on Abandoning Hyperion, and on its Miltonisms, [436]; on Beauty and Truth, [418]; on Brotherly affection, [271]; on Brown’s regular habits, [281]; on Bailey’s appetite for books, [133]-4; on the Blackwood article on Hunt, [152]; on Fanny Brawne’s appearance &c., [329]; on Brown’s rummaging out his old sonnets, [352] n.; on Devonshire weather and folk, [260]-1, [262]; on the Effect of the Reviews on the public, [340]-1; on Endymion, his aims in, [165], [237], his dissatisfaction with it, [150], and its defence by his friends, [314]-15, on its theme, [148]; on Endymion’s confession, [180]; on George Keats’s money troubles, [371]; on Hazlitt’s Shakespearean Lectures, [68]; on his ambitions as Poet, [324]; on his feelings on life and literature, [364]; on his own attitude to women, [288]; on his own capacity for judging paintings, [256]; on his own character, [153]-4, [200]-1, [223], [497], as poet, [269], [314]-15; on his own need of Poetry, [136]; on his own place in Poetry, [543]; on his plans for Hyperion, [426]; on his own pride &c., [368]; on his poetry, and determination never to write for writing’s sake or for a livelihood, [339]-40; on his poetry-writing idleness, (1819), [342], [348], [349], [352], [353]; on his ‘posthumous existence,’ [505]-6, [510]; on his sensations in ordinary society, [326]; on his own skill as operator, [29]; on his state of mind in 1819, [356], [380], [491]-2; on his unwritten poems, [534], [548]; on his wishes as to future work (Nov. 1819), [380]-1; on his work on the Ode to Psyche, [413]-14; on the Ireby dancing-school, [277] & n., [278]; on the Lasinio engravings, [325]; on a mawkish popularity, [313]; on his Nile sonnet and other writings (1818), [256]; on the quarrels of his friends, [255]; on the Quarterly’s attack and its good results, [326]; on his reading, and on his mental state (1819), [341], [342]; on the Scotch tour, [289]; on Sickness, in the lighter vein, [263]; on some friction with Hunt and others, 150-1; on street quarrels, [81]; on three witty friends, [383]; on Winchester ways, [371]; on Wordsworth in 1817, [250], on his dogmatism and Hunt’s, [252]-3, on his genius and Milton’s, [266]
Keats, Mrs George (née Wylie, q.v., later Mrs. Jeffrey), [323], [365]
Keats’s pleasant relations with, [270], [271]
Letter to, from Keats, [383]
Remarriage of, [531]
Keats, Mrs Thomas (née Jennings), mother of the Poet, [3]
Appearance and character of, [6]-7
Devotion to, of Keats, [7], [14], [15]
Second marriage of, [8]-9