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Cash resources stopped, v, 83

Cassandre de Blois, beloved of Ronsard, ii, 238-9

CASTLE BUILDER (THE), Fragment of, 1818; ii, 186-7
Castles, a government spy, iv, 177 (note)

Cathedral, penchant for a, v, 80

Cathedrals, mimicked by a subterranean stream, i, 127
Cats (Mrs. Dilke's), curious behaviour of, iv, 209

Cave of Quietude (The), i, 190-1

Caviare, pen-name used by Keats, iii, 17 (note), 23 (note)

Cawthorn, bookseller, dines with Keats and Brown, v, 33

Century Guild Hobby Horse (The), "fac-simile" of manuscript in, ii, 198 (note)
Cestius (Caius), Keats buried near tomb of, i, xliii

Chamber of Maiden-thought (the), iv, 109

Chamberlayne (William), reminiscence of his PHARONNIDA, i, 164

Referred to, i, xlvi

Champion (The), Sonnet published in, ii, 182

Theatrical notices by Keats in, iii, 229-45

Referred to, iii, vii, viii, 227; iv, 51, 53, 55

Change in Keats, v, 118

Chapman (George), SONNET ON FIRST LOOKING INTO CHAPMAN'S HOMER,

i, 46

His translation of Homer's Hymn to Pan quoted, iii, 261
Reynolds compares Keats with, iv, 180

Charlotte (Princess), commemoration medal on death of, iv, 55

Suicide of her accoucheur, iv, 76 (note)

Referred to, iv, 45, 194

Charlotte (Queen), death of, v, 35

"Charmian." See Cox (Jane).

Chatterton (Thomas), intreated heaven-ward by Shakespeare, i, 30

ENDYMION inscribed to, i, 65, 67

Sonnet to, ii, 166

Parallel passage from the ELLA of, ii, 211 (note)

Keats's disappointment at Hazlitt's treatment of, iv, 80 A
The purity of his English, v, 93, 121

Referred to, i, xlvii, 1; iii, 276 (note)

Chaucer, motto from, i, 51

Tribute to, i, 75

Copy containing sonnet by Keats, ii, 175-6 (note)

Keats secures a black-letter copy of 1596, iv, 106
Preferred to Ariosto, v, 133

Referred to, v, 31

Chester (Earl of), character in KING STEPHEN, iii, 147

Chesterfield (Lord), v, 164

Chichester, Keats's visit to, iv, 201; v, 6

Dowager card-parties at, v, 22

Christie (Mr.), See Scott (John)

Christmas-day 1818, invitations for, v, 3-4
Christmas gambols, obsoletion of, iv, 49

Circe's dealings with Glaucus and others, i, 154-60
"Claret feast," Keats "a little tipsy" at a, v, 45

Claret, Keats's partiality for, ii, 99 (note); v, 21, 26, 45

Clark (Dr., afterwards Sir James), promises to befriend Keats at Rome, v, 195
His great kindness, v, 202 (note), 203 (note)

His career, v, 203 (note)

Referred to, v, 204 (note)

CLARKE (CHARLES COWDEN), EPISTLE TO, poem of 1816, i, 35-8

On the Dedication of Keats's first book, i, 5 (note)

Biographical note on, iv, xv

Keats's first guide in the study of poetry, i, 36

Keats's letters to, iv, 3, 6

Recollections of Keats by, i, xxvii-xxix

Referred to, i, xii, xlv, xlvi; iv, 13 (note), 14; v, 23

Clarke (Rev. James Freeman), paper on George Keats by, iv, xiii

Clarke (John), Keats educated by him at his school at Enfield, i, xxvii
Claude's "Enchanted Castle," ii, 212 (note), 213; iv, 95

Clergy, Keats's opinion of the, v, 26, 35

Clerimond (Sir) in CALIDORE, i, 18

Climate, its effects on character, v, 90

Clymene, a fallen Titaness in HYPERION, ii, 146

Her tale of a voice calling "Apollo," ii, 150-1

Cobbett attacks "the Settlement," v, 23

Gets "a good character" in The Examiner, iv, 208

Referred to, v, 26

Cockney School of Poetry defined by The Quarterly Review, iv, 169 (note)

Cockney School of Poetry, No IV, an attack on Keats in Blackwood's Magazine,
iv, 163-5 (note)

The spirit in which Keats regarded it, i, xxxvii

Cœlus heartens his son Hyperion, ii, 141-2

Cous, an imprisoned Titan in HYPERION, ii, 143

Cold, a violent, caught in the Isle of Mull, iv, 158 (note), 161

Coleridge, parallel passage from, i, 104 (note)

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Ballad of the Dark Ladye, i, 178 (note)

Discourses to Keats, v, 44

Trifles with his talents, i, 58 (note)
SIBYLLINE LEAVES, iv, 41 (note), 43

Want of "negative capability," iv, 50

His saying, "There is death in that hand," i, xlviii

Referred to, iv, 16 (note), 50, 76, 179 (note)

College Street, Keats's letters from, v, 129-130
Collins, i, 56 (note); iv, 80

Colnaghi's v, 108

Colvin (Professor Sidney), i, xii, xiii; iv, xi

Comic Annual (The) for 1830, SONNET to a Cat issued in, ii, 189 (note)
COMUS, Milton's, parallel passage from, ii, 113 (note)

Concert (a), iv, 52

Conrad, Duke of Franconia, character in ОTHO THE GREAT, iii, 37

His treachery, iii, 41-2

His hypocrisy, iii, 68

His death by the sword of Albert, iii, 126

Conscience, curious, iii, 11; v, 56

Constable, the bookseller, negotiates with Reynolds, iv, 66

Constitution, "something wrong about" Keats's, v, 158

Consumptive fellow-traveller on voyage to Italy, v, 199

Coomb-in-Teign-Head, hamlet near Teignmouth, ii, 207, 209 (note); iv, 88

Corallina, nurse of Bellanaine in THE CAP AND Bells, iii, 190

Corinth, scene of the loves of Lamia and Lycius, ii, 18

Corneille, iv, 91 (note), 98 miliarita

"Cornwall (Barry)," See Procter (Bryan Waller)

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Crafticant, Elfinan's state-spy in THE CAP AND BELLS, iii, 191

Creus, a fallen Titan in HYPERION, ii, 144, 153

Cripps (-), a student of painting whom Haydon offered to teach gratis, iv, 36, 37,

40, 43, 58

Some unpleasantness about him, iv, 45, 46

Difficulty in settling with Haydon matters relating to, iv, 40

Question of "binding" him to Haydon, iv, 56

Critics, "dack'd hair'd," ii, 210; iv, 89

Croft (Sir Richard), Suicide of, iv, 76

Croft (Sir Herbert), iv, 76 (note)

Croker (J. Wilson), iv, 171 (note), 179 (note)
Crossing a letter, associations of, iv, 108
Cruelty transient, but love eternal, v, 184
Cupid in Neptune's palace, i, 167, 169
Cupids, apparition of, i, 119

CUPID'S REVENGE, ii, 206

Cybele, apparition of in ENDYMION, i, 128

Mourns with the other Titans in HYPERION, ii, 143

Cynthia, Diana addressed as, i, 144

Cythera, i, 168

DAISY'S SONG, ii, 202

Dance (a) at Mr. Wylie's cousin's, v, 15

Dancing, Keats asks his sister to give him lessons in, v, 14

Dante, Cary's version carefully read by Keats, i, 137 (note); ii, 64 (note); iv,-145

Probable allusion to the portrait of, i, 153

PURGATORIO, a thought from the, ii, 64
Referred to, iii, 232; iv, 115

See DREAM (A)

Dark eyes, Sonnet in answer to one by Reynolds on, ii, 198

Darling (Dr.), v, 191 (note)

Darkness, light on the shores of, ii, 206

Dartmoor, cancelled reference to in THE EVE OF ST. AGNES, ii, 89 (note)

Davenport (Mr.), an invitation from, v, 147

Referred to, v, 25, 40

Davenports (the) of Church Row, v, 33

David (King), reference to a psalm of, ii, 231; iv, 139

Davies (John), quotation from, v, 128 (note)

Davison (Thomas), printer of LAMia &c., ii, 3

DAWLISH FAIR, quatrain of 1818, ii, 215; iv, 94

Keats goes to, iv, 94

Day (R. C.), lines from the ARGONAUTICA translated by, i, 82 (note)

Dean Street, letter of Keats's from, iv, 3

DEATH (ON), poem of 1814, ii, 165
Death, easeful, ii, 101

"Life's high meed," iii, 16

Satisfaction in contemplating, iv, 115

"The great divorcer for ever," v, 197
The only refuge, v, 180

Of Keats, i, xliii

Death-warrant, Keats's, i, xli; v, 149 (note)

+De Foe (Daniel), v, 139 (note)

Dendy (Walter Cooper), piece of Keats's prose preserved by, iii, 276

Dennet (Miss), Columbine at Covent Garden, iv, 53

Derrynaculen, Keats's letters from, iv, 148; v, 109

Destruction, Nature's "eternal fierce," ii, 215; iv, 97

"Deucalion mountain'd o'er the flood," i, 111

Devereux (young), portrait of, v, 178

DEVON MAID (THE): Stanzas sent in a letter to B. R. Haydon (1818), ü, 210-11
Devonshire, misconceptions as to dialect of, ii, 210-11 (note); iv, 120

Keats's contempt for the men of, iv, 83

Prevalence of rain in, iv, 86, 88, 90-1 (note), 94, 98, 100, 101, 104

Snugness of the cottages in, iv, 126

Favourable impressions of, v, 94

Devonshire (Duke of), "foul calumny" as to his birth, iv, 77 (note)
De Wint (Peter), message to, iv, 116

Dial (The), Notes on Milton published in, iii, 256 (note)
Diana, her first meeting with Endymion, i, 89-93

Her appearance to Endymion in the well, i, 100
Calls Endymion into the Cave, i, 102

A subterranean temple of, i, 113, 115
Prayer of Endymion to, i, 115

Embraced by Endymion, i, 131

Her debate between love and reputation for chastity, i, 133-4
Addressed as Cynthia, i, 144

Her message to Endymion written "in star-light on the dark," i, 172
Disguised as an Indian Maid appears to Endymion, i, 174

Appears in her own person in the heavens, i, 187

Her Wedding Hymn, i, 191-3

Reveals herself and takes Endymion to heaven, i, 205

Difficulties in raising money, V,

100

Difficulties in Rome, v, 202-3 (note)

Dilke (Charles Wentworth), Biographical note on, iv, xxv
Keats's letters to, iv, 43, 163; v, 77, 95, 126, 163, 173
His kindness to Keats, iv, 80; v, 22

Occupied with politics and Greek history, v, 26
Amusing incident with Brown at his house, v, 105
Keats's friendship with, iv, 53

Sends a farce to Covent Garden, iv, 53
Keats goes to a dance at house of, iv, 58
Up to his ears in Walpole's letters, iv, 208
Removal to Westminster, v, 26, 40, 41
His preoccupation about his son, v, 41
Change in the disposition of, v, 121
Described as "a Godwin Methodist," ▼, 121

His penmanship compared with Bailey's, v, 164

A painful visit from, v, 185

Referred to, i, xxxviii; iv, 29, 34, 49, 50, 58, 65, 84, 176, 185, 197 (note),
199, 201, 202, 203; v, 26, 41, 45, 99, 102, 105

Dilke (Charles Wentworth and Mrs.), Keats and Brown's curious joint letter
to, v, 10

Removal from Hampstead to Westminster, v, 16, 18 (note)

Coming to dine with Keats and Brown at Hampstead, iii, 21

Dilke (Mrs.), her notes in re Keats's Scotch tour, iv, 159 (note)
Gives a dance, v, 140

"A battle with celery stalks" between Keats and, iv, 210

Has "another gall-stone attack," iv, 176

Referred to, iv, 12, 29, 34, 53, 172, 192, 199, 202, 208; v, 6, 13, 16, 27, 28,
41, 78, 129, 131, 136, 140, 147, 163, 170, 171, 173, 180, 199

Dilke (Sir Charles Wentworth), first baronet, son of the above, born 1810, iv, xxv
Tea with him on his birthday, v, 28

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