The Letters and Peoms of John Keats ...Dodd, Mead, 1883 |
З цієї книги
Результати 1-5 із 21
Сторінка xii
... nature , and high - spirited enough to follow him to the banks of the Mississippi . As all the letters in this book show , John Keats had a very lively affection for his brother's wife , and it is thus that he wrote to Bailey of her ...
... nature , and high - spirited enough to follow him to the banks of the Mississippi . As all the letters in this book show , John Keats had a very lively affection for his brother's wife , and it is thus that he wrote to Bailey of her ...
Сторінка 7
... nature that all pleasure is entirely lost . Hone , the publisher's trial , you must find very amusing , and , as English- men , very encouraging : his Not Guilty is a thing , which not to have been , would have dulled still more ...
... nature that all pleasure is entirely lost . Hone , the publisher's trial , you must find very amusing , and , as English- men , very encouraging : his Not Guilty is a thing , which not to have been , would have dulled still more ...
Сторінка 49
... nature ; but his last moments were not so painful , and his very last was without a pang . I will not enter into any parsonic comments on death . Yet the commonest observa- tions of the commonest people on death are true as their ...
... nature ; but his last moments were not so painful , and his very last was without a pang . I will not enter into any parsonic comments on death . Yet the commonest observa- tions of the commonest people on death are true as their ...
Сторінка 65
... nature transform a man into a Silenus ; this makes him a Hermes , and gives a woman the soul and immortality of an Ariadne , for whom Bac- chus always kept a good cellar of claret , and even of that he never could persuade her to take ...
... nature transform a man into a Silenus ; this makes him a Hermes , and gives a woman the soul and immortality of an Ariadne , for whom Bac- chus always kept a good cellar of claret , and even of that he never could persuade her to take ...
Сторінка 70
... nature , the hawk would lose his breakfast of robins , and the robin his worms ; the lion must starve as well as the swallow . The great part of men sway their way with the same instinctiveness , the same unwandering eye from their ...
... nature , the hawk would lose his breakfast of robins , and the robin his worms ; the lion must starve as well as the swallow . The great part of men sway their way with the same instinctiveness , the same unwandering eye from their ...
Інші видання - Показати все
Загальні терміни та фрази
affectionate friend afraid amusement Bailey beautiful Bedhampton called Charles Cowden Clarke cottage Covent Garden dare DEAR BROTHERS DEAR BROWN DEAR REYNOLDS DEAREST FANNY death delight Derwent Water Devonshire Dilke endeavour Endymion England eyes Fanny Brawne feel George Keats give glad Hampstead happy Haslam hate Haydon Hazlitt head hear heard heart Helvellyn hope Hunt imagination Isle of Wight JOHN KEATS Joseph Severn Keats's ladies leave letter live look Lord Lord Byron mind Miss morning mother never pain pass perhaps pleasant pleasure poem poet poetry poor Port Patrick remember Rice sensation Severn Shakspeare Shanklin sincere friend sister sonnet sort soul speak spirit Staffa street talk TEIGNMOUTH tell thee thing thought tion to-day to-morrow town verses walk week whole Winchester wish woman word Wordsworth write written wrote yesterday