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Thursday, December 18, 2014

The London of Our Mutual Friend A Virtual Ramble

The London of Our Mutual FriendA Virtual Ramble


Go to the south side of Portman Square, W1. Portman Square, you will remember, was where Mr. Podsnap's house was. The squares north of Oxford Street formed a quarter - "Stucconia," as Dickens calls it - much favoured by the prosperous mercantile and professional classes in the mid nineteenth century. A few early and mid nineteenth-century houses survive among the modern buildings in the square, but the spacious under-stated elegance of the district can best be appreciated today, not in the squares, but in the quieter streets running north and south between Oxford Street and Marylebone Road. Mr. Veneering was another denizen of "Stucconia."
Now walk east from Portman Square along Wigmore Street to another of the squares of "Stucconia," Cavendish Square. Silas Wegg's stall was situated outside a house in the square.
From Cavendish Square, take the southern exit, Holles Street, cross Oxford Street, and continue southwards through Harewood Place, Hanover Square and George Street, as far as Conduit Street, where you turn left. Notice how the streets are becoming narrower, the houses, or what you can see of the original houses over shop fronts, though still grand, are smaller. Turn right at Savile Row, and left at Vigo Street, passing, on your right, the rear entrance of Albany (the front entrance is in a court off Piccadilly). Albany, sometimes called "the Albany,"
was originally the town residence of George III's brother, the Duke of York and Albany. It was converted in 1803 into exclusive apartments for wealthy bachelors. Dickens lodged Fascination Fledgeby in one. He was thrashed there, you may remember, by his neighbour Alfred Lammle, and ministered to afterwards by a less than sympathetic Jenny Wren.
I say "his neighbour Alfred Lammle." Mr. and Mrs. Lammle, recall, acquired a "temporary" residence, after their marriage, in Sackville Street. This is reached by continuing along Vigo Street to the next corner, and turning right. Above the shop fronts at street level, you see eighteenth-century frontages. Whether you use the front or the rear entrance of Albany, Sackville Street is just around the corner. Though it is now very grand, full of expensive shops and corporate headquarters, in the 1860s, the parish of St. James, where you now are, was developing a raffish reputation. Once the most fashionable of quarters, it was being deserted by respectable members of the beau monde, in favour of Belgravia, further westwards, the aristocratic counterpart of "Stucconia." Now St. James's was becoming the haunt of wild young upper-class bachelors, and financially embarrassed older ones. Hence the Lammles' insistence that their residence in Sackville Street was temporary.
Continue walking southwards along Sackville Street until you emerge into Piccadilly. On the other side you see St. James's Church, designed by Christopher Wren, where the Lammles were married.
Cross the road, and cut, via Church Place to the east of the church, into Jermyn Street. Cross that too and walk south down Duke of York Street (a little to the West) into St. James's Square, haunt of Mr. Twemlow and his friends. Mr. Twemlow was one of the financially embarrassed older bachelors inhabiting St James's. He lived "over a livery stable yard in Duke Street, St James's," a block to the west. There are still a number of old yards to be found up alleys off Duke Street.
Leave St James's Square by one of its southern exits, and head east along the grand thoroughfare of Pall Mall. On the opposite side of the road you see exclusive clubs such as the Reform and the Athenaeum (the latter on the corner of Waterloo Place) - clubs such as the one to which Mr. Twemlow belonged, where there was much lobbying on Mr. Veneering's behalf.
Continue along Pall Mall, pass along the north side of Trafalgar Square, cross into Duncannon Street opposite, and thence into the Strand, the ancient route (with Fleet Street) between the cities of Westminster and London. Opposite you see Charing Cross Station and, in front of it, the Victorian replica of Charing Cross itself, a memorial to Queen Eleanor, wife of Edward I. It was here that Eugene Wrayburn witnessed the "ridiculous and feeble spectacle" of Jenny Wren's "bad boy" trying to cross the road. The station covers the site of Hungerford Market,New Hungerford Market, London. On the Day of Opening, July 2nd 1833 - with the Acent of Mr Graham in his Balloon. Hungerford Stairs, and Warren's Blacking Warehouse, where Dickens was put to work as a boy of twelve. Many feel it was this episode that excited, or at least reinforced, both Dickens's compassion for the dispossessed, and his horror at the thought of sinking into the underclass. It might be said that his accommodation of the two sentiments in later life is manifested by the marriage of Eugene and Lizzie Hexam, and their indifference to Society's opinion.
Turn to the left and walk eastwards along the Strand, as did Bradley Headstone, plotting, and Rogue Riderhood, muttering. Opposite the approach road to Waterloo Bridge on the right, you will find Wellington Street, running north. Here, on the southern corner of Tavistock Street, may be found the former offices ofAll the Year Round, the weekly periodical Dickens owned and edited from 1859 until his death in 1870. From 1860, Dickens's London home was a set of chambers over these offices. Here, much of Our Mutual Friend was written.
Continue eastwards along the Strand. At the junction with Chancery Lane, on the left, the road becomes Fleet Street. Still continue eastwards, as far as Inner Temple Lane on the right, which leads downhill into the Temple. Once the London headquarters of the Knights Templar, since the fourteenth century the Temple has been a centre for lawyers. It now houses the Inner Temple and the Middle Temple, two of the Inns of Court, as they are known - unincorporated societies for barristers (as advocates at the English bar are called), training schools for fledgling barristers, and accommodation for lawyers of all kinds. To enter the lane, you must pass through the early renaissance Inner Temple Gate, near to which Bradley Headstone lurked, "in a doorway with his eyes on Temple Gate," watching for Eugene Wrayburn, on whom he had murderous designs.
Walk southwards down the lane. Just before you reach the Temple Church, consecrated in 1185 by the Patriarch of Jerusalem, on your left you will see the Goldsmith Buildings, erected in 1861, the chambers within which overlook the graveyard. Dickens may well have had in mind an earlier building on this site for the chambers of Eugene Wrayburn and Mortimer Lightwood.
Pass the church and turn to your left. Walk through the square (Tanfield Court), and through the passageway at the end into King's Bench Walk. Turn right and walk south until, on your left, you see Whitefriar's Gate leading out of the Temple. Go out here, and walk straight ahead along Tudor Street until you emerge into New Bridge Street. Turn right, and walk as far south as the big traffic island. Look for the entrance to Blackfriars railway and underground stations, at the corner of Queen Victoria Street on the other side. Go into the Underground station and catch a tube train eastwards to the Monument.
When you emerge from the Monument station you are in the City, as the heart of the city of London is known. It is, and was in the 1860s, London's bustling financial and business centre. Dickens locates the business houses of Our Mutual Friend here, has his businessmen and clerks work here. But first, take a short walk westwards along Monument Street, towards the busy traffic, and emerge into King William Street. Turn left and walk towards the river, crossing to the other side. When you see the river below you, you are on London Bridge. Beyond Cannon Street railway bridge, upstream, you can see Southwark Bridge. Both London Bridge and Southwark Bridge have been rebuilt since the 1860s, but the stretch of water between them is where, at the opening of Our Mutual Friend, we discover Gaffer Hexam and Lizzie, in his boat, searching the water for corpses, close by the very heart of the City.
Now retrace your steps northwards, away from the river, along King William Street, until it reaches a busy and complex junction. Cross to the other side, turn to the right, and follow the road that branches to the left, Gracechurch Street. Walk almost as far as the next crossroads, but turn into the last narrow alley on the left, which will take you into the churchyard of St. Peter's Church, Cornhill, which seems to have been the chief model for the one where Bradley Headstone asked in vain for the hand of Lizzie Hexam. It's a surprising oasis of quiet amid the noise of the City.
Emerge into Gracechurch Street once more, turn left, and then immediately right at the crossroads, in order to walk eastwards along Leadenhall Street. The second turning on the left is St. Mary Axe, where the offices of Pubsey & Co were situated, and where Riah reluctantly did the bidding of Fascination Fledgeby. The roof garden of the premises was where Jenny Wren and Lizzie Hexam used to talk.
Turn right out of Leadenhall Street into Lime Street, the southward continuation of St. Mary Axe, then left at Cullum Street, and left again at Fenchurch Street. The first turning on the right is Mincing Lane, where Bella Wilfer visited her father at the offices of Chicksey, Veneering & Stobbles.
Continue eastwards along Fenchurch Street, until you see the approach to Fenchurch Street Station on the right. Go in, and take a train to Stepney East. It's only the second station, but make sure the train you catch stops there.
Emerge from Stepney East Station into Commercial Road. You are now in London's East End, to which the prevailing wind has always carried the air pollution and the Thames the water pollution of the rest of London. Not surprisingly, it has always been the home of, among others, London's poorest. Dickens houses many of the poorest and roughest characters of Our Mutual Friend here. Turn to the right, eastwards, and right again almost immediately, into Branch Road. This issues into the Highway, formerly the Ratcliff Highway. This was a notorious criminal quarter in the 1860s, natural habitat of such as Rogue Riderhood, and of Gaffer Hexam, whose home was "down by Ratcliff . . . down by where accumulated scum of humanity seemed to be washed from higher ground."
Turn left into the Highway, follow the road as it turns south through a right angle, then turn left at Narrow Street, and start walking eastwards. Note the dockside milieu as you cross the bridge over the channel from the Thames on your right into Limehouse Basin on your left. On the right-hand side you eventually come to the Grapes Inn, generally held to be the model for the Six Jolly Fellowship Porters. It's now a pleasant pub and restaurant. If the time is right and you so wish, go in, refresh yourself, and pass through to the rear, where you will find the "crazy wooden verandah impending over the water."
When you reach the junction with Three Colt Street on your left, you are close to where Rogue Riderhood lived, "deep and dark in Limehouse Hole, among the riggers, and the mast, oar and block makers, and the boat-builders, and the sail-lofts." Strictly speaking, Limehouse Hole was a feature not of the shore but of the river - a stretch of deep water once found at this bend in the river, useful for turning ships in - but the name also attached itself to the area of shore adjacent to the old Limehouse Hole Pier. Dickens knew about riggers in Limehouse Hole. His godfather Christopher Huffam, whom Dickens often visited as a child, had been a rigger, ship's chandler and contractor, with a place of business in a part of Garford Street now covered by the wharves to your south, as you stand at the junction of Narrow Street and Three Colt Street.
Start walking northwards along Three Colt Street, and turn left into Newell Street. This was once Church Row where Christopher Huffam's house was, at number twelve (later renumbered five).
Turn right into Commercial Road, and go into the churchyard, on the right, of Hawksmoor's St. Anne's Church, parish church of Limehouse. It was here that Miss Abbey Potterson, Dickens tells us, the landlady of the Six Jolly Fellowship Porters, "had been christened some sixty and odd years before." It was here, too, that John Harmon awaited George Radfoot, only to be drugged, robbed and thrown into the Thames.
You may now return to central London, if you want to, on a number 15 bus heading west along Commercial Road.
This ramble hasn't taken you to all the parts of London featured in Our Mutual Friend. You may care to visit others on separate excursions.
The dust mounds of the novel are modelled on those which used to be located in and around the area now occupied by King's Cross Station. "Maiden Lane, Battle Bridge," of which Mr. Boffin speaks, is now called York Way. It flanks the station to the east of it. There is still a Battle Bridge Road to the north of it. Dickens may have had in mind a particular dust mound in the Camley Street area, between St Pancras Way and York Way.
The Wilfers' home was in Holloway, a district north of King's Cross. The Caledonian Road, just east of York Road, runs north through Lower Holloway to the Holloway Road, which runs northwest to Upper Holloway. The inn overlooking the river at Greenwich, in which Bella Wilfer entertained her father, and later ate her wedding dinner, was probably modelled on the Trafalgar Tavern there. The Children's Hospital where Johnny dies is clearly the Hospital for Sick Children in Great Ormond Street, Bloomsbury.
Church Street, Smith Square, home of Jenny Wren, is now known as Dean Stanley Street, and can be found running west off Millbank, opposite The Victoria Tower Gardens to the south of the Palace of Westminster. The area is quite transformed, and the "little quiet houses" are much sought after by Members of Parliament and other political figures. Smith Square itself, at the other end of Dean Stanley Street is particularly handsome. The "very hideous church," Dickens describes, "with four towers at the four corners, generally resembling some petrified monster, frightful and gigantic, on its back with its legs in the air," is in fact St. John's, Smith Square. It is an extremely fine building, for all its not being to Dickens's taste, and is now used as a concert hall rather than as a church. There are still black doors under it, leading to the vaults, the ones through which Jenny Wren dreamed of blowing pepper at the boys who teased her, locked inside for the occasion. The vaults now house the refreshment rooms of the concert hall.

PLACES WHERE WE LIVE

Lately I’ve been thinking a lot about where I want to move to, I was thinking of Cantu or somewhere near  .
  I’ve been living near Milan and I  realized that the entire dynamic
 is like the opposite of where I live in London .
 Since my roadtrip later this summer can’t cover every area in the countryside around Cantu  , 
so it would be really cool if a few of you can share where you live ,say what it’s like.
I live in London , which many of you are probably familiar with due to our noteriety
for really happy go lucky people.
 As far as scenic nature goes  parts of 
London are pretty beautiful and I probably take for granted that I live so close
 to one of the nations most celebrtated parks.
 Generally the cockneys  here are pretty ok and we all look out for each other  .

 Whether you’re on the road,
in the supermarket, or the hospital- people here are generally 
pretty O.K if they are Londoners.

.
 There’s some, beautiful neighborhoods,
 a lot of stuff to do in nearly every area, the parks and the river
 are both less than 10 minutes away from where I live,

RALPH I live in Edinburgh, Scotland. I love it – it’s beautiful (when it’s not being dug up for the sake of installing tramlines or new piping), London is definitely calling. but despite it being a city in which its people have developed the ‘city mentality’ of complete apathy, it’s parochial as hell and it feels very difficult to be anonymous in this town. It’ll always be my HQ, and I’m glad it’s my hometown but it doesn’t feel that different from the rural town I used to live in 
JIM 

I live not too much above New York City in a town called Poughkeepsie.
 Little known fact, it was the NY capital before Albany.
 The bordering town right next to it, pretty much the same area, is called Hyde Park.
 Roosevelt’s estate is there and Vanderbilts mansion. There’s a lot of history for sure.
We have the hudson and the walkway over the hudson(largest pedetrian
walking bridge in the world) which is very scenic in some areas up here. It’s home,
 though. Do I want to stay here forever? Of course not but I’ll come back.
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dolly, I’m an Ohio dweller myself, surrounded by cornfields and woods! But within an hour I can be in Columbus or Cincinnatti, which are like any other big cities.
 If it’s nice, friendly and welcoming people you want to find, head south to Kentuckey, Tenessee or the Carolinas.
 It truly is night and day as to peoples attitudes from there to East Coasters.
 I’ve spent a lot of time traveling around this country and can tell you that
 Southern hospitality does exist. Second nicest people areas would be your
 extreme norths like Maine, Minnisota, etc. I didn’t care for Texas or Florida
much however, I found Oklahoma to be laid back. There’s not a lot out there,
 but something about it kept drawing me back there….

I live in New Zealand, lovely place to live when you walk past people they tend 
to say hi and I feel safe walking home drunk or just off my face
 in about 10 km radius at any time of the day.
 I tend to complain about particular people but I
 can say we don’t have massive problems like other countries seems to have. 
We got beaches all around and we are known for our farm land.
 ( we are a small country) Great place to live but I feel like 
moving elsewhere when i finish my degree too. Perhaps take a trip to America :)
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Profile photo of Clare Clare
I live in the Pacific Northwest, in a tiny town called Stevenson, WA.
 I’m like a two minute walk from a mile wide river and theres trees and lots of forest everywhere. I get bored with how small this place is but it is pretty beautiful, it rains A LOT though, otherwise, its nice, I’ve always lived in Washington though, and 
 theres a lot of forest throughtout the state.
 But if you like the outdoors, it’s the perfect place to live.
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Profile photo of  Anonymous(@)2 years, 6 months ago ago
@cornietzsche, I live just over the forth road bridge! Edinburgh’s my favourite city in the whole world (granted I’ve not been to Paris yet), and I feel so lucky to have it 20 minutes away. The architecture, the culture, everything, I love it.
The wee town I live in is pretty shitty to be honest. A few run down shops, and a lot of pissed off looking people. It’s the kind of place where you’ll often get random abuse shouted at you by teenagers or drug addicts. The older people are nice though, always manage to make friends at the bus stop. Only 5 minutes in the car and we can get to beaches, 10 minutes and we’re in a forest.
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Profile photo of Dolly Dolly(@dollywicks)2 years, 6 months ago ago
@cornietzsche, that sounds awesome,I’ve always wanted to go to Scotland. Although I’m sorry to hear your town is becoming a victim to excessive industrialization. Are you actually planning on moving out to London? If so, good for you, it’s a really beautiful city
@ojai, ahh, well it looks like we’re basically neighbors! I live like an hour away from you. Yeah, upstate is really nice it’s hard to believe upstate & long island are considered the same state, I cant wait to go camping at the finger lakes later this summer!
@epgohlke, I agree 100% on the southern hospitality thing, I used to live in Tennessee and the people there are like the complete opposite of New Yorkers. I’m definitely envious of your travel experience, do you just do it for the fun of it or are you in a band or something? I only assumed that based off your profile picture.. Oklahoma seems pretty sick, I was supposed to go recently for a music festival but couldn’t get off work :/
@limitedmoon Where in America are you considering? One thing I will give it is there’s a lot of opportunity here so coming here after you get your degree is probably a pretty safe bet. New Zealand sounds pretty cool though from your description.
@clarechapman No matter where we live we end up growing bored of it, so at least your surrounded by gorgeous nature instead of suburbia :p I’ve heard Washington has some really beautiful areas though
Thank you guys all for sharing, I really appreciate it. Except now I’m tempted to quit my job and go on a traveling spree :p
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Profile photo of Will Will(@lostinthestreet)2 years, 6 months ago ago
@dollywicks I grew up in Miami, went to college in Orlando and have been all over Florida. Hot and humid, people are aggressive, but it’s rich in many cultures. Stay closer to the coast to get some sort of escape from the heat. Oh and hurricane parties are the shit!
I currently live in Seattle, WA. I live and work in the city, don’t drive, and enjoy being around a liberal community. Tons to do, lots of clubs and music, and free thought. Washington state touts that they have the highest concentration of people who hold Bachelors degrees or higher, so there is intelligence here, a strong job market, and social activism.
Soon I’ll be moving to Venice Beach, CA to start a new business on the beach.
Ultimately I have one bit of advice, if I could give any…. try a place out. Trust where the universe is guiding you, and go for it… it’ll be worth it. That being said, if you don’t like a place, you can always go somewhere else. That’s my thoughts :)
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Profile photo of Matthew Matthew(@ojai)2 years, 6 months ago ago
@dollywicks, You know, I’ve never actually been to long island. I’ve lived in New York my whole life but never actually went. I’ve been to the city of course many of times, though.
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Profile photo of Lee Lee(@lldsgt)2 years, 6 months ago ago
@dollywicks, Ah, i also live on Long Island but i live up island, right at the crotch. It is beautiful out here, straight farmland and woodsy areas everywhere. Im in a nice area where I have a lot of outdoor things i can do, 2 minutes from the beach, i live out in the woods, tons of hiking trails, great places to go rock climbing, check out up island a bit, its actually very nice.
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Profile photo of Skye Skye(@skye)2 years, 6 months ago ago
I live in a town in Wyoming. It is about 40 minutes outside Yellowstone Natl. Park (google it!). Mountain surround my town and wildlife is crawling everywhere.. . .it’s pretty common to see wildlife out your windows. If very close to one another. . . everyone knows your name and what you do. You can walk into a coffee shop and they will know exactly what you get. In the winter temperatures reach to like -40deg F. In the summer tourists run through my town like a herd of buffalo. . .they’re everywhere! My town is pretty awesome. . .although at times it gives me small town feaver.
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Profile photo of Petergd Petergd(@petergd)2 years, 6 months ago ago
@dollywicks, I live in Arizona, and I must say I have no complaints…except for when it is 115 out. But after 21 years of living in the heat, I have gotten a little accustomed to it. People here are moderately nice, whenever I talk to someone visiting who isn’t from here they often say how enjoyable, laid back, and ‘slower’ everything is here. Which is a pretty accurate description in my mind. If I am having a bad day I can just take a deep breath and enjoy the scenery of the mountains and blue skies. The Grand Canyon is pretty surreal too, definitely worth a trip sometime in your life in my opinion. New York is only like 2,000+ miles away… it would make for one hell of a road trip going from the East coast to the West coast haha.
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Profile photo of Callisto Callisto(@calypso)2 years, 6 months ago ago
@dollywicks, I live in Oregon! I love it here. The people are friendly, there is no sales tax, the weather is beautiful and the nature is astounding. Most of the inhabitants are liberal and very open-minded (not to say we don’t have any bigots, but they live mostly in the east part of the state). I grew up in Bend, OR which is a smallish (80,000 people) tourist town. It is only a 20 minute drive from Mt. Bachelor which is the best ski mountain in the NW. Right now I live in Eugene, and I love it here also. The weather is different. It rains some more here than in Bend, where it is dry in the summers, falls and springs and snows a lot during the winter. Oregon is the best if you love nature, but Portland is a huge city if you are looking for city life. Mostly I just love how liberal it is here. A lot of the time I feel like the NW is dragged down by being considered the same country as the rest of the states. That’a all. Haha
Good day.
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Profile photo of KellyM KellyM(@kellah)2 years, 6 months ago ago
I live In Canada! Good ole Slave Lake Alberta. Its pretty far north. but i think its a beautiful place. We have a beautiful lake, and beach, buut all the people arent so swell. But, you also have everyone looking out for one another because it is a small community. Lots of drugs here though -.- but the nature is Beautiful!!
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Profile photo of Th-0m Th-0m(@0negative)2 years, 6 months ago ago
@dollywicks, I live in Northern New Jersey near Newark, and only a few miles from Manhattan. A lot of people make jokes about New Jersey but it’s a very unique place. We have all kinds of people, ranging from incredibly kind to complete dicks, extremely rich to impoverished, hippies to uptight jesus freaks, just everything . We have ALL, ethnic groups and cultures. Our neighborhoods range from Big Cities like Newark and Jersey City, to ghettos, to the quietest most stereotypical suburbs, and large stretches of rural farming. Generally the people are nice, and if you stop to ask someone for help, they will( I have, and have seen people done so). Unfortunately New Jersey, especially in the North is a little on the dangerous side. I’ve lived in the ghetto and the suburbs, and the cops are active it both. Whether it be drug dealers, teen gangs, or random high school shootings, we see a lot of shit, so as a result a lot of people are guarded and cautious about where they go, and what they’re doing. One thing I love about Northern NJ is the mass transit line,NJ Transit. We have buses and trains that run to or near every city, town, or county in NJ. Of course waiting sucks, but it can be a lot cheaper and quicker than say driving into New York City on a Saturday evening. Overall I really love New Jersey and though I’ll be moving away from NJ for awhile after college, I’ll probably come back to have and raise my kids here. There’s so much to see and do, New Jersey to me, is the purest exemplification of A’merricca.
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Profile photo of trevormsu trevormsu(@trevormsu)2 years, 6 months ago ago
I have in the suburbs of Detroit for all my life and I have to say it is a pretty decent place to live. We have a lot of parks (city, county, metropolitan, state etc), so it is easy to escape the urban sprawl for something more natural. The north of Michigan is really beautiful as well and not a super far drive (a couple hours). The weather is surprisingly decent, despite what you may here. Winter is no worse than the north-east coast and our summers tend to be a bit milder I think. The people aren’t really rude, they just aren’t exceptionally laid back or friendly. There is a pretty even political split, in that you will find plenty of liberals but also pockets of staunch republicans. The city of Detroit itself is not at all the same as Chicago or NYC… it is kinda dead in comparison. We do have a nice art museum and some other attractions however. So it has its pluses and minuses. I want to move somewhere new for grad school hopefully. Possibly east coast?
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Profile photo of Dan Dan(@danfontaine)2 years, 6 months ago ago
Grand Forks, North Dakota
Hick ass, hipster hating, dank ass weed not having, well, sometimes from the mountains they have em. College town, bar town, strange folk, old folk are stranger than the new folk but the new folk don’t know how to react, they’re all fucked up in the long run. Not enough blacks to balance out the white boy testosterone react, a stern fact.. Fox racing, Monster energy drink stickers on the back of pickup trucks and loud accelerations apparently equate to massive penis size. Hurley and Billabong abound – WE’RE NO WHERE NEAR THE FUCKING OCEAN. Fronts everywhere. People fronts,
 store fronts, Canadians like to visit because they’re addicted to retail like crack
 and like to budget for 3 day weekend hotel stays, suck infinite dick at driving.
 What the fuck am I even doing here, there isn’t even real food for me to eat,
well, save the health food store but that shit ain’t fresh. I’m too far away from it all. I gotta see it all. Where’s culture, where’s art, where’s my love?
This town is getting prettier by the minute but uglier by the second. I’m feeling reckless.
Might just drive this wreck of mine right into the river, of course not in it, I’m not a cynic.
 Maybe run away to a place where I won’t even know my shit.
Recombine on the constant til I’ve found my fit.
But fuck it, til then I’m forging the greatest friendships possible because it feels remarkable.
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Profile photo of Sasho Stoyanov Anonymous(@)2 years, 6 months ago ago
I live on a quiet place with little or no traffic. I have a mentally ill neighbor who keeps getting drunk and sings old songs out of tune for the past 15 years. There are also roosters around, not waking me up in the morning, because I am used to them, and because I don’t sleep much in general. There are only houses around, not a typical urban area, and I’m not afar from nature, especially the confused human nature.
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Profile photo of  Anonymous(@)2 years, 5 months ago ago
I live in Cairo. Not the best place to live at all. People here are kind and always help each other. Egyptians are also funny and like to joke about everything. However, Egypt is very over populated and crowded. Egypt isn’t safe too and not everyone is “good”.
Conclusion: Come for a visit to Hurghada, Sinai or wherever, but do not live in Egypt


I live in Greater Western Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. I am near the well known (in Australia) town of Mt Druitt. It is well known for its less than reputable element of people, a lot of drug addicts and therefore theft such as burglary. But in general, people are not so bad here, I don’t really know many people because I moved here about 4 years ago and have avoided making any regular friends. I suppose the people here, colloquially called bogans, are probably best described along the lines of trailer trash or red necks, but we certainly have more of a british “Lad” feel to us, or Green street hooligans.
I don’t mind living here, my goal is to just buy a vw combie or a beatle and drive around Australia, seeing natural sites and writing my stories. We are very young as far as a country goes, there is very little over two hundred years old as far as the human factor, but we have some nice sandstone buildings, colonial heritage listed places. The big attraction of Australia is the nature, there is so much of it, but a shit load of nothingness in between sites. We have one of, if not the, lowest population density, but that is because we are a young nation, most of this is desert and there is not much water about.
I remember people thinking we have Kangeroos jumping around our backyard, we say “that is ridiculous” then they say “oh, sorry, then how far are kangeroos from where you live?” well they are a 5 minute walk down the road, but that is beside the point, lol. But Sydney is a lovely city, we all complain about everything but we are just spoilt brats who never really had hardship in our life time, generally. My dad used to live in a shack with a dirt floor, then he lived in an orphanage while his dad was in prison, and we get upset when the wireless computer router does not reach our bed room. ha. So yeah, we are predominantly a pack of whingers.
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I live in Milwaukee and I love it. I love that it is a compact, easily navigated city with mostly good wholesome people. We’re about 1.5 hours from Chicago and about 5.5 from Minneapolis. There is tons to do as far as bars, museums, coffee shops, etc. We have an amazing lakefront, the university has well-regarded graduate and PHd programs as well as killer cool people. The neighborhoods all have distinct personalities and people. Cost of living is pretty reasonable. I live in the fashionable part of the city- the east side- where the university is and the creative-types live and the rent/utilities still are not too bad. Milwaukee is fantastic and often over-looked. I’ve lived other places but Wisconsin is tops, if you can manage to ignore our maniacal governor.
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I live in upstate new york. Pretty much right in the middle of the state it’s a small town called earlville. The nearest city is about 45 minutes away( Utica) and the nearest ‘real’ city is Syracuse, a little over an hour away. There is alot of beautiful landscape. I find that people are pretty unfriendly compared to other places I’ve visited. They avoid eye contact and are pretty wary of eachother in general. My little town has a library, a gas station, and a little cafe. There are just as many cows as people, I’m sure. Lots and lots of red
Necks. There was only one or two black families at my high school.
It’s mostly pretty peaceful. The adirondacks are about 2 hours north of us I’m really glad to be so close to all the beautiful landscape. My father told me once that the people who end up around here are the ones who’ve gotten stuck. So pretty much noone chooses to live here. I’m planning on moving away once I graduate from utica college so this thread was really interesting for me to read. Great idea:)

, I live in a big but sleepy suburb of Chicago, it’s pretty safe but there’s not a whole lot to do (besides drinking as if you worked for the post office, and blasting your mind into space on other things). We have a lot of parks around here, but unfortunately none are adult-sized, I really wish someone would make those. People around here can be anything really, unfortunately there are a lot of assclowns who like to act like they are super rich/a big deal, but there are a few genuinely cool people to hang out with. Usually you have to go into the city itself for adventure. There’s a lot of venues for concerts in the city, and good food to discover as well. But besides that, I really don’t know haha…..I’m not the best person to ask about this stuff, since I’m still trying to find out more exciting things to do around here even though I’ve lived here for all my years. Lately I’ve really been trying to find some adventurous things around here, and make a sort of bucket list.
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Profile photo of  Anonymous(@)2 years, 5 months ago ago
I’m in Los Angeles.
Beautiful weather, silly drivers, heavy traffic, but a great experience all togetherrrrrr.

I reside in Los Angeles, California just south from the downtown area also known as “South Central”. The weather is awesome most of the time especially along the beach sides. The environment on the other hand is filled with smog. Growing up here you develop certain kind of awareness of what streets to take and what streets you shouldn’t be around due to gang activity. The majority of the people are strange yet curious as said by The Doors in the song “People Are Strange”.
Truthfully growing up in Los Angeles was a privilege, I’ve