To the Sky. Lark Hail to the better finit! In propose Thars of un premeditated art Insert find more in be not ami time that t as well as f The circ tion of ot such we m -Each p spread bef turn away singers, on be saw, wh the most important gain was the friendship of the schoolmaster's son, Charles Cowden Clarke. At the age of fifteen Selection of Poetry for Life-work. he was apprenticed to a surgeon; but though he studied surgery four years and he never practised. About the time that he decided to give up sur gery and devote him a self wholly to poetry, First Publications. published a volume of poems. It contained little meriting serious attention except two sonnets, On First Looking into Chapman's Homer, and On the Grasshopper and the Cricket. These should have attracted attention from the magazines; but they seem to have been noticed only by Hunt's paper and a few others which Hunt influenced to review the volume. "Endymi in: A Po time he nev Review and former bol the first bo may posses "A th Its l Pass A bo Full Though it appeared, a the older m ature. T complete book," ind century sta Attitude that for ma Keats's dea poem in m weight of a That the not even se It should h ace. He |