Shelley – What's Hot London? https://www.whatshotlondon.co.uk Find out! Tue, 20 Jun 2023 22:01:24 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 https://www.whatshotlondon.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/cropped-mobile-app-logo-32x32.jpg Shelley – What's Hot London? https://www.whatshotlondon.co.uk 32 32 What’s Hot Hampstead? https://www.whatshotlondon.co.uk/whats-hot-hampstead/ Wed, 19 Apr 2023 16:14:45 +0000 https://www.whatshotlondon.co.uk/?p=13712 Hampstead & Highgate’s spring offering of arts, culture, nature spots, food & drink!
The sunnier weather’s tentative appearance ups the outdoor vibe. We point you in the direction of exhibitions, museums, cafes, restaurants and more!

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                             It’s all good heading for Hampstead’s hotspots at the first hint of sunshine, but your purposeful traipsing could be planned a little better. Hey, as you make your way to Parliament Hill on Hampstead Heath you could walk right past author George Orwell’s former home without realising. Or get lost in the muddy heath as you search aimlessly for Kenwood House or Hampstead Hill Garden and Pergola using a Google Maps app as non-plussed as you. So hang with us. We know all the must-sees and shortcuts in Hampstead & Highgate Russian Marriage Agency In Israel

History & Culture

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                             SPANIARD’S INN

Spaniards Inn, Hampstead, Keats, Shelley, Lord, Byron, Dick Turpin

Spaniards Inn, Spaniards Rd, London NW3 7JJ

English Romantic poets Lord Byron, Percy Shelley and John Keats frequented this historic pub on Spaniards Road in the early 19th-century. It’s said, Keats wrote Ode to a Nightingale in the pub garden. The historical accounts for that are a bit shaky, but one thing’s for certain – the regulars were fond of duelling back then. Even the original Spanish owners settled a feud with pistols at twenty paces. Having highwayman Dick Turpin propping up the bar with a pint of ale didn’t exactly calm the atmosphere. Turpin’s father once owned the pub. The crossed swords sign on the pub front hints at its truculent past. Spaniards Road was notorious for highwayman. An execution scaffold was erected on the road in a desperate attempt to make the highwaymen consider the consequences of their actions.          

Tips: The historic Kenwood House stately home is nearby. The 210 bus stops outside both.

     

HIGHGATE CEMETERY

Karl Marx

Highgate Cemetery has become a North London landmark because of its famous occupants. So a visit here is considered cultured and respectful rather than ghoulish – there’s even an entrance fee and a noticeable but dignified slant towards tourist attraction. Political philoopher Karl Marx, writer of the Communist Manifesto, is buried here and has the grandest headstone in the cemetery. His gravestone epitaph reads “The philosophers have only interpreted the world in certain ways. The point, however, is to change it.” Punk and fashion impressario Malcolm McLaren is also buried here. He gave the world the anarchic Sex Pistols punk band who reached for the skies with a nihilistic can-do, will-do, don’t-care attitude so it’s no surprise his gravestone reads: “Better a spectacular failure, than a benign success.”

Highgate Cemetery, Malcolm McLaren

Malcolm McLaren

Tips: Singer/musician George Michael is also buried in Highgate Cemetery and you might want to visit the grave of Victorian novelist George Eliot.

Nature Spots

 

PARLIAMENT HILL

Parliament Hill, Hampstead Heath

There are some amazing views of the London skyline from the top of Parliament Hill, Hampstead Heath. It’s one of the highest points in the capital – 98 metres up! Perfect for a spring picnic or a peaceful nature chillout. Also, don’t miss George Orwell’s former home on Parliament Hill. It’s on the residential street, not Hampstead Heath and is the last house before you enter the heath, conveniently marked out with a plaque.

Tips: Hampstead Heath Mixed Ponds are a relatively short walk away.

 

HAMPSTEAD HEATH SWIMMING PONDS

It’s a reasonably short and serene nature trek down Parliament Hill, through the heath to Hampstead Heath Swimming Ponds.The Mixed Ponds are closest to Parliament Hill but further afield there’s also Kenwood Ladies Pond and Highgate Men’s Pond.

 

HAMPSTEAD HILL GARDEN & PERGOLA

Photo by E. Saint-Jean

These rambling, terraced  gardens retain much of the period charm bookmarked by original owner Lord Leverhulme. There’s a poetic underscore in the architecture and landscaping that brings to mind centuries past. Great views of Hampstead Heath from the terrace.

Museums & Exhibitions

 

KENWOOD HOUSE

Visitor numbers at Kenwood House soared after the release of a movie about its most famous occupant Dido Elizabeth Belle. She had an African slave mother and her father was Sir John Lindsay, the nephew of Lord Mansfield who bought the house in 1754. He became her guardian and she lived at the house enjoying the privileges of a lady. You may be familiar with a famous portrait of Dido with Elizabeth Murray, who was also Lord Mansfield’s great-niece. The two are depicted as friends – if not equals. But certainly not servant and lady. A fascismile of this portrait can be seen in the house.

This magnificent neoclassical mansion houses an outstanding art collection, which includes floor-to-ceiling length works by the likes of Gainsborough and Joshua Reynolds. And once you have exited Kenwood House, you might want to check out Henry Moore sculpture Two Piece Reclining Figure No.5, which is a short walk away (below).

Henry Moore – Two Piece Reclining Figure No.5

Tips: The historic Spaniards Inn pub is only a few bus stops away from Kenwood House. Take the 210 bus.

 

KEATS HOUSE

We discussed earlier how poet John Keats drank in the Spaniard’s Inn with his literati mates, Percy Shelley, Mary Shelley and Lord Byron. Keats didn’t live too far away. His former home at 10 Keats Grove is now a museum that recreates the Georgian period in which he produced his greatest works. More morosely, you’ll come across an authentic-looking mock-up of the sofa and bed where he lay dying from tuberculosis.

Food & Drink

 

LA CAGE IMAGINAIRE

Before heading to the quaint and pretty La Cage Imaginaire French restaurant, tucked away on an equally quaint and pretty cobbled lane, you might want to check out Le Pain Quotidien bakery-restaurant on Highgate High Street. Not that you’ll find much to eat or drink there – it’s permanently closed. But, interestingly, it was once a bookshop where author George Orwell worked.

Le Pain Quotidien bakery-restaurant (formerly bookshop where George Orwell was employed)

Le Cage Imaginaire offers charming Gallic cuisine at affordable prices, and has a romantic vibe. Frog legs are on the menu, of course! The restaurant is real close to Hampstead Tube – so handy for travel.

 

 

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Keats House: Keats, Byron and the Shelleys (Museum) https://www.whatshotlondon.co.uk/keats-house-keats-byron-and-the-shelleys/ Tue, 14 Nov 2017 15:06:07 +0000 https://www.whatshotlondon.co.uk/?p=6411 Keats House Museum in Hampstead is devoting much of its autumn programme to the work, literary influence and friendship of poets John Keats, Lord Byron, Percy Shelley and Frankenstein novelist Mary Shelley. Keats and Shelley were quite close. On hearing of Keats’ ailing health, Shelley advised him to convalesce at Shelley’s family retreat in Italy but Keats graciously declined. At another retreat in Lake Geneva, Switzerland Byron, Shelley and his wife Mary would gather for a ghost storytelling challenge which resulted in her writing Frankenstein.

‘You speak of Lord Byron and me – There is this great difference between us. He describes what he sees – I describe what I imagine – Mine is the hardest task.’ – John Keats

The museum’s first instalment was Late Night Keats: Gothic Regency on October 27th, which examined how Gothic literature influenced Keats and the Romantic Poets. Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein may well owe a debt to Milton’s Paradise Lost; as discussed at the museum. But fast-forward to last weekend’s Afternoon Poems: ‘It’s Alive!’ – Byron, the Shelleys and Frankenstein. Again, the influence of Gothic literature was discussed with a focus on the Bryon and Shelley circle with reference to that ghost story challenge between the three of them at their Lake Geneva retreat.

The Keats House Poetry Ambassadors read a selection of poems and passages from novels that highlighted their shared fascination with death and the supernatural. Of course, there were excerpts from Frankenstein, Volume Two but also from its precursor Milton’s Paradise Lost (Book Eight). Percy Shelley’s poem Prometheus Unbound is amongst the Prometheus-themed work produced by these three literary giants, with Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein novel the ultimate creative realization of the Greek myth of Prometheus and his flight from Mount Olympus with the fire of knowledge stolen from the Gods.

A reading from a 1816 short story by Lord Byron clearly shows his interest in vampire subjects and may have inspired a spring of Gothic authors. It explains why around the period some readers confused the authorship of his work and that of John William Polidori (The Vampyre), who was obviously influenced by him. Bryon’s 1813 poem The Giaour also tells of a soul condemned to return as a vampire, yet Byron later disconnected himself from the genre and denied any such obsession with supernatural subject matter.  

The third and final instalment of the Keats-Byron-Shelley relationship is Shelley: ‘The Trumpet of a Prophecy’ Guided Walk on Saturday 25 November. There’ll be visits to landmarks in the life of this intellectual, radical poet and his relationship with Frankenstein novelist Mary Shelley.

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