For those of us who grew up with the BBC on radio and TV
(transmitted via our ABC), read Enid Blyton books then graduated to Dickens and
Austen, cheered on the brave chaps in grainy old war movies, saw the Royal
Family featured in every women’s magazine and studied a British-centred History
curriculum, visiting London is a little bit like coming home at last. And I know that’s quite a ridiculous thing to
say about one of the world’s great metropolises where you are just as likely to
hear Urdu or Croatian spoken as English, and much more likely to see a sari or
a hijab worn than a bowler hat, but London seems to carry traces of all its
past incarnations. The memory of Roman roads lives on in the layout of major
streets; the streets themselves are named for the old trades that were
conducted there. There are remnants, ruins and scars of centuries: relics of
the Great Fire; the blackened bricks from the Age of Steam, clusters of
gravestones from countless plagues, bomb damage from the Blitz as well as all
the official memories – plaques, statues, dedicated buildings, portraits,
libraries and museums. Peter Ackroyd develops this theme in his wonderful Biography of London. Places seem to hold a memory of their
previous uses – a church is likely to have been the site of a temple, and
perhaps a holy site long before that; an Adult Shop occupies the space where an
Elizabethan brothel operated; auto repairs are carried out where coaches used
to be made, which no doubt made chariots in earlier times. It would take a lifetime to explore this amazing city, and even
that wouldn’t be enough, because it creates something new every day.
We decided on a ten day visit to London while Terry was
recuperating from his heart surgery and not allowed to put any strain on his
chest (lines, winches, outboards etc) – and it seemed like the perfect time.
After all, Shakespeare warned us “summer’s lease hath all too short a date.”
And perfect it was, mild weather, several days of outright sunshine and
everything green and in bloom. Lines of poetry about bluebells, lilacs, ancient
oaks and chestnut trees kept popping into my head at every turn. AirBnB came up
trumps with a lovely Victorian house in Merton Park near Wimbledon, home of
Bernadette and Tudor, their son and Fred the cocker spaniel. Both history
graduates and enthusiasts, Bernadette and Tudor were able to advise us on
interesting things to see and do, besides filling in the fascinating stories
that surround almost every building, street corner and field.
Our B&B in Merton Park |
Merton Park, for
example, was the estate of Horatio, Lord Nelson, and though there is nothing
left of the house he shared with his mistress Emma Hamilton, we were able to
see their pew in the beautiful old Church of St Mary the Virgin, just down the road.
William Wilberforce, the abolitionist, lived nearby, and William Morris had his
model factory and design studio here. Emma Davison, the suffragette who died
under the hooves of the King’s horse at Epsom, spent her last night at a house
on the corner. And so on.
Terry managed to find four Geocaches while wombling around Wimbledon Common, and several others around Merton Park and London. The Geocache locator looked like a massive Christmas tree with thousands of lights, so a token effort was good enough for the moment. Hundreds of people were out on the Common, walking, riding bikes and horses and generally enjoying the perfect weather.
Churchyard, Merton church |
We were about ten minutes by train from central London so we
could do daily forays into the busy, teeming city then retreat back to a leafy
haven of peace and quiet. Perfect! We managed to see most of the obligatory
sights that seemed so familiar – the Tower, the Palace, the Abbey, all those
Monopoly board streets – but I’ll just write about a few highlights here and
bore everyone with all the rest when we get home.
One of our first outings was into the City proper for Terry
to make a pilgrimage to the Bank of England. It really was very interesting – a
walk through their museum is a journey through the history of Empire, the
financing behind the great expeditions, the slave trade, the South Sea Bubble,
centuries of wars, the trading dynasties. Walking around the streets you can’t
miss Lord Nelson atop his column in Trafalgar Square (where I was spattered by
a pigeon, just as I was in Times Square – the bastards missed me in St Mark’s).
The Admiral was a bit of a theme on our visit. We saw his blood-spattered, bullet-holed
jacket at Greenwich along with other memorabilia, the Great Hall where his body
lay in state and his tomb at St Pauls. We actually sailed over the site of the
Battle of Trafalgar on a very rough day after a failed attempt to reach Tangier
in 2012, managing to spare a thought for the great man and for all those who
lay below in the depths.
Darwin presides over the Natural History Museum |
London is an expensive city, but a lot of its museums,
galleries and parks are free. We went to both Tate galleries, the National
Gallery (to see Leonardo’s Virgin of the Rocks, to me the world’s most
beautiful painting), the British Museum, the Natural History museum, the
Victoria and Albert (loved the history walk-through and the costumes) and the
National Portrait Gallery. I really like portrait galleries. There’s always a
few good stories to go with the faces, often of people who have made a really
significant contribution to humanity though you’ve never heard of them.
(Previous discoveries include Douglas Waterhouse, the blessed inventor of
Aerogard and supervisor of George Bornemisso’s dung beetle project who made it
possible to go outside in Australia in summer, in the Australian National
Portrait Gallery; Charles Drew the African-American inventor of the Blood Bank
who later resigned from the Red Cross when it refused to desegregate blood (!)
at the US National Portrait Gallery in Washington DC). London’s gallery was
predictably full of royals, military men and a few literary types. The change
in portrait style over four hundred years was fascinating in itself, but my
favourite was Beatrix Potter, as your dear old aunty who’s gone a bit batty.
QE1 |
Beatrix Potter |
We had hopes of getting to a few shows but being a Parky and
a recovering heart patient took its toll of both of us. We ended up just
getting to one, but “Sunny Afternoon”, based on the story of The Kinks, was
wonderful – great music, high energy and according to Terry who actually saw
The Kinks back in the day, the cast nailed it. A mind-boggling array of plays,
musicals and exhibitions is on offer, and constantly changing. Next time we’ll
be better prepared and ration our energy.
Food was expensive and not great, though I’m sure there are
wonderful top end restaurants if you want to pay the price. On the other hand
there were plenty of great pubs, many with endearing names, an honourable
history and some good hearty beers and ciders, to be reviewed by the Captain in
a later blog.
We did a lot of walking around, just taking it all in. And
on one such walk, it just happened to be the Opening of Parliament and I was
strolling down Whitehall when through the massing crowds I saw a carriage
accompanied by Horse Guards. It was Charles and Camilla heading to Westminster.
And, as I perched precariously on a sort of kerb, a golden carriage appeared
bearing Her Majesty! So I really did get to see the Queen! She looks a little
different from the first time I saw her in 1962, but for ninety, she’s doing
very well.
Sorry, best I could do. Charles and Camilla are in there... |
We ran out of time, of course, to do everything, and towards
the end we had to split up to see the things we really wanted to see. So while
Terry headed to St Pauls to pay homage to Nelson, I took a tour of Westminster
Abbey (Do book ahead through their own website to skip the long queue.) This
was a highlight for me, a place I’ve wanted to see for about 50 years. And it
didn’t disappoint. The majestic old building, with its familiar spiky towers,
parts of it dating back to before the Norman Conquest. Edward III (the
Confessor) rebuilt it in the 11th Century and is the earliest of the
monarchs buried there. It really is awe-inspiring to stand beside a stone
sarcophagus holding the nearly one thousand year old bones of a king, and to
reflect that this is where William the Conqueror was crowned. I love those
stone sarcophagi with effigies of the deceased carved life-sized on the top. They
are generally remarkable likenesses, and the small details – a woman piously
reads a book, a knight’s faithful dog curls at his feet, a couple clasp hands -
serve to humanise these long-dead aristocrats. (My favourite ever was a Roman
tomb in Elmali, Turkey, where a stone couple are engaged in the familiar battle
of the bed-covers. The husband has hogged the quilt, exposing his wife’s
bedsocks for all eternity.) Elizabeth I is there in Westminster, and the two
Marys, the bitter divisions of faith resolved in the grave. Chaucer is buried
in this, his workplace, and he commands what has become Poets’ Corner, resting
place of many great British writers including Charles Dickens, Samuel Johnson,
Thomas Hardy and Lord Tennyson. Great scientists including Darwin, Wallace,
Rutherford, Faraday, Lister, Florey and Newton are interred in the Abbey and many
other greats have memorials. One of the most moving memorials is a beautiful
stained glass window commemorating those who died in the Battle of Britain; it
replaced a window destroyed in the Blitz. I could happily spend another day or
ten exploring this wonderful Gothic treasure trove!
So, we barely scratched the surface of this great city, let
alone the whole of the UK that is still beckoning. We will be back soon for
sure.
Nelson surveys London from his column
|
Great descriptions and evocative scene setting. Being a Londoner I love it when people remind me of my home city. Waterloo Sunset is one of my favourite songs for all sorts of reasons. I sat outside the Founders Arms having lunch and watching the Millenium Bridge construction project in the late 90s, never managed to cross it while it was still wobbly :(
ReplyDeleteGreat recap of London Carol. We also accidentally saw the Queen in 1996 when we were at Westminster Abbey. Quite an unexpected thrill. Glad to hear Terry is not making you do all the stressful line winching stuff during his recovery.
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