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tainly some of his work is merely, and some even crudely, sensuous but this is work in which the poet was trying his materials and his powers, and rising towards mastery of his real faculty and ultimate function.

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While discriminating between what was excellent in Keats, and what was not excellent, or was merely tentative in the direction of final excellence, we must not confuse endowments, or the homage which is due to endowments, of a radically different order. Many readers, and there have been among them several men highly qualified to pronounce, have set Keats beside his great contemporary Shelley, and indeed above him. I cannot do this. To me it seems that the primary gift of Shelley, the spirit in which he exercised it, the objects upon which he exercised it, the detail and the sum of his achievement, the actual produce in appraisable work done, the influence and energy of the work in the future, were all superior to those of Keats, and even superior beyond any reasonable terms of comparison. If Shelley's poems had defects-which they indisputably had-Keats's poems also had defects. After all that can be said in their praise—and this should be said in the most generous or rather grateful and thankful spirit-it seems to me true that not many of Keats's poems are highly admirable; that most of them, amid all their beauty, have) an adolescent and frequently a morbid tone, marking want of manful thew and sinew and of mental balance; that he is not seldom obscure, chiefly through indifference to the thought itself and its necessary means of development; that he is emotional without substance, and beautiful without control; and that personalism of a

wilful and fitful kind pervades the mass of his handiwork. We have already seen, however, that there is a certain not inconsiderable proportion of his poems to which these exceptions do not apply, or apply only with greatly diminished force; and, as a last expression of our large and abiding debt to him and to his well-loved memory, we recur to his own words, and say that he has given us many a "thing of beauty," which will remain "a joy for, ever." By his early death he was doomed to be the poet of youthfulness; by being the poet of youthfulness he was privileged to become and to remain enduringly the poet of rapt expectation and passionate delight.

THE END.

INDEX.

A,

Abbey, Guardian of Keats, 17, 19,

20, 29, 37, 39

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Blackwood's Magazine, 90; articles
in by Z, on The Cockney School
of Poetry, 91; 92, 93, 95, 97, 98,

99, 100, 103, 104, 153
Boccaccio's "Decameron," 107,
180, 181

Boileau, 70

Bojardo's "Orlando Innamorato,"
114

Brawne, Fanny, engaged to Keats,
30, 32; Keats's description of
her, 33; 34, 35, 36, 38, 40, 42,
44, 45; Keats's love-letters to
her, 45-46, &c. ; 53, 57, 60, 62,
102; her marriage to Mr. Lin-
don, 121; 130, 141, 143, 146,
147, 158, 160; poems to, 202
Brawne, Mrs., 29, 34, 36, 60, 61,
143
Brown, Charles Armitage, friend
of Keats, 25; Keats's verses on,
26; 27, 28, 29, 33, 38, 39, 41, 42,
43, 46, 48, 53; letter from Keats
to, 55-56, 59, 108, 111, 112, 114,
116, 119; his death, 120; 136,
156, 157, 160, 206
Burton's " Anatomy of Melan-
choly," 108

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'Chapman's Homer," sonnet by
Keats, 66, 69, 165, 166, 203
Chartier, Alain, 112

Chatterton, 67, 68
Chaucer, 112

Christ's Entry into Jerusalem, pic-
ture by Haydon, 21, 36, 43, 126,
158

"Christmas Eve," sonnet by

Keats, quoted, 157
Clark, Mrs., 60
Clark, Sir James, 59, 60
Clarke, Charles Cowden, precep-

tor and friend of Keats, 14, 18,
19, 20, 25, 65, 66; his "Recol-
lections," 102; 104, 125, 126,
129, 140, 148

Clarke, Epistle to, by Keats, 67,
68

Clarke, Rev. John, Keats's school-

master, 14

Coleridge, 25, 151, 164

Coleridge's "Christabel," 185
Colman, 156

Colvin's, Mr., "Life of Keats," 9,

35, 42

"Comus," by Milton, 115

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Edinburgh Review, 109, 117
Edouart, 35

"Endymion," by Keats, 23, 24,

25, 54, 67, 72; details as to the
composition of, 76; preface to,
79, 80; criticism upon in The
Quarterly Review, 83; Keats's
feeling as to this and other
criticisms, 91-106; 107, 108,
109, 122, 130, 137, 139, 141, 149,
152, 166; Shelley's opinion of,
167; summary of the poem,
175; critical estimate of it, 176–
180; 182, 186, 188, 189, 190
Examiner, The, 21, 68, 100
Eyre, Sir Vincent, 119

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