| The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-07. |
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| Keats, John |
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| 17951821, English poet, b. London. He is considered one of the greatest of English poets. | 1 | | The son of a livery stable keeper, Keats attended school at Enfield, where he became the friend of Charles Cowden Clarke, the headmasters son, who encouraged his early learning. Apprenticed to a surgeon (1811), Keats came to know Leigh Hunt and his literary circle, and in 1816 he gave up surgery to write poetry. His first volume of poems appeared in 1817. It included I stood tip-toe upon a little hill, Sleep and Poetry, and the famous sonnet On First Looking into Chapmans Homer. | 2 | | Endymion, a long poem, was published in 1818. Although faulty in structure, it is nevertheless full of rich imagery and color. Keats returned from a walking tour in the Highlands to find himself attacked in Blackwoods Magazinean article berated him for belonging to Leigh Hunts Cockney school of poetryand in the Quarterly Review. The critical assaults of 1818 mark a turning point in Keatss life; he was forced to examine his work more carefully, and as a result the influence of Hunt was diminished. However, these attacks did not contribute to Keatss decline in health and his early death, as Shelley maintained in his elegy Adonais. | 3 | | Keatss passionate love for Fanny Brawne seems to have begun in 1818. Fannys letters to Keatss sister show that her critics contention that she was a cruel flirt was not true. Only Keatss failing health prevented their marriage. He had contracted tuberculosis, probably from nursing his brother Tom, who died in 1818. With his friend, the artist Joseph Severn, Keats sailed for Italy shortly after the publication of Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems (1820), which contains most of his important work and is probably the greatest single volume of poetry published in England in the 19th cent. He died in Rome in Feb., 1821, at the age of 25. | 4 | | In spite of his tragically brief career, Keats is one of the most important English poets. He is also among the most personally appealing. Noble, generous, and sympathetic, he was capable not only of passionate love but also of warm, steadfast friendship. Keats is ranked, with Shelley and Byron, as one of the three great Romantic poets. Such poems as Ode to a Nightingale, Ode on a Grecian Urn, To Autumn, and Ode on Melancholy are unequaled for dignity, melody, and richness of sensuous imagery. All of his poetry is filled with a mysterious and elevating sense of beauty and joy. | 5 | | Keatss posthumous pieces include La Belle Dame sans Merci, in its way as great an evocation of romantic medievalism as The Eve of St. Agnes. Among his sonnets, familiar ones are When I have fears that I may cease to be and Bright star! would I were as steadfast as thou art. Lines on the Mermaid Tavern, Fancy, and Bards of Passion and of Mirth are delightful short poems. | 6 | | Some of Keatss finest work is in the unfinished epic Hyperion. In recent years critical attention has focused on Keatss philosophy, which involves not abstract thought but rather absolute receptivity to experience. This attitude is indicated in his celebrated term negative capabilityto let the mind be a thoroughfare for all thought. | 7 | | | | Bibliography | | Keatss letters (ed. by H. E. Rollins, 1958) vividly reveal his character, opinions, and feelings. See his poetical works, ed. by H. W. Garrod (2d ed. 1958); his autobiography, ed. by E. V. Weller (1933); biographies by A. Ward (1963), W. J. Bate (1963, repr. 1979), R. Gittings (1968), A. Motion (1998), and of his last days by J. E. Walsh (2000); studies by W. J. Bate (1945), M. Dickstein (1971), and D. van Ghent (1983). | 8 |
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| | | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2007 Columbia University Press. |
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