The day dawned bright and sunny – just
about the perfect English day. My mother would always remark that one could get
what she referred to as an Indian Summer in September. It did cloud over later
but the sun broke through and the weather did not spoil the day’s festivities.
I awoke as I remarked yesterday after 9
hours and 16 minutes of solid sleep – practically unprecedented. I think I was
awoken by the gentle rocking of the boat caused by the wake of a passing
vessel. Not a bad way to wake up, and even better when The G is beside me. The
Thames is a tidal river and the ebb ad flow if the tide is pretty strong. At
high tide the houseboat is afloat and rocks very gently.
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The famous houseboat - we are in the one on the left and we are staying in the room behind the two windows you can see |
The boat never seems to be quite level.
Taking a shower involves standing in a bath that is clearly on a slope giving
one a peculiar sense of insecurity. As with many boats, the doorways are
designed for midgets and everything is squashed up. As I write The G and I are
sitting on the bow of the boat drinking our coffee and watching the traffic crawl
by from south to north. As we all know north London is by far the superior part
which is probably why all the traffic is struggling to get there!!
I have no sense of being English anymore. I
am quite comfortable being in London: I quite like the place and it was once
home and the place where I worked. But it is not the London that I used to know
and because I haven’t been part of the change the difference now is very marked
to me. Perhaps that’s an obvious observation but I think the corollary of it is
that I shan’t be disappointed to leave tomorrow on the Great Scottish
Adventure.
The pull of family is a weak one for me. My
younger sister’s death in February put a strain on what were already pretty
weak links between my brother and me and even between my other sister and me
(and we have always been very close). Indeed my brother refused to engage with
me at all at the wedding: his loss really. It is very odd talking to a man who
stands sideways on to you with his arms folded. But then he was a banker so
perhaps that explains it!!
I enjoy seeing my parents – my Father has
an irrepressible sense of humour. Though he finds it hard to get about now and
walks with a stick he will still struggle to his feet when my Mother comes in
the room. My Mother is a human dynamo: still doing yoga at 86 she is alert and
as active as can be. We will be spending some more time with them when we
return from Scotland.
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My Mother and Father |
We were due to meet my brother-in-law at
the Elizabeth Gate of Kew Gardens at 14:00 in order to assist with the
construction of the famous arch. The G decided that we would walk over Kew Bridge
and walk eastwards along the north side of the river. This took us to a row of
very attractive mainly Georgian (late 18th early 19th
century) houses that we can just see from the boat as we look through the
arches of the bridge. There were several pubs each of which seemed to offer
increasingly tasty meals. We shall eat in one tomorrow (well today as I write).
The pubs were full of people eating their Sunday lunch and everybody’s lunch
seemed to be built around a massive Yorkshire pudding!!
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Swans are revered in many cultures. The Queen's Court has a "Warden of the Swans" who works with the "Marker of the Swans". They conduct an annual census of all swans on the Thames. The Queen owns all the UK's mute swans, but only exercises her right of possession around Windsor. |
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This is such a typical London street that I could not resist taking the picture |
One of the houses was for sale and rapid
research showed it to be a three bedroomed house with a guide price of £3.25m.
A snip!! It has lovely views though. We also passed the B Hopkin Morris Homes
of Rest. A plaque on the wall informed us that “Two of the houses [were] built
by R Thomas Child [and] one by M Soloman Williams [and] one by William Abbot
Carpinter (sic) at [their] own charge
for the use of [the] Poor of Chiswick for ever”. It is dated 1724 and another
plaque records that the houses were repaired in 1816. A third plaque is dated
1933.
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45 Strand on the Green just up the river from us. Yours for a cool £3.25m |
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For the benefit of the poor ... forever |
We wandered back to Kew and decided to take
a look at St Anne’s Church. I have a morbid fascination with graveyards because
the inscriptions on the tombstones often tell such intriguing stories. In this
case I was taken aback to see the grave of Thomas Gainsborough. I didn’t take a
photo because I had not thought it was the Thos Gainsborough. I should have
guessed because on Strand on the Green was a blue plaque commemorating the
painter Johan Zoffany (of whom I had never heard) and on Kew Green was another
plaque to Camille Pissarro (a French impressionist of whom I had heard). There
must have been a bit of an artists’ community here.
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Gainsborough's grave in St Anne's churchyard |
St Anne’s Church dates from 1714 and, to my
eye, was interesting but not particularly attractive. I think that English
architecture went into a bit of a lull between the Middle Ages (say 1600) and
the end of Age of Enlightenment (say 1775). By about 1775 the English mindset
had begun to develop into something identifiably different than continental
Europe. Of course I have no idea what I am talking about.
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St Anne's Church |
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Now here's a grave: this person came from "North Britain". This is a euphemism for Scotland which I have never heard before!! |
We made our way to the Elizabeth Gate at
Kew Gardens to meet Peter in order to construct the famous arch.
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A VW microbus at Kew Green |
The wedding
itself was in the Nash Conservatory. The Nash Conservatory is the oldest of the
19th Century glasshouses at Kew and is of major historical and architectural
importance. It was originally one of two
pavilions designed by John Nash for the gardens at Buckingham Palace, but King
William IV moved the current conservatory brick by brick to Kew in 1836. They
seemed to have the time, money and inclination to do that sort of thing in
those days. Good old Bill IV: a year later he was gone and Victoria ascended
the throne ushering in a new age where even greater feats of foolishness were
carried through.
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The Nash conservatory |
We should have known that the arch would
take longer to construct on the day and so it proved but we eventually got it
assembled. The florist, who was due to decorate it, was very impressed and told
us that she would be able to hire it out at £200 a throw and that there was a
fine business opportunity for Peter should he wish to become an archmaker. I
think he was not attracted to the opportunity!!
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Here is the arch (or chupah) erected in the Nash conservatory decorated by The G |
The wedding was at 4:30pm so until then we
repaired with Peter to The Cricketers pub to enjoy and glass of Good English
Ale (The G drinks cider).
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Peter and I enjoying a swift one before the wedding in The Cricketers |
It was a pretty big wedding as my
experience of weddings goes: about 140 guests. It was the first Jewish wedding
I had been to. In fact the happy couple had been legally married in a civil
ceremony that morning to which, I am delighted to say, Will wore his jeans and
T-shirt as a mark of protest. This is because you cannot perform a marriage
ceremony at Kew Gardens: the one we went to was a proper ceremony of course but
would not have been recognised by the State. This, of course, is different to
Australia where The G and I, for example, were able to ship a celebrant out to Montague Island and get married with the Sea Eagles and Whales.
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The G and me tying the knot on Montague with rainbow |
I will not regale much of the ceremony
itself, which was mercifully brief, but at one point Jodie circled Will while
the Rabbi sang a song. I don’t know the origin of this, perhaps it is to enable
the groom to do a final check on the goods!! I looked it up and I discovered
that the bride circles the groom under the chupah (that’s the wedding arch to
us philistines) to demonstrate her awesome power over her!! Way to go, Jodie!!
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The deed now done, the bride and groom emerge from the decorated chupah |
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The groom - glass in hand and a day's work well done! |
Jodie looked absolutely gorgeous in the most stunning and flattering lacy
off-white wedding dress ever made!! As The G said she was the Princess Grace of
Kew Gardens. At the end of the wedding Will was required to break a glass under
the chupah. This is about recognising that to come together a couple has to
have been apart; a conscious choice is made to be together. There are also
historical poarallels with the destruction of the temple in Jerusalem 2000
years ago.
Of course no serious wedding can happen in
one venue so, before getting to the wedding breakfast in the Orangery, we all
repaired for canapés on the Duck Pond Lawn. The G would be disappointed if I did not
tell you what we ate. There were 9 different canapés which we recall
as: salmon roulades, Peking duck cornets, quails’ eggs with mustard mousse,
courgette soufflé, caramelised
onion tartlets, foi gras bites, herbed chicken croquettes, asparagus tarts with
quince paste, and stilton rounds with onion chutney. This we washed down with Charles
de Muret champoo.
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Kew Palace. This is the third palace on the location. This one used to be called the Dutch House and George III lived there for a while. He was the so-called "mad king" |
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The Duck Pond with the Duck Pond Lawn behind |
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Let's get to the bottom of things... |
I sat
with my Father while the speeches were on and we were enjoying ourselves hugely
before my Mother noticed that I was causing his glass to be refilled. She
warned me that he would not make it through the evening if he had too much
grog. You and me both, Father!!
The wedding breakfast was in the orangery.
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The Orangery |
The setting for the tables at the wedding
breakfast was very attractive. One bridal grandmother had sewn hessian runners
while the bride’s mother and a multitude of aunts had decorated bottles and
jars with hessian, rope and stringy ribbons. Someone had sawn yew trees into
sections to stand the decorations on and to hold the place cards. The florist
had then done some serious floral work (as she had done with the chupah).
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Beautiful table decorations were the result of much hard work |
There was a fine (and rather too loud) band
with a lead singer, a brass section, guitar, bass, drums, and three back-up singers.
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The happy couple ... and that dress |
They were very good – tight, as
we musos say, as a duck’s arse. Before getting fed we were treated to the Hora.
I read that no Jewish wedding is complete without the Hora, or chair dance. In
this tradition, a few strong and brave guests hoist the bride and groom high
above the crowd on chairs to the infectious sounds of some rousing tune.
Friends and family dance around in an ecstatic circle as the elevated couple
tries not to look (or fall) down.
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Jodie and Will hoisted high for the Hora |
The G will not let me close without a look
at the menu. We had opted for the lamb which was, I may say, succulent.
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Left: The menu and (right) what was written on the back. |
Desert arrived on old movie style trays.
There was a large selection of petit four style deserts: salted caramel milk chocolate
lollipops, lemon meringue tartlets, white chocolate truffles with gold popping
sugar, mini-pavlova with berries, chocolate gateaux, tiny ice cream
cornets and little jars of lemon posset and Eton mess. There was more confectionary and fruit on sticks at a side table and
an open bar. After all this my sister’s wedding cake was handed round. I rose
to the occasion as a loyal brother should and much enjoyed a slice.
We knew that the party was going well when
tequila shots were brought out for the dancing youngsters (well late 20s and
early 30s). This reminded me of my daughter Sophie who is a keen tequila shot
drinker. She is going to Mexico this Christmas to practise. I am not sure
whether my Father moved on to the tequila but The G and I were delighted to see
him dancing with my Mother – an activity that cannot have occurred for many
years. So enjoyable were the festivities that even I danced with The G!!
But all good things come to and end and we
left the revellers at about 11:30 to walk gently back to our riverboat. We were
out like lights!!
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A Mini Clubman in Bush Lane just near the houseboat |
Awesome!
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