Selected Poems
By John Keats and Dr Andrew Hodgson
()
About this ebook
John Keats is regarded as one of the greatest poets of the Romantic movement. But when he died at the age of only twenty-five, his writing had been attacked by critics and his talent remained largely unrecognized.
Part of the Macmillan Collector’s Library; a series of stunning, clothbound, pocket sized classics with gold foiled edges and ribbon markers. These beautiful books make perfect gifts or a treat for any book lover. This edition is edited and introduced by Dr Andrew Hodgson.
This volume, Selected Poems, reflects his extraordinary creativity and versatility, drawing on the collections published during his lifetime as well as posthumously. He wrote in many different forms – from his famous Odes to ballads such as ‘La Belle Dame Sans Merci’, and the epic Hyperion. Together, they celebrate a poet who wrote with unsurpassed insight and emotion about art and beauty, love and loss, suffering and nature.
John Keats
John Keats was born in London in 1795. He and his siblings were orphaned at a young age - his father died in a riding accident in 1804 and his mother died six years later. Keats then left Enfield school to train as an apothecary and a surgeon but he was to leave his profession to dedicate his time to poetry. His first volume, Poems, was published in 1817 and only two more volumes, in 1818 and 1820, were published during his lifetime. In 1818 he fell in love with his neighbour Fanny Brawne, but he broke off their engagement due to his increasing ill health and lack of funds. In 1820 he moved to Italy where he died a year later of tuberculosis, the disease that claimed his mother and his brother Tom.
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Selected Poems - John Keats
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Introduction
ANDREW HODGSON
John Keats lived from 1795 to 1821. The poems he wrote in the last six years of that life are among the most pained and vibrant of any English poet. They combine wisdom with exuberance, sensuality with purpose, ebullient personality with an ability to think into the hearts of others. They stand in wonder at all that life might be and in sorrow at the true state of existence.
Keats’s childhood was scarred by tragedy. His father died in a riding accident when he was eight; he was orphaned by fourteen. There is a story of how when Keats was four, his mother fell ill: having heard that she needed to rest in complete silence, Keats acquired an old sword and stood guard at her bedroom door, even forbidding his mother from leaving the room. It is an early instance of the compassion and combativeness that fuse in Keats’s poetry. At school he was renowned, his friend Charles Cowden Clarke recalled, for his ‘terrier-courage’, his ‘utter unconsciousness of a mean motive’, and his voracious reading (he ‘appeared to learn’ the contents of a classical dictionary). By fifteen he was training as a surgeon’s assistant. For five years he dealt close-hand with the gruesome life of the preanaesthetic operating theatre.
Schooled in sufferings within and beyond the range of medicine, Keats sought poetry to be ‘a friend / To soothe the cares, and lift the thoughts of man’ (‘Sleep and Poetry’). His early poems teem with pleasure in nature. In ‘I stood tip-toe upon a little hill’ his eye is drawn by how swimming minnows
[. . .] ever wrestle
With their own sweet delight, and ever nestle
Their silver bellies on the pebbly sand.
If you but scantily hold out the hand,
That very instant not one will remain;
But turn your eye, and they are there again.
Keats doesn’t just describe the fish, he refreshes our sense of them. His language wins intimacy with their behaviour: ‘bellies’ rubs vulnerably against ‘pebbly’, rhymes ‘nestle’ and dart in and out of one another. But like the minnows, Keats’s poetry ‘wrestles with its own sweet delight’ in the luxuries of life and language. He knew that art cannot simply offer escape. ‘Can I ever bid these joys farewell?’ he asks in ‘Sleep and Poetry’. His answer is firm:
Yes, I must pass them for a nobler life,
Where I may find the agonies, the strife
Of human hearts [. . .]
A quest to comprehend the human heart, its ‘agonies’ as well as its affections, beats at the core of Keats’s writing.
The early poems are precise, quick, dense with impressions, events, sensations; they give Keats’s first volume, published in 1817, the feel, as a later poet, Edward Thomas, put it, of ‘an intimate poetic journal’. Having abandoned medicine, Keats was keeping company in London’s politically dissenting circles. Keats was robust in his sympathy for ‘the Liberal side of the Question’, yet the measure of his political mind is not what, but how, he thought. He lamented the proliferation of ‘stubborn arguers’ of all leanings who ‘want to hammer their nail into you and if you turn the point, still [. . .] think you wrong’; he advocated ‘letting the mind be a thoroughfare for all thoughts’. A distrust of the ‘preresolved’ shows in the verve of his writing, too. He exploited the intricacy and immediacy of the sonnet, yet at his most exhilarating, he peers beyond the close horizons of the form. The ending of ‘When I have fears that I may cease to be’ (an 1818 example) is captivating and unnerving in its embrace of a perspective from which ‘love and fame to nothingness do sink’: harried by mortality, Keats leaves us on the brink of a state where human values dissolve.
In Spring 1817, Keats left London for the Isle of Wight to set about a long poem, Endymion, which, he told his brother George, would be ‘a trial of my Powers’, particularly of his ‘invention’. Like many of his near contemporaries – Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley – Keats was fascinated by the imagination; his poems both exult in and scrutinize the mind’s creative force. Endymion retells the Greek myth of the shepherd Endymion’s quest for the goddess Cynthia, who has appeared to him in a dream. The poem, as meandering as its protagonist, springs from a jubilant faith that ‘A thing of beauty is a joy for ever’:
Its loveliness increases; it will never
Pass into nothingness; but still will keep
A bower quiet for us, and a sleep
Full of sweet dreams, and health, and quiet breathing.
Keats’s trust in the persistence of beauty and his gratitude for its consolations is driven by his awareness of all that creates need for such refuge – of ‘the unhealthy and o’er darkened ways / Made for our searching’. Throughout 1817, Keats’s brother Tom was in the early stages of tuberculosis: by the end of the year he was spitting blood. Yet Keats musters courage in the grip of tragedy. In the very acknowledgement of misery he strives to understand life’s ‘darkened ways’ as avenues for ‘searching’, paths which might bear the fruits of experience.
In March 1818 Keats joined his brothers in Devon. There, he composed Isabella, or, The Pot of Basil, a story of ill-fated love he later lamented as too ‘smokeable’ – susceptible to mockery – but whose fluctuations between dreaminess, Gothicism, and pathos are in truth controlled and wittily self-aware. Seeking experiences to ‘strengthen’ his ‘reach in Poetry’, Keats planned a tour of the North with his friend Charles Brown. The expedition proved exhausting. Keats and Brown tramped for over six hundred miles through cold and wet. They met natural beauty and inhuman poverty. On a brief crossing to Ireland they encountered ‘a squalid old Woman squat like an ape half starved from a scarcity of Biscuit in its passage from Madagascar to the cape’. ‘What a thing would be a history of her life and sensations’, Keats wondered, letting fall the material for a disquieting unwritten poem.
‘Thin and fevered’, Keats returned to London in August, ‘as brown and shabby as you can imagine, scarcely any shoes left, his jacket all torn at the back’. George had emigrated to America; Keats was left to nurse Tom, whose tuberculosis was worsening. Meanwhile, the reviews of Endymion were emerging. They subjected Keats to some rough stuff: Blackwood’s Magazine’s complaint at the poem’s ‘calm, settled, imperturbable, drivelling idiocy’ catches their tone. Keats was unflustered, declaring it ‘a mere matter of the moment’: ‘I think I shall be among the English Poets after my death.’ The next year would secure the truth of that conviction.
It started with an attempt to write an epic – the most ample and ambitious of poetic genres. Hyperion. A Fragment narrates the overthrow of the Titan Gods of Greek mythology by the Olympians. Keats finds in the story a poem about the necessity of change, and about the difficulty of making new starts when burdened by knowledge of the past. The poem dramatizes the Titans’ difficulty in accepting the wisdom of the defeated sea God Oceanus, that they are ‘not the beginning nor the end’ of history, but rather caught in currents beyond the individual life – that ‘on our heels a fresh perfection treads’. Hyperion blends its drama of conflicting voices with portraits of the suffering Titans which achieve a marmoreal grandeur. But its range and splendour was difficult to sustain, and circumstances challenged the poem’s ethos that a balm lies in selfless acceptance of ‘naked truths’: in December Tom died, and Keats laid the poem aside.
Keats’s richest writing is often self-divided. The Eve of St Agnes, written in January 1819, is at once a gorgeous embodiment and doubtful appraisal of ‘the holiness of the Heart’s affections and the truth of Imagination’ in which a more youthful Keats had expressed ‘certainty’. Keats’s heroine Madeline trusts a legend that, retiring supperless and naked on St Agnes Eve, she will dream of her future husband. A suitor, Porphyro, discovers her plan, enters her bedchamber and seduces her. In bare outline, Madeline seems naive, Porphyro opportunistic. Yet the sensuality of Keats’s writing ignites sympathy. At the poem’s climax, Porphyro wakes Madeline: ‘a painful change that nigh expelled / The blisses of her dream’. Porphyro seems ‘pallid, chill, and drear’. But the dream has only been ‘nigh expelled’. Porphyro’s passion half-sustains its ‘blisses’, reversing the ‘painful change’:
Into her dream he melted, as the rose
Blendeth its odour with the violet –
Solution sweet.
The description risks seeming hazily idyllic, but ‘Solution sweet’ casts a knowing glance to the poem’s own machinations, acknowledging that only in art can real and ideal marry so fluidly. The ‘sharp sleet’ ‘pattering’ against the windows soon affirms that bliss passes, passion fades, and time engulfs us.
As the winter receded, Keats was troubled by a sore throat and uncertain about his poetic career. He speculated on the world as a ‘vale of Soul-making’ in which suffering nurtures human character. The challenge of inner growth drives the bold, self-questioning Odes Keats composed with the coming of the spring. ‘Ode to Psyche’ kicks open the door to this new poetry of inward exploration. It is the least familiar of the Odes; its branching rhymes and rhythms give a thrill of fresh exploration to each reading. It begins as narrative, recounting a vision of Cupid reclining in a forest with Psyche, a nymph from Greek mythology later deified as the Goddess of the Soul. It morphs into lyric apostrophe, as Keats promises to construct a shrine to Psyche ‘In some untrodden region of my mind’. The poem is teasingly self-entangled: in writing a poem ‘to’ the soul, Keats is also speaking from it; in the very act of promising this shrine, his poem creates it. Affirmation, exploration, and uncertainty mix. At its close, this hymn to the inner life keeps open a window to the world beyond, ‘to let the warm love in’.
The other Odes follow the swirls of the ‘working brain’ evoked in ‘Psyche’. ‘Ode to a Nightingale’, composed, according to Charles Brown, in Keats’s Hampstead garden one May morning, explores the flight afforded by nature, and the composition of poetry itself, from the world in which ‘youth grows pale, and spectre-thin, and dies’. Keats achieves intense sympathy with the nightingale but also awareness of his difference from a creature ‘not born for death’. ‘No hungry generations tread thee down’, Keats remarks in a tone somewhere between joy, wonder, and sadness. As the line puzzles at the survival of the bird’s song across time, it throws open a vista on human life as a march of generations succeeding greedily upon one another.
‘Ode on a Grecian Urn’ questions art’s promise of an existence salvaged from the ravages of time. It battles with affecting persistence the suspicion that to live in art would be to feel bereft as much as unshackled from the world of ‘breathing human passion’. Yet to inhabit the living world is to be subject to the fact, as Keats puts its it with stark certainty, that ‘old age shall this generation waste’. The poem’s riddling final lines search out words for the difficult consolation that art extends amid that knowledge, and in so doing compact beauty and truth with the same inscrutable fascination as the urn itself: that ‘Beauty is truth, truth beauty’ may not be all we know on earth nor all we ‘need to know’, but we should be grateful that art can persuade us as much.
‘Ode on Melancholy’ writhes with awareness of one of Keats’s central truths: that pain and pleasure are entwined. Wittily voyaging out in search of melancholy, the poem discovers that it
[. . .] dwells with Beauty – Beauty that must die;
And Joy, whose hand is ever at his lips
Bidding adieu [. . .]
As often, Keats’s imagery seems pregnant with movement. The knowledge Keats arrives at here reemerges in a letter from the start of July: ‘I have never known any unalloy’d Happiness for many days together: the death or sickness of some one has always spoilt my hours’. The addressee was Fanny Brawne, with whom Keats had fallen in love at the start of the year – hopelessly so, in the sense that he could not marry without secure prospects, and that the ‘sickness’ spoiling his hours was now his own tuberculosis. Keats’s relationship with Fanny forms one backdrop for the composition of Lamia, Keats’s most single-minded poem, written in couplets braced against susceptibility to human feeling and illusion. It is two stories in one: a breezy account of the god Hermes’s love for a beautiful nymph, which hovers over the poem like a taunting reminder of the naivety, as Keats once put it, of thinking ‘that such a thing as happiness is to be had’ on earth; and the tale of a relationship between the youth Lycius and a snake-turned-woman Lamia, and its annihilation by the philosopher Apollonius, who pierces Lamia’s disguise with a look ‘Keen, cruel, perceant, stinging’. Keats’s adjectives twist home with a mix of relish and horror as illusion is dispelled.
Later in the summer, Keats returned to Hyperion, prefacing its narrative with a severely self-critical effort to distinguish the ‘poet’, who offers solace and salvation to all humanity, from the exclusive ‘Fanatic’ and indulgent ‘dreamer’. Keats confronts the tragic awareness reflected in the features of the Titan Goddess of memory Moneta, who keeps vigil at the fallen Saturn’s shrine:
Deathwards progressing
To no death was that visage; it had passed
The lily and the snow; and beyond these
I must not think now.
Keats’s memories of the operating theatre flood back here as he is faced with a knowledge of the world whose burden he finally backs away from with a touching vulnerability. When Keats gets to the story of the Titans, he cannot break free of its tragic roots. Dramatizing his rapt response to suffering Saturn and Thea, he portrays himself ‘Gasping with despair / Of change’: what had promised to be a demonstration of imaginative growth, breaks off unable to escape the sense that life is suffocated by suffering. In September, Keats gave up the poem for a second time.
‘Change’ always stimulated Keats. Writing to George in America the same month, he was moved by the thought that ‘Our bodies every seven years are completely fresh-materiald’:
This is the reason why men who had been bosom friends, on being separated for any number of years, afterwards meet coldly, neither of them knowing why – The fact is they are both altered – Men who live together have a silent moulding and influencing power over each other – They inter-assimulate. ’Tis an uneasy thought that in seven years the same hands cannot greet each other again.
Wide-eyed and saddened, the writing typifies Keats’s response to life: warmed by the thought of human ‘inter-assimulation’ (Keats marries ‘simulate’ and ‘assimilate’), the reflections gain poignancy from their inclusion in a long-distance letter. Separation from friends and from Fanny coloured the remainder of Keats’s life. Increasingly ill through the winter, he wrote little. One night in February he coughed blood. By the summer he had plans to winter in Italy. He departed in August. Fanny sewed a silk lining into his cap, which he said ‘scalded’ his scalp: anguish dwelt with tenderness. After a torrid journey, Keats arrived in Naples and then Rome, where, from a room above the Spanish Steps, he sent his final, heartbreaking letters. ‘I have an habitual feeling of my real life having passed and that I am leading a posthumous existence’, he wrote to Brown: ‘God knows how it would have been – but it appears to me – however, I will not speak of that subject’. The wavering of Keats’s voice as he approaches and retreats from acknowledging his immense potential embodies the humanity that underlies his greatness.
*
The following selection ranges chronologically across Keats’s output, mixing in poems published in his lifetime with those published posthumously. Excerpts have been made from the long early poem, Sleep and Poetry and from Endymion. The two Hyperion poems, left fragmentary by Keats, are included in their entirety. Quotations from Keats’s letters in the introduction are taken from The Letters of John Keats, 2 vols, ed. Hyder Edward Rollins (Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 1958).
‘I am as brisk’
I am as brisk
As a bottle of whisk –
Ey and as nimble
As