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[1] Houses of Parliament

[2] Big Ben

[3] Brett

[4] British Museum Piece

[5] St. Mary le Bow

[6] Piccadilly Circus

[7] Rosetta Stone

[8] Statue Man
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Hello again!
When you last left me, I was in Edinburgh. I've
since moved on to London and stayed in two more hostels (both
YHA run - for those of you that don't know, the Youth Hostel Association
is an organization that runs a large number of hostels all over
the world. What's special about them is that they all adhere to
a certain 'standard' of facilities, and you can only stay there
if you're a member of the YHA). London is definitely one of my
favorite cities in the world, tied with Paris and NYC, I believe.
The London
public transportation system [11] is far and away the best
I've experienced too - even the busses are great!
My first day in London (a Saturday) began with a
walking-tour of the downtown area near the Thames River. I managed
to get to the Globe Theatre box office before it closed and purchased
a £5 'yard' ticket (i.e. where the peasantry would stand
for the show (yes, *stand*)) for Tuesday night's performance of
Twelfth Night. I'd never seen or read that particular play, so
I was very much looking forward to it. On my last trip through
London (about 5 years ago), I saw a Midsummer's Night Dream there,
and thoroughly enjoyed it. As I was strolling along the Queen's
Walkway (the path that follows the south side of the Thames),
I noted things like the London Eye (big ferris-wheel thing), St.
Paul's [9], the Tate
Modern Museum [10] (which now inhabits a converted, former
mid-20th century powerstation), the Houses of Parliament, Big
Ben [2], etc. Had a nice person take my
photo with Big Ben in the background [1], and then walked
up toward Trafalgar Square, Leciester (pronounced 'Lester') Square
and finally Piccadilly
Circus [6].
The next few days I spent lots of time in museums.
I saw this fabulous exhibit in the Tate Modern on Picasso and
Matisse. I had no idea that they had such an interesting relationship.
The exhibit also presented their works both chronologically, and
paired works that were related to each other in terms of style,
meaning and how they were significant to each other (for instance,
some of Picasso's paintings served to prompt Matisse to incorporate
certain aspects of the Cubist style). Very interesting. The British
Museum was an interesting place, as well. I saw the
Rosetta Stone [7], the Sutton Hoo burial mound (which I realized
I'd seen once before when my mother had taken me to the British
Museum when I was very young - one of my distinct memories associated
with the exhibit were these shooting pains in my (little) legs
that were tired from walking slowly and methodically around a
museum, rather than the running/playing they were used to!). The
National Portrait Gallery had a special exhibit on Baroque artists
that worked in Genoa, which was pretty good. I realized as I was
walking about the Gallery that my endurance for museums was diminishing
a little, after having spent the better part of three days on
them. I persevered though :) One of the best thing about the National
Gallery were the school groups - what seemed to be young people
who worked for the Gallery sat with groups of elementary school
kids discussing a particular painting. I was surprised at how
interested most of the kids seemed in the paintings, and they
saw an amazing amount in the paintings with only a little prompting
from the guides.
One really can't spend any significant amount of
time in London without going to the theatre, which I've done quite
a bit. On Monday (and Wednesday), I unsuccessfully tried to get
tickets to see Gwenyth Paltrow in "proof". But I did
see the Vagina Monologues on Monday night, Twelfth Night at the
Globe Theatre Tuesday night, and tonight (Wednesday), I'm going
to see "Up For Grabs" with Madonna.
Now Reading: Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
(book 4). Very good books. I'm very much looking forward to the
movie version of book 2 (The Chamber of Secrets) now.
Yesterday, I met an
American from Texas named Brett [3], who was also staying
at my hostel. He was in his 4th of five weeks traveling solo,
and had left Great Britain for the end, and we had a great time
chatting about both traveling and other things. This morning,
he left for York, and we swapped emails and promised to keep in
touch.
Tomorrow morning, it's off to Paris (7:23a.m. train!),
for another long stay.
Cheers! Aaron
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