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August 21, 2008

The London Stone: What IS this thing?

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We've written about it before. I have a thing about it--probably because for now I live a lot of the time in California in an very "old" 22 year old home. Back East, in DC, NYC and Nantucket, and other parts of the U.S. where people do not use "party" as a verb, there's much older stuff, of course, sometimes going back to the 1600s--but nothing like in dear Albion and Western Europe. Sorry, rock and cave paintings and U.S. mound-builder relics don't cut it for me as much; so alert the Oberlin College faculty, the BIA and NPR, and then sue me. I like old books, old homes, old things; but they need to be the relics of real goofy-looking Europeans like me.

But the Stone is important to me because it's mysterious and fires the imagination--not that it's just old. There's a myth that the Stone was part of an altar built by Brutus of Troy, the legendary founder of London. Not true--but the Stone is Dang Old, older than Boudica, Disraeli or Keith Richards, and at the very minimum, an enduring symbol of the Authority of The City since London Roman times. So we're talking about at least 2000 years of Stoneness. Some scholars think 3000 years. Anyway, finding It is easy: you head east, down Fleet Street, past Dr. Johnson's house, past St. Paul's a block north, staying on Fleet Street (not Lane) which becomes Ludgate Hill (past intersection with Old Bailey), which becomes Cannon Street, to 111 Cannon, across from the tube station.

Got it? You'll miss It if you're not careful. You may give an oath to It if you like. The Stone likes that.

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Posted by JD Hull at August 21, 2008 09:39 PM

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