Wylies, theHenry.SeeWylie, HenryHerculaneum, a piece of,83“Here all the summer could I stay,” etc.,85Hermes,223“Hermia and Helena,” by Severn,265Hesketh, Lady,xv.*Hessey,xi.,53,100,114,164,177,184 note,199,282,286Hessey, Mrs.,88Hesseys, the.SeePercy StreetHill,47Hilton,114,240Hindoos,257Hobhouse,208Hodgkinson,271,284,297,363Hogarth,107,200,351Hogg,234Holbein,361Holinshed’sQueen Elizabeth,333Holts, one of the,218Homer,80,95 note,101,134,144;Pope’s,13,14;Chapman’s,363 and noteHone,47,51,220Honeycomb, Mr.,28Hook,309Hooker, Bishop,173Hopkinses, the,38Hoppner,189,190Horace,353Houghton, Lord,xix.,289 note,347 note;his Life of K.,xii.“How fever’d is that Man who cannot look,” etc.,258Howard, John,173Hubbard, Mother,177Hugh, Parson,104 and noteHumour superior to wit,47Hunger and sleepiness,122Hunt, Henry, his triumphal entry into London,299,329Hunt, John,17,28,58,67 note,72,191*Hunt, Leigh,xviii.,2 note,3,9,49,51,63,68,72,76,96,174,177,179,191,232,239,240,248,249,307,343,353,354,365,366,374;attacked,39,113;“Cockney school articles” thought to be by Scott,60 and note;criticisesEndymion,57,58;hisFoliage,11 note;damned Hampstead,87;his influence on K.,xviii.;K. hisélève,35;K. moves near to him,360 note;K. stays in his house,363 note,364;his kindness,368;his lock of Milton’s hair,62;his money difficulties,218;hisNymphs,11;his sonnet on the Nile,72;his paper on Preternatural History,234;hisLiterary Pocket-book,190,197;his quarrel with Haydon,33,34,35,56,61;his self-delusions,15Hunt, Mrs.,13,51,55Hyperion,331 note,362 note;begun,194,195;not continued,221;continued,280;given up because of its Miltonic inversions,321Iago,184Idleness,278“If by dull rhymes our English must be chained,” etc.,261“I had a dove and the sweet dove died,”207“I have examin’d and do find,” etc., by Mrs. Philips,29Imagination,41,42,43,108;the rudder of Poetry,34;its beauty and the heart’s affections alone certain,41;compared to Adam’s dream (Paradise Lost, Book viii.),41,42Imogen,24,184Indolence, Ode on,235 and note;The Castle of, by Thomson,234Invention, the Polar Star of Poetry,34Iona [Iconkill] visited,148,149Ireby,117;country dancing school at,116Ireland visited,124Irish and Scotch compared,126,129Isabella, orThe Pot of Basil,109,113,362 noteIsis, K.’s boating on the,28Italian, studied,101,289;the language full of poetry,23Italy,xix.“It keeps eternal whisperings around,” etc.,8Jacobs, Jenny, and Brown,279Jacques,68James I.,361Jane, St.SeeReynolds, JaneJean, Burns’,134Jeffrey,xii.,xix.Jemmy, Master.SeeRice, JamesJennings, Mrs.,290,318;referred to as “my aunt,”274Jessy of Dumblane,160Jesus and Socrates,236Joanna, To, by Wordsworth,116 noteJohn (seeReynolds),27,33,162John, St.,325Jonson, Ben,247 noteJournal-letters,xii.Jove better than Mercury,75,97Judea,11Juliet,24,135Junkets,i.e.John Keats,13Kean,46,48,84,131,191,226,241,280,284,285,286,291,319,336,340Keasle,189Keasle, Miss,170,189,308Keasle, Mrs.,189Keats, Emily (daughter of George K.),294,319,339,344,347;her birth announced,273Keats family, letters to,xi.*Keats, Fanny,xii. note,6,51,58,153,158,169,177,197,223,228,292,371,375,377;she is kept from K. by the Abbeys,145,218;the story ofEndymionis related to her,22Keats, Frances.SeeKeats, Fanny*Keats, George,6,8,9,10,13,14,17,22,23,34,38,49,52,84,101,109,112,114,119,132,142,152,153,161,166,187,213,217,263,265,268,270,273,275,277,284,285,320,337,340,341,343,344,345,346,347,349,358,359,361,362,369,375,376,377;his affairs troublesome,324,331,336;he goes to America,109,182;he visits England,328 and note;he returns to America,358;he is more than a brother to John K.,158;he copies John K.’s verses,342;he is devoted to his little girl,339;bad news from him,321,322,332;J. K.’s sonnet to him,72Keats, Georgiana.SeeWylie, GeorgianaKeats, John, his genius in prose-writing,xi.;his Life by Colvin,xi.,331 note;and by Lord Houghton,xi.;the characteristics of his letters,xiv. xv.;his character, “the young Cockney,” Shakspeare in his blood,xvi.,14;his reticence about Fanny Brawne,xvi.;the influence of Haydon, Leigh Hunt, and Charles Cowden Clarke over him,xviii.;his school at Enfield,xviii.;his portrait,2;his thoughts of settling in the country,4;he writes in theChampion,8,47,49;he cannot exist without poetry,9,165;“why I should be a poet,”12;his money troubles,14,19,28;he reads and writes eight hours a day, but cannot compose when “fevered in a contrary direction,”14;his morbidity,15,38,110,111;his excitement during composition,18;his thoughts of visiting the country,18;he writes with energy,23;he regards the elements as comforters,25;he projects a romance,32;he expects to be called Hunt’sélève,35;he does not expect happiness,38;his article on “Covent Garden,”49 and note;his views of religion,81,256;his plan of life,94;he regards the public as an enemy but does not write under its shadow,96;he studies Italian,101,289;he determines to learn Greek,101;his thoughts of death when alone,112;is noticed in theEdinburghandQuarterly,113;his ill-health,122,347-377;his independence of criticism,167;he expects to be among the English poet after his death,171;his defence by Reynolds,171;his declamations against matrimony,180;his pleasure in solitude,181;he talks of giving up writing,184;a sonnet and cheque to him,192,199;his notion of a rondeau,207;his thoughts of the country,209;his notice of Reynolds’Peter Bell,248,249;he feels himself the protector of Fanny K.,216;“he is quite the little poet,”219;his rhapsody about claret,222,223;his scorn of parsons,221seq.,233,268;he talks of turning physician,233;his portrait by Severn,274;his change of character,309;his distrust of Americans,312;his feelings towards Fanny Brawne during his last illness,371,372*Keats, Tom,8,9,11,44,47 note,79,82,84,85,87,94,100,112,135,158,159,165,169,175,177,179,180,181,182,183,185,215,301 note,349;his death,187 and note;his illness,43,49,63,103,161,162,164,168,186,187;his belief in immortality,188;his likeness to Fanny K.,397;his low spirits,98;Wells’ treatment of him,239,245Kelly, Mr.,124Kemble,198Kent, Miss,13,51Keswick visited,114,115Kingston,47,50 and note,53,95,196;his criticisms,98Kirkman,190,208,209;his uncle William,208Kneller, Sir G.,361Knox, John,220Kotzebue,241,300La Belle Dame sans Merci,250Lacon, Fool,339Lady of the Lake,136Lakes, the, described,114,115Lamb, Charles,39,191,316,361;his practical jokes,50Lamia,277,280,294,362 note;finished,288;quoted,289 and noteLandseer,50,58Laon and Cythna, by Shelley,48 and noteLaunce (inTwo Gentlemen of Verona),4Lear, King,47,58,63,80;a sonnet on,59Leech-gatherer, the,31Leicester, Sir John,240Lely, Sir Peter,361Leon, St., by Godwin,205Letters, those to Fanny Brawne omitted,xvii.;frivolous classification of,106,163;characteristics of K.’s,xv.;Dated from, Burford Bridge,40-44;Carisbrooke,6;Carlisle,116;Donaghadee,124;Featherstone Buildings,48;Fleet Street (Wells’),71;Hampstead (Well Walk),33-40,46,53-67,71-78,109-114,161-187;Hampstead (Wentworth Place),187-273,331-359;Keswick,114;London,1-4,19,39;Margate,10-17;theMaria Crowther,370;Mortimer Terrace (Leigh Hunt’s),363;Naples,372-374;Oxford,19-32;