John Keats (1795-1821), born the son of a stable manager from the East End of London, he left school at 14 and trained as an apothecary, studying medicine and then surgery. Although poor, he gave up medicine for poetry and, in the twelve months from September 1818, he produced an outpouring of major poetry which is unmatched in English. The symptoms of tuberculosis appeared early in 1820, in which year he travelled to Italy in search of a better climate. He died in Rome at the age of 25.