1829 (The Keepsake)

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1829

  1. My Aunt Margaret’s Mirror, Chapters I-II, pp. 1-44, by the author of Waverley
  2. The Magic Mirror, p. 33, by J. M. Wright
  3. 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
  4. On Love, pp. 47-49, by Percy Bysshe Shelley
  5. ___ to ___, p. 49, by F. Mansel Reynolds
  6. The Country Girl, pp. 50-51, by W. Wordsworth
  7. The Country Girl, p. 50, by J. Holmes
  8. On Two Sisters, p. 51, by F. Mansel Reynolds
  9. The Half-Brothers, pp. 52-68, by the authors of the O’Hara Tales
  10. Scraps of Italy, Parts I-IV, pp. 69-72, by Lord Morpeth
  11. The Triad, pp. 73-79, by W. Wordsworth
  12. ___ to ___, p. 79, by F. Mansel Reynolds
  13. The Sisters of Albano, pp. 80-100, by the author of Frankenstein
  14. Lake Albano, p. 80, by J. M. W. Turner, R. A.
  15. Invitation to a Beautiful but Very Small Young Lady, p. 100, by F. Mansel Reynolds
  16. Illustrations of the Characters of Anne Page and Slender, pp. 101-107, by the author of the Life of Kemble
  17. The Wishing-Gate, pp. 108-110, by W. Wordsworth
  18. Apropos of Bread, pp. 111-119, by Lord Nugent
  19. An Anticipation for a Certain Coquette, p. 119, by F. Mansel Reynolds
  20. Extempore, to——, to Whose Interference I Chiefly Owe the Very Liberal Price Given for Lalla Rookh, p. 120, by Thomas Moore
  21. Georgiana, Duchess of Bedford, p. 121, by Edwin Landseer, A. R. A.
  22. Verses, p. 121, by L. E. L.
  23. Epigrams, p. 122, by S. T. Coleridge
  24. The Tapestried Chamber, or the Lady in the Sacque, pp. 123-142, by the author of Waverley
  25. The Tapestried Chamber, p. 136, by F. P. Stephanoff
  26. To a Spinster Love’s Calendar, p. 142, by F. Mansel Reynolds
  27. An Attempt at a Tour, pp. 143-156, by the author of the Roué
  28. Sonnet, a Gravestone upon the Floor in the Cloisters of Worchester Cathedral, p. 156, by W. Wordsworth
  29. Lucy and Her Bird, p. 157, by J. M. Wright
  30. Lucy and Her Bird, pp. 157-160, by Robert Southey
  31. Fragments, Chapters I-III, pp. 160-162, by Percy Bysshe Shelley
  32. The Lady and Her Lovers, pp. 163-183, by the author of Gilbert Earle
  33. Love, p. 166, by F. P. Stephanoff
  34. Jealousy, p. 177, by F. P. Stephanoff
  35. Sonnet, a Tradition of Darley-Dale, Derbyshire, p. 183, by W. Wordsworth
  36. 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
  37. Lines, pp. 184-185, by Henry Luttrell
  38. The Thief Detected, p. 185, by F. Mansel Reynolds
  39. Death of the Laird’s Jock, to the editor of the Keepsake, pp. 186-192, by the author of Waverley
  40. The Laird’s Jock, p. 191, by H. Corbould
  41. Stanzas, p. 193, by R. Bernal, M. P.
  42. Reasons for Absence, pp. 194, by F. Mansel Reynolds
  43. Ferdinando Eboli, A Tale, pp. 195-218, by the author of Frankenstein
  44. Adelinda, p. 215, by Alfred E. Chalon, R. A.
  45. Quatrain Addressed to a Lady, and Written on the Envelope in Which Was Returned Her Own Letter, p. 218, by M. R.
  46. The Test of Love, p. 219, by F. Mansel Reynolds
  47. The Boy and the Butterfly, p. 220, by T. Crofton Croker
  48. An Incident, pp. 221-237, by F. Mansel Reynolds
  49. What is Love?, p. 237, by M. L.
  50. 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
  51. Lago Maggiore, p. 238, by J. M. W. Turner, R. A.
  52. Impromptu on a Poet Who Was Compelled by Poverty to Lodge with a Tailor, p. 239, by F. Mansel Reynolds
  53. Sketch of a Fragment of the History of the Nineteenth Century, pp. 240-256, by J. M.
  54. Life’s Day, p. 257, by W. Jerdan
  55. Description of the Engraving Entitled a Scene at Abbotsford, pp. 258-261, by the author of Waverley
  56. To a Critic Who Quoted an Isolated Passage, and Then Declared It Unintelligible, p. 261, by S. T. Coleridge
  57. The Broken Chain, pp. 262-263, by Mrs. Hemans
  58. 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.
  59. To ___, pp. 264-265, by F. Mansel Reynolds
  60. To a Pearl, p. 265, by Lord Porchester
  61. A Legend of Killarney, Chapters I-II, pp. 266-277, by Thomas Haynes Bayly
  62. Epigrams, p. 277, by S. T. Coleridge
  63. Burnham-Beeches, pp. 278-281, by Henry Luttrell
  64. The Garden of Boccacio, pp. 282-285, by S. T. Coleridge
  65. Garden of Boccacio, p. 282, by T. Stothard, R. A.
  66. The Old Gentleman, a Tale, pp. 286-309, by Theodore Hook
  67. The Altered River, pp. 310-311, by L. E. L.
  68. Epigram, p. 311, by S. T. Coleridge
  69. Lines Written in the Album of Elliot Cresson of Philadelphia, p. 312, by the author of Lorenzo de’ Medici
  70. The Victim Bride, pp. 313-314, by W. H. Harrison
  71. Clorinda: or, the Necklace of Pearl, the Tale of a Bystander, pp. 315-353, by Lord Normanby
  72. Clorinda, or the Necklace of Pearl, p. 344, by F. P. Stephanoff
  73. The King and the Minstrel of Ely, from the Norman-French, pp. 354-359, by J. G. Lockhart
  74. Epigram, p. 360, by S. T. Coleridge


Submitted by: Strobelt, Brittany: Section 1, Fall 2013