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[Archive] Sightings

KRAKEN Outer

Originally believed to be a creature of the Icelandic Sagas, the first actual sightings of the Kraken were in the late 18th Century by Erik Pontippidan, he wrote of the creature: ‘it is said that if [the creature’s arms] were to lay hold of the largest man of war, they would pull it down to the bottom’.

 

Sailors would often report of an octopus like brute with huge tentacles, covered in polypi writhing at the surface of the sea. As more and more sightings were reported, it became clear that the thing grotesque and haunting eyes, larger than any man. It was said that to stare into the eyes would be like looking into an abyss, inducing despair, almost as if you had looked upon death.

 

The Kraken Sleepeth

Alfred Lord Tennyson, Poet Laureate and close friend of Queen Victoria, wrote The Kraken in 1830.  Tennyson had witnessed the disastrous floods of 1829 and knew that the creature responsible was not of this world.  Tennyson himself was a member of ‘The Cambridge Apostles’ a secret intellectual society known to explore ‘moral sciences’.
Tennyson’s sonnet dedicated to this beast was more than simply a description.  Within the poem, Tennyson hid the secret incantation that would stop the Kraken from surfacing and flooding the Thames.

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Those of you keen on your history will know the Globe is not the Globe it used to be. Fire got the better of the last one. Water threatens the new one, and, most importantly, all of you. But we have sound knowledge that you’re the best and brightest London can offer.

You better show us, then. We’re waiting…

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You’re here. 

The first stop.  

Just as well: walk before you run, eh? Or paddle before you swim?

South Bank – your home turf. Not as you have always seen it, though, we imagine. News has it that it was the skaters who were the first to go. We hear the developers had wanted to turn it into a row of shops. How sad. They won that battle only to be drowned by the flood; Move fast, young reader. It might be your Mum’s house next…

Amongst the brutalist jungle of the arts stands the form of one of their greatest, now past –  holding a sword aloft: in defiance, or fear?

[File] Medusa

Medusa Logo (1)Medusa was formed on September 23rd 1928.  The present Monarch, King George V, was taken ill with Septicemia and it was at this time that the then Prime Minister, Stanley Baldwin, sanctioned the formation of Medusa, a top secret organisation dedicated to protecting England against the unknown.

 

Baldwin feared that the King’s ‘bad blood’ was something that meant the organisation must be kept secret from the monarchy and, in turn,  the public.

 

A select few are called upon when the realm must be protected.
Today, you have become part of the few chosen to protect the many.

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74_evey_by_the_trainBut wise are those who read with a critical eye and a spring in their step. What is now one way was once two and what is now surrounded once did the surrounding.

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Talk to those who are in the know and they’ll let you know. Come closer, though, dear reader. Enough back and forth – there’s history to be told!GaietyPhoto tube

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At the top of the curve, look up!

[Report] London’s Flood Defences [Top Secret]

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The Environment Agency’s “at risk” list includes the Houses of Parliament, Whitehall, City Hall, Canary Wharf, Westminster Abbey, the Tower of London, Kew Gardens, the O2 Arena, 51 railway stations, 35 Underground stations, eight power stations, more than 1,000 electricity substations, 400 schools, 16 hospitals and over half a million of Greater London’s roughly 3.3 million homes – not to mention 1.5 million of its people. Large areas of Southwark, Lambeth, Tower Hamlets, Hammersmith, Fulham, Wandsworth, Barking, Dagenham.

 

According to the BBC, these were the areas most affected by the 1928 flood

 

The Houses of Parliament, the Tate Gallery and the Tower of London were all swamped. So too, tragically, were many of the crowded basement dwellings into which the city’s poorest families were crammed.