Hello!
Up this morning about 6:30 am after a really lovely night’s
sleep.
I’m still far from 100% but am
definitely moving in that direction.
Unfortunately this afternoon, I went out without the inhaler and had a
bit of an episode but will now be carrying it with me, that’s for sure!
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| Wallace Collection |
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| Front room |
Out about 9:30 am to get to the
Wallace Collection, which really isn’t that far away from
here.
As the most direct route was the
tube, down we went into the bowels of London.
Just a few stops on the Central Line, and then up into the light.
It was a few blocks away from the station,
but we got there just a minute or so after their 10 am opening time.
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| Personal sundial! Try that in your pocket! |
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| This is actually wax about 6" high! |
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| One of the armor rooms |
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| Just a little something... |
Hard to believe, with as many times as we
have visited London (including renting flats for extended visits) we’d never
been there before!
It was really quite
something – beautiful house (turned into museum) and a collection that was
really incredible!
As it turns out, various family members had collected
various things over the years – the collection of armor and armaments is
incredible.
There is even a collection
of Asian armor and armaments, which was very unusual and interesting.
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| Upstairs landing |
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| SO much to see! |
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| Great Gallery upstairs with sky lights |
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| I love the green! |
The paintings were from many of the most
prominent painters in the world – Fragonard, Velasquez, Rembrandt, Turner – the
only one I couldn’t find was Lawrence Alma-Tatama, who happens to be one of my
personal favorites.
The house was decorated closely to the way it had been done
originally – my favorite was a stunning green room, that literally glowed! There were bronzes, and sculpture, and lots
of clocks – most of which were actually running on time! (They obviously have a good clock man
somewhere on staff!) There was Sevres porcelain, beautiful inlaid
furniture and illuminated manuscripts.
Something wherever you looked! There
was also a great deal of information available in individual folders, usually
in each room, to talk about the paintings, furniture, etc. Seriously, this is quite an amazing place to
visit. They even had an amazing
collection of wax portraits and scenarios – no idea how some of the detail was
done, it is so tiny, and they were something that we’ve never seen anywhere
before.
Decided after the basement and ground floor levels, that we
needed some sustenance before we tackled the first floor (our 2
nd).
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| From atop a double-decker bus! |
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| Lots and lots of people ... and it's winter! |
They have a really lovely restaurant in the
covered courtyard, and while we weren’t ready for lunch yet (as we ate about
8:30 am at the hotel fabulous breakfast!), we were feeling a bit peckish.
Robert ordered a pot of Earl Gray tea and a
croissant with jam, and I had pink lemonade (which was red, and I’d love to
know what was in it, because it certainly wasn’t like any lemonade I’ve had
before!) and a piece of delicious carrot cake.
Yummy!
Then up to the first floor.
However, by this time, I was getting more than a little “flat art” out –
I really do prefer sculpture to flat art against the wall, and while there was
plenty of that on offer, the upstairs rooms basically served as gigantic
galleries to the Wallace’s incredible paintings. We actually covered those fairly quickly, but
have promised ourselves that we will definitely be back to spend more time
upstairs.
Finally outside, and heading to
Stanford’s travel book store (this is where Sherlock Holmes went
when he needed a good map of the area around Baskerville Hall).
It is always a dangerous place for us to
visit.
One time we bought four globes …
shipped them home, of course, but what were we thinking?!
Stanford’s is in Long Acre, in Covent
Garden.
We caught a bus heading in that
direction, and got off at Piccadilly Circus and walked from there.
Had a good look around, and purchased an new
U.K. atlas, as well as the
Land Ranger
series of maps that include both Stonehenge and Avebury.
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| Hundreds of lanterns - Chinese New Year? |
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| Cute guy at pub! |
(Landranger maps, seriously, have pubs and
call boxes marked on them, and
R
maintains that the cows in the fields are on there too!)
Also got a few books on Malta and maps for
there as well as Corsica, as that is on next year’s travel agenda.
I know that we offloaded 15+ lbs. of books
and stuff yesterday in the mail, but we have added back a bit of that weight …
we just need to stay out of
Stanford’s,
that’s all!
Leaving the shop, it was starting to rain – surprise! – and for
one of the first and only times on record, we actually had our umbrellas with
us.
How about that for planning
ahead!
We had planned on finding a bus
back to the hotel at that point, but ended up at Leicester Square’s tube
station.
Northern Line one stop to
Tottenham Court Road, and then the Central Line west back to our hotel.
Very easy, although not as picturesque.
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| A taste of wine for me! (R got the rest...) |
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| Busy pub! |
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| Excellent soup! |
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| My chicken-leek-ham pie! |
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| R's steak on enormous pile of chips! |
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| Sticky toffee pudding with vanilla ice cream |
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| R's berry crumble! |
(Although how picturesque things are in the
rain is debatable!)
Back to the hotel around 3 pm, and very ready for a sit-down
for a while. Robert is making me chose a
place for dinner tonight, so I’m really debating. Again, as we didn’t really have a lunch to
speak of (unless a croissant and piece of cake counts) we will probably go out
early. May look in this neighborhood,
and ask the concierge for a suggestion or two.
(He was fabulous in pointing out Mailbox
for yesterday!) Do hope that the rain
does stop, and that we have a clear day for tomorrow. We’re going to the British Museum for a brief
visit, and then I’m not sure what we’ll do.
I had thought of the Imperial War Museum (which I just typed as “Warm”)
but the on-line description doesn’t sound like it would be a good fit for
us. We have been to the Churchill War Rooms multiple times, as
well as the City of London Museum
which has an excellent exhibition of WWI and WWII artifacts and memorabilia.
So … that’s it for the moment! More later!
m
xxx
Hi!
Back from a wonderful pub dinner! I looked on-line (seriously, where would we
be without it?) and found a listing of area restaurants. The top pub on the list, the Prince Edward turns out to be very close
to the hotel! So, we wandered over there
(rain stopped, and the sky is clearing!) about 5:30 pm and were the only folks
seated in their little, and very nice dining area.
Robert ordered their peas and ham soup for a starter. It was fabulous! I might have ordered it too if I could have
understood what the waitress was saying!
However … moving along … For mains, R
ordered their sirloin steak with chips, and I ordered their “Pie of the Day”:
chicken, leek and ham. R’s steak arrived perfectly cooked
(rare) on top of an enormous pile of
chips (French fries). He had to ask for
another plate on which to cut his steak, otherwise chips would have been all
over the floor. His plate also included
a huge mushroom and a baked tomato, both of which he declared excellent. My pie was great, and came with a mound of
mashed potatoes, as well as carrots (alas, overcooked) and broccoli. We were both pretty full by then, but their
desserts looked so good! I had sticky
toffee pudding with vanilla ice cream, and R
had their berry crumble. Both were great,
and we had to waddle back to the hotel for the night!
That’s all for now!
Lots of love,
m
xxx
Amazing that people can have collected that much for their personal home. The pub looks like a fun place. I'm sure they had sports on the telly.
ReplyDeletesandy
So glad you felt the Wallace Collection was well worth a visit. I spent 2+ hours just in the armor rooms! And then a lovely tea & chat w/Toby (another 2+ hours) in that charming courtyard (mostly sunny day). The food at the pub looked scrumptious!
ReplyDelete