Biography of John Keats (1795-1821)
John Keats renowned poet of the English Romantic  Movement, wrote some of the greatest English language poems including  "La Belle Dame Sans Merci", "Ode To A Nightingale", and "Ode On a  Grecian Urn".
O Attic shape! Fair attitude! with brede
Of marble men and maidens overwrought,
With forest branches and the trodden weed;
Thou, silent form, dost tease us out of thought
As doth eternity: Cold pastoral!
When old age shall this generation waste,
Thou shalt remain, in midst of other woe
Than ours, a friend to man, to whom thou sayst,
"Beauty is truth, truth beauty,--that is all
Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know."
Of marble men and maidens overwrought,
With forest branches and the trodden weed;
Thou, silent form, dost tease us out of thought
As doth eternity: Cold pastoral!
When old age shall this generation waste,
Thou shalt remain, in midst of other woe
Than ours, a friend to man, to whom thou sayst,
"Beauty is truth, truth beauty,--that is all
Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know."
John  Keats was born on 31 October 1795 in Moorgate, London, England, the  first child born to Frances Jennings (b.1775-d.1810) and Thomas Keats  (d.1804), an employee of a livery stable. He had three siblings: George  (1797-1841).Thomas (1799-1818), and Frances Mary "Fanny" (1803-1889).  After leaving school in Enfield, Keats went on to apprentice with Dr.  Hammond, a surgeon in Edmonton. After his father died in a riding  accident, and his mother died of tuberculosis, John and his brothers  moved to Hampstead. It was here that Keats met Charles Armitage Brown  (1787-1842) who would become a great friend. Remembering his first  meeting with him, Brown writes "His full fine eyes were lustrously intellectual, and beaming (at that time!)". Much grieved by his death, Brown worked for many years on his memoir and biography, Life of John Keats (1841). In it Brown claims that it was not until Keats read Edmund Spencer's Faery Queen  that he realised his own gift for the poetic. Keats was an avid student  in the fields of medicine and natural history, but he then turned his  attentions to the literary works of such authors as William Shakespeare and Geoffrey Chaucer.
  Keats  had his poems published in the magazines of the day at the  encouragement of many including James Henry Leigh Hunt Esq. (1784-1859),  editor of the Examiner and to whom Keats dedicated his first collection Poems  (1817). It includes "To My Brother George", "O Solitude! If I Must With  Thee Dwell", and "Happy is England! I Could Be Content". Upon its  appearance a series of personal attacks directed at Keats ensued in the  pages of Blackwood's Magazine. Despite the controversy surrounding his life, Keats's literary merit prevailed. That same year Keats met Percy Bysshe Shelley  who would also become a great friend. When Shelley invited the ailing  Keats to stay with him and his family in Italy, he declined. When  Shelley's body was washed ashore after drowning, a volume of Keats's  poetry was found in his pocket.
Having worked on it for many months, Keats finished his epic poem comprising four books, Endymion: A Poetic Romance--"A thing of beauty is a joy for ever"--in  1818. That summer he travelled to the Lake District of England and on  to Ireland and Scotland on a walking tour with Brown. They visited the  grave of Robert Burns and reminisced upon John Milton's  poetry. While he was not aware of the seriousness of it, Keats was  suffering from the initial stages of the deadly infectious disease  tuberculosis. He cut his trip short and upon return to Hampstead  immediately tended to his brother Tom who was then in the last stages of  the disease. After Tom's death in December of 1818, Keats lived with  Brown.
Early one morning I was awakened in my bed by a pressure on my hand. It was Keats, who came to tell me his brother was no more. I said nothing, and we both remained silent for awhile, my hand fast locked in his. At length, my thoughts returning from the dead to the living, I said--'Have 'nothing more to do with those lodgings,--and 'alone too. Had you not better live with me?' He paused, pressed my hand warmly, and replied,-'I think it would be better.' From that moment he was my inmate.
Around this  time Keats met, fell in love with, and became engaged to eighteen year  old Frances "Fanny" Brawne (1800-1865). He wrote one of his more famous  sonnets to her titled "Bright Star, would I were steadfast as thou art".  While their relationship inspired much spiritual development for Keats,  it also proved to be tempestuous, filled with the highs and lows from  jealousy and infatuation of first love. Brown was not impressed and  tried to provide some emotional stability to Keats. Many for a time were  convinced that Fanny was the cause of his illness, or, used that as an  excuse to try to keep her away from him. For a while even Keats  entertained the possibility that he was merely suffering physical  manifestations of emotional anxieties--but after suffering a hemorrhage  he gave Fanny permission to break their engagement. She would hear  nothing of it and by her word provided much comfort to Keats in his last  days that she was ultimately loyal to him.
Although 1819 proved  to be his most prolific year of writing, Keats was also in dire  financial straits. His brother George had borrowed money he could  ill-afford to part with. His earning Fanny's mother's approval to marry  depended on his earning as a writer and he started plans with his  publisher John Taylor (1781-1864) for his next volume of poems. At the  beginning of 1820 Keats started to show more pronounced signs of the  deadly tuberculosis that had killed his mother and brother. After a lung  hemorrhage, Keats calmly accepted his fate, and he enjoyed several  weeks of respite under Brown's watchful eye. As was common belief at the  time that bleeding a patient was beneficial to healing, Keats was bled  and given opium to relieve his anxiety and pain. He was at times put on a  starvation diet, then at other times prescribed to eat meat and drink  red wine to gain strength. Despite these ill-advised good-intentions,  and suffering increasing weakness and fever, Keats was able to emerge  from his fugue and organise the publication of his next volume of  poetry.
Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems  (1820) includes some of his best-known and oft-quoted works:  "Hyperion", "To Autumn", and "Ode To A Nightingale". "Nightingale"  evokes all the pain and suffering that Keats experienced during his  short life-time: the death of his mother; the physical anguish he saw as  a young apprentice tending to the sick and dying at St. Guy's Hospital;  the death of his brother; and ultimately his own physical and spiritual  suffering in love and illness. Keats lived to see positive reviews of Lamia, even in Blackwood's  magazine. But the positivity was not to last long; Brown left for  Scotland and the ailing Keats lived with Hunt for a time. But it was  unbearable to him and only exacerbated his condition--he was unable to  see Fanny, so, when he showed up at the Brawne's residence in much  emotional agitation, sick, and feverish, they could not refuse him. He  enjoyed a month with them, blissfully under the constant care of his  beloved Fanny. Possibly bolstered by his finally having unrestricted  time with her, and able to imagine a happy future with her, Keats  considered his last hope of recovery of a rest cure in the warm climes  of Italy. As a parting gift Fanny gave him a piece of marble which she  had often clasped to cool her hand. In September of 1820 Keats sailed to  Rome with friend and painter Joseph Severn (1793-1879, who was unaware  of his circumstances with Fanny and the gravity of his health.
Keats  put on a bold front but it soon became apparent to Severn that he was  terminally ill. They stayed in rooms on the Piazza Navona near the  Spanish Steps, and enjoyed the lively sights and sounds of the people  and culture, but Keats soon fell into a deep depression. When his  attending doctor James Clark (1788-1870) finally voiced aloud the grim  prognosis, Keats's medical background came to the fore and he longed to  end his life and avoid the humiliating physical and mental torments of  tuberculosis. By early 1821 he was confined to bed, Severn a devoted  nurse. Keats had resolved not to write to Fanny and would not read a  letter from her for fear of the pain it would cause him, although he  constantly clasped her marble. During bouts of coughing, fever,  nightmares, Keats also tried to cheer his friend, who held him till the  end.
John Keats died on 23 February 1821 in Rome, Italy, and now  rests in the Protestant Cemetery in Rome, by the pyramid of Caius  Cestius, near his friend Shelley. His epitaph reads "Here lies one whose name was writ in water", inspired by the line "all your better deeds, Shall be in water writ" from Francis Beaumont (1584-1616) and John Fletcher's (1579-1625) five act play Philaster or: Love Lies A-bleeding.  Just a year later, Shelley was buried in the same cemetery, not long  after he had written "Adonais" (1821) in tribute to his friend;
I weep for Adonais--he is dead!
O, weep for Adonais! though our tears
Thaw not the frost which binds so dear a head!
And thou, sad Hour, selected from all years
To mourn our loss, rouse thy obscure compeers,
And teach them thine own sorrow, say: "With me
Died Adonais; till the Future dares
Forget the Past, his fate and fame shall be
An echo and a light unto eternity!"
Fanny  Brawne married in 1833 and died at the age of sixty-five. English poet  and friend of Brown's, Richard Monckton Milnes (1809-1885) wrote Life, Letters, and Literary Remains of John Keats  (1848). During his lifetime and since, John Keats inspired numerous  other authors, poets, and artists, and remains one of the most widely  read and studied 19th century poets.

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