London Day 1: Westminster

I made it!

Long flights and time changes have gotten a little harder since the last time, but I survived. I’m sightseeing with extreme intensity! Hence why it’s taken me this long to finish my first blog post. This post isn’t even going to be a full wrap of my first full day in London, since there were so many photos. Most likely, content will be spaced out over the next few weeks since I will be doing much less sightseeing once I reach Wales.

Let’s get this thing started so that I can go to dinner!

I started Tuesday at Westminster Abbey, now technically a church and not an abbey (and for 16 years in the sixteenth century, a cathedral), and the site of the coronation of every English monarch since its construction.

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Most of the architecture is in the Gothic style, characterized by pointed arches and flying buttresses, even though its construction lasted well beyond the 16th century.

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Above the Great West Door are a series of statues representing ten twentieth-century Christian martyrs. A few might look familiar… they include Martin Luther King Jr and Óscar Romero.

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Worshipers may enter from the west, but visitors must buy tickets and use the doors under the north facade.

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There were no photos allowed inside, so I can’t show you the way the light filters in through the ancient glass; the tombs and dedications to hundreds of England’s most accomplished scientists, musicians, poets, and authors; the poppy-wreathed plaque beneath which is buried a single unknown soldier from World War I, to whom countless monarchs and world leaders have paid their respects; the painted screen and silvery pipes of the church’s organ, or the lace-like carvings in the Lady Chapel’s vault ceilings…

… so let’s go outside!

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The walkways of the Little Cloister are full of heavy wooden doors where canons, clergy, and lay officers live and work to this day.

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Beyond the Little Cloister is the College Garden, where (in the old days) the Abbey’s monks grew food, medicinal herbs, and plants for inks and dyes.

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Westminster School, one of the oldest schools in London, borders the College Garden.

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The garden is now more of a park, with flowerbeds, trees, walkways, and benches.

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Let’s bee friends.

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The exterior of the Lady Chapel makes use of Late Gothic architecture’s characteristic flying buttresses.

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I walked by the Houses of Parliament, but as they aren’t in session, visitors couldn’t go in.

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London pubs are always pn these beautiful, timeless corners, many with colorful flower baskets and easy-to-spot signs.

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But more about pubs later…

Next up: Trafalgar Square and lunch with the dead.

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