Phase II of Operation Be a Better Tourist was to skip out to Canterbury to check out the spiritual centre of England - Canterbury and it's cathedral. Going to the world's most important Anglican church was of course balanced by the other religously observed English weekend activity - that of drinking booze in large glasses. This duly performed, Sherry and I popped ino the cathedral for a lazy 3 hours of wandering around the interior and grounds of this huge, and hugely historical, building.
Like so many important Christian buildings, it is the amount of attention (certainly unsees today) paid to the detail of it's construction which is so striking - and with so many things English, the layers of history and legend behind it all. Seeing Thomas Becket's headless statue on the corner of the facade was one particularly poignant moment - a physical representation of one of the most infamous deeds in English history, within a couple of feet of you, does help put some perspective on places such as this.
Monday, February 11, 2008
Troublesome tourism
Sunday, February 10, 2008
Short and sweet
This is the knocker on Joel's door. There's something I really like about the contrasting textures of iron and wood here, very country home...
Sunday, February 03, 2008
Anglerrific
Right - apologies for the very late and out-of-order post, but here's a couple of shots from Bonfire Night (Guy Fawkes) last year. I was fortunate enough to be invited to my friend Joel's amazing family home in what has to be one of England's smallest villages, Newenden in Kent, for a night of launching rockets and setting fire to things. A quintessentially English weekend spent in quintessentially English surrounds, eating great (and yes, quintessentially English) food with great (I'm afraid also quintessentially English) company in a house which Joel gleefully pointed out was a good 4 centuries older than the nation I belong to.
Bonza!
Bonza!
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