
PREFACE
I.—TO CHARLES COWDEN CLARKE.
II.—TO BENJAMIN ROBERT HAYDON.
III.—TO BENJAMIN ROBERT HAYDON.
IV.—TO CHARLES COWDEN CLARKE.
V.—TO JOHN HAMILTON REYNOLDS.
VI.—TO JOHN HAMILTON REYNOLDS.
VII.—TO GEORGE AND THOMAS KEATS.
VIII.—TO JOHN HAMILTON REYNOLDS.
IX.—TO LEIGH HUNT.
This volume assembles the surviving correspondence of one of England’s most beloved Romantic poets, revealing the intimate voice he used with family and close friends. The letters range from tender messages to his sister‑in‑law in America to lively exchanges with fellow writers and publishers, offering a vivid picture of his daily concerns, travels, and artistic experiments. Listeners will hear the same restless curiosity and lyrical brilliance that animate his celebrated verses, now expressed in prose.
The editor has drawn on original manuscripts, newly discovered copies, and earlier scholarly editions to present the letters as accurately as possible, restoring passages that were previously omitted or altered. Included are the extensive journal‑letters of 1818‑19, rich with quoted poems, playful jokes, and candid reflections on the poet’s health and ambitions. As a result, the collection feels like a conversation with Keats himself, showcasing both his soaring imagination and his very human moments of wit and vulnerability.
Language
en
Duration
~13 hours (749K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2011-03-28
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1795–1821
A major voice of the English Romantic movement, his poems are loved for their rich imagery, musical language, and deep feeling. Though he died at just 25, works like Ode to a Nightingale, Ode on a Grecian Urn, and To Autumn made him one of the best-known poets in English.
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