Tread the cobblestones of the London streets where literary giants once roamed
The Senate House
Image: Wei Huang/Shutterstock
From here, I part ways with Andy, and follow the path past Woburn Square that eventually opens onto Gordon Square. This is one of the most literary spots in London, being the home of the notorious ‘Bloomsbury Group’, who, American writer and poet Dorothy Parker once quipped, ‘…lived in squares, painted in circles, and loved in triangles’. This quiet rectangle of dull-brown, Georgian-style structures once housed the core members of what came to be known as the Bloomsbury Group, a snobbish clique including novelist Virginia Woolf, her sister artist Vanessa Bell, biographer Lytton Strachey, poet TS Eliot, economist John Maynard Keynes and a few others. No 46 Gordon Square, in particular, is where Woolf and Bell grew up, and where Keynes lived, later, for 30 years.
I wander into the Gordon Square gardens and sit on a bench, trying to imagine the views Woolf must have had from her upper storey window over the tops of plane trees and copper beeches. Within moments, I feel like I am in the centre of an oasis of calm. It is hard to imagine that only a few streets away are the busiest areas of London, with their hustle of the daily grind, not to mention the summer tourists.
I stroll towards a busy corner of Tavistock Square and locate the huge, bright red, brick building of the British Medical Association, designed by Sir Edward Lutyens, the same architect of Lutyens-Delhi fame. I try to find Charles Dickens’ last residence in London, before he moved out to Gad’s Hill in Kent. I spot it, across the road, through a break in the traffic. It is from here that he wandered out in the dead of night, walking the London streets during intense bouts of insomnia. Some speculate that this was due to his affair with 18-year-old Ellen Ternan, for whom he wanted to leave Catherine, his wife of 20 years.
On another day, I take the tube to Russell Square station and follow the signs to the only London address of Dickens that is still standing, and has been converted into a museum. Seeing a large group of Korean students, I hasten to beat them to the front of the line, anticipating the small entryways and rooms inside typical London houses.
Surprisingly, though, the small sea-green front door of No 48 Doughty Street disguises a rather large labyrinth of hallways and rooms, spread across three floors, where Dickens lived with his family, holding dinners with authors, playwrights and critics, and conducting literary salons where he read his work from a specially designed lectern. Not only was I in the house where Dickens penned The Pickwick Papers, Oliver Twist and Nicholas Nickleby, I was staring at the very desk where they were written.
Unlike Bloomsbury, Hampstead has a provincial, though affluent, charm. It helps that Hampstead Heath, the lungs of Camden, makes up half of the village. Walking around, you’ll see its mostly Victorian architecture, from when it began to be developed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
According to Bernard Crick’s George Orwell: A Life, the author of Animal Farm and 1984 occupied a room in Flat 3, on the top floor of Warwick Mansions, 37 Pond Street. Before joining the Ministry of Information, Orwell had a job at Booklovers’ Corner—a second-hand bookshop—which included rent-free accommodation above the shop. While living here for a year in 1934, he wrote Keep the Aspidistra Flying, a book riddled with his impressions of middle-class Hampstead.
Since those days, Hampstead has evolved into an affluent and residential neighbourhood, albeit still managing to preserve its original village texture.
From the Hampstead Heath rail station, I walk up to the very end of Parliament Hill road, where it meets Hampstead Heath. No 77, the grand Victorian red-brick house, is where Orwell next rented a room, after friends thought he needed to be closer to the Heath for his weak lungs.
Back at the station, I walk straight down South End road, past a crescent row of shops and tea-rooms and follow the signpost to the Regency-style Keats House, down Keats Grove, now a museum. This is where John Keats lived briefly to explore life as a poet after leaving a promising career in medicine. Keats’ friend, poet and critic Charles Brown, owned one section of this house, and rented out a parlour and a bedroom to Keats.
Though he only lived here from 1818 to 1820, this was where Keats wrote most of the work he’s famous for, including Ode to a Nightingale and Ode to a Grecian Urn. Not long after he moved in, he fell in love with and proposed to 18-year-old Fanny Brawne, the daughter of the family who had rented out another part of the same house. The two lovers corresponded through letters, even though only a wall separated them. On the top floor of the museum there’s her purple stone and gold engagement ring.
Making my way through the museum, it’s hard not to feel drawn into the tragic circumstances of Keats’ premature death from tuberculosis while he was in Rome, aged only 25. Because his poetry gained fame posthumously, he died believing that he had failed in his ambition to be a great poet.
I walk back to South End road and follow the edge of the Heath until I come to the Vale of Health. What is now an exclusive residential area was once a malarial swamp. It was drained by the Hampstead Water Company in the 1770s and re-named in a bid to attract property buyers.
On entering a hamlet of villas surrounded almost entirely by woods, I search for No 3 Villas-on-the-Heath, the residence of Bengali poet Rabindranath Tagore when he visited London in 1912, the year before he was awarded the Nobel Prize. And just around the bend is No 1 Byron Villas, where DH Lawrence lived with his wife briefly in 1915. EM Forster, Aldous Huxley, Bertrand Russell, WB Yeats, Ezra Pound and Katherine Mansfield all visited the Lawrences here, making the Vale of Heath, at one time, the most literary spot in Hampstead.
I realise that on previous visits to London, I had never ventured beyond Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre and the British Library. Sure, I’d spotted the occasional blue plaque or statue dedicated to some writer or the other. But actively exploring this side of the city, discovering blue plaques of Nobel Laureates, locating the addresses that formed the backdrop to award-winning stories and poems and uncovering a deeper layer to London’s attractions is an entirely different experience. And a deeply satisfying one.
(This story appears in the 14 September, 2018 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)