London is not easy. It is expensive, sprawling, and the Tube is a sweatbox in July. It will test your patience and your wallet. But it will never bore you.
On the 73 bus from Oxford Circus to Stoke Newington, you will hear Yoruba, Polish, Gujarati, Cockney rhyming slang, and Australian upspeak. London is no longer a purely English city; it is the capital of the world.
Que vous veniez pour un week-end romantique, un voyage en famille ou un stage professionnel, ne vous décevra jamais. Elle vous surprendra, vous épuisera (marchez beaucoup !), et vous donnera envie de revenir dès que vous repasserez le pas de la porte de Saint-Pancras ou que vous survolerez la Tamise.
If you tell me what you're most interested in, I can provide more details on: off the tourist path A 48-hour itinerary for a first-time visit The best neighborhoods for foodies or shoppers
South of the river, the energy changes. The South Bank is a promenade of punk rock and poetry. Bookstalls sit under the shadow of the Tate Modern, a hulking former power station that now worships art instead of electricity. Street performers juggle fire while, across the water, St. Paul’s Cathedral nods its silent approval.