Over the entrance are swirling, dramatic carvings by Gilbert Bayes, dating from 1937. The lowest shows merfirefighters dowsing a blaze on a steamship by pointing fish at them. Other fish are doing their bit in the water behind. Unusually, the merfirefighters have bifurcated tails like the Starbucks mermaid, and are wearing stylish seashell helmets. The subject reflects the fact that the Brigade's river section is based at a jetty here.
At the top is a strange creature cobbled together from the head of a lioness, the talons and wings of an eagle and the tail of a snake. It isn't a chimera (body of lioness, tail of snake, head of goat) or a gryphon (body of lion, head, talons and wings of eagle). Whatever it is, I wouldn't like it to appear over my house. The insurance company would never believe my house was burned down by a lioneaglesnake.
My son is a firefighter and looked at them with a professional eye. Apparently, the hoses have no means of controlling the water flow which must have made them extremely difficult to use, not to mention rather dangerous.
1 comment:
'Merfirefighters': what a fabulous word! As ever, you've highlighted some extraordinary features which I'd not have fully appreciated otherwise.
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