A nature poet by inclination, Sidney Keyes was drawn to the work of
Holderlin and Rilke, taking them -paradoxically- to war against the
Germans. They draw out his essentially Wordsworthian temperament; he was
also touched by the very different imaginative worlds of Schiller and
Paul Klee. A passion for the microcosmic co-exists with an ability to
deal with large truths in his own voice or to enter into the imagination
of other, of Clare and Yeats for example. Though he died young, his
achievement is real. His dramatic monologues, his poems of landscape, of
the weird and macabre, and his amstery of blank verse set him apart.