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John Keats was born near London, the first of five children of stable keeper Thomas Keats and Frances Jennings Keats
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She leaves the children in the care of their grandmother. The grandmother signs over care of the children to a guardian, Richard Abbey, who takes the children’s inheritance money for himself.
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Keats studies at night with Charles Cowden Clarke, a sympathetic administrator at the school who sees his potential.
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Privately, he has started to write poetry.
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Richard Abbey is furious and the two have a falling-out.
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His brother Thomas is ill with tuberculosis, but Keats is assured that he will survive his journey.
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The poem begins with the immortal line, “A thing of beauty is a joy forever.”
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There, he meets and soon falls in love with his neighbor, Fanny Brawne. By the end of the year, the couple is engaged. This is a year of ups and downs for Keats – he writes many of his best poems, including the famous Odes, but also battles depression and the first symptoms of tuberculosis.
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When the second one happens a few months later, he moves into Leigh Hunt’s house, where Fanny nurses him.
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He is burned in the Protestant cemetery. Percy Bysshe Shelley writes the poem Adonais as an elegy for him.