Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: promise from Severn and I must put you in mind that on last All hallowmas' day you gave me your word that you would spend this Evening with meso no putting off. I have done little to Endymion latelylI hope to finish it in one more attack. I believe you I went to Richards'sit was so whoreson a Night that I stopped there all the next day. His Eemembrances to you.' (Ext. from the common place Book of my Mind Mem.WednesdayHampsteadcall in Warner Street a sketch of Mr. Hunt.)I will ever consider you my sincere and affectionate friendyou will not doubt that I am yours. God bless you John Keats. V.TO JOHN HAMILTON REYNOLDS. [London,] Sunday Evening [March 2, 1817 T].1 My dear EeynoldsYour kindness affects me so sensibly that I can merely put down a few mono-sentences. Your Criticism only makes me extremely anxious that I should not deceive you. It's the finest thing by God as Hazlitt would say. However I hope I may not deceive you. There are some acquaintances of mine who will scratch their Beards and although I have, I hope, some Charity, I wish their Nails may be long. I will be ready at the time you mention in all Happiness. There is a report that a young Lady of 16 has written the new Tragedy, God bless herI will know her by Hook or by Crook in less than a week. My Brothers' and my Remembrances to your kind Sisters. Yours most sincerely John Keats. 1 Not the long poem published under that title in 1818, but the earlier attempt beginning, " I stood tiptoe upon a little hill," which was printed as a fragment in the Poems of 1817. 2 This letter, which ia marked by Woodhouse in his copy "no date, sent by hand," I take to be an answer to the commendatory sonnet addressed by Eeynolds to Keats on February 27, 1817: see Keats (Men of Letters Series), ...