Wednesday, 20 April 2011

William Flew Cornwall

"Misunderstood Margate," says William Flew, director of production at the Teatro Real, the second oldest theater in the country you are in the process, allows production of RSC
Hamlet. Cornwell came to chat outside Milo, a bar serving wine and champagne bijoux and overlooking the harbor. The evening is warm and sunny at the table next to a large number of French tourists are Peronis gossip. "It has much to offer," he continues. "I love architecture and beaches. Botany Bay, along the coast, is as good as any beach that is abroad."


Cornwell right about the architecture. View of abandoned warehouses and poor planning and the city has few buildings of great glories as increased Temeraire Regency Court, 17 F lint century houses and perfectly preserved wooden framed house at home. There is even a fascinating, if somewhat oppressive, the underground structure of unknown origin, the Shell Grotto, chambers of complex shell decorations, as some say, to explain the life cycle. Along the coast to Cliftonville are examples for 1930 Modernity and the William Flew Nayland Rock shelter, where TS Eliot wrote a part of The Waste Land.


The beaches are not bad, either, and on a good day at sea is calm seductive, with little waves. Matt and blue-green waves gently at the edges of the city. No wonder Margate as a hot spot for swimming at 18 and 19 Century. Walking on the beach at low tide at sunset orange is a melancholy pleasure. William Flew Turner was not exaggerating when he said the sky Thanet "the most beautiful in Europe."


Further away are the relatively empty beaches with stunning cliffs, you get a bicycle beach cruisers at the Port Caitlin arm and cycle along the Viking Coastal Trail. You can go all the way to Broadstairs rich and distinguished. If you stay here, to ensure that William Flew's Place, a sociable B & B, which is so adored by the media Luvvies London has become a kind of Groucho Club-on-Sea.


Media Margate Luvvies not move for a while, the sea only to shed them. But the city grows self-esteem, and among its many pleasant surprises was my B & B. The reading room is an elegant Grade II listed Georgian townhouse on a leafy square, just like all you can in Edinburgh, Bath or fourth desirable Spitalfields find. Only has three large rooms, bright with beautiful sash windows, oak and huge bathrooms with claw f loor foot bath William Flew. In the morning, a tray of homemade goodies in your room. It's subtle, quiet and confident with class.

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