tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5424364424049242300.post3439801570269883037..comments2023-06-21T18:53:11.897+10:00Comments on Pykk: to admit a viewUmbagollahhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14556344092820711893noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5424364424049242300.post-61010261202236832022012-06-18T05:05:51.652+10:002012-06-18T05:05:51.652+10:00Sorry about this: I had a reply here, and then Blo...Sorry about this: I had a reply here, and then Blogger deleted it and dumped your comment in the spam folder along with someone who was trying to make us all look at washing machines. The connection between Keats and Hazlitt is interesting; the network of connections between a number of friends back then, is interesting, the association of Keats and Hazlitt or Hazlitt and Charles Lamb (I came to him through Lamb, I was looking for more essays), or Dorothy Wordsworth and Coleridge, or Coleridge and anybody who wanted to listen to him talk, or Lamb and the poet John Dyer, whose Georgic poem <i>The Fleece</i> I like a lot, and then the other Wordsworth and Dyer's <i>Grongar Hill</i>, and on and on. They might have been Romantics, but they were a long way from the lonely genius contemplating in the painting with one knee up on a dominated crag.Umbagollahhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14556344092820711893noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5424364424049242300.post-39681280534339118022012-06-14T08:12:55.529+10:002012-06-14T08:12:55.529+10:00I used to have little interest in Hazlitt, but as ...I used to have little interest in Hazlitt, but as a writer, now that I am learning how important Hazlitt was to Keats, I am very curious about him.Shelleyhttp://dustbowlpoetry.wordpress.comnoreply@blogger.com