London,
called "Llyn-din" by the Celts and "Londinium" by the Romans, this
prehistoric city has grown over the millennia from an anonymous
far-flung settlement, to the seat of power governing ¼ of the world, to
the music haven of the 1960s, and into what Newsweek magazine calls the
"coolest city on the planethttp://www.anytimevacations.com.a hip compromise between the non-stop
newness of Los Angeles and the aspic-preserved beauty of Paris -
sharpened to New York's edge." Indeed, the British capital rivals New
York for energy, art, dining, nightlife, entertainment, and a totally
hip attitude. If, however, you have no interest in London's pop culture,
and prefer to visit the London of history and literature, you will find
it intact amidst the new cool.
The Tower of London and the royal palaces have probably been featured in
more works of historical romance than any place else but it is the
whole, as represented in the works of Charles Dickens, that evokes most
people's preconceptions of London. Very little of Dickensian London
remains, which is mostly a good thing. Gone is the bleakness and misery
right down to the pea-soup fog, which was actually heavy smog now
dispatched thanks to air pollution controls. Though some of the
character has changed here and there with time and "progress," there are
still many, many places that remain just as they have always been.
Writer Samuel Johnson encapsulated London's appeal when he said, "When a
man is tired of London, he is tired of life, for there is in London all
that life can afford."