Perhaps what I love best about London are the modern day memories my visits have provided and the people I've met along the way. There was the time I was strolling down the Mall with a tour group and our way was suddenly blocked by a burgundy Rolls Royce coming out of a drive and stopping right in front of us. It was an older Rolls and the windows were as large as those found in some houses. Looking through the back passenger window, my gaze met and held that of Prince Charles. He was dressed in full regimental regalia no less. He smiled at me and raised his gloved hand to the visor of his hat in a jaunty salute before the car pulled away. Then there was the day that I was taken to the Victoria and Albert Museum and for a cruise up the river by David Parker, then curator of the Dickens House Museum. At one point during our ramblings, David took hold of my elbow, stopped me and pointed to a second story window. Looking up, I saw Inigo Jones's ceiling of the Banqueting House through the upper storey windows. Amazing. Another memory I'll always cherish is the time Anthony Lejeune, author of The Gentlemen's Clubs of London, invited me to dinner at Brooks's Club. Walking up the stairs to the second floor dining room, I came face to face with Sir Thomas Lawrence's full length portrait of George IV. Having port after dinner in library, I gazed at the portraits of the Dilettanti Society that range the walls and marveled at the fact that there were bed billows, in white pillow cases, placed on the arms of the leather couches, ready for any member who felt the overwhelming need of a nap.Labels: Beau Brummell, Kristine Hughes, St. James's Street