CHAPTER V.

“Endymion”; Keats’s classical predilections; extract (from “I stood tiptoe” &c.) about Diana and Endymion; details as to the composition of “Endymion,” 1817; preface to the poem; the critique in The Quarterly Review; attack in Blackwood’s Magazine; question whether Keats broke down under hostile criticism; evidence on this subject in his own letters, and by Shelley, Lord Houghton, Haydon, Byron, Hunt, George Keats, Cowden Clarke, Severn; conclusion.[73]