A Divine Day of Diverse Delights--Dickens' House, National Gallery, Meetings with Friends, Pub Dinner with Dean's Circle
Wednesday, January 21, 2015
London
The cold still
rages on--much to my annoyance, these mid-30 degree (Fahrenheit)
temperatures are creeping up to mid-40s next week --after I have left
London! Just my ill-founded luck! Still, I am dressing in warm cashmere
layers to be comfortable outside only to boil when I am in the stores!
Jetlag
seems a thing of the past and I was up at 7. 15 am this morning with
enough leisurely time to shower, dress, have a muesli and yoghurt
breakfast plus coffee and get on the Tube headed for Holborn to keep a
doctor's appointment. For my cold also still rages on. I decided I had
better get my throat seen by someone as the pain is intense and this
cold won't quit. From Russel Square Station, I passed by some of
London's most fascinating attractions that I have had the pleasure, on
previous occasions, of perusing: The Foundling Museum, Coram Fields (a
lovely park into which adults can enter only if they have a
child/children with them), the back streets of Holborn that so inspired
Dickens. And indeed, that was where I was first headed. To say Hello to
Charlie in his own parlour!
Visiting Dickens' House:
I
had first visited Dickens' House in 1987, i.e. 28 years ago, as a young
graduate student who had spent a great part of her life devouring his
novels. In intervening years, I have stopped in the gift shop to buy
gifts for various lovers of Dickens. But it was time, I decided to
return to the rooms that he had inhabited with his wife Catherine and
where she had borne two children--their first two daughters Kate and
Alice, at a time when they were still happily married. Later,
post-partum depression took its toll on her and their marriage crumbled.
Dickens got involved with another woman and the couple divorced. It is
easy to find the house in a long lane of modest terraced housing at 48
Doughty Street--it used to be literally in my own backyard when I had
lived in Holborn; but I had not visited then.
A self-guided tour
book is a handy tool as you go through the rooms. How the Victorians
lived in such perpetual darkness is always a mystery to me. Still, there
were flickering artificial candles in some of the rooms and they added
to the authenticity of atmosphere that one seeks in such abodes. Having
become prosperous through his writing, Dickens acquired a great many
personal treasures and loads of them are exhibited in this house--sets
of dining porcelain, a lovely Wedgwood tall cheese tray with lid in blue
Jasperware, a silver samovar, a carved marble sculpture of a Turk. But
the most significant items are his writing desk and chair that feature
in the famous painting, Dickens' Dream in which he is is seen
snoozing in the chair as all the characters from his novels come to
life. It is available in the form of a postcard in the shop. There are
also letters, first editions of his novels (Nicholas Nickleby
was written entirely in this house), much evidence of his great love for
Shakespeare (whom he revered and who continually offered him
inspiration), the theater (he saw a play in the West End almost every
night and even turned his hand to acting to prove to be rather good at
it), long walks (he is reputed to have walked an average of 20 miles a
day all over the city).
The visitor goes through the Main Hall
of the House, into the Drawing Room and Dining Room, then upstairs into
the bedrooms (the one Dickens' shared with Catherine, the other one in
which his beloved sister-in-law Mary died unexpectedly at 21), then up
another flight of stairs to the nursery and the servants rooms where a
grill from Marshalsea Prison in a grim reminder of the earliest trauma
he suffered. His father was imprisoned for debt and Dickens recalls the
humiliation he felt on having to go to prison to visit him. This
resulted in his earliest employment at age 12 in a shoe-blackening
factory where passers-by could peep in and watch the children at work
and giggle in amusement--not realizing how horrible it felt to the
children hard at work. It was great to re-visit these well-known
episodes in his life through the aid of such memorabilia and I lingered
in room after room, taking pictures (without a flash), pausing to read a
note here, to inspect a Victorian map of London there, to wonder at the
prodigious talent and industry of this most British of writers.
Off to the Doctor and Persephone Books:
Thankfully,
my doctor did not think anything was seriously wrong with me. Although I
might have picked up the chest infection from air pollution in Bombay,
he thinks I made it worse by picking up a virus in London where colds
and sniffles are raging. All I was recommended was salt water gargles
for my aching throat (slightly inflamed, he agreed) and more
paracetymol. Relieved, I walked to one of my favorite places in London
and my favorite bookstore in the whole wide world--Persephone Books on
Lamb's Conduit Street. The cozy warmth of this interior is hard to
describe, the unique collections that they reprint (classics for women
from the 1930s), the design of their productions (plain grey covered
paperbacks with gorgeous end papers featuring contemporary fabric prints
that come with matching bookmarks) and the gracious service you receive
whenever you are there, make it worthwhile to hunt down this shop and
buy something. I came away with a collection of book marks featuring
floral prints in bright colors for 50 p each. I intend to give them away
as gifts to my Book Club buddies.
An Unexpecdted Souvenir Find:
Then,
I was hurrying out to keep my lunch date; but not before I got
sidetracked by a foray into a design store--for somewhat inexplicably,
Lamb's Conduit Street has become increasingly gentrified. Rents are now
going through this roof in this convenient part of Holborn and the huge
thrift store (known as charity shop in Britain) that I used to frequent
has, sadly, closed down. It's been taken over by another upscale
interior design establishment, so that it appears it won't be long
before Holborn becomes another Chelsea. In Penthreat and Hall, I chanced
upon a huge wooden bowl filled with Christmas baubles being offered as a
fraction of their regular price: I picked up two beautiful glass globes
engraved and painted with gold and I can just see them catching the
light in a corner of our home in Southport all year round. For under 10
pounds, it made a unique souvenir of my stay in London.
Lunch with Loulou:
When
I finally did get on the Central Line Tube from Holborn, I got off at
Holland Park within 12 minutes and easily found the new home of my
friends Loulou and Paul--in whose palatial loft in Farringdon I had once
passed a few months. They have downsized and, in a two bedroom flat,
that overlooks Holland Hill Avenue, we had a lovely reunion. I said a
quick hullo to Paul who then disappeared for his own luncheon business
meeting, leaving Loulou to give me the grand tour of their charming
little home which makes up in location what it has lost in size. Indeed,
here I thought is another fine example of the wisdom of downsizing.
Loulou chose a fine Italian restaurant called Edeza
on Holland Hill Avenue to treat me to lunch; and it was there, over
gnocchi with rabbit ragout for me and breaded lemon sole for her, that
we caught up. I realize, thanks to invitations and meetings with fond
old friends, that I am eating at far better establishments on this trip
than I had envisioned. Three days in a row it has been Italian and this
meal did not disappoint. Most importantly, we had the chance to catch up
on our lives in a far more meaningful way than email can allow. We made
the discovery that, at this stage in our lives, it is our aging parents
that are huge concerns and that there are no easy solutions for the
provision of care for their well-being.
Haunting Holland Park Locations of As Time Goes By:
Regular readers of this blog will know that one of the great loves of my life is the British TV series As Time Goes
By starring Judi Dench and Geoffrey Palmer and set in Holland Park. The
series ran for about 12 years from the late 1980s to the early 2000s
and featured the daily lives of an upper middle class couple that had
once been engaged to be married, were parted by the war in Korea, go
their separate ways, marry, have children, become widowed/divorced and
meet up again 35 years later only to fall in love again, get married and
live happily ever after. If this sounds corny to you, keep in mind that
I am a hopeless romantic and am devoted to the show and have spent
hours trying to find the real-life locations in which the shooting
occurred.
So, imagine my delight, when I discovered that Loulou
now lives about 2 seconds from the site of the filming of the show--the
back gardens of Holland Park. I simply had to revisit them again--to see
Lionel and Jean's House, the church across the street in the park, the
store front that had served as location of their office called Type For
You--it was once the Clarendon Cross Post Office but became a discount
convenience store that was actually closing down (I went in and bought
Custard Powder for 50 p!) and the street across Holland Hill Avenue in
Addison Street that had served as the location for Lionel's flat. After
having lingered long enough and feeling extremely nostalgic for the show
that folded up, several years ago, I took a bus and rode on the top
deck all the way along Hyde Park wit the idea of spending a few hours at
another favorite place in the world--the National Gallery.
Saying Hello to Maggi Hambling and Other Old Friends at the National:
My
bus deposited me at the last stop--Piccadilly Circus--and so off I
strode past the Haymarket Theater and into Trafalgar Square. Revisiting
the National Gallery is always a bit like coming home and saying Hello
to my favorite friends. Only this time, I decided to see the special
exhibition on at the moment: Maggi Hambling's Walls of Water. I
had first become introduced to the work of this extremely eccentric
lady through my friends Loulou and Paul who know her through their
connections in Suffolk. For the months that I had lived in their
Farringdon loft, her self-portrait had hung right above my bed. It made
me feel as if I knew her well. So it made complete sense to look at the
work for which she had gained fame: her depictions of waves crashing on
the Suffolk beaches around where she lives.
Indeed her
canvasses are quite extraordinary--they are quite Pollock-like in some
respects as thick wads of oil paint seem to be stuck randomly on the
canvas. There is the sense of the definite movement of waves that burst
into random patterns on shore. Black and white is relieved by slashes of
occasional color. Interestingly, one of the works is entitled Amy
Winehouse--it is Hambling's tribute to another extraordinary
artist--there is the definite depiction of Winehouse's eccentric
bouffants, her vivid red lipstick. Curatorial notes informed me that
Hambling was inspired by the Norwegian artist Peter Balke who painted
the sea in the 19th century. In many respects, her work is a response to
Balke's. And intriguingly, the National has presented a special
exhibition on the work of Balke in the Sunley Room next door. I was
thrilled. It was a wonderful opportunity to study the impact of one
artist upon another. In Balke's work, light played a prominent role and
the vividness of detail that he is able to capture in his highly
realistic canvasses--the very opposite of Hambling's abstracts--are
worth examining. I was enchanted.
It was time to go out in
search of my old friends--beloved paintings that I get to see only
occasionally but which I most love about re-visiting London. I began
with the Carravaggios--Boy Bitten By A Lizard, Christ at Emmaus, then moved on to the classics that Marina Vaisey numbers among her 100 Masterpieces of Art: Canaletto's scenes of Venice (more realistic than any photograph), Lucus Cranach's Cupid Complaining to Venus, Holbien's The Ambassadors, Pieter de Hooch's Courtyard of a House in Delft (my very favorite painting in the whole world and one I could sit and gaze upon for hours), George Stubb's Whistlejacket (was ever a horse depicted in more animated a guise?), Constable's Haywain and Stafford Mill, Turner's The Fighting Temeraire, Mr and Mrs. Thomas Hallet by Gainsborough and poor Lady Jane Grey.
There are the lovely studies by Joaquim Buechler that have a whole
corridor-gallery devoted to them--I could also gaze on these forever. So
many treasures, so little time. I did not get the chance to enter the
Sainsbury Wing, for instance, to look at the work of Carlo Crivelli
(whom I discovered at the National many years ago and whose work I have
seen no where else); but I hope to return for another peep again before I
leave.
Outside, in Trafalgar Square, darkness had fallen and
there was a lively lights show that was projecting rainbows over the
fountains and Edward Landseer's lions. It made for wonderful photo ops
and all the world was taking selfies. It was at this time that I
received a call from another friend: Murali, a banker who was just
getting off work in Liverpool Street and wondered if I could meet him
for a drink.
I could, actually, as I had nixed my plans to
return to St. John's Wood to change before dinner. I was exhausted and
could not face the thought of making double journeys. Thankfully, I had
not worn jeans or sneakers; so my clothing would pass as 'semi-formal', I
figured. I was tired and flagging by this time and badly needed a sit
down. Yes, I told Murali, I would meet him at Bank, presuming that my
dinner appointment was there as the address I had been given said Old
Bank of England.
About 45 minutes later, I found Murali
awaiting my arrival by the Jubilee Monument just behind the equestrian
statue of the Duke of York. It was fabulous to see him again and
although I would have preferred a hot chocolate at that point, it seemed
that most coffee shops close by 6 pm in London! So we settled for a
pint instead at the Pavillion's End pub somewhere in the
labyrinth of little lanes that comprise The City in the area of Wren's
St. Stephen Woolnoth Church. Luckily, we did find seats and with
half-pints of cider in our possession, we were off and away discussing
all the things we talk about when we get together: travels in India,
books, poetry, paintings and art history (my friend has a passion for
Russian Abstract artists), discovering and re-discovering London...the
list is endless. Murali is great company for his mind is vital, current,
art-humanities-commerce-science wired (if that is possible)--indeed a
true Renaissance Man who became known to me through his reading of my
blog, when I lived in London. We have remained friends ever since and it
is always a pleasure to catch up with him.
Making a Big Gaff Over a Dinner Venue:
Then,
I was ready for the next item on my agenda: A Farewell Dinner for the
Dean's Circle of NYU at what I presumed was the actual Bank of England
on Threadneedle Street. I am sure Murali had his doubts when I told him
where I was headed for dinner--but then, I had presumed that august
banks as as this one, rent out space for corporate dos as so many
historic buildings seem to survive on such stunts.
Well, I
was mighty mistaken. The dinner was not in the bank at all as the amused
security assistant informed me...but, get this, in a pub named Bank of
England on Fleet Street! I felt both mortified at my gaff and terribly
anxious--I would be terribly late. Still, some quick thinking on
Murali's part sent me in the direction of the Chancery Lane Tube
Station. I walked through the lane and onto Fleet Street and found
myself facing Number 17. Well, since my address said 194 Fleet Street, I
expected it to be in the direction of Ludgate Hill and, instinctively, I
hailed a passing cab and jumped in. He sailed up and down the street a
couple of times and then told me that the pub was probably exactly where
I had hopped on! I was made to feel stupid for the second time in half
an hour--this was simply not working! He U-turned and dropped me back
exactly where I had hopped in, relieved me of 5 pounds and left me
feeling sheepish as I entered the vast hall. I recognized it immediately
as the venue that became notorious for the demon Barber of Fleet Street
who apparently slit the throats of his customers and had his mistress
then cut them up and bake them into pies in the sale of which she did
roaring business! Well, who knows how much truth there is in this story,
but I sure as hell wasn't ordering pie!
We had the special room
and thankfully too--for 30 Americans can get very noisy indeed. A
three-course meal was served consisting of Tomato Soup, Fish and Chips
(delightfully crisp cod fillets) with cheesecake for dessert. A slash of
raspberry coulis appeared like a smear of blood on the plate and
brought conversation inevitable around to the barber!
It was
fun. It was lively. It was noisy. I was pleased to have been invited to
bid goodbye to our students whose grand London adventure will end
tomorrow morning when they board that flight back Stateside. I was
seriously exhausted and could not wait to get public transport to reach
home. I walked all the way up Kingsway to Holborn Tube station, got off
at Marble Arch from where I took a bus home to St. John's Wood getting
there in under half an hour.
And while our students are
dreaming of their return home, I fell asleep thinking of dreaming
spires, for I will be in Oxford tomorrow with friends on a day trip that
promises to be a blast.
Until tomorrow, cheerio!
1 comment:
It's like coming home to me...London .Rochelle you bring the city alive..sharing all your visits to museums, shops, pubs and more.So joyful to experience the amazing city thru your eyes.
Laughed a lot at the Dinner Bank adventure..!
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