G
o
o
g
l
e
×
Please click
here
if you are not redirected within a few seconds.
All
Images
Books
News
Maps
Videos
Shopping
Search tools
Recent
Recent
Past hour
Past 24 hours
Past week
Past month
Past year
Archives
Sorted by relevance
Sorted by relevance
Sorted by date
'Bright Star': Will the Real John Keats Please Stand Up?
Newsweek
When I read John Keats's poetry in high school and college, I had a particularly vivid picture of the poet: pale and elfin—hardly five feet...
181 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
145 months ago
John Keats’s ode to a nectarine
Financial Times
This year is the bicentenary of the death of the poet John Keats. Aged 25, he died in his room beside the Spanish Steps in Rome, killed,...
38 months ago
Irritable Reachings: On John Keats
The Nation
John Keats was born in 1795. Orphaned at the age of 14, he was apprenticed by a manipulative guardian to an apothecary, a kind of general...
142 months ago
John Keats, the ultimate Romantic poet: an intriguing new take on his life from Lucasta Miller
CBC
"Beauty is truth, truth beauty." This haunting line from Ode on a Grecian Urn by John Keats is just one of many memorable quotations from...
30 months ago
John Keats' apprenticeship
The Lancet
Visitors to Keats House museum in London, UK, are often surprised by the first display case. A small leather notebook, containing lecture...
74 months ago
What makes John Keats’s ‘Ode on a Grecian Urn’ so enduringly powerful?
Aeon | a world of ideas
One of the most beloved poems by the English poet John Keats (1795-1821), 'Ode on a Grecian Urn' (1819) is perhaps best known for its...
17 months ago
John Keats
The New Yorker
This absorbing, diligently researched biography draws us into the North London homes of Keats's circle, imagining even the warmth of the fireplace.
142 months ago
Poem of the week: To Autumn by John Keats
The Guardian
Marked by sensuous profusion and artistic control, this most widely published of English poems is laden with meaning, writes Carol Rumens.
133 months ago
My hero: John Keats by Andrew Motion
The Guardian
'It's hard – no, it's impossible – to think of another writer who suffered and achieved so much in such a short time at such an early age'
150 months ago