In the main bar there are great booths with padded upholstery and cut-glass windows, I suppose, once a place where weighty matters could be debated in relative privacy. |
I only went into the Vic because of my dedication to my readers, and any pint of Guinness I might have had was solely for the purposes of journalistic research.
Anyway. Shortly afterwards I was strolling along in front of the Infirmary, when my ears were assailed by an unholy clatter and roar. The original front of the Infirmary is victorian gothic, but the rear sections are firmly esconced within the modern world. There's a helipad on the top of the Accident and Emergency department, and the bright yellow bumblebee known as the Yorkshire Air Ambulance was just lifting off.
Although they make a horrendous racket, the air ambulances, funded only by donations, not by government, local or national, are a welcome sight. I have friends who would be dead were it not for them. They can reach casualties in terrain a ground ambulance can not get to, they can transport an injured person faster or further in a given time.
And so I wend my way toward home.
Well, that was a pretty spiffy post. Interesting. Good pictures.
ReplyDeleteThanks, I want to go there.
ReplyDeleteThese old buildings are great!
ReplyDeleteAt the time Dickens and other criticised the 'modernisation of public houses' and now we think them great!
Super pics, and I understand the question re musicians. We used to use a pub next to Usher Hall. Bandsmen would down pints before playing and I often wondered how they kept it in!
I see few people. Is the Vic still frequented by the local hoi polloi?
ReplyDeleteThat woodwork is worth the visit (I just may fly over). Done back when the guilds did the detail work, with craftsmanship -- the intersection of art and function was blurred.