Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Beatlemania II

Mathew Street is where much of the Beatles stuff is concentrated. Particularly venerated is the Cavern Club, where they performed some 292 times. Alas, the Cavern Club was torn down some years back, but an Exact Replica in Pretty Much the Exact Same Place Give or Take is there. Bricks from the old Cavern Club now comprise a Wall of Fame of groups that performed at the Cavern over the years, an impressive lot. About every two feet down the street is a bronze plaque asserting something like "On this spot, between acts, on the evening of November 23, 1962, George Harrison re-tied his left shoe; confirmed by his then-agent, Hamish Hornsby."
Mathew Street







The Wall of Fame








I think she was squeezing his bum; she says not

Exact Replica of the Cavern Club





Large display explaining exactly where the Cavern Club was, and is, employing 
historical photographs, personal testimony, etc.































Beatlemania I

We were not really big Beatles fans, but always did like their music. The Museum down the street from the Walker had a special "Beat Goes On" exhibition on the history of Liverpool pop music, which is a lot more than the Beatles, so we visited it, for starters. Then, we had to find the Eleanor Rigby statue. See illustrations. Vicki says this is positively the last such photo she is taking. Liverpudlian passers-by did give us quite a look.
"The North's Top Group"











Screaming back at an audience







The "new look" suits










Paul's pants; read text (below)











Paul's pants text







Me consoling Eleanor Rigby; one of the two reasons I especially wanted to visit 
Liverpool

But she was inconsolable; I looked for Father MacKenzie, but he was away 
writing the sermon no one would hear; especially me























(The opportunity to meaningfully use the word "Liverpudlian" (=def. a resident of Liverpool), a very cool word, in my estimation, is the other reason for visiting).

Mersey, Mersey

We almost decided not to visit Liverpool but are glad we did. It's a city with important history, the museums are good, the downtown vibrant, and, there's always the Beatles. After the Walker Museum and environs, we walked into the main shopping district, which was crowded like Xmas, then to the Prince Albert Pier, then to the Cavern district on Mathew Street. We prepared ourselves for the experience by listening the night before to the entire collected works of the Beatles while parked outside a Tesco in St. Helens (a suburb).
It did not start well; the Kensington approach consists of block-after-block of 
(tastefully) boarded-up houses, awaiting "regeneration"; Liverpool has a long 
history of economic ups and downs






2008 European Capital of Culture








The Walker Museum, where we spent much of Saturday morning







Hogarth's portrait of his friend, the actor David Garrick, as Richard III







There were plenty of famous paintings, including the obligatory Rembrandt 
self-portrait (he must have done thousands of them); "The Punishment of 
Lust," by an obscure 19th century Italian, caught my eye; it was the mountains, 
I guess, if not the levitation







"A horse is a horse, unless, of course..."









Among the interesting buildings downtown, on the harbor










































































Saturday, October 10, 2009

Arbor Low

One of the megalithic sites I first read about, way back in the late 70s, was Arbor Low, in Derbyshire. The name stays with you, somehow. It is a sizeable henge, with ditch, big circle, a causeway and a little tumulus (Gib Hill) a few hundred yards away. The whole thing is a kind of Avebury/Silbury Hill on smaller scale, in limestone. As with Avebury, the Christians tried very hard to take this one down, and here, unlike Avebury, they succeeded. Not one of the stones now stands. But they all lay where they fell, and despite being limestone and melting away, it takes little imagination to see a very impressive circle, of interesting stone, large, and with associated peripherals. It is on a farm out in the boonies, several miles from Bakewell (not Half-Baked).

Places like Arbor Low were not protected, from Christians
or antiquarians or farmers, until the Antiquities Act of 1882;
at Arbor Low, the "VR" (Victoria Regina) posts circle the
monument itself; damn, I'd like to have one of those for my
garden!






Arbor Low; imagine all the stones up-right








Scale...big stones







Ditch and henge segment







Mental note: when we build our stone circle, we'll want to
use metamorphic rock






Gib Hill, a few hundred yard away from the henge














































































Chatsworth Gardens

Chatsworth dates from the 16th century, and, of course, there were gardens then too. The great breakthrough was in the 19th century, with the landscape architect and gardener Joseph Paxton. He made his name at Chatsworth, and went on to do the Crystal Palace in London, Central Park in NYC, and some other things. The conservatory at Chatsworth was one of his greatest achievements, a football field sized glass-enclosed and heated indoor garden (at this latitude?!) that could grow all manner of sub-tropical and tropical plants. It is gone now, a victim of wars and war economies, but much of his work...the rose garden, the flower garden, the cook's garden, the pine forest, the maze, the  grotto, and most especially the incredible rock garden (acres of it! giant boulders heaped on one another in amazing shapes), remains and could take a whole day to explore just in themselves. Unfortunately, or not, our camera battery died in the midst of the gardens, and I had forgotten to bring the spare.
Grand canal and fountain from House











The Wall here is an enclosed heated wall that supports larger arboreal specimens 
not-native to the climate; a remnant of Paxton's great conservatory









At the top of the Cascade










The Cascade, down to the House











In the Gardens...







Looking toward the Maze








Beginning the Rock Garden








My definition of a cool place...Missoula, Chamonix, Nelson (South Island, 
NZ)... includes the presence, on clear, calm days, of parasails, even the 
motorized types...











































































Friday, October 9, 2009

Chatsworth House

We have seen a great number of royal and other palaces and great houses in the past several months. For me, Chatsworth was the best, all-around, so far. It is by no means the largest, oldest, most important, historically, architecturally or artisitically. It's art is just so-so. But it's been lived in and cared for by the same family for 16 generations, and everything in the place is authentic, real, and genuine. No "period" stuff. The care is evident in the narrative and in the renovations now underway. And the gardens...Jospeph Paxton's gardens are not nearly what they were in Victorian times...the Crystal Palace had its origins here....but they are by far the best and most interesting I have seen yet, anywhere. I'll have to do a separate post on them.
View from the gardens









Entry hall; "apotheosis of Julius Caesar" on the ceiling (huh?)












State bedroom; reserved for the Monarch









Really nice character log in the study











Library











Dining room, where Queen Victoria had her first meal with the 
grown-ups, age 13












Now there's an antler chandelier!







Music room








Sculpture hall










Artsy shot of the fountains and grand canal











In the gift shoppe: one of the items you see all over the UK
is the "Keep Calm and Carry On" saying from WWII, on
mugs, fridge magnets, mousepads, and everywhere else...

































































































Thursday, October 8, 2009

Yorkshire Notes

We are now in Derbyshire, on a hill lay-by between (beautiful) Bakewell and Arbor Low, moving back to the left side, toward Wales. We'll be zig-zagging all the way back to Dover, I suppose. It's really a small island. Today we saw incredible Chatsworth, about which I'll write tomorrow. For now, some notes vaguely related to our second visit to Yorkshire:

1) In Yorkshire, on the Bronte Way walk, I had what I considered the nearly perfect day-hike lunch. First, thin-sliced Spam ("Some Parts Are Mammal"), fried in its own glop until golden brown. Although popularized by the Pythons, it is not really the British delicacy. Too many hikes in Hawaii have inclined me to it. Serving suggestion: don't read the label. Second, a chunk of Normandy cheese, accompanied by a few gulps of red French wine; in my case, Chateau de Tescaux, a very recent vintage, I suspect. Third, a hard-boiled egg (remove shell). Fourth, a handful of salted almonds. And, fifth, a confection, in my case, a slab or two of Romney's Kendal Mint Cake. (Make sure you have finished the wine). Mint cake ingredients are: sugar, glucose, and oil of peppermint. Nothing else. I love the way they sort sugar out from the glucose. Unlike all other British foods, there are no other nutritional notes. Nothing about daily requirements of triglycerides or red dye #4. Apparently Romney's was great-grand-fathered in, or else the appreciative 1953 quote from Sir Edmund Hillary on the package was good enough. It was good enough for me. Hillary...whom we encountered in Nepal and then in New Zealand, and now here, if only on a candy wrapper...really ties things together.

2) Driving in Yorkshire, especially in and around Haworth. The Dales are pretty, but driving up and down these deep valleys can be harrowing, especially in a 22 foot 3 ton van. The roads are rarely more than 12 feet wide, often less, never a shoulder, grades less than 20% aren't even marked (seriously), people park all over the streets, there is always a bus or "heavy goods vehicle" coming at you, there are bicyclists and pedestrians and dogs, and, invariably, there is always a woman and a baby carriage between you and the oncoming heavy goods vehicle, which is in a hurry, on the 24% grade turning road. None of this is hyperbole.

I have been coping, despite driving on the left side of the vehicle, contrary to British custom, and left side of the road. Vicki absolutely freaks out whenever we start the motor and stays that way for the duration of the trip. She braces for impact at the sight of any vehicle. In just four months she has nearly finished the bottle of raspberry liquer; normally it would have taken four years or fourteen years. Tom, our navigator, only complicates matters by consistently routing us through the CBD of any hamlet/village/town/city/metropolis we are near, consistently also on the smallest, steepest, and most exposed roads available. His answer to every query or command, and the first thing he says whenever we turn him on, is "turn around when possible." Turning the Grey Wanderer around, on these roads, is not always my first answer. But we are coping. Fortunately, British motorists, like those we have encountered elsewhere in northern Europe, are consistently patient, couretous, considerate, and smart. I hope they don't mind too much our blundering among them.

3) We did not visit Peniston, and we did not sample the pudding.

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

The Bronte Way

This is Vicki's third visit to Haworth--she's the Bronte fan and will tell her own story--and she has always wanted to walk the Bronte Way, out the valley from Haworth, past the falls and bridge, and up to Top Withins. So we did this Wednesday, seven miles, a relatively beautiful fall day. (Tuesday was a perfectly dreadful and dreary day, cold and raining, perfect for seeing the Parsonage Museum and Haworth.)

======================================
Vicki adds:

Haworth, England October 7, 2009


Today I finally did something that I have wanted to do for over twenty years ever since my first trip to the Bronte Parsonage in 1989. Today I walked the 7.5 miles to the ruins of Top Withens farm—the setting of Wuthering Heights. It was a beautiful day with much sun and temperatures in the 50s. I had prepared myself by reading both Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights in the last two weeks and spending yesterday on my third tour of the parsonage, museum and church. As one of the men said when we passed him on the way “It's a fine day for a literary pilgrimage.”

It was a beautiful path through the bracken and heather hardly changed since Charlotte, Emily and Anne walked it. Though now it is marked the Bronte Way with stops at the Bronte Waterfall, Bronte Bridge and even a rest in the stone chair that Charlotte would sit in for inspiration. A mile past the waterfall is the farmhouse that inspired Wuthering Heights—abandoned since the 30s and now roofless with some of the walls falling in. I came away with a stone and some heather and many photographs.

On the way back I could not help remembering how I first felt when reading those books in my early teens. How awestruck I was that love could be so passionate and strong between two souls that nothing in heaven, hell or earth could separate them. How awestruck I am today in reading them again for the upteenth time that these women living in a what we would consider the most bleak and lonely circumstances could build worlds even more real than reality itself. It was a literary pilgrimage and I have been well rewarded for my efforts.
Bronte Falls










Curious carvings on the back of the Stone Seat (click to enlarge); the real thing?







The Stone Seat









Vicki in the Stone Seat

The Bronte Bridge

Moors, from the heights







Top Withins, popularly known, even by the Tourist
Information types, as "Wuthering Heights"









Vicki at Top Withins










The fine print