Imatges de pàgina
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On Death, 1.

On Fame, 142.

On Fame, Another, 142.

On first looking into Chapman's Homer, 9.
On hearing the Bagpipe, and seeing The Stranger
played at Inverary, 246.

On leaving Some Friends at an Early Hour, 9.
On Leigh Hunt's Poem The Story of Rimini, 38.
On Oxford, 252.

On receiving a Curious Shell and a Copy of
Verses, 4.

On seeing a Lock of Milton's Hair, 39.

On seeing the Elgin Marbles, 36.

On sitting down to read King Lear once again,
40.

On the Grasshopper and Cricket, 35.
On the Sea, 37.

On-

'Think not of it, sweet one, so,' 38.
On visiting the Tomb of Burns, 120.
OTHO THE GREAT, 158.

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Folly's Song, 240.

'Hush, hush! tread softly! hush, hush, my
dear,' 120.

'I had a dove, and the sweet dove died,' 125.
'The stranger lighted from his steed,' 240.
Written on a Blank Page in Beaumont and
Fletcher's Works, 42.

Sonnets:

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Addressed to Benjamin Robert Haydon, 33.
'After dark vapours have oppress'd our
plains,' 36.

'As from the darkening gloom a silver dove,'
12.

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'Blue! 't is the life of heaven, the do-
main,' 43.

Dream after reading Dante's Episode of Paolo
and Francesca, A, 138.

'Happy is England! I could be content,' 35.
How many bards gild the lapses of time,' 8.
Human Seasons, The, 44.

'If by dull rhymes our English must be
chain'd,' 144.

6 Keen, fitful gusts are whisp'ring here and
there,' 8.

Last Sonnet, The, 232.

Oh! how I love, on a fair summer's eve,' 13.
On a Picture of Leander, 38.

On Fame, 142.

On Fame, Another, 142.

On first looking into Chapman's Homer, 9.
On hearing the Bagpipe and seeing The
Stranger played at Inverary, 246.

On leaving Some Friends at an Early Hour, 9.
On Leigh Hunt's Poem The Story of Rimini,
38.

On seeing the Elgin Marbles, 36.

On sitting down to read King Lear once
again, 40.

On the Grasshopper and Cricket, 35.

On the Sea, 37.

On visiting the Tomb of Burns, 120.

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'Why did I laugh to-night? No voice will
tell,' 137.

Written in Answer to a Sonnet, 43.

Written in Disgust of Vulgar Superstition, 35.
Written in the Cottage where Burns was
born, 121.

Written on the Blank Space at the End of

Chaucer's Tale of The Floure and the Lefe, 36.
Written on the Day that Mr. Leigh Hunt left
Prison, 5.

Written upon the Top of Ben Nevis, 123.
Specimen of an Induction to a Poem, 27.
Spenser, Imitation of, 1.

Spenserian Stanza, written at the close of Canto
II., Book V., of The Faerie Queene, 8.
Spenserian Stanzas on Charles Armitage Brown,
250.

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'The day is gone, and all its sweets are gone
214.

To a Cat, 252.

To a Friend who sent me some Roses, 13.
To Ailsa Rock, 121.

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To a Lady seen for a Few Moments at Vaux-
hall, 123.

To a Young Lady who sent me a Laurel
Crown, 7.

To Byron, 2.

To Chatterton, 2.

To Fanny, 215.

To G. A. W., 34.

To George Keats, 251.

To
-. 'Had I a man's fair form,' 26.
To Haydon, 36,

To John Hamilton Reynolds, 44.

To Leigh Hunt, Esq., 37.

To Sleep, 142.

To Some Ladies, 3.

To Spenser, 42.

To the Nile, 41.

To Thomas Keats, 245.

Translation from a Sonnet of Ronsard, 123.
Two or Three Posies, 251.

VERSES TO FANNY BRAWNE, 214.

Verses written during a Tour in Scotland, 120.

'Welcome joy, and welcome sorrow,' 42.
What the Thrush said, 43.

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INDEX TO LETTERS

AGRICULTURE, the effect of, on character, 392,
393.

Ailsa Rock, 312.

Amena's letters to Tom Keats, 364, 366.
America, in its relation to England, 332.

Bailey, Benjamin, entertains Keats at Oxford,
264; has a curacy, 271; his love affairs, 357;
letters to, 270, 271, 273, 283, 290, 303, 305, 318,
387.

Ben Nevis, ascent of, 323, 324.

Brawne, Fanny, first met by Keats, 340; de-
scribed by Keats, 342; tiffs with, 353; ar-
dently loved by Keats, 380, and in subse-
quent letters commended to Brown, 448;
letters to, 380, 382, 383, 384, 386, 388, 393, 413,
414, 423, 424, 425, 426, 427, 428, 429, 430, 432,
433, 436, 438, 440, 441.
Brawne, Mrs., takes Brown's house, 340; Keats
dines with her, 345; letter to, 446.
Brown, Charles Armitage, Letters to, 410, 411,
437, 444, 445, 447, 448.
Burford Bridge, 275.

Burns, Robert, visit to the country of, 308, 310,
313, 315.

Burton's Anatomy of Melancholy, quoted, 397.

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told to Fanny Keats, 264; draws near a close,
269; a test of his power of imagination, 270 ;
completed, 281; to serve as a pioneer, 289;
preface to, 296.

Examiner, The, a battering ram against Chris-
tianity, 258; has a good word on Wellington,
262; Keats's notice in it of Reynolds's Peter
Bell, 367.

Fingal's Cave, 322.

French Revolution, Keats on the, 398.

Godwin, William, 346.

Goldfish, Keats's fancy of a globe of, 372.
Greek, Keats wishes to learn, 299.

Haslam, William, letter to, 375.
Haydon, Benjamin Roberts, Keats's first ac-
quaintance with, 255; advises Keats to go
into the country, 255; his quarrel with Hunt,
270; proposes to make a frontispiece for En-
dymion, 281; his effect on Keats, 296; money
affairs with, 350; letters to, 260, 269, 279, 293,
295, 349, 350, 351, 371, 373, 379, 412, 440, 443.
Hazlitt, William, on Southey, 259; thinks
Shakespeare enough for us, 261; his Round
Table, 269; his essay on commonplace peo-
ple, 272; his lecture on poetry, 287, 289;
prosecutes Blackwood, 327; his letter to Gif-
ford, 358; his retort, 359.

Hessey, James Augustus, letter to, 328.
Hunt, Leigh, self-delusions of, 261; his quarrel
with Haydon, 270; attack on, in Edinburgh
Magazine, 273; his own name coupled with,
273;
his criticism of Endymion, 282; shows
Keats a lock of Milton's hair, 284; his char-
acter, 341; his conversation quoted, 343; let-
ter to, 258.

Hyperion, has too many Miltonic inversions, 408.

Indiaman, Keats's prospect of service on an,
377.

Jeffrey, Misses M. and S., letter to, 304.
Jeffrey, Mrs., letters to, 303, 376, 377.

Kean, Edmund, in Richard III., 276; dis-
cussed, 277.

Keats, Fanny, letters to, 264, 308, 325, 326, 328,

537, 338, 350, 351, 352, 371, 372, 373, 374,
375, 376, 378, 379, 381, 390, 414, 416, 417, 418,
423, 424, 425, 427, 429, 433, 434, 435, 438, 439,
440, 442, 444.

Keats, George, his resolution to go to America,
303;
his marriage, 305; arrival in America,
336;
return to England on a brief visit, 418.
Keats, George and Thomas, Letters to, 256, 276,
277, 280, 281, 286, 288.

Keats, George and Georgiana, letters to, 329,
338, 353, 394, 418.

Keats, John, goes to Southampton, 256; visits
Carisbrooke, 257; cannot exist without po-
etry, 258; begins Endymion, 258; habits of
reading and writing, 260; is painted in a pic-
ture by Haydon, 261; borrows money of Tay-
lor and Hessey, 262; leaves Margate for Can-
terbury, 262; asks for more money, 263; goes
to Oxford, 263; rows on the Isis, 267; makes
good progress with Endymion, 269; goes to
Hampstead, 270; regards his long poem as
a test of power of imagination, 270; is at
Dorking, 275; reads Shakespeare's sonnets,
276; criticises West's painting of Death on
the Pale Horse, 277; writes articles for
The Champion, 277; calls on Wordsworth,
278; passes in the first book of Endymion,
281; goes to hear Hazlitt lecture on poetry,
282; his recipe for a pleasant life, 286; is
reading Voltaire and Gibbon, 289; goes to
Devonshire, 290; goes to Honiton, 303; re-
turns to Hampstead, 303; goes to Keswick
by way of Ambleside, 307; climbs Skiddaw
and goes to Carlisle, 307; visits the haunts of
Burns, 308; visits the Meg Merrilies country,
309; crosses to Ireland, 311; sees Ailsa crag,
312; goes to Glasgow, 313; rehearses his
route, 314; traverses Loch Lomond, 316; in
view of the Hebrides, 317; reaches Inverary,
318; comes to the Isle of Mull, 319; crosses
the isle, 321; visits Fingal's Cave, 322;
climbs Ben Nevis, 323; returns to Hamp-
stead, 325; recounts his passage from Inver-
ness, 330; has an encounter with an unnamed
Lady, 334; notifies his brother George of
their brother Tom's death, 338; meets Fanny
Brawne for the first time, 340; describes her,
342; borrows money of Taylor, 349; lends
money to Haydon, 350; goes to Chichester,
353; goes to the consecration of a chapel,
355; considers the question of going to Edin-
burgh and studying medicine, 361; considers
also the plan of going as surgeon on an India-
man, 377; is obliged to refuse money to Hay-
don, 379; goes to Shanklin, Isle of Wight,
380; describes his life there, 381; goes to
Winchester, 387; engaged on Hyperion, 387;

works with Brown on a tragedy, 389; de-
scribes Winchester, 391; goes up to London,
393; returns to Winchester, 394; describes
an election there, 400; plays a joke on Brown,
406; gives up Hyperion, 408; returns to town,
413; is attacked with illness, 423; is ordered
to Italy, 439; reaches Rome, 448.

Keats, Thomas, sickness of, 275, 335, 337; his
death, 338; his affair with Wells, 364; letters
to, 307, 310, 312, 316, 320, 322.

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Scott, Walter, Keats's opinion of, 279.
Severn, Joseph, a friend of Keats, 255; letters
to, 373, 415, 416.

Shakespeare, Keats finds a head of, 257; ob-
serving his birthday, 258, 287; his Christian-
ity, 259; a presiding genius, 260; enough for
us, 261; his sonnets, 276; supposed seal of,
293.

Shelley, Percy Bysshe, 'telling strange stories
of the deaths of kings,' 259; his Queen Mab,
277; letter to, 442.

Snook, Mr., 267, 353, 354.
Soul-making, 369.

Southampton, journey to, 256.
Staffer, 318, 320, 321.

Taylor, Anne and Jane, poems by, 265.
Taylor and Hessey, letters to, 262, 263, 290, 293.

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