Londres -
On the 73 bus from Oxford Circus to Stoke Newington, you will hear Yoruba, Polish, Gujarati, Cockney rhyming slang, and Australian upspeak. London is no longer a purely English city; it is the capital of the world.
There is a moment, usually just as the Tube train rattles above ground between stations, when London reveals itself. You see the jagged silhouette: the Gherkin next to a medieval church spire, the Shard piercing low clouds like a shard of glass, and the London Eye turning its slow, mechanical blink over the grey silk of the Thames. Londres
What saves London from the frantic pace of New York or Tokyo is the green. Londres is a forest pretending to be a city. Hyde Park, Hampstead Heath, Richmond Park (where deer roam like they own the place, because they do). On a sunny day—that rare, precious commodity—the grass vanishes under a blanket of bodies. Office workers shed their suits like snakes, clutching takeaway coffees and pretending they are on holiday. On the 73 bus from Oxford Circus to
South of the river, the energy changes. The South Bank is a promenade of punk rock and poetry. Bookstalls sit under the shadow of the Tate Modern, a hulking former power station that now worships art instead of electricity. Street performers juggle fire while, across the water, St. Paul’s Cathedral nods its silent approval. You see the jagged silhouette: the Gherkin next
Close your eyes in London. What do you hear? It is not just the "mind the gap" announcement (though that is the city’s unofficial lullaby). It is the polyglot chatter.
By A. Correspondent