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Jumping off the Page!

Keats house may still be closed, but the new Keats Education Room in Heath Library (next door) is finally open for business! We had our grand opening on World Book Day, Thursday, 6th March, in a crowded session with Year 5 from Christ Church School called ‘Jumping Off the Page’.
The children arrived in costume, dressed as characters from their favourite books or films: we had Pippi Longstocking, Darth Vader and several wizards! Jane Healey, children’s librarian, started by showing the group illustrations from some of the great picture-books, from Where the Wild Things Are to The Snowman, and reading them a sinister story of wolves and carnivorous pictures. Then they hit the water-colours to design and paint their own story illustrations, featuring journeys, aliens and strange transformations.

A wonderfully colourful and messy time was had by all, and some of the children’s best paintings can be seen on display at Heath Library and in the Keats Education Room.

 

The Mulberry Tree at Keats House

Mulberry Tree with Keats House in the background Keats House recently received a request for information about the Mulberry tree that stands in the garden.

From: 'A Description and History of Vegetable Substances used in the Arts and in Domestic Economy', published by Charles Knight. London, 1829:

In this country, there are many old mulberry trees, of large dimensions, and remarkable for the quantity of fruit they bear. It is probable that some of these old trees were planted at the latter end of the 16th and the beginning of the 17th centuries; for James I endeavoured to render the cultivation of the tree general, in the same way that Henry IV had tried to introduce it in France. The first mulberry trees of England are said to have been planted at silent House, the seat of the Duke of Northumberland, in 1548; and the trees, though decayed in the trunk, still bear fruit. mulberry gardens were common in the 17th century, in the neighbourhood of London; but either from the climate or the prejudices of the people, the growth of silk never prospered.

The Mulberry tree at Keats House is a Common or Black Mulberry and is believed to date from the 17th century. As there were other fruit trees in the grounds of the house, it may have been part of an orchard. Mulberry trees are not native to this country. They are 'small bushy-headed trees, with large alternate, deciduous, toothed and often variously lobed leaves. They grow to '20 to 30 feet high, of rugged, picturesque appearance, forming a dense, spreading head of branches usually wider than the height of the tree, springing from a short, rough trunk.' The juicy purple fruit is about an inch long but extremely messy when picked carelessly. The trees are known to have been cultivated in England since the early sixteenth century, and possibly before.

Keats house in 1907 with the Mulberry tree in the foreground At Syon House, Brentford there is an example which is said to be the oldest of its kind in England, being introduced from Persia in 1548; it is perhaps one of the largest in the country. There are also a number of Mulberry trees associated with famous people. There is a tree in the grounds of Christ Church College, Cambridge, which is supposed to have been planted by Milton, and the same is claimed for another at Stowmarket. Shakespeare is connected with a tree which he is supposed to have taken from the Mulberry garden of James I and planted in his garden at New Place, Stratford upon Avon. Apparently there are descendants of this tree at Kew. Shakespeare's tree was cut down by the Rev. Mr. Gastrell around 1752 to 'save himself the trouble of showing it to those whose admiration of the poet led them to visit the ground on which it stood.' There is a mulberry tree at the site of David Garrick's villa, visible from the pavement by the bus stop on the north side of the Hampton Court Road. This tree is said to be have been grown from a tree originally planted by the Garricks, which was itself a cutting from Shakespeare's mulberry in Stratford.

There are also trees associated with William Morris at Kelmscott Manor, Gloucestershire; Charles Darwin at Down House, Kent; William Hogarth at Hogarth’s House, Chiswick; and William Wilberforce at Wilberforce House, Hull, East Yorkshire.

If the tree at Keats House is as old as it is thought to be, then John Keats would have seen it, although he does not mention it, even though he began visiting the house in 1817 and lived there between 1818 and 1820. Keats mentions the other type (the white mulberry) once in his surviving letters, when writing to his friend John Hamilton Reynolds in July 1818. Keats has been walking in Scotland with his friend Charles Brown through the country that Burns knew:

Mulberry tree in the garden of Keats House We were talking on different and indifferent things, when on a sudden we turned a corner upon the immediate County of Ayr - the Sight was as rich as possible - I had no Conception that the native place of Burns was so beautiful - the Idea I had was more desolate […] - O prejudice! It was rich as Devon - I endeavour'd to drink in the Prospect, that I might spin it out to you as the silkworm makes silk from Mulberry leaves […]

You might like to try making Mulberry Juice. You will need fresh washed mulberry leaves and a juicer. Apparently, ‘Mulberry leaf juice is broadly similar to wheatgrass juice. It is not as sweet - and the taste is reminiscent of mulberries. Both seem to make me shake my head involuntarily during consumption. Both are probably best consumed diluted. It is also very very green.' You have been warned. Best to eat the fruit or make some jam.

Visit http://mulberrytrees.co.uk/ for more information.

"An Awkward Bow"

On 31 October Keats House opened to the public for the very last time before closing for a refurbishment thanks to a Heritage Lottery funded grant. Over the next twelve months work will begin on the internal restoration of the Grade 1 listed building, meaning that more of the collection can be displayed. To bid farewell to Keats House as we know it we organised an afternoon of events and an evening reception, commemorating our highest visitor figures since 1996 and what is bound to be an exciting year ahead.

The afternoon began with a special Keats poetry reading group attended by sixteen people in total. Many of these were Keats House regulars who have been enjoying Friday afternoon sessions at the museum for a few years. There were also some new faces who did not object to reading a sonnet or two. Staff then hosted a Keats Quiz complete with prizes and trick questions. There were no losers here though as each person in attendance received a small Keats related treat. Finally, a very traditional English institution followed as tea and biscuits were served with volunteers on hand to help pour the drinks.

from left to right, of Janet Suzman and Andrew DawsonFrom 6.30pm we hosted a reception that saw us mingling with poets, writers and actors, valuable friends, City of London staff and volunteers. With canapés and wine available the evening began with a wonderful rendition of Ode on a Grecian Urn by Declan Donnellan. As founder of the theatre company Cheek by Jowl, Declan has been using the Chester Room as a space for auditions and rehearsals during the past couple of years. Poet Dannie Abse followed with a moving recitation of La Belle Dame sans Merci, which was by far one of the highlights of the evening. Next was Diana Bishop, poet in residence at Keats House in 2001, who read out two poems inspired by her tenure here.

from left to right, Andrew Dawson, Nicholas Shaw, and Jennifer TaylorKeats’s poetry and prose was then brought to life by Jennifer Taylor and Andrew Dawson who performed a segment from Keats in Hampstead, one of the great successes of summer of 2007.  Directed by James Veitch, Keats in Hampstead explored the relationship between Keats and Fanny Brawne and was given four stars by Time Out (in the same week Joseph was given only three). Nicholas Shaw who played Keats in the Peter Ackroyd documentary, The Romantics (2006), then read the sonnet When I have fears that I may cease to be. Janet Suzman; actress, director, writer and Hampstead local captured the essence of Keats House with a selection of prose. Finally, volunteer Trevor Williams performed an extract from Hyperion followed by a staff recitation of On Fame. Keats House manager Mick Scott closed the evening with an evocative farewell as the staff and volunteers closed the shutters for a final time, finishing with an ‘awkward bow’.

The name of the evening was taken from Keats’s final letter to Charles Brown, written from Rome in November 1820. ‘I can scarcely bid you good bye even in a letter. I always made an awkward bow’. Many thanks to all of the staff and volunteers, past and present, who have helped to contribute in someway to Keats House.


Last modified: 22 April 2008 | Author: Kevin Sheahan
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