There lies before me a photograph of the first two stanzas of Keats's “Ode on melancholy,” as they stood when just written. The manuscript page containing them was given to John Howard Payne by George Keats, the poet's brother, who lived for many years at Louisville, Kentucky, and died there; but it now belongs to Mr. R. S. Chilton, United States Consul at Goderich, Ontario, who has kindly given me a photograph of it. The verses are in Keats's well-known and delicate handwriting, and exhibit a series of erasures and substitutions which are now most interesting, inasmuch as the changes in each instance enrich greatly the value of the word-painting.
To begin with, the title varies slightly from that first adopted, and reads simply “On melancholy,” to which the word “Ode” was later prefixed