... of the seven deadly sins, the eighth and most horrid is emotional blackmail ... whilst for this blogger, the only sacred thing is life itself
Sunday, November 13, 2011
Saturday, November 12, 2011
Thursday, November 10, 2011
her wonderful daughter alex just told me that tina's gone ... last week i had promised her that paul newman would be waiting by the gate to lead her directly, hand in hand, to the bluebell wood
...and this is what was playing on the radio when i got the message
Wednesday, November 9, 2011
burwash rose ... a generous gift from it's maker ...
http://www.traditionalcheesedairy.co.uk/news.htm
... many thanks ... we'll savour it when the loved one gets home this evening
Monday, November 7, 2011
some mildly discordant domestic discourse which failed to ruin our weekend ...
He: "Do you know ? I think you've never, ever, polished my shoes for me !"
She: "You might like to get on the internet this evening and start researching ... like ... where your nearest soup kitchen will be."
Sunday, November 6, 2011
Saturday, November 5, 2011
Thursday, November 3, 2011
Wednesday, November 2, 2011
Sunday, October 30, 2011
Friday, October 28, 2011
Thursday, October 27, 2011
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
Monday, October 24, 2011
Saturday, October 22, 2011
Friday, October 21, 2011
some of this week's BTs
Walking from the bus stop to the work place on a moonlit night, seen across the dark open space of a newly demolished factory, silhouetted against the brightly lit laundry in acre lane, the elegant black form of a sure-footed young fox trotting sixty yards along the narrow top of a six foot wall.
Later, in the brilliant cloudless mid-morning, in the High Weald, whilst loading the truck on a steep ramp besides a small cheese factory, i lift my head at the sound of horseshoes in the lane, and see two white ponies trotting up the gentle slope towards Stonegate village, silhouetted against the cold blue sky with two stout ladies bouncing in the saddles.
Back in the city, seen from the top deck of the homeward bus, quite unusually, a pair of falcons, unfamiliar to me with short wings and deep chests and dark tails, clearly side-lit in the late afternoon sunlight whilst circling on a thermal for a long time, high, but not too high, above a supermarket near the crossroads at Clapham Junction, where, by an improbable coincidence, there stands a famous Victorian pub named The Falcon.
Later, in the brilliant cloudless mid-morning, in the High Weald, whilst loading the truck on a steep ramp besides a small cheese factory, i lift my head at the sound of horseshoes in the lane, and see two white ponies trotting up the gentle slope towards Stonegate village, silhouetted against the cold blue sky with two stout ladies bouncing in the saddles.
Back in the city, seen from the top deck of the homeward bus, quite unusually, a pair of falcons, unfamiliar to me with short wings and deep chests and dark tails, clearly side-lit in the late afternoon sunlight whilst circling on a thermal for a long time, high, but not too high, above a supermarket near the crossroads at Clapham Junction, where, by an improbable coincidence, there stands a famous Victorian pub named The Falcon.
one bt, although sometimes there isn't time to grab the camera ...
Last saturday, after sitting in an empty carriage for twenty minutes whilst my train was held at brockenhurst station, i went to the door just in time to see a huge steam locomotive drawing a long train of ancient carriages stained with years of use and filled with happy day trippers heading for corfe castle ... but there wasn't time to grab the camera
Six hours later, as i walked back from the hospice at christchurch to the station, i heard the same train thundering under the bridge, but just too far away for me to run with my camera ... so all i saw was the cloud of smoke, and all i smelled was soot and sulphur.
An hour and a half afterwards, as my train slid quietly through the darkness towards london, i caught a faint whiff of that sulphur and soot again, ... and a minute later we were gradually overtaking the dimly lit steam excursion carriages, so slowly that i could see the fabrics on the seats, the crisp linen tablecloths, the glinting brass table lamps ... and then the open plan carriages where old fashioned families sprawled amongst shopping bags, cast off coats, huddles of children ... and all so gradually that there was time for them to wave at me and for me to wave back.
http://www.swanagerailway.co.uk/news783.htm
Six hours later, as i walked back from the hospice at christchurch to the station, i heard the same train thundering under the bridge, but just too far away for me to run with my camera ... so all i saw was the cloud of smoke, and all i smelled was soot and sulphur.
An hour and a half afterwards, as my train slid quietly through the darkness towards london, i caught a faint whiff of that sulphur and soot again, ... and a minute later we were gradually overtaking the dimly lit steam excursion carriages, so slowly that i could see the fabrics on the seats, the crisp linen tablecloths, the glinting brass table lamps ... and then the open plan carriages where old fashioned families sprawled amongst shopping bags, cast off coats, huddles of children ... and all so gradually that there was time for them to wave at me and for me to wave back.
http://www.swanagerailway.co.uk/news783.htm
Sunday, October 16, 2011
Saturday, October 15, 2011
read all about it ! read all about it ! mystery patient ( tina schol, the last time i set eyes on her ) wears no-longer-fashionable sweater knitted by photographer's mother ( sylvia forward ) twenty-five years ago whilst scrutinizing terry pratchett interview in today's guardian ... and she's only the very same person that slipped a copy of "mort" to me about twenty years ago
Wednesday, October 12, 2011
Wednesday, October 5, 2011
Monday, October 3, 2011
roelandt savery's dancing dodos
i don't really know if they danced but i like to think they'd have enlivened the grounds of many of our stately homes had mankind not been so unkind
here's an excellent history of the subject
http://julianhume.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/History-of-the-dodo-Hume.pdf
beware, slimmers ! ... this is an hornazo
baked by santi, the village baker of lagartera in toledo province ... a great man, and a self taught architect, too
eaten, ( probably mostly ), during this past weekend by my cruel friend linda, who must only have photographed it just to make me nostalgic ( i am not jealous, i am not salivating, do you hear me, linda ? )
if i remember rightly, it is a gigantic compartmentalized pasty containing localized fillings of mutton, of chorizo, and a boiled egg
Sunday, October 2, 2011
Saturday, October 1, 2011
the colour purple ... delightful classical scholarship via metafilter
just click on this link for a short essay on antique perceptions by the late william harris
http://community.middlebury.edu/~harris/Classics/purple.html
he seems to have been a delightfully free thinker ... and doodler
http://community.middlebury.edu/~harris/ss/spot.html
in the past i've struggled and failed to paint with purple
here's an image borrowed from some clever young americans who don't have that problem
http://lotsoferaserdust.deviantart.com/art/Purple-Sea-172639231
http://community.middlebury.edu/~harris/Classics/purple.html
he seems to have been a delightfully free thinker ... and doodler
http://community.middlebury.edu/~harris/ss/spot.html
in the past i've struggled and failed to paint with purple
here's an image borrowed from some clever young americans who don't have that problem
http://lotsoferaserdust.deviantart.com/art/Purple-Sea-172639231
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