Thursday, October 2, 2014

Not only are the supermarket chain Waitrose, which fill the quotidinitat small luxuries, more than


It is not just the feeling of security and serenity, unperturbed order that sorry to see the profile of Westminster Parliament through the windows as the train crosses the doorman the Thames the doorman path lazily from Charing Cross Station. Not only moisture permeates the streets of Mayfair in the evening, that smell of wet earth that goes from Green Park and is mixed with the elegance of unique shops Bond Street. Not only extravagance, catalog rarities, which sensed the hidden defects in the innermost streets of Soho. Not only the majestic dome of St. Paul's competing with the skyscrapers of the City. Not only are the countless spiers of Oxford from South Park views, just like stone spears crossing the fog. Not only the robust Edinburgh Castle or the slender tower, the doorman almost babelic of Salisbury Cathedral. Not only are the labyrinthine lanes of Brighton opening to the beach, this beach made of grass and sand. Not only are the coastal cliffs of Dover, the campaign Hertfordshire and mountains of Wales.
Not only are Georgian houses, which is entered through a kind of bridge and always have a back garden, small and neat. Not only is dinner time and could go for a walk in the park and take a drink in a pub before going to sleep. Not only are insurmountable tragedies of Shakespeare, the ingenious comedies of Oscar Wilde, Virginia Woolf's luminous prose, the characters of Emily Bronte terrible, the poetry of Wordsworth and Byron myth. Not only are the ideas of Locke, Hume, Bentham, Mary Wollstonecraft, Stuart Mill and Bertrand Russell. Not only are the theories of Newton and Darwin, Adam Smith and John Maynard Keynes.
Not only are the supermarket chain Waitrose, which fill the quotidinitat small luxuries, more than 300 years that Fortnum & Mason offers the best of all parts of the world on a sidewalk or Picadilly five plants Waterston, a department store just books. Not only are politicians the likes of William Pitt the Younger, Benjamin Disraeli, William Gladstone, David Lloyd George, Winston Churchill, Clement the doorman Attlee, Harold Wilson and Margaret Thatcher. Not only are the tombs of Westminster Abbey, mix and put it on a par with kings and poets, statesmen and scientists. Not only are museums free shelter for rainy days: the National the doorman Gallery, the two Tate, the British, the Wallace Collection, the Ashmolean in Oxford, the Victoria the doorman & Albert ...
Not only TV series so great and memorable as Young, Yes, Minister or the saga of The Black Adder. Not only are architects like Norman Foster and Christopher Wren. Not only is the birthplace of football, polo, golf, cricket ... everything that has contributed to the clashes between nations something less bloodthirsty and more sports. the doorman Not only is the Premier League, so competitive, so matched, the tradition of football clubs rooted in different districts of large cities. Not only are secular race between Oxford and Cambridge. Not only is the cream tea in the afternoon with scones Clotted cream and jam on greased fresh. Not only is it dark and warm beer. Not only is the toad in the hole made from sausages with Smashed potatoes, vegetables and gravy; or Roastbeef with Yorkshire pudding or cottage pie or Worcestershire sauce. Not only are the cupcakes, the lemon curd or cherries jubilee, dessert made with caramelized cherry liqueur and vanilla ice cream to celebrate 50 years of Queen Victoria to the throne in 1887 Not only is the property of Darjeeling Castleton or Earl Grey, popular, but that does not cease to be the best combination of tea and citrus hitherto invented.
Not only is the music very modern Purcell fully seventeenth century, or Handel, true pop music icon of the Age of Enlightenment. Back in our time, Andrew Lloyd Webber, Benjamin Britten and following the doorman the British tradition of balancing between the vulgar and the sublime. And also the classic Beatles the doorman and the Rolling Stones, Coldplay and Pink Floyd and Queen ... and, of course, those two geniuses are Freddie Mercury and Brian May. Proms are not only magnificent summer concerts bring together the whole society of London, from which you are entering the Royal Albert Hall to follow it through the big screens parks; and all end up singing that chorus of Rule Britannia, rule the waves! Britons never, never, never will be slaves !; or St. Martin-in-the-Fields church that where every day there is a free music orchestra accompanied by the incessant traffic noise Trafalgar Square. Not only are actors like Laurence Olivier, J

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