Keats, John, 1795-1821
One of the principal figures of the Romantic movement, John Keats belonged to the second generation of Romantic poets, alongside Percy Shelley and Lord Byron. Having received little formal education, Keats was initially apprenticed to a surgeon, and he eventually broke off his apprenticeship to work as a dresser, becoming more involved in the literary realm as he began to dabble in poetry in 1814. By 1817, his literary interests had come to fruition, and he left his position to dedicate himself entirely to poetry.