my pen seems to have grown too goutty for verse;
I see by little and little more of what is to be done, and how it is to be done, should I ever be able to do it;
writing a little now and then; says he continually suffers from
agonie ennuiyeuse;
I have been writing a little now and then lately: but nothing to speak of—being disconnected and as it were moulting; has thoughts about the
beautiful and elegant, graceful, silly, fashionable and strangeFanny Brawne; with Brown visits Chichester and Bedhampton for about two weeks
I have not been entirely well for some time;
What imagination I have I shall enjoy;
I have not gone on with Hyperion;
I have not been in great cue for writing lately—I must wait for the spring to rouse me up a little;
I have no doubt of success in a course of years if I persevere;
A Man’s life of any worth is a continual allegory;
Lord Byron cuts a figure—but he is not figurative—Shakespeare led a life of Allegory; his works are the comments on it—; sore throat, which he says has
hauntedhim
never to write for the sake of writing, or making a poemwithout years of matured reflection—
otherwise I will be dumb;
I will not spoil my love of gloom by writing an ode to darkness;
I am three and twenty with little knowledge and middling intellect;
not exactly on the road to an epic poem;
I will not mix with that most vulgar of all crowds the literary; admires Hazlitt, likes half of Wordsworth, none of Hunt;
I know not why Poetry and I have been so distant lately. I must make some advances soon or she will cut me entirely
disinterestedness of Mind;
Circumstances are like Clouds continually gathering and bursting; agrees with Wordsworth:
we all have one human heart; despite the
frauds of religion,he recognizes the
splendourof Jesus, who, with Socrates, did achieve true disinterestedness of heart;
I am however young writing at random—straining at particles of light in the midst of a great darkness—without knowing the bearing of any one assertion of any one opinion;
Nothing ever becomes real till it is experienced;
I have not that in me which will well bear the buffets of the world; miniature painting of Keats by friend Severn to be shown at the Royal Academy
I am still at a stand in versifying—I cannot do it yet with any pleasure—I mean to look around at my resources and means—and see what I can do without poetry;
The fifth canto of Dante pleases me more and more; continuing
suspicion of Abbey,the trustee of family finances
no more can man be happy in spite, the worldly elements will prey upon his nature;
the vale of Soul-making—a
grander system of salvation:
perfectibility: the nature of the world will not admit of it;
a World of Pains and troubles is [necessary] to school an Intelligence and make it a soul. A Place where the heart must feel and suffer in a thousand diverse ways!; poem: La Belle Dame sans Merci; poem: Hyperion, K gives up on, sends to Woodhouse; poems: On Fame (Fame, like a wayward girl) and On Fame (How fever’d is the man); poem: Ode to Psyche, over which K says he has taken
moderate pains
leading a fevrous life alone with Poetry;
I cannot resolve to give up my Studies [of Poetry];
I would rather conquer my indolence and strain my nerves at some grand Poem than be a dunderheaded indiaman; poem: Ode to a Nightingale; ill mid-month
I dare say my discipline is to come, and plenty of it too; hopes he has become
less of a versifying Pet-Lamb;
I cannot resolve to give up my favorite studies: so I propose to retire into the Country and set my Mind a work once more;
My purpose is now to make one more attempt in the Press; idled by
the overpowering idea of our dead poets and from the abatement of my love of fame; continuing serious money problems, and needs friends to help
I must live upon hope and Chance; now looks
upon the affairs of the world with healthy deliberation;
I do not pass a day without sprawling some blank verse or tagging some rhymes;
I have of late been moulting: not for fresh feathers & wings [but for] sublunary legs [ . . . ] whence I may look out into the stage of the world;
I cannot write for the mere sake of the press;
Poems are as common as newspapers and I do not see why it is a greater crime in me than in another to let the verses of an half-fledged brain tumble into the reading-rooms and drawing room windows; poem: Ode to a Nightingale published; poem: a new attempt at [The Fall of] Hyperion (mainly gives up on Sept); throat problems and uneven temper
great hopes of success, because I make use of my Judgement more deliberately than I yet have done(rev. March 1820)
One of my Ambitions is to make as great a revolution in modern dramatic writing as Kean has done in acting;
I look upon fine Phrases like a lover;
plunging so deeply into imaginary interests;
Shakespeare and the Paradise Lost every day become greater wonders; contempt for
the literary worldwill
enable me to write finer things than any thing else could;
fine writing is next to fine doing the top thing in the world;
the best sort of Poetry—that is all I care for, all I live for;
I feel it in my power to become a popular writer; feels he has physical weakness that compromises his striving; Woodhouse and Taylor worry about Keats’s literary disposition and what might be best for him—as well as his money situation
sensation; poem: To Autumn; poem: The Fall of Hyperion overly Miltonic, too
artfulwith
false beautyas opposed to
the true voice of feeling; mainly gives up on The Fall of Hyperion; out of need, wants to work as a periodical writer, live cheaply;
strengthening one’s intellect is to make up one’s mind about nothing—to let the mind be a thoroughfare for all thoughts. Not a select party; does not trust poetry as a livelihood;
My Poetry will never be fit for anything it doesn’t cover its ground well
an odd sort of life for the two or three last years—Here & there—No anchor—I am glad of it;
My name with the literary fashionable is vulgar; Bryon
describes what he sees—I describe what I imagine;
The great beauty of Poetry is, that it makes every thing every place interesting;
I want to compose without this feverof vexation and ambition; wishes to write without the Miltonic
vein of art;
I will no longer live upon hopes;
things won’t leave me alone
I cannot exist without you,
My Creed is Love and you are its only tenet—You have ravished me away,
I cannot breathe without you;
I must be busy, or try to be so;
I am more fond of pleasure than study; returns to live at Wentworth Place, Hampstead; perplexed by and time taken up with financial affairs related to his brother’s (George’s) bankruptcy in America; Otho the Great sent to Drury Lane for possible production
a disease which at intervals comes upon me like a fever fit; without purpose:
lax, unemployed, unmeridian’d, and objectless; money issues mounting; tends to his brother’s financial concerns;
greatest ambitionis to write plays, yet motivation weakening; briefly works on The Fall of Hyperion, but leaves it, having also given up in Sept
unwell,and fears about cold weather and exertion triggering his throat issues; doctor orders he gets a warm coat and thick shoes;
preparing some Poems to come out in the Spring; K (wrongly) believes he has
hopes of success in the literary worldbased on possible production of Otho the Great
Six Actspassed to limit and suppress reform; Wordsworth publishes Peter Bell and The Waggoner; Percy Shelley publishes The Cenci, writes Masque of Anarchy [publ. 1832],
Ode to the West Wind,and
England in 1819; Percy Florence Shelley born to Mary and Shelley; Mary Shelley begins Mathilda [unpublished until 1959]; Byron publishes Don Juan cantos 1 and 2, anonymously; Hazlitt publishes Political Essays; Polidori publishes The Vampyre; Parry explores the Arctic; born: John Ruskin, George Eliot, Walt Whitman, Herman Melville, James Russell Lowell, Queen Victoria; the financial
Panic of 1819in America; Francisco Goya begins his group of Black Paintings; the stethoscope invented
They toil not, neither do they spin.
[Text based on the published version in Keats’s 1820 collection.]
× Cite this page:
Blank, G. Kim. “Select Chronology & Keats’s Key Comments: 1819.” Mapping Keats’s Progress: A Critical Chronology. Edition 3.27 , University of Victoria, 19 August 2024. https://johnkeats.uvic.ca/1819-09.html.
G. Kim Blank, “Select Chronology & Keats’s Key Comments: 1819,” Mapping Keats’s Progress: A Critical Chronology, Edition 3.27 , last modified 19th August 2024. https://johnkeats.uvic.ca/1819-09.html.
Blank, G. Kim. “Select Chronology & Keats’s Key Comments: 1819.” Mapping Keats’s Progress: A Critical Chronology, Edition 3.27 , last modified 19th August 2024. https://johnkeats.uvic.ca/1819-09.html.