Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Charles Armitage Brown (14 April 1787 – 5 June 1842) was a close friend of the poet John Keats, as well as a friend of artist Joseph Severn, Leigh Hunt, Thomas Jefferson Hogg, Walter Savage Landor and Edward John Trelawny. He was the father of Charles (Carlino) Brown, a pioneer and politician of New Plymouth, New Zealand.

  2. Jan 14, 2020 · Charles Armitage Brown (1787–1842) is remembered now as ‘the friend of John Keats’: his generosity gave the poet a home for his most productive months between December 1818 and May 1820. Most that is widely known about Brown is associated with...

    • Nicholas Roe
    • nhr@st-andrews.ac.uk
    • 2020
  3. Charles Armitage Brown, the owner of the half of the house they were renting, was spending the summer on a walking tour of Scotland with his friend John Keats. The other half of the house was occupied by the Brawnes’ friends Charles and Maria Dilke, who described Brown’s melancholy friend to the Brawne family.

  4. Feb 22, 2015 · You are here: Home » Keats » The Life of John Keats: A memoir by Charles Armitage Brown. Brown was Keats's closest friend. His Life of John Keats, revised and completed twenty years after the poet's death, offers unique insight into Keats's life.

  5. People also ask

  6. Brown’s original manuscript was published in full in 1937, under Browns pen name of “Charles Armitage Brown”. It had by then achieved mythic status for Brown’s accounts of the composition of the Nightingale ode, the “drop of blood” which Keats told Brown was his “death warrant” and other memorable events of their shared life.

  7. To help execute the will’s terms, his former roommate and sometime traveling companion Charles Armitage Brown drafted a catalogue of Keats’s library and the names of friends who had lent or given books to the poet.

  8. John Keats. Autograph letter to Charles Armitage Brown, September 28, [1820]. Fanny Brawne. Lock of hair. John Keats. Letter to Mrs. Samuel Brawne, Naples Harbour, 24 October [1820]. John Keats. Letter to Charles Armitage Brown, November 1, 1820.

  1. People also search for