Of all the great poets of the early
nineteenth century Wordsworth, Coleridge,
Scott, Byron, Shelley, Keats John Keats
was the last born and the first to die. The length
of his life was not one-third that of Wordsworth,
who was born twenty-five years before him and outlived
him by twenty-nine. Yet before his tragic death
at twenty-six Keats had produced a body of poetry
of such extraordinary power and promise that the world
has sometimes been tempted, in its regret for what
he might have done had he lived, to lose sight of
the superlative merit of what he actually accomplished.
The three years of his poetic career,
during which he published three small volumes of poetry,
show a development at the same time rapid and steady,
and a gradual but complete abandonment of almost every
fault and weakness. It would probably be impossible,
in the history of literature, to find such another
instance of the ‘growth of a poet’s mind’.
The last of these three volumes, which
is here reprinted, was published in , when it
’had good success among the literary people and
. . . a moderate sale’. It contains the
flower of his poetic production and is perhaps, altogether,
one of the most marvellous volumes ever issued from
the press.
But in spite of the maturity of Keats’s
work when he was twenty-five, he had been in no sense
a precocious child. Born in in the city of
London, the son of a livery-stable keeper, he was brought
up amid surroundings and influences by no means calculated
to awaken poetic genius.
He was the eldest of five four
boys, one of whom died in infancy, and a girl younger
than all; and he and his brothers George and Tom were
educated at a private school at Enfield. Here
John was at first distinguished more for fighting
than for study, whilst his bright, brave, generous
nature made him popular with masters and boys.
Soon after he had begun to go to school
his father died, and when he was fifteen the children
lost their mother too. Keats was passionately
devoted to his mother; during her last illness he would
sit up all night with her, give her her medicine,
and even cook her food himself. At her death
he was brokenhearted.
The children were now put under the
care of two guardians, one of whom, Mr. Abbey, taking
the sole responsibility, immediately removed John from
school and apprenticed him for five years to a surgeon
at Edmonton.
Whilst thus employed Keats spent all
his leisure time in reading, for which he had developed
a great enthusiasm during his last two years at school.
There he had devoured every book that came in his way,
especially rejoicing in stories of the gods and goddesses
of ancient Greece. At Edmonton he was able to
continue his studies by borrowing books from his friend
Charles Cowden Clarke, the son of his schoolmaster,
and he often went over to Enfield to change his books
and to discuss those which he had been reading.
On one of these occasions Cowden Clarke introduced
him to Spenser, to whom so many poets have owed their
first inspiration that he has been called ‘the
poets’ poet’; and it was then, apparently,
that Keats was first prompted to write.
When he was nineteen, a year before
his apprenticeship came to an end, he quarrelled with
his master, left him, and continued his training in
London as a student at St. Thomas’s Hospital
and Guy’s. Gradually, however, during the
months that followed, though he was an industrious
and able medical student, Keats came to realize that
poetry was his true vocation; and as soon as he was
of age, in spite of the opposition of his guardian,
he decided to abandon the medical profession and devote
his life to literature.
If Mr. Abbey was unsympathetic Keats
was not without encouragement from others. His
brothers always believed in him whole-heartedly, and
his exceptionally lovable nature had won him many
friends. Amongst these friends two men older
than himself, each famous in his own sphere, had special
influence upon him.
One of them, Leigh Hunt, was something
of a poet himself and a pleasant prose-writer.
His encouragement did much to stimulate Keats’s
genius, but his direct influence on his poetry was
wholly bad. Leigh Hunt’s was not a deep
nature; his poetry is often trivial and sentimental,
and his easy conversational style is intolerable when
applied to a great theme. To this man’s
influence, as well as to the surroundings of his youth,
are doubtless due the occasional flaws of taste in
Keats’s early work.
The other, Haydon, was an artist of
mediocre creative talent but great aims and amazing
belief in himself. He had a fine critical faculty
which was shown in his appreciation of the Elgin marbles,
in opposition to the most respected authorities of
his day. Mainly through his insistence they were
secured for the nation which thus owes him a boundless
debt of gratitude. He helped to guide and direct
Keats’s taste by his enthusiastic exposition
of these masterpieces of Greek sculpture.
In Keats published his first
volume of poems, including ’Sleep and Poetry’
and the well-known lines ‘I stood tiptoe upon
a little hill’. With much that is of the
highest poetic value, many memorable lines and touches
of his unique insight into nature, the volume yet showed
considerable immaturity. It contained indeed,
if we except one perfect sonnet, rather a series of
experiments than any complete and finished work.
There were abundant faults for those who liked to look
for them, though there were abundant beauties too;
and the critics and the public chose rather to concentrate
their attention on the former. The volume was
therefore anything but a success; but Keats was not
discouraged, for he saw many of his own faults more
clearly than did his critics, and felt his power to
outgrow them.
Immediately after this Keats went
to the Isle of Wight and thence to Margate that he
might study and write undisturbed. On May th
he wrote to Haydon ’I never quite
despair, and I read Shakespeare indeed I
shall, I think, never read any other book much’.
We have seen Keats influenced by Spenser and by Leigh
Hunt: now, though his love for Spenser continued,
Shakespeare’s had become the dominant influence.
Gradually he came too under the influence of Wordsworth’s
philosophy of poetry and life, and later his reading
of Milton affected his style to some extent, but Shakespeare’s
influence was the widest, deepest and most lasting,
though it is the hardest to define. His study
of other poets left traces upon his work in turns
of phrase or turns of thought: Shakespeare permeated
his whole being, and his influence is to be detected
not in a resemblance of style, for Shakespeare can
have no imitators, but in a broadening view of life,
and increased humanity.
No poet could have owed his education
more completely to the English poets than did John
Keats. His knowledge of Latin was slight he
knew no Greek, and even the classical stories which
he loved and constantly used, came to him almost entirely
through the medium of Elizabethan translations and
allusions. In this connexion it is interesting
to read his first fine sonnet, in which he celebrates
his introduction to the greatest of Greek poets in
the translation of the rugged and forcible Elizabethan,
George Chapman:
On first looking
into Chapman’s Homer.
Much have I travelled
in the realms of gold,
And many goodly states
and kingdoms seen;
Round many western islands
have I been
Which bards in fealty
to Apollo hold.
Oft of one wide expanse
had I been told
That deep-brow’d
Homer ruled as his demesne;
Yet did I never breathe
its pure serene
Till I heard Chapman
speak out loud and bold:
Then felt I like some
watcher of the skies
When a new planet swims
into his ken;
Or like stout Cortez
when with eagle eyes
He stared at the Pacific and
all his men
Look’d at each
other with a wild surmise
Silent, upon a peak
in Darien.
Of the work upon which he was now
engaged, the narrative-poem of Endymion, we
may give his own account to his little sister Fanny
in a letter dated September th, :
’Perhaps you might like to know
what I am writing about. I will tell you.
Many years ago there was a young handsome Shepherd
who fed his flocks on a Mountain’s Side called
Latmus he was a very contemplative sort
of a Person and lived solitary among the trees and
Plains little thinking that such a beautiful Creature
as the Moon was growing mad in Love with him. However
so it was; and when he was asleep she used to come
down from heaven and admire him excessively for a long
time; and at last could not refrain from carrying
him away in her arms to the top of that high Mountain
Latmus while he was a dreaming but I dare
say you have read this and all the other beautiful
tales which have come down from the ancient times
of that beautiful Greece.’
On his return to London he and his
brother Tom, always delicate and now quite an invalid,
took lodgings at Hampstead. Here Keats remained
for some time, harassed by the illness of his brother
and of several of his friends; and in June he was
still further depressed by the departure of his brother
George to try his luck in America.
In April, , Endymion was
finished. Keats was by no means satisfied with
it but preferred to publish it as it was, feeling it
to be ’as good as I had power to make it by
myself’. ’I will write independently’
he says to his publisher ’I have written
independently without judgment. I may
write independently and with judgment hereafter.
In Endymion I leaped headlong into the sea,
and thereby have become better acquainted with the
soundings, the quicksands, and the rocks, than if
I had stayed upon the green shore, and piped a silly
pipe, and took tea and comfortable advice.’
He published it with a preface modestly explaining
to the public his own sense of its imperfection.
Nevertheless a storm of abuse broke upon him from the
critics who fastened upon all the faults of the poem the
diffuseness of the story, its occasional sentimentality
and the sometimes fantastic coinage of words,[xiii:]
and ignored the extraordinary beauties of which it
is full.
Directly after the publication of
Endymion, and before the appearance of these
reviews, Keats started with a friend, Charles Brown,
for a walking tour in Scotland. They first visited
the English lakes and thence walked to Dumfries, where
they saw the house of Burns and his grave. They
entered next the country of Meg Merrilies, and from
Kirkcudbrightshire crossed over to Ireland for a few
days. On their return they went north as far
as Argyleshire, whence they sailed to Staffa and saw
Fingal’s cave, which, Keats wrote, ’for
solemnity and grandeur far surpasses the finest Cathedral.’
They then crossed Scotland through Inverness, and
Keats returned home by boat from Cromarty.
His letters home are at first full
of interest and enjoyment, but a ‘slight sore
throat’, contracted in ’a most wretched
walk of thirty-seven miles across the Isle of Mull’,
proved very troublesome and finally cut short his
holiday. This was the beginning of the end.
There was consumption in the family: Tom was
dying of it; and the cold, wet, and over-exertion
of his Scotch tour seems to have developed the fatal
tendency in Keats himself.
From this time forward he was never
well, and no good was done to either his health or
spirits by the task which now awaited him of tending
on his dying brother. For the last two or three
months of , until Tom’s death in December,
he scarcely left the bedside, and it was well for
him that his friend, Charles Armitage Brown, was at
hand to help and comfort him after the long strain.
Brown persuaded Keats at once to leave the house,
with its sad associations, and to come and live with
him.
Before long poetry absorbed Keats
again; and the first few months of were the most
fruitful of his life. Besides working at Hyperion,
which he had begun during Tom’s illness, he wrote
The Eve of St. Agnes, The Eve of St. Mark,
La Belle Dame Sans Merci, and nearly all his
famous odes.
Troubles however beset him. His
friend Haydon was in difficulties and tormenting him,
poor as he was, to lend him money; the state of his
throat gave serious cause for alarm; and, above all,
he was consumed by an unsatisfying passion for the
daughter of a neighbour, Mrs. Brawne. She had
rented Brown’s house whilst they were in Scotland,
and had now moved to a street near by. Miss Fanny
Brawne returned his love, but she seems never to have
understood his nature or his needs. High-spirited
and fond of pleasure she did not apparently allow the
thought of her invalid lover to interfere much with
her enjoyment of life. She would not, however,
abandon her engagement, and she probably gave him all
which it was in her nature to give. Ill-health
made him, on the other hand, morbidly dissatisfied
and suspicious; and, as a result of his illness and
her limitations, his love throughout brought him restlessness
and torment rather than peace and comfort.
Towards the end of July he went to
Shanklin and there, in collaboration with Brown, wrote
a play, Otho the Great. Brown tells us
how they used to sit, one on either side of a table,
he sketching out the scenes and handing each one,
as the outline was finished, to Keats to write.
As Keats never knew what was coming it was quite impossible
that the characters should be adequately conceived,
or that the drama should be a united whole. Nevertheless
there is much that is beautiful and promising in it.
It should not be forgotten that Keats’s ‘greatest
ambition’ was, in his own words, ‘the
writing of a few fine plays’; and, with the
increasing humanity and grasp which his poetry shows,
there is no reason to suppose that, had he lived,
he would not have fulfilled it.
At Shanklin, moreover, he had begun
to write Lamia, and he continued it at Winchester.
Here he stayed until the middle of October, excepting
a few days which he spent in London to arrange about
the sending of some money to his brother in America.
George had been unsuccessful in his commercial enterprises,
and Keats, in view of his family’s ill-success,
determined temporarily to abandon poetry, and by reviewing
or journalism to support himself and earn money to
help his brother. Then, when he could afford
it, he would return to poetry.
Accordingly he came back to London,
but his health was breaking down, and with it his
resolution. He tried to re-write Hyperion,
which he felt had been written too much under the
influence of Milton and in ’the artist’s
humour’. The same independence of spirit
which he had shown in the publication of Endymion
urged him now to abandon a work the style of which
he did not feel to be absolutely his own. The
re-cast he wrote in the form of a vision, calling
it The Fall of Hyperion, and in so doing he
added much to his conception of the meaning of the
story. In no poem does he show more of the profoundly
philosophic spirit which characterizes many of his
letters. But it was too late; his power was failing
and, in spite of the beauty and interest of some of
his additions, the alterations are mostly for the
worse.
Whilst The Fall of Hyperion
occupied his evenings his mornings were spent over
a satirical fairy-poem, The Cap and Bells, in
the metre of the Faerie Queene. This metre,
however, was ill-suited to the subject; satire was
not natural to him, and the poem has little intrinsic
merit.
Neither this nor the re-cast of Hyperion
was finished when, in February, , he had an attack
of illness in which the first definite symptom of
consumption appeared. Brown tells how he came
home on the evening of Thursday, February rd, in
a state of high fever, chilled from having ridden
outside the coach on a bitterly cold day. ’He
mildly and instantly yielded to my request that he
should go to bed . . . On entering the cold sheets,
before his head was on the pillow, he slightly coughed,
and I heard him say “that is blood
from my mouth”. I went towards him:
he was examining a single drop of blood upon the sheet.
“Bring me the candle, Brown, and let me see this
blood.” After regarding it steadfastly
he looked up in my face with a calmness of expression
that I can never forget, and said, “I know the
colour of that blood; it is arterial blood;
I cannot be deceived in that colour; that drop of
blood is my death warrant; I must die."’
He lived for another year, but it
was one long dying: he himself called it his
‘posthumous life’.
Keats was one of the most charming
of letter-writers. He had that rare quality of
entering sympathetically into the mind of the friend
to whom he was writing, so that his letters reveal
to us much of the character of the recipient as well
as of the writer. In the long journal-letters
which he wrote to his brother and sister-in-law in
America he is probably most fully himself, for there
he is with the people who knew him best and on whose
understanding and sympathy he could rely. But
in none is the beauty of his character more fully
revealed than in those to his little sister Fanny,
now seventeen years old, and living with their guardian,
Mr. Abbey. He had always been very anxious that
they should ‘become intimately acquainted, in
order’, as he says, ’that I may not only,
as you grow up, love you as my only Sister, but confide
in you as my dearest friend.’ In his most
harassing times he continued to write to her, directing
her reading, sympathizing in her childish troubles,
and constantly thinking of little presents to please
her. Her health was to him a matter of paramount
concern, and in his last letters to her we find him
reiterating warnings to take care of herself ’You
must be careful always to wear warm clothing not only
in Frost but in a Thaw.’ ’Be
careful to let no fretting injure your health as I
have suffered it health is the greatest
of blessings with health and hope
we should be content to live, and so you will find
as you grow older.’ The constant recurrence
of this thought becomes, in the light of his own sufferings,
almost unbearably pathetic.
During the first months of his illness
Keats saw through the press his last volume of poetry,
of which this is a reprint. The praise which it
received from reviewers and public was in marked contrast
to the scornful reception of his earlier works, and
would have augured well for the future. But Keats
was past caring much for poetic fame. He dragged
on through the summer, with rallies and relapses, tormented
above all by the thought that death would separate
him from the woman he loved. Only Brown, of all
his friends, knew what he was suffering, and it seems
that he only knew fully after they were parted.
The doctors warned Keats that a winter
in England would kill him, so in September, ,
he left London for Naples, accompanied by a young
artist, Joseph Severn, one of his many devoted friends.
Shelley, who knew him slightly, invited him to stay
at Pisa, but Keats refused. He had never cared
for Shelley, though Shelley seems to have liked him,
and, in his invalid state, he naturally shrank from
being a burden to a mere acquaintance.
It was as they left England, off the
coast of Dorsetshire, that Keats wrote his last beautiful
sonnet on a blank leaf of his folio copy of Shakespeare,
facing A Lover’s Complaint:
Bright star! would I
were steadfast as thou art
Not in lone splendour
hung aloft the night,
And watching, with eternal
lids apart,
Like Nature’s
patient, sleepless Eremite,
The moving waters at
their priest-like task
Of pure ablution round
earth’s human shores,
Or gazing on the new
soft-fallen mask
Of snow upon the mountains
and the moors
No yet still
steadfast, still unchangeable,
Pillow’d upon
my fair love’s ripening breast,
To feel for ever its
soft fall and swell,
Awake for ever in a
sweet unrest,
Still, still to hear
her tender taken breath,
And so live ever or
else swoon to death.
The friends reached Rome, and there
Keats, after a brief rally, rapidly became worse.
Severn nursed him with desperate devotion, and of Keats’s
sweet considerateness and patience he could never say
enough. Indeed such was the force and lovableness
of Keats’s personality that though Severn lived
fifty-eight years longer it was for the rest of his
life a chief occupation to write and draw his memories
of his friend.
On February rd, , came the end
for which Keats had begun to long. He died peacefully
in Severn’s arms. On the th he was buried
in the beautiful little Protestant cemetery of which
Shelley said that it ’made one in love with
death to think that one should be buried in so sweet
a place’.
Great indignation was felt at the
time by those who attributed his death, in part at
least, to the cruel treatment which he had received
from the critics. Shelley, in Adonais,
withered them with his scorn, and Byron, in Don
Juan, had his gibe both at the poet and at his
enemies. But we know now how mistaken they were.
Keats, in a normal state of mind and body, was never
unduly depressed by harsh or unfair criticism.
‘Praise or blame,’ he wrote, ’has
but a momentary effect on the man whose love of beauty
in the abstract makes him a severe critic on his own
works,’ and this attitude he consistently maintained
throughout his poetic career. No doubt the sense
that his genius was unappreciated added something
to the torment of mind which he suffered in Rome,
and on his death-bed he asked that on his tombstone
should be inscribed the words ‘Here lies one
whose name was writ in water’. But it was
apparently not said in bitterness, and the rest of
the inscription[xxiii:] expresses rather the natural
anger of his friends at the treatment he had received
than the mental attitude of the poet himself.
Fully to understand him we must read
his poetry with the commentary of his letters which
reveal in his character elements of humour, clear-sighted
wisdom, frankness, strength, sympathy and tolerance.
So doing we shall enter into the mind and heart of
the friend who, speaking for many, described Keats
as one ’whose genius I did not, and do not,
more fully admire than I entirely loved the man’.