1829 (The Keepsake)
From vsfp
1829
- My Aunt Margaret’s Mirror, Chapters I-II, pp. 1-44, by the author of Waverley
- The Magic Mirror, p. 33, by J. M. Wright
- Stanzas by Lord F. L. Gower, on the Execution Militaire, a Print from a Picture by Vigneron, pp. 45-46, by Lord F. L. Gower
- On Love, pp. 47-49, by Percy Bysshe Shelley
- ___ to ___, p. 49, by F. Mansel Reynolds
- The Country Girl, pp. 50-51, by W. Wordsworth
- The Country Girl, p. 50, by J. Holmes
- On Two Sisters, p. 51, by F. Mansel Reynolds
- The Half-Brothers, pp. 52-68, by the authors of the O’Hara Tales
- Scraps of Italy, Parts I-IV, pp. 69-72, by Lord Morpeth
- The Triad, pp. 73-79, by W. Wordsworth
- ___ to ___, p. 79, by F. Mansel Reynolds
- The Sisters of Albano, pp. 80-100, by the author of Frankenstein
- Lake Albano, p. 80, by J. M. W. Turner, R. A.
- Invitation to a Beautiful but Very Small Young Lady, p. 100, by F. Mansel Reynolds
- Illustrations of the Characters of Anne Page and Slender, pp. 101-107, by the author of the Life of Kemble
- The Wishing-Gate, pp. 108-110, by W. Wordsworth
- Apropos of Bread, pp. 111-119, by Lord Nugent
- An Anticipation for a Certain Coquette, p. 119, by F. Mansel Reynolds
- Extempore, to——, to Whose Interference I Chiefly Owe the Very Liberal Price Given for Lalla Rookh, p. 120, by Thomas Moore
- Georgiana, Duchess of Bedford, p. 121, by Edwin Landseer, A. R. A.
- Verses, p. 121, by L. E. L.
- Epigrams, p. 122, by S. T. Coleridge
- The Tapestried Chamber, or the Lady in the Sacque, pp. 123-142, by the author of Waverley
- The Tapestried Chamber, p. 136, by F. P. Stephanoff
- To a Spinster Love’s Calendar, p. 142, by F. Mansel Reynolds
- An Attempt at a Tour, pp. 143-156, by the author of the Roué
- Sonnet, a Gravestone upon the Floor in the Cloisters of Worchester Cathedral, p. 156, by W. Wordsworth
- Lucy and Her Bird, p. 157, by J. M. Wright
- Lucy and Her Bird, pp. 157-160, by Robert Southey
- Fragments, Chapters I-III, pp. 160-162, by Percy Bysshe Shelley
- The Lady and Her Lovers, pp. 163-183, by the author of Gilbert Earle
- Love, p. 166, by F. P. Stephanoff
- Jealousy, p. 177, by F. P. Stephanoff
- Sonnet, a Tradition of Darley-Dale, Derbyshire, p. 183, by W. Wordsworth
- Over a Covered Seat in the Flower-Garden at Holland-House, Where the Author of the “Pleasures of Memory” Has Been Accustomed to Sit, Appear the Following Lines, p. 184, by Vassall Holland
- Lines, pp. 184-185, by Henry Luttrell
- The Thief Detected, p. 185, by F. Mansel Reynolds
- Death of the Laird’s Jock, to the editor of the Keepsake, pp. 186-192, by the author of Waverley
- The Laird’s Jock, p. 191, by H. Corbould
- Stanzas, p. 193, by R. Bernal, M. P.
- Reasons for Absence, pp. 194, by F. Mansel Reynolds
- Ferdinando Eboli, A Tale, pp. 195-218, by the author of Frankenstein
- Adelinda, p. 215, by Alfred E. Chalon, R. A.
- Quatrain Addressed to a Lady, and Written on the Envelope in Which Was Returned Her Own Letter, p. 218, by M. R.
- The Test of Love, p. 219, by F. Mansel Reynolds
- The Boy and the Butterfly, p. 220, by T. Crofton Croker
- An Incident, pp. 221-237, by F. Mansel Reynolds
- What is Love?, p. 237, by M. L.
- Stanzas Addressed to R. M. W. Turner, Esq. R. A. on His View of the Lago Maggiore from the Town of Arona, pp. 238-239, by Robert Southey
- Lago Maggiore, p. 238, by J. M. W. Turner, R. A.
- Impromptu on a Poet Who Was Compelled by Poverty to Lodge with a Tailor, p. 239, by F. Mansel Reynolds
- Sketch of a Fragment of the History of the Nineteenth Century, pp. 240-256, by J. M.
- Life’s Day, p. 257, by W. Jerdan
- Description of the Engraving Entitled a Scene at Abbotsford, pp. 258-261, by the author of Waverley
- To a Critic Who Quoted an Isolated Passage, and Then Declared It Unintelligible, p. 261, by S. T. Coleridge
- The Broken Chain, pp. 262-263, by Mrs. Hemans
- Impromptu, on the Assertion of a Lady, That in Her Drawing of Venus, the Hair of the Goddess Was Arranged so as to Conceal a Portion of Her Figure, Without Disobeying the Laws of Gravity, p. 263, by M. R.
- To ___, pp. 264-265, by F. Mansel Reynolds
- To a Pearl, p. 265, by Lord Porchester
- A Legend of Killarney, Chapters I-II, pp. 266-277, by Thomas Haynes Bayly
- Epigrams, p. 277, by S. T. Coleridge
- Burnham-Beeches, pp. 278-281, by Henry Luttrell
- The Garden of Boccacio, pp. 282-285, by S. T. Coleridge
- Garden of Boccacio, p. 282, by T. Stothard, R. A.
- The Old Gentleman, a Tale, pp. 286-309, by Theodore Hook
- The Altered River, pp. 310-311, by L. E. L.
- Epigram, p. 311, by S. T. Coleridge
- Lines Written in the Album of Elliot Cresson of Philadelphia, p. 312, by the author of Lorenzo de’ Medici
- The Victim Bride, pp. 313-314, by W. H. Harrison
- Clorinda: or, the Necklace of Pearl, the Tale of a Bystander, pp. 315-353, by Lord Normanby
- Clorinda, or the Necklace of Pearl, p. 344, by F. P. Stephanoff
- The King and the Minstrel of Ely, from the Norman-French, pp. 354-359, by J. G. Lockhart
- Epigram, p. 360, by S. T. Coleridge
Submitted by: Strobelt, Brittany: Section 1, Fall 2013