They entered next
the country of Meg Merrilies, and from Kirkcudbrightshire crossed
over to Ireland for a few days. On their return they went north as
far as Argyleshire, whence they sailed to Staffa and saw Fingal's
cave, which, Keats wrote, 'for solemnity and grandeur far surpasses
the finest Cathedral.' They then crossed Scotland through
Inverness, and Keats returned home by boat from Cromarty.
His letters home are at first full of interest and enjoyment,
but a 'slight sore throat', contracted in 'a most wretched walk of
thirty-seven miles across the Isle of Mull', proved very
troublesome and finally cut short his holiday. This was the
beginning of the end. There was consumption in the family: Tom was
dying of it; and the cold, wet, and over-exertion of his Scotch
tour seems to have developed the fatal tendency in Keats
himself.
From this time forward he was never well, and no good was done
to either his health or spirits by the task which now awaited him
of tending on his dying brother. For the last two or three months
of 1818, [xv]until Tom's death in December, he
scarcely left the bedside, and it was well for him that his friend,
Charles Armitage Brown, was at hand to help and comfort him after
the long strain. Brown persuaded Keats at once to leave the house,
with its sad associations, and to come and live with him.
Before long poetry absorbed Keats again; and the first few
months of 1819 were the most fruitful of his life. Besides working
at Hyperion, which he had begun during Tom's illness, he
wrote The Eve of St. Agnes, The Eve of St. Mark,
La Belle Dame Sans Merci, and nearly all his famous
odes.
Troubles however beset him. His friend Haydon was in
difficulties and tormenting him, poor as he was, to lend him money;
the state of his throat gave serious cause for alarm; and, above
all, he was consumed by an unsatisfying passion for the daughter of
a neighbour, Mrs. Brawne. She had rented Brown's house whilst they
were in Scotland, and had now moved to a street near by. Miss Fanny
Brawne returned his love, but she seems never to have understood
his nature or his needs. High-spirited and fond of pleasure she did
not apparently allow the thought of her invalid lover to interfere
much with her enjoyment of life. She would not, however,
[xvi]abandon her engagement, and she
probably gave him all which it was in her nature to give.
Ill-health made him, on the other hand, morbidly dissatisfied and
suspicious; and, as a result of his illness and her limitations,
his love throughout brought him restlessness and torment rather
than peace and comfort.
Towards the end of July he went to Shanklin and there, in
collaboration with Brown, wrote a play, Otho the Great.
Brown tells us how they used to sit, one on either side of a table,
he sketching out the scenes and handing each one, as the outline
was finished, to Keats to write. As Keats never knew what was
coming it was quite impossible that the characters should be
adequately conceived, or that the drama should be a united whole.
Nevertheless there is much that is beautiful and promising in it.
It should not be forgotten that Keats's 'greatest ambition' was, in
his own words, 'the writing of a few fine plays'; and, with the
increasing humanity and grasp which his poetry shows, there is no
reason to suppose that, had he lived, he would not have fulfilled
it.
At Shanklin, moreover, he had begun to write Lamia, and
he continued it at Winchester. Here he [xvii]stayed
until the middle of October, excepting a few days which he spent in
London to arrange about the sending of some money to his brother in
America. George had been unsuccessful in his commercial
enterprises, and Keats, in view of his family's ill-success,
determined temporarily to abandon poetry, and by reviewing or
journalism to support himself and earn money to help his brother.
Then, when he could afford it, he would return to poetry.
Accordingly he came back to London, but his health was breaking
down, and with it his resolution. He tried to re-write
Hyperion, which he felt had been written too much under the
influence of Milton and in 'the artist's humour'. The same
independence of spirit which he had shown in the publication of
Endymion urged him now to abandon a work the style of which
he did not feel to be absolutely his own. The re-cast he wrote in
the form of a vision, calling it The Fall of Hyperion, and
in so doing he added much to his conception of the meaning of the
story. In no poem does he show more of the profoundly philosophic
spirit which characterizes many of his letters. But it was too
late; his power was failing and, in spite of the beauty and
interest of [xviii]some of his additions, the
alterations are mostly for the worse.
Whilst The Fall of Hyperion occupied his evenings his
mornings were spent over a satirical fairy-poem, The Cap and
Bells, in the metre of the Faerie Queene. This metre,
however, was ill-suited to the subject; satire was not natural to
him, and the poem has little intrinsic merit.
Neither this nor the re-cast of Hyperion was finished
when, in February, 1820, he had an attack of illness in which the
first definite symptom of consumption appeared. Brown tells how he
came home on the evening of Thursday, February 3rd, in a state of
high fever, chilled from having ridden outside the coach on a
bitterly cold day. 'He mildly and instantly yielded to my request
that he should go to bed . . . On entering the cold
sheets, before his head was on the pillow, he slightly coughed, and
I heard him say—"that is blood from my mouth". I went towards him:
he was examining a single drop of blood upon the sheet. "Bring me
the candle, Brown, and let me see this blood." After regarding it
steadfastly he looked up in my face with a calmness of expression
that I can never forget, and said, "I know the colour of that
blood;—it is arterial [xix]blood; I
cannot be deceived in that colour; that drop of blood is my death
warrant;—I must die."'
He lived for another year, but it was one long dying: he himself
called it his 'posthumous life'.
Keats was one of the most charming of letter-writers. He had
that rare quality of entering sympathetically into the mind of the
friend to whom he was writing, so that his letters reveal to us
much of the character of the recipient as well as of the writer.
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