The love letters of John Keats and Fanny Brawne.
Who better to write the world’s most memorable love letters than the world’s most famous writers? This week in history’s most passionately-penned correspondence, we turn to the most tragic of the romantic poets, John Keats (1795-1821), writing to the love of his life, Fanny Brawne:
My Dearest Girl,
I have been a walk this morning with a book in my hand, but as usual I have been occupied with nothing but you: I wish I could say in an agreeable manner. I am tormented day and night. They talk of my going to Italy. ‘Tis certain I shall never recover if I am to be so long separate from you: yet with all this devotion to you I cannot persuade myself into any confidence of you….
You are to me an object intensely desirable — the air I breathe in a room empty of you in unhealthy. I am not the same to you — no — you can wait — you have a thousand activities — you can be happy without me. Any party, anything to fill up the day has been enough.
How have you pass’d this month? Who have you smil’d with? All this may seem savage in me. You do no feel as I do — you do not know what it is to love — one day you may — your time is not come….I cannot live without you, and not only you but chaste you; virtuous you. The Sun rises and sets, the day passes, and you follow the bent of your inclination to a certain extent — you have no conception of the quantity of miserable feeling that passes through me in a day — Be serious! Love is not a plaything — and again do not write unless you can do it with a crystal conscience. I would sooner die for want of you…
Yours for ever
J. Keats
Keats would never marry his true love – he would be taken by tuberculosis before he could present Brawne with a marriage proposal she could practically accept, and he died in Rome at the terribly young age of 26.
The love affair between Keats & Brawne was fictionalised in 2009 in Jane Campion’s Bright Star.
Images: Wikimedia Commons / Wikimedia Commons