| Natural History Museum (outside) |
| Natural History Museum (inside) |
We saw an impressive, realistic model of a Tyrannosaurus Rex that moved its body and roared. Poor T-Rex with its disproportionately tiny arms. According to a blurb I read at the museum, if the dinosaur ever tripped, the fall would most likely be fatal because its inadequate arms could not lessen the impact.
| T-Rex and its itty bitty arms |
Next we walked over to The Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A), the largest museum of decorative art and design in the world. It contains over 4.5 million objects, transcending all cultures and spanning throughout thousands of years of history. The museum was originally named the South Kensington Museum and has been at its present location since 1857. In 1899, Queen Victoria expanded the main entrance of the museum and it was renamed The Victoria and Albert Museum to honor and memorialize her late husband, Albert.
Queen Victoria ruled England for sixty-three years and seven months, the longest reign of any monarch in British history and of any female monarch in world history. Her great-great granddaughter is the current Queen, Elizabeth II, who now has the second longest reign in British history at sixty years.
| Victoria and Albert Museum |
| Queen Victoria, reigned from 1837-1901 |
| Inside the V&A Museum |
| Medieval & Renaissance Galleries |
| Music room in the British Gallery |
There was also an activity that allowed you to design your own coat of arms. Here is mine:
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| My coat of arms, "Peace and Plenty" |
After touring the museums, we met up with Caitlin's boyfriend Kevin at a pub near my hotel where we ate and relaxed for a couple of hours. I was sad to say goodbye to Cait but we had such a great time this week, it's not an experience I'll forget.
There are many things I will miss about London. I will miss the extravagant architecture and how you can walk past buildings that were constructed over a thousand years ago; how you are in the presence of King Henry VIII, Queen Elizabeth I, Charles Dickens, William Shakespeare, Charles Darwin, Sir Christopher Wren and countless other influential figures; how people spill out of pubs to enjoy beers on the streets with friends on every night of the week; how you can step into a sea of Londoners and hear hundreds of different languages and accents; how everyone takes a short respite from their hectic daily lives between 2:00 and 5:00 pm each day for afternoon tea; how waiters and waitresses let you sit at a table hours after you've finished eating and don't bring you the check until you ask for it; how history is embedded into every aspect of the city, and how important tradition is in the sense that people still engage in customs and practices not necessarily because it makes sense but because that's how it's been done for thousands of years.
I figured I'd conclude my blog with a quote, because usually someone else said it better. Thanks to all who read my blog throughout the week. I hope you enjoyed it!
"When a man is tired of London, he is tired of life; for there is in London all that life can afford."
-Samuel Johnson, 1709-1784
