Tuesday, October 7, 2014

London 11/2006

London November 2006


Unusual drama surrounded this trip, as we wanted to meet our new granddaughter before leaving the country! Lauren Dorothea Strong Albers was born November 2nd, so we boarded the plane with visions of Lauren in our heads!

London was cold and rainy most of our nine-day stay, but it was fabulous just the same. We had seen the main sights in London, so focused on some new attractions like the Tate Modern. Took a city tour given our catatonic jet-lagged state. The best time to arrive anywhere is just before dinner. We arrived at 7am and needed to stay awake if possible. Quite a challenge!

After a full night’s sleep, our Renaissance! We smile, we tour, and we are engaged!
It’s Remembrance Day (November 11 &12). The Queen presided over the ceremonies honoring the war dead, including Americans who helped Britain. I remember listening to Europeans my parents’ age talking about World War II as if it had happened recently even though it was then 1963-64.

We walked along the Thames admiring the old stone buildings in London. They age so gracefully.

Visited the Turner watercolors at the Tate Britain. They still have a major impact on me. My favorites are unfinished and abstract. I think it’s great that Turner insisted the exhibit be free to the public. Bought Lauren a first Christmas stocking in the gift shop.

We went to Leicester Square and bought discount tickets to “Blood Brothers” at the Phoenix. London’s theater area is lively and bright. The play was okay and well enacted.
Meeting my third cousin, Jan Barber, was so interesting. She contacted Dad (DMS) for genealogy online and they’ve been e-mailing and comparing notes for 3 years. She brought us a Christmas pudding. Her cousin, Vince, joined us. Then, later in the week, another cousin, Sandra, kept us company. They are related to Grandpa Freeman via his grandfather, William. The cousins were eager to hear about Grandpa’s jolly personality, his singing little folk songs, and buying candy bars for all.

Not so jolly was the purse-snatcher at our lunch restaurant. None of us had a clue. Jan’s lovely bag was stolen off the floor at her feet. We toured the Tate Modern housed in a power station and presented by a huge piazza complete with a James Taylor sound-alike street performer. The museum’s very high ceilings are dramatic. An interactive slide exhibit drew smiles from all ages swooping down the various coils. My favorite piece was a nearly life-sized sculpture of 7 men sitting on bleachers and laughing! I wonder if it was done by the same sculptor whose “men on monkey bars” made me smile in Oporto?

On to the British Museum. I now understand why people travel to London just to see this marvel. Some artifacts include the history of how they were discovered. This adds lots of intrigue. After all, we may someday see a glimmer of silver, as a 9 year old did in 1740’s near the River Ty. She brought it home and there is stands in the museum- a detailed gorgeous silver platter! Other favorites of mine were the cleverly carved chess set which inspired a scene in a Harry Potter film; the Rosetta Stone and, most of all, the elegant Reading Room now open to the public. Seas of leather bound books, soft lighting, study desks and beautiful domed ceiling. I have to admit the Library of Congress and University of Washington reading rooms are mere reflections, though lovely.

Also fun to see is a display of silver candlesticks, gold coins, etc. shown exactly as found buried years ago when the owner left them in his yard for safekeeping. (No safety deposit boxes then). How about a gold metal cape, An exquisite pitcher with an adorable metal duck on the spout.

Mike’s meeting group sponsored an evening reception at the Museum of London complete with a bawdy tour guide highlighting aspects of Victorian history and decadence; Stilton cheese and Welsh rarebit appetizers while I examined the Punch puppet.

I asked my newfound cousin if I could see her everyday life in West Byfleet. She directed me by train first to Guilford where we strolled (soaked) in the castle gardens and enjoyed the Alice in Wonderland sculpture. Jan doesn’t blink at the thought of a 1.5 hrs. train trip to London with its concomitant walks. No mystery why my English countrymen are slimmer than we in USA.
Then to West Byfleet and her charming home. We chatted over hot chocolate and tea and felt we had known each other for ages. Bentley, a handsome black cat, was adopted by Jan when he was 10 years old, rested comfortably by the glass door overlooking the lovely garden.

I like her use of  ‘posh’ to describe selecting upstairs seating in the fish restaurant. There we had linens for our fish and chips. She explained that chips are irregular. French fries are something else!

Every since the 70’s I’ve been telling Beatrix Potter’s The Tale of Peter Rabbit. No wonder I booked a trip to the Lake District to visit her former home at Hill Top. I decided to opt for first class train seats as it included breakfast and dinner and was a long trip. We arose at dawn, paid way too much for a cab, met the tour contact person and were escorted onto the train and to our seats.  All was well until the conductor checked our tickets. We had been put on the wrong train! It took two hours to transfer and meet our local guide in the Lake District. There were two others on the tour: Boston College students spending a quarter in London. We became acquainted as I searched for them to alert them to the mistake. The conductor gave us one pass for the four of us, so we stuck together.

Despite the rain and the delay, we enjoyed our travel through the beautiful Lake District. The Beatrix Potter center is a bit worse for wear, but the English cream tea at the Tailor of Gloucester CafĂ© with scones was awesome. Seeing Hill Top and the garden that inspired Mr. McGregor’s garden, surveying the countryside she surveyed, was wonderful. Autumn colors decorated the area. The layered stone fences use rock from Ice Age glaciers. Walls formed without mortar allow the water to drain through and thus preserve the fence.

We saw William Wordsworth’s home and burial place plus lots and lots of sheep!

When we toured London with a third cousin, Sandra, we ate at a pub and heard the waiter call the silverware “picks and shovels”. Enjoyed Cornish pastry with smashed vegetables while Mike had fish and chips.
We visited St. Paul’s Church, learning that Mike’s relative, John of Gaunt, was buried there, but that church burned to the ground. The present church was built on top of the flattened ruins. On to Westminster Cathedral where we found  ancestral burial sites of Edward the first and second plus many, many other famous peoples’ graves and memorials.

We said goodbye to cousin Jan, eager to host her when she travels to the USA.

Mike and I visited the British Library staring long and hard at the Magna Carta and thinking of Mike’s ancestor King John. The newish facility soars. It’s huge with a grand piazza. In the center is a glass-walled core collection of rare books called the Kings Library. We saw this configuration at Yale’s library. It resembles a shrine to the ideas in these books.

The collection includes precious letters, scores, and books: a Gutenberg bible, music by the Beatles, Beethoven, Mozart; manuscripts of Tolstoy, Austen, Chaucer. Wow!

We returned to the massive British Museum focusing on the mummies and medieval England.


Our London stay finale was perfect- dinner at the elegantly decorated Criterion Restaurant off Piccadilly Circus. On to India………

No comments: