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Day Three

Jan. 22nd, 2005 09:33 am
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[personal profile] poliphilo
We walked across Kensington Gardens till we bumped into Kensington Palace. Princess Di lived here (and Queen Victoria before her.) The whole park has been turned into a memorial to Di. There’s a Princess Diana walkway- with marked spots for you to pause and think beautiful thoughts- and a Princess Diana Memorial Fountain (newly installed)- which doesn’t work properly.

I keep waiting for Diana to dwindle into a mere historical figure like all the rest, but she doesn’t show any signs of doing so and maybe she won’t. After all, Marilyn, with whom she’s always compared, is still as big as she ever was- and she’s been dead over 40 years. There’s never been fame quite like this before, a fame kept evergreen (and ever present on TV) by the existence of a vast archive of recorded sound and image.

We came home the long way round, circling back down Kensington Church Street, a quiet, low-rise shopping street for all the world like the high street of a provincial market town. Lots and lots of antique shops- all with objects of museum quality in the windows. We checked out the estate agents: a two room apartment in this area could be yours for as little as a million quid. Where (and how) I wonder do all the service workers live?

Date: 2005-01-22 05:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jackiejj.livejournal.com
...And don't forget Elvis!

How much is two million quid, please, in dollars?

I've been reading a beautiful book, Haunted Castles of Britain and Ireland, and here is a birthday Ghost Story for you, from Devon:

In Berry Pomeroy castle, in Devon, lived an ancient family who arrived with the Norman Conquest.

The castle, which "perches eerily on a rocky throne above a wooded ravine," is haunted by a "blue lady," who wanders in moonlight through the ruined manor house. But another ghost haunts the castle as well, in the "eeriest part of this eeriest of ruins." To meet her, you must climb down and down "into a dark dungeon by way of a twisting stone staircase."

The dungeon walls are mossy and dank. It's here that the "wicked Eleanor Pomeroy imprisoned and starved to death her sister, Margaret," because she was jealous of her sister's beauty, and because Margaret loved the same man she did.

The book says you can see Margaret's "misty form in the depths of the tower." She will brush by you on the dimly lit stairwell...

--Happy continued travels in London. Buy yourself a fine book for your birthday!

Date: 2005-01-23 04:41 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] poliphilo.livejournal.com
Berry Pomeroy- what a wonderful name! Thanks for the story

Ailz tells me that 2 million pounds is about 3 and 3/4 million dollars.

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