Графични страници
PDF файл
ePub

KEATS (JOHN), Chronology of principal events, &c.—continued
1819 Resolves to work for periodicals, September, iii, 332, 335, 338
Returns to Hampstead to winter, October, iv, 40

Leaves off animal food, October, iv, 40

Throat in a threatening state again, December, iv, 47
1820 ODE ON A GRECIAN URN published, January, ii, 115 (note)
Fatal illness commences, 3 February, iv, 58, 62 (note), 151 (note)
Keats and Brown finally part at Gravesend, 7 May, iv, 182 (note)
LA BELLE DAME SANS MERCI published, 10 May, ii, 357 (note)
Fragment of THE CAP AND BELLS written, June (?), ii,488; iv,85
LAMIA, ISABELLA &c. published, first week in July, iv, 88
Stays at Kentish Town near and with Hunt, June-July, iv, 86-91
Fresh attack of blood-spitting, 22 June, iv, 87, 100
"Under sentence of death from Dr. Lamb," 12 July, iv, 88 (note)
Returns to Wentworth Place to be nursed by Mrs. and Miss
Brawne, August, iv, 92

Sails for Italy with Severn, September, iv, 105, 294
His last Sonnet, written on board ship, iv, 366
Writes his last letter from Rome, November, iv, 113

1821 His death, 23 February, iv, 216, 226, 294, 356

Buried near the tomb of Cestius (Caius), 26 February, iv,

216, 226, 244-5, 295

His papers sent to Brown, July, iv, 363

Early recollections of him by George Keats, iv, 403, 413
Said to have been an ungovernable child, iv, 348

His affection for flowers, iv, 65

His early fondness for live pets, ii, 292; iii, 289

His love for his brothers, i, xxv; iii, 160

His paternal affection for his orphan sister, i, xiii, xxv

A most orderly scholar, iv, 303

Extent of his school reading, iv, 305

His fighting prowess, iv, 275, 298, 304, 323, 411

Witnesses a prize-fight, iv, 325; sees a bear-baiting, iv, 324-5
His dislike for the French language, iii, 79

His admiration for the Italian language, iii, 79

Study of Italian, iii, 145, 327; iv, 30

Proposed study of Latin, iv, 30

Study of Greek contemplated, iii, 145; idea relinquished, iv, 30
His great knowledge of art, iv, 366, 377

His fondness for music, i, xxix

His dislike for the medical profession, iv, 376

His knowledge of and unfitness for medicine, iv, 312-13

He does not regret abandoning medicine, iii, 335

Possible return to medical pursuits, iii, 1 50, 279, 306, 310; iv, 84

[ocr errors]

KEATS (JOHN)-continued

His aversion to letter writing, iv, 35

His strictures on philosophy, ii, 36-7

His determination to study philosophy, iii, 146, 148
His religious beliefs, i, xxx; iii, 264-5; iv, 185, 339
His profound reverence for Shakespeare, iv, 338
Shakespeare's Poems his "inseparable companion," iv, 253
His reverence for Wordsworth, iii, 45-6; and delight in the
ODE ON INTIMATIONS OF IMMORTALITY, iii, 92

His early faults of versification, &c., i, xix, 337

His eagerness for fame, iii, 60; iv, 159, 169; contempt for popu-
larity, iii, 141, 319; and hopes of literary success, iv, 47
Earnest single-heartedness of his art-work, i, xviii
Rapidity of his developement in poetic style, i, xxiv
The Drama his greatest ambition, iv, 44

Effect of critical malignity on him according to Hunt, ii, 536
Self-criticism more painful than that of Blackwood or The
Quarterly, iii, 230

His pen-names, i, xv ; ii, 334 (note), 357 (note), 488; iv, 85
Difference between his poetry and Byron's, iv, 18
Remarkable quality of his humour, iv, 324

His apparent consciousness of a high calling, iv, 349
Intemperance referred to by Lord Houghton, iii, 83 (note);
asserted by Haydon and denied by Clarke, iv, 357
His constitutional tendency to consumption, iv, 293
A mighty soul in a little body," iv, 200

His distaste for society, iii, 194

His feelings towards women, i, xxvii; iii, 194

His views on matrimony, iii, 242-3

His fear of domestic cares, iv, 134

His proneness to forebodings of ill, iv, 130

"As much like the Holy Ghost as Johnny Keats," iv, 404
Refusal to visit Shelley, for sake of poetic independence, iii, 82
Pressure of his brother's illness on him, iii, 225, 228, 244
Faintness of lovers depicted by him, i, xxvi-vii; iv, 282

Ecstasies and miseries alternating, iv, 158

His horror at finally leaving Fanny Brawne, iv, 106, 111
"Fretted to death," iv, 215

"This cursed dying of mine,” iv, 364

His intended last will and testament, i, xxx

His personal appearance, iv, 273, 333, 346

Said by Clarke to have resembled his father, iv, 302

Said by George Keats to have resembled his mother, iv,

406, 409 (note)

Clarke's views on the portraits of him, iv, 334

KEATS (JOHN)-continued

Note by the Editor on the portraits, i, xxiii-xl

Said to have had "a fine compactness of person," iv, 336
Keats family, American section of, i, xi

Keats (Frances Mary), or “Fanny Keats,” date of birth, i, xlviii
Keats's letters to, iii, 77, 167, 214, 216, 229, 231, 232, 245,

247, 253, 256, 273, 287-91, 293, 297-303, 305-7, 309, 322;
iv, 40, 43, 47, 49, 58-64, 66, 69, 73-81, 86-9, 91-3, 102;
letters referred to, i, xiii

"Very much prisoned" from Keats, iii, 196, 275

Her character still unformed in 1818, iii, 236
Her resemblance to Tom, iv, 115

Marries Señor Llanos, iv, 303

Referred to, i, xxxi, xxxv ; iii, 100; iv, 6

Keats (Frances), born Jennings, Keats's mother, date of death, i, xlviii
KEATS (GEORGE), Epistle to, poem of 1816, i, 47-52

SONNET TO, i, 61-2; referred to, i, xxii

SONNET TO, WRITTEN IN SICKNESS (1820?), ii, 356

Dates of birth and death, i, xlviii

Letter from C. & J. Ollier to, on the POEMS (1817), i, 348
Keats's letters to, iii, 235; iv, 3 [See also Keats (George
and Thomas) and Keats (George and Georgiana)]

A Song by, i, xviii

His transcripts of John's poetry, i, xviii (note)

Decides to marry and emigrate to America, iii, 156-8 ; iv, 386
Arrival in America, iii, 231; waiting for letters from, iii, 293
Letters from Louisville at last, iii, 300, 306, 309

Not good news from, iii, 329, 331

He and his wife not happy in America, iv, 33

Keats's sudden return to town on account of, iv, 142

Visits England, iv, 50; returns to America, iv, 56

A narrow escape of, iv, 59; good news from, iv, 115
His mother-in-law, iv, 165

Account by Rev. James Freeman Clarke of, iv, 382-91
Letters from, iii, 132-3; iv, 77-8, 116, 391-419

A member of the Unitarian Church at Louisville, iv, 383
Intellectual, modest, energetic, manly, self-possessed, iv, 384
His fights for John, iv, 385

A fight on his own account, iv, 385 (note)

His business undertakings, iv, 388, 393-4

His reverence for John's genius, iv, 389

His death in 1842, iv, 390

Fidelity to John's memory, iv, 401, 402, 413, 415

Anxiety about John's Life and Posthumous Works, iv, 406,

414-15, 417, 419

Keats (George)-continued

A passage in "Adonais " gall and wormwood to him, iv, 413
Referred to, i, xi; iv, 81

See PROPHECY (A)

Keats (George and Georgiana), Keats's letters to, iii, 264, 274

Keats (George and Thomas), Sonnet to, i, 72

Keats's letters to, iii, 50, 98, 102, 107, 115, 120

Their visit to France, iii, 78

Said by Clarke to have resembled their mother, iv, 303
Keats (Georgiana Augusta), Keats's tenderness and admiration
for, iii, 236

Enquiries as to the employments of, iii, 284-5

Serious illness of, iv, 77 (note)

Keats's letter to, iv, 50 [See also Keats (George and
Georgiana)]

Referred to, iii, 162 (note), 179

Scrap-book apparently belonging to, i, xviii (note)
See ACROSTIC and Wylie (Georgiana Augusta)
Keats (Georgiana Emily), prophecy concerning, ii, 315

The poet's niece, iv, 395

Ante-natal message to, iii, 266
Her birth, iii, 306

Her "exact admeasurement," iv, 9

Serious illness of, iv, 77 (note)

Keats (Thomas) Senior, date of death, i, xlviii; iv, 276 (note)
Keats (Thomas) Junior, his birthday 18 November, i, xlviii, 73
Keats unable to go to Devonshire with, iii, 86

Proposal to follow him thither, iii, 93

Staying at Margate with John, iii, 58

His health improves at Teignmouth, iii, 137, 143, 148, 149
Keats's letters to, iii, 162, 170, 180, 187, 198, 203 [See also
Keats (George and Thomas)]

Extremely ill while John was in Scotland, iii, 213 (note), 214
Pressure of his illness on John, iii, 225, 228, 244

"Much worse," iii, 236

His last days, iii, 247, 264; date of death, i, xlviii

Keats supposes a white rabbit to be the soul of, i, xxx

His estate, iii, 259

Referred to, iii, 106, 126, 129; iv, 126 (note)

66 Keen, fitful gusts are whisp'ring here and there," Sonnet, i, 74
Kentish Town, contemplated removal to, iv, 80

Keats's letters from, iv, 84-92, 177-89

The transmission of letters from, iv, 119
Keats stays with Leigh Hunt at, iv, 177
Keswick, Keats's letter from, iii, 162

[blocks in formation]

KING LEAR, SONNET ON SITTING DOWN TO READ (1818), ii, 252-3
Manuscripts of, ii, 252 (note)

Thought by Medwin to have appeared in some periodical,
ii, 253 (note); referred to, iii, 108

KING STEPHEN A DRAMATIC FRAGMENT (1819), ii, 475-85
Dramatis personæ, ii, 474

Referred to, i, x

King's Teignton, a village near Teignmouth, ii, 260, 262 (note)
Kingston, iii, 99, 139, 142

Kingston & Co., iii, 101

Kingswells, Keats's letter continued at, iii, 184

Kirk, the "horrible dominion" of the, iii, 171, 172

Kirkoswald, Keats's letter continued at, iii, 183

Knowledge, no enjoyment in the world but drinking in, iii, 147

Needful for thinking people, iii, 150

KOSCIUSKO, SONNET TO, i, 84

Kosciusko, "mightily forlorn,” i, 101

"La belle dame sans mercy," See BELLE DAME SANS MERCI (La)
Lacys (the), iii, 261

Lake Poets, revival of taste for nature by, i, 333

Morbidity of, i, 342

Lake school (the), i, 96

Lakes, Keats's tour to the, iii, 157, 162-4

Lamb (Charles), his ❝tact of humanity” and “Shakespearean wis-

dom," i, 334

A witticism of, iv, 33

Calls Voltaire a good Christ for the French, iv, 281 (note), 353

His delight with Keats's last book, iv, 287

Said to have reviewed it in The Morning Chronicle, iv, 328
At Haydon's "immortal dinner," iv, 353

Insults "the comptroller of stamps," iv, 354-5

Referred to, iii, 97; iv, 85, 279, 342

Lamb (Dr.), iv, 88 (note)

LAMIA, ISABELLA, THE EVE of St. AgneS, AND OTHER POEMS,

ii, 1-177

Described, ii, 2

The original title-page (dated 1820), ii, 3

Advertisement by the Publishers, ii, 5

The original table of contents, ii, 7

Lists of words altered in this edition, i, xliv-vii

The Edinburgh Review on, i, 364-6

« ПредишнаНапред »