John Keats, A Longman Cultural Edition
Häftad, Engelska, 2006
269 kr
Slutsåld
From Longman's Cultural Editions series, John Keats, edited by Susan J. Wolfson, is the first edition organized to give a sense of the poet’s thinking by interspersing letters, poems, and publications of reviews and contemporary works. This is a new event in editions of Keats, arranged not in the usual way of separating these writings, but rather by positioning them alongside the author's poems in order of composition or appearance in print, for a more holistic understanding of Keats’s work. Editor Susan Wolfson has taken care that all poems and letters have been freshly edited from their sources, and the manuscripts reflect scriptive elements such as cross-outs and underlines. This edition also includes some unusual contextual writings, including newspaper reviews of Keats's publications.
Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum2006-12-13
- Mått139 x 211 x 24 mm
- Vikt514 g
- FormatHäftad
- SpråkEngelska
- FörlagPearson Education (US)
- ISBN9780321236166
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Susan J. Wolfson is professor of English at Princeton University. In addition to this present volume, her editorial work includes Felicia Hemans (Princeton UP, 2000) and the Longman Cultural Edition of Frankenstein. With Claudia Johnson, she is coeditor of the Longman Cultural Edition of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice. With Peter Manning, she is coeditor of the Romantics volume in The Longman Anthology of British Literature, and Selected Poems of Lord Byron (Penguin, 2005). Her critical books include the prize-winning Formal Charges: The Shaping of Poetry in British Romanticism (Stanford UP, 1997) and Borderlines: The Shiftings of Gender in British Romanticism (Stanford UP, 2007).
- About Longman Cultural Editions About this VolumeTexts, acknowledgmentsAbbreviations List of IllustrationsKeats / cover Frank Dicksee, La Belle Damecover or frontispiece: (Charles Brown’s charcoal sketch)Title page of Poems (1817)Ms of letter to Reynolds, 19 February 1818Title page of Endymion (1818)Ms of a stanza of Ode on MelancholyTitle page of Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems (1820) IntroductionTable of Dates POEMS, LETTERS, §CONTEXTUAL SUPPLEMENTS From The Examiner 5 May 1816: To Solitude Letters to Benjamin Robert Haydon, 20 and 21 November 1816From The Examiner, 1 December 1816: Leigh Hunt, “Young Poets” (On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer)§ Pope’s Homer / Chapman’s HomerFrom The Examiner 23 February 1817: “After dark vapours” From Poems (1817)Dedication. To Leigh Hunt, Esq.“I stood tip-toe”§ Wordsworth on the origin of mythology, The Excursion, Book IVImitation of SpenserSonnets I: To My Brother George II: To *** (“Had I a man’s fair form”)III. Written on the day that Mr. Leigh Hunt left prisonIV. “How many Bards . . .”V. To a Friend who Sent me some RosesVIII. To My BrothersIX. “Keen, fitful gusts”X. “To one who has been long in city pent”XIII. Addressed to Haydon (“Highmindedness, a jealousy for good”)XIV. Addressed to the Same (“Great spirits”)XV. On the Grasshopper and the Cricket§Leigh Hunt, To the Grasshopper and the CricketXVII. “Happy is England!”Sleep and Poetry From The Examiner, 9 March 1817: To Haydon, with a sonnet written on seeing the Elgin MarblesLetter to John Hamilton Reynolds, 17-18 April 1817Letter to Leigh Hunt, 10 May 1817Letter to B.R. Haydon, 10-11 May 1817Letter to John Taylor & James Augustus Hessey, 16 May 1817From The Champion 17 August 1817: On the Sea Letter to J.H. Reynolds, 21 September 1817Letter to B. Bailey, 8 October 1817§ Hunt attacked in Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine (October 1817) Letters to B. Bailey, 3 and 22 November 1817To J.H. Reynolds 22 November 1817From The Champion, 13 December 1817: Dramatic Review: Mr. KeanLetter to George and Tom Keats, 21 & ?27 December, 1817 Further poetry, written in 1816-1817, published posthumously“In a drear-nighted December (The Gem, 1830)“O Chatterton!” (1848)“Byron!” (1848)Ode to Apollo (1848)Written in disgust of Vulgar Superstition (Poetic Works, 1876)“Fill for me a brimming bowl” (Notes and Queries, 1905)On Peace (Notes and Queries, 1905)Lines Written on the Anniversary of Charles’s Restoration (Amy Lowell, John Keats [1925])Letter to B. R. Haydon, 23 January 1818Letter to B. Bailey, 23 January 1818Letter to G&T Keats 23 & 24 January 1818;On Sitting down to Read King Lear Once AgainLetter to J. Taylor, 30 January 1818Letter to J.H. Reynolds, 31 January 1818;“O blush not so,” “Hence burgundy,” “God of the Meridian,” “When I have fears,”§ Robin Hood Sonnets by J. H. ReynoldsLetter to J.H. Reynolds, 3 February 1818; “ answer to his Robin Hood Sonnets”§ Sonnet-contest: Keats To the Nile; Hunt, The Nile; Shelley, To the NileLetter to J.H. Reynolds, 19 February 1818; “O thou whose face hath felt the winter’s wind”Letter to J. Taylor, 27 February 1818Letter to B. Bailey, 13 March 1818The first preface for Endymion, with title page and dedicationLetter and verse epistle to John Hamilton Reynolds, 25 March 1818Letter to B.R. Haydon, 8 April 1818Letter to J.H. Reynolds, 9 April 1818Letter to J. Taylor, 24 April 1818Letter to J.H. Reynolds, 27 April 1818Letter to J. H. Reynolds, 3 May 1818, with “Mother of Hermes!” Further Poetry written January-April 1818, posthumously publishedSonnet to a Cat (Comic Annual 1830)To-- (Time’s Sea) (1848)§ J. H. Reynolds, Sonnet“Blue!” (1848)§ Oscar Wilde, letter to Emma Speed, 21 March 1882, with Keats’s Grave From Endymion (1818)Title-page, dedication, Prefacefrom Book IKeats’s aspirations, opening scene (1-106) Endymion’s malady (163-84; 392-406, 453-88, 505-15)Endymion’s self-defense (520-857; “Pleasure Thermometer”)Endymion’s melancholy (970-92)from Book IIKeats’s invocation, Endymion’s restlessness (1-68)Endymion in the underworld; the Bower of Adonis (376-529)Venus’s assurances (573-93)Endymion’s blissful dream of Cynthia (730-61)from Book IIIKeats’s invocation and attack on worldly monarchs (1-72)Glaucus’s tale of his love quest and Circe’s Bower (372-638)from Book IVKeats’s invocation, Endymion finds an Indian Maid (20-66)Endymion’s rapture with this maid (84-119, 293-313)Endymion’s dream of his Moon Goddess; the Cave of Quietude (497-554)Endymion gives up, happy conclusion (961-end). Letter to B. Bailey, 21 & 25 May 1818Letter to B. Bailey, 10 June 1818Letter to Fanny Keats, 3 July 1818, with “There was a naughty boy”Letter to B. Bailey 18 & 22 July 1818§ “The Cockney School of Poetry, No. 4.” Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, August 1818Letter to Charles Wentworth Dilke, 20-21 September 1818Letter to J. H. Reynolds 22(?) September 1818§ Pierre de Ronsard, Les Amours de Cassandre, Sonet IIKeats’s “free translation” of Ronsard§ Article on Endymion, Quarterly Review XIX (c. 27 September)Letter to James Hessey, 8 October 1818Letter to George & Georgiana Keats, 14- 31 October 1818Letter to Richard Woodhouse, 27 October 1818§ Oscar Wilde’s defense of Dorian Gray, 12 July 1890Sonnet to Ailsa Rock (Literary Pocket Book, 1819 [pub. late 1818]) Further poetry written in 1818, posthumously published§ from “Mountain Scenery,” New Monthly Magazine, 1822Lines written in the Scotch Highlands (Examiner, 1822)On Visiting the Tomb of Burns (1848)“This mortal body” (1848)“Sonnet I wrote on the top of Ben Nevis” (1848)Fragment (“Where is the Poet?”) (1848)Modern Love (1848) Annotations on Paradise LostLetter to G. & G. Keats, 14 February-3 May 1819;“Why did I laugh tonight?”, “As Hermes once” (on a dream of Dante’s Paolo and Francesca), La Belle Dame sans Merci, two sonnets on “Fame,” “To Sleep,” “If by dull rhymes”Letters to Miss Jeffery 31 May and 9 June 1819Letters to Fanny Brawne, 1, 8, 15, 25 July 1819Letter to B. Bailey, 14 August 1819Letter to J. Taylor, 23 August 1819Letter to J. H. Reynolds, 24 August and 21 September 1819Letter to R. Woodhouse, 21-22 September 1819Letter to C. W. Dilke, 22 September 1819Letter to Charles Brown, 23 September 1819Letter to G. (& Ga) Keats, 17-27 September 1819; “Pensive they sit.”Letters to F. Brawne, 13 and 19 October 1819“The day is gone”Letter to J. Taylor, 17 November 1819 Posthumously published poetry from 1819To--- (“What can I do . . .?”) (1848)Ode on Indolence (1848)To---- (“I cry your mercy”) (1848)“This living hand” (H. B. Forman, Poetical Works 1898) Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems (1820)AdvertisementLamiaIsabella; or, The Pot of Basil, a Story from Boccaccio§ The story of Isabella in The DecameronEve of St. Agnes§ Canceled stanzas Ode to a NightingaleOde on a Grecian urnOde to PsycheFancy§ “Fancy” in Paradise LostTo AutumnOde on Melancholy§ The cancelled first stanzaHyperion. A Fragment The Fall of Hyperion Letter to Georgiana Keats, 13-28 January 1820Letter to F. Brawne, ?February 1820To Fanny (1848)La Belle Dame sans Mercy (Indicator May 1820)Letter to F. Brawne, before 12 August, 1820§ Letter from Percy Bysshe Shelley, 27 July 1820Letter to P. B. Shelley, 16 August 1820§ from The Indicator, 20 September 1820: Leigh Hunt’s Farewell to KeatsLetter to Ch. Brown, 30 September 1820Keats’s Last Sonnet (“Bright star”) (1848)Last letters, to Ch. Brown, November 1820 (1848) Glossary of Mythological and Literary References Contemporary References Further Reading and Browsing Index of titles, first lines, key topics