Monday, March 5, 2012

London, Town, and Season



Read enough British Literature (of which crime I am absolutely, certifiably guilty) and one will come upon the rich and elite mentioning at tea or at dinner that they are going “to town”.  This isn’t popping from their lovely country estate to the local population; “town” referred to the one and only London, England.  Society gathered in town for the season (when Parliament was in session, but more specifically for late spring and summer): balls, derbies, concerts, art exhibits, dinners and overall enjoying life, and therefore, to keep up appearances, one had a house in town and one had a house in the country.  The country estate, unless it was from many, many generations before when the ancestors may not have had the common sense, was close enough to London so that no more than a day need be spent traveling between country and town lodgings.  While one saw acquaintances of the country in town, often people would rotate in two different circles- their town acquaintances and their country neighbors.  Country neighbors were good company for afternoon calls, but if one wished to raise one’s status, one would usually be seeing a different circle of acquaintances for the balls and evening dinners.

Of course, if you weren’t of the elite, you had a house in either the city or the country and rented rooms whenever you needed to travel.  This saved you all of the pesky details the upper, upper class had to see to, such as sending servants on ahead to open up the house.