Fugitive Poems
By John Keats
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About this ebook
John Keats
Born in London in 1795, John Keats is one of the most popular of the Romantic poets of the 19th century. During his short life his work failed to achieve literary acclaim, but after his death in 1821 his literary reputation steadily gained pace, inspiring many subsequent poets and students alike.
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Fugitive Poems - John Keats
FUGITIVE POEMS
..................
John Keats
KYPROS PRESS
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Copyright © 2016 by John Keats
Interior design by Pronoun
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Fugitive Poems
The Eve of Saint Mark
When I Have Fears That I May Cease to Be
I Stood Tip-Toe Upon a Little Hill
On Sitting Down to Read King Lear Once Again
Lines Rhymed in a Letter From Oxford
How Many Bards Gild the Lapses of Time!
Dedication [Of Poems, 1817] To Leigh Hunt, Esq.
To One Who Has Been Long in City Pent
A Song About Myself
La Belle Dame Sans Merci
Ode on Indolence
TO— (What Can I Do to Drive Away
)
Where’s the Poet?
For There’s Bishop’s Teign
O blush not so! O blush not so!
To Mrs Reynolds’s Cat
Over the Hill and Over the Dale
Where be you going, you Devon maid?
Character of Charles Brown
FUGITIVE POEMS
..................
THE EVE OF SAINT MARK
Upon a Sabbath-day it fell;
Twice holy was the Sabbath-bell
That call’d the folk to evening prayer;
The city streets were clean and fair
From wholesome drench of April rains;
And, on the western window panes,
The chilly sunset faintly told
Of unmatur’d green vallies cold,
Of the green thorny bloomless hedge,
Of rivers new with spring-tide sedge,
Of primroses by shelter’d rills,
And daisies on the aguish hills.
Twice holy was the Sabbath-bell:
The silent streets were