John Keats

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Standard Name: Keats, John

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Literary responses Adelaide Procter
The Spectator greeted this collection effusively as without question the most promising of any first appearance in this century, except that of Keats , and the Saturday Review asserted, presumably with reference to Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Literary responses Mary Tighe
When Thomas Moore read Psyche he expressed his pleasure to MT in a short lyric which calls her by the name of her protagonist, Psyche; at her death he eulogised her by the same...
Literary responses Mary Tighe
As soon as it was brought to public attention (as the work of a woman who had died tragically young), Psyche attracted a rush of attention. The Quarterly Review accorded Tighe high praise as being...
Literary responses Florence Dixie
Holyoake , the dedicatee, in his prefatory piece (like W. Stewart Ross commenting on The Story of Ijain) defends FD 's work not only by assertion (it is a a marvel of thought...
Occupation John Wilson Croker
JWC became a lawyer, (moving from Ireland to London after the Act of Union) a Tory MP, an editor of several eighteenth-century texts (including letters by Lady Hervey and by Henrietta Howard, Lady Suffolk )...
Occupation Frances Horovitz
Through this experience she met the literary biographer Robert Gittings . She built with him a professional partnership to work on interpretations of John Keats and Thomas Hardy , of whom Gittings was writing biographies...
Publishing Percy Bysshe Shelley
PBS had Adonais, his elegy on the death of Keats , printed at Pisa. He sent a copy of this edition to John Gisborne on this date. The poem was printed at London...
Publishing Dorothy Wellesley
DW 's introductions are largely biographical. After these first books she got her series taken on by Collins for The English Poets, a subset of their series Britain in Pictures (of whose editorial committee...
Publishing Natalie Clifford Barney
The volume was published in a limited edition of 680.
Barney, Natalie Clifford. Poems & poèmes. Émile-Paul Frères and George H. Doran.
back matter
A translucent interleaf bearing words from Keats 's Ode to Psyche: . . . A casement ope at night / To let...
Publishing Antonia Fraser
She followed it with Love Letters: An Anthology, dedicated to Harold Pinter and published in later 1976.
Fraser, Antonia. Must You Go?. Random House of Canada.
62
Writing about this book in the Times on 6 November that year, AF noted that she...
Publishing Doreen Wallace
DW 's next novel, Creatures of an Hour, which also appeared in 1933 (title adapted from a love-poem by Keats ), was her last before she switched, in 1934, her publisher from Ernest Benn
Reception Mary Howitt
MH 's biographer Joy Dunicliff credits her with introducing the reading public to both Keats and Gaskell .
Dunicliff, Joy. Mary Howitt: Another Lost Victorian Writer. Excalibur Press of London.
1
Reception Jane Porter
It was then eighteen months since the failure of Switzerland. Mitford's hard-heartedness towards her was juxtaposed with pity for Keats , whom she believed to be dying as a result of the Quarterly's...
Textual Features Sylvia Townsend Warner
One poem, Wish in Spring, opposes Keats 's notion that writing poetry comes naturally: STW points out that it is a difficult activity which takes great care.
Warner, Sylvia Townsend. “Editorial Materials”. Sylvia Townsend Warner: Collected Poems, edited by Claire Harman, Carcanet New Press, pp. xi - xxiii; 275.
xviii
Textual Features Carol Ann Duffy
Titled simply September 2014 and headed with a Gaelic greeting that translates as I love you, this short poem highlights the shared prickliness of the two national symbols and the pilgrimage of an English...

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