The Keats letters, papers, and other relics, forming the Dilke bequest in the Hampstead Public Library, reproduced in fifty-eight collotype facsimiles, Quotes

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The Keats letters, papers, and other relics, forming the Dilke bequest in the Hampstead Public Library, reproduced in fifty-eight collotype facsimiles, The Keats letters, papers, and other relics, forming the Dilke bequest in the Hampstead Public Library, reproduced in fifty-eight collotype facsimiles, by John Keats
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The Keats letters, papers, and other relics, forming the Dilke bequest in the Hampstead Public Library, reproduced in fifty-eight collotype facsimiles, Quotes Showing 1-2 of 2
“All I hope is that I may not lose all interest in human affairs--that the solitary indifference I feel for applause even from the finest Spirits, will not blunt any acuteness of vision I may have. I do not think it will--I feel assured I should write from the mere yearning and fondness I have for the Beautiful even if my night's labours should be burnt every morning and no eye ever shine upon them.
But even now I am perhaps not speaking from myself; but from some character in whose soul I now live.”
John Keats, The Keats letters, papers, and other relics, forming the Dilke bequest in the Hampstead Public Library, reproduced in fifty-eight collotype facsimiles,
“To be thrown among people who care not for you, with whom you have no sympathies[-] [it] forces the Mind upon its own resources, and leaves it free to make its speculations [on] the differences of human character and to class them with the calmness of a Botanist...”
John Keats, The Keats letters, papers, and other relics, forming the Dilke bequest in the Hampstead Public Library, reproduced in fifty-eight collotype facsimiles,