Tests: Negative. Adventure: Positive.

Tests: Negative. Adventure: Positive.

LONDON—I’m here to tell you that it’s possible to fly across the Atlantic wearing a mask, deal with 10 days of quarantining, undergo four COVID tests in a period of three weeks, slump through an untimely head cold, stress over a lost key and dysfunctional entryway to a rented flat—and still have a great time.

It rained a lot. Randomly timed calls from the British authorities, meant to assure we were not spreading the virus, were disconcerting. (Big Brother!). Britain’s prime minister, appearing as disorganized as his hair, announced national “Freedom Day” from virus restrictions simultaneously with news that he was forced to self-isolate. At times, the three weeks were a bit like being in a surreal Monty Python skit—but not as funny.

So what?

You haven’t lived until you’ve been to a wedding in which the groom and bride—he pedaling a three-wheel cargo bike while she rides in the delivery unit, the velocipede complete with “just married” signs and tin cans trailing noisily behind—exit the ceremony through local streets escorted by a bagpiper while local residents applaud through open windows and surprised, grinning passers-by offer congratulations.

That was our daughter in the cargo bin, the star of the show.

Long delayed by the maddening pestilence, the formalization of their vows—the ceremony, bagpiping march back to the garden in their flat, the meal, balloons, cake-cutting, champagne-toasting (all planned and executed by the newlyweds)—included their baby boy and a small gathering of the couple’s friends. And us, arriving from The Colonies.

Evolving coronavirus protocols already had eliminated the pub site for their reception and kept festivities almost exclusively outdoors. There had been persistent predictions of heavy rain for the day and a last-minute email that rescinded earlier approval on the wedding site. That and other pop-up issues were resolved favorably, and in the end, the light morning drizzle couldn’t dampen anything. And we stayed another week to hang out with the grandboy. A cute little bugger.

Our stay reinforced my feeling that London is a swell place, diverse and alive, even in the midst of the modern plague. Parks and playgrounds are in abundance and everywhere are runners, bicyclists, children, dogs. Outdoor marketplaces and pubs bustle in spite of the distancing edicts.

In previous times, a night or two at the theatre, day at the museum or concert at St. Martin-in-the-Fields was on the schedule. And maybe a lunch of fish-and-chips or an activity as touristy as walking the zebra crossing on Abbey Road.?Not now. But our stay, specifically the isolation stage, coincided with televised coverage of two favorite sporting events—Wimbledon tennis and the European soccer championships, both of which involved top-of-the-news English accomplishments and the attendant local fuss.

If you had been there for the whole thing, you would never forget it.

We’ll be back, of course.

要查看或添加评论,请登录

John Jeansonne的更多文章

  • God's team, or just a good team?

    God's team, or just a good team?

    (This is from three years ago, when Sister Jean first became March Madness news. She's back--and good for her.

  • Just to drop a name....

    Just to drop a name....

    Celebrity is a peculiar thing. It bestows a sort of mythic aura on its subject and engenders public reverence.

  • Not just another game

    Not just another game

    A few things have changed since I was last directly involved in Super Bowl coverage for Newsday 20 years ago. There was…

  • Really?

    Really?

    A good Latin phrase always is handy for extraordinary Olympic moments. (The Games official motto is in Latin: citius…

  • Bonds, Clemens, fame and notoriety

    Bonds, Clemens, fame and notoriety

    Re-posting my old argument regarding the Hall of Fame (first posted in 2017)..

  • Home runs weren't all that happened

    Home runs weren't all that happened

    Let’s say you are the target of senseless hate and that, having survived, you are advised to simply forget about it…

  • Still here

    Still here

    (This just appeared in Newsday’s Act2, the Geezer section.) A former colleague telephoned recently—first time we’d…

  • And it's not a waltz, either....

    And it's not a waltz, either....

    If the question should arise on a test or in a friendly game of trivia, could you name Australia’s national anthem?…

  • Native American mascots: No offense?

    Native American mascots: No offense?

    Guilty. Not, if it please the court, for intentionally disparaging Native Americans by playing on high school teams…

  • Statistics and other truths

    Statistics and other truths

    Recognizing the “major league” status of the old Negro Leagues seems like a fat pitch down the middle of the plate, but…

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了