The nice thing about free travel weekend is that we've been able to do random things we've been wanting to do, but haven't had time. This morning, we started out at the John Soane museum. While he was alive, Soane collected tons and tons of random stuff and kept it all inside his house. He had huge rooms filled with statues, busts, books, paintings, a skeleton, and a sarcophagus! It was pretty cool, but the whole time we were walking through the rooms going, "...what?" The guy was like one of those hoarders on the TLC show! And apparently the sarcophagus in his house is the most valuable one outside of Egypt! It just seems so random that this random guy had the most valuable Egyptian artifact sitting in his house! Anyways, the museum was free, so it was worth it :)
After that, we went to see the body of Jeremy Bentham at the College of London. Jeremy Bentham is this guy who wanted his body preserved for science in the 1800s, so it's been kept there ever since for people to come look at. It was honestly kinda weird ha. It was like being at body world!
Next, we went up North to check out Highgate cemetery. The East side of the cemetery is open to the public (after paying some moola of course), and Karl Marx and George Eliot (the author) are buried in that part. That was cool to see their graves! The West side is closed to the public, and the only way to see it is to book a tour in advance. They only let 15 people in a day, so it's pretty exclusive I guess. Amanda and I were the only ones who wanted to go through the East part, and it took us a while to find Eliot's grave. Our tour was at 1:45, so we had to run through the cemetery to make it to the tour on time. Amanda and I have this thing with running late to places, especially in cemeteries! The tour through the West end was pretty interesting, but the only famous person I knew was the poet Christina Rossetti. The cemetery was way overgrown, but it made it look even cooler. I love the old cemeteries here! When we were on the set for Harry Potter, they said that Highgate cemetery inspired the gravestone used in Harry Potter 4! Anything having to do with Harry Potter is exciting ha.
Right now in English class we're reading poetry from John Keats, and our teacher Nick told us we'd get extra credit for going to his house in Hampstead Heath. I really like Keats besides, so I was excited to go out to his house. The ride to his house took a while though, and we were all feeling a little worn out, so touring his house wasn't the most exciting thing ever. It wasn't even close to being inside Dove Cottage! It was kind of cool though, because Keats fell in love with the girl who lived next door, except for her family lived literally RIGHT next door, as in their houses were connected to each other. If you want to read something cute, look up Keats's love letters to Fanny Brawne. They're a little dramatic, but so cute :)
We headed back to London to eat dinner, then we went and saw Singin' in the Rain!! I wasn't sure if I was going to like it, because Katherine told me it was all tap dancing and singing and what not. It was based on the movie with Gene Kelly and Debbie Reynolds, and the show was getting good reviews, so I decided it would be fun to go with everybody. We got to the box office about an hour and a half before, and got front row seats! And, the show was fantastic! The acting was so good, and the songs were so fun! There was a lot of dancing, but I loved it actually. The scene where Don Lockwood sings Singin' in the Rain was a blast, because it rained on stage and the actor kicked water at us! Then at the end they did one more number where the whole cast came out and danced and kicked water at us. It was so fun! We got pretty wet, and I was just smiling the whole time. It was a fun way to end the day :)
Thursday, May 31, 2012
Wednesday, May 30, 2012
"Rain or Shine... It's Potter Time!"
Monday, May 28
- We had our history midterm today, which took about three hours to take. Pretty much the entire morning we spent studying, but then, after dinner, we went and saw Wicked!! It was my first time seeing it, so I was so excited! The set was amazing! The songs were so good too. I bawled when they sang "For Good." We had pretty good seats too, so it was a great experience! It was totally wicked!! :)
- We had six hours of class today! We had three hours of English, then three hours of History. It was a pretty tiring day. After dinner, we went to Picadilly Circus for a girls' night out. First, we did some shopping. I got a Manchester United jersey, and I was pretty excited about it :) We went to a store called Cool Britannia, which is the ultimate tourism/souvenir shop of London. They have everything Britain that you could possibly imagine, even Will & Kate mugs. We got some ice cream from Ben & Jerry's, then went to the movie theater to see The Lucky One with Zac Efron. It was cute! All of us had been really wanting to go the movies, so it was fun to go out and see a check flick :)
- Today was the first day of free travel weekend. About half of us decided to stay in London and do all there is to do here, and we started out our day (after class) by taking a double decker bus to Warner Bros. Studios for a tour of The Making of Harry Potter!! They have on display tons and tons of props, sets, make-up, and costumes in the studio. The tour started out in the Great Hall-- yes, THE Great Hall!! There were mannequins of Hagrid, Dumbledore, McGonagall, Filch, Snape, Trelawney, Mad-Eye, and Flitwick, wearing their costumes from the movies! Around the Great Hall were the robes of the different houses, including the robes Robert Pattinson wore! A tour guide took us through the Great Hall, but then after that the tour was self guided. There was so much stuff to see! They had props from every movie, and information about the directors and filmmaking. They had the sets of the Gryffindor boys' dormitory, the Gryffindor common room, Dumbledore's office, Hagrid's hut, the Potion's classroom, the Burrow and Diagon Alley. Outside, they also had the Knight Bus, the skeleton statue in the cemetery from Goblet of Fire, #4 Privet Drive, the bridge at Hogwarts, and Godric's Hollow. I saw the invisibility cloak, all the wands and broomsticks they used, Mad-Eye's trunk, the sorting hat, Basilisk, Aragog, Buckbeak, dobby, all the horcruxes (not including Harry and Nagini), and tons more! We were all freaking out the whole time! We got some butterbeer about halfway through and it was sooo good! It was basically like cream soda with whipped cream, but better! After the tour we stopped in the gift shop to get some chocolate frogs and fizzing whizbees. I really wanted to get Nicholas Flamel's wizard card, but I got Dumbledore, which was still way cool! It was so exciting to see all the props that were used in the actual movies! After the tour we were talking about why Harry Potter is such a big deal, at least to us, because the books and movies have been with us almost our entire lives! We've grown up with Harry Potter, and now it's so sad that the books and movies are over! We're watching Harry Potter 7:2 right now actually :) It was fun to just be a nerd with lots of other girls who are just as big a nerd as me :) I'll for sure be putting up some pictures when I get better internet.
- After the tour we went to an Asian restaurant called Wagamama's. It was super good! All in all, today was super amazingly awesome! I just love that London has something for everyone. No matter where we go we always end up having a crazy fun adventure. I loved being able to go and do something today that was uniquely London, something that I would never get to do back home. Mischief Managed :)
Sunday, May 27, 2012
Northern England/Scotland
Ok, I'm going to do this blog a little differently, because I'm so far behind. Here we go!
Monday, May 21
Thursday, May 24
Friday, May 25
Saturday, May 26
Monday, May 21
- The picture is of Dove Cottage, William Wordsworth's home for about a decade. Such a cool experience to eat dinner there!
- The day started out with a coach ride to Preston, where the first Saints were baptized in England.
- We got a guided tour of the MTC in Preston, then went to see the temple there. It's so pretty!
- We drove into Ambleside, which is in the Lake District, the most beautiful place I've ever seen! It was amazing!
- That night half of us had dinner in Dove Cottage. We were the second group ever to eat dinner in there, it's not something they normally do. It was so cool! The food was pretty good too. We had this stew called Coleridge stew, mashed carrots, and potatoes.
- That night we had room assignments, and I roomed with Kayley and Emily in a cute little bed and breakfast.
Tuesday, May 22
- We went hiking pretty much all day this day. We went hiking to a lake called Loughrigg Tarn, (Tarn means lake here), which was beautiful! On the hike back we passed by two other lakes, which were also very beautiful.
- We got to explore Ambleside a little bit. It was such a cute little town!
- We hiked to a waterfall that nigh, called something Force (force means waterfall). I felt like I was hiking through the mountains in Utah a little bit actually :)
- Wednesday, we got to go to the Wordsworth museum to look at some old manuscripts. We got to see first and second editions of Lyrical Ballads, an early version of Frankenstein, Keats's poetry, Wordsworth's copy of Paradise Lost, and old letters between Wordsworth and his wife. This part was so cool! It was awesome to be able to handle such old manuscripts!
- This night, we drove about five hours to Edinburgh and checked into our hostels.
- We ate dinner at the Elephant House, which is where J.K. Rowling started writing Harry Potter! It was cool to eat there, although the food wasn't very good at all haha.
- We hiked to Arthur's seat, which I think is the highest peak in Scotland. This is where Orson Hyde came when he was a missionary to dedicate Scotland to the Lord for missionary work. It was a mostly uphill hike, but it was so worth it! The view up there was amazing!
- Staying in the hostel was not a great experience haha. It wasn't very clean, and there were 8 of us staying in one room in bunk beds. At least I got the experience though!
- We got most of this day to explore Edinburgh. We took a guided tour of Edinburgh castle, which was cool!
- We got a few hours of free time, which we spent shopping for souvenirs and stuff. There were guys in kilts on almost every street corner playing bagpipes, which I was so excited about! The city was cool, but I would have liked more time there, and especially more time hiking. We didn't get any time in the highlands, and I wish we could have gone up there. It was still fun though!
- We spent this day in York, an old medieval city in Northern England. There's still an old medieval wall surrounding the city, and we got to walk around on it. There's an old street called Shambles, which is where the phrase "going to shambles" is called, because the street is so old that the roofs are slanting over the street, making it seem dark. I bought a way cool Marvel bag there! I'm king of in love with it :)
- We drove back to London this night, then got all day Saturday to do whatever.
Sunday, May 20, 2012
Hosh Kosh Bigosh
The
past few days have been kind of low key, so we got to do some things we’ve been
wanting to do on our own. On Friday, we went to Abbey road to get a picture
walking across the street! I didn’t realize that that road is still used, so we
had to wait a while before it was clear enough for a picture. There were a lot
of other people there trying to get a picture, and we all probably looked
really funny walking back and forth across the road so many times. We wrote our
names on the wall outside Abbey Road Studios, which, to be honest, I didn’t
know existed before this! We sang Beatles’ songs while we were there, so it was
fun!
Saturday
morning we went on a tour of the Houses of Parliament. I mostly liked hearing
about the history behind Parliament, but when the tour guide starting
explaining the voting process I was lost. We weren’t allowed to take pictures
inside, which is understandable, but I wish I could have! The rooms inside were
way cool! After the tour, we went to take pictures in a red telephone booth
with Big Ben in the background. It’s a pretty big touristy thing, so there was
already a line to get in the booth when we got there. Once it was my turn, I
stood next to the booth for a picture, when all of a sudden these two guys
dressed up as silver cowboys came and stood next to me! They didn’t say a word,
just came and stood next to me giving a thumbs up! Well this family walking by
thought the silver cowboys were funny too, so they all jumped in my picture
with me! I had waited in line to get my turn with the phone booth, and I wanted
my picture! I just stayed right there and smiled for this random family’s
photo! I think that picture should probably go on the awkward family photos
website haha. We went to Portobello Market next, which was so fun! I bought some good stuff for me and people back home :) They also have really good crepes there!
Last night, Jared, Trent, Cree, Katie and I went to see a play called
Woman in Black. They just made a movie called Woman in Black, and we had heard
that the play was super scary, but we were all wondering how a play could be
scary. We went to the theater about an hour before it started and bought tickets,
then went and got dinner at an Indian place called Sagar. It was delicious!
Curry is now one of my favorite foods I think. So, we get to the theater and
all our seats are random, so none of us are sitting by each other. My seat was
on the floor, in the back row and the very end seat. I thought for sure they’d
have people walking through the audience to try and scare us, and because of
where I was sitting I thought they’d come for me first. I was so freaked out
before the play even started! The play was really well done I thought. It was
just two guys the whole time (plus the woman in black), so it took some
imagination, but that’s what plays are all about right? It was SO scary! The
story line goes something like this: A ghost of a woman in black haunts a small
town, and every time there’s a sighting of her, a child in the town dies! They
used loud sound effects that made me jump so bad, and doors that opened by
themselves, and rocking chairs that rocked by themselves. I jumped so bad at
this one part at the end that the guy sitting next to me starting cracking up
and didn’t stop till it was over! It really was pretty funny. There was a crazy
twist at the end of the play that made it even better! I now know how plays can
be scary!
I
realized I haven’t explained about my ward here very much. I’m really loving
being back in Young Women! I can still remember the Young Women theme, so
that’s good :) The teacher is an
older lady named Daphne, and she’s really good at being there every week. We
had two young women in class today, and one of them is an investigator. It’s
kind of intimidating to have an investigator in class, because Daphne will
sometimes ask us to share our feelings or an experience we’ve had that goes
along with the lesson. Most of the people in the ward are converts, so they
like to hear the experiences we’ve had growing up in the church. Today we learned
about the Priesthood, and Daphne asked us to share about blessings we’ve
received from the Priesthood. I’ve always had the Priesthood in my home growing
up, so it wasn’t hard to think of how it’s blessed my life. It’s cool to have
an investigator though, because I feel like a missionary! One of the
missionaries in the ward came to class with her today, and he had an American
accent, so we got to talking about where he was from. He said he was from Utah,
so I asked him what city. He said Kaysville, and that he had gone to Davis
high! Isn’t that crazy? What a small world! He graduated a year later than me,
but his older brother, Seku Holder, graduated my same year from Davis. I told
him I knew his brother, then we played the “Do you know so and so?” game. He listed off
a bunch of guys I went to school with, including Matt Whittle, who’s in my home
ward! It’s so crazy that I ran into someone from Kaysville, Utah in London.
That just goes to show how tiny the Mormon world is!
It’s crazy to think that we’re already halfway done with the program
here. I’ve loved my time here so far, and I plan to make the most of my last
month! Being in this ward has taught me so much, and I’m so grateful I’ve grown
up in the church. I hope all’s going well back home. I miss all you guys!
Tomorrow we’re going to Scotland for a week, and I’m so excited! We’re stopping
in Preston on the way there, which is where the first members of the church in England were
baptized. We’re also going to the Lake District, which is supposed to be
absolutely beautiful. I can’t wait!
Friday, May 18, 2012
The Olympic Games!
One of our classes while we're here is called London Walks, and all we have to do is go on walks around London and then write down what we think is cool or interesting about it. Yesterday, for one of our walks, we went on a guided tour of the Olympic sites! Our tour guide was this funny old guy who said he was born in Ireland, even though he had a British accent. When we go on walks we're supposed to take notes in our little notebooks called commonplace books, but I forgot mine, so I took out a scrap piece of paper to write on. My scrap piece of paper I found in the bottom of my bag was a map for the Louvre, which I think is pretty funny!
Our guide told us about these camera shots called honey shots. They're those shots where there's a break in the game, and the camera roams around the fans and stays on one person for a few seconds. Our tour guide, Tom, told us that these shots are called honey shots. Well, they want the people at the games to be attractive to make London look good, so everyone is given an "attractiveness" number, which is put on the end of their Visa card. When anyone applies for a ticket to the games, their bank is contacted so they can look up their "attractiveness" number! You have to have a certain number to be able to get into the games! Isn't that crazy? He said that the number for synchronized swimming is low, like 2 or 3, but you have to have a pretty high number for the races. I actually don't know if I believe that, but everyone else thinks it's true, so I guess it must be! My professor, Nick, said, "So what does it mean if the last number on my card is 9?" Ha!
Our guide told us that London's been getting ready for the Olympics for the last five years. The games were supposed to be in Paris, but Tom told us that at the big conference where all the delegates voted on the location, the Paris delegate whispered to the guy next to him, "Good thing the games aren't in London, because the only food that's worse than English food is food in Finland!" Unfortunately for the Paris delegate, the delegate from Finland was standing right behind him. Hence, the games are in London! Again, I don't know how much of this is factual, but it's funny :) Tom told us that the reason the marathon is still in miles instead of being in the metric system, is because of the Queen of England during the 1908 Olympics. She wanted the marathon to go past a school so that the kids could see the people running, and the course for the marathon ended up being exactly 26.2 miles, and it's just stayed that way.
The Olympics are going to be in the East End of London, which is the poorer and more ghetto part of London. They're having the Olympics here to get money into the East End to try and fix it up. On our walk through the sites I wasn't super impressed by the area. It does't look like they've done a lot of cleaning up, but maybe in the next three months they'll get a lot done. On the site where they built the actual stadium, Tom said they found 6 unexploded WWII bombs, and 4 bodies!! Crazy stuff! Random facts about the stadium: The stadium fits about 80,000 people. A hotel room that normally costs $40 by the Olympic stadium will cost about $750 on opening night. NBC has been here for the past 6 months getting ready to film the Olympics. The Olympic village where the athletes will stay has 17,000 flats, and later will be used as a school and medical center. They really are trying to pour money into this thing to try and fix the East End up. It will be interesting to see if it works! Tom said it will take about 10 years to see the results though, so we'll just have to wait and see!
Yesterday night, we went and saw the play War Horse. They had a life-size puppet horse that was actually really cool! It took a little bit to get used to watching a huge puppet horse being operated by three guys ha, but they made it work. If you've ever seen Lion King, it was like the opening scene where all the animals come out. They made the horse move and sound like an actual horse. It was a good play! I've never seen the movie, but I think the play follows the same plot line. I'll have to watch the movie when I get home!
Our guide told us about these camera shots called honey shots. They're those shots where there's a break in the game, and the camera roams around the fans and stays on one person for a few seconds. Our tour guide, Tom, told us that these shots are called honey shots. Well, they want the people at the games to be attractive to make London look good, so everyone is given an "attractiveness" number, which is put on the end of their Visa card. When anyone applies for a ticket to the games, their bank is contacted so they can look up their "attractiveness" number! You have to have a certain number to be able to get into the games! Isn't that crazy? He said that the number for synchronized swimming is low, like 2 or 3, but you have to have a pretty high number for the races. I actually don't know if I believe that, but everyone else thinks it's true, so I guess it must be! My professor, Nick, said, "So what does it mean if the last number on my card is 9?" Ha!
Our guide told us that London's been getting ready for the Olympics for the last five years. The games were supposed to be in Paris, but Tom told us that at the big conference where all the delegates voted on the location, the Paris delegate whispered to the guy next to him, "Good thing the games aren't in London, because the only food that's worse than English food is food in Finland!" Unfortunately for the Paris delegate, the delegate from Finland was standing right behind him. Hence, the games are in London! Again, I don't know how much of this is factual, but it's funny :) Tom told us that the reason the marathon is still in miles instead of being in the metric system, is because of the Queen of England during the 1908 Olympics. She wanted the marathon to go past a school so that the kids could see the people running, and the course for the marathon ended up being exactly 26.2 miles, and it's just stayed that way.
The Olympics are going to be in the East End of London, which is the poorer and more ghetto part of London. They're having the Olympics here to get money into the East End to try and fix it up. On our walk through the sites I wasn't super impressed by the area. It does't look like they've done a lot of cleaning up, but maybe in the next three months they'll get a lot done. On the site where they built the actual stadium, Tom said they found 6 unexploded WWII bombs, and 4 bodies!! Crazy stuff! Random facts about the stadium: The stadium fits about 80,000 people. A hotel room that normally costs $40 by the Olympic stadium will cost about $750 on opening night. NBC has been here for the past 6 months getting ready to film the Olympics. The Olympic village where the athletes will stay has 17,000 flats, and later will be used as a school and medical center. They really are trying to pour money into this thing to try and fix the East End up. It will be interesting to see if it works! Tom said it will take about 10 years to see the results though, so we'll just have to wait and see!
Yesterday night, we went and saw the play War Horse. They had a life-size puppet horse that was actually really cool! It took a little bit to get used to watching a huge puppet horse being operated by three guys ha, but they made it work. If you've ever seen Lion King, it was like the opening scene where all the animals come out. They made the horse move and sound like an actual horse. It was a good play! I've never seen the movie, but I think the play follows the same plot line. I'll have to watch the movie when I get home!
Wednesday, May 16, 2012
Bath Time Stories
Every day I'm so surprised by how much we can fit in in a day! We just read Sense and Sensibility for our English class, so this morning we took a coach to Chawton, which is where Jane Austen lived out the last few years of her life. We saw the church she went to, the estate her brother lived in, and the cottage where her and her mom and sister lived in. I bought Emma at the gift shop there, which is cool, cause she wrote it there! We watched a little video at her house about her life, and it mentioned her fling with Tom Lefroy! It made me so happy, but also a little sad, because I realized that the movie Becoming Jane is almost all fiction, and I love that movie!
We went next to Stourhead Gardens, which are these gardens at the Stourhead estate (pretty complicated, I know). This is where they filmed the scene in Pride and Prejudice where Mr. Darcy proposes to Elizabeth and she turns him down! When we got to the pavilion where the scene was shot, we just started screaming because we were so excited! I feel like this was mostly a day for the girls in the program, because almost all of it was centered around Jane Austen. We took so many pictures around that pavilion, but it was hard not to, because it was SO beautiful! I know I say this every time, but really, I think this was the most beautiful place I've seen so far. It's so hard to capture it in pictures too! The hike around the lake made me feel like I was in a fairy tale or something, as cliche as that sounds. I finally got a picture put up! The internet is so slow that I only got one up, but hopefully you can see how pretty it is there. It's so green!
Next stop after Stourhead was the city of Bath. Jane Austen lived with her family in Bath for a while, but she didn't like it at all. One of her books, (Persuasion, which I love!) is set in Bath. It's named Bath after all the Roman baths left there from when the Romans were in Britain; the Romans thought that the hot springs had healing powers. They've got a museum built up around the baths, so it was cool to see them. You can't go in them, but they do have clean bath water that you can drink. It sounds gross, because it is! It tasted like hot metal! Haha I had the hot cool-aid Julian Smith video going through my head the whole time. After exploring the baths, we went to this place called the Royal Crescent, which is a bunch of apartments built in the shape of a crescent. It's the biggest attraction in Bath besides the baths, but I wasn't really impressed by it. I did my presentation on the Royal Crescent in our prep class, and I though it was going to be a lot bigger. For dinner we ate at an Irish Pub, and it was really good! I just got a burger though, so nothing too exciting :) After that it was time to head back to the bus and then head back to the center. Today was another full day where I saw and did things that I've always wanted to! I'd say that today my horizons were widened :)
We went next to Stourhead Gardens, which are these gardens at the Stourhead estate (pretty complicated, I know). This is where they filmed the scene in Pride and Prejudice where Mr. Darcy proposes to Elizabeth and she turns him down! When we got to the pavilion where the scene was shot, we just started screaming because we were so excited! I feel like this was mostly a day for the girls in the program, because almost all of it was centered around Jane Austen. We took so many pictures around that pavilion, but it was hard not to, because it was SO beautiful! I know I say this every time, but really, I think this was the most beautiful place I've seen so far. It's so hard to capture it in pictures too! The hike around the lake made me feel like I was in a fairy tale or something, as cliche as that sounds. I finally got a picture put up! The internet is so slow that I only got one up, but hopefully you can see how pretty it is there. It's so green!
Next stop after Stourhead was the city of Bath. Jane Austen lived with her family in Bath for a while, but she didn't like it at all. One of her books, (Persuasion, which I love!) is set in Bath. It's named Bath after all the Roman baths left there from when the Romans were in Britain; the Romans thought that the hot springs had healing powers. They've got a museum built up around the baths, so it was cool to see them. You can't go in them, but they do have clean bath water that you can drink. It sounds gross, because it is! It tasted like hot metal! Haha I had the hot cool-aid Julian Smith video going through my head the whole time. After exploring the baths, we went to this place called the Royal Crescent, which is a bunch of apartments built in the shape of a crescent. It's the biggest attraction in Bath besides the baths, but I wasn't really impressed by it. I did my presentation on the Royal Crescent in our prep class, and I though it was going to be a lot bigger. For dinner we ate at an Irish Pub, and it was really good! I just got a burger though, so nothing too exciting :) After that it was time to head back to the bus and then head back to the center. Today was another full day where I saw and did things that I've always wanted to! I'd say that today my horizons were widened :)
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
Is the First Word Tomato?
Ok, I just have a few random things to post about. Yesterday, we went to a play as a group called "Written on the Heart." It was about the translation of the King James Version of the Bible. It went back and forth between William Tyndale and the time while they were translating the Bible. It was actually pretty good! It was a little hard to follow, and I would have been totally lost if we weren't learning this stuff in class. It was interesting though!
Tonight, we went to see the musical Matilda! It's been playing here for a while now, and it was SO good! It was hilarious, and just so much fun! The dancing was amazing, and the songs were so catchy. I think I'm going to buy the whole soundtrack off itunes, because I loved it so much! The little girl that played Matilda was really good too. There's this one part where Miss Honey writes "I can read books" on the board, and Lavender tries to read it. She says, "I've got it! Is the first word... tomato?" Miss Honey goes, "No, but tomato's a very good word!" Lavender just does this huge fist pump and goes "YESSS!" Haha oh man it was so funny! Once it comes to the States, I'm so going to see it again! :)
We're leaving bright and early for Bath tomorrow morning, so we're staying up and watching Pride & Prejudice tonight :) Bath is where Jane Austen lived while she was writing, so it's going to be super cool! I can't wait!!
Tonight, we went to see the musical Matilda! It's been playing here for a while now, and it was SO good! It was hilarious, and just so much fun! The dancing was amazing, and the songs were so catchy. I think I'm going to buy the whole soundtrack off itunes, because I loved it so much! The little girl that played Matilda was really good too. There's this one part where Miss Honey writes "I can read books" on the board, and Lavender tries to read it. She says, "I've got it! Is the first word... tomato?" Miss Honey goes, "No, but tomato's a very good word!" Lavender just does this huge fist pump and goes "YESSS!" Haha oh man it was so funny! Once it comes to the States, I'm so going to see it again! :)
We're leaving bright and early for Bath tomorrow morning, so we're staying up and watching Pride & Prejudice tonight :) Bath is where Jane Austen lived while she was writing, so it's going to be super cool! I can't wait!!
Sunday, May 13, 2012
Paris Day 3
Sorry for the information overload, but so much happened in those three days in Paris, and I just want to get it all down! The third day there was pretty rough. We had to be down for breakfast at 8, then be ready to check out at 9. We dropped our luggage off at the train station in lockers, then set off for the Louvre! The Louvre was cool, but I think I was too tired to appreciate it as much as I should have. It was cool to see the Mona Lisa, but I was surprised by how small it was. They had it roped off, so we could only stand from far off and look at it. Still, it was pretty legit!
We were so tired of standing on our feet after a couple hours at the Louvre that we decided to go on an ice cream run. We went to this ice cream place that was supposed to have the best ice cream in Paris, and it didn't disappoint! The caramel ice cream was amazingly good! It also felt good to sit and rest for a bit. We went to an art museum called the Orangerie next, which had huge Monet murals on the walls. The nice thing about this museum is that they have benches where you're supposed to just sit and stare at the paintings, which we did, gladly. I would have been a bad pioneer I think. My feet were just throbbing! We had one last museum to hit up after the Orangerie, which was Napolean's Tomb. I told myself that it might be pretty cool to see, so that at least gave me some motivation. Napolean's Tomb is part of a bigger building that used to be both a hospital and an armory, which kind of cracks me up. We walked into the smaller building with Napolean's tomb and saw his monument right away to our right. The name "Joseph Napolean" was inscribed on the side, and we were standing there thinking aloud how we never knew his name was Joseph, when we realized that that wasn't his tomb... His real tomb was in the middle of the huge room down on a lower floor. We had heard that there were actually 8 different coffins surrounding Napolean, but I don't know if that's true. The monument to Napolean was bigger than I thought, but honestly, I was so tired by that point that I just wanted to go sit down and eat! Like I said, I would have been a terrible pioneer :)
We went and ate dinner at the first restaurant we saw that was close to Napolean's tomb. It was a cafe on the street corner, and it was the most French place we ate while we were there. I ordered quiche, but my friend Lauren got duck, so I tried some of it and it wasn't bad! At this point in the day, we still had about two hours til we had to meet up at the train station. We decided to go to Pere Lachaise, a cemetery where Oscar Wilde, Jim Morrison, Rossini, and Chopin are buried. There was glass all around Oscar Wilde's tombstone, because people kept coming and writing on it. People had written all over the glass still though--they were mostly quotes from things he had written. There was a nasty old tube of pink lipstick laying on the ground, so I used it to write my name and Amanda's on the glass. Amanda is an English major too, so she was just as excited as me to be at his gravesite. We realized after how funny it was that we had written our names together on a known homosexual's grave. Haha! :) Around then a van came driving by and the lady inside said that the cemetery was closing soon, so we needed to exit (sortie) immediately. We still hadn't found Chopin's grave yet though, so we ran in and out of the graves trying to find it while running away from the white van lady patrolling the cemetery. It was pretty great! We found Chopin's grave and left the cemetery before it closed, so no worries. We were then running a little short on time though, so we booked it back to the metro.
By the time we got back to the train station, my feet were so sore and blistered that I was basically waddling. Cobblestones are not the greatest surface to walk on. All I wanted to do was to sit down, but when we got there, our profe stopped us and said that someone had lost their ticket, so we all had to give him our tickets. He said they all needed to be accounted for, then he'd pass them back out. Our tickets were in our backpacks in our locker, so we had to go get those out, then give our tickets up. Please Note: Before we left for Paris we were given our tickets to and from Paris, so we also still had our tickets from London. Well, lucky me, I got the ticket FROM London TO Paris that someone accidentally turned in to our profe. Everyone else got through while I waited on the other side, because I had the wrong ticket. My professor said he'd figure it out, so I just waited on my sore feet and watched the time tick away. I started getting nervous and thought the train was going to leave without me! Then, with 13 minutes left to go til the train left, my professor came back with the right ticket. Phwew! Well, the fun doesn't stop there. Once we arrived back in London, I couldn't find my Oyster card. My oyster card is what lets me ride the tube in London, so without it, I couldn't get back to the center. I was so frustrated! I came close to just buying a new card, but my friends told me to just buy a one time pass and then look for my card later. So, that's what I did. Thankfully I did find my card the next morning, so that was good. It was just so frustrating piled on top of everything else, piled on top of my sore feet! Literally!
Last thing... Amanda, Kayley and I were starving, so we stopped at burger king to eat something. This British guy probably in his early thirties came and sat with us, named Tim. We just started talking and then he asked us if we were going to go out for drinks that night. We all looked at each other like, "Who's going to be the one to talk about the church?" We told him that we were Mormons and we didn't drink. He told us he'd heard of the church before and had actually gone to a meeting once before! He said it hadn't been the right thing for him at the time, but maybe now he'd check it out again. We just said, "Yeah, yeah you should!" That was my first real missionary type encounter in London! It was awesome! I hope I get more opportunities like that :)
We went and ate dinner at the first restaurant we saw that was close to Napolean's tomb. It was a cafe on the street corner, and it was the most French place we ate while we were there. I ordered quiche, but my friend Lauren got duck, so I tried some of it and it wasn't bad! At this point in the day, we still had about two hours til we had to meet up at the train station. We decided to go to Pere Lachaise, a cemetery where Oscar Wilde, Jim Morrison, Rossini, and Chopin are buried. There was glass all around Oscar Wilde's tombstone, because people kept coming and writing on it. People had written all over the glass still though--they were mostly quotes from things he had written. There was a nasty old tube of pink lipstick laying on the ground, so I used it to write my name and Amanda's on the glass. Amanda is an English major too, so she was just as excited as me to be at his gravesite. We realized after how funny it was that we had written our names together on a known homosexual's grave. Haha! :) Around then a van came driving by and the lady inside said that the cemetery was closing soon, so we needed to exit (sortie) immediately. We still hadn't found Chopin's grave yet though, so we ran in and out of the graves trying to find it while running away from the white van lady patrolling the cemetery. It was pretty great! We found Chopin's grave and left the cemetery before it closed, so no worries. We were then running a little short on time though, so we booked it back to the metro.
By the time we got back to the train station, my feet were so sore and blistered that I was basically waddling. Cobblestones are not the greatest surface to walk on. All I wanted to do was to sit down, but when we got there, our profe stopped us and said that someone had lost their ticket, so we all had to give him our tickets. He said they all needed to be accounted for, then he'd pass them back out. Our tickets were in our backpacks in our locker, so we had to go get those out, then give our tickets up. Please Note: Before we left for Paris we were given our tickets to and from Paris, so we also still had our tickets from London. Well, lucky me, I got the ticket FROM London TO Paris that someone accidentally turned in to our profe. Everyone else got through while I waited on the other side, because I had the wrong ticket. My professor said he'd figure it out, so I just waited on my sore feet and watched the time tick away. I started getting nervous and thought the train was going to leave without me! Then, with 13 minutes left to go til the train left, my professor came back with the right ticket. Phwew! Well, the fun doesn't stop there. Once we arrived back in London, I couldn't find my Oyster card. My oyster card is what lets me ride the tube in London, so without it, I couldn't get back to the center. I was so frustrated! I came close to just buying a new card, but my friends told me to just buy a one time pass and then look for my card later. So, that's what I did. Thankfully I did find my card the next morning, so that was good. It was just so frustrating piled on top of everything else, piled on top of my sore feet! Literally!
Last thing... Amanda, Kayley and I were starving, so we stopped at burger king to eat something. This British guy probably in his early thirties came and sat with us, named Tim. We just started talking and then he asked us if we were going to go out for drinks that night. We all looked at each other like, "Who's going to be the one to talk about the church?" We told him that we were Mormons and we didn't drink. He told us he'd heard of the church before and had actually gone to a meeting once before! He said it hadn't been the right thing for him at the time, but maybe now he'd check it out again. We just said, "Yeah, yeah you should!" That was my first real missionary type encounter in London! It was awesome! I hope I get more opportunities like that :)
Saturday, May 12, 2012
Paris Holds the Key to Your Heart
Day 1: Tour Eiffel and Seine Cruise
Alright, here we go! We left the center at 6:15 Wednesday morning and went from the St. Pancras train station heading to Gare du Nord in Pairs. That trip was just fine and I didn't even notice when we went under the water. Paris is one hour later than London, so we didn't arrive until about 11:20. We walked to our hotel, got checked in, and had about ten minutes to freshen up and stuff before we headed out as a group. Nick (our program director) said that the hotel was rated about a four star by European standards, but by American standards it was about a 2. It was a pretty tiny room, and the hair dryer was a hose coming out of the wall. It made me think of every movie where they end up in a shabby European hotel like in European Vacation or Just Married haha. It was fine though, because at the end of the day all we needed was a bed!
We had been given a metro pass the night before, so we used that for the first time in Paris to get to these gardens by the Louvre called the Tuileries. The metro is a lot dirtier than the tube in London, although we didn't notice that til we got back to London. The Tuileries were beautiful--just big and open, and there were so many people out and about. It was also a beautiful day! We hadn't seen the sun for a while, and it was so warm with just a little breeze. It was humid, which I wasn't expecting. After strolling the Tuileries, our professors set us loose in Paris, telling us to walk down Champs Elysees to find something to eat. Champs Elysees is a big, famous street in Paris with lots of clothing stores and places to eat. We strolled down the street and got some euros out at an ATM, then explored a side street til we found this little cafe to eat at. None of us speak French except for Kayley, but fortunately the guy behind the counter spoke English. He was so funny! We were being super touristy and taking pictures of our food, so he came and jumped in our pictures and was teasing us when we said Merci. After eating, we walked down the rest of Champs Elysees to Arc de Triumphe, which was awesome! It was a lot bigger than I thought, and when we went inside and climbed to the top, the view was incredible! I wish I would have known more about the history behind it before we came to Paris. We were supposed to meet up with the group at 8:15 by the river Seine, so after the Arc de Triumphe, we headed on Avenue Kleber to the Eiffel Tour!! The Eiffel Tower was not a let down at all. It was so tall and beautiful! I don't know what makes it so beautiful, because it's just made of iron, but it's amazing! We have a goal to take a jumping picture at every main attraction that we go to, so we took pictures of us jumping in front of the Eiffel Tower. Then we actually went and climbed the stairs all the way to the top! Well, you can only climb to a certain point, then we had to take an elevator the rest of the way. We could see so far from the very top! We could even see the Statue of Liberty (the much smaller one that's on the Seine) :) We went out for dinner after that to a really good pizza place, and then met up with everyone else around then for a cruise on the Seine! It was just about sunset, so it was the perfect scene. Tons of people our age who were just chilling on the side of the river waved to us as we went by. Paris is such a happy, hippy city! And it really is so romantic! Being on the river with all the lights was romantic enough, but right as we were passing the Eiffel Tower on our way back, it started sparkling!
Day 2: Fifteen Hours!
The hotel gave us breakfast in the morning, which was nice. As soon as we finished breakfast, which was about 8:30, we headed out for the city! The first place we hit up was Notre Dame. It looked exactly how I pictured it, and all my knowledge came from Disney's Hunchback of Notre Dame. The inside wasn't all that unique, but the outside was cool! We crossed a bridge to the other side of the river, and found a bookstore called Shakespeare and Company, which apparently Hemingway used to go to when he lived in Paris. I loved it because it was just a little house with staircases leading up into little nooks. We went to Saint Chapelle next, which is a church known for its stained glass windows. Each window depicts a scene from the Old Testament, and the windows are huge! It was pretty cool. We then went to La Conciergerie, where Marie Antoinette was kept before she was beheaded. We saw the cell she was kept in, and inside they had a black shawl over a mannequin that was supposed to look like her sitting in there. It was so creepy! Pretty interesting, though. We got some lunch at a little stand back by Notre Dame, and got these sandwichs called croque monsieurs. Basically it's a toasted ham sandwich with cheese on the inside, and cheese on the outside. So good! We decided it was like a heart attack waiting to happen though. It probably isn't the best thing for you, but man does it taste good.
After getting those places crossed off our list, we headed off for Versailles! We took about a 45 minute train ride to get there, but it was worth it. The palace at Versailles was easily the most impressive palace I've seen yet. It wasn't just the building though, it was the grounds around it! The grounds probably go for a mile or more behind the palace, and there's even a lake/pond back there. It was another beautiful day, so we bought raspberry sherbet and relaxed in the shade for a bit. It felt great! Then, we decided to just check and see how much it would cost to pay to go in a row boat on the lake/pond. Split up between four of us, it only cost about 2.50 euro! We had a little bit of trouble at first getting away from the dock, but then Kayley took over the oars and we went a-rowing away! Kayley is a pro rower, thanks to all her many years of girl's camp :) Rowing in a rowboat at Versailles was one of my favorite things we did in Paris! So, that was great. After that, we went and saw Marie Antoinette's house out back, but we couldn't figure out why anyone would live there when you could live in the Versailles palace.
The trip to Versailles took about five hours of our day, but it was okay, cause we had planned for it. We had a museum pass as well that got us into all these places for free! Well, kinda. It was all pre-paid with our program money. On our way back we had to buy a ticket, cause we were out of our zone for our metro pass. Some nice guy came and helped us out, because we couldn't figure out how to buy the tickets. We don't read French very well. We went to the Musee d'Orsay that night, which was pretty cool, except we were worn out from walking around all day. Oh, I forgot to mention... this day we celebrated like it was my birthday, because I wanted to have my birthday in Paris! I decided that all I wanted for my birthday was to lie under the Eiffel Tower and watch it light up. After the museum we wanted to go to this bakery that's supposed to be really good, but I knew we wouldn't make it to the tower if we went. We broke off from the group we were with, and just the five of us started booking it to the Eiffel Tower. The tower sparkles for five minutes every hour, so we had one shot to make it by 10 o'clock, because we had to be back at the hotel by 11. It was about a quarter to ten when Amanda and I decided to run. We ran through the streets of Paris for probably a mile before we finally turned a corner and saw the base of the Eiffel Tower! We collapsed on the grass and about thirty seconds later it started sparkling! I was so happy we had made it! We were extremely tired and gross from running, but it was worth it. We lied there for the full five minutes and just watched it. It was definitely the best birthday ever! :)
We were on our feet for fifteen hours that day, so our feet were killing us once we got back to the hotel, and we were exhausted. I'll blog about the third day tomorrow, because it's going to take me quite a bit of time. My first two days in Paris were probably two of the best days ever! I've got church early tomorrow, and I need to get some sleep. I got called to be in Young Women's, and I loved my first Sunday last week! I'm excited to go tomorrow. Hopefully some of the young women show up this time, cause last week no one came but the presidency!
Alright, here we go! We left the center at 6:15 Wednesday morning and went from the St. Pancras train station heading to Gare du Nord in Pairs. That trip was just fine and I didn't even notice when we went under the water. Paris is one hour later than London, so we didn't arrive until about 11:20. We walked to our hotel, got checked in, and had about ten minutes to freshen up and stuff before we headed out as a group. Nick (our program director) said that the hotel was rated about a four star by European standards, but by American standards it was about a 2. It was a pretty tiny room, and the hair dryer was a hose coming out of the wall. It made me think of every movie where they end up in a shabby European hotel like in European Vacation or Just Married haha. It was fine though, because at the end of the day all we needed was a bed!
Arc de Triumphe |
Paris holds the key to your heart |
Yeah, sparkling! It was already lit up and looked amazing, and then it started sparkling all over with flashing lights and looked even cooler! I think that's one of the most beautiful things I've ever seen. It was quite the experience! We headed back to our hotel after that and planned the next day out hour by hour. There were some things we were required to do, and some things we wanted to do on our own.
Day 2: Fifteen Hours!
The hotel gave us breakfast in the morning, which was nice. As soon as we finished breakfast, which was about 8:30, we headed out for the city! The first place we hit up was Notre Dame. It looked exactly how I pictured it, and all my knowledge came from Disney's Hunchback of Notre Dame. The inside wasn't all that unique, but the outside was cool! We crossed a bridge to the other side of the river, and found a bookstore called Shakespeare and Company, which apparently Hemingway used to go to when he lived in Paris. I loved it because it was just a little house with staircases leading up into little nooks. We went to Saint Chapelle next, which is a church known for its stained glass windows. Each window depicts a scene from the Old Testament, and the windows are huge! It was pretty cool. We then went to La Conciergerie, where Marie Antoinette was kept before she was beheaded. We saw the cell she was kept in, and inside they had a black shawl over a mannequin that was supposed to look like her sitting in there. It was so creepy! Pretty interesting, though. We got some lunch at a little stand back by Notre Dame, and got these sandwichs called croque monsieurs. Basically it's a toasted ham sandwich with cheese on the inside, and cheese on the outside. So good! We decided it was like a heart attack waiting to happen though. It probably isn't the best thing for you, but man does it taste good.
After getting those places crossed off our list, we headed off for Versailles! We took about a 45 minute train ride to get there, but it was worth it. The palace at Versailles was easily the most impressive palace I've seen yet. It wasn't just the building though, it was the grounds around it! The grounds probably go for a mile or more behind the palace, and there's even a lake/pond back there. It was another beautiful day, so we bought raspberry sherbet and relaxed in the shade for a bit. It felt great! Then, we decided to just check and see how much it would cost to pay to go in a row boat on the lake/pond. Split up between four of us, it only cost about 2.50 euro! We had a little bit of trouble at first getting away from the dock, but then Kayley took over the oars and we went a-rowing away! Kayley is a pro rower, thanks to all her many years of girl's camp :) Rowing in a rowboat at Versailles was one of my favorite things we did in Paris! So, that was great. After that, we went and saw Marie Antoinette's house out back, but we couldn't figure out why anyone would live there when you could live in the Versailles palace.
The trip to Versailles took about five hours of our day, but it was okay, cause we had planned for it. We had a museum pass as well that got us into all these places for free! Well, kinda. It was all pre-paid with our program money. On our way back we had to buy a ticket, cause we were out of our zone for our metro pass. Some nice guy came and helped us out, because we couldn't figure out how to buy the tickets. We don't read French very well. We went to the Musee d'Orsay that night, which was pretty cool, except we were worn out from walking around all day. Oh, I forgot to mention... this day we celebrated like it was my birthday, because I wanted to have my birthday in Paris! I decided that all I wanted for my birthday was to lie under the Eiffel Tower and watch it light up. After the museum we wanted to go to this bakery that's supposed to be really good, but I knew we wouldn't make it to the tower if we went. We broke off from the group we were with, and just the five of us started booking it to the Eiffel Tower. The tower sparkles for five minutes every hour, so we had one shot to make it by 10 o'clock, because we had to be back at the hotel by 11. It was about a quarter to ten when Amanda and I decided to run. We ran through the streets of Paris for probably a mile before we finally turned a corner and saw the base of the Eiffel Tower! We collapsed on the grass and about thirty seconds later it started sparkling! I was so happy we had made it! We were extremely tired and gross from running, but it was worth it. We lied there for the full five minutes and just watched it. It was definitely the best birthday ever! :)
We were on our feet for fifteen hours that day, so our feet were killing us once we got back to the hotel, and we were exhausted. I'll blog about the third day tomorrow, because it's going to take me quite a bit of time. My first two days in Paris were probably two of the best days ever! I've got church early tomorrow, and I need to get some sleep. I got called to be in Young Women's, and I loved my first Sunday last week! I'm excited to go tomorrow. Hopefully some of the young women show up this time, cause last week no one came but the presidency!
Tuesday, May 8, 2012
Word, Sworth!
Fish and chips at Cafe Diana |
After the museum, we went shopping at Primark. It's always so hot and crowded in there, and today was a little bit hectic. It was a successful shopping day though! I got two pairs of shoes for 7 pounds! We couldn't stay long at Primark, because we had to head back to the center for dinner. We went to see Phantom of the Opera after dinner, and it was so amazing! The first half was good, and then the second half was even better! I thought all the actors had amazing voices, especially Christine. The Phantom was a little shaky on the high notes, but other than that he did great. I just think of Gerard Butler so highly that I don't know if anyone can compare! We all agreed that the set and the music was great though. I think that's been my favorite play/musical we've seen so far! After the play had finished and we came outside the theater, there were four guys setting up for a dance routine, so we stopped and watched them. They did cool break dancing and were really good! It was so fun to stand in the square outside the theater and cheer along with everybody. Today was a really good day :)
Now, we're all packing for Paris tomorrow!! We're leaving at 6:15 am, which means another early morning. We'll be taking the tube to a chunnel station, called Eurostar, then taking that into the heart of Paris! I'll get to see the Eiffel Tower tomorrow! I won't be taking my laptop with me, so I won't be blogging for the next three days. I'll be sure to write down what we do though, so I can post about it. This is such an awesome experience, and I can't wait till tomorrow!
Monday, May 7, 2012
"Wait, The Queen's Dead?!"
Buckingham Palace |
Lion Statue at Trafalgar Square |
One of our favorite places to eat is a little cafe called Pret A Manger, and they're all over the place. We don't know how to pronounce it in French, so we just say it like it sounds. It sounds pretty funny to say it like that! We got dinner there, then took the tube to the University College of London to see something pretty interesting. This guy named Jeremy Bentham donated his body to the university when he died, and they keep his body on display in the school! It's stuffed with straw, and he only has a head made of wax, because rival schools kept stealing his real head. Gross, but cool! We walked all the way to the university to see him, then when we got there he was stored away in a box! Usually he is on display, but we think that maybe he was put away because it was a bank holiday today. None of us know what a bank holiday is, but most everything was closed today because of it, so we just kept blaming everything on the bank holiday. After that disappointment, we walked to this gelato shop that Katherine wanted to show us. Do you know the muffin man? The one who lives on Drury Lane? :) We walked down Drury Lane on our way to get gelato, which was kind of cool! The gelato place is called Scoop, and it was worth the walk! We were going to go to Covent Garden next, which is in a scene from My Fair Lady, but it was getting dark by then and it had been a long day. We want to go back sometime though. I always love coming back to the centre after a long and tiring day. Even though I come home exhausted, I feel like I'm getting the most out of my experience here. I just love walking around London and finding things I didn't know about before. I'm thinking I should probably find out what a bank holiday is though :)
Saturday, May 5, 2012
Husband Hunting
Brighton Pavilion |
A briny beach |
Canterbury Cathedral |
Tomorrow is my first day in my new ward! We were supposed to get an email with our callings, but our bishop never sent it. I guess we'll find out tomorrow, though. Church starts at 9, and we've got about an hour of travel to get there, so it's going to be another early morning. I'm excited though! I think this is going to be one of the best things about the program. Cheers everybody!
Thursday, May 3, 2012
British Museum & Other Cool Stuff
Rosetta Stone |
On a walk through Hyde Park |
Peter Pan Statue |
About half of the group went to see Matilda the musical tonight, so a group of us girls went to a place called Ben's Cookies to get pazukis, or cazukis, or fazukis, or whatever you call them! They call them cookie monsters here, which is way easier to remember. The Matilda goers said that it was awesome, so I'm excited to go! I'll be able to go with another group on May 15. Plays and musicals here are super cheap, so we're trying to go to as many as we can without breaking our budget. I'm sorry for the lack of pictures! I've been putting all my pictures on facebook, but if you don't have facebook, hopefully someone who does can show you what I've been up to! There'll be more to come!
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
Westminster Abbey & Les Mis
As you can tell by my title, today we went to Westminster Abbey! All but four monarchs have been crowned there, and most of them have been married there, including Will and Kate! Besides this, the Abbey is still used as a church, and there are lots of monuments to soldiers, monarchs, poets, and authors. Outside the main entrance above the door are a bunch of statues commemorating important people from the 1900s, and our guide pointed out Martin Luther King Jr. for us, which I thought was pretty cool! The ceiling in the part of the church called the nave is 101 feet high, and 3,300 graves are found in the Abbey. When you first walk in is a grave marking the “unknown soldier,” which not even the Queen is allowed to walk on. It’s a tradition at royal weddings for the bride to lay her bouquet on the grave. This grave is honoring all the unnamed soldiers who died in WWI. WWI to England is like what WWII for us—it’s a much bigger deal here than in the States. Also towards the front is a monument to FDR, as well as the oldest piece of furniture in Britain still used for its original purpose—the coronation chair. The chair was built in the 1300s, and is still used in the coronation ceremony today. I have no idea how it hasn’t fallen apart!
There are so many famous people buried at Westminster Abbey, and
that was my favorite part about it. Some of the famous scientists buried there
are Charles Darwin, Isaac Newton, Michael Faraday, and Clark Maxwell. They also
have monuments to past prime ministers, and I found out that some people in
Britain call policemen “bobbies,” because Robert Peel was the prime minister
who started the police force. Interesting to finally know where that comes
from! One of my favorite parts was seeing the grave of Mary I and Elizabeth I.
I wish I could have taken pictures inside! Mary and Elizabeth were half-sisters
born to King Henry VIII, (Hampton court guy, king who beheaded all his wives) and
they didn’t get along. Mary (known as Bloody Mary for killing so many
Protestants) tried to have her half-sister Elizabeth killed, because she was
afraid Elizabeth would try to take over the throne. When Mary died, Elizabeth became the queen. Elizabeth was
afraid that Mary, Queen of Scots (different from Mary I) would try to overthrow
her, so she had Mary put on trial and killed. After Elizabeth died, James VI
from Scotland (son of Mary, Queen of Scots) took the English throne and became
James I. James had Elizabeth and Bloody Mary buried next to each other, which I
think is hilarious! I’m sorry for all the history, and I know it’s confusing,
but I had to explain it so that it makes sense why it’s such a big deal that
the sisters are buried right next to each other. “Divided in life, but together
in death.” I think James did it just to spite Elizabeth, who killed his mom! Anyways…
my favorite part in the Abbey is a place called Poets’ Corner. Geoffrey
Chaucer, known as the Father of English Literature, was the first poet buried
there, and ever since, famous poets and writers are represented there: John
Milton, William Shakespeare, John Dryden, Edward Spenser, Alfred Lord Tennyson,
Robert Browning, Oscar Wilde, D. H. Lawrence, Longfellow, Keats, Shelley,
Robert Southey, T.S. Eliot, Jane Austen, Wordsworth, Samuel Johnson, Samuel
Coleridge, the Bronte sisters, Robert Burns, Charles Dickens, and Rudyard
Kipling, just to name a few J
It was so awesome! All the other English majors and I were freaking out,
because those are all major writers that we’ve studied! Oh, and as a side note,
the oldest door in England, made in 1050, is in a part of the Abbey called the
Chapter House :)
Tonight, after a delicious meal of
ribs in the centre, we went as a group to Les Miserables! I’d never seen it
performed before, so I was so excited to see it! It was amazing! The songs were
beautiful, and they all had good voices, especially the actor who played Jean
Val-Jean. I had seen a spoof of it done at the Desert Star with my grandma and
cousins, so the whole time I kept thinking of “Jean Levi Jean!” It was really
good, but I think I’m still more excited to see Wicked and Phantom of the
Opera. I don’t know if anyone can beat Gerard Butler, though, but we’ll see :)
Tuesday, May 1, 2012
Hampton Court
Today, we went to Hampton Court Palace, the favorite palace of King Henry VIII. He had about 60 other palaces, but this one was his favorite. He's the king that had 6 wives, and beheaded almost all of them, because they only had daughters. His second wife, Anne Boleyn, is famous, because she was the mother of Queen Elizabeth. While I was walking around, I kept thinking of an SNL skit where Kristen Wiig acts like a tudor girl and calls herself the "other, other Bolyen girl." The palace was amazing! We put on these medieval-looking robes that made me feel like we were in The Village, and walked around the palace, listening to our audio tour. We toured the king's kitchens, his private rooms, the great hall, and also the William and Mary part that was added on later. The tour said that the servants had to prepare dinner for 600 people! I thought, man, I'm never going to complain about washing the dishes ever again! King Henry himself even came walking into the courtyard when we were there, and we got a picture with him! He was actually kind of intimidating! My favorite part of Hampton court was the gardens. They were so beautiful and huge! I took about a hundred pictures, so don't worry. There's a maze in the gardens that we were all excited to go through, but it cost about 4 pounds, so we decided not to. We had a nice sunny day too, so it was perfect! I decided to wear my rain boots for the first time today, and of course when I do, it doesn't rain. I walked through all the puddles though :)
Tonight, a few of us went to see The Avengers. I won't give anything away... but I will say it was awesome! I'll probably end up seeing it again in the States. I feel like seeing a movie here was an important cultural experience. You should all go see it... when it comes out in America :)
Hanging out with the wooden courtiers |
Beautiful gardens at Hampton Court |
Tonight, a few of us went to see The Avengers. I won't give anything away... but I will say it was awesome! I'll probably end up seeing it again in the States. I feel like seeing a movie here was an important cultural experience. You should all go see it... when it comes out in America :)
Bill Shakespeare
Yesterday was so fun! On our way to Stratford, we stopped at a little town called
Chipping Norton and had a quick lunch of pizza and apple turnover. The drive to
Stratford was about two hours in a coach, and the English countryside is
beautiful! England has about twenty different shades of green, and we passed
these huge golden-yellow fields, but I'm not sure what kind of flowers they were.
First, we stopped at Anne Hathaway’s cottage. The house was built in medieval times before Anne’s family lived there, and you can still even see the fingerprints in the walls from when it was built! Pretty cool. Shakespeare famously wrote in his will that to his wife, Anne, he left nothing but his “second best bed,” and upstairs they had that bed displayed. Shakespeare was only 18 when he married 26 year-old Anne, and their marriage had to be done quickly, because Anna was already 3 months pregnant. Or at least, they think it’s the same bed. In the kitchen they still have the original floor laid down by Anne’s grandfather during the reign of King Henry VIII. More about good ole king Henry will come later. We learned some interesting things about how the household was run back in Shakespeare’s day. The tour guide told us that husbands were allowed to beat their wives as long as the stick they used was smaller than the width of their thumb. This is where the phrase keeping someone “under the thumb” comes from. Also, husbands were only allowed to beat their wives during daylight hours, so as not to keep the neighbors up. The house has no foundation or cellar, so I have no idea how it’s still standing! And, apparently, 13 generations of Hathaways lived in that house. Pretty cool! The gardens at the cottage were also so pretty!
Stratford-upon-Avon |
Graveyard at Trinity Church |
Before going to Twelfth Night, we walked around Stratford for a bit, then got some dinner at a little café. The theater we went to does a bunch of Shakespeare plays year-round; it’s not the famous Shakespeare theater, The Globe, but we are going to go to a play there later in the trip. Our seats were up in the nosebleeds on the side, but because the way the theater was set up, we could still see everything. The play was so good! It was hilarious. The actor who played Malvolio (the bad guy) did such a good job! He reminded me of the Duke in Moulin Rouge. The play was a little difficult to understand at some parts, but because I’ve read the play a few times, I didn’t get lost. I'm so glad I was able to visit the famous Shakespeare spots; they're places I've wanted to go my whole life! This place is a dream come true!
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