John Keats
Writer
October 31, 1795 – February 23, 1821
Credits:
Poems:
A Galloway Song; A Song About
Myself; A Song of Opposites; A Party Of Lovers; Acrostic: Georgiana Augusta
Keats; Addressed to Haydon; Addressed to the Same; After dark vapours have
oppressed our plains; Apollo to the Graces; An Extempore; As from the darkening
gloom a silver dove; As Hermes once took to his feathers light; Before he went
to live with owls and bats; Ben Nevis: A Dialogue; Blue!—’Tis the life of
heaven—the domain; Bright star, would I were stedfast as thou art; Calidore: A
Fragment; Character of C. B.; Epistle To John Hamilton Reynolds; Endymion;
Extracts from an Opera; Faery Songs; Fancy; Fill for me a brimming bowl; For
there’s Bishop’s Teign; Fragment Of “The Castle Builder”; Fragment of an Ode to
Maia; God of the meridian; Happy is England! I could be content; Hence
burgundy, claret, and port; Hither, hither, love; How many bards gild the
lapses of time; Hush, hush, tread softly, hush, hush, my dear; Hymn To Apollo;
Hyperion; I am as brisk; I cry your mercy—pity—love!—aye, love; I had a dove,
and the sweet dove died; I stoof tip-toe upon a little hill; Imitation of
Spenser; In after time a sage of mickle lore; In drear nighted December;
Isabella; or, the Pot of Basil; Keen, fitful gusts are whisp’ring here and
there; King Stephen: A Fragment of a Tragedy; La Belle Dame sans Merci: A
Ballad; Lamia; Lines on Seeing a Lock of Milton’s Hair; Lines on the Mermaid
Tavern; Lines (Unfelt, unheard, unseen…); Lines Written on 29 May, the
Anniversary of Charles’s Restoration, on Hearing the Bells Ringing; Meg
Merrilies; Modern Love; Not Aladdin magian; O grant that like to Peter I; O
Solitude! if I must with thee dwell; O thou whose face hath felt the winter’s
wind; Ode (Bards of Passion and of Mirth); Ode on a Grecian Urn; Ode on a
Melancholy; Ode on Indolence; Ode to a Nightingale; Ode to Apollo; Ode to
Psyche; Of late two dainties were before me plac’d; Oh! how I love, on a fair
summer’s eve; On a Leander Which Miss Reynolds, My Kind Friend, Gave Me; On
Fame (“Fame, like a wayward girl”); On Fame (“How fever’d is the man”); On
First Looking into Chapman’s Homer; On Leaving Some Friends at an Early Hour;
On Peace; On Receiving a Curious Shell, and a Copy of Verses, from the Same
Ladies; On Receiving a Laurel Crown from Leigh Hunt; On Seeing the Elgin Marbles;
On Sitting Down to Read King Lear Once Again; On Some Skills in Beauley Abbey,
near Inverness; On the Grasshopper and Cricket; On the Sea; On the Sonnet; On
Visiting the Tomb of Burns; On Leigh Hunt’s Poem, the ‘Story of Rimini’; Otho
the Great: A Tragedy in Five Acts; Over the hill and over the dale; Read me a
lesson, Muse, and speak it loud; Robin Hood; Sharing Eve’s Apple; Sleep and
Poetry; Song of Four Fairies: Fire, Air, Earth, and Water; Sonnet to Byron;
Sonnet to Chatterton; Sonnet to Sleep; Sonnet to Spenser; Specimen of an
Induction to a Poem; Spirit here that reignest; Stay, ruby breated warbler,
stay; Sweet, sweet is the greeting of eyes; The day is gone, and all its sweets
are gone; The Eve of St. Agnes; The Eve of St. Mark; The Fall of Hyperion: A
Dream; The Human Seasons; The Gadfly; The Gothic looks solemn; The Cap And
Bells; Or, The Jealousies: A Faery Tale (Unfinished); There is a joy in footing
slow across a silent plain; Think not of it, sweet one, so; This living hand,
now warm and capable; This mortal body of a thousand days; Time’s sea hath been
five years at its slow ebb; Tis the “witching time of night”; To.- (Had I a
man’s fair form, then might my sighs); To.- (Hadst tho liv’d in days of old);
To a Friend Who Sent Me Some Roses; To a Young Lady Who Sent Me a Laurel Crown;
To Ailsa Rock; To Autumn; To Charles Cowden Clarke; To Emma; To G. A. W.; To
George Felton Mathew; To Haydon with a Sonnet Written on seeing the Elgin
Marbles; To Homer; To Hope; To J. H. Reynolds; To Kosciusko; To Leigh Hunt,
Esq.; To Mrs. Reynold’s Cat; To My Brother George (epistle); To My Brother
George (sonnet); To My Brothers; To one who has been long in city pent; To Some
Ladies; To the Ladies Who Saw Me Crown’d; To the Nile; Translated From A Sonnet
Of Ronsard; Two or three posies; What can I do to drive away; When I have fears
that I may cease to be; Where by ye going, you Devon maid; Where’s the Poet?
(Fragment); Why did I laugh tonight? No voice will tell; Woman! when I behold
thee flippant, vain; Women, wine, and snuff; Written in Disgust of Vulgar
Superstition; Written on the Day That Mr. Leigh Hunt Left Prison; Written On
The Blank Space Of A Leaf At The End Of Chaucer’s Tale Of The Flowre And The
Lefe; You say you love, but with a voice.
Movies and television:
Bright Star (2009); Camera Three
(1958); Cariño, sabes que soy de otro planeta (2022); Count the Ways (1975);
Isabella and the Pot of Basil (2004); La belle dame sans merci (2005); La Belle
Dame Sans Merci by John Keats (1997); New in November 2011 (2012); The Eve of
St. Agnes (1950); The Merciless Beauty (2016); The Sunday Programme (2003);
Venus Blue (1998).