Keats
John Keats, one of the greatest English poets and a
major figure in the Romantic movement, was born in
1795 in Moorfields, London. His father died when he
was eight and his mother when he was fourteen; these
circumstances drew him particularly close to his two
brothers, George and Tom, and his sister Fanny. Keats
was well educated at a school in Enfield, where he
began a translation of Virgil's Aeneid. In 1810 he was
apprenticed to
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fell deeply in love with a young neighbour, Fanny
Brawne. During the following year, despite ill health and
financial problems, he wrote an astonishing amount of poetry,
including `The Eve of St Agnes', `La Belle Dame sans Merci',
`Ode to a Nightingale' and `To Autumn'. His second volume of
poems appeared in July 1820; soon afterwards, by now very ill
with tuberculosis, he set off with a friend to Italy, where he
died the following February.
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