Selected Letters of John KeatsFarrar, Straus and Young, 1951 - 282 páginas |
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Página 116
... look'd into it - Are these facts or prejudices ? Whatever they are , for them I shall never be able to relish entirely any devonshire scenery- Homer is very fine , Achilles is fine , Diomed is fine , Shakspeare is fine , Hamlet is fine ...
... look'd into it - Are these facts or prejudices ? Whatever they are , for them I shall never be able to relish entirely any devonshire scenery- Homer is very fine , Achilles is fine , Diomed is fine , Shakspeare is fine , Hamlet is fine ...
Página 117
... look On Mists in idleness : to let fair things Pass by unheeded as a threshhold brook . He hath his Winter too of pale Misfeature , Or else he would forget his mortal nature . Aye this may be carried - but what am I talking of — it is ...
... look On Mists in idleness : to let fair things Pass by unheeded as a threshhold brook . He hath his Winter too of pale Misfeature , Or else he would forget his mortal nature . Aye this may be carried - but what am I talking of — it is ...
Página 229
... look with such eyes upon me as I have upon you : it cannot be . Forgive me if I wander a little this evening , for I have been all day employ'd in a very abstr [ a ] ct Poem1 and I am in deep love with you - two things which must excuse ...
... look with such eyes upon me as I have upon you : it cannot be . Forgive me if I wander a little this evening , for I have been all day employ'd in a very abstr [ a ] ct Poem1 and I am in deep love with you - two things which must excuse ...
Contenido
Introduction by Lionel Trilling | 3 |
A Note on the Text | 43 |
The Selected Letters | 55 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Abbey able affectionate Brother John affraid Bailey beautiful Bedhampton BENJAMIN ROBERT HAYDON Book Brown called CHARLES COWDEN CLARKE dear Fanny dear Keats dear Reynolds death delight Dilke endeavour Endymion evil eyes FANNY BRAWNE FANNY KEATS feel Friday friend John Keats George George Keats give glad Hampstead happy Haslam Hazlitt hear heart hope human Hunt's idea imagination JOHN HAMILTON REYNOLDS Keats's King Lear Ladies Leigh Hunt live look mean Milton mind Miss Monday morning mother nature never night pain pass passage perhaps pleasant pleasure poem poet Poetry problem of evil seems Severn Shakespeare Shelley Sister sonnet soon sort Soul speak spirits Sunday Taylor and Hessey Teignmouth tell thing THOMAS KEATS thought Thursday tion town truth Tuesday walk Walthamstow Wentworth Place wish Woodhouse word Wordsworth write written wrote yesterday Your's