Letters of, to Taylor and another, on Keats,368List of Books in Keats’s Library, compiled by,556-8Memorial volume on Keats, planned by, with Taylor,529,seeWoodhouse TranscriptsSonnet by, on ‘Poems,’131on the Date ofIn a drear-nighted December,158on the Inspiration of the two sonnetsWhen I have Fears, andTime’s Sea, and the linesFrom my despairing heart,259& n.onHyperion,426-7; onIsabella, on Keats’s reading aloud and on the changes inEve of St Agnes,366-7; on Keats’s character and poetry,368; on a Long talk with Keats (1819),366et sqq.Woodhouse Transcripts in Crewe MSS.,259n.Lent by Taylor to Milnes,533Woollett, W., engraver of ‘The Enchanted Castle,’265n.‘Word-of-all-work, Love,’ phrase of George Eliot,549n.Words, lax use of, and free modification of, inEndymion,212-13Wordsworth, Dorothy,250,290Wordsworth, Mrs,250Wordsworth, Rev. Christopher,245Wordsworth, William,244; absent on Keats’s visit to Rydal,274Appearance, voice, manner and mannerisms of,79,249Bailey’s acquaintance with,133Characteristics of,246,249,315Conversation of, Hazlitt on,251Fame of, steady growth of,526Friendship of, with Haydon,62,462& n.Genius of, compared with that of Keats,234,267-8,484; Bridges and the author on,128-9in relation to that of Milton, Keats on,266and Greek mythology,125-6,220Head of, in Haydon’s picture,462& n.Hunt’s verdict on,44Keats’s meeting with and relations with,245et sqq.and Kingston,246et sqq.,251Letter from, to Reynolds on his poemThe Naiad,64Poetry of,21,196n.Disuse in, of the older verseforms,108,119Influence of, on Keats, seen inEndymion,125,126,233-4La Belle Dame,350Keats’s appreciation of,145-6, and critical judgments on,251-2,263,267Local influences on,2Poems of humble life, attitude to, of the Hunt circle,121,348Poems of tragic life,121Stanzas on Burns, countered by Keats in ‘Bards of Passion,’387Political change of view of,45Reminiscence of, in theSolitudesonnet by Keats,90Sonnetsof God-speed to Scott,525n.to Haydon, three,65Scotch tour of, with his sister,290Wilson’s attitude to, inNoctes Ambrosianæ,300on Keats’sHymn to Pan,227,249; on the Poetic Revolution,119; on the Sources of poetic Inspiration,89; on Vowel-variation,401-2World-sadness, Keats on, and on the duty of relieving it,448-9et sqq.Written on the day that Mr Leigh Hunt left Prison, sonnet (Keats),23Written in disgust of Vulgar Superstition, sonnet (Keats),91Wylie, Georgiana Augusta (afterwards Mrs George Keats, and later Mrs Jeffrey),141; engagement of, to George Keats,24,34Keats’s poems written for,34,86,89,269,270Marriage of,268,269,271; second marriage,331; hereafterseeJeffrey, Mrs,andKeats, George and his wifeWylie family,366Young Poets, essay (Hunt)Beginners of promise referred to,54,69Keats’s Chapman Sonnet printed in,54‘You say you love, but with a voice,’ love-plaint by Keats, Elizabethan echo in,157-8‘Z’ PapersinBlackwood, gibes of at Hunt and Keats,301-3,307-8,474; fatal duel fought over,519‘Zack,’4Zanconi, Milanese prints by,325n.
Letters of, to Taylor and another, on Keats,368List of Books in Keats’s Library, compiled by,556-8Memorial volume on Keats, planned by, with Taylor,529,seeWoodhouse TranscriptsSonnet by, on ‘Poems,’131on the Date ofIn a drear-nighted December,158on the Inspiration of the two sonnetsWhen I have Fears, andTime’s Sea, and the linesFrom my despairing heart,259& n.onHyperion,426-7; onIsabella, on Keats’s reading aloud and on the changes inEve of St Agnes,366-7; on Keats’s character and poetry,368; on a Long talk with Keats (1819),366et sqq.
Letters of, to Taylor and another, on Keats,368
List of Books in Keats’s Library, compiled by,556-8
Memorial volume on Keats, planned by, with Taylor,529,seeWoodhouse Transcripts
Sonnet by, on ‘Poems,’131
on the Date ofIn a drear-nighted December,158
on the Inspiration of the two sonnetsWhen I have Fears, andTime’s Sea, and the linesFrom my despairing heart,259& n.
onHyperion,426-7; onIsabella, on Keats’s reading aloud and on the changes inEve of St Agnes,366-7; on Keats’s character and poetry,368; on a Long talk with Keats (1819),366et sqq.
Woodhouse Transcripts in Crewe MSS.,259n.
Lent by Taylor to Milnes,533
Lent by Taylor to Milnes,533
Woollett, W., engraver of ‘The Enchanted Castle,’265n.
‘Word-of-all-work, Love,’ phrase of George Eliot,549n.
Words, lax use of, and free modification of, inEndymion,212-13
Wordsworth, Dorothy,250,290
Wordsworth, Mrs,250
Wordsworth, Rev. Christopher,245
Wordsworth, William,244; absent on Keats’s visit to Rydal,274
Appearance, voice, manner and mannerisms of,79,249Bailey’s acquaintance with,133Characteristics of,246,249,315Conversation of, Hazlitt on,251Fame of, steady growth of,526Friendship of, with Haydon,62,462& n.Genius of, compared with that of Keats,234,267-8,484; Bridges and the author on,128-9
Appearance, voice, manner and mannerisms of,79,249
Bailey’s acquaintance with,133
Characteristics of,246,249,315
Conversation of, Hazlitt on,251
Fame of, steady growth of,526
Friendship of, with Haydon,62,462& n.
Genius of, compared with that of Keats,234,267-8,484; Bridges and the author on,128-9
in relation to that of Milton, Keats on,266
in relation to that of Milton, Keats on,266
and Greek mythology,125-6,220Head of, in Haydon’s picture,462& n.Hunt’s verdict on,44Keats’s meeting with and relations with,245et sqq.and Kingston,246et sqq.,251Letter from, to Reynolds on his poemThe Naiad,64Poetry of,21,196n.
and Greek mythology,125-6,220
Head of, in Haydon’s picture,462& n.
Hunt’s verdict on,44
Keats’s meeting with and relations with,245et sqq.
and Kingston,246et sqq.,251
Letter from, to Reynolds on his poemThe Naiad,64
Poetry of,21,196n.
Disuse in, of the older verseforms,108,119Influence of, on Keats, seen in
Disuse in, of the older verseforms,108,119
Influence of, on Keats, seen in
Endymion,125,126,233-4La Belle Dame,350
Endymion,125,126,233-4
La Belle Dame,350
Keats’s appreciation of,145-6, and critical judgments on,251-2,263,267Local influences on,2Poems of humble life, attitude to, of the Hunt circle,121,348Poems of tragic life,121Stanzas on Burns, countered by Keats in ‘Bards of Passion,’387
Keats’s appreciation of,145-6, and critical judgments on,251-2,263,267
Local influences on,2
Poems of humble life, attitude to, of the Hunt circle,121,348
Poems of tragic life,121
Stanzas on Burns, countered by Keats in ‘Bards of Passion,’387
Political change of view of,45Reminiscence of, in theSolitudesonnet by Keats,90
Political change of view of,45
Reminiscence of, in theSolitudesonnet by Keats,90
Sonnets
Sonnets
of God-speed to Scott,525n.to Haydon, three,65
of God-speed to Scott,525n.
to Haydon, three,65
Scotch tour of, with his sister,290Wilson’s attitude to, inNoctes Ambrosianæ,300on Keats’sHymn to Pan,227,249; on the Poetic Revolution,119; on the Sources of poetic Inspiration,89; on Vowel-variation,401-2
Scotch tour of, with his sister,290
Wilson’s attitude to, inNoctes Ambrosianæ,300
on Keats’sHymn to Pan,227,249; on the Poetic Revolution,119; on the Sources of poetic Inspiration,89; on Vowel-variation,401-2
World-sadness, Keats on, and on the duty of relieving it,448-9et sqq.
Written on the day that Mr Leigh Hunt left Prison, sonnet (Keats),23
Written in disgust of Vulgar Superstition, sonnet (Keats),91
Wylie, Georgiana Augusta (afterwards Mrs George Keats, and later Mrs Jeffrey),141; engagement of, to George Keats,24,34
Keats’s poems written for,34,86,89,269,270Marriage of,268,269,271; second marriage,331; hereafterseeJeffrey, Mrs,andKeats, George and his wife
Keats’s poems written for,34,86,89,269,270
Marriage of,268,269,271; second marriage,331; hereafterseeJeffrey, Mrs,andKeats, George and his wife
Wylie family,366
Young Poets, essay (Hunt)
Beginners of promise referred to,54,69Keats’s Chapman Sonnet printed in,54
Beginners of promise referred to,54,69
Keats’s Chapman Sonnet printed in,54
‘You say you love, but with a voice,’ love-plaint by Keats, Elizabethan echo in,157-8
‘Z’ PapersinBlackwood, gibes of at Hunt and Keats,301-3,307-8,474; fatal duel fought over,519
‘Zack,’4
Zanconi, Milanese prints by,325n.