Sunday 31 October 2021

1988 Boston

31.1.88

The tapestry room of Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum – concert by the American Brass Quintet.  3pm.

The size of everything – almost to parody.  The subway trains out to Harvard; the stretch limos; the helpings of food, the return of the coffee jug.  They do not know the meaning of the word "want" – even with derelicts lying in the street – as I saw yesterday by the Symphony Hall.  The superficial veneration for the old here – though the old is not really.  For example, the street names – Gloucester, Hereford etc. 

Harvard itself is disappointing – nothing binds together.  Especially Harvard's main courts: buildings thrown together, undistinguished architecture.  Little feel of town dominated by university.  They do build a better skyscraper in Boston; the integration of the old Irish and the new puts London to shame.  Boston Common is like Central Park on a smaller scale: surrounded by skyscrapers.

Faneuil Hall and Quincy Market – feeble restorations – inside shows no sense of exterior – doesn't link with the rest of town.  Newbury Street works very well ; a long, elegant road which manages the difficult trick of marrying flash shops with living houses.  The harmony of the design is never monotonous.  Surprisingly, the parallel streets remain relatively untouched, with the exception of Boylston Street.  

There is an ICA here too – but of Art, not arts.  I should have gone last night, but at 10pm was too tired to contemplate even less sleep to be followed by jet lag – old age, I fear.

Saturday 30 October 2021

1987 Isle of Man

Maughold

If there are terrestrial visions of heaven, one of them must be the village and church of Maughold, the easternmost point of the Isle of Man.  The tiny hamlet, with its neat white houses looking as if they were built and painted yesterday, seems imbued with the architectural equivalent of moral wholesomeness.  It forms a kind of secular antechamber – as a good life in this world does to the next – to the sacred splendour which lies beyond.  The church itself is simple in the extreme: a short nave, and bare walls inside and out; simple like heaven itself, perhaps.  In a sense, the church and village exists as the concentrated focus of the paradisaical setting which enfolds them.

With the soft contours of Maughold Head at your back, the land slopes gently away before rising up again to the successive hills and distant mountains: North Barrule and the Snaefell itself.  As the sun swings round low from the south, its rays light up the grass from within, making the landscape glow with a preternatural greenness.  The tree and bushes case long, more than real shadows.  Over the fields, white biblical sheep seem to hover; and above them the pale blue dome of sky stretches from the mountains to the sea.  Nestling amidst it all is the village, the church and its circumscribed and circumspect graveyard.  In its primary colours and schematic perfection, it could be a scene painted by a child.

The church retains its intimacy because many of the most potent religious artefacts are found outside.  In a simple wooden pavilion stands a forest of old crosses and stones dating back to the earliest Christianity.  Some are simple cruciform, others more ornately decorated with typically Celtic motifs; others bear images and inscriptions.  Surrounded by them, there is a feeling of the weight of ages, together with a sense of durability.  These fragile, incised slabs of rock have endured all the centuries and their changes; they are proof of one kind of immanence.

The also bear eloquent witness to the ebb and flow of cultures which have swept over the island, and added to the rich racial mix.  As well as the early Christian crosses there are remnants of the Vikings.  Gone are the neatly ordered Ogham letters: instead, the stones are cut with jagged Futhark runes, an alphabet of swords and spears, and with images from the saga of Sigurd the Volsung.  It is an extraordinary experience to find the same story that Wagner took as the basis of his huge tetralogy, hidden away in the windswept corner of a churchyard on a forgotten isle.

In an area rich with so many histories, it is perhaps appropriate that the island's national badge, the three legs of Man, first made its appearance here.  The Maughold Village Cross stands without advertisement or ceremony alongside the church, a simple stone column surmounted by a crucifix and the characteristic design.  And it is unsurprising that folk tales abound in the parish.  For example, Berrey, the most famous of the many Manx witches, lived here.  On stormy nights, her coven would disappear under the side of North Barrule, from where their fearsome shrieks rose on the wind; and it is recorded that they danced around Maughold Church, trying to raise the eponymous saint from his grave.  It seems unlikely that they succeeded, surrounded as they were by such heavenly, overmastering beauty.

Point of Ayre

If Maughold is heaven, Point of Ayre is the Isle of Man's hell.  Its most natural approach is via Ramsey, a kind of encampment on the route to Hades, filled with a premonitory sense of doom and despair.  As you drive down from Maughold, it looks real enough with its long pier and empty, out of season beach; but close up it seems a sham.  The Manx Electric Railway stops here suddenly, as if it has made a mistake; the buildings feel too low, the streets too unconnected: as a town, it does not convince.  Instead, it looks like feeble window-dressing to hide what lies beyond.

What lies beyond is nothing, or the Manx equivalent of it.  From Ramsey to Point of Ayre the land is almost totally flat.  The contrast with the folded and bunched foothills around Snaefell is extreme.  For a region where everything seems to grow organically out of everything else, there is a sense of isolation here found nowhere else on the island.  As you look south to the misty outlines of the central mountains, it is hard to believe they lie in the same country.

In a sense, they do not.  That pervasive air of abundance found elsewhere on the island is absent in the north.  It is as if the land has been cursed and cast out from the tribe.  And yet, at first glance, the spreading countryside is as familiar and fertile as Norfolk.  But where Norfolk's rich earth seems to tremble with fecundity, here it lies inert and exhausted.  Paradoxically, too, this flatness hides rather than reveals: the roads huddle down between high hedges, as if afraid to look over the tops at the vacancy of what surrounds them.

Before reaching the Point of Ayre itself, you pass through the small village of Bride.  By the turning to the Point there is an unexpectedly large church.  It stands like the lonely Gothic house in a Hitchcock film; it seems to demand a leaden sky and forks of lightning licking around its dark silhouette.  Perhaps it stands there as a final call to repentance.

Thereafter the road begins to lose its gentle waywardness; as it straightens, it manifests its inflexible sense of purpose more nakedly.  And then, in a final gesture of contempt, it bends gratuitously through ninety degrees, hard by the ominously named village of Phurt.  It is a name to stand beside that other inhuman monosyllable, Dis, which Dante, that expert in damnation, uses of the same place.  It shares its sneering malevolence, its stamp of inexorable finality.

And then, without climax or resolution, the road just peters out.  This is the Point of Ayre.  Around about, there is nondescript wasteland; scrub and low bushes grow hither and thither in the poor sandy soil.  Rubble and twisted pieces of rusting scrap lie everywhere like a desecration.

As with any hell, the worst torture is to be tantalised.  Gazing east from the characterless shore, across a waveless ocean as blank as the land it laps and which infected it, you can see hover in the distance the soft velvety forms of the Cumbrian hills, a celestial vision of another, greater island paradise.  Juxtaposed with such desolation, it is enough to drive the devil himself mad with longing.

Across the heart of Man
 
From Douglas to Peel there runs a valley which cuts the Isle of Man in two.  Locally it is known as the Plains of Heaven.  It is not hard to see why: it represents a vale of tranquillity strangely disjoint from the brooding spirit of the rest of the island.  Perhaps this is simply geography.  Everywhere else on Man is coastal: you are confronted constantly with the sea; it exhausts you with its daily tirelessness, its infinitely subtle gradations of colour, its endless horizon.  Here, at the heart of the island, there is no sea; here is the negation of the Isle of Man's crabbing circumspection; here is a sense of space and peace.

Through the valley runs a road; on the maps it is called the A1.  This knowledge induces a curious kind of dissonance; the A1, after all, is the backbone of Britain, a name and a road which is woven into modern consciousness like a bright thread running through the weave of mainland history.  But this A1 is a small, tidy road; it carries no fleets of lorries, no hordes of car-borne travellers. It is a quiet country road winding its unhurried way through idyllic villages and farms.  It could be anywhere – or nowhere.

It is the same with the "A" roads which run across the island like a fine mesh of capillaries.  Each one bears a name already charged with deep associations: so the A3 is no longer the artery which pumps south-west London's suburbanites in and out of town as great diurnal gouts of traffic; instead it is a fragile link which runs the length of the isle from Ramsey in the north to Castletown in the south, with barely a car to be seen.

The Plains of Heaven have a similar disconcerting sense of false familiarity.  To see them is to know them, because they are manifestly England, or rather an idealised, exile's vision of England.  The immaculate whitewashed houses, the quaint, chocolate box thatching, the lush green which surrounds them as rolling, comfortable hills: nothing out of place, no element jars.  It is the epitome of civilised country living, a kind of genteel, gentrified nirvana.

But like much on Man, it is only skin-deep, only one of those vital appearances.  Along the A1 those appearances are kept up well enough: you pass through places with comforting names like Union Mills, Glen Vine and Crosby – all of them sounding like retirement villages created by canny property speculators.  But scratch those appearances and the real Man keeps showing.  The farms which line the road have disconcerting, heathen names like Ballawilleykilly, Cooilingel and Kennaa; their uncouth clusters of vowels and consonants suggest primitive oaths or curses.  These are the words and the names which the white cottages and their picture book thatches try to hide.

Further along the A1, the pretence can be kept up no more.  Just by the innocuous-looking village of St John's, under the watchful eye of the tree-covered hill of Slieau Whallian – from whose top witches were once rolled down in barrels spiked with nails on the inside – lies blatantly, for all to see, the very heart of ancient Man: Tynwald Hill.

Tynwald Hill 

If the Ancient Greeks had colonised the Isle of Man along with all the Celts, English, Vikings, Normans and the rest, they would doubtless have called Tynwald Hill the omphalos or navel of that world.  The hill stands as the manifest centre of the island, its political, spiritual and social pivot.  And it is here that all the strands of its history lead.

The Tynwald comes from the Old Norse: thingvollr, the field of the Thing.  The Thing was the Viking form of open air parliament; it dates back a thousand years.  The Manx ceremony, which takes place on Tynwald Hill around noon on Old Midsummer's Day, July 5, may therefore be the earliest surviving formalised legislature in the world.  The time and the date, like the name and its origins, reach back effortlessly beyond history.

Like bees to a rich cultural honeypot, the arcane and mysterious officers of the land make a splendid and often unique appearance there, trailing with them the huge baggage of tradition implicit in their existence.  The coroners, or crown men, of the island's sheadings are there: each of the six sheadings subsume yet smaller Manx districts, from the parishes and their treens, to the lowly ballas.

The Vicar-General is there, a lawyer, despite his title.  So are the seventeen Captains of the Parishes, vestiges of a past ever-vigilant against further invaders.  Yn Lhaihder, the Reader, is there to transmute the crude iron of barbarous English into the Celtic electrum of Manx, while two Deemsters are present as interpreters of law.

The House of Keys is there, the main legislative body of the island, with its 24 members: some from the sheadings, the others from Douglas, Ramsey, Castletown and Peel.  And with them, the rest of the political, bureaucratic and clerical superstructure which the Isle of Man has accrued during a thousands years of independence and idiosyncrasy.

All of these gather at Tynwald Hill in due appointed order, characters in a pageant which disconcerts the stranger because it is real not factitious; they bear their titles and duties proudly, like weather-beaten monuments covered in patches of brightly-coloured lichen, badges of immemorial age.  They ascend the four-tiered mound of earth which is the hill itself, while the church of St John's looks on across the grass.  Dubiously, no doubt, since the first Tynwald Hill was probably an altar to Thor.  But the church, like everyone else on Man, has reached an accommodation with these tricky currents of the past.

It is part of the attraction and paradox of Man that this density of history can exist in such a disarming setting.  With the quiet country road running alongside, a couple of pubs, and the neat, well-kept church, it could almost be any village green; the land around seems agriculturally rich but otherwise unspectacular.  Instead, the area is charged with a sense of the living past which is probably unmatched anywhere on the mainland, for all its famous and cherished traditions.  Like the Midsummer Day ceremony itself, Man remains a secret island, known to few outsiders, and understood by even fewer.

Peel

The small town of Peel on the Western side of the island is like some mysterious negative double of the capital Douglas.  Superficially they are similar: both have impressive sweeping bays; both have extensive harbours – Peel is Douglas's only real rival for deep water anchorage.  But in spirit and detail they are as far apart as their physical disposition suggests, contraries repelled to opposite sides of the island by profound and irreconcilable differences.

Douglas greets the rising sun, and is best seen at dawn when the sea and the sands catch the early morning light.  It is an open and optimistic town which seems to tumble down from the hills to greet its visitors.  Peel waits for the setting sun; its special time is the night.  It turns its back on England, on the public face of Douglas, and sits brooding on its plain, meditating on the sea and the misty realm of Ireland beyond.

Like suspicious country folk, it makes no concessions to strangers.  Its streets are bent and narrow; new-fangled devices like cars can proceed only with difficulty.  The scenes here have barely changed for centuries.  Its history, and the way it is taken for granted – the ruined old church converted to a public garden – stand in further contrast to Douglas, that parvenu among Manx towns, an artefact of the holiday trade, a symbol of all that Peel shuns.

And whereas Douglas is all that it seems – or perhaps even less – Peel has a secret, one best shared at night.  Moving down through the maze of tiny lanes, past old and unwelcoming houses, you find yourself on the seafront; there is no helpful flow to the streets – as in Douglas – to take you there: you simply enter the warren and trust the town's wisdom.

The seafront is not grand; and by night, the sea comes as a shock.  Or rather, the open sky with the barely perceptible movement beneath it comes as a surprise: Peel has no hints of this immensity in its almost wilfully cramped scale.  As your eyes adjust to this new darkness, something tremendous happens.  Due east of the bay, a great brooding mass looms out of the night, even blacker than the heavens.  At first, it looks like a mountain; then it seems more like a great ship, moored by the harbour.  Gradually, you make out the majestic shape of an ancient castle.

Built at the end of the fourteenth century, Peel Castle is somehow small in scale yet magnificent in its proud indomitability.  It stands on St Patrick's Isle; as its name suggests, this is a spot dense with history: St Patrick himself, together with the traces of neolithic weapons, Bronze Age daggers, Celtic buildings, Norse defences, and a medieval cathedral.

Back in the heart of new Peel, a small, unremarkable café nestles at the main crossroads; as night draws on, its windows pour out a yellow light through the panes streaked with condensation.  Inside, tea and scones and coffee and toast are served to the silent townsfolk before they make their short way home.  Perhaps in memory of the rich tapestry of its past, and of its precious lurking secret, it is called – with perfect and apt ingenuousness – the Viking Café.  Peel's past lives on.

Port Erin

Port Erin lies on the margin of two great seas: the Irish Sea flowing in from the west, and the great waves of the high moors which roll down from the north-east.  The road from Peel, which winds its solitary way across these moors, is the best entrance to the town, especially when the low-lying mists cling to its surface.  As you swing round the brow of the hill and descend towards the coast, the whole of the south-west corner of the island is laid out before you like a map, with Port Erin nestling under the brooding hulk of Bradda Head.

The moors represent yet another face of the Isle of Man.  They could easily pass for one of the great English open places such as Dartmoor.  Unlike their English counterparts, they seem unconnected with the surrounding land.  From the tidy small village of Dalby, halfway down from Peel, the road suddenly rears up over smooth hills into the moor's high plateau, which swirls around the foot of the South Barrule mountain in gentle curves, featureless except for the odd plantation.

For its full effect, the moor needs thick-spun mist.  Then it is another world – as if you have passed through a secret portal into a limitless desolate plain quite at odds with the landscape you have left.  The moor is devoid of habitations, perhaps cursed.  The roads wind on unbroken by markers, human or natural.  The contrast between the bare emptiness and the tamed and populated feel of the coastal strips is stark.

As a result, Port Erin and its surrounding villages comes as a welcome relief.  But the context is vital: the town itself is exiguous and self-effacing to the point of vanishing.  It is as if it has been sandwiched between the sea and the moor, squeezed over the centuries to a paltry line or two of houses huddling around the bay.

Just as the moors reveal themselves best in the mist, so Port Erin can only really be seen out of season.  With people it is simply another mock Cornish fishing village, with families sitting on the beach alongside the boats.  Without them, the place cannot hide; its empty cafés stare back at the unblinking sea, which rolls in over the vacant sands.  At most you will find there the omnipresent beachcombers, their metal detectors wrapped in plastic as they scan and dig, scan and dig, like some obsessive, wintering seabird. It is never clear what they are looking for, or if they ever find it.  Perhaps it does not matter.

Even out of season, on a wet, cold Sunday in November, there are small signs of life in Port Erin.  A café remains open at the end of the promenade.  Inside, there is the same cosy order found elsewhere on the island.  The simple but neat tables and chairs, the ornaments, the fading pictures, the unmemorable knick-knacks; the snug warmth and sense of refuge from the elements, the relentless sea, the moors and the mist.

Dominating the bay is the great shoulder of Bradda Head.  It stands like a sentinel at the entrance to the harbour, and is a reminder, a synecdoche, of the rest of the island's topography.  But it stands aloof, leaving Port Erin to fend for itself between the two great seas.

The Calf of Man

The quiet Port Erin and its equally retiring sibling, Port St Mary, have the air of second-rank Cornish coves. Beyond them, in the extreme south-west of the island, lies a vision of Cornwall which surpasses even the original: both in the way its romantically charged landscape contains within it a deep and melancholy sense of abiding futility, and also through the ultimately redemptive power of that landscape's beauty.

The first sight intimates something of this.  As you pass beyond the two Ports, and gain the brow of the hill at Cregneish, all at once the end of the island's corner appears before you.  The road winds through green fields divided up by hedgerows, themselves an idealised version of the fertile Cornish landscape.  The path descends steadily and unerringly towards a gently curved mound which seems to hover above the silver sea: this is the Calf of Man, an island to an island.

Like the grandest parts of Cornwall's coast, the headland ends dramatically with cliffs which lour over the black sea hundreds of feet below.  Rather than simply ending, it is as if the land has been torn off by some maddened giant.  The multicoloured strata of the rocks seem to confirm this: they buck and twist along the face of the cliff, sometimes rising up vertically in defiance of gravity and the laws of nature.  Viewing their tortured lines along the coast is to read a record of frenzied defiance, a sage set in stone.

At the shorelines, the shattered cliff-wall follows that wheeling thread of stratification.  In some places great ledges have formed, hanging out over the water as they are slowly undermined; in others, the rocks split vertically, causing jagged mounds to rise up from the ground, each mound a bristling sheaf of razor-sharp stone blades.  Elsewhere, the layers of rock veer at impossible angles like broken hands of a demented geological clock.  In the face of such gigantic and impersonal struggles, despair can seem the only adequate response.

Untouched by the millennial savagery of the sea and the cliffs, the Calf of Man counterpoises its serenity like a saint in benediction.  It floats in the manner of those improbable beatific visions which are vouchsafed at unpredictable moments to the abject, the oppressed or to those who are simply innocent.  Its contours are smooth like a venerable forehead, its vegetation looks like the soft green cloth of an obscure religious order.  It seems to stand in the same relation to Man, as Man does to the mainland; you could almost imagine that behind the Calf there is another, smaller island, even more beautiful, and behind that yet another, and so on to an island vanishing size and infinite perfection.

On the clifftop opposite the Calf, there is a simple café.  At first sight you might deplore this jarring note, this invasion of romantic grandeur by tawdry quotidian reality; and indeed, from the outside the café is as bland and unprepossessing as could be.  Yet with its dark, warm, and crowded interior, it stands as a tiny haven of humanity in this vast theatre of impressive but overwrought and uncaring nature; and it its peaceable hubbub, the quiet message of the Calf finds an echo.

Castletown

Castletown bears a grudge.  A century ago, it lost its position as capital of Man, ceding that title to the upstart Douglas.  It has not forgotten.  It cannot forget, because even in the tiny things, it is constantly reminded: Douglas is graced with a mayor, while Castletown, once home of the Lord of Mann himself, makes do with a chairman like any other place.

So now the town sulks at the end of the island, huddling away in its dowdy skirts like some dowager unwilling to mix with her social inferiors.  To see it at its most put upon and supercilious, visit it on a cold Sunday morning in November with only the wind and a fine drizzle for companions.

The main parade, for all the initial attractiveness of its unified yet varied architecture, is bleak and oppressive.  It looks unreal, as if the buildings were hollow shells, mere scenery for some long-forgotten drama.  Its empty streets are full of a tight-lipped, reproachful silence; the four-square Georgian windows gaze out of the intimidatingly neat house-fronts with unblinking stares of malice; the facades' original colours have turned into dull, unnameable hues: to look at them is like sucking lemons.  Everything says "go away".

All of the town has been touched by this bitterness.  The eponymous Castle Rushen is not grand and romantic like Peel's; instead it seems costive, unwilling to give even the time of day to the passer-by, and as hard and unbending as the edges of its steely-sharp masonry.  As if on purpose, it lacks Peel Castle's dramatic setting: it is content for the town's buildings to sidle up to it like old gossips, trading stories among themselves of the new and terrible insults offered by the outside world.

The harbour, too, is sullen.  You reach it meanly through an archway off the end of the parade; its appearance is unexpected and unwelcoming.  It looks like a huge muddy field, walled in for some inexplicable reason, with a few forlorn boats lying helplessly on their side, superannuated and inelegant sea monsters.  There is no apprehensible link to the sea beyond: the harbour, like all of Castletown, has simple disconnected itself.

Perhaps the town's position contributes to this overwhelming mood of desperate isolation.  It feels like the end of the island, just as Douglas is its natural beginning.  And as Isle of Man's most southerly point, it is easy to see it as the place where all that is black and heavy and bitter sinks down to, and settles, congealing slowly.

For there is a sadness about Man, a sadness which Castletown may pettishly exaggerate, but does not invent.  It is born of many things: the melancholy moods of the weather, the fretting relentlessness of the omnipresent sea, the subtle pain which is the inevitable concomitant of great natural beauty.  But above all, the deep sadness of the Isle of Man springs from its having seen and known so much, in such a little space and time, and from it now finding itself reduced – like Castletown – to almost nothing, to just a small, jewel-like island set in the grey, glinting sea, surrounded by four distant kingdoms and the swirl of memories.

The Isles of Man

The cartographers of the Ordnance Survey have a guilty secret: of all the lands they have charted, the Isle of Man is their favourite child.

Unfold Sheet 95 of the 1:50 000 Series and that secret is out: the map contains the Isle of Man exactly, both in length and width.  In effect, the whole of the great enterprise of the Ordnance Survey has been planned around this one necessity of scale.  No wonder, then, that the map itself should be a masterpiece of draughtsmanship, instinct with the grace and fine sensuous detail of a Henry Moore etching.  The contours shimmer over the surface like the glossy pelt of some noble animal; and such is the cartographer's art, that as your eyes pass over the loving delineation, your feel your body respond to the tug of the land's rise and fall.

This in part is the secret of Man's charm: it seems so knowable, so already known.  It is like one of the half-imaginary islands in some fantastic traveller's tale, whose paths you tread almost by instinct even while feeling uncomfortable with this unbidden knowledge.  Man seems to be one of those islands whose names – Tristan de Cunha, Ascension, Pitcairn – conjure up hazy images of familiarity combined with a haunting sense of otherness and distance.

It could almost be a textbook island – with its neatly ordered towns, roads, railways, airports, hills, lakes, plains and costs – got up for a child's edification.  Created to be easily graspable, it becomes a paradigm of islandness.  But the manifestly human scale of things is deceptive: paradoxically, this most compact of islands is one of the least immediately accessible, either intellectually or emotionally; it is simply too rich.  There are too many Isles of Man.

Man is the seaside spa-town of Douglas, the picturesque cove of Port Erin, the Cotswoldian verdancy of Maughold; it is Snaefell's Cumbrian beauty, the Norfolk wastes of the Point of Ayre, the Arthurian grandeur of the coast by the Calf, the Home Counties cosiness of the island's interior; it is the bitterness of Castletown, the aloofness of Peel, the mystery of Tynwald Hill; it is all and none of these.

Man is a land which flaunts and delights in its contradictions.  Travelling through it, it is clearly part of Britain; except that something terrible has happened to the names: the ballas and the gobs and the cronks cannot be reconciled with the almost military normality of the rest of visible society.  It is as if you have fallen into a parallel vision of the world: everything is exactly the same – almost…

It is this constant sense of dislocation which makes the Isle of Man such a rich experience.  It puts you back in touch with the pristine freshness of knowledge where nothing can be taken for granted.  The inhabitants of Man have always known this; a land conscious of the little people is a land which recognises layers of reality beyond the most obvious.  The island's motto says it all: quocunque jeceris, stabit – whichever way you throw it, it will stand.  It refers not just to the three-legged emblem of Man, but to the many-side land itself.

More destinations:

Monday 25 October 2021

2021 Gibraltar

19.10.21

On the 9th floor of the Eliott 
Hotel, looking out across the Bay of Gibraltar from the near-empty hotel restaurant.  Spain in the hazy distance, tankers moored or moving.  Cloudy but pleasantly warm in this Mediterranean outpost of the UK.  The tell-tale sign that all is not as it should be: they drive on the right here…

Gibraltar seemed the perfect post-Brexit/Covid trip.  Short – just three nights here – but enough time to see more or less everything.  Safe – Gibraltar has one of the lowest incidences of Covid.  And weird: a little chunk of limestone that will be forever England (well, not if the Spaniards have anything to do with it). An alienated piece of the EU, just a few kilometres from Africa…

The flight was good but horribly early: 7.10am take-off meant getting up at 3am.  At least it was Terminal 5, Heathrow, one of my favourites.  Swooping from the east of the Rock, its gaunt vertical face, around to Gibraltar Bay, where the improbable runway sticks out into the sea.  No room for error.

Then the inevitable checks.  Mostly done before leaving, online.  Very efficient: after you have submitted your Passenger Location Form, you are taken straight to the test booking site.  On the ground, less impressive.  First, you queue at passport control; then you queue for your lateral flow test; then you find there are no taxis left to take you into town.  So you walk.  It's not far, but there's a unique obstacle holding up vehicles and people.  Planes are taking off, and the runway cuts across the road.  So the road is closed while the planes take off – rather close.

Finally, the barrier lifts, and off we go.  Strange to see UK road signs, but cars on the right.  Also many signs in Spanish, not unreasonably.  We walk through the Landport Tunnel, once the only land route in.  then along Main Street.  Which turns out to be a perfect distillation of English seaside towns like Blackpool or Bournemouth.  Small, tacky, full of horrible "souvenirs" – and people who look as if they would buy them.  Mostly old.

In Grand Casemates Square – the Piazza San Marco of Gibraltar.  Here via the dock area – not just ugly, but oppressively chaotic – no plan, no style.  Huge blocks of buildings closing off the way – no road through.  Here vaguely attractive, open at least.  Moorish Castle just visible, Main Street ahead of us.  Huge building to the right, looks like the abandoned concrete hulks of Chișinău.  This place is weird.

20.10.21

Out to the cable car base.  Following Main Street, I was surprised to see its character change once it became for cars – vastly better.  Where the pedestrianised part is twee and naff, the part to the south has some good buildings.  Passing by St. Jago's Arch, things fall apart – hard to find the sense of roads, with the paucity of street names hardly a help.  But we finally made it to the cable car to find zero queue and just a couple of people waiting inside the cabin.  £30 each for the full works, but Moody's Second Law of Tourism applies…

The ride up quick and smooth, though I am not totally convinced by this technology.  The upper cable station nothing special, aside from its location, which is stunning.  The views from the two platforms just fantastic, with the harbour and runway laid out clearly, Spain in the distance, and Morocco looming out of the haze.

Three apes nearby, picking over carrots, apples and watermelon.  Magnificent beasts, with a golden-brown fur.  Pretty indifferent to humans, more interested in food or finding fleas on each other.  The biggest (alpha?) males were superbly disdainful as we walked past them.  A Spanish family foolishly had a plastic bag, and the apes were keen to inspect it.  The bloke shooed them away, but was unwise to bring it.

Along to the Skywalk – pretty dull, but some nice views south.  The eastern side of the Rock is pretty impressively precipitous.  Further south to St. Michael's Cave.  Better than I expected – really majestic forms, rather spoilt by the lighting's garish effects.  A dozen minibuses outside disgorging people.  We moved off down to the Apes' Den – where there were sadly no apes.  But we had seen plenty elsewhere.

We decide to descend to the town, rather than ascend to take the cable car.  A long way, but shielded from the sun by the Rock, with great views.  I saw a couple of planes swinging round from the south to land – tiny dots moving over the sea and Spanish mainland.  The tankers and container ships playing to and fro.  The filthy pollution they create is evident.  Yesterday, we saw an obscenely large P&O cruise ship pull out – a ridiculous floating hotel, with hotel and cold running Covid: I wouldn't go one even if you paid me.

Finally down to the town, and to The Angry Friar, opposite The Convent – the Governor's Residence.  Just as we were about to order, the power went off – something that happens here apparently.  After salad and sandwiches, back here to the hotel to rest.

In Jury's, nice atmosphere. In the afternoon, to the botanic gardens by the cable car station.  Lots of interesting plants and trees, but a strange feeling of chaos, of things not hanging together, which seems to be the dominant theme here.  Then to the harbour – the new one – and the Harbour View restaurant.  Next to flash catamaran.  Gibraltar should be more like this, although I noted with disapproval that the marina was "private" – enclosing the commons.  Tut.

21.10.21

Up on the Rock again, staring across at the mountains of Morocco.  Brilliant sunshine, fresh breeze, nobody else up here.  Wonderful – surely one of the greatest views on earth.  We were so near to Morocco that our phones switched from Gibtel to a Moroccan provider… 

Exploring the northern part of the Rock.  Along to the Great Siege Tunnels.  Amazing achievement, with great views of airport where planes take off infrequently, but impressively.  Before each take-off, a police car clears the road, with siren blaring.  

Two things seem more common here than I expected: people speaking Spanish, and people smoking...it's like going back in time to the UK in the 1970s.  Which seems appropriate.

Back in the Water Front, where we had a drink yesterday, but now for supper.  Busy, lots of people who look as if they belong with the very swish boats in the marina.  But getting here from the hotel was madness.  This town seems designed to stop easy access anywhere.  There are long physical obstacles – bastions from the past, blocks of offices or flats from the present – that require huge detours to pass around.  This is the worst-designed place I have every visited.

22.10.21

In Grand Casemates Square, sitting in the sun as it rises from behind the Rock.  The fact that the city is in the shade for several hours lends it a very particular quality.  As does the number of old people hobbling along with walking sticks. 

Yesterday, I forgot to mention that on the way down from the Great Siege tunnels, we visited the Moorish Castle.  Just a bare shell now, but impressive enough in its own way.  A useful reminder of the Moorish heritage here – even down to its name [according to Wikipedia, the name is derived from Arabic: جبل طارق‎, romanized: Jabal Ṭāriq, lit. 'Mount of Tariq' (named after the 8th-century Moorish military leader Tariq ibn Ziyad)].

Now in the ultra-swish, rather empty airport building.  But its main feature is the north side of the Rock in all its gleaming limestone glory.  Certainly a memorable sight – the White Cliffs of Dover packed into a single, soaring spire – rather like the similarly shaped church in Reyjavik – but much bigger.  Rather let down by the dull and stumpy flats and hotels at its base, dwarfed by Nature.

This morning, we walked around the city.  I always want to call it a town – city sounds too grand, but it has not one, but two cathedrals.  The Roman Catholic one (very dull) and the Anglican one, which has an appropriately Moorish cut to its ecclesiastical job (sic).  Inevitably, it reminds me of Mezquita in Cordoba, but a pale, genteel version.

The thing is, there really isn't that much to see in Gibraltar.  Except the Rock, of course, and its delightful apes.  And indeed, the view from the top in clear weather is certainly one of my top sights – along with that from Gergeti Church in Georgia, from the Sugarloaf Mountain in Rio, and from the top of Mount Batur in Bali.

Monday 11 October 2021

1989 New York

8.11.89 Heathrow

Heathrow airport, on board flight BA 175.  Well, dull it isn't.  After my burglary (my burglary?  Well, more of that later on), a real, live (ha!) aborted take-off.  I was dozing at the time, as is my increasing wont.  We accelerated, then the brakes were slammed on – not hard, but hard enough.  Later, the captain explained that strong winds were blowing us skew off the runway.  We were already one hour late; now we are waiting for the brakes to cool.  I bet the hijackers on board are annoyed…

Read my first Paul Auster; it begins to fall into place: the New Metaphysicals: too clever by three-quarters.  Fun, but Auster rather empty.  Unlike some on this plane, I am calm.  I think the burglary taught me something: that I am essentially untouched by these events – because it does not matter.  Nothing really does.  If life is meaningless, so are delays and inconveniences.  The robbery of my flat was also a delicious experience in serenity; my heart moved not a jot.  Messy, perhaps, but interesting too: you need excrescences on the surface of life; a totally aerodynamic world is boring.  I definitely need to get married and have kids – now there's excrescences…

Room 1502, Hotel Dorset.  Amazing view from my room.  AT&T Building to the right, and the strange light-haze from the nearby Citicorp.  Flash room. $190/night.  NYC ground to a halt because of the rain.  Opposite me great chess boards of light.  West 54th Street below, together with the dwarfed rooftops of the apartments.  The hiss of tyres in the wet; aureoles of rain around the lights; car and truck horns.  I really like New York.

9.11.89 New York

An interesting day.  Up early (late body time), hashed beef breakfast – yum – then out to walk in the wet rush hour.  I find a CD hoard, then to the Frick.  A lady cab-driver tells me about her sushi-eating habits – but insists she is "not anal-retentive".  I find the Frick familiar.  Gob-smacked by the Bellini.  Again.  Great Vermeers (3), "Polish Rider" et al.  To the Guggenheim – disappointing again.  Lunch in the Met – where I see they have Canaletto….

To work.  Back in a cab driven by an Albanian: World War III is imminent, Gorby is a cunning commie.  He (the driver) escaped from Albania in '53, came to London to see an Albanian hit-man – killer of three KGB agents (?!).  Totally paranoid, bent by his past.

Then to the Met, an orgy of Canaletto.  Many early pix I've never seen.  And so close up, the paint almost tactile.  Bought the catalogue – and see that Constable is back in print - $260 – but I must get it.  I still feel strangely free of material possessions, even in buying them.  Writing now in MOMA – shades of Auckland, I don't think.

10.11.89

A bad, bad day.  Walked out of Ziff meeting.  Anyway.  Back at Met after stroll through beautiful Central Park.  Coffee and bread pudding in candle-lit cafe (K284 playing live) then – to the Canaletto, inevitably.

The Liechtenstein pix are a revelation.  The light and colours radiate, yet the skies are so moody.  Rio dei Mendicanti: contrast of white walls on the left, ragged, lived-in chaos to the right.  Figures very vague.  Physicality of brush-strokes in the sky.  A boatyard to the right.  Washing on roofs looks like festival pennants.  No dogs.  Is the building next to the church religious?  If so, why the flower boxes?  A tree in the centre.  

The first, famous (to Walks with Lorenzetti) Piazza San Marco.  It manages to be grand and provincial – a ragged Nowheresville that happens to be Venice.  Birds (aargh).  The stalls' shades like beach umbrellas.  Dogs.  Notice often greenery growing from buildings – desuetude.  The crowds by the clock.  Unlike Canaletto's later pix, these look even better further back – like the Impressionists.  San Giacomo di Rialto – this and a later one remind me of Kathmandu – Durbar Square, or between it an Freak Street.  The market.  The strange pictures like huge playing cards.

Some just don't work – that of SS. Giovanni e Paolo.  Rialto Bridge from the north: lovely light and shade: deep, dark colours, a slash of crimson.  The thing about the Grand Canal is that often you get extreme compression, which with the windows articulates the surface.  La Carità: something I've not seen before: a fire.  Venice is so watery – the embodiment of this element, it seems antithetical, the fire.

To the copperplates – and the world is suddenly full of light – no dark scumbling.  The clouds are thick.  The lines in the windows etc. are ruled – adds to the sense of certainty of the pic.  Sky not blue, but pale grey-blue.  The figure pissing against the Rialto bridge.  Very Levantine – the boats, the hats.  In this context, the Stonemason's Yard looks even more extraordinary.  The broken stones look out of place in this city of smoothness.

West end of Molo – very light in technique, like Guardi, lacks detail.  Pic of Orologio – beautiful bustle – a very people-centred pic – at eye-level for a change.  Scratching dog, lounging man.  Very thick paint on buildings.  Strange to see completely new pic – and viewpoint.  For example, San Cristoforo, Michele and Murano.  Square format – very thin paint – almost a sketch.  Odd angles – impossible view.  Mainland is disconcerting.  Pentimenti on Queen's Entrance to the Grand Canal are like ghosts, hovering beneath the surface.  Piazzetta looking north: brilliant red of figure; extreme perspective of loggia; very theatrical. 

The pen and ink drawings are ecstasy close up – like intricate Bach chorale preludes.  Studies are fierce – full of energy.  

The Fonteghetto della Farina – a shock to see images no longer there.  It is fun to see – and recognise – the Houston pix.  The shops in Canaletto are also like Kathmandu: small caves, huddled away – San Geminiano is deeply disturbing in Piazza San Marco, disruptive.  North-east corner of Piazza San Marco – big, bold treatment.  Messy details – planks, dogs, stalls, shades, very urban.  Shades look like bauta masks and hoods.  

Beautiful peaceful capriccio of house, church, tower and bridge by the Lagoon, delicate washes, free brushwork.  His Accademica pic is very theatrical, lovely diagonals, stage stairs, entrances and exits, unusual upward view – normally filled in by the sky.  The late pic of the Rialto – very busy (like Kathmandu) – the greenery, pots and pans.  

Perhaps the most surprising pic in the whole exhibition is Night Festival at San Pietro in Castello.  Night?? In Canaletto???  Reminds me of my Night Movement II – lanterns at night.  Here there are spots of light – especially intriguing inside the building.  Beautiful clouds with moon behind.  The confused bunches of people, the dark water, rich reds, the campanile.  I suppose in part the effect is helped by my ignorance of the scene.  Where are we?  Is it realistic?  Palladian facade.  The cloaked figures – a chill in the air.  The wooden bridge.  The dog in the boat; the Punch and Judy show (you can see Mr Punch's stick).  I have realised that I have regarded this as an island – not part of Venice…

Aha! - as I thought: it is an island – but also part of Venice – see map.  Its orientation is completely unexpected – a typically Canaletto re-ordering.

11.11.89

Remembrance/Veteran's Day.  I was roused by my early morning call at 5 – an attempt to return to GMT.  A strange feeling for the day, rootless, almost.  Glorious walking weather: 50°F, brilliant New York sunshine – reminded me of 5 years ago….

I sit now in The Saloon, opposite the Met (opera), nice bustly place – very Village Voice.  Failing to achieve figs and prosciutto, I am forced to make do with medallions of tuna, followed by marinated duck in aubergine.  A fairly strong Sauvignon accompanies the meal.

Yesterday at the Canaletto exhibition was really good.  Looking very hard at these pix, close up, some of which I knew, some not, was like an intellectual/pictorial work-out.  I kept on seeing more but forced myself to go yet deeper.  A paradigm of all seeing – and understanding.  I can see that Canaletto will be an obsession for the rest of my life – Walks with Lorenzetti has not exorcised him.

Down by the subway to Canal Street – partly after seeing an early Channel 13 (PBS) on Laurie Anderson – what a brilliant, spiky woman – who lives here.  Then around Broadway, West Broadway, Tribeca, Soho, Greenwich Village.  All vaguely familiar, but not exactly.  I could see myself living here, very bustling, young (ish).  Failed to eat at a Polish and Yugoslav restaurant – they took no credit cards, I was low on cash – thanks to my burglar (what fine word).  Back to the hotel, then to here.

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Saturday 9 October 2021

1989 Eastern Ireland

22.7.89 Glendalough

Already a day out – but at least this time I'm trying to catch Ireland – last year's Cork and Kerry has almost all been lost.  A bad start: I slept barely at all Thursday night – real-live projectile vomiting whilst down at this years Ad Managers' conference.  I attended the first session then drove blitzed out of my head to Heathrow – a miracle I didn't fall asleep.

More fun at Dublin – no hire cars at the airport.  In to Dublin, to Hertz's south of the city depot.  A brand new jamjar (17 miles on the clock.)  Drove down the N11 to Bray, where I was meeting Sister Anne at the DART station.  Everything so slow and relaxed, the cars old and small.  Bray itself a bit like Brighton or some other cheap south-coast seaside resort.  Lots of young bored people around.  Not where one would want to stay – no character.  The tourist office at the top of the High Street, upstairs in a Victorian building.  At the back, a great metal plate "to weigh up to 10 tons".

Picked up Anne, then drove down the N11.  Outside Bray, the character of the countryside changed: great masses, green and wooded, reared up – not an Ireland I had seen before.  Again, very peaceful.  Passed tempting sign to Glendalough, but went on to Wicklow.  Which turned out to be Bray with a dirty-looking harbour (shades of Isle of Man's Castletown).  We phone the Royal Hotel at Glendalough and book two rooms.

The drive there rises to a plateau of rolling countryside.  Tiny back roads, hedges – reminds me of Cornwall.  The hotel lies in the valley down a dead-end road.  It is a turn of the century building, long and fitted out sparsely.  A nice two-star hotel feel to it.  The staff are obliging but amateurish: it is very quiet – strangely so in this glorious weather, and so near to Dublin.  And this the height of the season.  Early to bed to try to sleep off what was systemic dysfunction the night before (Tippett piano sonatas hammering through my fevered brain.)

This morning up late-ish (breakfast at 8.30am) then out to view the antiquities hereabouts.  First, the cathedral, behind the hotel.  A wonderful setting: sloping gravestones lichen-covered, high grass, a few paths, all in a valley floor.  A birch tree, leant against by the wind, with five trunks like five fingers.  The cathedral decrepit, but its Romanesque character visible.  Gravestones within – one to a man who died at 105 years – imagine the changes he spanned.

Then to the great Round Tower.  Surprisingly straight and clean in its lines, its surface broken by the interstices of rocks.  A celtic rocket.  (Priest's house).  St Kevin's Kitchen, an authentically dark and gloomy place with its little bell tower, leading to a bridge over a burbling brook.  A flotilla of pond-skaters, a dragonfly and the intensest green; strange butterfly.

Across the river along a path amidst bracken (Finzi's/Hardy's song) to St Saviour's, a spaceship in a clearing.  Flies everywhere – how I hate 'em.  Then by car to the upper lake, where I write now.  Wonderfully serene.  The water clear to the gravel beneath, the high valley walls descending steeply.  To the left, wooded slopes which remind me of Lake Phewa in Nepal; to the right, glorious pine trees, their branches picked out in rich browns and oranges.  High up to the right a crag with strangely blasted trunks like telegraph poles.  At the head of the valley, a waterfall, lots of scree.

23.7.89 Wexford

From Glendalough we moved to the Wicklow Gap – spoilt by fir plantations, then up to Russborough House.  First to Poulaphouca House for lunch.  A strange place.  The bar long and dark, with rows of small bottles, deer heads, deep-brown furniture and a TV playing Irish football high at one end.  A clump of young middle-aged men drinking silently, watching.  Through to the restaurant, empty except for us (when do these places even get busy?).  The food surprisingly good – excellent home-made mushroom soup – shades of my last visit in Kerry.  What made the place was the Ives-like music: Beethoven's Piano Concerti 1 and 2, Chaka Khan, and musique concrète from the kitchen.  Wonderful.

Then to Russborough House.  Beautiful lichened grey stone, classical Palladian design with two wings.  The house looks out to the Wicklow mountains.  Tour only, alas.  Just a few rooms open to the public, but some considerable wealth therein.  Good sequence of Murillos, Guardi, Constables, Vernet (Shades of Avignon), Ruisdael (Berechtsheim), Hobbema.  Shame about the stolen Vermeer, still missing.  A cosy feel, with furniture and ornaments chosen with care.  Friendly library.  Almost liveable in.  Lafranchini bros. Plaster-work brilliant, especially on ceilings.

After tea in an old kitchen (?) - high roof, unadorned walls (à la
 Kedleston) on to the Sally Gap.  Beautiful sense of space and desolation, spoilt only by the encroaching firs.  Stopped to admire Lough Tay, a strange industrial brown, glistening below.  Then completing the circuit, to Laragh, through the Vale of Clara and Vale of Avoca – the latter very attractive.  It was growing late so we hurried straight down to Wexford, staying at the Talbot Hotel, large but more character than White's, plus a better location.

That location gave us a brilliant early morning sun across the sea, glistening like white-hot gold.  After a full breakfast – kippers and gooseberry jam – a walk out to the breakwater.  High above, a huge mackerel sky like a lace shawl.  The waterfront before us, very still and peaceful, like the fronts on the Liffey in Dublin.

Wexford itself tiny, not particularly distinguished, but heaps better than most other places – Ireland's towns are surprisingly ugly.  I find the Opera Festival House with difficulty – it lies in the totally misnamed High Street – a tiny back road – and is almost invisible.  I wonder what the Festival is like.  Otherwise, little else of note here, the church and abbey ruins feeble.  The harbour and sea the best things.  I sit writing this in blazing sunshine at the end of Henrietta Street, a little semi-circular indent off the harbour.  Oddly, there is a railway line along the quays – functional, without warning.

24.7.89  Castletown House, Celbridge

I write this now in the coolest cellar imaginable; outside is blistering eternal sunshine.  I have eaten a passable cream tea in the heart of this mansion.  But back to yesterday.  After Wexford, half in search of the mysterious Yola – another lost language of these islands (Cornish, Faroese, Manx…). Past the lovely Lady's Island Lake – a weird castle tower balanced on edge like a stunt double-decker bus – then down to Kilmore Quay.  Anne wanted a trip out to the Saltees, which looked like huge, languorous whales in the sunshine, but no go.

The harbour charming: a huge poem of rusting cables and great hulks.  The village was relatively unattractive.  And the beach was simply too inviting.  So we accepted its long shelving beach, and hard clear sand left by the retreating tide.  There for two hours, a thin veil of could overhead like a huge piece of lace, nicely tempering the extreme heat.

From there, back through Wexford to Enniscorthy. Set surprisingly on a hill, it looked, at 3 on a hot Sunday afternoon like a deserted Spanish village during siesta.  Everything shut, but the dynamics of the streets good.  On then to Courtain – a total Butlin's – then up to Arklow.  A cycling race impedes our progress by car.  Parking and continuing on foot, we hear impro jazz bands everywhere.  Down by the estuary, the place is a tip.  Indeed, I am depressed by how many Irish towns are grey, ugly and featureless.  Give me England anytime.

But it was getting late, we were hot and tired, and we passed The Bridge, an eighteenth-century inn on the bridge.  Inside, slightly unprepossessing, but the landlord an honest-looking bloke and only £12/head the night for bed and breakfast.  Out in the evening – after a go on the paddle boats for Anne.  We encounter a big gig (100s) and Irish bands in every pub – of which there are many.  The whole town is a-buzz with music, and hot but happy people.  A surprisingly good Chinese meal (in Arklow?) - but no chopsticks.  Standing on the bridge we saw two worlds: behind us, modern barbarism, squat shacks and storehouses; in front, a vision of georgic beauty, Wicklow hills in the distance.

Driving out this morning, after a hearty Irish breakfast, we took the coast road to Wicklow, which was stunning: peaceful and beautiful, reminding me of the South of France and Cornwall at once.  Some nice villas too.  Then via the N11 to Enniskerry and Powerscourt.  Normally gardens do nothing for me – but these were different.  The setting for the main Italianate garden was magnificent: terraces down to a huge pond shimmering between the dotting lily leaves.  High trees everywhere, and in the far distance, the prospect of the Great Sugar Loaf, plus attendant hills.  What a backdrop.  Otherwise the usual paraphernalia of lichened urns, green dribbling statues and perfect lawns.  Other features are a Japanese garden set in a formally boggy hollow – à la Golden Gate park – with chickweed-type(?) greenery everywhere.

Near the entrance, past strange mushroom-shaped trees, a path led through wildly-coloured flowers – including huge blue thistles – to a gate in an old brick wall.  Thence to a magic realm: a dolphin fountain set in another shimmering pond.  Magic.

The house itself – as so many seem to be in Ireland – was destroyed by fire, though only recently.  As a result, the shell shows strange vegetable forms pressing against the lower room's windows – as if a conservatory had gone mad.  Inside, the visible remains of old wallpaper are sad.  The architecture itself looks unspecial, but apparently its contents were fine.  From this idyll, to the Powerscourt waterfall, also in the house's grounds.  Set in a lush hidden valley – lots of oaks – this comes cascading down a steeply slanting face of rock like a huge twisted silk scarf, or a Christo wrapping.  A stream wends away with tawny water, oaks overhead adding to the Dutch effect.  Driving away to Glencree, the retreating form of the Great Sugar Loaf.  The road down to Tallaght – so near Dublin – surprisingly bracing.  These must be some of the best-kept secrets in Ireland.

Now I leave the Castletown coffee room – a tour of OAP Yanks has arrived – why do the old travel?  What profit can it bring them now?  The long passageway is cool as only old houses can be.  As you might expect, many curious rooms: a glimpse of an old kitchen; a wine cellar; a room with a hip bath and crude frescoes of a foxes' feast – leading to a narrow white scullery – wit: the picture above the foxes' feat is of a huntsman fallen in a ditch; a dark room full of randomly placed chains like a surrealist work of art – a cool, dank small.  Locked, a nursery room with a huge crude doll's house, and furniture, a cradle and old suitcase; next to it an empty bedroom – bed, wardrobe, low chest of drawers, all very 1900s.

Inside the house – the entrance hall – a wonderful approximate cube – gleaming white.  My eye is caught by a chamber organ, eighteenth century – four and half octaves.  Ionic columns and half columns, simple design though complex ornamentation.  In the office, I see an amazing piece of furniture – with pigeonholes, drawers et al.  A leather chair – covered with a hood…?  On the staircase – Lafranchini (?) plasterwork.  A rather pleasant tour with a young lady who reminds me of my secretary Linda… Rather intelligent, by the sound of it…

The house quite interesting – but sad since so much had been sold off.  The best room was the print room – prints applied on the walls as decoration.  The facade is large but rather unimpressive – no focus, and the colonnades are rather short.  The gardens are simply parkland, again, no grand focus.  But a pleasant place, on an enjoyable day out.

On to Dublin – sampling the delights of the one-way system.  In fact, Dublin rush-hour looks pretty wild. I park in St. Stephen's Green, not far from the hotel I stayed in two years back (Powers).  Then a walk.  My feet gravitate towards Grafton Street – I am tempted by the bustle of Bewley's, but resist – then on to Trinity College Dublin.  Perhaps the echoes of the Trinity make this place attractive.  Then down to see the Project Art Gallery.  A nice space, simple, with Satie gently playing.  As I leave, someone cycles right in and out of another door.  Interestingly, this whole area – quite decrepit when I visited before – is becoming quite lively, and looks to be a Soho or Greenwich Village in the making.

The same also goes – as far as restoration – to much of Dublin that I see this time.  There are a lot of people around, and the atmosphere is more upbeat.  However, the same seems not to be the case for the rest of Ireland I saw – still very backward, with black (Bakelite?) telephones, and punch-button adding machines.  It makes you realise what England must have been like until recently to the visiting Yanks…

For supper, inevitably, I return to the Colony.  Much as I remember it: right on, stand-offish, with studenty posters and studenty posers.  Good angry music in the background.  Just right.  Then a turn round St Stephen's, on to the airport.

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