We managed to get in another trip before the end of the year! Our friend J is on her annual visit from across the Pond, and we decided to meet her, and her hostess A, in the courtyard of the British Library today.
I have been to the British Library before - I was part of a panel of speakers there at an event a couple of years ago - but not often. We went to the café there to buy lunch, which was a bit of a failure as the food was very, very expensive for what it was (industrially-produced sandwiches for nearly a fiver each, anybody?) and they sold their coffee in disposable cups, which meant I wasn't about to buy any. AND most of my eye-wateringly expensive BLT fell out of its wrapper and landed on the floor when I opened it. SIGH. But hey, the company was good and we sat and chatted for a long time before deciding to visit the exhibition that had first drawn us there, which was the one called "Cats on the Page". It was really rather glorious; lots of familiar friends, from My Cat Geoffrey to Mog, via Old Possum and some splendidly Victorian moralistic cats. But no cat that walked by himself... I suppose they can't have everybody, but I did feel that was a particularly egregious omission.
Once we had looked round that, we thought we might want to go to the Anglo-Saxon exhibition, but we found you had to pay for that, unless you were a member, so we decided not to, but instead went into the permanent exhibition of the Treasure of the British Library, which I have been to before, but which you can spend hours and hours in. The "Treasures" are eclectic, ranging from the Codex Sinaiticus to draft lyrics of Beatles songs, via Magna Carta, Jane Austen and P G Wodehouse!
The Magna Carta has a room to itself - you see the copy of the charter itself (one of only a very few in existence) with a modernised transliteration on the opposite wall. And there is a video that highlights the salient points of it. An awful lot of it was very personal: "We will remove completely from their offices the kinsmen of Gerard de
Athée, and in future they shall hold no offices in England. The people
in question are ,. . .." with a list of names. Fascinating stuff, and I could - and might - spend a long time studying it!
But the highlight of the exhibition is the displays entitled "The Art of the Book", lots of lavishly-illustrated manuscripts, often of the Bible. Many of the Bibles and prayer-books were commissioned by wealthy landowners, and sometimes the illustrations are of them and their family. There was one lovely Nativity scene inside a letter "P" (starting Puer Nobis).
We eventually had to tear ourselves away as time was getting on and the Swan Whisperer needed to get to Figure Club. J and A headed for Library shop, and we headed home. A delightful afternoon, with brilliant company!
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