We were given eight locations around London that had some sort of physical representation of Shakespeare. After we were broken into smaller groups, we were assigned one of these eight memorials and tasked with defending it as the best representation of the Bard. Ours was the statue housed in this small, eccentric London museum—the Soane. This Shakespeare was a bust, perched far aloft. The bust is in the Classical style—no pupils or irises, merely whites. Shakespeare looks rather hefty, and his rounded face is covered with awkward facial hair. Drunk on success and having finally achieved the societal statue he so desired, he sits there—looking down on us mere mortals, his cheeks puffed out almost as much as his puffed sleeves. I lovingly refer to him as the Elvis-Shakespeare. It was utter silliness.
Back at The Globe, we didn't ever determine whose was best because—let's face it—Shakespeare's best memorial is his words.
One of our stops was the British Library. Oh goodness, this was just about my favorite thing I've seen so far. Today, I looked upon:
An actual 10th century manuscript of Beowulf and pages from Seamus Heaney's 1999 Whitbread winning translation.
One of Shakespeare's First Folios, turned to the page where this is at the top: “Thy drugs are quicke. Thus with a kiss I die.” (Name the play!)
Jane Austen's Volume the Third and her writing desk . Seeing her handwriting actually teared me up. Don't judge.
Bronte's Jane Eyre, Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway with the heading The Hours...
Handel's Messiah, Mozart, Beethoven's tuning fork and 9th symphony, and Medelssohm's Wedding March.
Henry VIII's prayer roll: This is a long, illustrated tapestry of Christ's life. (I think Henry should've spent more time with this...)
The oldest New Testament in the world and
Alice, Alice, Alice. The original in C.S. Lewis' hand. I got Taylor's special London present in the BL's gift shop...she's my little Jabberwocky, my silly nonsense girl and so she gets her special present from here.
That's all for today. I really feel settled in and comfortable now. At the end of the day, I do want to lock myself in the room where it is only just me. The crowds are very overwhelming. I have been called a city-girl by some of Jeremy's family from New Mexico, but I am here to tell you that growing up in the American suburbs does not a city girl make.
That's all for now.