Catalog

Record Details

Catalog Search



Complete poems and selected letters  Cover Image Book Book

Complete poems and selected letters / Edited by Clarence De Witt Thorpe.

Record details

  • Physical Description: liii, 666 pages : frontispiece (portrait) ; 19 cm.
  • Publisher: Garden City, N.Y. : Doubleday, Doran & Co., [1935]

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note:
"A selected bibliography": l-lii.
Formatted Contents Note:
Introduction -- Keat's life and background -- The humanitarian Keats -- Keat's realism -- Keats the craftsman -- The philosophic Keats -- The chief events in Keat's life -- A selected bibliography -- Imitation of Spenser -- Fill for me a brimming bowl -- On death -- Sonnet to Byron -- Sonnet on peace -- Stay, ruby-breasted warbler -- Sonnet to Chatterton -- Written on the day that Mr. Leigh Hunt left prison -- To hope -- Ode to Apollo -- Anniversary of Charles II's restoration -- Three sonnets on women -- To some ladies -- On receiving a curious shell, and a copy of verses -- Sonnet to a young lady who sent me a laurel crown -- To George Felton Mathew -- Solitude -- To... (Georgiana Augusta Wylie, afterwards Mrs. George Keats) -- On an engraved gem of Leander -- The poet's music -- To Emma -- Women, wind, and snuff -- Apollo and the graces -- Hither, hither, love -- You say you love -- Specimen of an induction to a poem -- Calidore -- To one long in city pent -- To a friend who sent me some roses -- Oh how I love -- The poet -- To my brother George (Many the wonders) -- To my brother George (Full many a dreary hour -- To Charles Cowden Clarke -- On first looking into Chapman's Homer -- Highmindedness, a jealousy for good -- Great spirits now on earth -- Before he went to feed with owls -- Sonnet on receiving a Laurel Crown from Leigh Hunt -- Sonnet to the ladies who saw me crown'd -- Hymn to Apollo -- To my brothers -- Keen fitful gusts -- On leaving some friends at an early hour -- I stood tip-toe -- Sleep and poetry -- Had I a man's fair form -- To Kosciusko -- Happy is England -- To G. A. W. -- Sonnet written in disgust of vulgar superstition -- As from the darkening gloom -- On the grasshopper and cricket -- After dark vapours -- Dedication to Leigh Hunt, Esq. -- On Leigh Hunt's poem "The story of Rimini" -- Written on the blank space of a leaf at the end of Chaucer's Tale... -- To Haydon -- On seeing the elgin marbles for the first time -- On the sea -- Endymion -- On Oxford -- Think not of it, sweet one -- Unfelt, unheard, unseen -- In a drear-nighted December -- Sonnet to a cat -- Lines on seeing a lock of Milton's hair -- On sitting down to read King Lear once again -- When I have fears -- Sharing Eve's apple -- Hence burgundy, claret, and port -- A song of opposites -- Robin Hood -- Lines on the Mermaid Tavern -- To a lady seen for a few moments at Vauxhall -- To the Nile -- To Spenser -- Answer to a sonnet by J. H. Reynolds -- Some doggerel sent in a letter to B. R. Haydon -- What the thrush said -- Extracts from an opera -- Faery songs -- Spirit here that reignest -- Modern love -- To Homer -- The human seasons -- The castle builder -- The Devon maid -- Dawlish fair -- Epistle to John Hamilton Reynolds -- Isabella -- Sonnet to J. R. -- Frogment of an ode to Maia -- Acrostic -- Sweet is the greeting of eyes -- Sonnet on visiting the tomb of Burns -- A song about myself -- meg Merrilies -- A Galloway song -- To Ailsa rock -- Written in the cottage where Burns was born -- Lines -- The gadfly -- On hearing the bag-pipe and seeing "The Stranger" played at Inverary -- Staffa -- Written upon the top of Ben Nevis -- Ben Nevis -- Where's the poet? -- Spenserian stanza -- Translation from a sonnet of Ronsard -- A prophecy to his brother George in America -- Fancy -- Ode -- I had a dove -- Hush, hush! tread softly -- Ode to Fanny -- Hyperion -- The eve of St. Agnes -- The eve of St. Mark -- Why did I laugh -- Bright star -- An extempore -- Spenserian stanzas on Charles Armitage Brown -- On a dream -- Tosleep -- Two sonnets on fame -- Song of four fairies -- Two or three -- La belle dame sans merci (original) -- La belle dame sans merci (revised) -- Ode to psyche -- On the sonnet -- Ode on indolence -- Ode to a nightingale -- Ode on a Grecian urn -- Ode on melancholy -- Lamia -- A party of lovers -- To autumn -- The day is gone -- Line to Fanny -- Lines supposed to have been addressed to Fanny Brawne -- To Fanny -- The fall of Hyperion -- Otho the great -- King Stephen -- The cap and bells -- Letters --
Subject: English poetry > 18th century
English literature > 18th century > Poetry.
Authors, English > 18th century

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at Sage Library System. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Treasure Valley Community College. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Treasure Valley Community College Library.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Circulation Modifier Status Due Date Courses
Treasure Valley Community College Library 821.78 K224c (Text) 32220000618443 Adult Non-Fiction Available -


Additional Resources