- [Section] Oscar Wilde, letter to Emma Speed, 21 March 1882, with Keats's Grave
- from Endymion (1818)
- Title page, dedication Preface
- from Book I
- Keats's aspirations, opening scene (1-106)
- Endymion's malady (163-84, 392-406, 453-88, 505-15)
- Endymion's self-defense (520-857: "Pleasure Thermometer")
- Endymion's melancholy (970-92)
- from Book II
- Keats's invocation, Endymion's restlessness (1-68)
- Endymion in the underworld; the Bower of Adonis (376-529)
- Venus's assurances (573-93)
- Endymion's blissful dream of Cynthia (730-61)
- from Book III
- Keats's invocation and attack on worldly monarchs (1-71)
- Glaucus's tale of his love quest and Circe's Bower (372-638)
- from Book IV
- Keats's invocation, Endymion finds an Indian Maid (20-66)
- Endymion's rapture with this maid (85-119, 293-313)
- Endymion's dream of his Moon Goddess; the Cave of Quietude (497-554)
- Endymion gives up, happy conclusion (961-end)
- Letter to B. Bailey, 21 and 25 May 1818
- Letter to B. Bailey, 10 June 1818
- Letter to Fanny Keats, 2-5 July 1818, with "There was a naughty Boy" [3 July]
- Letter to B. Bailey, 18 and 22 July 1818
- [Section] "Cockney School of Poetry, No IV." Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, August 1818
- Letter to Charles Wentworth Dilke, 20-21 September 1818
- Letter to J. H. Reynolds, 22(?) September 1818
- [Section] Pierre de Ronsard, Les Amours de Cassandre, Sonet II
- Keats's "free translation" of Ronsard
- [Section] Article on Endymion, Quarterly Review XIX (c. 27 September)
- Letter to James Hessey, 8 October 1818
- Letter to George and Georgiana Keats, 14-31 October 1818
- Letter to Richard Woodhouse, 27 October 1818
- [Section] Oscar Wilde summons Keats, to defend Dorian Gray, 12 July 1890
- Sonnet to Ailsa Rock (Literary Pocket book, 1819 [published late 1818])
- Further poetry written in 1818, published posthumously
- [Section] from "Mountain Scenery," New Monthly Magazine, 1822
- Lines written in the Scotch Highlands (Examiner, 1822)
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- On Visiting the Tomb of Burns (Literary Remains, 1848)
- "This mortal body" (Literary Remains, 1848)
- "Sonnet I wrote on the top of Ben Nevis" (Literary Remains, 1848)
- Fragment ("Where's the Poet?") (Literary Remains, 1848)
- Modern Love (Literary Remains, 1848)
- Annotations on Paradise Lost
- Letter to George and Georgiana Keats, 14 February-3 May 1819; "Why did I laugh tonight?" "As Hermes once" (on a dream of Dante's Paolo and Francesca), La belle dame sans merci, two sonnets on "Fame," To Sleep, "If by dull rhymes"
- Letters to Miss Jeffery, 31 May and 9 June 1819
- Letters to Fanny Brawne, 1, 8, 15, and 25 July 1819
- Letter to B. Bailey, 14 August 1819
- Letter to J. Taylor, 23 August 1819
- Letters to J. H. Reynolds, 24 August and 21 September 1819
- Letter to R. Woodhouse, 21-22 September 1819
- Letter to C. W. Dilke, 22 September 1819
- Letter to Charles Brown, 23 September 1819
- Letter to George (and Georgiana) Keats, 17-27 September 1819; "Pensive they sit"
- Letters to F. Brawne, 13 and 19 October 1819
- "The day is gone"
- Letter to J. Taylor, 17 November 1819
- Posthumously published poetry from 1819
- To-. ("What can I do...?") (Literary Remains, 1848)
- Ode on Indolence (Literary Remains, 1848)
- To-. ("I cry your mercy") (Literary Remains, 1848)
- "This living hand" (H. B. Forman, Poetical Works, 1898)
- Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems (1820)
- Lamia
- Isabella; or, The Pot of Basil. A Story from Boccaccio
- [Section] The story of Isabella in The Decameron
- The Eve of St. Agnes
- [Section] Canceled stanzas
- Ode to a Nightingale
- Ode on a Grecian Ura
- Ode to Psyche
- Fancy
- [Section] "Fancy" in Paradise Lost
- To Autumn
- Ode on Melancholy
- [Section] The cancelled first stanza
- Hyperion. A Fragment -
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