He
was 25 when he died. In his lifetime, he published all of 54 poems, and wrote a
total of 150. He was seen by many as something of a radical, abandoning the
poetry written by John Dryden and Alexander Pope and instead loosening poetic
forms, and thus inviting massive cultural and societal change (they took poetry
rather seriously in the early 1800s). Upon his death, he slipped into a
shallow obscurity, and it would take Alfred, Lord Tennyson to resurrect his
poetry and his reputation.
Today,
he’s seen as one of the “Big 5” of Romantic poetry – William
Wordsworth,
Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Percy Bysshe
Shelley,
Lord Byron (aka George
Gordon). And John Keats.
We
usually meet Keats and his fellow Romantic poets in high school English
classes, and we wonder why anyone would write a poem about a Greek pot. Or a
nightingale. Love poems we understand, but this other stuff seems a little
strange. It often takes a gifted teacher to help us understand what poems like
“Ode to a
Nightingale”
and “Ode on a Grecian
Urn”
are really about.
In
September, my wife and I had the opportunity to join a “Keats Walk” in
Hampstead and Hampstead Heath in north London, led by the able guide Anita Miller. Hampstead is the
area most associated with Keats, the area where he lived for a time, and many
of his greatest poems were written there. (Starting tomorrow, I have a series
of four articles at Tweetspeak
Poetry
in November that explore the walk, the poetry, and the impact and influence of
Keats). The walk ended at Keats House, almo known as Wentworth House, and it
was there I bought the 2012 biography of Keats by Nicholas Roe, simply entitled John Keats.
A
number of good biographies of Keats have been published, including ones by W. Jackson Bate, former British
poet laureate Sir Andrew
Motion,
Sidney Colvin (an older
biography free on Amazon Kindle under public domain), and the pre-Raphaelite
writer William Rossetti (also free on
Amazon Kindle). Nicholas Roe’s biography likely exceeds them all – meticulously
researched, exploring both Keats’ life and his poetry, documenting what is and
isn’t known about the poet, his family, and his poetry.
Roe,
professor of English Literature at St. Andrews University in Scotland, brings a
wealth of both professional, academic and perhaps even personal understanding
to his subject. He’s the author of Wordsworth and Coleridge: The Radical Years (1990); John Keats and the Culture of Dissent (1999); The Politics of Nature: William Wordsworth and Some
Contemporaries
(2002); Leigh Hunt: Life, Poetics, Politics (2003); Fiery Heart: The First Life of Leigh Hunt (2005); and Romanticism: An Oxford Guide (2005). He’s
also served as editor of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and the Sciences of Life (2002); Keats and History (2007); and English Romantic Writers and the West Country (2010).
Nicholas Roe |
If
his publications weren’t enough, Roe is also chair of The
Keats Foundation, Keats House, Hampstead, and a trustee of The Wordsworth Trust, The
Keats-Shelley Memorial Association, and The Wordsworth Conference Foundation. He’s one of the
leading Romantic era scholars.
His biography of Keats is that of an
academic, yes, but an academic who has broadened his writing style to embrace a
more general interested reader. And the picture of Keats he presents is more of
a complete one, that of a rising poet conscious of what it takes to succeed in
poetry, dealing with family tragedies and illness for almost all of his young
life, and a poet who could quickly dash off a beautiful poem while more experienced,
practiced poets would agonize. Keats was also the poet somewhat sneered at by
critics; he did not arise from the gentlemanly, educated classes but from a
more middle-class commercial one (Keats, Roe points out, was often cited by
contemporary critics as a “Cockney poet”).
Well-researched and extensively
footnoted, Roe’s John Keats provides
tremendous insight into the poet who almost fell into obscurity but whose
poetry would influence Tennyson, the pre-Raphaelites, Pound, Yeats, Eliot,
Derek Waldcott and Seamus Heaney, and the poet who wrote some of the most
beautiful poems in the English language. It’s an excellent biography.
To see the start of the series on Keats in Hampstead and the Keats Walk, please visit Tweetspeak Poetry tomorrow.
Painting: John Keats on Hampstead Heath by Joseph Severn.
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