Sunday, October 31, 2010

Huh?




Do you see this?

It's on Etsy, and it costs $36.00.

...Why? Scraps + thread + braiding is NOT worth nearly forty dollars. Is it just me, or is that a bit ridiculous?

Ok, that's all. Happy Halloween!

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Photo Files, '07-'10

I haven't forgotten that I'm in a different country and I keep going places and taking pictures and needing to tell people about it. It's just that after a while I get very bored of writing about it. So I thought I'd go ahead and write about something I actually wanted to write about. I promise I will get to the others--but honestly, I'm not really all that fussed about doing it promptly anymore. It'll eventually all be caught up, and then life will be awesome. I may be forty by then, but hey, whatever works. So: current post.

"A good snapshot stops a moment from running away."
--Eudora Welty

I went through my photo files this past week. A snarly, jumbled mess they were, too--not because I usually keep them that way, but because after my computer crashed this summer, the files never went back to the state of organization they'd previously enjoyed, and I never had time to straighten them out. Enter study abroad, and plenty of time to look at things online, sit around my room doing nothing, and travel and then put off writing about it, and other such bad habits. The good thing about this half procrastination, half stress over not knowing what to do with myself (or my life...or next semester...or my suitcase. Hey, don't laugh, I lose sleep over this stuff) is that I do get a lot of lists made and files organized.

Because that's what I do when I feel like things are not quite right. Or when I feel overwhelmed, either one. I make lists and organize things. Every single piece of paper I've received since August has been put in chronological order, and, well, here's a list of things I've made lists about.
  1. ALL of my different usernames for the million different things I'm signed up for online.
  2. Sewing projects to do sometime, knitting projects to do sometime, random craft projects to do sometime. These are further categorized into things to try sooner, things to try eventually, things to make for me, things to make for other people, things I could try to sell, etc.
  3. Every single card/letter/piece of mail I've received since getting here, the date I received it, whether or not a response was mandatory or preferable or unnecessary, and whether or not I've sent one yet.
  4. Every object I brought with me. Every single one. From dental floss to every pair of earrings to the particular edition of every single magazine as well as the bags themselves. Further itemized into what I wore, what I carried on, and what was in my suitcase.
  5. Every object I've bought here. Even postcards. And where I bought them, how much they cost, and how much that cost is in US dollars. I figure this will be convenient when I have to fill out a declaration form on the plane on the way home.
  6. Every item that I will be taking home, split into what I can wear, what will go into the first carry on, what will go into the second carry on, and what will go into the suitcase.
  7. Every item I brought or bought that I will NOT be taking home, divided into what can be recycled, sold, given back to the school, and trashed.
  8. Everything I will probably be purchasing during the rest of the semester.
  9. Potential school schedules for next semester. A lot of them.
  10. Things I do not like about England.
  11. Things I do like about England.
  12. Things I want to do/make/eat when I get home.
  13. Things I want to still do while I'm here.
  14. A complete budget for the entire semester and a basic financial outline for next semester as well.
  15. Goals in life. This includes things like "own a home" and "learn to cook healthy food" and "get married" as well as "own a dishwasher" and "visit Harry Potter World in Florida."
  16. Things I need my life to contain. This includes money, structure, and family members.
  17. Things that have gone wrong this year.
  18. Things that have gone right this year. The other list is longer, but some years are just like that.
  19. Shopping lists. About forty-five of them.
  20. To-do lists. About a billion of them. Everywhere.
  21. Presents to buy or make for people, and how I should package each one.
  22. Different ways to wear my hair that look good and don't require a hairdryer, curling iron, straightener, or any products. Because I don't have any of it here, and don't own half of it at home either.
  23. Things to have in a kitchen. This includes both supplies (because really, there should be ziplock bags, dishtowels, and measuring spoons in every kitchen) and ingredients (there should always be mustard and butter and rice around, for instance). This list was born out of a desire to one day own a properly-equipped kitchen in a country where the oven is in degrees fahrenheit and the cupboards contain more than pasta and bullion cubes.
  24. Trip itineraries. Very, very, very detailed trip itineraries. Trip itineraries titled things like "Travelling Guide for December 10-11, 2010: Norwich House to Brighton Bus Station to London Heathrow Central Bus Station to London Heathrow Terminal Three to American Airlines Flight 115 to JFK Terminal Eight to American Eagle Flight 3695 to Norfolk Arrivals to Norfolk Baggage Claim to Greeting Family to Supper Out to Home." That's the title, not the itinerary. Which include things like taxi phone numbers, the names of every stop along the way to Heathrow so I know not to get off at those ones, directions from the Central Bus Station to Terminal Three, what to do while waiting for the flights, what to do while on the planes, what questions I should be asking, what documentation I should have on me, and where I think we should get supper when I get to my family.
  25. Lists I need to make. Because otherwise I might forget, and then I might run out of lists to write one day, and be forced into doing something that is productive or self-destructive or something.
I'm not kidding or being over dramatic. These lists exist, and I could provide photographic evidence, except that would be boring.

In case you were curious, I have very small, reasonably neat handwriting, I keep the majority of my textbooks, and I have about 45,000 lists stuck in different notebooks and on different pieces of paper, and I hate throwing them away. I like spelling out numbers. I am intimidated by the phone and beginning to be intimidated by my email. And I'm developing a wrinkle between my eyebrows.

Slight OCD tendencies? Psh. Habits befitting a sixty-year-old librarian? Psh.

Ok, well, maybe. But this post isn't actually supposed to be about that. It's about the files I've been going through.

Like this one.


I have a lot of sunset photos. There must be more pretty evenings at home than I remember. Sunsets aren't so common here, but the light is pretty in the afternoons.

Of course there are a lot of this type of picture:


Blurry and bad.

Also, an uncommonly high number of this sort of picture:


Apparently I'm a huge dork and every time my mom puts the camera on me, I act ridiculous.

(In that particular picture, I think it was allowed, though--it was my birthday.)

There are lots of doll photos like this.


I don't really do anything with these pics, but the dolls are so pretty I have to take the pictures.

I have simply TONS of this sort of photo:


Also known as the "Carson has no idea that you're behind him taking a picture of him reading Cosmo aloud to you and Kate, and Kate is intently listening to the story about twenty flirting techniques and ignoring the camera" photograph. Another version of this type of photo involves the back of people's heads as I walk behind them. I must walk in the back of groups a lot, because I have hundreds of these.

Lots of these, too:


Various craft projects I complete at school and need to share with my mother. Or projects whose colors are so pretty that I decide I just HAVE to capture it in photographic form. These little felt roses were beauties, and pretty easy. I gave one to everybody in my immediate family, and none of the boys told me I was crazy. If that doesn't show that my brothers and father are well-raised males, I don't know what does.

The Eagle Scout badges, maybe, and the grades and manners. But I think the roses are a nicer concrete example.

(I'm very proud of my family.)

This type of picture is akin to the dorky Katherine picture a few up--it's the dorky brother picture.


You would not believe how many of these I have. David's a bigger goof than I am.

Feet pictures. I don't know what it is. Maybe it's because it's hard to take pictures of myself in public, but other people start giving me weird looks after I take seventeen pictures of them. Maybe it's because I want to take pictures but am trying to just give people the impression that I'm looking through the review section on the camera, so it's naturally pointed at my feet. Maybe I just really like my toenails, or have a partiality for metallic toenail polish. Maybe it's because I danced for fifteen years and have a very strong appreciation for my feet. Maybe I'm trying to see how my jeans look with my shoes when there's not a full-length mirror. Maybe it's the way I try to prove that I exist, since I tend to be the person taking the photos and thus am not usually in them.


I don't really know. But what I do know is that I have a picture of my own feet in nearly every single album on my computer. That's dozens and dozens of feet pictures. It's almost creepy.

I find these sometimes.


Lovely pictures of things that immediately make me want it to be Christmas, or summer, or New Year's, or the Fourth of July, or Thanksgiving. In this particular case, it's obviously Christmas.

Along with feet pictures, this is how else I show up in my computer files.


There are an alarming number of these, actually. I apparently really love my fingernails.

But really, don't they look nice in that picture? Somebody should be appreciating them. Who cares if it's myself?

I like it when I turn up some of these in a messy file.


Hello, Elon. You're beautiful at Christmas. I'll miss the twinkling lights on the trees and the luminaries this year. See you in January.

I found a lot of these pictures, too.


Otherwise known as "Katherine doesn't have a second mirror to look at the back of her hair, but she wants to know if it looks okay or not without having to go ask somebody who could possibly lie about it anyway, so she takes about ten pictures of the back of her head, because it's really hard to focus on the back of your head when your arms are behind and above you and you can't see the little screen." In this particular photo, I'm not sure why I was concerned about the back of my hair since you can see in the mirror that I obviously haven't bothered to even put in my contacts and thus don't seem to be concerned about overall appearance, but who knows. I might've had a reason. Or else maybe I was bored of homework and had a pile of bobby pins.

Anyway.

I particularly like it when certain things turn up. Like this.


When I was in high school, Photoshop and I were very chummy. I think I was actually pretty decent with it--or maybe I was just braver with the idea that I could take photos and make some sort of art with it. This was one of my very favorite collages, made from pictures of one of the little girls I babysat for eight years (and consider practically family) and pictures from the road we both live on. I remember the pictures, and I remember the day most of them were taken, which was warm and sunny and happy. The song in the background is "Fields of Gold," which I believe was first sung by Sting. The version I've always listened to is by Eva Cassidy, though, and back in high school I used to sit on my floor in the dark after I was supposed to be asleep and listen to it on repeat. Eva Cassidy has a truly beautiful voice. "Fields of Gold" is still one of my favorites--although it took a long time before I realized that it's not just a slightly melancholy song; it's a sad one.

That little girl is nearly eleven now, by the way. She was about seven in those pictures. I wrote her and her older sister letters today.

I found this, too.


In fact, I found two versions. But I think I like the green one better.


This next one was for my brother before I went to college, but I don't think I ever gave it to him. And now it's three years later, and he's applying to colleges.


We're cute siblings, David and I. We like to dance and to drive around singing off-key for no reason. And by that I mean that the driving is for no reason; the off-key singing is because carrying a tune is not a talent found in my immediate family. But we all like to sing anyway, so sing we do.

Totally forgot this one below existed--I did it for a photography class project in my senior year, I think. Whether or not I got an A is anyone's guess, but my money is on yes. And it's pretty obvious that I was feeling nostalgic when I dumped out all those photos around my feet to take a foot picture. (Yep, a foot picture. I need to mention here that I don't like anybody else's feet. Just mine.) Additional nostalgia provided by my little brother, holding up a piece of paper with lyrics from "Good Riddance."

I think I was born nostalgic.


I particularly love that picture in the Polaroid frame all the way to the left--Kayla and Olivia pretending to tango in Venice. It's really, really hard to believe that that was three years ago. I haven't seen some of the people in these pictures in literally years. Makes me feel old. And I'm only twenty!

And sometimes I find things like this collage below. Then I have to close my door and stare at it for a long time.


I miss this home. And this home isn't exactly the same as the one to which I'll return in December...but no matter what, it holds my Mama, and my Daddy, and my brothers, and a mailbox labeled 3849. I can't wait to see all of the above.

I love it.


Well, the pictures are all tidy now. Next organizing project: Document files. Project after that: iTunes playlists. They could use revamping, and "Happy3," "I Like" and "End of Freshman Year GAH" could probably be renamed to something making more sense.

Oh, and I just read sixty pages of Rousseau, so the first person to tell me that I'm procrastinating is in so much trouble.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

First Day of Break: London!

"By seeing London, I have seen as much of life as the world can show."
--Samuel Johnson

Well, now that I'm a majestic nearly TWO weeks late posting about my trip, my internet connection and my patience level WITH said internet connection coincided well enough that I thought I'd blog about the first day of my trip: London.

Plus, I'm heading into London again this Saturday, and it would be positively shameful to not post about the first London trip before the second. (First and second here are not exactly the correct terms. I've technically been to London five times: when I was a senior in high school, when I got into Heathrow in early September, when my Sussex in September program took us all to the Globe Theatre in mid-September, the time I'm blogging about now, and a stopover on my way back from this trip. So technically this was the fourth time and the day trip this Saturday will be the sixth, but whatever. I'm an English major. I don't do counting.) So yeah. Rewind really quickly to Friday, September 24th.

I got up at 7:15. Dressed, bed made, Facebook checked, packed up, peanut butter toast made for breakfast and consumed. It was drizzly, and I wasn't sure if that was supposed to be a bad omen or not, but fortunately the man at the Falmer ticket window was nice (Falmer is the train station directly adjacent to campus), and the train ride went smoothly despite a wailing toddler, and I managed to find the Ticket on Departure machines pretty easily and got my tickets for the trip between Brighton and London. The Brighton train station is a lot larger than the Falmer station (which is literally the size of my freshman year dorm room)--it has restaurants and everything--but it still has the flower boxes which seem to be a ubiquitous train station item around here, and I found that very encouraging. It was not difficult to find my train, even though I worried about it. That's just my way of doing things--worry about them until they turn out right. It will probably give me high blood pressure in ten years or so, but until then it seems to work well enough.

The train to London stopped and started so frequently that it made me feel a bit ill. The consolation here is that it's much, much quicker than the coach I've now taken twice before. I'd almost rather take the train back to London for my trip back to Heathrow in December, if it weren't for the luggage thing and the having to take the tube to Heathrow from St. Pancras (with luggage) thing. I'm pretty sure I can't handle that. Instead, I'll take the taxi to the coach station, pay the driver the obligatory twelve pounds, pay my twenty-five pounds to take an early evening coach to Heathrow and have them stow my suitcase under the bus, and then wait at Heathrow all night, go through passport control and security at like four in the morning, find my gate, chill there until 7:30am or so, and then board. At 8:30,am, I'll be on the way back to the USA and sleeping the whole way there.

Not that I've spent time thinking about this or anything. Of course not.

Ok, so maybe I have. But wow. Off-topic, much? Sorry. Back to London. And just ignore me when I start typing things like that. It's just that I don't like deleting things after I write them, because when I read through them later it amuses me to see how much drivel I come up with.

Well, I got there. And then I walked confusedly around the station (St. Pancras) for a minute, and then I went to go find Euston (the station I'd be leaving from late that night). It was a straight shot, if a mite further than I had expected, and I went ahead in once I found it and used the machine to get my tickets to Edinburgh for later and found a London Center map. It was around ten in the morning by then, and I decided that since I'd passed the British Library on the way in (and thus knew where it was), I could go to that later, and should go ahead and find the British Museum.

It was still drizzly--but I don't mind drizzly. It's good that it didn't rain harder than that, though, because I walked around for about a million years trying to find the British Museum. Who woiuld really think that the British version of the Smithsonian (so, obviously huge) would be so hard to find when you have a MAP? I'll tell you I did walk all over the place before eventually realizing that I just wasn't walking far enough--so I walked father. And then, still not finding it and beginning to feel a bit upset, I found a park called Bloomsbury Gardens or something like that, and there were some nice families and little kids running around, so I went in to collapse on a bench and try once again to figure out what magical path I had totally missed on the map.

Just an aside--it would be WAY easier to find my way around if the British would just put some street signs up and not expect you to have the inherent knowledge that you're on Marylebone Road or Tottenham Court Road or whatever. Same goes for Brighton. I didn't notice is to much in Bath or Lewes, but both times I was with a lot of people so it wasn't me trying to find stuff. And Lewes is pretty small. But really, what is the point of having maps if there aren't going to be any street names posted anywhere? End of aside.

The map told me exactly what it had told me before: "The British Museum is around here and you can't find it! Nah-nah-nah-nah-nah!" If I weren't a muggle, a tongue totally would've raised up from the map and stuck out at me. But then, if I weren't a muggle, I wouldn't've been lost anyhow, because I would've just apparated to the British Museum gate in the first place. (I'm sorry--the Harry Potter references just jump out of this country right and left, and I can't help but record them.) Anyway, I went over and looked at the sign for the garden, figuring that I might as well start learning something. And it turns out that I did learn quite a bit about how London's garden squares were planned and how this one was used in WWII and how it was restored in the '70s, etc. I learned something else, too--that the British Museum was directly across the street. Like, directly. Oh.

So, I traipsed on over.

The British Museum actually looks much like the Smithsonian buildings, just more gray and less white. Colossal columns, wrought-iron gate, walls and an iron fence surrounding the museum with huge postery things advertising upcoming exhibits. Apparently the Book of the Dead is coming soon. Best of all, in my opinion, it's free. Donations encouraged. I didn't donate. I'm a terrible person.

You get to pass through the gate, cross through the stone courtyard (through vendors selling caramel peanuts and roasted chestnuts and something smelling like funnel cake), and enter between the massive pillars into a veritable world of polished marble. The first room is all black.


The second room, though, which is basically the hub of the museum, is all white, with an impressively high ceiling (or ceiling-like thing; I think there may be another ceiling on top of that) formed in glass triangles, which webs from the top of a gigantic circular room in the center of the larger white room, and extends to the edges of the big white room (let's just go ahead and call it the BWR, ok?). It reminded me vaguely of the glass pyramid in front of the Louvre if they rolled it out and draped it over the museum. Which of course would never happen because the French are incredibly touchy and don't want to change anything or change it back once it has been changed, and plus it's impossible, but that's not the point and I digress.


Anyway, out of the BWR I ambled through the spotlight exhibit, which is called Life and Death and explores living and dying at different times and in different cultures throughout the world. The first think on the way in is this big Easter Island head thing, but what I actually thought was most interesting was the long, long, long display in the center of the room. It was a long piece of netting with clusters of pills sewn into every inch. Along the sides were pictures and stories and small vials of medicines and hypodermic needles and such. The display told the stories--birth to present (which is death for one; the other is 84) of two British citizens, a Tom and a Susie, and included reproductions of every single pill/bit of medicine they took throughout their lives. So every one of Susie's birth control pills was there, and there were her kindergarten shots, and treatment for breast cancer, and her daughter Ruby's birth certificate. Tom has high blood pressure, so there were pills for that. The display was meant to illustrate how much medicine is prescribed to every person nowadays through the course of their lives. Personally, I felt it was brilliant.

After that exhibit, I went to check out the classics collection, which is sort of like an exhibit about exhibiting, if that makes any sense. It's housed in a huge long room, beautifully styled with elaborate crown molding and elegant tan walls and chandeliers and mahogany bookcases floor-to-frescoed-ceiling, all glass-fronted so you can admire the antique leather bound books they house. Books with titles like "Antiquis Roma, Vol XIV" and on like that. There are display cases everywhere, lit up, which hold some of the museum's earliest acquisitions. This doesn't mean the oldest stuff in the museum at all. It means the stuff that has been in the museum the longest. Some of the things are even fakes! Of course, in the 1700s-1800s when the stuff came to the museum, the curators didn't know that or have the scientific advantage of carbon dating, etc.

The exhibits' contents are explained, but they are also explained in context of their acquisition, so you learn why there's so much stuff from India and China, and you learn what the curators thought such-and-such meant and why they thought that, and you learn who collected this from whom, and what all of this meant in the Age of Enlightenment. It was very interesting.

I got lunch right after that in the BWR--a hot ham and cheese sub with nasty lettucey stuff and those weird dried tomato things I don't like. I picked that stuff off and ate the rest sitting cross-legged on the floor by one of the big pillars, though, because I was really hungry and there were no seats left. And plus it meant I got to take off my big heavy backpack for a little bit and rest. I spent some time after that in the shops, not buying anything but enjoying looking around. They have some nice stuff! I'm sort of flummoxed as to what to get for everybody for Christmas/gifts. So I go in lots of shops, and I enjoy it, but I don't usually actually buy anything.

I'm ashamed to admit it, but I totally bypassed the Egyptian/African/Asian/South American/American exhibits, as nice as I'm sure they were, and went straight for the Britain/Europe through the Ages section, which encompasses like twenty rooms. It walks you through Britain's history from back when it was still attached to the mainland, to its earliest residents and their lifestyles on to raids and migrations in from different locations (Vikings, Germanic tribes), to the development of farming and through the jewelry and treasures of hundreds of hoards and burial grounds.


Just the information about the hoards is fascinating--cremations, mounds, ship burials, cart burials, tombs, and so on. Death is a great creative art in so many cultures. The exhibit continued to talk about the Romans, the advent of Christianity, the Normans, the Viking raids, the middle ages, the Renaissance, all the kings and queens, Mary and Elizabeth, the nineteenth century and industrialism, the age of inventions.

Which is where it ended. I would have liked to have seen it capped with a WWII display, but I guess maybe it's more of a US thing to have museums charging right on up to the present? I know at the Smithsonian they have the flag they hung at Ground Zero in 2001 and I'm pretty sure they have Michelle's inaugural ballgown, so that's going up to 2009. It's equally possible that I just didn't visit that particular branch of the museum or that there's another museum that houses artifacts from the nineteenth century to the present. Anyway. It was a wonderful display, and I think I learned a lot even though I already had a strong basis in the subject. It's always different to learn about something and to actually learn about it while you're seeing it.

The jewelry and weaponry were very interesting, and so was the Bog Man, although that also grossed me out a little. As the timeline progressed I appreciated the stuff a little less, I think, because I've seen Roman stuff before, and it's great but I still feel like it doesn't belong in Britain, and the jewelry at the end is beautiful, but cameos and coral bracelets just aren't as novel to me as golden torques and leather shields.


I did particularly love the room--two rooms, really--filled entirely with clocks. Grandfather clocks, cuckoo clocks, and an insanely comprehensive selection of watches, both pocket and wrist. The room positively gleams of polished wood, gold, brass, and glass watch faces. Some of the clocks are very, very intricate indeed. The room was warmly lit, and I felt very Victorian. I also felt that when I stood still that all the clocks were ticking around me like a heartbeat. I think Dedaddy and Daddy would have loved it.

Lastly, I went to the Rosetta Stone, which is really cool but which is also just a big black rock. I enjoyed the (extremely accurate) facsimile nearby more, because it wasn't in a case, it wasn't buried under Asian tourists taking eighty pictures of it apiece (come ON, people), and I could actually touch it and interact with it.

The totem pools were pretty cool, too, and I took some pictures for Daddy.

The store was my last stop, and I did stop and sit a while, just to get the backpack off--it was miserably heavy and made my back and shoulders just ache. They have some nice little souvenirs, but I ultimately just got some very small trinkets.

(this is me right before I left the museum)



I'd already passed the British Library, like I said way up at the top of the post, and so I knew where it was and it took me just a few minutes to get there. But oh. My. Gosh. HOW I loved it. I like the building and courtyard themselves, because they're interesting and because there are big signs everywhere with quotes about reading and knowledge.

And I have no idea how you'd set about checking out a book, even though it's a working (and HUGE) library. It's the archive that is so incredible. Actually, I sat in the room and wrote all about it.

This isn't the archive; but it's pretty cool. There's also a museum about modern British inventions in the library, which I did go through. But mostly, it was all about the archives.

THIS is the entrance to the archives. No photos allowed. But do let me tell you about it, straight out of my journal, because I am lazy and don't want to reformat anything.

"The British Library is shockingly amazing. It's like being dipped into an alternate world, a wishing well hiding all the glittery rich dollops of literary amazingness at the bottom and then being shown an old wooden bucket so you can squeak down and actually see it for yourself rather than leaning over the edge straining to glimpse a folio corner or an ornate drop cap. This Gallery is a violet-carpeted paradise. And just to add to its majestic impression, the floor lights are purple and the cabinets are lacquered black. All the glass in the room is lit up so it looks like ice. And the floor-to-ceiling glass displays are etched with a collage of bluish text and illustrations. "Music," says one. "Historical Documents," says another. I am sitting between these two on a padded gray bench listening to a schoolteacher of some sort explain to what looks like a bunch of high school students of college first-years the importance of handwriting and the flexibility and liveliness of the English language. I know everything he's saying already, but I'm enjoying the free lecture.

More than that, though. I just saw pages from the manuscript of Beowulf. And Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, whose illustrations are much brighter and more gorgeous than I'd expected. And i saw pages of sheet music from the 1700s. And pages on which the Beatles took notes. I saw the first manuscript--the one given to Alice Liddell--of Alice's Adventures Underground, and I saw two of LEWIS CARROLL's nine PRIVATE DIARIES, one of which was opened to the page of the real golden afternoon!!! I also saw about fifteen other copies of Alice, including Salvador Dali's, and the printing-blocks of Tenniel's illustrations. There is a map over here of "Longe Isleland" from the 1600s. There are covers gilded, engraved, tooled, painted, inlaid...they are art, and they're being treated like it here. THERE ARE MIRROR-SCRIPT PAGES FROM THE NOTEBOOK OF LEONARDO DA VINCI! Audobon's life-size Birds of America is here. Priceless illuminated manuscripts.

Sacred Buddhist and Jainist texts on scrolls; sacred Hindu texts on panels. The re-bound Codex Sinaiticus, as well as the Codex Alexandrinus, and fragments of a papyrus codex in Greek of the gospel of St. John. Sultan Baybar's Qur'an, which is one of the most intricate and beautiful books I have ever seen. The sumptuously colorful Golden Hagadah. A copy of the Gospels well over a thousand years old. The Ramsey Psalter, and the Eadui Psalter. The Arnstein Bible. A stunning Bestiary. The Sherborne Missal! It's lovely--you could spend an eternity on any one page. Victorian naturalist books, and huge painting/writing combinations from old China. The Dering Roll, which is incredible, simply incredible. The exquisitely-calligraphied Macclesfield Alphabet Book. Prints from India, Persia, and Tukey.

Darwin's letters. A letter by Ada Lovelace which sets out in writing for the first time the principles of a computer program. A manuscript by Freud. Documents from British expeditions to Antarctica alongside Henry VIII's prayer roll. SHAKESPEARE'S FIRST FOLIO, among other quartos and copies of Shakespearean plays. Christopher Marlowe, Thomas Middleton, CHAUCER, Beaumont and Fletcher, Ben Jonson. Two out of the four existing copies of THE MAGNA CARTA. Handwritten manuscripts of Tess of the d'Urbervilles, "The Ballad of Reading Gaol," Lord Jim, the Commonplace Book of John Milton, John Dryden's An Opera. Jane Austen's teenage notebook, opened to a story dedicated to her sister Cassandra called "Catharine, or the Bower," JANE AUSTEN'S WRITING DESK (it's a laptop or desktop affair, very small). Wordsworth's "Poem of Childhood" and CHARLOTTE BRONTE'S JANE EYRE opened to the conclusion where (in excellent handwriting), she has written "Reader, I married him."

I am amazed. I am flat-out flabbergasted. And rather humbled. I keep feeling that if I closed my eyes, I'd be able to hear the murmurs and chuckles and broods and "little weeps" of the writers and illustrators who labored so long over the workds here displayed. They put so much of themselves into these things--it's practically tangible. You can nearly hear Falstaff's wisecracking, hear Alice's plaintive "What's the use of a book without pictures or conversations?" hear the low chants behind the monk laboriously applying ink to parchment in a cold monastery.
I remember feeling a little bit of this when my class at Davidson (I was twelve; it was a summer program) took a field trip to that very fancy library in Charlotte or Raleigh or wherever it was, and we were allowed to see a first-edition copy of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz and marvel at the vast collection of colored spines on the shelves. I wanted to live there, too."

Please forgive me excessive wordiness and vomit of the pen. I may be an English/poly sci double, but in my heart it's all about the books, not the news channel. That's just how it goes.

The gallery closed at five, but the library didn't close until six, so I sat on a bench outside the gallery doors and read Enid Blyton's Book of Brownies (which was delightful and something I will definitely read to my children someday) until they began to kick everyone out.

This little stowaway is one of the touches from home I brought with me to Brighton, and the only one I brought on this trip. I thought she might enjoy being my Flat Stanley character now and then. And really, I think she looks pretty happy chilling here beneath the railing.

I never actually checked to see who these guys were, but they looked very literary and imposing as they stared at me that entire last hour.

And I'm sorry, but this is absolutely the cutest possible name for a cafe you see exiting the library, is it not? If it hadn't been closed, I would definitely have gone in and had some hot chocolate.

Then I went back to Euston.

And it was there that, for ninety-nine pence, Millie's Cookies gave me the best cookie in the world. It was an orange chocolate-chip cookie, and I have GOT to find out either the recipe or if they have stores in North Carolina, because Mama would love it. It was like a chocolate orange in cookie form. Then I ended up getting a chicken bites meal at Burger Kind (exotic, huh?) and sitting in there until nearly ten writing and making lists and such.

London's a funny place, I've decided. It's dichotomous--it holds what is perhaps the West's most confusing airport and marks none of the streets adequately, yet it's the capitol of one of the world's most orderly country. You see people in suits, because London is a city of businessmen, and you see teenagers in the most utterly outlandish outfits rocking out on the street. It's incredibly urban, yet there are parks on every corner. It's also incredibly historic, yet so, so modern, with simply a ton of steel and glass and sleep skyscrapers. It's a bit confusing, too, that it's the quintessential British city, yet I heard just as much Chinese and Japanese and Spanish and Italian and Polish and French as I heard English.

Also, I'm really not used to cities. At all.

I had a long time to ponder this, since my train didn't leave until around 11:40pm, so it's like being in a smallish but crazy busy airport, and you can people-watch. After I left Burger King I sat next to a Taiwanese foreign exchange student and a British lady, but of whom were very nice. My train (the Caledonian Sleeper) finally started boarding around 11:20pm, and i wasa very pleased to find that my standard seat (which I'd been picturing as an uncomfortable airplane-style seat) was actually really wide and cushy, with a footrest and those flap things on the headrest so you can sleep just leaning your head to the side.

It was a beautiful experience. Plus, it was warm.

And since I woke up in Edinburgh, that belongs in another post!