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John Keats
1795 - 1821

The English poet John Keats stressed that man's quest for
happiness and fulfillment is thwarted by the sorrow and
corruption inherent in human nature. His works are marked by
rich imagery and melodic beauty.
John Keats was born on Oct. 31, 1795, the first child of a
London lower-middle-class family. In 1803 he was sent to school
at Enfield, where he gained a favorable reputation for high
spirits and boyish pugnaciousness. His father died in an
accident in 1804, and his mother in 1810, presumably of
tuberculosis. Meanwhile, Keats's interest had shifted from
fighting to reading.
When he left school in 1811, Keats was apprenticed to an
apothecary-surgeon in Edmonton. Then it was that Edmund
Spenser's Faerie Queene awakened him to the charm and power of
poetry. The imaginative beauty of Spenser's world of fantasy
fulfilled some romantic yearning in his adolescent mind, and he
was even more impressed by the poet's mastery of language as
evidenced in the aptness and the sensory intensity of his
imagery. It was probably during his last months at Edmonton that
Keats first tried his hand at writing: four stanzas entitled
"Imitation of Spenser."
On Oct. 2, 1815, Keats was registered at Guy's Hospital, where
he was to pursue his medical studies. He was a conscientious
student, but poetry gained increasing hold on his imagination.
Some growing sense of alienation may be perceived in his first
published poem, the sonnet "O solitude! If I must with thee
dwell," which Leigh Hunt printed in the Examiner on May 5, 1816.
Autumn 1816 brought decisive weeks in the maturation of Keats's
art and personality. In late September he read George Chapman's
translation of Homer, and this impressed upon him a new aspect
of both Elizabethan and Greek poetry: no longer the mellow
sensuousness, the exquisite fantasy that he had found in
Spenser, but a virility in theme and style that was to encourage
him in his turn to "speak out loud and bold." In October he made
the acquaintance of Hunt and of some of the young men who were
to become his devoted friends and to whom he addressed so many
admirable letters over the next 4 years. During November and
December he wrote most of the poems for his first volume, which
was published in March 1817.
Although it contains many felicitous, and at times arresting,
phrases, the book testifies to the young poet's inexperience and
immaturity. The derivative mannerisms of some of the sonnets,
the easy sybaritic nature description in "I stood tiptoe," the
romantic diffuseness and facile escapism of "Sleep and Poetry"
do much to account for the criticism - though not the venomous
malice - it received at the hands of Blackwood's Magazine in
October. In retrospect, this first volume has a character of
anticipation rather than achievement.
Publication of Endymion
The same cannot be said of Endymion: A Poetic Romance, to the
writing of which Keats devoted most of his time from April to
December 1817 and which appeared in May 1818. This mythical
story of the Latmian shepherd's love for the moon goddess
provided him with a narrative framework through which he hoped
to discipline his exuberant imagination; within a firm structure
that takes the hero through the bowels of the earth, under the
sea, and through the sky, he could nevertheless give free rein
to his fancy in a great variety of incidents. Keats turned the
story of Endymion into an allegory of the romantic longing to
overcome the boundaries of ordinary human experience. The
similarity with Percy Bysshe Shelley's Alastor, which had been
published in 1816, is obvious; but whereas the quest led
Shelley's hero to despair and death, Endymion significantly
realizes that ultimate identification with transcendence is not
to be achieved through the unmediated vision he had sought, but
through humble acceptance of human limitations and of the misery
built into man's condition.
Keats's letters reveal that at this time several of his friends
were ill or suffering from some sort of vexation. His brother
was very unwell, and he himself, after a bad cold, prophetically
feared in October 1817 that "I shall never be again secure in
Robustness." Like other romantic writers, Keats had a central
need somehow to adjust the evidence that, as he put it, "The
world is full of troubles" with an exalted intuition of cosmic
harmony; this preoccupation runs as a major trend through his
letters.
Another basic problem with which Keats's letters deal is how to
reconcile the rival claims of romantic subjectivity, which makes
for sincerity, concreteness, intensity, and originality, and of
esthetic objectivity, which alone raises poetry to universal
meaningfulness. Such reconciliation, he thought, had been
achieved by Shakespeare through a quality which Keats, in
December 1817, had called "Negative Capability."
It may have been in a deliberate attempt to secure greater
impersonality that in March-April 1818, after the allegory of
Endymion, he turned to straightforward narrative in Isabella,
which is based on a story by Boccaccio. Although the poem is
distinctly inferior, its theme was connected with Keats's more
philosophical preoccupations, as it centers on the beauty and
greatness of tragic love.
On the whole, 1818 brought a lull in Keats's creative output.
His letters, however, show that it was also a period of rapid
inner growth. By May he had become articulately conscious of
several pregnant verities: that experience, rather than
unbridled fancy, is the key to true poetry; that sorrow and
suffering are not to be eschewed but should be expected - in
1819 he was to say "greeted" - as a necessary step in the making
of the soul; that no great poetry can be achieved if "high
Sensations" are not completed by "extensive knowledge" and that
he himself, in his exploration of life's "dark passages," had
not yet reached further than the "Chamber of Maiden-Thought."
Later Works
It was presumably in order to give poetic utterance to this
enriched view of life and art that Keats started work on
Hyperion in September 1818. This new poem linked up with
Endymion, as an essential part of its purpose was to describe
the growth of Apollo into a true poet through ever deeper
acceptance and understanding of change and sorrow. But Keats was
unable to get ahead with it for a number of reasons: a trip to
Scotland had impaired his health; Blackwood's had published a
vitriolic attack on Endymion; his brother, Tom, had died after
several weeks' painful illness. Keats's friends were trying to
entertain him, and he was reluctantly swept up in the absorbing
trivialities of social life. Moreover, at this time he fell in
love with Fanny Brawne.
In spring 1819 Keats sought creative relief from his failure to
give satisfactory shape to his idea in new ventures which were
apparently less ambitious, yet proved to be the crowning work of
his annus mirabilis. Turning once more to verse narrative, he
first produced the opulent Eve of St. Agnes, in deliberate
revulsion against what he now saw as the "mawkish"
sentimentality of Isabella. The rape of Madeline in this poem
was soon to find its dialectical counterpart in the ghostlike
idealism of La Belle dame sans merci, a ballad that tells of the
mysterious seduction of a medieval knight by another of Keats's
elusive, enigmatic, half-divine ladies. Each poem embodies an
important trend in Keats's poetry: his sybaritic sense of
exquisite sensuality verging at times on eroticism, and a
longing mixed with fear and diffidence for some experience
beyond human mortality.
These were followed in the spring and summer of 1819 by the
first great odes: "Ode to Psyche," "Ode on a Grecian Urn," and
"Ode to a Nightingale." These, together with the later "Ode on
Indolence" and "Ode on Melancholy," are among the most acute
imaginative explorations of the intricate relation between the
contrasting experiences and aspirations whose interplay had
always controlled Keats's inspiration: sorrow and bliss, art and
reality, life and dream, truth and romance, death and
immortality.
The triumphant balance and integration achieved in the odes was
inevitably precarious. They coincided with the positive
conception of the world as a "Vale of Soulmaking," which the
poet had framed in April. But incipient financial trouble,
together with his tortured love for Fanny, were beginning to
press upon Keats. The three schemes that kept him busy during
the latter half of 1819 illustrate his confusion and perplexity.
In cooperation with one of his friends, he wrote his only drama,
Otho the Great, in the futile hope of acquiring both money and
public recognition. He also made his last attempt to define the
function of the poet in The Fall of Hyperion; but this, like the
former Hyperion, was never completed and remains a tantalizing
fragment of cryptic, inconclusive beauty. Significantly, the
last long poem that he managed to bring to completion was Lamia,
a brilliantly ambiguous piece which leads to the disenchanted
conclusion that both the artist and the lover live on deceptive
illusions.
Keats's health had been declining for some time. In February
1820 a severe hemorrhage in the lungs revealed the seriousness
of the disease. His third and last volume, Lamia, Isabella, The
Eve of St. Agnes and Other Poems, was printed in July. In
September, Keats left for Italy on an invitation from Shelley.
He died in Rome on Feb. 23, 1821.
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This web page was last updated on:
11 December, 2008
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