While maintaining his disagreement with Keats's "principles of poetry" and "abuse of Pope," Byron in a letter of 1821 also apologizes to the memory of John Keats. The evolution of poetic power Keats describes in "Sleep and Poetry" and Endymion connects itself to the tradition of genius tragically cut shortas exemplified by Thomas Chatterton, who lived from 1752 to 1770 and to whom Endymion is dedicated. Keats differentiates the couplets he writes in ''Sleep and Poetry" from those of Pope and eighteenth-century neoclassicists who "sway'd about upon a rocking horse, / And thought it Pegasus."
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In "Sleep and Poetry" an Apollo-like charioteer, having evolved from an erotic, pastoral setting, "with wond'rous gesture" animates the natural world. This imaginative perception cannot be maintained butin a typical Keatsian processdeliquesces, and "a sense of real things comes doubly strong." Reality seeks to overcome this vision, rising "like a muddy stream." The poetic imagination, which defines itself in the rest of the poem, enables "the great end / Of poesy, that it should be a friend / To sooth the cares, and lift the thoughts of man.
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Poetry brings pleasure and joy. The narrator, who with "full happiness" will "trace the story of Endymion," begins by insisting, "A thing of beauty is a joy forever." Keats revises the myth of Endymiona prince made immortal and put into an endless sleep, during which the moon goddess visits himinto a story of a young man's quest. A passionate encounter with an inconstant female presencethe moon, Dianadrives Keats's Endymion to the depths of the earth and sea. He comes to "a jasmine bower, all bestrown / With golden moss. His every sense had grown / Ethereal for pleasure."
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A vision of sexual consummation allows poetic description, the presence of a poet, who "sang the story up into the air, / Giving it universal freedom." Endymion, however, awakes alone and "most forlorn upon that widow'd bed. . . ." While the light of the moon always finds him, under the ocean Glaucus, who has been entranced by the nymph Sylla, warns him about involvement with such an "arbitrary queen of sense." Able to reunite Glaucus, Sylla, and a procession of other lovers, Endymion's own vision of love for Diana is set against the reality of a physical relationship with an Indian maid. Ready to renounce "cloudy phantasms," "the air of visions," the "daintiest Dream," Endymion contemplates telling his children, "There never liv'd a mortal man, who
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