Fanny Blaun's female workers are unrivaled in woolwich and Hampstead.
She meticulously designed and sewed every outfit for travel and prom.
She pursues fashion, knows nothing about poetry and literature, but is obsessed with poor romance
Ism poet John Keats.
John Keats' friend Charles Brown always mocked Fanny Brouin for his superficial ignorance and lack of understanding of literature.
Every time the two people met, they quarreled and did not give in to each other.
When John Keats first met Fanny Blaun, he thought that she, like other women, was frivolous, pursuing money and wealth, and advocating a noble life of luxury and pleasure.
Fanny Braun bought Endemion by John Keats to find out what the poems he wrote were.
The obscurity of the poems really intrigued Fanny Blaun.
When John Keats was a teenager, his parents died one after another. Of the three younger brothers, one died prematurely, and the other brother, Tom, also suffered from tuberculosis.
Fanny Blaun's father died prematurely, and she understood John Keats' feelings in the face of the pain of his loved ones.
She carefully prepared the gift and came to John Keats's residence.
John Keats was impressed by Fanny Braun's kindness and led her to his brother Tom's room.
At the Hampstead Choir, everyone was upset by Blackwood Magazine's extreme criticism of John Keats' Endymion.
John Keats's younger brother Tom did not resist the torment of illness and passed away.
Fanny Blaun also shed tears of sadness when she heard the news.
She spent the night embroidering a pillowcase for Tom, hoping he would be all right in heaven.
John Keats, grateful for Fanny Berlawn's kindness, pushed away the Reynolds family's invitation and spent Christmas night with the Berlaun family.
To step into the world of John Keats, Fanny Blaun wanted John Keats to teach her poetry.
Charles Brown had always thought that Fanny Brouin had done a play on a whim or just to win John Keats's favor.
Fanny Braun borrowed books recommended by John Keats, and she read chaucer, Spencer, Milton, Odyssey, and all the works of John Keats in a week.
Fanny Blauan came to return the book to John Keats.
Charles Brown didn't like John Keats and Fanny Brouane to stay together and let John Keats go to Chichester.
Mr. Charles Brown was shocked by Fanny's change and, after the conversation, immediately wrote her a love letter.
John Keats returned to Hampstead Hill and learned of the two men's dealings, believing that Fanny Blauern had a crush on Charles Brown's wealth and had chosen him as his object of affection.
He accused Charles Brown of deliberately driving him away, originally just to pursue Fanny Blaun and have more opportunities to get along with her.
Charles Brown argued vigorously, even saying that the love letter was nothing more than a joke made by Fanny Blaun.
Fanny Braun was humiliated in an argument between the two men. For a long time to come, they didn't have any contact.
The Dirk family moved to Westminster, and Fanny suggested that her mother move to the house next door to John Keats, where the Dirk family had lived.
The bedrooms for two people are separated by just a wall. John Keats would occasionally lean against the wall, quietly listening to what Fanny Blaun was doing across from her.
But the two men's relationship was always obstructed by Charles Brown.
Despite this, they secretly established a relationship.
Fanny Blaun did not see John Keats, and lying on the bedroom bed, she could feel john Keats' love.
John Keats, relying on the love of Fanny Brouane, continued to flesh out his poetry.
The two people tacitly accompanied each other. Until Charles intended to rent out his house, and John Keats went to the Isle of Vight for poetry.
John Keats could not prevent Charles Brown from renting his own home, nor could he give up his work just to stay with Fanny Blauern. He had to earn contributions, pay off the debts that Tom had incurred in his medical treatment, and accumulate wealth for his and Fanny Blaun's future.
After separating from John Keats, Fanny Blaun remained depressed, hoping all day that John Keats would write to her to inform her of his news.
The mother was more certain of her daughter Fanny's love affair with John Keats. She was extremely fond of John Keats, but she was reluctant to let her daughter marry him and live a life of poverty.
Charles Brown returned to his residence and John Keats traveled to London alone.
Fanny Blaun waited for John Keats to return and collected the keys to the door for him.
The two reunited people kissed together because of longing. John Keats also took out the ring left by his mother and put it on Fanny Blaun's hand.
In the early spring of 1820, John Keats went to the City of London, and he did not wear a coat that day. When he returned to save money, he sat outside the carriage, and his whole body was drenched in rain.
After returning that night, John Keats contracted a lung disease and began coughing up blood because of the wind chill.
In order to reassure John Keats, Charles Brown refused to let Fanny Braun enter John Keats' room again.
Even if you can see each other through the window, it makes two people suffer.
In order to express their thoughts about each other, they began to write love letters to each other.
Abigail, the maid of the Fanny Blauern family, is pregnant with Charles Brown's child.
Sudden changes led Charles Brown to decide to rent out his house and take Abigail to live elsewhere.
John Keats, without Charles Brown's patronage, moved to a small, cramped hotel.
Everyone thought John Keats' departure was a good thing for Fanny Braun. John Keats' current situation simply does not provide Fanny Braun with a stable married life.
Fanny Blaun's little sister, Tutz Blaun, was playing in the garden when she saw John Keats lying in the bushes.
Thoughts and illness led him to Fanny Braun's house, hoping to be with her again.
Dr. Brie repeatedly insisted that John Tzu Chi could not withstand the cold British winter and that he had better go to warm Italy to recuperate.
The relationship between Fanny Braun and John Keats has long been discussed. Fanny Braun begged her mother to let John Keats stay until the day he left for Italy.
The poet Severn paid for John Keats' journey and arranged everything for John Keats to do in Italy.
Before leaving, the mother agreed to their marriage, and the wedding was held for them on the day john Keats returned to England.
Charles Brown returned to the house with Abigail and their children. He brought with him poems written by John Keats in Italy.
John Keats' journey to Italy was not so smooth. The passenger ship was quarantined for a long time, during which time John Keats was tortured. The torments of life gave him more creative inspiration, and he wrote more poems than ever before.
Winter is almost over. But Fanny Blaun didn't have the day when she and John Keats would be together again.
Charles Brown brought bad news of John Keats' death.
Unable to accept the fact that her lover had died, Fanny Braun almost fainted from crying in her mother's arms.
She took off her ornate costumes, cut off her long beautiful hair, and began a seven-year mourning life for John Keats.
John Keats gave her an engagement ring that she wore on her hand until she died.