Sometimes the most rewarding things are the things that happen unexpectedly or those things you notice about the place, the country. Other things did not impress me much while I was experiencing them but in retrospect they impress me a lot. Then of course there are regrets I have about the things I didn't see, the things I didn't do. I didn't talk much to anyone while there for one thing. I didn't wander over to have at least a peek in the lobby of the BBC. I just photographed the outside of the building.
Some people were holding a strike protest a block away on the other side of Regents street, complete with a blow up rat as a mascot *, but somehow I had other things I wanted to do rather than cross the street and see what that was about. I wish I had. It might have been interesting to see an industrial action. Maybe I was afraid of being arrested or something. Mostly I looked at things and discovered things.
As it happened this is what I did and saw in London, and this list probably would be different from your list. I guess I was a typical tourist in a way, but I did my own thing too.
Day 1. I flew from Chicago O'Hare to London Heathrow, getting in rather late, when the bus service to hotels was about to shut down for the night which would have necessitated taking a cab.
Fortunately I got there just as the last bus wandered by to take people to the various hotels. While such services are free in Chicago, in the UK you pay about 4 pounds to take the bus. I spent the night at the Holiday Inn at the airport, which was nice but expensive and except for all the fire doors you had to go through to get to your room, about the same as staying in any fairly nice hotel in the US. A mirrored elevator, a spacious room, a decent bed, and all that.
Even the TV wasn't that much different. They even gave a rundown of the weather in the US although the prime focus naturally was on weather locally. I watched news, talk, weather.
Apparently somebody had bombed the Boston Marathon and Margaret Thatcher had just died and this was news all over the world. It was front page news as they tracked down the suspects that whole week. You scarcely had to buy a newspaper over there because there are many excellent free ones. And naturally some people thought Thatcher was great and others thought she was awful. Most people seemed to be in the middle somewhere. I liked Margaret Thatcher. Somebody had to take the TUC down a notch and she was the woman for the job. Socialism is somewhere between a very old, bad joke and hell.
*Interestingly enough they use these blow up rats used in labor protests in Chicago too.
I mean for one thing, there was the novelty of the traffic driving on the opposite side of the streets. I found parking was more logical and less haphazard than it was in Glasgow. The streets are narrow and they go in all directions. A compass is always a good idea in such a place in addition to a good map because coming up out of the tube it is very easy to get your directions confused.
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| The British love their newspapers |
Anyway, what did I do? Day 2 I took the Picadilly line down to central London and got off at Oxford Circus, nearest stop to the place I was staying, then after I checked in, walked over to the British Museum and spent several hours there.
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| British Museum |
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| Piccadilly Circus |
Day 3 I got up and went a short distance down to Green Park, ate my breakfast, and then looked at Buckingham Palace
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| Moi at Buckingham Palace |
They must have had about a dozen different ones. This was mildly interesting. I guess it was about as close as I was going to get to seeing a Royal. I also bought a bunch of post cards featuring all the various members of the royal family and some royal souvenirs, as many as I dared to take back with me. I proceeded to Victoria Station which was all torn up and under construction, but nevertheless a grand commuter stations.
Unlike in the US there are public rest rooms there but you have to pay to get into them. I guess it was worth 50p for privilege of peeing. Mind those fluids and those solids too. (After all, if they are going to be plying you with all manner of food and drink, it is cruel and not a small bit hypocritical not to not help with exit strategies for those consumables too.)
There were a couple of theaters nearby one featuring "Wicked" which later in the week I went to see. I then walked back up Victoria Street. Along that street there were some interesting things and other things that were rather ho hum. I liked Westminster Cathedral and would have gone inside except that they were holding mass in there at the time.
| Westminster Cathedral, completed in 1903 |
Office buildings and government buildings, some new some old. There was New Scotland Yard on the left, which is where the metropolitan police or the equivalent of the FBI operates in London. I doubted they were open to the public but then I didn't really try. I continued up the street and just missed getting in on a tour of Westminster Abbey which closes early on Saturday. So I probably will never see the inside of the place. Actually I did see the inside of the place for a minute or so, having gone in the exit by mistake.
| Westminster Abbey |
| The Houses of Parliament |
| The Anti-Morsi demonstration |
| Emmeline Pankhurst British Suffragette |
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| Pedestal of the Burghers of Calais |
Day 4 was a Sunday, so I figured it was a good day to visit Highgate Cemetery. The tubes open later that morning.
I walked over to Goodge Street, to catch the North Line, a small tube station where there is no access except via a large elevator, though for the motivated I suppose you could do the long flight of steps from the underground. It took a while and was a long ride. The A-Z Atlas I had was very confusing, the critical area being right in the binding area on maps 64 and 65 but I got off at the right stop, which was Archway.
Immediately around the station it looked a bit scruffy but as you headed up the hill it seemed to get a lot more prosperous next to the cemetery. There was the Whittington Hospital and Middlesex University and pubs and a very spare looking McDonalds up that way.
The Cemetery is a big one, but a venerable one. The West side has fallen into ruins, more or less and is not considered safe for people to wander about on their own.
| Karl Marx grave in Highgate East |
| Neither Adams' or MacLaren's grave, but that of someone else who liked dogs |
| Charing Cross, considered the center of London |
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| A local policeman and me at Trafalgar Square |
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| In front of St. Paul's Cathedral |
Day 5 I went to see St. Paul's cathedral, the Millenium Bridge, the Tate Modern, and Southwark Cathedral. I took the tour of the inside of St. Paul's which did not allow photography, but I did climb to the top of the dome and take a lot of pictures of London from up there, which was stunning.
| Panoramic shot taken with Olympus SP590uz |
| The Millennium Bridge with the Tate Modern on the other side of the of the river |
| The main hall of the Tate Modern |
| The Nave of Southwark Cathedral |
Day 6 I got up early and went to Brompton Cemetery near Earl's Court.
It is a fine old cemetery, and open to the public. I learned later that it is also a well known pickup spot for gay Londoners. I saw people cutting through the cemetery or roller blading through it. I even saw children on bicycles going through there. There were some contemporary graves and older graves dating all the way back to the 1800s. There was a military section which was interesting.
It featured a lot of the victims both in and out of uniform who died during the first and second world wars. It also featured the graves of Russian Orthodox believers and priests forced into exile after the Russian Revolution.
Earls Court was itself kind of a funky neighborhood. I wish I had had more time to explore it, but I was off to see other things. After a rest, I went to see the Tower of London.
| A musical wherein the Wizard turns out to be an even greater turkey than he was in the movie. |
Day 7 I got up early and took a bus downtown for a change. It would have taken me to Westminster and ultimately to Brixton (another place I regret missing) but my mind wandered and by the time I managed to get off I was across the river in Lambeth on the other side of the tracks.
| Lambeth |
| the British War Museum |
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| Attempting to teach Algebra to a bunch of inner city kids who could scarcely perform simple arithmetic was discouraging to say the least. |
| Two denizens of Lambeth (or is it Southwark?): I have never bothered to color my hair. It looks so bad when it grows out in the roots. I wear gray clothing. The person on the left is more my style. |
I walked west on Lambeth Road under the tracks and into the presence of Lambeth Palace, the home of the the Archbishop of Canterbury. I looked around but did not go inside.
| Lambeth Palace, home of the Archbishop of Canterbury |
| Millbank Tower: No thanks, we've got plenty of these things back home. |
| One of the galleries of the Tate Britain |
| Cabinet War Rooms: the mannequins were quite convincing. Did they enlist the skills of Madame Tussaud? |
| Superficial damage to the Tate Britain near the entrance caused by a German Bomb during WWII |
Day 8 was my last full day in London. I decided to go for a long walk. I walked west on New Cavendish Street until I got to Marylebone High Street. I found Daunt Books, which was a very nice bookstore on the West side of the street.
| Daunt Books, Marylebone: A dangerous place for bibliophile. I mean how would I get them back in my luggage? |
| I wasn't even looking for it when I found it, and even spoke to a lady in the churchyard and confessed to having some Methodist connections in my past. |
| They wanted the eagle to be bigger, but the British made them tone it down. |
| Franklin Delano Roosevelt in Grosvenor Square |
After the embassy I walked west on Upper Grosvenor Street and got to Park Lane which is a wide and busy street. (You call that a Lane?) I walked up to where the Speaker's corner was located (no speakers on a weekday) and looked also at the Marble Arch.
| Marble Arch, in the NE corner of Hyde Park |
| This inevitably reminds me of that memorable scene in the Godfather. |
| Peter Pan : My role model. Maybe if you don't grow up you will avoid other unpleasant realities of life, like death and taxes. |
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| Queen Victoria, who was born in Kensington Palace |
| Apparently normal schoolchildren, tragically afflicted with an ability to speak fluent French. |
The cruise was pleasant enough and enabled me to see the river and the stuff along the river.
| The London Eye |
| The Tower Bridge |
| The Isle of Dogs: Home of the Tall office buildings, and more going up. How many construction cranes can you see in this picture? |
We arrived at Greenwich in the late afternoon.
| Greenwich University (foreground, formerly the Royal Naval Hospital), the Queen's House (white square building) and on the hill (center-right) is the Royal Observatory. |
At the time I thought I would have to get it fixed. After the river cruiser docked at Westminster I took one last walk home after dark up Regents Street to my room on Bolsover Street, did my laundry in the wee hours and took the Picadilly line back to Heathrow.
| Goodbye. |
















