We wanted to visit the Tower while the poppies were in their glory in the moat, though there are schools of thought which suggest that a rainy half-term day was not the perfect choice. But we went, and enjoyed it a great deal. We shall go back as we did not have time or energy for the Bloody Tower and the White Tower, and it is not possible to see the Chapel Royal before 4.30 unless you are with a guided tour. This means that there will be more than one post about the Tower. Linda will tell you about the outside spaces, and the art works which embellish them; and we shall return.
The throne room, which is in the Wakefield Tower, is a handsome, octagonal room, again modestly furnished (ie there is a throne...) with information about the various Plantagenet kings.We had originally agreed that we would walk the walls (wall walking being a pastime to which we are both much addicted) when the drizzle stopped; but in fact the route thorough the medieval palace takes you to a bit of wall-walk, which leads to another tower with interesting things in it, and so on until you have walked all the wall there is.
So we next came to the Salt Tower, where prisoners were once kept, and where some interesting graffiti have been preserved behind perspex, with explanations. More wall walk brought us to the Broad Arrow Tower, which was dressed as the Guard Room, with the obligatory metal hats to try on, and instructions about being on duty to preserve the Tower, the King, the Kingdom and, no doubt, civilisation as they knew it then. Sounds of battle followed us along the wall to the Constable Tower, which has a model of the tower as it was, with key areas to defend, and lists of the weapons needed by each grade of soldier.
The next tower delayed us for some time, as it contained fascinating information and pictures of the Royal Beasts: the menagerie which was here between 1210 and 1832, when the creatures were moved to the care of ZSL at London Zoo (a mere 6 years after the zoo had been founded, so they must have been pleased to get a few extra animals)
After a few more metres of the wall walk, we came to the exhibition about the Tower in the First World War. It was a centre for recruiting and training, and there were some very interesting archive photographs, enhanced by having a modern civilian (or soldier, or Scout, or Nurse), in colour, added to show where the picture was taken. The only annoying thing about this very interesting little exhibition was that the film of the Artists Rifles in training had been recorded with the projector running too fast. I do wish people would take the trouble to get things right. Soldiers of the Great War did not jerk about in a slightly risible way.
This is another area where prisoners were kept, especially those who were not of the 'right' branch of Christianity: quite a difficult balancing act, after all, with monarchs changing the particular fine tuning much as modern governments fiddle with the school curriculum. On the other hand, in 1570, the Pope excommunicated the Queen of England, a sort of fatwah inciting Catholics to assassinate her, so imprisonment was not unreasonable. Some of the inmates were incarcerated for so long that they clearly had plenty of time to carve their feelings and family information into the walls.
If the weather had been better, we should have eaten our sandwiches and gone on to look at more; but the persistent drizzle and chill made that unattractive and all the Tower's indoor eateries were - of course - heaving with half-termers. So we agreed to come back another time, and left.
What did we not see? Well, we chose to avoid the 'Torture in the Tower' bit, with its straggling queue, and shall return, as I said at the top, for two towers and the chapel.
And the poppies? we thought they were very moving and beautiful, disagreeing with the art critic of the Guardian who said they were prettified and mawkish.

Went yesterday. incredibly busy ~ and respectful.
ReplyDelete