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.
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."
Catalog link
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