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The
International Writers Magazine: World Travel
The
Weight of London
Eric D. Lehman
Every
time I land at Heathrow, I can feel a difference in the air. With
many countries, the swirl of foreign language makes it obvious
that I am traveling, that I have left the United States and entered
the land of the other. But this could still be New York, though
perhaps a cleaner one. Sure, I receive a strange-looking currency
out of an ATM instead of dollar bills, but I have no problem reading
the signs for the Underground, no problem telling the taxicab
driver where to go. It was just like America, except smaller and
with better public transportation. Why then, did it feel so different?
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The first thing
I notice this visit is that tea becomes my blood as it never can be
in America. The hotpot always seems ready at friends flats, whether
they are of Indian, Chinese, or Irish extraction. "Tea?" is
offered at every pause, at every corner café, and the tradition
and ritual connect us with a billion British through the years. I try
to think of a daily American custom that has lasted as long, fifty years
even, and fail. Another day we had afternoon tea at Fortnum and Mason,
pretending to be upper crusters. "Pass the scones, old sport,"
my friend tells me, quite seriously. But that day we drink tea at a
simple tea house in Regents Park, and I have what is possibly
the best cuppa of my life. I check the bag and find the Twinings label,
a common tea brand in the U.S. "Twinings!" I exclaim to my
friends. "This aint the Twinings we get!" I marvel at
the attention to quality, to the importance of detail in daily life
that seems missing at home.
From the Regents Park tea house, we walk out onto the wet green
lawns and find the spot where the final scene of John Fowles The
Magus takes place, where the main character and the reader are left
wondering whether love will triumph. Suddenly, ten thousand novels,
plays, and films open to my senses as I realize that London is English
Literature, the birthing ground for story itself, for a million scenes
of conflict and resolution. Down the road, in the Archive Room of the
British Library, those stories line the walls unbelievable documents
that seem legendary: the only copy of Beowulf, the first folio
of Shakespeare, the Magna Carta, Alice in Wonderland, Newtons
laws, Gandhis letters, and a thousand more, spinning my head
in disbelief. Such a room does not exist in America, except in palest
imitation, housing a few minor manuscripts, a paltry sum of historical
record.
The city seemed like a thick tea bag full of the most venerable leaves
as we waded into it again. Stopping at the British Museum, I find a
hundred pieces from history class, things that make our heads swim in
the deep well of time. Outside, in the streets, the march of history
continues, from the primeval Tudor taverns to the iconic Big Ben. Here
we stride through those stories in a way we could never do in a place
like Hollywood, where the backdrops are fake and the on-site locations
constantly changing. Here the ancient gates and smoky taverns live beside
gleaming towers of modernity. Certainly a place like New York has at
least begun to build its own mythology, with a hundred years of film
and novel to lend it weight. But in ancient Londinium these moments
can come to life all around you, in this dense, chewy center of English-speaking
culture.
My friends and I take pictures with the electrified statue of Winston
Churchill, on which no pigeon dares to perch, and duck into Westminster
Abbey. As we make our way through the ancient halls, we find the tomb
of Queen Elizabeth. Queen Elizabeth! That such a fabled person walked
the earth and has an actual resting place seems beyond all expectation.
We pay homage in Poets Corner, to the writers who built our common
language and passions. And then, in the wide gallery of the Abbey, I
find the grave of Charles Darwin, an apparent contradiction that only
the British could cheerfully stomach, like a Monty Python skit come
to life. It is like the pub a wry Britisher opened in an old temperance
hall, like the celebration of Guy Fawkes Day with fireworks. Only
a people with a seasoned, rich culture can see beyond the seemingly
outrageous paradox to the calm, tea-blend of true history.
I stand a long time at the grave of Charles Darwin, amongst the murmur
of tourists and the sound of echoing feet, knowing that some of my fellow
English-speakers probably take this for granted, the solid weight of
memory their lives made denser than scones by narrative and details,
in a way that most Americans will never know.
© Eric D. Lehman December 2006
University of Bridgeport
elehman@bridgeport.edu
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