Grecian Urn, See ODE ON A GRECIAN URN Gyges, an imprisoned Titan in HYPERION, 300 Hackney coach, address to a, 529 Hammond (Thomas), Keats apprenticed to, xxix Handel, 44 66 Happy is England! I could be content," Sonnet, 58 TEIGNMOUTH : Some Doggerel," His "fresh magnificence," 352 Keats's introduction to, xxix Henry the Fowler, 457 Hermes visits Crete in quest of a certain nymph, 207 Hero, 109 Hesperides, 121 HIGHLANDS, LINES WRITTEN IN THE (1818), 386-8 HOMER, SONNET ON FIRST LOOKING INTO CHAPMAN'S, 54 SONNET TO (1818), 354 Horses with wings, journey of Endymion and the Indian on, 180-8 Houghton (Lord), his editions of Keats, xvi-vii "How many bards gild the lapses of time!" Sonnet, 49 Hum, a soothsayer in THE CAP AND BELLS, 527 HUMAN SEASONS (THE), Sonnet of 1818, 359 Hunt (James Henry Leigh), Dedication of Keats's first book to, 3 Sonnet written on the day he left Prison, 48-9 Sonnet on Keats's first introduction to, 52-3 Described as a "great spirit," 56 His remarks on THE EVE OF ST. AGNES, xxiv Hyacinthus, the legend of, 89 Hymn for Diana's Wedding in ENDYMION, 186-8 HYPERION, promise of, in the preface to ENDYMION, 78 Book I, 289-99; Book II, 299-311 Fragment of Book III, 311-15 Originally meant to be as long as ENDYMION, 203 Dates connected with, xxx-xxxi Published at the wish of Messrs. Taylor and Hessey, 203 Hyperion, hero of the poem, his unsecure sovereignty, 294, 329 Is heartened by his father Cœlus, 298-9 His entry among the fallen Titans, 310 "I stood tip-toe upon a little hill," poem of 1816, 5-12 Iäpetus, a fallen Titan in HYPERION, 301, 311 Imagination, decay of, 66 IMITATION OF SPENSER, early poem, 27-8 Imogen, 109 Indian Maid (Diana in disguise) appears to Endymion, 170 Her renunciation, 192; her transfiguration, 199 Indicator (The), cancelled passage of ENDYMION from, xiii-iv, 566-7 Inverary, THE STRANGER and the Bag-pipe played at, 391 Ireland, visit to, xxx ISABELLA; OR, THE POT OF BASIL. A STORY FROM BOCCACCIO, 231-49 Finished by April 1818, xxx Portion of manuscript of, xii Invocation of Boccaccio in, 236-7 Isabella, or Isabel (heroine of THE POT OF BASIL), enamoured of Lorenzo, 231 Her merchant brothers and their pride, 235 Her brothers discover her intrigue with Lorenzo, 236 Their wish to marry her to some noble, 237 Her grief at the disappearance of Lorenzo, 239-40 Her expedition with her nurse to find the body, 243 Isabella, or Isabel-continued Takes home Lorenzo's head and plants basil over it, 245-6 Italy, longings for, 58 Jove, the rebel, Hyperion's threats against, 296 Kaims (De), character in KING STEPHEN, 508 Kean (Edmund), Keats criticizes, xxx KEATS (JOHN), Chronology of events, compositions, &c., xxix-xxxi His love for his brothers, xxiii His paternal affection for his orphan sister, xxiii His strictures on philosophy, 226 His early faults of versification, &c., xvii-xviii His feelings towards women, xxv-vi Faintness of lovers depicted by him, xxiv-v Keats family, American section of, xvii Keats (Frances Mary), or “Fanny Keats,” date of birth, xxix Keats (Frances), born Jennings, Keats's mother, date of death, xxix SONNET TO, 47; referred to, xxi SONNET TO, WRITTEN IN SICKNESS (1820?), 417-18 A Song by, xvii; his transcripts of John's poetry, xvii See PROPHECY (A) Keats (George and Thomas), Sonnet to, 52 Keats (Georgiana Augusta), scrap-book apparently belonging to, xvii Keats (Georgiana Emily), prophecy concerning, 394-5 Keats (Thomas) Senior, date of death, xxix Keats (Thomas) Junior, his birthday 18 November, xxix, 52 Date of his death, xxx "Keen, fitful gusts are whisp'ring here and there," Sonnet, 52-3 King's Teignton, a village near Teignmouth, 364 KOSCIUSKO, SONNET TO, 57 Kosciusko, "mightily forlorn," 72 "La belle dame sans mercy," See BELLE DAME SANS MERCI (LA) Lakes, visit to the, xxx LAMIA, ISABELLA, THE EVE of St. AgneS, AND OTHER POEMS, Date of publication, xxxi LAMIA, Part I, 207-19; Part II, 219-28 The manuscript, xii; referred to, xxv, xxx, xxxi Lamia in the form of a snake, described, 208-9 Is disenchanted by Hermes, 211 Is enamoured of Lycius, 210, 212, 213 Her enchanted house in Corinth, 218-19 Her unwillingness to be known to Lycius's friends, 221 Her magic preparations for the bridal feast, 222-3 Vanishes under the stare of the sophist Apollonius, 228 Latona, the temple of, 104 Latmus, the scene of ENDYMION, 81 Laurel Crown (a), See SONNET Leander, 141; Sonnet on a Picture of, 345-6 Leatherhead, stay at, xxx “Libertas ” (= Leigh Hunt), 37, 42 "Life is but a day," 63 LINES ("Unfelt, unheard, unseen"), 1817, 347 LINES ON THE MERMAID TAVERN, poem of 1818, 280-I LINES ON SEEING A LOCK OF MILTON'S HAIR (1818), 360-1 LINES TO FANNY (1819), 415-16 LINES WRITTEN IN THE HIGHLANDS AFTER A VISIT TO BURNS'S COUNTRY (1818), 386-8 Little John, 282, 283 Lorenzo, enamoured of Isabella, 231 Plot of Isabella's brothers to murder, 237; his murder, 239 Love, the top of the crown of humanity, 102 Its unknown might, 103 Its power increases with the height of the object, 104 The God, his jealousy of Lamia and Lycius, 219 Its "little sweet" kills "much bitterness," 234 The cousin of Selfishness, 240 "Love doth know no fullness, and no bounds," 347 One of the Shadows in the ODE ON INDOLENCE, 404 A day of love, 414 Lovel (Mr.) in THE ANTIQUARY alluded to, 390 LOVERS, A PARTY OF, verses of 1819, 413-14 LOVER'S COMPLAINT (A), Sonnet written in Shakespeare's Poems Lowther, "a Man in Parliament dumb-founder'd," 389 Ludolph (Prince), character in OTHO THE GREAT, 422 His remorse for his rebellion, 448 Reconciliation with his father, Otho the Great, 448 Lycidas, the "pontiff-priest" of Fingal's Cave, 392-3 Lycius, a youth of Corinth beloved of Lamia, 210, 212, 213 Proceeds to Corinth with her, 217 Desires to show her to his friends, 221; gains his point, 222 Madeline, in THe Eve of St. AgNES, her abstraction, 255 Her prayer at the painted window, 261 Is roused by Porphyro singing at her bedside, 263 |