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Alexander, i, 175

Alfred (King), a champion of Freedom, i, 45

Alfred (The), West of England Journal &c., Reynolds on Keats
and The Quarterly in, iii, 373-80

Referred to, iii, 238

"Alp" in the singular, as in Milton, i, 85, 156

Alpheus and Arethusa, episode of, i, 225-9

Alsager (Mr.), owner of the Chapman's Homer first seen by Keats,
i, 77 (note); iv, 310

Alston, iii, 120

Amalthea, i, 199

Ambition, one of the Shadows in the ODE ON INDOLENCE, ii, 330

America, contemplated visit to, iii, 196

American humanity can never reach the sublime, iii, 242

AMOURS (LES) DE CASSANDRE, ii, 569 (note)

Amphion, i, 275

Anacreon, A glorious folio of," ii, 232

ANATOMY OF MELANCHOLY, Extract from Burton's, ii, 40

Angela, Madeline's nurse in The Eve of St. Agnes, ii, 78

Animal food, Keats leaves off, iv, 40

Annals of the Fine Arts, ODE TO A NIGHTINGALE published in,
ii, 110 (note)

ODE ON A GRECIAN URN published in, ii, 115 (note)

Sonnets published in, ii, 219 (note)

Apollo and Admetus, i, 128

Apollo, Clymene's story of, in HYPERION, ii, 168

"Once more the golden theme," ii, 174

Meets Mnemosyne, ii, 174

His convulsion, ii, 177

"Too effeminate and human," ii, 537

Ode to (1815), ii, 205-7

Hymn to (1815), ii, 208-9

Apollonius, instructor of Lycius in LAMIA, ii, 25

Lamia desires his absence from her bridal, ii, 31

Comes unbidden to the wedding of Lamia and Lycius, ii, 34
Browbeats Lamia from her woman's form, ii, 37-40

Extract from Burton's ANATOMY OF MELANCHOLY, Con-

cerning the life of, ii, 40

Apollonius Rhodius, a passage in the ARGONAUTICA of, i, 138 (note)
ARABIAN NIGHTS (THE), allusion to Zobeide's story in, i, 140

See THOUSAND and One Nights (The)

Arethusa and Alpheus, episode of, i, 225-9

Argus, allusion to the story of, i, 223

Ariadne, a vintager, i, 199

Arion, i, 193

Ariosto, Keats reads, iv, 30

As diffuse as Spenser, iii, 327

Armida, i, 29

Arrears of versifying to be cleared, iv, 167

Asia, a fallen Titaness in HYPERION, ii, 161

Associations with scenery, pleasure of, ii, 299

Athenæum (The), rejected lines of FANCY published in, ii, 122 (note)
Draft of SONNET TO SLEEP published in, ii, 347 (note)
Notes on Milton published in, iii, 18

Severn's letters published in, iv, 362 (note)

Atlantic Monthly (The), paper by Clarke from, iv, 301

Atlas, a fallen Titan in HYPERION, ii, 162

Auchencairn, Keats's letter from, iii, 170

Audubon, considered by Keats to be dishonest, iv, 5, 30
Autumn, the music of, ii, 138

AUTUMN (TO), poem of 1819, ii, 137-8

Probably composed at Winchester, ii, 137 (note)
Rejected readings from the manuscript of, iv, 427
Auranthe, character in OTHO THE GREAT, ii, 366
Her intrigue with Albert glanced at, ii, 371
Her ambition, ii, 371

Her marriage with Ludolph, ii, 411

Her plot against Erminia disclosed, ii, 419

Her flight from the Castle of Friedburg, ii, 445
Her capture by Ludolph, ii, 453

Her death, ii, 471

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Babbicomb, a clamber over the rocks" to, iii, 142
"The finest place in the south," iii, 330

Bacchus, triumph of, i, 291-4

Bag-pipe (the), See SONNETS

Bailey (Benjamin), dates of birth and death, i, xlix

Keats stays at Oxford with, iii, 70 (note)

"Scarcely ever well," iii, 72; his career, iii, 72 (note)

His account of Keats's habits at Oxford, iii, 73 (note)

Keats's letters to, iii, 82, 84, 89, 94, 104, 156, 159, 192, 218, 317

Intended visit at Bath to, iii, 142

His letters about Keats in an Oxford Paper, iii, 159

His marriage, iii, 318

His penmanship compared with Dilke's, iv, 71

Referred to, i, xxxviii; iii, 86, 87, 101, 102, 127, 133 (note), 156

Baldwin (Earl) de Redvers, character in KING STEPHEN, ii, 474

Ballantrae, Keats's letter from, iii, 180

Barnes, iii, 158

Barrow, iii, 378; iv, 269

Bartlett (Mr.), a surgeon at Teignmouth, iii, 127

BASIL, THE POT OF, See ISABELLA

Basil Pot Song (the), Professor Comparetti on, ii, 552
Text of, ii, 554-5

Translation by John Payne, ii, 556-7

Basket, the Tale of the, iv, 131

Bath, intended visit to Bailey at, iii, 142

Batty (Dr.), gives Leigh Hunt a lock of Milton's hair, iv, 428
Hunt's sonnets to him, ii, 563-5

Bay of Biscay, Keats in a storm in, iv, 107 (note)
Bear-baiting used as a figure of speech, i, 188 (note)

Keats describes a, iv, 324-5

Beaumont and Fletcher, THE DOUBLE MARRIAGE by, i, 236 (note)
Extract from THE WOMAN HATER, iii, 37-9
Keats reads THE FALSE ONE by, iii, 279

Alluded to, i, 43; ii, 127, 243

See ODE

Beauty" a joy for ever,” i, 121

Evanescence of, ii, 111

Identical with truth, ii, 118; iii, 90

Love of, iv, 128

The only conceivable beginning of Keats's love, iv, 129
Bedhampton, Brown and Keats's letter from, iii, 260

Bellanaine, bride elect of Elfinan in THE CAP AND BELLS, ii, 490
BELLE DAME SANS MERCI (LA), poem of 1820, ii, 357-60

Published in The Indicator, ii, 357 (note)

Two versions of, ii, 357 (note)

Leigh Hunt's remarks on Chartier's poem of the name, ii, 570-3
"An ancient ditty, long since mute," so called, ii, 97

Referred to, i, x, xv, xx

Beneficence the only worthy pursuit, iii, 147

Aspirations after, iii, 234

BEN NEVIS, SONNET WRITTEN UPON THE TOP OF (1818), ii, 312-13
BEN NEVIS, A DIALOGUE, poem of 1818, iii, 207-9

Ben Nevis, ascent of, iii, 203-6

Benjamin (Nathan), Brown's tenant, amusing story about, iv, 23
Bentley (Benjamin), Keats's landlord in Well Walk, iii, 203; iv, 194
Bertha, in THE EVE OF ST. MARK, ii, 321

A mortal maiden beloved of Elfinan in THE CAP AND
BELLS, ii, 496, 505

Bertrand (General), iii, 66

Bewick, iii, 108, 139

Biancopany (Esquire) = Samuel Whitbread, ii, 495 (note)
Birkbeck (Morris), "too American,” iii, 242

His NOTES ON A JOURNEY IN AMERICA, iv, 53

Referred to, iii, 265, 274

Birthday (Keats's), iii, 245

Birthplace, the "flummery" of a, iii, 178

Bishop's Teignton, a village near Teignmouth, ii, 260, 262 (note)
Blackwood's Magazine, characteristic ribaldry of, ii, 247 (note)
Attacks on Hunt and Keats in, iii, 84; iv, 352

Abuse of confidence by some one connected with, iii, 85 (note)
Vulgar personal attacks on Hazlitt in, iii, 224 (note)
Hazlitt's anger with, iv, 361

Supports Hogg versus Burns, iii, 280

George Keats on, iv, 398

Referred to, iii, 161

Blake's (William) THE WILL AND THE WAY, ii, 277 (note)
Blanchard (Laman), sonnet by, attributed to Keats, i, xvi
Blood-spitting, fresh attack of, iv, 87, 100

Blue eyes, Keats's preference for, ii, 258

Boating on the Isis, iii, 74

Boccaccio's Story of Isabella, in English by John Payne, ii, 547-51

See ISABELLA

Boileau, the school of, i, 95

Books lent to Fanny Brawne not to be sent home, iv, 160
Brawne (Fanny), dates of birth and death, i, xlviii

Ode to (1819?), ii, 326-8

Pictured at a dance, ii, 327

Lines to, ii, 352-4

Sonnet to (1819), ii, 355

First meeting with Keats, iii, 227 (note)

Account of a "Charmian" not a portrait of her, iii, 227 (note)
Described by Keats, iii, 268-9

Probable mistake as to her age, iii, 269 (note)

Brown writes Spenserian stanzas about Keats and, iii, 283

Keats's return to Hampstead to be nursed by her and her

mother, iv, 92

Keats's horror at leaving her, iv, 106, 111

Last words to, iv, 110

Keats's letters to, iv, 125-89; referred to, i, xi

Details about the original letters to, iv, 119-20

Her family and their residence at Hampstead, iv, 127 (note)

Her indisposition, iv, 152

Keats's engagement thought imprudent, iv, 156 (note)

Not to visit Keats with Brown at home, iv, 157, 161, 165, 168
Her natural pride and buoyancy, iv, 158 (note)

Brawne (Fanny)-continued

A thousand Houris, iv, 163

Keats's vision of her in her " shepherdess dress," iv, 179
Imprisonment at Hampstead, iv, 170

"Flirting with Brown," iv, 181

Writes to Keats after his departure to Italy, iv, 218
Severn's idea of a brooch for, iv, 367

"An amiable girl," iv, 401

Referred to, i, xxxiii; iv, 103 (note)

Brawne (Margaret), mentioned as "Tootts," iv, 110

Referred to, iv, 127, 135, 155

Brawne (Mrs.), her dog Carlo, iv, 61
Keats goes to stay with, iv, 92

Keats's letter to, iv, 108

Letter from Severn to, iv, 203

Referred to, iii, 249 (note); iv, 119, 127, 135, 151, 155, 157,

160, 161, 163, 173, 178, 193, 198

Brawne (Samuel), father of Fanny, iv, 127 (note)

Brawne (Samuel), brother of Fanny, iv, 110, 127, 135, 171, 172

Breama (Water), in SONG OF FOUR FAERIES, ii, 340
Briareüs, an imprisoned Titan in HYPERION, ii, 159
Referred to, i, 244 (note)

Bridal custom described in LAMIA, ii, 32

British Gallery, Keats visits the, iii, 120

Britomartis, i, 29

Brothers, Keats's love for his, i, xxv; iii, 160

Brown (Charles Armitage), Spenserian Stanzas on (1819), ii, 337-8
His kindness to Keats, iii, 121, 275, 290; iv, 40

Accident to, iii, 125

Writes "volumes of adventures to Dilke," iii, 198

Ridiculous letter written by him and Keats, iii, 260

His house at Hampstead robbed, iii, 261

Proposal for Keats to "domesticate with " him, iii, 264-5

Keats's letters to, iii, 335, 337; iv, 84, 100, 103, 105, 110, 113

Letters from Scotland by, iii, 354-62

Called the Red Cross Knight by Keats, iii, 359, 361

Parts from Keats at Inverness in August 1818, iii, 359, 361

A practical joke of Keats's upon, iv, 22-3

At Bedhampton and Chichester, iv, 31

Letter concerning Keats's illness, iv, 62 (note), 73 (note)

Copies Hogarth's head, iv, 65, 70

His second visit to Scotland, iv, 79

Requested by Keats to go to Rome with him, iv, 102

Keats goes to live with him, iv, 326

His SHAKESPEARE'S AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL POEMS, iv, 326

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