The Complete Works of John Keats: Poems, Plays & Personal Letters. John Keats

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The Complete Works of John Keats: Poems, Plays & Personal Letters - John  Keats

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are flying swiftly, and as yet

       Nothing unearthly has enticed my brain

       Into a delphic labyrinth - I would fain

       Catch an unmortal thought to pay the debt

       I owe to the kind Poet who has set

       Upon my ambitious head a glorious gain.

       Two bending laurel sprigs - ’tis nearly pain

       To be conscious of such a Coronet.

       Still time is fleeting, and no dream arises

       Gorgeous as I would have it - only I see A trampling down of what the world most prizes

       Turbans and Crowns, and blank regality;

       And then I run into most wild surmises

       Of all the many glories that may be.

      A Song of Opposites

       Table of Contents

      Under the flag

       Of each his faction, they to battle bring

       Their embryon atoms.

       Milton

      Welcome joy, and welcome sorrow,

       Lethe’s weed and Hermes’ feather;

       Come today, and come tomorrow,

       I do love you both together!

       I love to mark sad faces in fair weather;

       And hear a merry laugh amid the thunder;

       Fair and foul I love together.

       Meadows sweet where flames are under.

       And a giggle at a wonder;

       Visage sage at pantomime;

       Funeral, and steeple-chime;

       Infant playing with a skull;

       Morning fair, and shipwreck’d hull;

       Nightshade with the woodbine kissing;

       Serpents in red roses hissing;

       Cleopatra regal-dress’d

       With the aspic at her breast;

       Dancing music, music sad,

       Both together, sane and mad;

       Muses bright and muses pale;

       Sombre Saturn, Momus hale; -

       Laugh and sigh, and laugh again;

       Oh the sweetness of the pain!

       Muses bright, and muses pale.

       Bare your faces of the veil;

       Let me see; and let me write

       Of the day, and of the night -

       Both together: - let me slake

       All my thirst for sweet hearache!

       Let my bower be of yew,

       Interwreath’d with myrtles new;

       Pines and lime-trees full in bloom,

       And my couch a low grass-tomb.

      The Castle Builder - Fragments of a Dialogue

       Table of Contents

      CASTLE BUILDER In short, convince you that however wise

       You may have grown from convent libraries,

       I have, by many yards at least, been carding

       A longer skein of wit in convent garden.

      BERNADINE A very Eden that same place must be!

       Pray what demesne? Whose Lordship’s legacy?

       What, have you convents in that Gothic Isle?

       Pray pardon me, I cannot help but smile.

      CASTLE BUILDER Sir, Convent Garden is a monstrous beast

       From morning, four o’clock, to twelve at noon, It swallows cabbages without a spoon,

       And then, from twelve till two, this Eden made is

       A promenade for cooks and ancient ladies;

       And then for supper, ‘stead of soup and poaches,

       It swallows chairmen, damns, and Hackney coaches.

       In short, Sir, ’tis a very place for monks,

       For it containeth twenty thousand punks,

       Which any man may number for his sport,

       By following fat elbows up a court.

       In such like nonsense would I pass an hour With random Friar, or Rake upon his tour,

       Or one of few of that imperial host’

       Who came unmaimed from the Russian frost.

       Tonight I’ll have my friar - let me think

       About my room, - I’ll have it in the pink;

       It should be rich and sombre, and the moon,

       Just in its mid-life in the midst of June,

       Should look thro’ four large windows and display

       Clear, but for gold-fish vases in the way,

       Their glassy diamonding on Turkish floor; The tapers keep aside, an hour and more,

       To see what else the moon alone can show;

       While the night-breeze doth softly let us know

       My terrace is well bower’d with oranges.

       Upon the floor the dullest spirit sees

       A guitar-ribband and a lady’s glove

       Beside a crumple-leaved tale of love;

       A tambour-frame, with Venus sleeping there,

       All finish’d but some ringlets of her hair;

      

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