JOHN KEATS
... JOHN KEATS SECRETS OF HIS GENIUS. CENTENARY OF POET'S DEATH. • ...
... JOHN KEATS SECRETS OF HIS GENIUS. CENTENARY OF POET'S DEATH. • ...
... JOHN KEATS John Keats, His Life and Poetry, His friends. Critics, and After-Fame,” bidnev Colvin 'Macmillan and Co.), is splendid work that will, if anything, add the fame of its distinguished author. It will probably be many years before such another ...
... JOHN KEATS: THE LIVING YEAR Robert Gittings Mr. Gittings is a gentle and faithful biographer who has seized on an excellent theme and made living use of it. . . There is something deeply moving in the picture which emerges of this marvellous youth. ...
... John Keats From a drawing by Joseph Severn. mer, to “move,” and Keats occupied with the first version of “Hmerion.“ About a month later he records, in a letter to his brother George, his reencounter with a friend he had previously met at Hastings while ...
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... JOHN KEATS Keats, when he died, had just , and-twentieth year. wa9 under j{il height; and his lower limbs were small , * with the upper, but neat and well * shoulders were very broad for hi* '' ' ' e face in which energy and sensibility j iio ably mixed ...
... John Keats | He was riding on a ’bus and reading the shorter poems of John > Keats—a small, red-cloth volume, | easily pushed into the pocket. got into conversation with him. e isn’t often I come upon I anyone reading Keats,” I ventured though I’ve seen ...
... JOHN KEATS. Joint Kura was born in London, October 29th, 1796, and was the son of a livery. stable proprietor in Finsbury, and was • sent, when about the age of five years, to Mr. Clarke's school, at Enfield. While there that intellectual ambition which ...
... JOHN KEATS. At a time like this when we hear so much talk—some sincere and some vapid—about the mission of lyouth in reconstruction and youth coming into Ito own, the centenary of the death of John Keats , has a special significance. Here was a youth ...
... JOHN KEATS. (By Arthur Symon 3 in the 'Monthly Review.) Keats had the courage of the intellect and the cowardice of the nerves. That terrier-like resoluteness which schoolfellow observed in him as boy was still strong when the first certainty of hia ...
... JOHN KEATS. His life was writ in water, but on ours He aoatter'd beauty with a royal hand, Like one who toils upon a foreign strand To fill another's distant path with flowers ; Or one who, sorrowing all night's sleepless hours, Goes forth with comfort ...
... JOHN KEATS.* m It is not very lon;. since two biographies of an English p ...