Keats House was the place John Keats lived through his most prolific years. It's a fascinating museum for lovers of the romantic poet; here he wrote ‘Ode to a nightingale’ under the plumb tree in the garden and fell in love with the Fanny Brawne, the girl next door.
Set in a peaceful leafy suburb, a short walk from Hampstead Heath this charming house hosts regular poetry nights and literary events, forming a fitting memorial to a poet who suffered so much for his art, before eventually succumbing to Tuberculosis at the young age of 25.