id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 36356 Colvin, Sidney Life of John Keats: His Life and Poetry, His Friends, Critics and After-Fame .txt text/plain 227140 10345 73 Let it be remembered moreover that the years of Keats's school days and About the same time as Keats another young member of Hunt's circle, John Some time after the turn of the year we find Keats presented with a copy Thy thoughts, dear Keats, are like fresh-gathered leaves, Turning to Keats's next favourite among the old poets, William Browne of official form of verse; and among the most admired poets of Keats's day, Quite in the last days of his visit Keats, whose mind and critical power its relation to the works of certain other poets and poems of Keats's Pan no longer as a shepherd's god but as a symbol of the World-All. Wordsworth, when Keats at the request of friends read the piece to him, admiration of other men.[3] One day early in the new year Keats took The work of Keats's two mature years (if any poet or man in his ./cache/36356.txt ./txt/36356.txt