The Edith Cavell pub is at the bottom end of the Tombland stretch of businesses in Norwich, owning the street corner with two entrances and lots of glass. It’s a simple enough pub with several beers on draft and bottled beers, mixers and soft drinks. No food, but they do have chips and nuts for purchase if you simply must eat something while you drink. A handful of tables and a dozen or so stools at the bar. They also have a «fruit machine» and a jukebox, but those seem to be there because it’s just what people put in their pubs these days. The beer is nice and cold, served in the expected logo’ed glasses. My Peroni was perfectly poured and was just what I needed to start my «post-vocational decompression therapy». The pub is named after the famous World War One nurse who is buried nearby. Edith Cavell helped many Allied soldiers escape Germany and Belgium — she was found guilty of treason by the Germans and was executed. There’s quite a bit about her on the Internet — she is one of the most famous martyrs of the war. If you’ve been near London’s Trafalgar Square, perhaps you’ve seen that memorial. Strange to drink in a pub named after an executed nurse.