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The Long Post About London Rain

October 21, 2008 Kim Tracy Prince 15 Comments

Day 2 of Mommy’s Trip to London:

At the end of Day 1, I slept a deep sleep marred only by the freakish clanging of clangy things in the little courtyard below my hotel room’s windows at 6AM. Back at home I would seethe for a few minutes and then throw the window open and curse and yell at the offender (which is usually a dog, and therefore it does not ever work), but here I was too tired to do anything about it, and besides, what could I do without being The Ugly American Traveler? I’m sure if a local were to call out the noisemaker, she would say “Excuse me, but would you mind discontinuing that unfortunate racket? Thank you very much, cheerio!” I’m never in that polite of a mood before the first thing in the morning. Frankly, I don’t think I’m ever as nice in real life as Londoners inspire me to be.
Eventually, though, I did stumble out of bed and I took advantage of the free continental breakfast at the hotel, which bewildered me at first because the menu had things on it like “Weetabix” and “porridge,” which I’ve only seen in Goldilocks and the Three Bears. Not willing to chance it, I had coffee, orange juice, and a mixture of shredded wheat, yogurt, and jam. And toast. With jam. Then I snuggled up in the drawing room on a fluffy couch to read about the project for which I was scheduled to interview the Big Movie Star that evening.

And then I had hours to kill, so I wandered down to Marble Arch and boarded a Big Bus Tour. This tour cost 24 pounds and takes you all around London, with either a tour guide or a recording that you listen to with headphones. You can get off at any stop to check out the local attraction, be it a true tourist attraction like Madame Tussaud’s or a shopping or theater district.

I didn’t have a lot of time, so I had to choose wisely. I stared wide-eyed around me as the bus made its way around the gray city that was heavy with clouds and threatening rain all day. I did not worry, because I had a teeny tiny umbrella in my purse, and I was ready to use it. After all, it hasn’t rained in Los Angeles in a very long time, so long that the idea of rain is like magic to Kyle, who can’t wait to use an umbrella for the first time, and to stomp in puddles.

I wasn’t moved to get off the bus until St. Paul’s Cathedral. It was strange the way I literally felt a wordless calling to see the inside of this famous church. I’m not very religious despite my dabbling in the Jesus Moms Club. Every Sunday I say “we should go to church,” and sometimes we actually do, but it’s such an ordeal that when Mass is over Stewart and I often feel like we’ve done our duty for a while and don’t have to go back again until we feel guilty enough.
What is that about the Catholic guilt? Do other religions have that? It’s like we’re taught Guilt as a study topic in catechism or something. Maybe it was the guilt that drove me into the Cathedral, but whatever it was, it made me clamber off the bus with an urgency and an excitement I simply cannot explain.
Once inside the majestic building I was overcome with emotion. So many years of religious worship took place on that very site. Mass was actually in session, and when the priest made the sign of the cross I swear my body responded and did the same although I did not consciously go through the motions.
A little sign that read “The Whispering Gallery” pointed to a small door that led to a spiral staircase. A bigger sign counted the steps and warned people who are not in shape to NOT TRY CLIMBING THE STAIRCASE. A billion-year-old staircase built by tiny monks? How could I resist?
I climbed the staircase.

Two hundred and fifty seven steps up a winding nautilus of stairs, I came out on a ledge that rings the interior of the dome of St. Paul’s Cathedral. The “whispering” part of the gallery refers to the fact that a whisper on one side of the dome can be heard 300 feet across on the other side. I’m not sure if that’s actually true, because I did not try it. I was too busy remembering that I am afraid of heights, while also being dazzled by the artwork inside the towering ceiling. One can climb up to the tippity top, but like I said, afraid of heights.

Approriately, I headed down. The level below ground is called The Crypt, and is the resting place of hundreds of distinguished English figures. Each grave or memorial, many of them for soldiers, is marked by a beautiful and creepy sculpture or tablet. Absurdly, just off to the side of the crypt are a cafeteria and gift shop. I bought a magnet with a cool picture of the nautilus view of the staircase that will be meaningful only to me, and a CD of Christmas songs recorded in the Cathedral by the choir.

I found the bus again and continued snapping pictures of places I’d like to see later with my Palm Treo camera phone. When I get back to the States and put my American life back together, I will show them to you. And when I ever come back to London, I will visit those places.

I chose to get off the bus again at Buckingham Palace. From the bus point of view, it was nothing much. Just the side of a drab building and a golden gate. I couldn’t visit London without seeing something so iconic as the front of the palace with the marching guards, so I hurried up the street to the gates and watched them clack back and forth like wind-up toys. It was growing cold and windy, so after I caught the next bus I rode back to Baker Street (famous location of Sherlock Holmes’ house) and walked back to the hotel to get ready for my shoot.

Walking in London is a true pleasure. Just the quick walk down Baker Street was exhilarating, not because of what I found there (shops, restaurants, businesses, garbage) but because I felt so independent and powerful and trailblazing – like the me I was before. Before what? Before I had children…maybe. Before I got bogged down in the smallness of life with young children…maybe that. Before I started shying away from taking risks, from breaking with The Schedule and The List in favor of peace in my household, in my heart. But you know what? There isn’t peace in my heart. I still struggle with that ubiquitous choice between Mother and Woman. Some people make it seem like there doesn’t have to be a choice. For me, there cannot be a choice. I must be both, and sometimes I must be fully one or the other.

The unknown of London had intimidated me because it is so far out of my comfort zone. When I was making my plans I wondered about everything: the different currency, the odd electrical plugs, how I would get internet access, do they have irons in London? But now that I am here my resourcefulness and curiosity have come back a thousandfold. I am thriving, but I realize that I am helped along by money (it’s very expensive here, and I am lucky that business is paying for most of it, and that I don’t have to worry about the rest. Well, not too much.) and by the support of my husband who is home with the kids and undoubtedly keeping the house from actually falling down around them if not keeping it clean. At all.

Being here, anonymous, apart from my everyday surroundings and unable to make a quick cheap phone call to family, I am free to be simply Myself, and all that comes with it. Mother does not leave me fully – all day I saw families with young children and I suddenly missed my own with a physical longing that is making me spend too much money on presents for them. Alas, I did not find a cowboy hat for Kyle’s big head, but I did find a fluffy soldier hat at Buckingham palace.

After that last chilly leg down Baker Street I made it back into my hotel room at four o’clock…just as it started raining. The rain continued on and off all night. I felt like it was welcoming me, and I was glad that it had waited to fall until I felt truly comfortable in the city.
(There is, in fact, an iron in London. It’s on the second floor of the Durrants Hotel. It helped me get ready for my shoot.)
My car brought me to Elstree Studios in the north of London. Our journey was long, because we left here at 5pm, the beginning of rush hour, in the rain. I asked the driver endless questions, mostly “Where are we now? How about now?” and I delighted in hearing the names of the neighborhoods. Hendon. St. Pancras. Borhamwood.
I arrived at the studio, full of adrenaline and ready to get to work, and after about an hour I was told I would not get my interview that evening, and so I’d have to stay another night. “Oh,” I thought. “Darn.” I almost braved the overground train system to save money, but since it was dark and rainy and I didn’t know the lay of the land up there, I allowed myself to be chauffered back to town in a plush Volvo. I know. It was a difficult choice.

So then I had the night to myself, although it was too late to go see a show and I was too nervous and tired to walk far and roam around like the previous evening. I chose a local restaurant on James Street in a row of restaurants that bustled with people and voices and accents from all over the world.

I sat in a corner reading my book and enjoying some wine and an English chicken and ham pie (I’d forgotten how I used to love frozen pot pies but I had stopped eating them because! The sodium! It will kill you! But how can a homemade English pie be anything but wholesome and fulfilling?) and I was happy as a clam and very entertained when a group of children came scrambling into the restaurant wearing Halloween masks and crying “Trick or treat!”

I looked up at the one by my table, who was literally thrusting a cup into my face, and said “What? Am I supposed to give you money?” And Oliver Twist himself lifted his mask to reveal a pathetic and precious little face and said “Yes! It’s Halloween!” So I got out some pence to drop into his cup and as I did so the waiters piled the children into one group and shoved them out the door, apologizing to me, the only sucker in the joint, saying “They’re not supposed to do this. They’re VERY cheeky!” And I was amused and not at all ashamed that I had been suckered because I was so pleased to have heard the word “cheeky” in a conversation.

The book I was reading was “Lady’s Maid” by Margaret Forster. My mother gave it to me after she finished it. It is a fictional account of the last 15 or so years of the life of Elizabeth Barrett Browning as told through the point of view of her personal maid, Elizabeth Wilson.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning 1806-1861

The novel is a richly crafted tale of what it meant to be a servant in that day and age. I had gotten far enough in the book that I was turning pages furiously, eager to see what happened next. Browning herself does not come off looking so noble in this tale, as her treatment of the loyal maid in times of need is less than just. But my reaction to those things is colored by my personal paradigm, which includes living in the 21st century and not knowing at all what is like to have servants of any kind. Don’t count my cleaning lady. I am HER maid, and you all know what I am talking about.

The tour guide on the bus said that in the 19th century one quarter of the population of London was a servant of some kind to a richer household. As we drove through the residential streets, the guide pointed out that the row houses, many that are now divided into several flats, were for one family each with the kitchens and sculleries below ground and the servants quarters all the way at the top in tiny rooms.

He also pointed out, early in my first leg of the tour, that the church where Elizabeth Barrett married Robert Browning was in this street. I remembered from the novel that the church was not far from where she lived. So last night during dinner I flipped through the book with my little London map next to it, and discovered that I am staying blocks, mere blocks, away from the house described in the first two years of the story.

I would be prouder to say that I am a scholar who knows the Brownings’ poetry and therefore that is why I was so excited to have this destination in mind as I left the restaurant and walked through the quiet streets in the rain. I wish I could tell you that my excitement came from a more educated curiosity than wanting to know where Central Perk is in New York. Alas, I cannot. But that doesn’t take away from the thrill I got when I found 50 Wimpole Street and stood there, in the rain under my tiny umbrella, looking up at the house in the row of houses and wondering in which room Barrett Browning had spent her days and which room belonged to the maid, and imagining the household servants bustling about, going up and down the back staircases to and from the rooms below. The house now belongs to a cardiac hospital, but a special message is engraved in the stone by the front door. I took a picture of it for you. I’ll show you when I get home.

Stay tuned for Day 3: in which I interview the Big Movie Star, but not before nearly throwing up because I was so nervous.

Part 1:  London After Dark
Part 2.5:  The Big London Tease
Part 3:  The London Aha! Moment
Part 4:  The Last Word on London

Related Posts:

  • The Big London Tease
    The Big London Tease
  • London After Dark
    London After Dark
  • My Interview With Nicolas Cage
    My Interview With Nicolas Cage

Travel Baker Street, Big Bus Tour, Buckingham Palace, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, London, Marble Arch, Margaret Forster, St. Patrick's Cathedral

Comments

  1. Auntie Katie says

    October 22, 2008 at 1:41 AM

    Great post. Almost makes me miss traveling to far away places on someone else’s dime. Almost.

    Reply
  2. Aunti Rola says

    October 22, 2008 at 2:47 AM

    Wow, I wish I could go to London. Only you are way more adventurous than I would be.

    Reply
  3. Laura Gross says

    October 22, 2008 at 3:03 AM

    It’s so exciting to re-discover London through your “new to London” eyes! I think this worked out the way it was meant to be, Luke camping, Josh in Ohio, me in Portland, and you in London. Kismet.
    Laura (aka “The Boss of the Wonderful Company that sent Kim on this Wonderful Trip!”)

    Reply
  4. Auntie Lisa says

    October 22, 2008 at 3:54 AM

    Glad you are having a good time. You’re making me want to go to Europe again. I love that it your posts are sounding like the old you. Does the delayed interview mean you’re staying longer?
    Cheerio

    Reply
  5. Nana & Grandpa says

    October 22, 2008 at 3:01 PM

    Soounds like your having a great time
    wish Grandpa and I could still travel
    London was our first trip, You’ll enjoy it even more when you can travel with Stuart. See you when you get home.
    Love Nana & Grandpa

    Reply
  6. Anne says

    October 22, 2008 at 4:34 PM

    I hope you didn’t vomit on Daniel Craig. Because you interviewed Daniel Craig, right? RIGHT?
    I’m dying of curiosity.

    Reply
  7. Bernadette says

    October 22, 2008 at 10:18 PM

    I love your London stories. It feels like I’m there with you! Glad you’re having a great time!

    Reply
  8. MomHOP says

    October 22, 2008 at 10:37 PM

    I am SO excited for you and that you are enjoying the book and actually seeing where events unfolded. What a great perspective as you read on….I feel like I am right by your side as you describe your experiences. Can hardly wait to see pictures.

    Reply
  9. Bettijo Hirschi says

    October 23, 2008 at 1:42 AM

    Again… loving your London Journal. I really loved the part when you talked about “before” … so TRUE! –b

    Reply
  10. Freakazojd says

    October 23, 2008 at 7:53 AM

    Oh my goodness, I SO love London! Hope you’re having a great time and will check in again soon to catch more updates! 🙂

    Reply
  11. Lisa says

    October 23, 2008 at 12:02 PM

    I thought of so many comments as I read this post and of course, now, at the end of it, I forgot most of them. When I was in England for a month, I ate Wheatbix almost every single day. They are actually yummy, if you drown them in milk and sprinkle on some sugar.
    Oh, and I loved what you wrote about being a mother and a woman…. that really resonated with my own feelings these days. Feelings I have been too hesitant to post about because they are still rather raw.
    I’m glad you got to see so much of London and I can’t wait to see the pictures when you return.

    Reply
  12. ByJane says

    October 23, 2008 at 9:54 PM

    Wow! It’s so interesting to see how You come out in this post–the whole Mom vs Woman thing.

    Reply
  13. S@L says

    October 24, 2008 at 10:11 PM

    Wonderful post. It is odd, isn’t it, to think of your Self as either a Mother or a Woman and to navigate switching between them. I wonder whether someone will figure out how to consolidate the two roles into something new (Mothman?).

    Reply
  14. Sandri says

    October 25, 2008 at 12:24 AM

    You are such a great writer. I cannot believe some big fancy publication hasn’t already snagged you up. Lucky for us, I guess; we get to enjoy this yummy stuff all for ourselves!
    I am so busy in these crazy times (so many sad stories) that I barely have time to think about the woman me versus the (single) mommy me. Your post makes me contemplate some things I’ve pushed away…

    Reply
  15. Charlene Ross says

    September 17, 2014 at 1:03 PM

    Haha! I am my cleaning lady’s maid. I DO know what you’re talking about.:)

    And yes, mom v. woman – will any of us ever come to terms with that? As you know my kids are teens and I STILL feel it. (Not as much, but trust me, it’s there.)

    Reply

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