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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

66

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)

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

LAMIA, ISABELLA, THE EVE of St. Agnes, &c.—continued
Review by Leigh Hunt in The Indicator, ii, 525-41
Mistake as to date of composition of contents, ii, 539
"Coming out with very low hopes," iv, 84

Keats sends Shelley a copy, iv, 97

Hunt's copy in Shelley's pocket when drowned, iv, 97 (note)
A literary success, iv, 101

Not popular among ladies, iv, 104

LAMIA, Part I, ii, 11-26

Part II, ii, 27-40

Dates connected with, ii, 10

The manuscript, i, xii; ii, 10

The ground-work of the story, ii, 10, 40

The verse modelled upon that of Dryden, ii, 10

First part finished, iii, 312

Keats's reassurance on looking the poem over, iv, 8
Referred to, iii, 317, 327; iv, 167

Lamia in the form of a snake, described, ii, 12-13

Is disenchanted by Hermes, ii, 16

Is enamoured of Lycius, ii, 15, 17, 19
Confesses her love to Lycius, ii, 23
Proceeds to Corinth with him, ii, 24

Her enchanted house in Corinth, ii, 25-6

Her unwillingness to be known to Lycius's friends, ii, 29
Consents to an open bridal, ii, 31

Her magic preparations for the bridal feast, ii, 32-3

Vanishes under the stare of the sophist Apollonius, ii, 40

Landor's GEBIR, parallel passage from, ii, 146 (note)
Landseers (all the), iii, 108

Latin, proposed study of, iv, 30

Latona, the temple of, i, 164

Latmus, the scene of ENDYMION, i, 124

Laughter of friends, iv, 184

Laurel Crown (a), See Sonnet

Lawn Bank, other name of Wentworth Place, iv, 195

Lawrence (Sir Thomas), iv, 113 (note)

Leander, i, 238

Sonnet on a Picture of, ii, 221-2

Leatherhead, Keats's letters from, iii, 86, 89

Leicester (Earl of), "a promising subject," iv, 44

Lethargy, fits of, iii, 157, 179

Letterfinlay, Keats's letter from, iii, 203

Letter writing, Keats's aversion to, iv, 35

Letters, cannot be sent daily from Shanklin, iv, 129

Lewis (David), a kind old gentleman, iv, 61

"Libertas" (= Leigh Hunt), i, 48, 54

"Life is but a day,” i, 92

Lindon (Mrs.), married name of Fanny Brawne, iv, 209

LINES ("Unfelt, unheard, unseen "), 1817, ii, 226-7

LINES ON THE MERMAID TAVERN, poem of 1818, ii, 130-1

Manuscript of, ii, 130 (note)

LINES ON SEEING A LOCK OF MILTON'S HAIR (1818), ii, 249-51

Manuscripts of, ii, 249 (note)

LINES TO FANNY (1819), ii, 352-4

LINES WRITTEN IN THE HIGHLANDS AFTER A VISIT TO BURNS'S

COUNTRY (1818), ii, 299-302

Lionel, rejected name of lover in THE EVE OF St. Agnes, ii, 77 (note)
Literary Pocket-book, Leigh Hunt's, Sonnets issued in, ii, 247-8, 295-6
Song written in a copy of, ii, 273 (note)

Literary success, hopes of, iv, 47

Little John, ii, 133, 135

Live pets, Keats's early fondness for, iii, 289

Llanos (Señor), marries Fanny Keats, iv, 303

Loans of Keats to various people, iii, 296

Loch Awe, the beauty of, iii, 190

Loch Craignish, description of the best inn near, iii, 191

Loch Lomond, description and rough sketch of, iii, 187-8

Lockhart (John Gibson), stated to have written the "Cockney
School" articles, iii, 109 (note)

Lodore, fall of, iii, 163

London, visit to, on George's business, iv, 142

Lorenzo, enamoured of Isabella, ii, 45

Plot of Isabella's brothers to murder, ii, 51

His murder, ii, 53

Instructs Isabella in a vision as to his burial-place, ii, 57
Words of his ghost applied to Fanny Brawne, iv, 153

Love, the top of the crown of humanity, i, 162

Its unknown might, i, 163

Its power increases with the height of the object, i, 163
Invocation to, i, 173-6

The God, his jealousy of Lamia and Lycius, ii, 27
Keats's opinion of love in a hut, ii, 27

Its "little sweet" kills "much bitterness,” ii, 48

The cousin of Selfishness, ii, 54

"Love doth know no fullness, and no bounds,” ii, 226
One of the Shadows in the ODE ON INDOLENCE, ii, 330
Keats tries to " 'reason against the reasons” of, iv, 146
Love or death, iv, 146

A wonder and delight, iv, 153; not a plaything, iv, 183
A day of love, ii, 354

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