The Keepsake (Keepske) 1829

A literary annual (1827-1857), edited by a series of high profile figures including the Countess of Blessington and Frederic Mansell Reynolds. Illustrated poetry in The Keepsake was written for expensive engravings of paintings, so that the poem illustrated the picture.

Poems appearing in this periodical

1829

Total poems: 48
Poem title Poet(s) Date Vol etc. Transcribed? id #
Stanzas by Lord F. L. Gower, On the Execution Militaire, a Print from a Picture by Vigneron Egerton, Francis (Leveson-Gower) 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 45–46 no 2948
To — Reynolds, Frederic Mansel 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 49 no 2949
On Two Sisters Reynolds, Frederic Mansel 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 51 no 2958
The Country Girl Wordsworth, William (1770-1850) 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 50–51 no 2950
Scraps of Italy Howard, George William Frederick 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 69–72 no 2951
To — Reynolds, Frederic Mansel 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 79 no 3539
The Triad Wordsworth, William (1770-1850) 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 72–79 yes 2952
Invitation. To a Beautiful But Very Small Young Lady Reynolds, Frederic Mansel 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 100 no 2953
The Wishing-Gate Wordsworth, William (1770-1850) 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 108–110 no 2954
An Anticipation for a Certain Coquette Reynolds, Frederic Mansel 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 119 no 2955
Extempore. To —, To Whose Interference I Chiefly Owe the Very Liberal Price Given for Lalla Rookh Moore, Thomas (1779-1852) 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 120 no 2956
Verses Landon, Letitia Elizabeth (pseudonym L. E. L.) 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 121 yes 2957
“Last Monday all the papers said” Coleridge, Samuel Taylor 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 122 no 16043
“Hoarse Mævius reads his hobbling verse” Coleridge, Samuel Taylor 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 122 no 2959
“There comes from old Avaro’s grave” Coleridge, Samuel Taylor 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 122 no 16042
To a Spinster. Love’s Calendar Reynolds, Frederic Mansel 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 142 no 2960
Sonnet. A Gravestone Upon the Floor in the Cloisters of Worcester Cathedral Wordsworth, William (1770-1850) 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 156 no 2961
Lucy and Her Bird Southey, Robert 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 157–160 no 2962
I. Summer and Winter Shelley, Percy Bysshe 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 160–161 no 3036
II. The Tower of Famine Shelley, Percy Bysshe 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 161–162 no 13666
III. The Aziola Shelley, Percy Bysshe 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 162 no 13667
Sonnet. A Tradition of Darley-Dale, Derbyshire Wordsworth, William (1770-1850) 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 183 no 3540
The Thief Detected Reynolds, Frederic Mansel 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 185 no 3038
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 Luttrell, Henry 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 184–185 no 3037
Stanzas Bernal, Ralph (1783-1854) 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 193 no 3039
Reasons For Absence Reynolds, Frederic Mansel 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 194 no 3040
Quatrain Addressed to a Lady, and Written on the Envelope in Which Was Returned Her Own Letter Reynolds, Frederic Mansel 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 218 no 3041
The Test of Love Reynolds, Frederic Mansel 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 219 no 3042
The Boy and the Butterfly Croker, Thomas Crofton 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 220 no 3043
What Is Love? Lamb, Caroline, M. L. (poet; The Keepsake) 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 237 no 3044
Impromptu, on a Poet Who Was Compelled by Poverty to Lodge With a Tailor Reynolds, Frederic Mansel 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 239 no 3046
Stanzas, Addressed to R. M. W. Turner, Esq. R. A. On His View of the Lago Maggiore from the Town of Arona Southey, Robert 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 238–239 no 3045
Life’s Day Jerdan, William 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 257 no 3541
To a Critic who Quoted an Isolated Passage, and then Declared it Unintelligible Coleridge, Samuel Taylor 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 261 no 3047
The Broken Chain Hemans, Felicia 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 262–263 no 3048
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 Reynolds, Frederic Mansel 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 263 no 3049
To — Reynolds, Frederic Mansel 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 264–265 no 3050
To a Pearl Herbert, Henry 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 265 no 3051
Your poem must eternal be Coleridge, Samuel Taylor 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 277 no 3052
“Swans sing before they die—’twere no bad thing” Coleridge, Samuel Taylor 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 277 no 16044
Burnham-Beeches Luttrell, Henry 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 278–281 no 3053
The Garden of Boccacio Coleridge, Samuel Taylor 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 282–285 no 3054
Epigram Coleridge, Samuel Taylor 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 311 no 3056
The Altered River Landon, Letitia Elizabeth (pseudonym L. E. L.) 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 310–311 no 3055
Lines Written in an Album of Elliot Cresson of Philadelphia Roscoe, William 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 312 no 3057
The Victim Bride Harrison, William Henry 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 313–314 no 3058
The King and the Minstrel of Ely. From the Norman-French 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 354–359 no 3059
Epigram Coleridge, Samuel Taylor 1829 The Keepsake Volume 1829, Page 360 no 3542