Project Gutenberg's A Day with Keats, by May (Clarissa Gillington) Byron
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Title: A Day with Keats
Author: May (Clarissa Gillington) Byron
Illustrator: William James Neatby
Release Date: November 11, 2009 [EBook #30451]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
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DAYS WITH THE GREAT POETS
KEATS
[Illustration]
[_Painting by W. J. Neatby._ LA BELLE DAME SANS MERCI.
I met a lady in the meads
Full beautiful, a faery's child;
Her hair was long, her foot was light,
And her eyes were wild.]
A DAY WITH KEATS
BY
MAY BYRON
HODDER & STOUGHTON LTD.,
PUBLISHERS LONDON
_Uniform with this Volume_
DAYS WITH THE POETS
BROWNING
BURNS
KEATS
LONGFELLOW
SHAKESPEARE
TENNYSON
DAYS WITH THE COMPOSERS
BEETHOVEN
CHOPIN
GOUNOD
MENDELSSOHN
TSCHAIKOVSKY
WAGNER
_Made and Printed in Great Britain for Hodder & Stoughton, Limited,
by C. Tinling & Co., Ltd., Liverpool, London and Prescot._
A DAY WITH KEATS
About eight o'clock one morning in early summer, a young man may be
seen sauntering to and fro in the garden of Wentworth Place, Hampstead.
Wentworth Place consists of two houses only; in the first, John Keats is
established along with his friend Charles Armitage Brown. The second is
inhabited by a Mrs. Brawne and her family. They are wooden houses, with
festooning draperies of foliage: and the clean countrified air of
Hampstead comes with sweet freshness through the gardens, and fills the
young man with ecstatic delight. He gazes around him, with his weak dark
eyes, upon the sky, the flowers, the various minutiae of nature which
mean so much to him: and although he has severely tried a never robust
physique by sitting up half the night in study, a new exhilaration now
throbs through his veins. For, in his own words, he loves the principle
of beauty in all things: and he repeats to himself, as he loiters up and
down in the sunshine, the lines into which he has crystallized, for all
time, sensations similar to
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