JOHN KEATS AND HIS POETRY

... I JOHN KEATS AND HIS POETRY. (Fronilb Dahe.gli Ussiers ftp Mlapoeie.,) t Boccacio furnished Keats with lthe material of his ooen,-Isubella, or the Pot of Basil, being only an h rendering' of one of his immortal prosel tales. It begins thus pleasantly ...

Poetry

... 0 l retp. ON RECEIVING A CROWN OF IVY FROM JOHN KEATS. BY LZIGH HUNT. A crown of ivy ! I submit my head To the young hand that gives it-young, 'tie true, But with a right, for 'tis a poet's too. Bow. pleasant the leaves feel! and how they spread With ...

Original

... as mousy!- Liverpool. ( POSTHUMOUS rOETIfR. In one of our leading miscellanies there are some stanzas bearing the name of John Keats, and given as hitherto unpub. lisbed. If the well-kuorwn and unfortunate Keats be the author, h~is ghost ought to haunt ...

POETRY

... Evil thoughts that would enslave thee. God is in thee! Mortal, fear not: Trust in Hinm, and He will save thee] SONNET OF JOHN KEATS, WRITTEN ON LEIGH HUNT'S STORY OF RIMINI. We are indebted for the following beautiful sonnet to a friend who possesses ...

TWO SONNETS ON THE G

... TWO SONNETS ON THE GRASSHOPPER AND CRICKET, [FROM POEMS BY JOHN KEATS.] The poetry of earth is never dead; When all the birds are faint with the hot sun, And hide in cooling trees, a voice will run From hedge to hedge about the new-mown mead; That is ...

ORIGINAL POETRY

... wild resolve Ttiht dare would all for thee; * Faithless, and fickle as the wind_ Oh! he cannot love like me! J. $ONNETS.-BY JOHN KEATS Kr.E fitful gusts are whispering here and there Among the bushes, half leafless and dry; The stars look very cold about ...

Poetry

... - ON RECEIVING A CROWN OF IVY FROM JOHN KEATS. BY B1IGH HUNT. A crown of ivy ! I submit my head To the young hand that gives it-young, 'tis true, But with a right, for 'tis a poet's too. How pleasant the leaves feel ! and how they spread With their broad ...

THE MAGAZINES

... lished Sonnet, by the late John Keats, the last be ever wrote, which we give to our readers, and wish that we could give it in the imitation of the poet's writing, as it is given in the magazine:- SONNET BY THE LATE JOHN KEATS. Bright star ! would I were ...

Published: Sunday 15 February 1846
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1227 | Page: 6 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

Poetry

... V)Ctr-ol. , ON RECEIVING A CROWN OF IVY FROM JOHN KEATS. BY LZIGH HUNT. A crown of ivy! I submit my head To the young hand that gives it-young, 'tistrue, But with a right, for 'tis a poet's too, How pleasant t e leaves feel ! and how they spread With ...

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... boldness or grace. True-the two people are no more to be brought into comparison than two such poets as CAMPBELL and the late JoHN KEATS: the former, for instance, is the beau-ideal of polished grace and precision; the latter, of unpremeditated elegance,-leaving ...

LITERATURE

... There are, however, some dozen excel- lent articles, of which Some Remarks on Coningsby, by Real England, i very timely. John Keats, Robert Broovrsing, and Mrs. S. C. Hall, are aimsong the names of the writers. THE HnAe.D OF ?? is the first number of a ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... and To put a spirit of youth in every tliing,- is, we believe, the yotn,,est of tdem all, and just of are. His name is JOHN KEATS. ?? has not yet pu blishled atny tlinig except in a neawspaper ; but a set of his inaisulcripts was handed us the other ...