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©
2002 Display
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Sisters
resident explores England
Peggy Benton
is home from the moors and it shows. Her English countryside, peaches and
cream complexion is still glowing.
Her son Craig and his wife
Sally accompanied her to visit their daughter Megan, who is in her junior
year at Goldsmith College at the University of London. Megan is studying
photography and journalism.
Their hotel was across from
the Natural History Museum in Kensington.
Sally's childhood friend Susan
met them for lunch and arranged for an acquaintance, David, to take them
on a private tour of Parliament. He belongs to The Black Rod, which serves
the members of Parliament. It is his duty to take attendance and duly
note those present in order for them to get paid.
(It is reported that there
are those who make an appearance and then disappear. Tsk, tsk.)
David escorted the Bentons
through the House of Lords. The House of Commons was in session so they
dared not disturb. And, Peggy recounts, they just missed Prime Minister
Tony Blair, who was darting off to meet President Bush in the United States.
The only anti-war unpleasantness
was across the street where a group of 20 or so protesters was camped
on the corner. They were there night and day, chanting their slogans,
but, recalls Peggy, for the most part everyone ignored them.
The London Eye Ferris Wheel
ride was a highpoint, a very high point.
It is almost eight times the
size of a normal Ferris, and overlooks the Parliament and the Thames.
Also on the itinerary was
the Yann Arthus-Bertrand photography exhibit, Earth From The Air. It held
68 pieces of various geographical sites, some extremely remote.
There were the requisite pub
tours and samplings of England's best ales, stouts, and lagers. Hugo's
Restaurant at the Goethe Institute in Kensington offered organic selections,
while Portobello Road's market had not only exquisite crepes and Portobello
mushrooms, but antiques, Persian rugs, and retro clothing.
The Plowman's Lunch served
at smaller cafés was platters of loaves of bread, assorted cheeses, and
salad, which only a plowman could consume in one sitting.
Peggy noted that there was
a Starbuck's on every corner. Another interesting franchise is the Wagamami
fast food place featuring Japanese noodles.
After London, it was off to
the country, for a lovely, back-in-time, veddy British adventure set against
the beauty of the Dales and the Yorkshire moors. There were castles to
explore, ancient Cistercian monasteries, and pastoral scenes of lambs,
daffodils, and stone walls framing villages on verdant rolling hills.
In Yorkshire, they visited
the Bronte Haworth Museum where the Brideshead Revisited series was televised.
"We stayed in wonderful bed
and breakfast inns, mostly farm families with great hospitality," Peggy
recalled.
The Bentons toured Riveault,
an abbey dating to 1132.
At the very old Castle Howard
just north of York, the Bentons caught a glimpse of The Honorable and
Mrs. Simon Howard, proud parents of twin babies, giving them a peek at
that stratum of society.
Like most Sisters residents,
the Bentons enjoyed the trip -- and were glad to return home.
"It's always good to be back,
especially in Sisters," Peggy said. "Lovely as it was, the beauty here
belongs to us."
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