165-] English Literature
John Keats – Summary
Early
Life
John
Keats was born in London on October 31, 1795. His parents were Thomas Keats, a
hostler at the stables at the Swan and Hoop Inn, which he would later manage,
and Frances Jennings. He had three younger siblings: George, Thomas, and
Frances Mary, known as Fanny. His father died in April 1804 in a horse riding
accident, without leaving a will, and his mother remarried almost immediately.
Throughout his life Keats had close emotional ties to his sister, Fanny, and
his two brothers, George and Tom. After the breakup of their mother’s second
marriage, the Keats children lived with their widowed grandmother at Edmonton,
Middlesex. John attended a school at Enfield, two miles away, that was run by
John Clarke, whose son Charles Cowden Clarke did much to encourage Keats’s
literary aspirations.
John
Keats received relatively little formal education. In 1803, Keats was sent to
John Clarke's school in Enfield, which was close to his grandparents’ house and
had a curriculum that was more progressive and modern than what was found in
similar institutions.
At
school Keats was noted as a pugnacious lad and was decidedly “not literary,”
but in 1809 he began to read voraciously. After the death of the Keats
children’s mother in 1810, their grandmother put the children’s affairs into
the hands of a guardian, Richard Abbey. At Abbey’s instigation John Keats was
apprenticed to a surgeon at Edmonton in 1811. He broke off his apprenticeship
in 1814 and went to live in London, where he worked as a dresser, or junior
house surgeon, at Guy’s and St. Thomas’ hospitals. His literary interests had
crystallized by this time, and after 1817 he devoted himself entirely to
poetry. From then until his early death, the story of his life is largely the
story of the poetry he wrote. John Clarke fostered his interest in classical
studies and history. Charles Cowden Clarke, who was the headmaster’s son,
became a mentor figure for Keats, and introduced him to Renaissance writers
Torquato Tasso, Spenser, and the works of George Chapman. A temperamental boy,
young Keats was both indolent and belligerent, but starting at age 13, he
channeled his energies into the pursuit of academic excellence, to the point
that, in midsummer 1809, he won his first academic prize.
When
Keats was 14, his mother died of tuberculosis, and Richard Abbey and Jon
Sandell were appointed as the children's guardians. That same year, Keats left
John Clarke to become an apprentice to surgeon and apothecary Thomas Hammond,
who was the doctor of his mother’s side of the family. He lived in the attic
above Hammond’s practice until 1813.
Early
works
Charles
Cowden Clarke had introduced the young Keats to the poetry of Edmund Spenser
and the Elizabethans, and these were his earliest models. His first mature poem
is the sonnet “On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer” (1816), which was
inspired by his excited reading of George Chapman’s classic 17th-century
translation of the Iliad and the Odyssey. Clarke also introduced Keats to the
journalist and contemporary poet Leigh Hunt, and Keats made friends in Hunt’s circle
with the young poet John Hamilton Reynolds and with the painter Benjamin
Haydon. Keats’s first book, Poems, was published in March 1817 and was written
largely under “Huntian” influence. This is evident in the relaxed and rambling
sentiments evinced and in Keats’s use of a loose form of the heroic couplet and
light rhymes. The most interesting poem in this volume is “Sleep and Poetry,”
the middle section of which contains a prophetic view of Keats’s own poetical
progress. He sees himself as, at present, plunged in the delighted
contemplation of sensuous natural beauty but realizes that he must leave this
for an understanding of “the agony and strife of human hearts.” Otherwise the
volume is remarkable only for some delicate natural observation and some obvious
Spenserian influences.
In
1817 Keats left London briefly for a trip to the Isle of Wight and Canterbury
and began work on Endymion, his first long poem. On his return to London he
moved into lodgings in Hampstead with his brothers. Endymion appeared in 1818.
This work is divided into four 1,000-line sections, and its verse is composed
in loose rhymed couplets. The poem narrates a version of the Greek legend of
the love of the moon goddess (variously Diana, Selene, and Artemis; also
identified as Cynthia by Keats) for Endymion, a mortal shepherd, but Keats puts
the emphasis on Endymion’s love for the goddess rather than on hers for him.
Keats transformed the tale to express the widespread Romantic theme of the
attempt to find in actuality an ideal love that has been glimpsed heretofore
only in imaginative longings. This theme is realized through fantastic and
discursive adventures and through sensuous and luxuriant description. In his
wanderings, Endymion is guilty of an apparent infidelity to his visionary moon
goddess and falls in love with an earthly maiden to whom he is attracted by
human sympathy. But in the end the goddess and the earthly maiden turn out to
be one and the same. The poem equates Endymion’s original romantic ardour with
a more universal quest for a self-destroying transcendence in which he might
achieve a blissful personal unity with all creation. Keats, however, was
dissatisfied with the poem as soon as it was finished.
Keats
wrote his first poem, “An Imitation of Spenser,” in 1814, aged 19. After
finishing his apprenticeship with Hammond, Keats enrolled as a medical student
at Guy’s Hospital in October 1815. While there, he started assisting senior
surgeons at the hospital during surgeries, which was a job of significant
responsibility. His job was time consuming and it hindered his creative output,
which caused significant distress. He had ambition as a poet, and he admired
the likes of Leigh Hunt and Lord Byron.
He
received his apothecary license in 1816, which allowed him to be a professional
apothecary, physician, and surgeon, but instead, he announced to his guardian
that he would pursue poetry. His first printed poem was the sonnet “O
Solitude,” which appeared in Leigh Hunt’s magazine The Examiner. In the summer
of 1816, while vacationing with Charles Cowden Clarke in the town of Margate,
he started working on “Caligate.” Once that summer was over, he resumed his
studies to become a member of the Royal College of Surgeons.
Thanks
to Clarke, Keats met Leigh Hunt in October of 1816, who, in turn introduced him
to Thomas Barnes, editor of the Times, conductor Thomas Novello, and the poet
John Hamilton Reynolds. He published his first collection, Poems, which
includes “Sleep and poetry” and “I stood Tiptoe,” but it was panned by the
critics. Charles and James Ollier, the publishers, felt ashamed of it, and the
collection aroused little interest. Keats promptly went to other publishers,
Taylor and Hessey, who strongly supported his work and, one month after the
publication of Poems, he already had an advance and a contract for a new book.
Hessey also became a close friend of Keats. Through him and his partner, Keats
met the Eton-educated lawyer Richard Woodhouse, a fervent admirer of Keats who
would serve as his legal advisor. Woodhouse became an avid collector of Keats-related
materials, known as Keatsiana, and his collection is, to this day, one of the
most important sources of informations on Keats' work. The young poet also
became part of William Hazlitt’s circle, which cemented his reputation as an
exponent of a new school of poetry.
Upon
formally leaving his hospital training in December 1816, Keats' health took a
major hit. He left the damp rooms of London in favor of the village of
Hampstead in April 1817 to live with his brothers, but both he and his brother
George ended up taking care of their brother Tom, who had contracted
tuberculosis. This new living situation brought him close to Samuel T.
Coleridge, an elder poet of the first generation of Romantics, who lived in
Highgate. On April 11, 1818, the two took a walk together on Hampstead Heath,
where they talked about “nightingales, poetry, poetical sensation, and
metaphysics.”
In
the Summer of 1818 , Keats started touring Scotland, Ireland, and the Lake
District, but by July of 1818, while on the Isle of Mull, he caught a terrible
cold that debilitated him to the point that he had to return South. Keats'
brother, Tom, died of Tuberculosis on December 1st, 1818.
Keats
moved to Wentworth place, on the edge of Hampstead Heath, the property of his
friend Charles Armitage Brown. This is the period when he wrote his most mature
work: five out of his six great odes were composed in the Spring of 1819:
"Ode to Psyche," "Ode to a Nightingale," "Ode on a
Grecian Urn," "Ode on Melancholy," "Ode on Indolence."
In 1818, he also published Endymion, which, much like Poems, was not
appreciated by critics. Harsh assessments include “imperturbable drivelling
idiocy” by John Gibson Lockhart for The Quarterly Review, who also thought that
Keats would have been better off resuming his career as an apothecary, deeming
“to be a starved apothecary” a wiser thing than a starved poet. Lockhart was
also the one who lumped together Hunt, Hazlitt, and Keats as member as “the
Cockney School,” which was spiteful of both their poetic style and their lack
of a traditional elite education that also signified belonging to the
aristocracy or upper class.
There
were two important women in John Keats’ life. The first one was Isabella Jones,
whom he met in 1817. Keats was both intellectually and sexually attracted to
her, and wrote about frequenting “her rooms” in the winter of 1818-19 and about
their physical relationship, saying that he “warmed with her” and “kissed her”
in letters to his brother George. He then met Fanny Brawne in the fall of 1818.
She had talent for dressmaking, languages, and a theatrical bent. By late fall
1818, their relationship had deepened, and, throughout the following year,
Keats lent her books such as Dante’s Inferno. By the summer of 1819, they had
an informal engagement, mainly due to Keats’ dire straits, and their
relationship remained unconsummated. In the last months of their relationship,
Keats’ love took a darker and melancholic turn, and in poems such as "La
Belle Dame sans Merci" and "The Eve of St. Agnes," love is
closely associated with death. They parted in September 1820 when Keats, due to
his deteriorating health, was advised to move to warmer climates. He left for
Rome knowing that death was near: he died five months later.
The
famed sonnet "Bright Star" was first composed for Isabella Jones, but
he gave it to Fanny Brawne after revising it.
Themes
and Literary Style
Keats
often juxtaposed the comic and the serious in poems that are not primarily
funny. Much like his fellow Romantics, Keats struggled with the legacy of
prominent poets before him. They retained an oppressive power that hindered the
liberation of the imagination. Milton is the most notable case: Romantics both
worshipped him and tried to distance themselves from him, and the same happened
to Keats. His first Hyperion displayed Miltonic influences, which led him to
discard it, and critics saw it as a poem “that might have been written by John
Milton, but one that was unmistakably by no other than John Keats.”
Death
Keats
died in Rome on February 23, 1821. His remains rest in Rome’s Protestant
cemetery. His tombstone bears the inscription “Here lies One whose Name was
writ in Water.” Seven weeks after the funeral, Shelley wrote the elegy Adonais,
which memorialized Keats. It contains 495 lines and 55 Spenserian stanzas.
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