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John Keats (1795 - 1821)
John Keats was born on 31 October 1795 (probably), first
child of Thomas Keats and Frances Jennings Keats, who had
apparently eloped. Everything was pretty ordinary for all
concerned for a while--the Keatses had three more sons (George
and Thomas, plus Edward who died as a baby) and one daughter,
Frances, by 1803. That was also the year when John went away
to school at Enfield. In 1804, John's father was killed in a
fall from a horse. Just over two months later, for mysterious
reasons, Frances remarried, to a London bank clerk named
William Rawlings. Frances quickly decided she'd made some sort
of terrible error and left, taking nothing with her since the
laws of the time decreed that all her property and even her
children belonged to her husband. Frances' mother, Alice,
swept in and took custody of the children, but she could do
nothing about the Swan and Hoop, which Rawlings sold
immediately before disappearing. It was around this time that
John became prone to fistfights, which he rarely lost even
though he was small for his age.
Frances reappeared suddenly in 1809, ill and depressed from
many years of depending on the kindness of strangers. John was
overjoyed to see her and took care of her devotedly, but it
was soon obvious that she had consumption. She died in 1810, a
year or so after her brother died of the same disease. John
was crushed, and turned from fighting to studying. A year
later, one of his financial guardians, a man named Abbey, sat
him down and asked John what he'd like to do for a living.
John had already considered the question, and replied that
he'd like to be a surgeon. So he was duly apprenticed to a
surgeon named Hammond who lived in the neighborhood.
It was in 1813 that John first started reading lyric
poetry, most notably works by Sir Edmund Spenser like "The
Faerie Queen." It was also around this time that John began to
really rebel against Hammond. The following year, Grandmother
Jennings died, and the family was split up, it being improper
at that time for younger sisters to live with older brothers
without a parental type around. Frances was sent to live with
the kids' other financial guardian and the two boys went to
work. John just kept to himself and wrote really sad poems.
These poems still weren't very good, and he kept right on with
learning to be a surgeon (in fact, he was doing so well, he'd
jumped ahead of the curriculum) but over the next couple of
years, poetry gradually became the overriding ambition of his
life and medicine was left in the dust.
One of John's sonnets, called "To Solitude, " was printed
in 1816, in the liberal newspaper, The Examiner. This
sonnet was good, but it wasn't until a little later in the
year that he wrote "On First Looking Into Chapman's Homer,"
which proved that he was the man to watch. His first volume of
poetry appeared on 3 March 1817, and it didn't sell very well
at all. John was depressed, but kept writing. Shelley had
challenged him to an epic poetry writing contest over the
summer, and for that contest, John wrote Endymion,
though he didn't finish it within the time limit, so I guess
Shelley won. But John was the sought-after young poet in
London, and he lived in a whirl of parties and dances, even
though he didn't much like crowds.
In June of 1818, John apparently became convinced that he
would have only three more years to live. He'd already written
many of his most famous poems, but he was still convinced that
he hadn't yet done enough to leave his mark on the literary
world. His brother George had announced plans to emigrate to
Illinois with his new wife, and his brother Tom had just
started showing signs of consumption and needed John to look
after him. And to top it all off, John had just fallen madly
in love with a young woman named Frances Brawne. All of this
overwhelmed and depressed him. He tried to lose himself in his
latest poem, Hyperion, but that's hard to do when
you're spending most of your time in a sickroom.
Tom died in December of 1818. Though John should have
received £500 from Tom's estate, Abbey (the guardian) decreed
that he couldn't have it until his sister Frances turned 21.
It wasn't until a year or so after John's death that anyone
realized that Abbey had misappropriated nearly £1000 from
Alice Jennings' estate. To make matters worse, brother George
had gone broke and was begging John to send him whatever he
could scavenge from the family funds. Desparate, John
convinced his publishers to issue another volume of his
poetry, but this was not a stunning success. Dead broke, he
still allowed George to have the remnants of the family
estate. John was rapidly becoming dependant on the help of his
friends, people like Leigh Hunt (who'd gotten married and
settled down some) and Charles Brown. John was also developing
consumption, coughing up blood in February of 1820.
It was around this time that, without consulting John,
Charles began arrangements for sending John to Italy. John
didn't want to be so far away from his ladylove, but he felt
incapable of arguing. He left in September of1820, accompanied
by Joseph Severn, an up and coming portrait artist. Once in
Rome, the two men moved into lodgings across the piazza from
an English doctor named Clark. John was not allowed to write
poetry and only given the dullest books to read, as emotional
excitement was considered very bad for consumptive patients.
John was definitely in a state; he stopped opening letters,
even from his beloved Frances, after a month or so. In
December, he tried to commit suicide by taking laudanum, but
Severn stopped him. Later, delirious from the disease and the
starvation diet Clark prescribed, John would rant at Severn
for stopping him and even went so far as to accuse his friends
of having poisoned him back in London.
On 23 February 1821, John died. Frances, upon hearing the
news, seemed all right for a few weeks, then fell ill, and
after recovering began wearing widows' weeds. John had
requested that his tomstone read only "Here lies one whose
name was writ in water." Charles Brown, feeling that was too
brusque, had this carved on the stone instead: "This Grave
contains all that was Mortal of a YOUNG ENGLISH POET Who on
his Death Bed, in the Malicious Power of his Enemies, Desired
these Words to be engraven on his Tomb Stone 'Here lies One
Whose Name was writ in Water'". Biography by:
Ward, Eileen. John Keats: The Making of a Poet. New
York: Viking Press, 1963.
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