It was an icy day, and the DLR line was under repair, but the decision had been made and the visit went ahead. The driver of the substitute bus was delightful, if somewhat uncertain about the route.
When we finally arrived, I wandered around the hospital for veteran sailors (later the Royal Naval College). There were memorials to heros. In 1806, on the upper level of the Painted Hall, the body of Horatio, Lord Nelson lay in state, following the battle of Trafalgar. Closer to the river, a statue marked Sir Walter Raleigh, 200 years earlier.
In Jakarta are many memorials to heros. One National Hero, Diponegoro, is depicted as strong-willed and flamboyant. A Javan prince from Yogyakarta, he led guerilla warfare against Dutch colonials from 1825 to 1930, until he was captured and exiled to Sulawesi (the Celebes). His name lives on in history books, statues, in the title of a Semarang university and in the current title of the Central Java military region.
Wanting to head to the National Gallery, behind Nelson's Column and Trafalgar Square, I didn't have time for the vagaries of delightful bus drivers. I took the launch and made a drawing on the way.
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