Yoko Ono on Tittenhurst Park, Ascot
Ascot
In
1969, John and I went to see three houses, before deciding on Ascot.
One estate had a beautiful winding road with huge birch trees on
bothsides going all the way up to the house. We liked that one very
much, but sadly they declined to sell it to us. The Class thing, you
know. Next we saw a mansion which once belonged to a very famous English
poet of the olden days. His offspring were living in it at the time we
visited. In our generation, all of us read and memorized this poet's
work in English classes throughout the world. The mansion was on a
rolling hill full of daffodils and had the beauty and the warmth you
expected from the poet. There was a certain excitement in the idea of
John Lennon taking this poet's mansion as his residence. But John and
Isoon realized that the mansion was like a shrine to many people, and we
probably would have felt bad even putting a fresh coat of paint on the
walls. The last one was a beautiful, old and rambling castle. It was a
true Saxon castle. John loved it. I loved the outside look of the
castle, witha moat and beautiful flower beds. But it was too scary for
me to think of actually living there. The main bedroom had a triple high
ceiling and a window way up high, like one would imagine a room would
be in the Tower of London. John thought it was great. “It’s like being
in a horror film" (That, in John's book, meant exciting)."On a strong
windynight, we can hold each other and stay under the covers!" There was
afull set of old armour standing like a real warrior in the
corridoroutside the bedroom. Then we went to the kitchen downstairs.
There were rows of huge, rusty, iron pots each, of which could easily
feed 50 people. I'd never seen anything like that before. You could boil
a witchin one. I wondered if John was thinking I would cook for him in
this kitchen on the cook's day off. For that matter, I wondered if
anybody would want to come to cook for us in this kitchen. Peter
Shotton, John's old buddy who drove us there kept saying "Yeah, man this
is great" - at the same time throwing a concerned look in my direction
like saying "I hope you're not gonna say no to this one.” Well, I did.
Itook John aside and said, "John it's alright when we're together. but
what if you go out one night without me? I'd be too scared to be here
alone." John kissed me and said, "Don't be silly. I would never go out
without you, you know that. Now, that's a silly thought isn't it? To
think I would ever leave you alone!" John meant it when he said he would
never leave me alone. But how was I to know that at that point in our
relationship that we would always be together like a pair of jeans? I
was coming from the 20th century, you know, not from Wuthering Heights. I
heard John say quietly to Peter, "Too bad, Yoko doesn't like it.""What a
pity" Peter said. In hindsight, I kind of regret that we never lived in
that beautiful old castle. I regret that I wasn't a Saxon-warrior woman
who could stir those big pots with one arm without tumbling into it.
Ascot was just right for us. It was Georgian, thank God, not Saxon. John
said, "You like it?" seeing already from my expression of relief that
it was a go. “Yes," I nodded.” Okay we'll take it" "But...""What, what?"
"There's no water on the land." "Oh, that. We'll build alake then. It's
easy." John and I thought we would make Ascot our home and live there
for many, many years to come. Otherwise, why did we plunka huge lake in
the garden and plant feeble looking plum and cherry saplings around the
lake which promised to become trees in twenty years time?
In
1969, John and I went to see three houses, before deciding on Ascot.
One estate had a beautiful winding road with huge birch trees on
bothsides going all the way up to the house. We liked that one very
much, but sadly they declined to sell it to us. The Class thing, you
know. Next we saw a mansion which once belonged to a very famous English
poet of the olden days. His offspring were living in it at the time we
visited. In our generation, all of us read and memorized this poet's
work in English classes throughout the world. The mansion was on a
rolling hill full of daffodils and had the beauty and the warmth you
expected from the poet. There was a certain excitement in the idea of
John Lennon taking this poet's mansion as his residence. But John and
Isoon realized that the mansion was like a shrine to many people, and we
probably would have felt bad even putting a fresh coat of paint on the
walls. The last one was a beautiful, old and rambling castle. It was a
true Saxon castle. John loved it. I loved the outside look of the
castle, witha moat and beautiful flower beds. But it was too scary for
me to think of actually living there. The main bedroom had a triple high
ceiling and a window way up high, like one would imagine a room would
be in the Tower of London. John thought it was great. “It’s like being
in a horror film" (That, in John's book, meant exciting)."On a strong
windynight, we can hold each other and stay under the covers!" There was
afull set of old armour standing like a real warrior in the
corridoroutside the bedroom. Then we went to the kitchen downstairs.
There were rows of huge, rusty, iron pots each, of which could easily
feed 50 people. I'd never seen anything like that before. You could boil
a witchin one. I wondered if John was thinking I would cook for him in
this kitchen on the cook's day off. For that matter, I wondered if
anybody would want to come to cook for us in this kitchen. Peter
Shotton, John's old buddy who drove us there kept saying "Yeah, man this
is great" - at the same time throwing a concerned look in my direction
like saying "I hope you're not gonna say no to this one.” Well, I did.
Itook John aside and said, "John it's alright when we're together. but
what if you go out one night without me? I'd be too scared to be here
alone." John kissed me and said, "Don't be silly. I would never go out
without you, you know that. Now, that's a silly thought isn't it? To
think I would ever leave you alone!" John meant it when he said he would
never leave me alone. But how was I to know that at that point in our
relationship that we would always be together like a pair of jeans? I
was coming from the 20th century, you know, not from Wuthering Heights. I
heard John say quietly to Peter, "Too bad, Yoko doesn't like it.""What a
pity" Peter said. In hindsight, I kind of regret that we never lived in
that beautiful old castle. I regret that I wasn't a Saxon-warrior woman
who could stir those big pots with one arm without tumbling into it.
Ascot was just right for us. It was Georgian, thank God, not Saxon. John
said, "You like it?" seeing already from my expression of relief that
it was a go. “Yes," I nodded.” Okay we'll take it" "But...""What, what?"
"There's no water on the land." "Oh, that. We'll build alake then. It's
easy." John and I thought we would make Ascot our home and live there
for many, many years to come. Otherwise, why did we plunka huge lake in
the garden and plant feeble looking plum and cherry saplings around the
lake which promised to become trees in twenty years time?
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