Part of Poirot's charm was that it was forever set in a nebulous "Jazz Age". The actual Christie novels spanned a period of nearly fifty years, but the TV show relocated them all to an era of flappers and cigarette holders, rightly recognising that nobody really wanted to see Miss Lemon doing the frug or Inspector Japp tripping on LSD. It submerged itself in a world of clean lines, elegant white facades, and stainless steel lamps. It embodied Art Deco.
Leamington Spa station was rebuilt in the late thirties to an Art Deco design and for a while I could pretend I was in a Poirot. I wouldn't be a murderer, of course, being a working class oik; I'd be one of the porters at the station carrying the bags of some pencil thin heiress, or, if I was lucky, a red herring victim, one of those uppity plebs who tries to blackmail a few shillings out of the killer and ends up stabbed in the throat. It's a station that's been beautifully preserved and restored. The refreshment rooms might offer lattes and Diet Cokes, but they embody an era of tea urns and chippy women behind the counter. The larger of the two has been turned into a full bar, which I wholeheartedly support.
Outside, I immediately fell for the white symmetrical station frontage, even if cars have come along and ruined the forecourt. A humped crossing for pedestrians was regarded as somewhere convenient to stop for an Uber driver, while another roared away at a speed entirely unsuitable for the narrow car park. Fortunately the station sign was away from the main run. It is there, honest, behind that tree.
There was a small underpass to one side and I ducked down it for a look. Leamington Spa had two stations for a long time, literally backing onto one another: the current station was the Great Western one, while across the tracks was Avenue, run by the London and North Western.
I went from the station into the Old Town. Before the spas were built in the 18th century, this was simply another small Warwickshire settlement. The discovery of the springs, however, as part of the trend of taking "medicinal" waters, meant it was suddenly a top tourist spot. The population ramped up considerably and to accommodate them and the visitors a new town was built across the river.
This side of the river was still where the smaller, less well-regarded businesses hung out. There were Polish shops and kebab houses, vape stores and an Iceland, while a decent looking pub had its entrance blocked by three men having a very intense and possibly violent conversation. Leamington Spa is popular with students from Warwick University and this really felt like the part of town they rolled through, drunk.
I crossed the river Leam and reached the elegant, Regency side of the town. Immediately on my left was the town's pump rooms, now repurposed as the museum and art gallery. Disappointingly, there doesn't seem to be an opportunity to actually take the waters any more. I'd have thought Gwyneth Paltrow would've been all over that. It apparently had a sulphurous tang, and was a mild laxative, but Goop could soon package that as a positive. A natural cleanse to restore your auras and chakras or something. You could bathe in it - suitably warmed for modern sensibilities - and then spend the afternoon emptying out your interiors to give you a pallid glow.
It is, however, dry. I was there with my empty bottle, hoping to fill it with this medicinal goodness, and I got nothing. Like so much in this country, it promises a lot and delivers very little. I'm sure the Council would love to get it working again but budgets and cuts and prioritisation of services and so on - the constant drumbeat of neglect and sadness you get wherever you go in the country now.
Still, the Parade - or rather Parade, as it's technically called, much like Carpenters - is very impressive. It's a long straight avenue lined with white fronted Georgian shops and restaurants and it was gleaming in the sunshine. It was broken up by the terracotta Town Hall, fronted by a statue of Queen Victoria looking her usual happy self, but mostly it was a stretch of extreme elegance.
I mean, imagine if Planet Bong hadn't got this classy font. It would totally lower the tone. Still, I'd rather go to Planet Bong than the frigging Edinburgh Woollen Mills, which had a store opposite. Boo!
Parade - it feels very odd writing that - ends in Christchurch Gardens, a large expanse of grass and trees. I turned right and disappeared into the smaller streets behind. I fancied a pint, but I was still too close to the town centre; the pubs here were very much gastro, boasting of their fine grass fed steaks or Wing Wednesdays (40p a wing!) and then in tiny letters underneath or you could just have a drink I guess, we're ok with that, you take up a table with a single glass of wine when we could have a family of four filling their faces in that spot, no, it's totally fine, we don't mind at all.
Where there's Regency architecture, there's bound to be a crescent, and Royal Leamington's example is Lansdowne Crescent. It's not the biggest curve of houses, and the doorbells indicated all the mansions had long since been sliced up into flats, but it was still aesthetically pleasing. If this was a Poirot it would house the London home of some absolute cad who was poodlefaking with the gorgeous young wife of the victim. He'd be completely unrepentant about it, of course, until Hercule pointed out that the Colonel Sir Henry Twissel had been found drowned in his ornamental pond, at which point the man would visibly pale and guiltily confess that he was at the cricket the whole time and couldn't possibly have pushed him in. Or did he?
I was a little anxious at passing him, but he took the decision out of my hands, lurching into the traffic without looking either way and marching across the road. Meanwhile, I followed a sign for the Royal Spa Centre. I thought there must be at least one spa in the town I could poke my nose into. By now I was feeling a little hot from all the walking, and I quite fancied the idea of relaxing in an elegant pool. I didn't have any swimming trunks of course, and also I can't actually swim, but the fantasy was there. I was basically picturing that bit in GoldenEye before Xenia turns up.
It's... not great. I mean, it's perfectly ok, don't get me wrong. It's got a ticket office that doubles as a cafe. It's got a waiting area. There's a bus exchange outside. It's perfectly adequate. I just feel like it could be a bit more. I also hate that a building constructed in the 21st century doesn't look like it; that they've gone for a pastiche rather than building something for today.
The feeling of "adequate" runs to the rail side, too. The line here was singled decades ago, so there's only one platform. However, they've planned ahead and built the station with bridges and lifts so, if the line is ever doubled, they can slot in a second platform without any bother.
So the question is: why didn't they just build the second track and platform? Maybe not all the way from Leamington to Coventry - let's not shoot for the moon - but there used to be a passing loop at Kenilworth. You could put that back and then there could be increased capacity on the line, plus, you could build that second platform while you're building the station and not have to come back at a later date with all the hassle and expense involved. Oh, I forgot, this is England, nothing gets built here, ever. (Yes I am writing this as the news of HS2's cancellation breaks and yes I am fucking furious and also depressed).
Kenilworth's High Street was busy and well stocked with shops. You could tell that we were in the neutral zone between The South and The Midlands because there was a Robert Dyas. For some reason, these stores are all over the bottom of England, but the furthest North they get is Solihull. I went in for a poke around because I'd never been in one, and was a little befuddled. It was basically a Rightway, or perhaps a slightly posher Wilko (RIP) - practical housewares, a bit of garden furniture, electrical and decorating supplies. I'm not sure why they think us poor Northerners would be unable to cope with access to reasonably priced drills and pergolas.
If I'm honest, I wasn't really in the mood for Kenilworth. I'd taken four trains to get here, leaving Birkenhead at half eight that morning, and unless I was presented with the Hanging Gardens of Babylon or a twenty foot high statue of Paul Rudd it would've been hard to capture my imagination. It has a castle of course, but that's a mile out of town and I couldn't be bothered. Perhaps I should've gone to Kenilworth before Leamington Spa because it all seemed a bit inadequate by comparison. I certainly couldn't see David Suchet utilising his little grey cells here. Really, there was only one thing to do.
Five pound seventy five that cost me. It's very expensive being an alcoholic these days. I might switch to meths. Send me back to the Twenties, when I could get roaring drunk on gin and it would cost thruppence ha'penny. It's almost worth getting stabbed for.
2 comments:
In terms of period detective television, Jeremy Brett's Holmes is surely even better, if only for its (usually) greater fidelity to the books.
That Deco railway station..."I *say*..." (if you know, you know)
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