Volume Page Thou still unravish'd bride of quietness, ... Time's sea hath been five years at its slow ebb, Welcome joy, and welcome sorrow, Well, well, I know what ugly jeopardy What is more gentle than a wind in summer? What though, for showing truth to flatter'd state, 232 I ... 75 III ... 298 II ... 234 Where where! where shall I find a messenger? You have my secret; let it not be breath’d. ... ... II 399 II 229 [Keats's first volume, published early in 1817, is a foolscap octavo worked in half sheets. It was issued in drab boards, with a back label Keats's Poems, and consists of a blank leaf, fly-title Poems in heavy black letter, with imprint on verso, "PRINTED BY C. RICHARDS, NO. 18, WARWICK STREET, GOLDEN SQUARE, LONDON", title-page as given opposite, Dedication with note on verso as reproduced, and pages 1 to 121 including the fly-titles to the Epistles, Sonnets, and Sleep and Poetry, all as reproduced in the following pages. There are head-lines in Roman capitals running throughout each section, recto and verso alike, (1) Poems, (2) Epistles, (3) Sonnets, and (4) Sleep and Poetry. Leigh Hunt, reviewing with characteristic boldness, loyalty, and insight this volume, dedicated to him, laid his finger unerringly on its weak and strong points. His review appeared in The Examiner for the Ist of June and 6th and 13th of July 1817, and will be found reprinted as an Appendix in the present edition of Keats's Works; but I have not hesitated to snatch a line from it now and then by way of appropriate foot-note to these early poems.-H. B. F.] |