Keats addresses a nightingale he hears singing somewhere in the forest and says that his “drowsy numbness” is not from envy of the nightingale’s happiness, but rather from sharing it too completely; he is “too happy” that the nightingale sings the music of summer from amid some unseen plot of green trees and shadows.
A. 
True
B. 
False
3.
In his poetry, Keats proposed the contemplation of beauty as a way of delaying the inevitability of death.
A. 
True
B. 
False
4.
Even before his diagnosis of ___________, Keats focused on death and its inevitability in his work.