Tag Archive | Sissinghurst

Knocking About Knole House in Kent

Friday, June 19, 2009
Knole House, Kent

Having visited Vita Sackville-West’s famous garden in Sissinghurst, I was keen on seeing her childhood ‘home’, Knole House–also in Kent but in the town of Sevenoaks which is much closer to London.

Getting To Knole:
One week of attempting to reach National Trust properties has left me with a very bad taste in my mouth. I have said before that I think their annual membership is a rip-off and I am going to say so again. For one thing, most of their properties are open only for about five months of the year (usually after Easter and until October). The rambling homes they now own are too expensive to heat during the winter and are shut down.

Secondly, during the months that the houses are accessible to visitors, they are not open every day of the week. Most are open only from Thursday to Sunday. That cuts down your options right there.

Thirdly, let’s say you decide to visit on a Friday (as I did yesterday), you will discover, to your horror, that there is no public transport available to these houses at all except (if you are very fortunate), one day of the week (“usually Sundays and Bank Holidays”). So woe betide you if you are a foreigner in the UK and do not drive and do not have access to a car. You simply cannot reach these spots which are in the back of beyond, in most cases (Knole and Chartwell and Polesdon Lacey, for instance). At the end of the day, your only recourse is a taxi and given the long distances of these places from the nearest rail head, you end up paying a good fifty pounds per trip (and that is not including the entry fee which you would not be paying if you have an annual membership). I paid almost fifty pounds only on transport to get to Polesdon Lacey after which I swore I would not hail a taxi again!

I would like to make a very humble appeal to the National Trust that it run a shuttle bus service from the nearest rail head to its properties on the days that they stay open, as in the case of Sissinghurst where a shuttle bus took me from Staplehurst railway station to the venue for a fee of 2 pounds. Even an intrepid traveler like me and one who is accustomed to public transport can get fed up about having to trek miles of country roads to arrive finally at a property.

A case in point was Knole House. I took a train from London’s Charing Cross (8.80 pounds return) to get to Sevenoaks (a half hour journey by Southeastern trains). The station is on a fairly crowded street which led me to believe that someone would be able to tell me which bus would take me to Knole. No such luck. Everyone I asked said they did not have a clue. And there are no signs anywhere at the station providing this information. Finally, I was lucky enough to come across an elderly man who had probably lived in the area all his life. He told me that a red bus would get me to the top of the hill from where I would need to walk along the London Road to get to the spot from where I would need to walk another two miles to get to Knole Park. (“It is a vast park, you see, and you have to walk a couple of miles before you get the front door!”) Good God! I hoped he was joking!

Well, at the bus stop, I had a look at the schedule and discovered that, unlike London, in these out-of-the-way hamlets, the frequency of the buses is deplorable–there are two buses per hour. So if you have just missed one, you will wait for a half hour to hop into the next one! Having no choice in the matter, I stood at the bus stop seething, when suddenly the same man came up to me and actually offered me a ride! “I could run you to the top of the hill”, he said, “because the buses are rather unreliable”. And, of course, he did. I was so grateful! It saved me a good long uphill walk which would have exhausted me and, given the fact, that I am still recovering from Plantar Fascittis and will probably have to deal with this foot condition for the rest of my life, I have to find every means of curtailing my walking, if I can help it.

At the top of the hill, where he dropped me off, I discovered I was near a school called The Manor School. The road dips downhill at this point. I set off bravely attempting to reach the park and when I got there, five minutes later, I was outraged. There I was, looking at a vast park filled with white spotted deer, scattered around a tarred road that stretched out as far as I could see and then curved uphill and then disappeared around a bend. Was I expected to walk all that way to get to the front entrance of Knole House? Apparently. Well, my feet would never allow me to do that! No, there was simply no means of transportation available (not even a shuttle bus from that point!).

I suppose someone desperate could have spoken to the lady who was manning the kiosk (and probably taking parking fees from the drivers) to request one of them to give me a ride up the hill. But I did not want to bother her. Instead, I took the initiative and approached the female driver of a car that was clearly headed inside and requested a lift and was turned down! I was shocked! Such a thing would NEVER have happened to me in the States. To be on the property of a well-known monument, to be a single female and to request a lift of someone in America would have resulted in people saying, “Oh, of course, hop right in”. But in this country, I now understand that the making of such a request is considered “cheeky”!

I refused to be daunted. After all, I wasn’t going to turn right back and return to London because my physical handicap did not allow me to get to the front gate, was I? So I walked ahead and requested the couple in the next car. They told me immediately to get right in, but I do not believe that they were very happy about it at all. They did not say a word to me when I was inside–but once I saw how far one had to drive to get to the front gate, I decided that it was worth their annoyance to be able to save that dreadful uphill climb to Knole. It went on and on and on and I could never have done it on my two feet and still have had any energy left to tour the house. Twenty years ago maybe, but not at this point in my life.

Inside Knole House:
So at the front gate, more irritation awaited me. There was only one ticket kiosk and only one lady manning it. I have the Royal Oaks Foundation Membership Card which means all I ought to be given is a sticker that would let me right through. But, to my bad luck, there was a couple in the line before me waiting to buy a ticket and they had to receive the whole spiel on how they could become members of the National Trust and what the different rates were, etc. Now, shouldn’t there have been someone else to enroll new members, sitting at another desk somewhere? Why do I have to wait in line while new members are being enrolled when all I need to do is show my membership card and walk right in? I was so cheesed off by this entire experience that my bad mood stayed with me for the rest of the day–and I know that I usually have a high threshold for dealing with such minor irritations. Besides, at the back of my mind was the thought, How am I going to get back to Sevenoaks railway station if there is no transport available? Do I have to walk all the way? I was so depressed.

Of course, I lost patience and had to excuse myself and cut ahead in the line while the couple made up their minds–they weren’t sure whether they wanted to fork out the annual membership fee or not. I asked if I could enter while they made up their minds! And sure thing… a second later, I had a white ticket and was crossing the vast green courtyard to arrive at the tower-like gates where I crossed another courtyard (this one paved in old and new limestone tiles) and was entering the house.

There, at the front desk, in the Great Hall, I decided I needed desperately to ask one of the volunteers for help me. Could some kind of transport be arranged that would get me back to Sevenoaks station–a taxi maybe? Well, it must have been my lucky hour. The lady at the counter immediately volunteered her help–she got off duty at 2 pm and would be happy to give me a ride to the station. It was 12. 3o pm which left me an hour and a half to see the place. I was so delighted and so relieved!

History of Knole House:
This is a huge house and I mean massive. The National Trust opens up only a small portion of it to visitors–the grand state rooms that once hosted dignitaries and was used by visiting members of royalty.

The house was built in the Tudor period (early 1500s) of grey stone around a series of courtyards concealed by high impenetrable walls. It belonged to Thomas Cromwell, but Henry VIII eyed it (as he was wont to do) and after Cromwell’s execution, it passed into Henry’s greedy hands. His daughter Elizabeth I gifted it to Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, for a while her favorite courtier (heh heh).

Upon his death, she gifted it to her cousin Thomas Sackville, first Earl of Dorset, another powerful figure in her court. It still remains in the Sackville family which explains why Vita Sackville-West was born and grew up here. Because her father did not have any sons (and there was some kind of clause stipulating that only male heirs could inherit this property), it fell into the hands of her uncle (her father’s brother) in 1928–around the time that Vita was marrying Harold Nichilson and looking for a property in Kent that she could buy (she ended up buying Sissinghurst).

Touring Knole:
The Great Hall, the first room that visitors enter, has a wonderful oak carved screen (once brightly painted but converted by the Victorians into this present state–a dark wood finish). Replicas of the famous oil portraits of the personalities associated with the house line the walls.

For me, the most interesting part of this room was a facsimile copy of the original manuscript of her novel Orlando that Virginia Woolf gifted to her dear friend Vita because the house she has created as the setting in that novel is modelled on Knole where she had spent some happy days and nights (heh heh). The manuscript in Virginia’s own handwriting can made the hairs on your neck rise and for me it was one of the most valuable items on display.

From this point, visitors stroll through room after room, a warren of narrow corridors and low passages that connect one vast room with the next. There are three distinctive Long Galleries full of portraits featuring some of the most prominent figures in those turbulent historical periods. These galleries are filled with Stuart furniture that was rejected by William of Orange when he became king and wanted to wipe out all vestiges of the Stuart regime that had preceded his own. Charles Sackville, the fourth earl of Dorset, who happened to have an important position in the court at this time helped himself liberally to as much of the furniture from Whitehall Palace and Hampton Court Palace on which he could lay his avaricious hands (the ways of Ministers, it seems, haven’t changed a great deal over the centuries)–with the result that Knole boasts the finest collection of Stuart furniture in the country–including some rare X-framed armchairs. I have to say that most of the furniture is in a deplorable condition with fabrics badly in need of refurbishment and wooden frames that are falling apart. The National Trust is working hard on conservation (a part of the duties of which it remains very proud) and visitors can see both their efforts and their achievements.

Leopards are scattered all over the house–on the plastered ceiling and in the form of marble sculpture that lines the grand staircases as it remains a symbol of the Sackville coat of arms. There are portraits galore everywhere you turn. In the Cartoon Room, lined with reproductions of the Raphael Cartoons (the original of which are in the V&A), a cellist and a violinist, were playing really badly and sounded so awful, I wished they would stop. I saw the King’s Room where James I is supposed to have slept but no one is sure about this as there is no documented evidence to prove it. There are usually some pieces of silver furniture in this room but they were not on display as they’ve been moved to another exhibition somewhere else (the V&A, I believe).
Well, overall, it is a grand manor filled with aged paintings (few originals–most reproductions) and really ageing furniture and that sums it up best. There is no audio guide and visitors had to compete for the hand held guides in each room that give details about the room’s history and its furnishings. I have to say that for a home this important and this mammoth, I was somewhat disappointed by my visit. The place ought to be run in a smoother fashion.

At 2pm, when she did get off work, Doreen did give me the promised lift to Sevenoaks. She was friendly and helpful and we had a very nice conversation in the car. If only everyone was this approachable, I thought. She also advised me on how to get to Bromley South station in order to catch a bus to Chartwell, childhood home of Sir Winston Churchill, which is only a half hour ride away–great if you have a car but inaccessible by public transport. This was the next venue on my agenda and I did find a train that got me there.

Getting to Chartwell–Another Fiasco:
The young male assistant on the Infoline at Chartwell had informed me in the morning that Bus Number 246 would get me to Chartwell from Bromley South Station. What he neglected to mention was that this bus runs only on Sundays and Bank Holidays (even though I had told him specifically that I was going up to Chartwell today after visiting Knole)! Another piece of incorrect information offered by a National Trust volunteer who was basically unhelpful and could barely answer a question I put to him.

Of course, when I arrived at Bromley South, the bus driver in the 246 bus told me that his bus ran to Chartwell only on Sundays! If I got off at the last stop on his bus today, I would have more than a half hour walk to the main gate, he said. OK, that was it. I decided I had enough of trying to get to these National Trust properties on my own two feet and I decided to turn right back and return to London. But then I figured that since I had an Oyster bus pass, I would take a joy ride through the lovely suburb of Bromley and the entrance to Kent and see the country on what was another beautiful day.

So that was what I did. A bus ride really did take me into the heart of these suburban communities which are pretty and serene and then I was back on the train and heading to London and feeling rather low when I received a call from my former neighbor Tim asking if I would be up for a meal at home featuring a selection of different kinds of prawn–only the line was bad and I heard “different kinds of corn”. I agreed anyway because I was free and because Tim is a chef par excellence and I am always pleased to leave myself in his capable hands. He and wife Barbara would get to my place by 8 pm, he said. My spirits lifted enormously and next thing I knew, I was actually looking forward to the rest of the day. He said that I did not need to get anything ready as he would bring everything. Yyeess!! How lucky was I!!

Dinner at Denmark House with Tim and Barbara:
So Tim and Barbara arrived at 8 pm leaving me just enough time to check and respond to urgent email. They arrived with a big backpack filled with food–all kinds of prawns, as Tim had promised, one of my favorite things in the world. We started off with a bottle of Harrod’s champagne which Tim uncorked as I passed around the flutes. We nibbled on hummus with pita bread which was in my fridge and which I had toasted gently. It was just the right appetizer. While we chatted companionably in my kitchen and I caught up with my friends and told them about my largely disappointing day, Tim busied himself at the stove throwing a bunch of ingredients together with expertise and skill.

When our meal was ready, we marched to the table that I had set with candles and the sweet peas from Loulou’s garden that I had brought home from Suffolk. With the salad and the foaccaccia that Tim had bought from Waitrose, we started with delicious potted shrimp–basically little baby shrimp concealed under a layer of butter. They were very good indeed (my very first time eating potted shrimp). I had always wondered what they tasted like and I’m glad I found out and enjoyed them too. With freshly cooked asparagus and my salad, we started to tuck into the large dish of prawns–all sorts and all sizes from crayfish and Argentinian prawn, to the sort that can be crunched up shell and all (though Barbara and I preferred to peel them first) to the biggest treat of all, large chunks of rock lobster that was just terrific. Tim thought of everything–the fresh lemon and the lime was squeezed liberally over our prawns. It was a meal fit for the Gods. We took our time, peeling them carefully and enjoying the treat enormously. I could not get over the fact that a couple of hours before this, I had no idea we’d be up to our elbows peeling prawns. What a fun evening it turned out to be!

Then, because Tim and Barbara are such good walkers, they suggested a walk in the neighborhood before pudding. Capital idea, indeed. So off we went towards Exmouth Market and it was brought home to me again what a happening neighborhood this is once the sun has set! Guys and gals were out in droves “hanging” as they say, at the bars and the clubs and I thought to myself, Imagine what a great time I could have here if I were twenty five years younger and single! Well, I wasn’t having too bad of a time at Farringdon in 2009, so I am very grateful indeed. All one needs are a couple of great buddies and what a good time one can have. I am so blessed in Tim and Barbara and I simply cannot feel enough appreciation for their repeated gestures of friendship.

Back home, I put the kettle on for some coffee while Tim set out dessert: profiteroles (my favorite English pudding–or are they French?) and fresh raspberries, dressed lightly with brown sugar and clotted cream. More conversation, more jokes, more joyous laughter, and before we knew it, it was close to midnight. I felt so delighted that they made such a spontaneous decision to hook up with me tonight in this lovely loft where there is no much great space for a party and every possible implement that a chef could want.

I had no more incentive left to clear up than to throw things into the dishwasher and turn it on, tuck leftovers into the fridge with the intention of doing more cleaning up on the morrow. And on that happy note, I fell asleep.

A Day With Friends in the Suffolk Countryside

Thursday, June 18, 2009
Iken, Suffolk

I set my alarm for 7.00 this morning as I couldn’t risk waking up too late. I had a 9. 38 am train to catch from Liverpool Street Station and not being familiar with this station, I wanted to give myself ample time to get there by bus and pick up my train ticket that I had booked on the phone two days ago (20 pounds round trip). I was excited as I had been invited to spend the day in the countryside with my friends Paul and Loulou (in whose London loft I am currently residing) who farm a vast land holding near the Alde River on the East Anglian coast.

The train journey was lovely. I read a copy en route of The English Home magazine (the Christmas 2008 issue, if you can believe it!) but once the city landmarks disappeared behind us, I abandoned it and enjoyed the sight of the countryside spread out under a Constable sky. Big fluffy clouds smeared the bluest skies but the sun shone full and golden upon the passing fields. Loulou was awaiting my arrival at Wickham Market station (a journey of exactly 2 hours) in her spiffy grey Mercedes sport car and off we went.

The Church of St. Botolph’s:
Our first stop was at the Norman church of St. Botolph’s where Loulou happens to play the voluntary role of Warden. She had a minute’s errand to run there which left me enough time to survey this place of pilgrimage. Not only is the church picture-perfect (it combines a thatched roof, a square Norman tower and a more modern portion in the same building–the first time ever I have seen a church with a thatched roof!) and has some interesting interior features such as a timbered roof and a medieval marble font. It also has part of a Saxon cross preserved inside. Services are still held here regularly and the place reminded me very much of an episode in Midsomer Murders entitled The Bell Ringers. Up in the loft, I could see the ropes from which the bell-ringers actually hang as they ring the bells–the ones in this church are very valuable as they pre-date the Reformation.

Back in the car with Loulou behind the wheel, I took in the simple rural pleasures of the Suffolk countryside. Mile after mile of cultivated farmland passed us by along the narrowest ribbons of road–most untarred and mostly sandy. Having farmed in these pastoral environs for over twenty years, Loulou is familiar with the crops grown on this soil–barley and rye and potatoes–and she identified them individually. Tiny villages tucked away in the golden waving fields enchanted me, some sporting the famous Suffolk pink on their walls (which Loulou informed me were once created by diluting paint pigment with pig’s blood!)–Ah the strange old ways of rural folk!

Stanny House Farm:
In a short while, we arrived at Stanny House Farm, the country estate owned by my friends, a sprawling parcel of Suffolk countryside that left me gasping. Loulou did the wise thing and gave me the grand tour in stages–starting with her gardens (which I was most keen to see for she is a keen gardener). Our first stop was her vegetable garden, a neatly designed space enclosed within red brick walls and featuring a variety of lettuces, broad beans, tomatoes, herbs, Swiss chard, etc. all of which she snipped quite handily and threw into her trug as she went along in order to concoct a salad for our lunch. For it was nearly lunch time and Paul had left his office (all of twenty steps away!) to come and join us in the lovely conservatory where we sat down to eat.

The meal was simple but so delicious–I mean how can you go wrong with home grown produce picked fresh off their stalks, right? The addition of tuna and some hard boiled eggs and crisp asparagus and a balsamic vinaigrette that I whisked up, meant that we had ourselves a Salade Nicoise served with multi-grain bread and butter and a selection of cheeses for afters. Dipper, their ageing bitch, joined us at the table and gratefully received the tidbits that Paul passed her. It was the very essence of English country life and I felt as if I had strayed into one of the features in the Homes and Garden magazines I read. How delighted I was to be a guest at this charming table.

Lunch done, Loulou took me for another walk–this time around her flower gardens. I climbed the picturesque red brick Millennium Wall along the stairs and over the Rockery that she has created from old salvagaed stone and filled with rare succulents. Indeed her perennial beds delighted me and before long, we were taking a longer tour to the outhouses and thatched-roof barns that comprise the property, converted into office space, entertainment space, etc. I met Denny, the gardener, who works hard with Loulou and Paul to keep this massive property in shape just as earlier I had met Linda, the housekeeper who has worked on the farm for over twenty years. During our tour, Loulou provided so much information about their collection of art works centered around medieval alabasters, sculpture and paintings and it was fascinating in every respect. In-between, we paused to admire and talk about their Polynesian sculptures and their modern British oil paintings.

The Unlikely Reunion of A Portrait and a Sword:
We spent a great deal of time in the hallway of their home where a striking portrait of a British colonial officer on horseback being eyed by his three red-clad infantrymen caught my eye. It turned out to be a painting of Paul’s great-great-great grandfather, a Lt. Gen. Littler, Deputy Governor-General of Bengal, depicting him on the Battlefields of Ferozepur in 1845–i.e. just before the Great Mutiny of 1857!

Knowing my deep interest in Indo-British history, Loulou took the time and trouble to tell me the story about the manner in which this painting came into their possession–and indeed it made my hair rise! The painting, depicting an ancestor on Paul’s maternal side, had been passed down to members of his family and was taken for lost (though Paul and Loulou had seen pictures of it and were aware of its existence). One day, purely by happenstance, the two of them were in Sotheby’s in London when Loulou spotted the painting and knew that it was the one depicting Paul’s ancestor. In excitement, she pointed it out to Paul who then bid on it and brought the painting home. So that was Part One of this exciting story.

But it does not end there! It was when they were hanging it upon the wall in the entrance hall of their Suffolk home that Loulou (she of the eagle eye!!!) noticed once again that the good general was carrying a sword in his hand that most uncannily resembled the one that had been passed down to Paul by his family members and which she had gifted to her own son Jack! In fact, the sword was somewhere in Jack’s room upstairs!

Needless to say, Loulou sprinted upstairs, found the sword, held it against the one in General Littler’s hand in the portrait and was convinced that she was holding the exact same sword in her own hand!!! Of course, they then framed the painting in such a way as to have the sword, sheathed well in its own scabbard, hanging from the bottom of the painting. This story was so mind blowing that my knees felt weak on listening to it and I really felt as if I had to sit down right there on the stairs leading up their bedrooms!

What I loved, most of all, was the completely understated manner in which this treasure trove was presented to me. Loulou’s completely unassuming and very modest ways were totally disarming and I marveled at them even as I was deeply touched by them. She and Paul were nothing if not casual. While there are extremely rare pieces sprinkled about the house, it is fully and completely lived-in and nowhere did it appear to me like a museum at all. This, I think, is the home’s biggest triumph–that it exuded the down-to-earth spirit of its occupants with the most genuine sincerity and not the slightest iota of boastfulness. How goes the old saying? Old money whispers, it does not shout! That was what I most loved about Stanny House and its inhabitants. I felt deeply endeared to it and to them even though I was visiting it for the very first time.

Helmingham House and Gardens:
Then, we got into the car again and Loulou took me on another delightful drive–more farms, more fields, more villages–to Helmingham House and Gardens, a place that she simply knew I would love. About a half hour away from her place, the property comprises a grand Elizabethan mansion (a private house which cannot be visited) surrounded by the most beautiful gardens that are kept open to the public for a fee of 5 pounds each. Loulou has been to this place several times and knew exactly where to take me. Indeed, these gardens were amazing and I took so many pictures.

The star attraction for me was an incredible clump of salmon pink poppies, the size of which I have never seen in my life. They were as large as peonies (of which there were many in different colors), as tall as my waist and in my absolute favorite color. I could not stop exclaiming over them. The herbaceous borders are so well tended and so superbly coordinated in terms of color and texture that I could tell that an expert had conceived of them and created them. It turns out that most of these gardens are fairly new as the current owner is a passionate gardener who has done a great deal to develop the gardens and very generously opens them up to the public.

The property also comprised a rose garden and an Elizabethan Knot Garden (in keeping with the design of the house which is itself a beauty what with its typically interesting Tudor brick designs on the wall, its multiple chimneys and its moat that encircles the property at two levels). As if this sense of space and grandeur were inadequate, the estate has its own herd of white spotted fallow deer and there were several of them not far from the house at all. In fact, a few fawns were rather close to the gardens (though safely fenced far away!).

After pausing to examine the rarer specimens of the collection, Loulou and I needed a tea break and we took one in the Garden Tea Room where we enjoyed a really good cup of tea and a slice of Coffee and Walnut Cake–the third day in a row that I have indulged in this newly-discovered English treat (at Sissinghurst, Polesdon Lacey and now here at Helmingham!). Then, because it was almost 5 pm and I had a train to catch and Loulou and Paul had a dinner date to keep, we left the premises.

But Loulou was still keen to show me other parts of the area and took me for a long drive towards the coast through entirely different terrain that compromised forests known for their bird and wild life. We arrived at the coastal village of Orford which reminded me so much of Southport and its marina that I lost no time at all taking pictures of the sailing vessels in the estuary. It was all quite delightful indeed!

Back at Stanny House, the three of us and Dipper set out on a lovely walk through the farmland to spot bee orchids that have recently sprung up in their grasslands–but the property is so vast that we had to drive to get to this particular field. I made the discovery that both my friends are keen naturalists and have an abiding love for birds and other creatures, not to mention flora. They are so excited that orchids have naturally taken seed on their property! As we walked, Paul, binoculars slung around his neck, looked for and spotted a number of birds incuding a white barn owl that soared in the distance. Indeed, their excitement was infectious and I had a truly marvelous afternoon in their company for I learned so very much on a subject about which I am truly an ignoramus–Natural History. I missed Llew sorely as I know that his own interests as a naturalist and his great love for birds would have thrilled him so much in these wide open spaces. If we are ever in England together, I would love to bring him back to this unspoiled curve of the East Anglian coast. As we walked through waist-deep grass dotted with spiky thistle (much to Dipper’s annoyance), I simply had to pause to take more pictures for I have never had this superbly bucolic experience before.

Then, it was time for them to hurry home and get dressed for their dinner appointment. They dropped me off along the way at Wickham Market train station and whizzed off. I boarded my train, five minutes later, and spent the two hour long journey (with a change at Ipswich) recalling the incredible day I had enjoyed in their lovely company. I have to say that Loulou did not send me back empty handed–there was Bibb Lettuce and Arugula (what the English call ‘Rocket’) in my bag and a charming bunch of the most fragrant sweet peas from her garden.

Regular readers of this blog will know that I have felt deeply blessed all year–ever since I arrived in London. But, on my way back to Denmark House, I could not help thinking that my biggest blessing this year has been the amazing range of English friends I have made and the manner in which they have taken me to their hearts and shared the uniqueness of their lives with me. Paul and Loulou are two of those great blessings and for that I feel truly grateful.

Back at Liverpool Street Station at 9. 45 pm, I hopped into a bus that brought me home in less than twenty minutes. I put my sweet peas in cool water and prepared for bed, deeply happy about the unusual and very interesting day I had spent in Suffolk.

Sissinghurst, Grosvenor House Antiques Fair, Dinner at St. John

Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Sissinghurst, Kent

Morning Rumination:
I had what one might call a phenomenal day–and I rarely use that term lightly. I mean, I awoke at 6. 30 am. I am now convinced that the reason I could never sleep beyond 5 am in my former flat at High Holborn was because it was much too warm at night. Not only was there a lack of cross-ventilation but I used to sleep under a down comforter (that’s American for a duvet) and I am sure that the combination caused me to wake up far too early each morning. It is also quieter here as traffic noises do not reach me in this secluded fold of Farringdon. At any rate, with the longer hours I am sleeping here, I wake up deeply refreshed. Though it is supposedly summer, this bedroom is far cooler and though day breaks as early as 4 am, I sleep like a baby till 7!

I read Harry Potter for an hour making swift progress. I am now only a hundred pages from the end of Book VI which leaves me just one more volume to finish–shall probably read that one next week in Oxford. At 7. 30, I checked my email, responded to notes that required immediate action and at 8.00 am, I entered my bathroom for a shower, prepared a toast and melted cheese sandwich (breakfast to go) and took the bus to my Bedford Square NYU campus as I needed to photocopy some forms that I filled out last night for my Oxford stint.

I had intended to spend the day at Sissinghurst ‘Castle’ and Garden in Kent but since the bus that went from the railway station in Kent to the garden only left twice a day (at 11. 45 am and 1. 45 pm), I had the time to print out a few of the many interviews that I have been transcribing in the past couple of weeks. However, soon I noticed that the toner of my printer in my office needed to be replenished and, on scanning the train schedule, I discovered that I would need to hurry to get to Charing Cross within the next 45 minutes to take the 10. 30 am train to Staplehurst.

I locked up my office quickly, caught the 29 bus to Charing Cross, bought a return day ticket (15 pounds round trip) and made the 10. 30 am train just in the nick of time. It was a very leisurely hour long ride to Staplehurst where I would connect to the public shuttle bus that would deposit me at the garden.

Train to Kent:
The train journey to Kent on South Eastern Railway was pleasance personified. En route, I read up City Secrets of London, a book that gives insider tips on the most interesting and unique bits and pieces of the city. Now that I have almost come to the end of my year in London, I do want to make sure I see the very last dregs of the city’s ‘sights’.

We passed by some of the most recognizable city landmarks (Hungerford Bridge, the London Eye–up close and looming ahead of me like a gigantic bicycle wheel–Tower Bridge, the Gherkin–indeed this was the first time I was traveling by train across the Thames and it was a pretty marvelous experience on what was another truly spectacular day).

When we left the city behind, we zoomed into a tunnel and it took us quite a while to get out of it…but when we did, we had magically left urbanity behind and emerged into the Kentish countryside that lay quiet and emerald bright in the golden light of day. Mile upon mile of velveteen lawn sprawled out before me as far as my eye could see punctuated only by the white conical hats of the rust oast houses in which the famous Kentish hops are dried for the brewing of its famous beers (Shepherd Naeme is the oldest brewery in the country and it is based in the medieval town of Faversham). Not for nothing is Kent called The Garden of England–indeed orchards that in autumn would yield the sweetest pears, apples and plums were plain to see as the train whizzed past and I could quite easily imagine the splendour of their spring-time blooms.

Arrival at Sissinghurst:
I arrived at Staplehurst in exactly an hour. There was a bus awaiting me at the station at 11. 30 am. when we pulled in. It is a quaint toy-like building seemingly in the middle of nowhere. In fifteen minutes’ time, after we’d driven through the town of Staplehurst (4 pounds round trip) with its exposed beam houses and medieval pubs, we were in the midst of rural Kent, fields with the occasional sheep wandering through them, proclaiming its farming pursuits. The signs to Sissinghurt Castle and Garden were prominent, proudly displayed by The National Trust that owns and maintains the property.

The History of Sissinghurst:
For students of contemporary English Literature, the name of Sissinghurst ought to be familiar (as indeed it has been to me for decades). Associated with novelist, gardening columnist and gardener, Vita Sackville-West, a prominent member of The Bloomsbury Group and a close friend of novelist Virginia Woolf, the home and garden have become legendary and a compulsory stop on the itinerary of any English garden-lover. I have read about this place and seen umpteen pictures in the many gardening magazines to which I have a subscription–both writers and gardeners have been fascinated with the lives and the outcome of its residents.

Born Victoria Sackville-West to an aristocratic family at the turn of the 20th century, ‘Vita’ as she became known, was raised in Knole House (which I shall be visiting later this week) in Kent, an old Elizabethan country estate that had been in her family since the time of Thomas Sackville, first Earl of Dorset to whom it had been gifted by Queen Elizabeth I. Because she was a female, Vita could not inherit property in those backward Victorian and Edwardian Ages. Knole House, therefore, passed on to other members of her family; but upon her marriage to Harold Nicholson, Vita bought Sissinghurst since she always wanted to live close to Knole and in the midst of the Kentish countryside.

Sissinghurst had been an abandoned property for at least a hundred years when it fell into the hands of Vita and Harold. It had last seen occupation during World War I when French soldiers were stationed there. It was they who thought that the remnants of the old Tudor mansion with its unique tower resembled a chateau and the term ‘Castle’ was used for the first time in connection with the property at Sissinghurst–a designation that stuck. It came to be known as Sissinghurst Castle and Garden– a fact that must have pleased the history and tradition-conscious Vita!

For the next three decades, Vita and Harold lived at Sissinghurst, raising their two sons, Nigel and Ben there (and their dog Rebecca), writing their novels, their reviews, literary criticism and biographies and…most famously, creating a garden. Indeed, the last was their mutual passion and it was Harold who designed the property in such a way as to create divisions within it–the divisions that have come to be termed ‘garden rooms’. These divisions were achieved through the use of tall hedges, box and yew borders, red brick walls (now covered with ivy, creepers and climbing roses) and bent wood edging.

Vita, for her part, planned the plantings with the idea of creating separate, individual gardens each themed differently (the Herb Garden, the Rose Garden, the Cottage Garden and, most well-known of all and possibly the reason so many people travel to Sissinghurst each year for a glimpse of it, the White Garden). It was for all these reasons that I have wanted so badly to visit Sissinghurst in season. I yearned to walk in the footsteps of this fascinating literary couple who left their mark on gardening history as well as created a sense of marital camaraderie and shared interests that have always appealed to the Romantic in me.

I have to say that I have visited Sissinghurst before–about four years ago, in the company of my cousin Cheryl and her husband David. But we had arrived there at the end of November when the garden had been closed for the year. All we could see then was the moat that surrounds the property and the twin turrets of the Tower. This time, I was determined to go in June, when I knew the gardens would be at their prime and, believe me, if I could have ordered the kind of day I would have liked for this expedition, I could not have chosen better!

Touring Sissinghurst:
Sissinghurst is open only three days a week–on Tuesdays, Saturdays and Sundays. I can just imagine the hordes that must descend upon the place at the weekends in the summer. If the number of people present today was anything to go by, well, I am glad I did not wait for the weekend but chose this odd day instead. There were numerous coach groups, comprised, no doubt, of garden club members. I loved the fact that so many of the visitors were elderly (the average age of the visitors was sixty if they were a day) and they were dressed in the ubiquitous wide-brimmed straw hats that made so many of them appear as if they would bend down any minute and start doing a bit of weeding themselves!

Apart from the clothing and headgear that is so distinctive a part of English garden visitors, there are the comments and I absolutely love to eavesdrop on them: “Oh, do you see those roses. Aren’t they extraordinary?” and “My word, is that clematis? How do those flowers grow so large?” and “Would you look at those delphiniums? Just lovely, they are!” Toddlers, meanwhile, stumbled among the foliage of a border bed and were lifted gingerly by mothers pushing strollers while gardening staff trundled along, their wheel barrows filled with the plants they’d uprooted to thin the beds.

I had the time of my life and realized as I flitted, butterfly-like, from one garden room to the next, that there is a limit to the love of one’s own company! For it is difficult to be in a garden and remain silent. I mean, for the many months that I have tolerated my own company in this city, I spent hours in museums or in art galleries in intellectual or in artistic contemplation of greatness. But, in a garden, where it is not the mind that is stimulated but the senses, one must simply express in verbal form, one’s delight in one’s surroundings. How is it possible, for instance, to pass by a clump of two-colored sweet peas and not exclaim at their uniqueness? How can one survey a batch of brand-new snow-white Icecap Delphiniums that are taller than I am and not gasp in disbelief? How can one possibly pass by irises, yellow as buttercups, and not wonder at the concealed stakes that must hold up those weighty sunshiny heads? And yet somehow, I managed to curtail my natural verbose impulses and simply imbibe as best I could the brilliance of the vision and the doggedness of the effort that had created so splendid a sight before my dazzled eyes.

So treading my way at leisure through the Purple Garden with its lavender and salvia and the first lupins I believe I have ever seen in my life, I entered the Library. This Tudor building (completely clad in red brick) was once the Stable and housed the horses who undoubtedly worked in the fields in centuries when Sissinghurst was a working farm. Harold and Vita converted it into the library, inserted windows, a gigantic stone Inglenood fireplace and loads of books that line the walls like soldiers. A quick peek at their titles showed me works by Horace Walpole, Herbert Spencer and William Blake. There is a striking oil-painted portrait of Vita above the mantelpiece–she is not a beautiful woman but she exudes breeding like her rose bushes exude fragrance–effortlessly! I was struck by the coziness created by the use of Turkish kilims on the floor and an abundance of lamps. The room just begged to be sat in and enjoyed, preferably with a good book in hand.

Outside, I walked towards the twin turrets of The Tower and found a line waiting to climb the spiral stairway to the top for what, I could only assume, would be thrilling views of the Kentish countryside. A few minutes later, I was curling myself around those stone-steps lined with portraits of Ottoman personalities that were inherited by Vita’s mother. En route, I passed by the most charming octagonal shaped room–Vita’s boudoir (though they call it her study–a term far too bland, I believe, for her flamboyant personality). This room was bagged by Vita as soon as she saw it and she cozied it up, as she had done the library, with a chaise-longue (for swift naps, no doubt, in-between her bouts of strenuous writing), a bent wood chair, a desk that was cluttered with writing paraphernalia and a black and white portrait of her dear friend Virginia Woolf, and in an ante-room, stacks of books on the wall. Virginia would, no doubt, have been envious of Vita’s Room of Her Own (as indeed I was)!

More twirling around the spiral steps and I was up at the summit where the scene spread out before me was indeed as thrilling as I expected. The garden beneath me looked like a patchwork quilt upon which Lilliputtians crawled for the folks inspecting them were suddenly shrunken in size. I could hardly stop myself from taking pictures of the property from on high.

And then I was down and finally in the White Garden (entered by the cutest wooden door set in a red brick wall) and had to pinch myself to believe that I was actually there in the flesh–for God knows how many times I have been here virtually and in my imagination. Could I imagine what this place looked like on a full moon night? Just as splendid as must the Taj Mahal, I thought, as I took in the sights of white shrub roses and tall white poppies (the first I have ever seen), white nicotiana whose fragrant heads brushed my trousers and white foxgloves, giant white peonies and white shoo fly flowers and there, standing like a proud focal point in the garden, the Icecap Delphiniums that the gardeners created only this year replacing what they called “poor Galahad” who now seems like a poor relation at the same wedding banquet! These towered above and dwarfed me (as you can see from the picture below).

It was time to pause to take in the flowery feast spread out before me and it was by a sheer stroke of luck that I found a shaded arbor that was planted with what was probably wisteria vine that had finished blooming. Seating myself at a table that seemed tailor-made for a picnic, I pulled out my sandwich and began to munch when I was joined by the sweetest pair of ladies you could imagine. I have written before about the basic unfriendliness of the English, particularly in gardens, where they stick to their own company and do not welcome intrusions.

A Chance Brush with the British Raj:
Well, these two ladies proved me wrong–you cannot generalize about anything, can you? Jeanie and Beatrice were friendly and warm and by their speech–both accent and diction–I could tell two things: they were ladies of quality and they had traveled. For it is only those who have had some kind of global exposure who can be so open to fellow travelers on the road of life. And then guess what? It was all revealed. Both these ladies who unbelievably were in their mid-80s (how on earth was that possible??!!) had been born in India and had lived a good part of their early lives in Calcutta–in fact, one of them had her daughter at the Elgin Hospital, she said–a lovely lady whom I met a little later. Their fathers were stationed in India during the fading days of the Raj and they knew that glorious eastern city in her colonial heyday. No, neither one of them had been back in at least a half century but they cherished the fondest memories of their days there. We had the nicest conversation–they were articulate and curious and had minds sharp as buttons! Glory be to them (and may I have that same inquisitiveness of spirit when I become a octogenarian)!

A half hour later, my sandwich all consumed, their daughters joined us–lovely women (probably cousins) who looked at if they might be my own contemporaries. So there I had it–a chance to finally speak to someone and to exclaim about the genius and synergistic creativity that combined in the Vita-Harold marriage and to talk about these ladies’ school days in Mussourie and Nainital and the diplomatic parties they attended in Calcutta as young brides! Indeed, these ladies whisked me back to the Edwardian world–not of Sissinghurst but of the Raj, half a globe way, and I felt privileged and honored to have been allowed to step into that space, if only for a little while.

Then, I was off, camera slung around my neck, to see the Rose Garden (many bushes were past their prime and in need of deadheading!) and the Cottage Garden and then the wide open meadow where bees buzzed and a dovecote stood sentinel all the way to the banks of the lovely deep moat that gave their Tower its castle antecedents and on to the Lime Alley punctuated at both ends by classical statuary and on to the Nuttery where I watched busy gardeners at work thinning herbaceous borders.

And I realized, all of a sudden, that what makes Sissinghurst so distinctive a garden is not the plantings and not the flowers and not the garden rooms and certainly not the pathways (some brick, some gravel) but it is the architecture–the old-fashioned and utterly charming collection of buildings (the Tower, the Tudor library, the cottages, the farm houses) that lie sprinkled among the acres that do it. It is the age that is proclaimed by their brick walls and slate roofs, the roses and clematis that ramble up their sides clinging ferociously for a centuries-old foothold, the aged wooden doors and rusty wrought iron handles, that give this space its mark of distinction. For, of course, I could take notes and replicate the selection of flowers that Vita advocated in my own gardens at Holly Berry House in Southport, Connecticut. But no, they would never look the same (even were I to reproduce the lushness of those peonies or the profusion of those hydrangeas–which I never could) because they would be viewed against the white clapboard siding of a typical New England colonial–not against the moss and lichen-covered stone walls of an Elizabethan outhouse! And, therein, lies the difference!

While the gigantic wrought-iron clock on the Tower (a present to Vita from Harold and her boys) tolled the lazy hours, I found sustenance at tea-time in a pot of National Trust Blend and a generous slice of coffee and walnut cake as I propped myself by a window to have the glory of the countryside spread out before me for free, as it slumbered silently on this spectacular afternoon. Then, I browsed in the shop, read snippets from the lives of the Nicholson family and promised myself that I would read Sissinghurst: An Unfinished Story by Adam Nicholson, their grandson, who still lives and writes on the property, following doggedly in the footsteps of his illustrious grandparents!

It was time for me to catch the 5. 30 bus returning to Staplehurst station which left me only about ten minutes to browse through the lovely exhibition on the first floor of the barn. I wish I had thought of doing this earlier for the exhibit was just heart warming–it contained Vita’s journals in her own handwriting with the accompanying printed pieces as they appeared in The Observer, the London newspaper in which she wrote a gardening column for decades. How could a female writer like myself not take inspiration from so unusual a woman? I am so glad I went to Sissinghurst and I cannot wait to get to Knole–I know that the two visits will work like a jigsaw puzzle to fit together all the missing pieces that comprise her privileged life.

Back in London for the Grosvenor House Art and Antiques Fair:
The train got me back to London in an hour, but absent-mindedly, I got off at London Bridge instead of Charing Cross. It was not a problem, however, for I jumped into the Tube and headed off to Marble Arch where I had made plans to meet my friend Stephanie at the Grosvenor House Art and Antiques Fair.

It was my friend Loulou who had given me a free pass to the event that admitted two and since I hadn’t seen Stephanie in ages and she knows how fond I am of antiques, I thought she would best appreciate a dawdle through the stalls with me. She was arriving from Richmond on the Tube and only reached there at 7. 30. The late evening opening was winding down but we did have a quick half hour to dally with the dealers and marvel at their wares–paintings by Frank Leger and Picasso, sculptures by the late Victorians including one of my favorites of all time–Drury’s The Age of Innocence priced at 60,000 pounds!–jewelry from Cartier and Boucheron, rare Persian carpets, Sevres porcelain and what American interior designer Mario Buatta (aka The Prince of Chintz!) jokingly calls “phooey Louis” were all available. If you had a stuffed wallet and some good taste at your disposal, you could walk home with gems–just like that! Stephanie exclaimed freely and loudly and we both wished we had more time to tread through these treasures. But at 8.oopm, the curtain came down on another day of dealing and we made our way outside to find the buses that got us back to my flat.

Dinner at St. John in Farringdon:
For I took Stephanie with me to Farringdon to deposite my bag in my flat before we set off for dinner in the neighborhood. She loved the loft space I currently occupy as she took in the Modern Art on its walls–the Andy Warhol Marilyn Monroes (miniatures of which we had seen at the Art Fair only to receive sticker-shock!). It was only ten minutes later, that we left in search of dinner as she was starving and I suggested the St. John Bar and Restaurant that lies right opposite my building. Though we did not have reservations, the maitre d’ was able to squeeze us in and we spent the next couple of hours catching up and eating a most interesting meal.

As it happened, we got into conversation with an American foodie couple from Boston who sat right besides us at the next table (put a pack of Americans together and the conversation starts flowing, doesn it it?). Hard to believe that they had come to London only to eat at this restaurant! I had just chanced to find a tidbit about this place in the book I had been reading but to be given an endorsement as huge as this was stunning. It seems the restaurant is world-famous (it is ranked Number Two in the world) and is known for its “Nose to Tail Eating” which means that its menu features parts of game that no other restaurant would serve–literally from nose to tail. With a two-volume recipe book collection to its name, this restaurant is a star. With that introduction, we ought not to have been surprized by a menu that included Bone Marrow and Parsley Salad, a special of Lamb’s Neck, Oxtail (which features the entire tail), a deboned pigeon and snails with courgettes!

Stephanie and I decided to play it somewhat safer! For appetizers, she got Crabmeat on Toast while I got the Roast Pork and Rabbit Terrine (both very good and superbly seasoned and spiced) and for a main, we decided to share what we thought would be pot roast of “Gloucester Old Spot” as we get it back in the States, only to discover that it was nothing more special that roast ham served with stewed peas! At 20 pounds, we both thought it was atrociously priced and Stephanie even declared that her mother’s ham was far better than this! By the way, the bone marrow and parsley salad was no longer available nor was the terrine we also ordered and finally when it came time for ‘pudding’, I ordered the elderflower sorbet only to be told that they had also run out of it! Instead, they brought us a strawberry sorbet (which they said was free of charge) but which neither of us wanted anyway and so declined. Instead we shared the chocolate terrine which was delicious but in my opinion, much too firm–I think I’d have preferred a creamier texture. At about fifty pounds for the meal (I had a glass of red house wine, Steph had a Diet coke), we thought we did not get our money’s worth at all. Had our American companions not hyped it up so much, perhaps we would not have been so sorely disappointed…but perhaps we should give it another try before writing it off so completely.

A few minutes later, I was kissing Stephnie goodbye as she returned to the Tube and at 11.30, I was winding down at the end of what had been, as I said at the beginning, a truly phenomenal day.

Towers, Gallows, Churches, Markets–Another Fascinating Walk

Tuesday, June 9, 2009
London

I am sorry to have to spend so much time analyzing the vagaries of my sleep patterns, but they never cease to amaze me. Throughout the winter, when most folks tend to sleep in, I was awaking at the crack of dawn–even before dawn had cracked, in most days, i.e. at 4 and 5 and 6 am! Now, when summer is almost upon us and light appears in the eastern night sky before 5am, I sleep curled up like a baby until 7 and 8 am!!! This is the weirdest thing and I have never in my life experienced anything like it. Much as I am delighted that I am finally sleeping long and well, I am also sorry to lose the several productive hours I had at my PC in bed long before the rest of the world stirred.

At any rate, I awoke at 7 today, read Potter for an hour, called my parents in Bombay and spent almost an hour on the phone catching up with them about so many things, then sat to blog about my day yesterday. This took me a good part of the morning and it was about 11. 30 when I got out of bed!!! Since it was too late for breakfast, I fixed myself a brunch (toasted parma ham and blue cheese sandwich with some good coffee) and got back to my PC right after that to call my cousin Blossom in Madras. That chat when on for ages, then emailing back and forth with Chriselle in the States (after a long chat with Llew in the morning–we’re all about her wedding plans right now) and I found that it was about 4 pm when I finished all the things I wanted to do–most of which involved scheduling my projects for the next few weeks.

With time running out and my return to the States becoming imminent with every passing day, I feel pressured into completing all the items on my To-Do List as well as making time for my library research and for drafting the lecture that I have been invited to give to the international graduate students at Oxford in the middle of July! So you can imagine that I am beginning to feel as if I should make every second count–as if I haven’t been doing that for the past one year already!

The end result is that I have almost given up the idea of doing the Homes and Gardens Tour that I had intended as I find that most of the places I want to visit are way out of the public transport tracks and would take me ages to reach if I used the National Express coach services. Instead, I have decided to try and see just a couple of the gardens that can be reached by local train lines from London (such as Sissinghurst and Wisley Royal Garden) and to see the estates and mansions that lie sprinkled along the Thames. When I am in Oxford, during the third week of this month, I shall find it easier to reach places in the Cotswolds and in Wiltshire and at that time, I can try to see Blenheim Palace, Kelmscott Manor and the Hidcote Manor Gardens. So major changes in plans for me mean that next week I ought to be able to spend a whole week at the British Library with documents that will aid my understanding of negotiations that were carried out between the officials of the departing British Raj and the representatives of the Anglo-Indian Association.

I am, in a way, relieved that I have modified my plans. Everyone thought I was idiotic to aim at so ambitious an itinerary and I can now see why. At any rate, with so many wonderful places to cover that are so much closer to London, it makes no sense to be spending long hours in coaches, stuck in traffic when I would rather be out on my two feet exploring the country. So with those alterations in my plans all set, I could take a shower, dress and go off to cover one more self-guided walk in my book–this one entitled “Wanderings and Wizards”.

Wanderings and Wizards Walk:
There was much more than wanderings and wizards on this walk which turned out to be a sampler of sorts for it offered everything that the city of London has been known legendarily to possess–marvelous Wren churches, spooky graveyards, teeny-tiny tucked-away gardens, dim alleyways, atmospheric pubs and even a gigantic Victorian market–Leadenhall, so-called because its roof was made of lead and glass in the 19th century.

So, let’s begin at the beginning: I started off at Tower Hill (took another old Routemaster 15 bus there–I will never tire of the thrill of riding in these relics from a past era) and arrived at the Tower Hill Underground Station from where I walked across Trinity Square Gardens to arrive at the Memorial to the members of the Merchant Marine Corps who gave up their lives for their country–and then to a far older monument–the Memorial to the many men and women who were beheaded from 1381 to 1747.

The Tower of London is right across the busy road and I could only imagine what the last minutes of these poor ill-fated individuals might have been like as they made the journey from their prison cells in the Tower to this spot. Beheadings and hangings were public spectacle in those awful days and people gathered in vast numbers to take in these gruesome scenes. It was in 1747 that the last person (80-year old Lord Lovatt) was beheaded–thank God for little mercies! The monument is a poignant reminder of the injustice that so many of them faced in their last few years (individuals such as Sir Thomas More, for instance, who died fighting for their beliefs, their faith and their ideals, as heroes not as cowards).

When one considers the circumstances in which they died, it is curious (and I do not see the humor) in a pub across the street that is named The Hung, Drawn and Quartered!–but this is British humor, I guess. This pub stands right opposite the Church of All Hallows By-The-Tower (where I attended a recent Sunday Eucharist service) from which Samuel Pepys, the famous diarist who recorded the details of the Great Fire of London of 1566, watched the city turn into a bonfire–a scene of great desolation. There is a bust to his memory in a small garden in Seething Lane opposite the church.

Just a few steps away is the churchyard of St. Olav’s with its eerie stone gate that has three skulls and crossbones adorning its pediment. Apparently, these were designed to keep body snatchers away for it was not unusual for thieves to dig up fresh bodies right after they had been buried–these were sold to hospitals that needed them for the instruction of their student doctors as part of anatomy lessons. Inside, I found St. Olav’s to be equally spooky and I took a quick tour of the place before dashing out again. Somehow, with all the ghostly tales that I am reading as part of these tours, I feel rather uneasy in spaces that have not another soul in sight. I do not want my own brush with any of London’s ghosts and spectres, if I can help it.

Past St. Olav’s, the tour took me to very narrow alleys and unlit lanes that must have been the breeding ground for thieves in the not-too-distant past. They were reminiscent of the novels of Dickens and it was only when I was back on the main thoroughfares that I felt comfortable again. Office-goers were hurrying homeward though it was only 4. 45 and I soon realized that with the newspapers reporting a strike by Tube staff starting this evening, they were eager to get home before they found themselves stranded.

I pressed on, however, arriving at the splendid entrance to Leadenhall Market, a truly magnificent piece of Victorian architecture. It is a trifle reminiscent of Borough Market and Spitalfields but its fresh coat of paint makes it seem somehow much more striking. Whether this face lift is owed to its use by Hollywood producers of the Harry Potter films or not, I do not know, but the location was the setting for the scenes in Diagon Alley and there is actually a shop front in vivid blue that was the entrance of The Leaky Cauldron pub in the film. I enjoyed pottering (if you will forgive the pun!) around the market and its many shops that appeared like cubby-holes in the wall.

Right past this antiquated building is another that stands in peculiar contrast to it–the building that houses Lloyd’s, the British insurance firm. Only its building is like an industrial factory what with its steel facade, its glass elevators that ply along the exterior and its pipes that run the length and breadth of the structure. It reminded me very much of the building that houses the Centre Georges Pompidour in Paris, the location of the city’s collection of Modern Art. As anyone who has been reading this blog regularly knows, this form of Modernism is not my cup of tea at all and I was glad to leave the premises, though I rather marvelled at its design.

That was when I arrived at a series of churches, one after the other, that stood in small patches of green studded with ancient grave stones. There was the Church of St. Peter Upon Cornhill and then the Church of St. Michael. I have, by now, seen so many churches on these walks, that I have pretty much entered and perused all of the work of Christopher Wren that exhibits his attempts to rebuild the main houses of Christian worship in the center of the city after the Great Fire.

By the time I arrived at Bank Underground Station, commuters looked deeply harried and I could see why. Trains had already stopped running and I abandoned my intentions of getting to the National Theater to try to exchange some tickets that I am currently holding. Instead I did the sensible thing and hopped into the first 25 bus I saw that got me safely back home where I spent the rest of the evening writing this blog, fixing and eating my dinner (Chicken Kiev with soup and toast with chocolate mousse for dessert), making transport inquiries online for my intended trip to Highgate and Hampstead tomorrow and reading some more Potter before I retired for the day.

Seeing Samantha Bond in Stoppard’s Arcadia and Liberty of London

Saturday, June 6, 2009
London

In keeping with my resolution to always get substantial work done before I goof off, I awoke at 7. 30 am, read some Potter, proofread my blog, caught up with my email, then stopped for a spot of breakfast–make that a whole cup of coffee and some toast with preserves. I am trying to finish up all the odds and ends of food stuff left over from my pantry supplies as I do not want to take any of it back to the States. And time is flying…

Then, it was back to the drawing board for me as I began transcribing an interview I did with Gerry in Wembley. This neighborhood is quiet, quieter than Holborn, if that is at all possible. While Holborn did carry the occasional screech of tyres up to my third floor window even on weekend mornings, I do not hear a squeal here at all–the better to get my work done.

It was while I was hammering away at my PC that the email came–offering me free tickets to see Tom Stoppard’s Arcadia. This is a play I had toyed with the idea of seeing for a while–not only do I think Stoppard is quite the most brilliant living playwright in England (I speak here with knowledge of The Real Thing, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead and, of course, his unforgettable Oscar Award-winning screenplay for Shakespeare in Love)–but the play stars Samantha Bond whose performance in Distant Shores I had loved when I saw her play the very feisty wife of a physician (played by Peter Davison) on a PBS channel in the States. So, when the offer of free tickets fell into my lap, I grabbed it. A few calls on my cell phone and I found company–my buddy Rosemary agreed to drop all her scheduled cleaning chores to go with me (I didn’t have to do too much arm-twisting!) and we decided to meet at the Duke of York Theater at 2. 15 pm. This gave me enough time to have a relaxed shower, get back to my transcription, dress, and leave the house at 1. 15 pm to pick up tickets outside Covent Garden at 1. 45 pm.

I have yet to figure out which bus stops are closest to my new roost, which routes they serve and how to make connections–but I am sure all that will be sorted soon. What I did find when I set out was that the entire Smithfield Market area was barricaded. Apparently, there were to be some major bicycle races there in the evening. I did find an odd Number 11 stop by (all buses were re-routed) and hopped off at Covent Garden and, against all my expectations, made it there on time to pick up the tickets.

London is just crawling with tourists right now and the attractions are buzzing with buskers. It is difficult to cut through the crowds and though, at most times, I do enjoy the travel energy associated with these folks (God knows I have enough of it myself!), I have to say it was annoying this afternoon.

However, I did pick up the tickets and a hearty ham and mustard sandwich from M&S Simply Food which I munched en route to the Theater on St. Martin’s Lane which kept the hunger pangs at bay.

Rosemary was waiting for me in the lobby. It wasn’t long before we found our seats and chinwagged until the curtain went up. She had bought a program while awaiting my arrival and I was glad she did. Not only did it have an extraordinary amount of information on the actors, but it was full of notes about the history of landscaping in England as the play is themed around the changing fashions in English garden design from the classical to the naturalism of Lancelot (Capability) Brown to the Picturesque style that followed. Hannah, in the play, speaks of Brown who was influenced by Claude Lorraine (French landscape painter) who was, in turn, influenced by Virgil (Italian medieval poet). She says:

“English landscape was invented by gardeners imitating foreign painters who were evoking classical authors. The whole thing was brought home in the luggage from the Grand Tour”.

These have to be among the most striking lines in the play and a perfect example of Stoppard’s erudition–and this is only one example. . Of course, those of us who have kept up with the trends beyond the 19th century know that in the 20th, English garden design continued to evolve with Gertrude Jekyll and Edwin Lutyens collaborating to create the concept of Garden Rooms–a venture in which they were joined by the redoubtable Vita Sackville-West who presented us with her famous White Garden at Sissinghurst.

I know I digress when I say that perhaps it was fitting that I should see this play the very weekend I am beginning to make plans for a week-long tour of the Grand Country Estates and Gardens of England. This is another one of the items on my List of Things To-Do before leaving England and since June is possibly the best month to visit English gardens, I can think of no reason to waste any more time. Besides, my friend Loulou in whose fabulous loft I am currently staying, was just telling me only a few days ago that she has to get her garden ready for a local garden club that is about to visit her estate garden in Suffolk. For she is a dedicated gardener and if her home (whose en suite spare room I am currently occupying while she spends most of her week in Suffolk) is anything to go by, her garden must be ethereal! I can’t wait to take her up on her offer to visit her there and see it for myself. By comparison, I am sure that my Connecticut garden, a tour of which is on my website, must seem like a blooming traffic island!

So there was I familiarising myself with the vocabulary of English landscape design from ‘hermitages’ and ‘hahas’ to ‘gazebos’ and ‘wilderness’ as much as I grappled with the more esoteric aspects of the script that derive from mathematics about which, I have to admit, an abiding ignorance–one of the characters deals with chaos theory and utilizes it to help figure out the grouse population on the estate. Infused into this rather abundant pastiche of allusions are those from literature–from Lord Byron (who is central to the plot) and Lady Caroline Lamb, to Mrs. Radcliff and Robert Southey–so that the creative arts constantly intersect the sciences. Newton is thrown in for good measure as are Euclid and Fermat and Carnot. Stoppard is nothing if not intellectual, so go prepared for a cerebral roller coaster ride in the theater.

After you have stopped gasping at the verbal and conceptual pyrotechnics of this play, you will have a chance to be swept away by the engaging performances especially of Bernard Nightingale (played very energetically by Neil Pearson whom we have all seen in the Bridget Jones films among other things) and Bond herself (who brings to this role the same mixture of sensuality and physicality I had grown to love in Distant Shores). The set design lends itself perfectly to the juxtaposition of two different eras (the early Romantic Age and our own early 21st) and the comings and goings of historic and more contemporary characters who waltz around each other literally and figuratively on the stage. Prepare to be enchanted.

Inside Liberty of London:
When the play was over, we went our separate ways. Having equipped myself with a map and bus guide, I found my way to Liberty of London which is on Great Marlborough Street just off Regent Street but closer to the Oxford Circus (not the Piccadilly) end. And what a building it turned out to be! Just charming! I mean, I had seen pictures of this store and was prepared for a Tudor building. But how cleverly the space inside has been employed. It is simply stunning. I have yet to read up a bit about the history of the building. Is it a genuine Tudor building? Or a Victorian masquerade made in imitation of the Tudor idiom? God knows…and I will find out, I know, soon enough from the garrulous Web. But for the moment, I have to say I was delighted I stepped in.

It really is a London institution and I cannot for the life of me explain why I haven’t been in here before! Why is it that I have always visited Harrods? Why is Selfridges always on my list of stores to sample? Well, better late than never—so I guess I can say Been There, Done That to Liberty to London and tick another item off my List. Needless to say, everything was screamingly pricey, but then what did I expect if not sticker-shock? And this is perhaps the very first store in which I have ever browsed where every possible precaution has been taken against those endowed with sticky fingers. I mean as if the CCTV thing (such a fixture in London) were inadequate, there are locks and long telephone coil-like extensions attached to all the big label items! Watch out Winona!

Nor did I walk out empty handed. Indeed I was presented with some pretty nice samples–Dr. Perricone’s skin care products for face and eye area–the deep penetrating night creams, said to work wonders in two weeks. I’ve seen the good doctor peddle his wares on the box in the States but never have I seen his range in a department store. Well, try them I will. Hopefully something lovely will come out of my gallivanting into Liberty!

I had half a mind to undertake one of my walking tours in the St. Paul’s Cathedral area but then it had turned nippy and I wasn’t adequately dressed (nor did I have the right walking shoes on) for a gad about the graveyards of the East End. I decided to get home instead and finish transcribing my interview as I have another full day ahead of me tomorrow (a Thames-side visit to Osterley House and Park), so I figured I’d better conserve my stamina for the hike that lies ahead.

The area around Smithfield Market had been transformed. Crowds had gathered to cheer the cyclists on and provided me with the opportunity to take a few pictures as the competitors warmed up. I do not believe that this sports meet has a name yet, but the commentator kept raving about the fact that it is becoming more popular each year and poised to take its place soon as one of the capital’s most exciting events. Well, if that ever happens, I will be able to say that I caught the races while the event was still in its infancy. For I did stand around and take it all in and then I continued to stay abreast of what was going on as the commentary floated up to my loft home while I ate my dinner.

Yes, indeed, back home, I ate an early dinner (chicken noodle soup out of a packet and pasta with Chocolate mousse out of a pot) and I returned to my room to continue my transcription. When it was all done, I stopped to brush and floss my teeth, get ready for bed and write this blog.

I’d say it was rather a productive Saturday, wouldn’t you?

June 8, 2009:
PS: Did have a chance to read up a bit about the history of Liberty of London and this is what I have found out (Courtesy of The English Home magazine):
Liberty of London was founded by Arthur Lasenby Liberty in 1875. “The creation of a recognisable look for the shop was always a conscious aim of its founder and his most shrewd move was the building of a Tudor shop, which was completed in 1924. This addition meant that the building itself became the shop’s trademark and a symbol of its founding values”.

I would also agree with writer Harriet Paige who says, in the same magazine, that:
” And it is perhaps the buildings themselves–Liberty’s timber-frame structure, Fortnum and Mason’s eccentric time-piece and Harrod’s Edwardian frontage–that has ensured Britain’s great department stores have become true London landmarks”.

I mean, I think this is absolutely true. Other than Macy’s which does have an iconic building all its own on an individual block at 34th Street and Sixth Avenue, none of the New York department stores stand out in any way in terms of their buildings. Each one looks exactly like the other–there is no character, no individuality, indeed no imagination whatsoever that has gone into their making. This is what, I suppose, has always made England so enthralling to me and the States…well, so blah!