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Keats scholar finds that Roman police investigated poet before death
The Guardian
Official records show that the English poet's landlady alerted Rome's authorities to the 25-year-old's illness months before he died from tuberculosis.
10 months ago
The Life and Poetry of John Keats
The Objective Standard
In his short time on earth, John Keats wrote countless poems of immortal beauty that have been beloved for centuries, and I hope,...
58 months ago
On the Mundane Letters of John Keats
Literary Hub
Not long ago, a poem by Diane Seuss appeared in Poetry with the title, “Romantic Poet”: Article continues after advertisement.
19 months ago
John Keats, Valentine
Los Angeles Review of Books
I'VE WANTED TO TATTOO this line by John Keats on my body for a long time now: “Till Love and Fame to Nothingness do sink.
139 months ago
A joy forever: poetry world prepares to mark bicentenary of John Keats
The Guardian
Two hundred years after his early death, plays, readings and new poetry will honour the legacy of the much beloved author.
43 months ago
In poet John Keats’ letters, a man full of life just before he died
PBS
Romantic poet John Keats is best known for his odes, epics and sonnets. But in his short lifetime he also wrote dozens of letters to...
82 months ago
How poet John Keats met his early end
PBS
Today marks the day in 1821 when John Keats, the Romantic poet who waxed on Grecian urns and nightingales, succumbed to tuberculosis. He was only 25.
91 months ago
John Keats - Romantic Poet, Ode to Autumn, Endymion
Britannica
John Keats - Romantic Poet, Ode to Autumn, Endymion: Keats had written “Isabella,” an adaptation of the story of the Pot of Basil in Giovanni Boccaccio's...
90 months ago
John Keats in the season of mists
The Lancet
On Feb 23, 1821, John Keats died of tuberculosis in Rome, Italy. James Clark, the resident English doctor who later became physician to...
43 months ago
John Keats was an opium addict, claims a new biography of the poet
The Guardian
The author of Ode to a Nightingale wrote his greatest poems with the aid of opium, believes Prof Nicholas Roe
144 months ago