1. Bollingen Series;JCC Mays,2001
2. George Felton Mathew in “European Magazine” (1816), in Coleridge, The Critical Heritage, ed. J. R. de J. Jackson (New York: Barnes & Noble, 1970), p. 241.
3. Collected Notebooks, 4, 5428, quoted in Michael John Kooy, Coleridge, Schiller, and Aesthetic Education (Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave, 2002), p. 185.
4. George Whalley, Coleridge and Sara Hutchinson (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1955), pp. 65–66, says that “he refused to consider divorce”; even the sympathetic and wise
5. J. Robert Barth, S. J., Coleridge and the Power of Love (Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 1988), p. 34, writes “Divorce was for him—for religious reasons but no doubt also, unconsciously, for psychological reasons—out of the question, so a separation was arranged.”