Page:Keats, poems published in 1820 (Robertson, 1909).djvu/284

 256 l. 113. So Apollo leaches his divinity—by knowledge which includes experience of human suffering—feeling 'the giant-agony of the world'.

198. l. 114. gray, hoary with antiquity.

l. 128. immortal death. Cf. Swinburne's Garden of Proserpine, st. 7.

199. l. 136. Filled in, in pencil, in a transcript of Hyperion by Keats's friend Richard Woodhouse— Glory dawn'd, he was a god.

HENRY FROWDE, M.A.