So, nine hours on the plane was worth it, along with the accompanying jet lag, to find ourselves here in Oxford. Specifically, here in our room at Christ Church, which it turns out rents out rooms during the vacations during term-time. Yesterday I was too tired for much, but we did stroll around in the Covered Market (interesting to compare it with Seattle’s Pike Place Market, which sprawls by comparison. We found the place for the Tolkien Exhibit without any trouble and even gave the gift shop a preliminary poke-about.
On our way back to Christ Church College we took a side-trip and climbed the Saxon tower, where I saw a sheela-na-gig (first time to see one, as opposed to just pictures or drawings of them), touched five of the tower’s six great bronze bells (no longer rung, less out of fear of cracking the bells and more from concern how the vibrations from the bells might shake the tower. I managed to make myself climb all the way to the roof, where I crouched and enjoyed the view as long as I cd stand (thus repeating my performance at Bath cathedral the last time we were over here in 2012). One of these days I’m going to make my way to the top of one of these too-tall towers and not be able to make my way back down, like Pickles the Fire Cat, but today was not that day.
After two hours or so of fighting off sleep with less and less success, I finally gave in and turned in around seven o’clock, pm, local Oxford time: about eight hours off Seattle time and our internal clocks.
And twelve hours later I woke up, we breakfasted in the dining hall at Christ Church with a roomful of other visitors, and we headed over to see The Great Exhibit: the biggest, and best, Tolkien display ever mounted. More on that tomorrow.
—John R.
—tired but not jet-lagged,
—Christ Church college, Oxford.
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2 days ago
2 comments:
If you get over to Cambridge, John, a nice exhibit of Harry Burton's King Tut tomb discovery photographs is running through 23 September 2018: http://maa.cam.ac.uk/photographing-tutankhamun/
Allan.
Dear Allan
That sounds like a great display and right up my alley -- on our last visit to England in 2012 Janice and I had gone to HighClaire House to look at Lord Carnarvan's collection (including a few items he and Carter smuggled out). But between Tolkien and Oxford and Stonehenge and LaCock and Bath and the Thames River tour and a visit to St Paul's in Covent Garden (which figure largely in the first book on the RIVERS OF LONDON series) and a long stroll through Hyde Park, there simply wasn't time.
--John R.
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