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from a poet of still doubtful fame into a master and an immortal. The attachment, Sir Sidney thinks, was a misfortune for him, though he qualifies this by adding that "so probably under the circumstances must any passion for a woman have been." Well, let us test this "misfortune" by its consequences. The meeting with Fanny took place, as I have said, in the autumn of 1818. During the winter Keats continued to write _Hyperion_, which he seems already to have begun. In January 1819 he wrote _The Eve of St. Agnes_. During the spring of that year, he wrote the _Ode to Psyche_, the _Ode on a Grecian Urn_, the _Ode to a Nightingale_, and _La Belle Dame sans Merci_. In the autumn he finished _Lamia_, and wrote the _Ode to Autumn_. To the same year belongs the second greatest of his sonnets, _Bright star, would I were steadfast as thou art_. In other words, practically all the fine gold of Keats's work was produced in the months in which his passion for Fanny Brawne was consuming him as with fire. His greatest poems we clearly owe to that heightened sense of beauty which resulted from his translation into a lover. It seems to me a treachery to Keats's memory to belittle a woman who was at least the occasion of such a passionate expenditure of genius. Sir Sidney Colvin does his best to be fair to Fanny, but his presentation of the story of Keats's love for her will, I am afraid, be regarded by the long line of her disparagers as an endorsement of their blame. I can understand the dislike of Fanny Brawne on the part of those who dislike Keats and all his works. But if we accept Keats and _The Eve of St. Agnes_, we had better be honest and also accept Fanny, who inspired them. Keats, it must be remembered, was a sensualist. His poems belong to the literature of the higher sensualism. They reveal him as a man not altogether free from the vulgarities of sensualism, as well as one who was able to transmute it into perfect literature. He seems to have admired women vulgarly as creatures whose hands were waiting to be squeezed, rather than as equal human beings; the eminent exception to this being his sister-in-law, Georgiana. His famous declaration of independence of them--that he would rather give them a sugar-plum than his time--was essentially a cynicism in the exhausted-Don-Juan mood. Hence, Keats was almost doomed to fall in love with provocation rather than with what the Victorians called "soul." His destiny was not to be a ha
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