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Baldwin (Earl) de Redvers, character in 'KING STEPHEN,' iii, 147

Ballantrae, Keats's letter from, iv, 132

Barnes, iv, 112

Barnes (Miss), v, 33

Barrow, iv, 179 (note)

Bartlett (Mr.), a surgeon at Teignmouth, iv, 87

BASIL, THE POT OF, See ISABELLA

Basil Pot Song (the), traced, ii, 57 (note)

Translation by John Payne, ii, 57 (note)

Basket, the Tale of the, v, 74

Bath, intended visit to Bailey at, iv, 100

Batty (Dr.), gives Leigh Hunt a lock of Milton's hair, iv, 62
Hunt's sonnets to him, iv, 62-3

Bay of Biscay, Keats in a storm in, i, xliii; v, 198 (note)
Bear-baiting used as a figure of speech, i, 114 (note)
Beattie (James), Keats outgrows the poetry of, iv, 201

Beaumont and Fletcher, THE DOUBLE MARRIAGE by, i, 144 (note)
Extract from THE WOMAN HATER, iii, 251-2

Keats reads THE MAID'S TRAGEDY by, v, 31
Keats reads THE FALSE ONE by, v, 36

Alluded to, i, 29

See ODE and SONG

Beauty "a joy for ever," i, 71

Evanescence of, ii, 100, 122

Identical with truth, ii, 106; iv, 46

Love of, v, 71-2, 156

The only conceivable beginning of Keats's love, v, 72
Venus called "smiling Beauty's paragon," i, 167

Bedhampton, Brown and Keats's letter from, v, 10

Bellanaine, bride elect of Elfinan in THE CAP AND BELLS, iii, 190
BELLE DAME SANS MERCI (LA), poem of 1819, iii, 22.5; v, 48-9
Published in The Indicator, iii, 23 (note)

Two versions of iii, 23 (note)

"An ancient ditty, long since mate," so called, ii, 85
Referred to, i, xlii, xlv

Beneficence the only worthy pursuit, iv, 103

Aspirations after, iv, 174

BEN NEVIS, A DIALOGUE, poem of 1818, ii, 235-7

Ben Nevis, ascent of, iv, 153-4

BEN NEVIS, SONNET WRITTEN UPON THE TOP OF (1818), ii, 234

Benjamin (Nathan), Brown's tenant, amusing story about, v, 123

Bentley (Benjamin), Keats's landlord in Well Walk, i, xxxiii; iv, 152, 196; v, 24, 62

Bentley (Mrs.), her noisy children, iv, 37

Regrets at leaving, iv, 196

Referred to, iv, 152; v, 24, 39

Bertha, in THE EVE OF ST. Mark, iii, 4

A mortal maiden beloved of Elfinan in THE CAP AND BELLS, iii, 205, 208,

209, 211

Bertrand (General), iv, 21

Bewick (William), iv, 58, 64, 99; v, 40

Biancopany (Esquire)=Samuel Whitbread, iii, 194 (note)

Birkbeck (Morris), "too American," iv, 182

His NOTES ON A JOURNEY IN AMERICA, 142

Referred to, iv, 191, 196; v, 22, 29

Birkbeck (the Misses), v, 46

Birkbeck (young), v, 39, 55

Birthday (Keats's), i, xxiii; iv, 189

Birthplace, the "flummery " of a, iv, 131

gard 196 II

Bishop's Teignton, a village near Teignmouth, ii, 207, 209 (note); iv, 88;
V, 62

Blackwood's Magazine, characteristic ribaldry of, ii, 201 (note)

Attacks on Hunt and Keats in, iv, 42, 43

Abuse of confidence by some one connected with, iv, 42 (note)

Piracy of letters owned by Martin, iv, 196

Vulgar personal attacks on Hazlitt in, iv, 168 (note)

Hazlitt's anger with, iv, 163-4

Supports Hogg versus Burns, v, 36 X

George Keats on, i, xxxvii

Referred to, iv, 115

Blake's (William) THE WILL AND THE WAY, ii, 203 (note)
Blanchard (Laman), sonnet by, attributed to Keats, i, xiv
Blood-spitting, fresh attack of, i, xlii; v, 179, 193

Blue eyes, Keats's preference for, ii, 199

Boating on the Isis, iv, 31

Boileau, the school of, i, 56

Books lent to Fanny Brawne not to be sent home, v, 158
Brawne (Fanny), biographical note on, iv, xxxiv

Ode to (1819?), iii, 8-10

Pictured at a dance, iii, 9

Lines supposed to have been addressed to (1820?), iii, 223
Lines to, iii, 164-6

Sonnet to (1819), iii, 166

First meeting with Keats, i, xxxviii; iv, 167 (note)

An occasional "chat and tiff" with, v, 23

Described by Keats, iv, 193, 197

Probable mistake as to her age, iv, 197 (note)

Brown writes Spenserian stanzas about Keats and, v, 44

Keats's return to Hampstead to be nursed by her and her mother, i, xlii

Keats's horror at leaving her, v, 197, 200

Last words to, v, 199

Brawne (Fanny)—continued

Keats's letters to, v, 67, 71, 73-7, 79, 82, 92, 129, 130, 131, 146, 149, 150,
151-3, 155-7, 158, 159-62, 164-7, 168-9, 174, 175, 180, 183-6

Details about the original letters to, v, ix

Her family and their residence at Hampstead, iv, xxxiv

Her estimate of Keats, i, xli

Keats's engagement thought imprudent, v, 153 (note)

Not to visit Keats with Brown at home, v, 160, 162, 165
Her natural pride and buoyancy, v, 155 (note)

A thousand Houris, v, 161

Keats's vision of her in her "shepherdess dress," v, 176
Imprisonment at Hampstead, v, 152, 167

"Flirting with Brown," v, 180

Referred to, iv, x; v, ix, 195 (note)

Brawne (Margaret), mentioned as "Tootts," v, 199

Referred to, v, 69, 77, 152

Brawne (Mrs.), "a very nice woman," iv, 193

Her dog Carlo, v, 149

Keats goes to stay with, i, xlii

Keats's letter to, v, 198

Referred to, iv, 202; v, 3 (note), 24, 28, 39, 69, 77, 147, 152, 155, 157, 160,

161, 162, 169, 175

Brawne (Samuel), father of Fanny, iv, xxxiv; v, 69 (note)

Brawne (Samuel), brother of Fanny, iv, xxxiv; v, 69 (note), 77, 168, 199

Breama (Water), in SONG OF FOUR FAERIES, iii, 26

Briareüs, an imprisoned Titan in HYPERION, ii, 143

Referred to, i, 149 (note)

Bridal custom described in LAMIA, ii, 25

Briggs (—), v, 141

British Gallery, Keats visits the, iv, 80

Britomartis, i, 21

Brothers, Keats's love for his, i, xlvii; iv, 115

Brown (Charles Armitage), Spenserian Stanzas on (1819), iii, 20-1; v, 44
His kindness to Keats, i, xxxviii, xl; iv, 80; v, 16, 22, 36, 100
Biographical note on, iv, xxvi

Accident to, iv, 86 (note)

Writes "volumes of adventures to Dilke," iv, 147

Ridiculous letter written by him and Keats, v, 10

His house at Hampstead robbed, v, 11

Proposal for Keats to "domesticate with " him, i, xxxviii; iv, 191
Keats's letters to, v, 97, 98, 175, 177, 193, 195, 196, 200, 202

Letters from Scotland by, i, xxxv, xxxvi; iv, 150, 157-9

Called the Red Cross Knight by Keats, i, xxxvi; iv, 158

Account of a story by, v, 24-5

Parts from Keats at Inverness in August 1818, iv, 158

Brown (Charles Armitage)-continued.

Keats likes "his society as well as any man's,"

81

He and Keats "cursing like Mandeville and Lisle," v, 88
"Brown! By God, they say you're handsome," v, 105
A practical joke of Keats's upon, v, 123

At Bedhampton and Chichester, v, 121

At Chichester, iv, 199

Letter from him concerning Keats's illness, v, 150 (note)
Copies Hogarth's head, v, 154, 163

His second visit to Scotland, i, xli; v, 175

Requested by Keats to go to Rome with him, v, 194

His SHAKESPEARE'S AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL POEMS, iv, xxvi
His character sketched by Dilke, iv, xxvii

"Brown drove, but the horse did not mind him," v, 25

Referred to, i, x; ii, 96, 125, 184 (note); iii, 20, 35, 147; iv, 37, 39, 53, 65,
185, 191, 193, 196, 198, 199; v, 22, 27, 28, 40, 44, 45, 55, 65, 66, 75,
80, 81, 82, 84, 86, 87, 88, 91, 96, 101, 109, 112, 115, 116, 117, 123, 126,
128, 129, 131, 135, 136, 144, 147, 170, 192

Brown (John), v, 45

Brown (Mrs. Septimus), v, 23

Browne's BRITANNIA'S PASTORALS, motto from, i, 29 (note)

Browning (Elizabeth Barrett), tribute to Keats by, i, xlvii

Browning (Robert), on the thrush's song, ii, 200 (note)

P.S. of letter from Leigh Hunt to, iv, 61-2

His tribute to Keats in ONE WORD MORE, i, xlvi

Browning (Robert and Elizabeth Barrett), part of lock of Milton's hair given to,

iv, 62 (note)

Bucke (Charles), quarrel with Kean, v, 41

Buffon, v, 35, 36

Buonaparte (Napoleon), contrasted with Mark Anthony, iv, 22

See Napoleon

Burdett (Sir Francis), iv, 182

Burford Bridge, ENDYMION finished at, i, xxxiv, 65

Burleigh (Lord), portrait of, v, 178

BURNS, SONNET ON VISITING THE TOMB OF (1818), ii, 217

SONNET WRITTEN IN THE COttage where BURNS WAS BORN (1818),
ii, 225

LINES WRITTEN IN THE HIGHLANDS AFTER A VISIT TO BURns's
COUNTRY (1818), ii, 226-8

His Tomb, iv, 120; his Cottage, iv, 131, 136

Reputation for writing "mony sensible things," iv, 129

Beauty of his native place, iv, 129, 135

His disposition Southern, iv, 127

A "mahogany-faced old jackass" who knew him, iv, 131
Allusions to his TAM O' SHANter, iv, 135-6

Referred to, iv, 145

Burns (Mrs.), living at Dumfries, iv, 120

Burton's ANATOMY OF MELANCHOLY, Extracts from, ii, 32; v, 105

Notes on, iii, 266-75

Burton (Mr.), v, 11

Butler (Mr.), iv, 202; v, 11

Butler (Sarah), iv, 105

Butterfly, Endymion led to Diana by a, i, 107 et seq.

BYRON, SONNET TO (1814), ii, 165

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Another satire expected, "called DON GIOVANNI," v, 23
Difference between the poetry of Keats and, v, 111

Keats's indignation at the levity of the storm scene in his Don Juan, v,
198 (note); his "last flash poem," 107

"Fare thee well" quoted in THE CAP AND BELLS, iii, 216

"Byron piping-hot," v, 40 (note)

Keats unwilling to know him, iv, 37

Described as a "literary king," iv, 199

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Passages concerning Keats in the writings of, ii, 126-7

Alluded to, iv, 72, 80, 181; v, 23, 40

Byron (George), his forgeries, i, xiv

Caen Wood, i, 7 (note)

Cage, Keats will not sing in a, v, 161

"Cairn-something," Keats's letter from, iv, 137

CALEB WILLIAMS contrasted with WAVERLEY, iv, 208

CALIDORE, A FRAGMENT, published 1817, i, 16-20
Cameron (Mrs.), her ascent of Ben Nevis, iv, 154

Campbell, iv, 179 (note)

Canning, iv, 179 (note)

Canova, v, 202 (note)

Canterbury, home of Bertha in THE CAP AND BELLS, iii, 205

Intended visit to, iv, 23

CAP AND BELLS (THE); OR THE JEALOUSIES: A FAERY TALE-unfinished
(1820), iii, 189-223; referred to, i, xi, xl; v, 158, 178

Keats's last literary labour, iii, 187

Capper and Hazlewood, iv, 185, 188; v, 103

Card-playing, iv, 54; v, 47, 75

Carey (William), attack on Haydon by, v, 128 (note)

Carisbrooke, Keats's letter from, iv, 10

Cary's Dante carefully read by Keats, i, 137 (note)

Sonnet written in, iii, 16

Carlile (Richard), Government persecution of, v, 25, 108
Carlisle, Keats's letter continued at, iv, 119

Caroline (Queen), iii, 194 (note)

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