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 |