The Project Gutenberg eBook of Letters of John Keats to His Family and Friends

This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook.

Title: Letters of John Keats to His Family and Friends

Author: John Keats

Editor: Sidney Colvin

Release date: March 28, 2011 [eBook #35698]

Language: English

Credits: E-text prepared by Jonathan Ingram and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LETTERS OF JOHN KEATS TO HIS FAMILY AND FRIENDS ***

 

E-text prepared by Jonathan Ingram
and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
(http://www.pgdp.net)

 


 

JOHN KEATS.
Portrait by Joseph Severn in the National Portrait Gallery.

 

 

LETTERS
OF
JOHN KEATS
TO HIS FAMILY AND FRIENDS

 

EDITED BY
SIDNEY COLVIN

 

WITH FRONTISPIECE

 

 

 

MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED
ST. MARTIN’S STREET, LONDON
1925

 

 

COPYRIGHT
First Edition (Globe 8vo) June 1891
Reprinted October 1891, 1918, 1921
Reprinted (Crown 8vo) 1925


PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN

 

 


CONTENTS

LETTER   DATE PAGE
  Preface   xi
1. To Charles Cowden Clarke Oct. 13, 1816 1
2. To Benjamin Robert Haydon Nov. 20, 1816 1
3.  " " Nov. 20, 1816 2
4. To Charles Cowden Clarke Dec. 17, 1816 2
5. To John Hamilton Reynolds Mar. 2, 1817? 3
6.  " " Mar. 17, 1817 4
7. To George and Thomas Keats April 15, 1817 4
8. To John Hamilton Reynolds April 17, 1817 6
9. To Leigh Hunt May 10, 1817 10
10. To Benjamin Robert Haydon May 10, 1817 13
11. To Messrs. Taylor and Hessey May 16, 1817 17
12.  " " July 8, 1817 19
13. To Mariane and Jane Reynolds Sept. 5, 1817 19
14. To Fanny Keats Sept. 10, 1817 21
15. To Jane Reynolds Sept. 14, 1817 24
16. To John Hamilton Reynolds Sept. 21, 1817 28
17. To Benjamin Robert Haydon Sept. 28, 1817 32
18. To Benjamin Bailey Oct. 8, 1817 33
19.     "     " About Nov. 1, 1817 36
20.     "     " Nov. 5, 1817 39
21. To Charles Wentworth Dilke Nov. 1817 40
22. To Benjamin Bailey Nov. 22, 1817 40
23. To John Hamilton Reynolds Nov. 22, 1817 44
24. To George and Thomas Keats Dec. 22, 1817 46
25.  " " Jan. 5, 1818 48
26. To Benjamin Robert Haydon Jan. 10, 1818 53
27. To John Taylor Jan. 10, 1818 53
28. To George and Thomas Keats Jan. 13-20, 1818 54
29. To John Taylor Jan. 23, 1818 56
30. To George and Thomas Keats Jan. 23, 1818 57
31. To Benjamin Bailey Jan. 23, 1818 61
32. To John Taylor Jan. 30, 1818 64
33. To John Hamilton Reynolds Jan. 31, 1818 65
34.  " " Feb. 3, 1818 67
35. To John Taylor Feb. 5, 1818 71
36. To George and Thomas Keats Feb. 14, 1818 71
37. To John Hamilton Reynolds Feb. 19, 1818 73
38. To George and Thomas Keats Feb. 21, 1818 75
39. To John Taylor Feb. 27, 1818 77
40. To Messrs. Taylor and Hessey Mar. 1818? 78
41. To Benjamin Bailey Mar. 13, 1818 78
42. To John Hamilton Reynolds Mar. 14, 1818 82
43. To Benjamin Robert Haydon Mar. 21, 1818 85
44. To Messrs. Taylor and Hessey Mar. 21, 1818 88
45. To James Rice Mar. 24, 1818 88
46. To John Hamilton Reynolds Mar. 25, 1818 90
47. To Benjamin Robert Haydon April 8, 1818 94
48. To John Hamilton Reynolds April 9, 1818 96
49.  " " April 10, 1818 98
50. To John Taylor April 24, 1818 99
51. To John Hamilton Reynolds April 27, 1818 100
52.  " " May 3, 1818 103
53. To Benjamin Bailey May 28, 1818 109
54.  " " June 10, 1818 111
55. To John Taylor June 21, 1818 114
56. To Thomas Keats June 29-July 2, 1818 114
57. To Fanny Keats July 2-4, 1818 118
58. To Thomas Keats July 2-9, 1818 123
59.  " " July 10-14, 1818 127
60. To John Hamilton Reynolds July 11-13, 1818 132
61. To Thomas Keats July 17-21, 1818 136
62. To Benjamin Bailey July 18-22, 1818 142
63. To Thomas Keats July 23-26, 1818 147
64.  " " Aug. 3, 1818 153
65. To Mrs. Wylie Aug. 6, 1818 158
66. To Fanny Keats Aug. 18, 1818 161
67.  " " Aug. 25, 1818 162
68. To Jane Reynolds Sept. 1, 1818 162
69. To Charles Wentworth Dilke Sept. 21, 1818 163
70. To John Hamilton Reynolds About Sept. 22, 1818 165
71. To Fanny Keats Oct. 9, 1818 166
72. To James Augustus Hessey Oct. 9, 1818 167
73. To George and Georgiana Keats Oct. 13-31, 1818 168
74. To Fanny Keats Oct. 16, 1818 182
75.  " " Oct. 26, 1818 183
76. To Richard Woodhouse Oct. 27, 1818 183
77. To Fanny Keats Nov. 5, 1818 185
78. To James Rice Nov. 24, 1818 186
79. To Fanny Keats Dec. 1, 1818 187
80. To George and Georgiana Keats   About Dec. 18, 1818-Jan. 4, 1819 187
81. To Richard Woodhouse Dec. 18, 1818 210
82. To Mrs. Reynolds Dec. 22, 1818 211
83. To Benjamin Robert Haydon Dec. 22, 1818 211
84. To John Taylor Dec. 24, 1818 212
85. To Benjamin Robert Haydon Dec. 27, 1818 213
86. To Fanny Keats Dec. 30, 1818 213
87. To Benjamin Robert Haydon Jan. 4, 1819 214
88.  " " Between Jan. 7 and 14, 1819 214
89.  " " Jan. 1819 215
90. To Fanny Keats Jan. 1819 215
91.  " " Feb. 11, 1819 216
92. To George and Georgiana Keats Feb. 14-May 3, 1819 217
93. To Fanny Keats Feb. 27, 1819 262
94.  " " Mar. 13, 1819 263
95.  " " Mar. 24, 1819 264
96. To Joseph Severn Mar. 29? 1819 265
97. To Fanny Keats April 13, 1819 265
98. To Benjamin Robert Haydon April 13, 1819 267
99. To Fanny Keats April 17, 1819? 268
100.  " " May 13, 1819 270
101.  " " May 26, 1819 270
102.  " " June 9, 1819 271
103. To James Elmes June 12, 1819 272
104. To Fanny Keats June 14, 1819 272
105.  " " June 16, 1819 273
106. To Benjamin Robert Haydon June 17, 1819 274
107. To Fanny Keats July 6, 1819 275
108. To John Hamilton Reynolds July 11, 1819 276
109. To Charles Wentworth Dilke July 31, 1819 277
110. To Benjamin Bailey Aug. 15, 1819 280
111. To John Taylor Aug. 23, 1819 281
112. To John Hamilton Reynolds Aug. 25, 1819 282
113. To Fanny Keats Aug. 28, 1819 283
114. To John Taylor Sept. 1, 1819 286
115.  " " Sept. 5, 1819 286
116. To George and Georgiana Keats Sept. 17-27, 1819 290
117. To John Hamilton Reynolds Sept. 22, 1819 319
118. To Charles Wentworth Dilke Sept. 22, 1819 322
119. To Charles Brown Sept. 23, 1819 325
120.  " " Sept. 23, 1819 327
121. To Charles Wentworth Dilke Oct. 1, 1819 328
122. To Benjamin Robert Haydon Oct. 3, 1819 328
123. To Fanny Keats Oct. 16, 1819 331
124. To Joseph Severn Oct. 27? 1819 332
125. To John Taylor Nov. 17, 1819 333
126. To Fanny Keats Nov. 17, 1819 334
127. To Joseph Severn Dec. 6? 1819 334
128. To James Rice Dec. 1819 335
129. To Fanny Keats Dec. 20, 1819 335
130.  " " Dec. 22, 1819 337
131. To Georgiana Keats Jan. 13-28, 1820 338
132. To Fanny Keats Feb. 6, 1820 347
133.  " " Feb. 8, 1820 348
134.  " " Feb. 11, 1820 350
135.  " " Feb. 14, 1820 350
136. To James Rice Feb. 16, 1820 350
137. To Fanny Keats Feb. 19, 1820 352
138. To John Hamilton Reynolds Feb. 23 or 25, 1820 352
139. To Fanny Keats Feb. 24, 1820 353
140. To Charles Wentworth Dilke Mar. 4, 1820 354
141. To Fanny Keats Mar. 20, 1820 355
142.  " " April 1, 1820 356
143.  " " April 1820 357
144.  " " April 12, 1820 357
145.  " " April 21, 1820 357
146.  " " May 4, 1820 358
147. To Charles Wentworth Dilke May 1820 359
148. To John Taylor June 11, 1820 360
149. To Charles Brown June 1820 360
150. To Fanny Keats June 26, 1820 362
151.  " " July 5, 1820 363
152. To Benjamin Robert Haydon July 1820 363
153. To Fanny Keats July 22, 1820 364
154.  " " Aug. 14, 1820 364
155. To Percy Bysshe Shelley Aug. 1820 365
156. To John Taylor Aug. 14, 1820 367
157. To Benjamin Robert Haydon Aug. 1820 367
158. To Charles Brown Aug. 1820 368
159. To Fanny Keats Aug. 23, 1820 368
160. To Charles Brown Aug. 1820 370
161.  " " Sept. 28, 1820 370
162. To Mrs. Brawne Oct. 24, 1820 372
163. To Charles Brown Nov. 1,2, 1820 374
164.  " " Nov. 30, 1820 376

 

 


PREFACE


The object of the present volume is to supply the want, which many readers must have felt, of a separate and convenient edition of the letters of Keats to his family and friends. He is one of those poets whose genius makes itself felt in prose-writing almost as decisively as in verse, and at their best these letters are among the most beautiful in our language. Portions of them lent an especial charm to a book charming at any rate—the biography of the poet first published more than forty years ago by Lord Houghton. But the correspondence as given by Lord Houghton is neither accurate nor complete. He had in few cases the originals before him, but made use of copies, some of them quite fragmentary, especially those supplied him from America; and moreover, working while many of the poet’s friends were still alive, he thought it right to exercise a degree of editorial freedom for which there would now be neither occasion nor excuse. While I was engaged in preparing the life of Keats for Mr. Morley’s series some years since, the following materials for an improved edition of his letters came into my hands:—

(1) The copies made by Richard Woodhouse, a few years after Keats’s death, of the poet’s correspondence with his principal friends, viz. the publishers, Messrs. Taylor and Hessey; the transcriber, Woodhouse himself, who was a young barrister of literary tastes in the confidence of those gentlemen; John Hamilton Reynolds, solicitor, poet, humourist, and critic (born 1796, died 1852); Jane and Mariane Reynolds, sisters of the last-named, the former afterwards Mrs. Tom Hood; James Rice, the bosom friend of Reynolds, and like him a young solicitor; Benjamin Bailey, undergraduate of Magdalen Hall, Oxford, afterwards Archdeacon of Colombo (1794?-1852), and one or two more.

(2) The imperfect copies of the poet’s letters to his brother and sister-in-law in America, which were made by the sister-in-law’s second husband, Mr. Jeffrey of Louisville, and sent by him to Lord Houghton, who published them with further omissions and alterations of his own.

(3) Somewhat later, after the publication of my book, the autograph originals of some of these same letters to America were put into my hands, including almost the entire text of Nos. lxiii. lxxiii. lxxx. and xcii. in the present edition. The three last are the long and famous journal-letters written in the autumn of 1818 and spring of 1819, and between them occupy nearly a quarter of the whole volume. I have shown elsewhere[1] how much of their value and interest was sacrificed by Mr. Jeffrey’s omissions.

Besides these manuscript sources, I have drawn largely on Mr. Buxton Forman’s elaborate edition of Keats’s works in four volumes (1883),[2] and to a much less extent on the edition published by the poet’s American grand nephew, Mr. Speed (1884)[3]. Even thus, the correspondence is still probably not quite complete. In some of the voluminous journal-letters there may still be gaps, where a sheet of the autograph has gone astray; and since the following pages have been in print, I have heard of the existence in private collections of one or two letters which I have not been able to include. But it is not a case in which absolute completeness is of much importance.

In matters of the date and sequence of the letters, I have taken pains to be more exact than previous editors, especially in tracing the daily progress and different halting-places of the poet on his Scotch tour (which it takes some knowledge of the ground to do), and in dating the successive parts, written at intervals sometimes during two or three months, of the long journal-letters to America. On these particulars Keats himself is very vague, and his manuscript sometimes runs on without a break at points where the sense shows that he has dropped and taken it up again after a pause of days or weeks.[4] Again, I have in all cases given in full the verse and other quotations contained in the correspondence, where other editors have only indicated them by their first lines. It is indeed from these that the letters derive a great part of their character. Writing to his nearest relatives or most intimate friends, he is always quoting for their pleasure poems of his own now classical, then warm from his brain, sent forth uncertain whether to live or die, or snatches of doggrel nonsense as the humour of the moment takes him. The former, familiar as we may be with them, gain a new interest and freshness from the context: the latter are nothing apart from it, and to print them gravely, as has been done, among the Poetical Works, is to punish the levities of genius too hard.

As to the text, I have followed the autograph wherever it was possible, and in other cases the manuscript or printed version which I judged nearest the autograph; with this exception, that I have not thought it worth while to preserve mere slips of the pen or tricks of spelling. The curious in such matters will find them religiously reproduced by Mr. Buxton Forman wherever he has had the opportunity. The poet’s punctuation, on the other hand, and his use of capitals, which is odd and full of character, I have preserved. As is well known, his handwriting is as a rule clear and beautiful, quite free from unsteadiness or sign of fatigue; and as mere specimens for the collector, few autographs can compare with these close-written quarto (or sometimes extra folio) sheets, in which the young poet has poured out to those he loved his whole self indiscriminately, generosity and fretfulness, ardour and despondency, boyish petulance side by side with manful good sense, the tattle of suburban parlours with the speculations of a spirit unsurpassed for native poetic gift and insight.

The editor of familiar correspondence has at all times a difficult task before him in the choice what to give and what to withhold. In the case of Keats the difficulty is greater than in most, from the ferment of opposing elements and impulses in his nature, and from the extreme unreserve with which he lays himself open alike in his weakness and his strength. The other great letter-writers in English are men to some degree on their guard: men, if not of the world, at least of some worldly training and experience, and of characters in some degree formed and set. The phase of unlimited youthful expansiveness, of enthusiastic or fretful outcry, they have either escaped or left behind, and never give themselves away completely. Gray is of course an extreme case in point. With a masterly breadth of mind he unites an even finicking degree of academic fastidiousness and personal reserve, and his correspondence charms, not by impulse or openness, but by urbanity and irony, by ripeness of judgment and knowledge, by his playful kindliness towards the few intimates he has, and the sober wistfulness with which he looks out, from his Pisgah-height of universal culture, over regions of imaginative delight into which it was not given to him nor his contemporaries to enter fully. To take others differing most widely both as men and poets: Cowper, whether affectionately “chatting and chirping” to his cousin Lady Hesketh, or confiding his spiritual terrors to the Rev. John Newton, that unwise monitor who would not let them sleep,—Cowper is a letter-writer the most unaffected and sincere, but has nevertheless the degree of reticence natural to his breeding, as well as a touch of staidness and formality proper to his age. Byron offers an extreme contrast; unrestrained he is, but far indeed from being unaffected; the greatest attitudinist in literature as in life, and the most brilliant of all letter-writers after his fashion, with his wit, his wilfulness, his flash, his extraordinary unscrupulousness and resource, his vulgar pride of caste, his everlasting restlessness and egotism, his occasional true irradiations of the divine fire. Shelley, again—but he, as has been justly said, must have his singing robes about him to be quite truly Shelley, and in his correspondence is little more than any other amiable and enthusiastic gentleman and scholar on his travels. To the case of Keats, at any rate, none of these other distinguished letter-writers affords any close parallel. That admirable genius was from the social point of view an unformed lad in the flush and rawness of youth. His passion for beauty, his instinctive insight into the vital sources of imaginative delight in nature, in romance, and in antiquity, went along with perceptions painfully acute in matters of daily life, and nerves high-strung in the extreme. He was moreover almost incapable of artifice or disguise. Writing to his brothers and sister or to friends as dear, he is secret with them on one thing only, and that is his unlucky love-passion after he became a prey to it: for the rest he is open as the day, and keeps back nothing of what crosses his mind, nothing that vexes or jars on him or tries his patience. His character, as thus laid bare, contains elements of rare nobility and attraction—modesty, humour, sweetness, courage, impulsive disinterestedness, strong and tender family affection, the gift of righteous indignation, the gift of sober and strict self-knowledge. But it is only a character in the making. A strain of hereditary disease, lurking in his constitution from the first, was developed by over-exertion and aggravated by mischance, so that he never lived to be himself; and from about his twenty-fourth birthday his utterances are those of one struggling in vain against a hopeless distemper both of body and mind.

If a selection could be made from those parts only of Keats’s correspondence which show him at his best, we should have an anthology full of intuitions of beauty, even of wisdom, and breathing the very spirit of generous youth; one unrivalled for zest, whim, fancy, and amiability, and written in an English which by its peculiar alert and varied movement sometimes recalls, perhaps more closely than that of any other writer (for the young Cockney has Shakspeare in his blood), the prose passages of Hamlet and Much Ado about Nothing. Had the correspondence never been printed before, were it there to be dealt with for the first time, this method of selection would no doubt be the tempting one to apply to it. But such a treatment is now hardly possible, and in any case would hardly be quite fair; since the object, or at all events the effect, of publishing a man’s correspondence is not merely to give literary pleasure—it is to make the man himself known; and the revelation, though it need not be wholly without reserve, is bound to be just and proportionate as far as it goes. Even as an artist, in the work which he himself published to the world, Keats was not one of those of whom it could be said, “his worst he kept, his best he gave.” Rather he gave promiscuously, in the just confidence that among the failures and half-successes of his inexperienced youth would be found enough of the best to establish his place among the poets after his death. Considering all things, the nature of the man, the difficulty of separating the exquisite from the common, the healthful from the diseased, in his mind and work, considering also the use that has already been made of the materials, I have decided in this edition to give the correspondence almost unpruned; omitting a few passages of mere crudity, hardly more than two pages in all, but not attempting to suppress those which betray the weak places in the writer’s nature, his flaws of taste and training, his movements of waywardness, irritability, and morbid suspicion. Only the biographer without tact, the critic without balance, will insist on these. A truer as well as more charitable judgment will recognise that what was best in Keats was also what was most real, and will be fortified by remembering that to those who knew him his faults were almost unapparent, and that no man was ever held by his friends in more devoted or more unanimous affection while he lived and afterwards.

There is one thing, however, which I have not chosen to do, and that is to include in this collection the poet’s love-letters to Fanny Brawne. As it is, the intimate nature of the correspondence must sometimes give the reader a sense of eavesdropping, of being admitted into petty private matters with which he has no concern. If this is to some extent inevitable, it is by no means inevitable that the public should be farther asked to look over the shoulder of the sick and presently dying youth while he declares the impatience and torment of his passion to the object, careless and unresponsive as she seems to have been, who inspired it. These letters too have been printed. As a matter of feeling I cannot put myself in the place of the reader who desires to possess them; while as a matter of literature they are in a different key from the rest,—not lacking passages of beauty, but constrained and painful in the main, and quite without the genial ease and play of mind which make the letters to his family and friends so attractive. Therefore in this, which I hope may become the standard edition of his correspondence, they shall find no place.

As to the persons, other than those already mentioned, to whom the letters here given are addressed:—Shelley of course needs no words; nor should any be needed for the painter Haydon (1786-1846), or the poet and critic Leigh Hunt (1784-1859). Theirs were the chief inspiring influences which determined the young medical student, about his twentieth year, at the time when this correspondence opens, to give up his intended profession for poetry. Both were men of remarkable gifts and strong intellectual enthusiasm, hampered in either case by foibles of character which their young friend and follower, who has left so far more illustrious a name, was only too quick to detect. Charles Cowden Clarke (1787-1877), the son of Keats’s schoolmaster at Enfield, had exercised a still earlier influence on the lad’s opening mind, and was himself afterwards long and justly distinguished as a Shakspearean student and lecturer and essayist on English literature. Charles Wentworth Dilke (1789-1864), having begun life in the Civil Service, early abandoned that calling for letters, and lived to be one of the most influential of English critics and journalists; he is chiefly known from his connection with the Athenæum, and through the memoir published by his grandson. Charles Brown, afterwards styling himself Charles Armitage Brown (1786-1842), who became known to Keats through Dilke in the summer of 1817, and was his most intimate companion during the two years June 1818 to June 1820, had begun life as a merchant in St. Petersburg, and failing, came home, and took, he also, to literature, chiefly as a contributor to the various periodicals edited by Leigh Hunt. He lived mostly in Italy from 1822 to 1834, then for six years at Plymouth, and in 1841 emigrated to New Zealand, where he died the following year. Joseph Severn (1793-1879) was the son of a musician, himself beginning to practise as a painter when Keats knew him. His devoted tendance of the poet during the last sad months in Italy was the determining event of Severn’s career, earning him the permanent regard and gratitude of all lovers of genius. He established himself for good in Rome, where he continued to practise his art, and was for many years English consul, and one of the most familiar figures in the society of the city.