The Complete Works: Poetry, Plays, Letters and Extensive Biographies. John Keats

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The Complete Works: Poetry, Plays, Letters and Extensive Biographies - John  Keats

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your flocks a-bleating -

      But O, on the heather to lie together,

      With both our hearts a-beating!

IV

      I’ll put your basket all safe in a nook,

      Your shawl I hang up on the willow,

      And we will sigh in the daisy’s eye

      And kiss on a grass green pillow.

      Song: Hush, hush! tread softly! hush, hush my dear!

I

      Hush, hush! tread softly! hush, hush my dear!

      All the house is asleep, but we know very well

      That the jealous, the jealous old baldpate may hear,

      Tho’ you’ve padded his nightcap – O sweet Isabel!

      Tho’ your feet are more light than a Fairy’s feet,

      Who dances on bubbles where brooklets meet. -

      Hush, hush! soft tiptoe! hush, hush my dear!

      For less than a nothing the jealous can hear.

II

      No leaf doth tremble, no ripple is there

      On the river, – all’s still, and the night’s sleepy eye

      Closes up, and forgets all its Lethean care,

      Charm’d to death by the drone of the humming Mayfly;

      And the moon, whether prudish or complaisant,

      Has fled to her bower, well knowing I want

      No light in the dusk, no torch in the gloom,

      But my Isabel’s eyes, and her lips pulp’d with bloom.

III

      Lift the latch! ah gently! ah tenderly – sweet!

      We are dead if that latchet gives one little clink!

      Well done – now those lips, and a flowery seat -

      The old man may sleep, and the planets may wink;

      The shut rose shall dream of our loves, and awake

      Full blown, and such warmth for the morning’s take

      The stock-dove shall hatch her soft brace and shall coo,

      While I kiss to the melody, aching all through!

      Lines On Seeing a Lock of Milton’s Hair

      Chief of organic numbers!

      Old Scholar of the Spheres!

      Thy spirit never slumbers,

      But rolls about our ears,

      For ever, and for ever!

      O what a mad endeavour

      Worketh he,

      Who to thy sacred and ennobled hearse

      Would offer a burnt sacrifice of verse

      And melody.

      How heavenward thou soundest,

      Live Temple of sweet noise,

      And Discord unconfoundest,

      Giving Delight new joys,

      And Pleasure nobler pinions!

      O, where are thy dominions?

      Lend thine ear

      To a young Delian oath, – aye, by thy soul.

      By all that from thy mortal lips did roll,

      And by the kernel of thine earthly love,

      Beauty, in things on earth, and things above

      I swear!

      When every childish fashion

      Has vanish’d from my rhyme,

      Will I, grey-gone in passion,

      Leave to an after-time,

      Hymning and harmony

      Of thee, and of thy works, and of thy life;

      But vain is now the burning and the strife,

      Pangs are in vain, until I grow high-rife

      With old Philosophy,

      And mad with glimpses of futurity!

      For many years my offering must be hush’d;

      When I do speak, I’ll think upon this hour,

      Because I feel my forehead hot and flush’d,

      Even at the simplest vassal of thy power, -

      A lock of thy bright hair, —

      Sudden it came,

      And I was startled, when I caught thy name

      Coupled so unaware;

      Yet, at the moment, temperate was my blood.

      I thought I had beheld it from the flood.

      Addressed to Haydon

      Highmindedness, a jealousy for good,

      A loving-kindness for the great man’s fame,

      Dwells here and there with people of no name,

      In noisome alley, and in pathless wood:

      And where we think the truth least understood,

      Oft may be found a “singleness of aim,”

      That ought to frighten into hooded shame

      A money mong’ring, pitiable brood.

      How glorious this affection for the cause

      Of stedfast genius, toiling gallantly!

      What when a stout unbending champion awes

      Envy, and Malice to their native sty?

      Unnumber’d souls breathe out a still applause,

      Proud to behold him in his country’s eye.

      On Death

I

      Can death be sleep, when life is but a dream,

      And scenes of bliss pass as a phantom by?

      The transient pleasures as a vision seem,

      And yet we think the greatest pain’s to die.

II

      How strange it is that man on earth should roam,

      And lead a life of woe, but not forsake

      His rugged path; nor dare he view alone

      His future doom which is but to awake.

      Epistle to John Hamilton Reynolds

      Dear Reynolds! as last night I lay in bed,

      There came before my eyes that wonted thread

      Of shapes, and shadows, and remembrances,

      That every other minute vex and please:

      Things all disjointed come from north and south, -

      Two Witch’s eyes above a Cherub’s mouth,

      Voltaire with casque and shield and habergeon,

      And Alexander with his nightcap on;

      Old Socrates a-tying his cravat,

      And Hazlitt playing with Miss Edgeworth’s cat;

      And Junius Brutus, pretty well so so,

      Making the best of s way towards Soho.

      Few are there who escape these visitings, -

      Perhaps one or two whose lives have patent

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