1818/] On the Cockney
to his succession, the greater seems to be the impulse to hasten the return of similar embarrassments, a preposses- sion for which I confess myself unable to account satisfactorily, unless by ad- mitting the force of habit, which we all know " is prodigious and unac- countable." Should you, Mr Editor, consider this sketch worthy of appearing in print, it may, however slight, afford a cud for rumination to some of your readers, and may perhaps induce me, in a future Number, to consider, a little more at large, a subject which I have only touched SKIN DEEP.
COCKNEY SCHOOL OF POETRY. No IV. . OF KEATS, THE MUSES' SON OF PROMISE, AND WHAT FEATS HE YET MAY DO, &C. CORNELIUS WEBB.
Of all the manias of this mad age,
the most incurable, as well as the most
common, seems to be no other than
the Metromanie. The just celebrity
of Robert Burns and Miss Baillie has
had the melancholy effect of turning
the heads of we know not how many
farm-servants and unmarried ladies;
our very footmen compose tragedies,
and there is scarcely a superannuated
governess in the island that does not
leave a roll of lyrics behind her in her
band-box. To witness the disease of
any human understanding, however
feeble, is distressing ; but the spectacle
of an able mind reduced to a state of
insanity is of course ten times more
afflicting. It is with such sorrow as
this that we have contemplated the case
of Mr John Keats. This young man
appears to have received from nature
talents of an excellent, perhaps even
of a superior order—talents which, de-
voted to the purposes of any useful
profession, must have rendered him a
respectable, if not an eminent citizen.
His friends, we understand, destined
him to the career of medicine, and he
was bound apprentice some years ago
to a worthy apothecary in town. But
all has been undone by a sudden at-
tack of the malady to which we have
alluded. Whether Mr John had been
sent home with a diuretic or compos-
ing draught to some patient far gone
in the poetical mania, we have not
heard. This much is certain, that he
has caught the infection, and that
thoroughly. For some time we were
in hopes, that he might get off with a
violent fit or two; but of late the
symptoms are terrible. The phrenzy
of the "Poems" was bad enough in,
its way ; but it did not alarm us half
so seriously as the calm, settled, im-
perturbable drivelling idiocy of "En-
dymion." We hope, however, that in
so young a person, and with a consti-
tution originally so good, even now the
disease is not utterly incurable. Time,
firm treatment, and rational restraint,
do much for many apparently hopeless
invalids ; and if Mr Keats should hap-
pen, at some interval of reason, to cast
is eye upon our pages, he may per-
haps be convinced of the existence of
his malady, which, in such cases, is
often all that is necessary to put the
patient in a fair way of being cured.
The readers of the Examiner news-
paper were informed, some time ago,
by a solemn paragraph, in Mr Hunt's
best style, of the appearance of two
new stars of glorious magnitude and
splendour in the poetical horizon of
the land of Cockaigne. One of these
turned out, by and by, to be no other
than Mr John Keats. This preco-
cious adulation confirmed the waver-
ing apprentice in his desire to quit the
gallipots, and at the same time excit-
ed in his too susceptible mind a fatal
admiration for the character and ta-
lents of the most worthless and affect-
ed of all the versifiers of our time.
One of his first productions was the
following sonnet, "written on the day
when Mr Leigh Hunt left prison."
It will be recollected, that the cause
of Hunt's confinement was a series of
libels against his sovereign, and that
its fruit was the odious and incestuous
"Story of Rimini."
"What though, for shewing truth to flattered}} state,
Kind Hunt was shut in prison, yet has he.
In his immortal spirit been as free
As the sky-searching lark, and as elate.
Minion of grandeur ! think you he did wait ?
Think you he nought but prison walls
did see,
Till, so unwilling, thou untum'dst the
key?
Ah, no ! far happier, nobler was his fate !
In Spenser's lialls ! he strayed, and bowers
fair,
Culling enchanted flowers ; and he flew