Trova una copia online
Collegamenti a questo documento
Trova una copia in biblioteca
Stiamo ricercando le biblioteche che possiedono questo documento…
Dettagli
| Informazioni aggiuntive sul format: | Online version: Keats, John, 1795-1821. Complete poetical works and letters of John Keats. Boston, New York, Houghton, Mifflin and company, c1899 (OCoLC)609279730 |
|---|---|
| Persona incaricata: | John Keats |
| Tipo materiale: | Risorsa internet |
| Tipo documento: | Book, Internet Resource |
| Tutti gli autori / Collaboratori: |
John Keats; Horace Elisha Scudder |
| Numero OCLC: | 276921 |
| Descrizione: | xxiv p., 473 p. front. (port.) |
| Contenuti: | Biographical sketch -- Early poems -- Imitation of Spenser -- On death -- To Chatterton -- To Byron -- Woman! when I behold thee flippant, vain -- To some ladies -- On receiving a curious shell and a copy of verses from the same ladies -- Written on the day that Mr. Leigh Hunt left prison -- To Hope -- Ode to Apollo -- Hymn to Apollo -- To a young lady who sent me a laurel crown -- Sonnet: How many bards gild the lapses of time -- Sonnet: Keen, fitful gusts are whisp'ring here and there -- Spenserian stanza, written at the close of Canto II., book V., of the Faerie Queen -- On leaving some friends at an early hour -- On first looking into Chapman's Homer -- Epistle to George Felton Mathew -- To ___: Hadst thou liv'd in days of old -- Sonnet: As from the darkening gloom a silver dove -- Sonnet to solitude -- Sonnet: To one who has sent me some roses -- Sonnet: Oh! how I love, on a fair summer's eve -- I stood tiptoe upon a little hill -- Sleep and poetry -- Epistle to my brother George -- To my brother George -- To ___: Had I a man's fair form, then I might my sighs -- Speciman of an induction to a poem -- Calidore: a fragment -- Epistle to Charles Cowden Clark -- To my brothers -- Addressed to Benjamin Robert Haydon -- To Kosciusko -- To G. A. W. -- Stanzas: In a drear-nighted December -- Written in disgust of vulgar superstition -- Sonnet: Happy is England! I could be content -- On the grasshopper and the cricket -- Sonnet: After dark vapours have oppress'd our plains -- Written on the blank space at the end of Chaucer's Tale of the floure and the lefe -- On seeing the Elgin marbles -- To Haydon (with the preceding sonnett) -- To Leigh Hunt, Esq. -- On the sea -- Lines: Unfelt, unheard, unseen -- On___ Think not of it, sweet one, so -- On a picture of Leander -- On Leigh Hunt's poem The story of Rimini -- Sonnet: When I have fears that I may cease to be On seeing a lock of Milton's hair -- On sitting down to read King Lear once again -- Lines on the Mermaid tavern -- Robi Hood -- To the Nile -- To Spenser -- Song written on a blank page in Beaumont and Fletcher's works between 'Cupids revenge' and 'The two noble kinsmen' -- Fagment: Welcome joy and welcome sorrow -- What the thrush said -- In answer to a sonnet ending thus: 'Dark eyes are dearer far than those that mock the hyacinthine bell' -- To John Hamilton Reynolds -- To the Human seasons -- Endymion -- The Poems of 1818-1819 -- Isabella, or the pot of basil -- To Homer -- Fragment of an ode to Maia -- Song: Hush, hush! tread softly! hush, hush, my dear! -- Verses written during a tour in Scotland -- On visiting the tomb of Burns -- To Ailsa Rock -- Written in the cottage where Burns was born -- At Fingal's Cave -- Written upon the top of Ben Nevis -- Tranlation from a sonnet of Ronsard -- To a lady seen for a few moments at Vauxhall -- Fancy -- Ode: Bards of passion and mirth -- Song: I had a dove and the sweet dove died -- Ode on melancholy -- The Eve of St. Agnes -- Ode on a Grecian urn -- Ode on indolence -- Sonnet: Why did I laugh tonight? No voice will tell -- Ode to Fanny -- A Dream, after reading Dante's Episode of Paolo and Francesca -- La belle dame sans merci -- Choris of fairies -- Faery songs: -- Shed no tear! O shed no tear -- Ah! Woe is me! poor silverwing! -- On fame -- Another on fame -- To sleep -- Ode to Psyche -- Sonnet: If by dull rhymes our English must be chain'd -- Ode to a nightingale -- Lamia Dramas -- Otho the great: a tragedy in five acts -- King Stephen: a dramatic fragment -- The Eve of St. Mark -- Hyperion: a fragment -- To Autumn -- Verses to Fanny Brawne -- Sonnet: The day is gone and all its sweets are gone -- Lines to Fanny -- To Fanny: I cry your mercy-pity-love-ay,love! -- The Cap and bells; or the jealousies -- The Last sonnet -- Supplementary verse -- Hyperion: a vision -- Fragments -- Where's the poet? show him! show him! -- Modern love -- Fragment of the Castle builder -- Extracts from an opera: O! were I one of the Olympian twelve -- Daisy's song -- Folly's song -- Oh, I am frighten'd with most hateful thought! -- Song: The stranger lighted from his steed -- Asleep! O sleep a little while, white pearl -- Familiar verses: Stanzas to Miss Wylie -- Epistle to John Hamilton Reynolds -- A Draught of sunshine -- At Teignmouth -- The Devon maid -- Acrostic: Georgiana Augusta Keats -- Meg Merrilies -- A Song about myself -- To Thomas Keats -- The Gadfly -- On hearing the bagpipe and seeing the stranger played at Inverary -- Lines written in the Highlands after a visit to Burn's country -- Mrs. Cameron and Ben Nevis -- Sharing Eve's apple -- A Prophecy: to George Keats in America -- A Little extempore -- Spenserian stanzas on Charles Armitage Brown -- Two or three posies -- A Party of lovers -- To George Keats: written in sickness -- On Oxford -- To a cat. |
| Titolo della serie: | Cambridge edition of the poets. |
Commenti
Commenti degli utenti
Aggiungi un commento e condividi il tuo pensiero con gli altri lettori.
Diventa il primo.
Aggiungi un commento e condividi il tuo pensiero con gli altri lettori.
Diventa il primo.
Etichette
Aggiungi etichette: per "The complete poetical works and letters of John Keats.".
Diventa il primo.
