Plan your visit. 225 Madison Avenue at 36th Street, New York, NY 10016.

Plan your visit. 225 Madison Avenue at 36th Street, New York, NY 10016.

Notes concerning John Keats, undated [ca. 1818 or later].

BIB_ID
104878
Accession number
MA 215.67
Creator
Woodhouse, Richard, Jr., 1788-1834.
Display Date
undated [ca. 1818 or later].
Credit line
Purchased by Pierpont Morgan, 1906.
Description
1 item (1 p.) ; 25 cm
Notes
Dating: Keats's comment "Brown, he ought not to have asked me," is possibly in reference to George Keats's 1818 emigration to America.--Cf. Rollins, "The Keats Circle," 1948, v. 2, p. 102, n. 3.
Formerly cataloged as a copy (in the autograph of Richard Woodhouse) of some notes made by John Keats.
Part of a large collection, assembled by Richard Woodhouse, of letters and manuscripts relating to the English poet John Keats. Items in the collection have been described in individual catalog records; see collection-level record for MA 215 for more information.
Provenance
Part of a collection assembled by Richard Woodhouse; by descent in 1834 to the publisher John Taylor; by descent in 1864 to his relatives, descending finally to his niece by marriage, Mrs. George Taylor of Bakewell, Derbyshire; purchased by Pierpont Morgan from the London dealer Frank T. Sabin in 1906.
Summary
Being a short list of quotations by or notes concerning John Keats. One line reads "If I die you must ruin Lockhart;" another reads "Brown, he ought not to have asked me."