Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Covent Garden

I could walk through a thousand autumn leaves in the crisp, winter freshness, admiring the works of artists who showcase their wares for at least 50 years of London's coldness. This is Hyde Park.

Autumn in the colourful Covent Garden is quite another picture: entertainers galore adorn the 19th century atmosphere, decorating the yesteryear pavement. It's cobblestones indeed. When you're 12 years old and being entertained by a street-performer, throw them a pound or two after you're called to be part of the performance - when you're a magician for a day. Before, or after, the local foodster prepares you a wonderful baked potato a la chilli-con-carle.

When you enter your teens in the same place, you might stop to re-read the red sign-board upon the entrance to Covent Garden, signifying the importance of this olden-day market-place. You notice you read the signboard as an individual with an interest in history as others snap by, recording your expression studying a past that is dear to you.

Years pass, and you stop by the same place as a 20-something, ordering the same baked potato with the same filling, from the same place. Another street-performer fills the piazza with his/her increasingly less exciting stunts. Foreign faces prevail, and less spashes of the pound coin are to be heard, when you toss them from the same spot you once relished your 2.99 Covent-Garden-baked-potato or .99-flake-ice-cream.

Apples & tomatoes - they can be purchased in less visible areas of the market, though the traditional fruit & veg trade in this area has rapidly died out, replaced by other modern-day commodities. Real Covent Garden children always know to find real market delicacies without compromising on culture, or do they.

10 comments:

Jayne said...

My sisterbylaws' dad was a barrow-boy 'dahn the gardn' & remained in the fruit & veg trade until he retired. Covent Garden was a very special place in those days. It has it's own atmosphere nowadays, thanks to the arts primarily, but if only those walls could talk..........you'd be amazed :-)

Seabee said...

It's still fun, but I prefered it in the good old days. Like Dubai:-)

i*maginate said...

*jayne, that's mega cool! Lurve the slang ;-) Yeah it's changed - and far more tourists!

*seabee, hehe. Fun indeed but I felt like a real oldie when I went back - as a child I used to watch the performers on the main 'square' and when it got boring I used to look up at the bar with the open balcony to see what the heck all those grown-ups were giggling about - I think I now understand. ;-) I even went to that place and it's a total dump...and the street perfomances aren't as captivating as before.

* said...

It was beautiful back then, and even now stepping into Covent Garden has a magical quality of its own. Two summers ago when we were down that way, I took the kids down for the day.The expressions, the wonderment on their faces crosses all the passages of time.
I love the buskers, the quaint shops selling all sorts of paraphenalia, and ofcourse all the live performers.

BuJ said...

nice.. cov garden is one of my fav places.. but is replaced now by the borough market and of course the yummy spitafields :)

BuJ said...

btw, where's that tug?

Ammaro said...

i so miss london... im feeling nostalgic now... :( havent been to my hometown since 98...

Jacinto said...

Well written, Covent Garden seems to be a charming place , should visit it again.

BHCh said...

Oh, girl... Good post.

BHCh said...

Oh girl... Good post!