The poet John Keats once said, “Love is my religion – I could die for it.” John Keats was a British poet who is credited for writing some of the most impactful poetry. Though his life was short-lived, he wrote some of the most sensual and simultaneously darkest poetry of the Romanticism Era. John Keats’s use of poetic devices synthesized with original themes paved the way for Romanticism and influenced later poets to experiment with darker themes in their own writings. John Keats was known for his erudition and his innovativeness. John Keats was one of the most insightful poets of his time (O’Connor). This led to many people during and after his time of writing have compared his writings as being equivalent to the writings of Shakespeare (“Early Poetry, Prose”). John Keats had a hunger for, “a life of sensations rather than thoughts.”, and this aided him in creating his poetry (Ward 141). …show more content…
In addition, John Keats developed his own style of writing for his poetry (Ward 29). Unique to Keats’s time of writing, he wrote of the unpleasant aspects of life. This topic being present in a sensual poem about love was uncommon (“Early Poetry, Prose). Another favorable aspect of Keats’s poetry is that it contained imagery, metaphors, and symbolism. However, not many readers were able to pick up on Keats’s peculiar use of symbolism and the deeper meaning of the poem as a whole (Ward 141). Keats’s use of pastoralism in his poetry led to a darker and a new vision of life. This new vision of life portrayed our existence to be shown as an “unresolvable mixture of bliss and pain”