Probably quieter than usual here for a week or so as I hit the road tomorrow for a week or so. twittering will continue here.
I used to work out how many miles I'd be doing on these trips, but I've given up. Trying a time-free non-linear view of travelling over the past year or so. It seems to lead to less stress.
Sunday, January 13, 2008
Friday, January 11, 2008
Poem 4 - Limerick
Wednesday, January 09, 2008
Poetry book 3
Leisure
What is this life, if, full of care,
We have no time to stand and stare.
No time to stand beneath the boughs
And stare as long as sheep or cows.
No time to see, when woods we pass,
Where squirrels hide their nuts in grass
No time to see, in broad daylight,
Streams full of stars, like skies at night.
No time to turn at Beauty's glance,
And watch her feet, how they can dance.
No time to wait till her mouth can
Enrich that smile her eyes began.
A poor life this if, full of care,
We have no time to stand and stare.
William Henry Davies
Labels:
li'l lamb,
poem,
poetry,
sheep,
stand and stare,
william henry davies
French Farmhouse Doors
Our old, lovely, twisted french farmhouse doors have been squeeking for a while, so I thought I'd give them a drop of oil. Worked a treat; no more noise. Only problem is that they are so twisted that it was only a sticky mechanism that allowed us to shut them. Now they're smooth and oiled, they pop open all the time. Ever heard the expression, if it ain't broke don't fix it?
Monday, January 07, 2008
Forming, Norming etc. ...
I don't know if this model is still popular, but it occured to me yesterday during a few issues raised before and at our samba rehearsal. It's a nice idea if it now means we can get on with the music. Not guaranteed it seems from the explanation, but I'm optimistic, as ever.
Poem for a deat poet - Roger McGough
Poem for a dead poet
He was a poet he was.
A proper poet.
He said things
that made you think
and said them nicely.
He saw things
that you or I
could never see
and saw them clearly.
He had a way with language.
Images flocked around
him like birds,
St Francis he was,
of the words. Words?
Why he could almost make 'em talk.
Roger McGough
Friday, January 04, 2008
Another book
To add to the complete list of books here is The Mammoth Book of Celtic Myths and Legends by Peter Beresford Ellis, in excellent condition. Only postage cost or call by and collect.
Could be fun if anyone wanted to call by with a swap. It's a way to go from anywhere.
Poetry book 1
Me an Li'l lamb are compiling a poetry book one at a time, and I thought I'd share the first few here. Turn about. Down to you to guess which are my choices, and which are hers...
Warning - Jenny Joseph
When I am an old woman I shall wear purple
With a red hat which doesn't go, and doesn't suit me,
And I shall spend my pension on brandy and summer gloves
And satin sandles, and say we've no money for butter.
I shall sit down on the pavement when I'm tired
And gobble up samples in shops and press alarm bells
And run my stick along the public railings
And make up for the sobriety of my youth.
I shall go out in my slippers in the rain
And pick flowers in other people's gardens
And learn to spit.
You can wear terrible shirts and grow more fat
And eat three pounds of sausages at a go
Or only bread and pickle for a week
And hoard pens and pencils and beermats and things in boxes.
But now we must have clothes that keep us dry
And pay our rent and not swear in the street
And set a good example for the children
We must have friends for dinner and read the papers.
But maybe I ought to practise a little now?
So people who know me are not too shocked and surprised
When suddenly I am old, and start to wear purple.
Warning - Jenny Joseph
When I am an old woman I shall wear purple
With a red hat which doesn't go, and doesn't suit me,
And I shall spend my pension on brandy and summer gloves
And satin sandles, and say we've no money for butter.
I shall sit down on the pavement when I'm tired
And gobble up samples in shops and press alarm bells
And run my stick along the public railings
And make up for the sobriety of my youth.
I shall go out in my slippers in the rain
And pick flowers in other people's gardens
And learn to spit.
You can wear terrible shirts and grow more fat
And eat three pounds of sausages at a go
Or only bread and pickle for a week
And hoard pens and pencils and beermats and things in boxes.
But now we must have clothes that keep us dry
And pay our rent and not swear in the street
And set a good example for the children
We must have friends for dinner and read the papers.
But maybe I ought to practise a little now?
So people who know me are not too shocked and surprised
When suddenly I am old, and start to wear purple.
Thursday, January 03, 2008
Books are friends
Parting with books is always a little sad. Rather like parting with friends. But as one friend once said, quoting I assume, friends come into your life for a reason, a season, or for life. Unless it's for life, then let them go when the time comes. Same with books. I've been hanging on to some of these for decades without even being aware of their existence. I still have many, but most are as yet unread. When I've read them, they'll join the list until I can give them away. If there are no takers, it might be to charity shops sometime before the end of January.
Free Books
Surname | Date | Title |
Hopkins | 1976 | Poems and Prose |
McFadden | 1992 | Ancient Voices Current Affairs |
Hands | 2004 | The Handbook of Digital Photography |
Black | 1979 | The Elements of Palaeontology |
Collins | 1990 | A Roomfull of Birds - Scottish Short Stories |
Lawson | 1992 | Unnatural Selections |
Ballard | 1984 | Empire of the Sun |
May | 1982 | The Many-Coloured Land |
Wodehouse | 1987 | Life at Blandings |
Peake | 1978 | Gormenghast |
May | 1982 | The Golden Torc |
May | 1983 | The Non Born King |
Peake | 1987 | Tutus Groan |
Peake | 1983 | Tutus Alone |
Lewis | 1989 | The Volcanoes Above Us |
Trueman | 1972 | Geology and Scenery in England and Wales |
Coelho | 1992 | The Pilgrimage |
Richards | 2003 | Xenophobe's guide to the Welsh |
Yapp | 2004 | Xenophobe's guide to the French |
Rowe | 1991 | Collins Gem Wine |
Kennedy | 2001 | The Rough Guide to the Internet |
Twain | 1972 | The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn |
Van der Post | 1967 | The Hunter and the Whale |
Fitzpatrick | 1999 | Tanzania Zanzibar & Pemba |
Kay | 1998 | Trumpet |
Chatwin | 1989 | What am I doing here |
Vonnegut | 1994 | Palm Sunday : Welcome to the Monkey House |
Suskind | 1986 | Perfume |
Dickens | 1974 | Bleak House |
Austen | 1972 | Pride and Prejudice |
Lewis | 1979 | My Lords, Ladies and Gentlemen … Reverend Sirs |
Willmot | 1987 | Pemulwuy: The Rainbow Warrior |
Baker | 1972 | Christmas Customs and Folklore |
Okri | 1998 | Infinite Riches |
Crossley-Holland | 1985 | Axe-Age, Wolf-Age: A Selection of Norse Myths |
Yeates | 1962 | Selected Poetry |
Gatt | 1976 | Turner: The life and work of the artist (illustrated) |
Eichenbaum & Orbach | 1983 | What do women want? |
Sassoon | 1940 | The Complete Memoirs of George Sherston |
Buchanan | 1978 | The Portable Plato |
Neidjie | 1989 | Story About Feeling |
Lawrence | 1975 | Sons and Lovers |
Thelwell | 1978 | Belt Up |
Dickens | 1977 | Great Expectations |
Dickens | 1985 | Oliver Twist |
Swift | 1967 | Gulliver's Travels |
Dickens | 1969 | Hard Times |
Dickens | 1970 | A tale of Two Cities |
Brewer | 1895 | The Student's Hume: A History of England |
Thelwell | 1976 | Top Dog |
Thelwell | 1978 | This Desirable Plot |
Thelwell | 1978 | Up The Garden Path |
Thelwell | 1977 | A Leg at Each Corner |
Thelwell | 1977 | Riding Academy |
Thelwell | 1978 | The Effluent Society |
Thelwell | 1975 | Angels on Horseback and Elsewhere |
Hamilton | 1982 | Plato: Gorgias |
Magorian | 1998 | Goodnight Mister Tom |
Cantlie | 1927 | First Aid to the Injured |
Guareschi | 1964 | Comrade Don Camillo and Don Camillo and the Devil |
Livingstone | 1944 | Plato and Modern Education |
Gwynn | 1975 | The Gower yarns of Cyril Gwynn |
Proulx | 1999 | Wyoming Stories from Close range |
Froude | 1886 | Oceana or England and her Colonies |
Bronte | 1986 | Jane Eyre |
Sayers | 1983 | Peig: the autobography of Peig Sayers of the Great Blasket Island |
Thouless | 1968 | Straight and Crooked Thinking |
Barber | ? | Innsegall: The Western Isles |
Morton | 1945 | In Search of Scotland |
Hoog | 1979 | Monet |
Allott | 1986 | English Poetry 1918-60 |
Godin | 2005 | Purple Cow |
Hays | 2004 | Marcus Aurelius - Meditations |
Banks | 2002 | Dead Air |
Treffert | 1990 | Extraordinary people |
Maclellan | 1986 | Gaelic Dictionary |
Rhys Jones | 1986 | Living Welsh |
Lorayne | 1986 | Page-a-Minute Memory Book |
Liyi | 1984 | 100 Chinese Idions and Their Stories |
Charton | 1989 | Seas and Oceans - Collins Reference Dictionary |
Pearce, Markandya, Barbier | 1991 | Blueprint for a Green Economy |
Allen | 1943 | Guerrilla War in Abyssinia |
Dossey | 1985 | Space, Time & Medicine |
Emerson | 1990 | The Oxford Authors Ralph Waldo Emerson |
Packham & Harding | 1982 | Ecology of Woodland Processes |
Robbins | 1997 | Unlimited Power |
Aman | 1982 | Folk Tales from Indonesia |
Marshall & Gabriel | 1994 | The Great Pub Crawl : A Story of Swansea Pubs |
Mackechnie | 1974 | Gaelic Without Groans |
Tredennick | 1957 | Plato : The Last days of Socrates |
Robbins | 1992 | Awaken the Giant Within |
MacNeill | 1991 | Everyday Gaelic |
Blacklaw | 1989 | Bun-Chursa Gaidhlig |
Williams | 1999 | The Work We Were Born To Do |
Knight | 2000 | NLP at Work |
Handly | 1979 | The Way of the World: Congreave |
Robinson et al. | 1978 | Elements of Cartography |
Morris | 1986 | Intimate behaviour |
Acland | 1990 | A Sudden Outbreak of Common Sense |
Hays | 1987 | You Can heal Your Life |
Dobson (Ed) | 1991 | The Green Reader |
Edmunds | 1979 | The Gower Coast |
Maclean & Carrrell (Eds) | 1986 | As an Fhearann from the land |
Clarke | 1994 | Oz Clarke's Essential Wine Book |
Koski & Symons | 1991 | YOU Magazine Journolists |
Swindells & Mason | 1989 | The Complete Book of the Water Garden |
Mitford | 1968 | Madame de Pompadour |
Happy New Year again and again
One big turn of the year event!
There's little chance of that happening I reckon, but it's a nice thought. Roll the solstice, Christmas and New year into one event, have three or four days of celebration/holiday, and then carry on with life. I'd prefer solstice; since living in the middle of nowhere, I really do notice the change in daylight hours, and I am sooo pleased when the days start to get longer. I'm up for all those new year energies straight away. Only everyone around me is focused on Christmas. OK, let's have a shindig, great. Then let's get into the new year! But no, we all have to wait a week and have some kind of party again! No wonder there are some forced smiles around at most of the new year's bashes I've been to. This year was cool, I enjoyed it. Really. Ok Ok it is a bit baah humbug, but only a bit. Let's get up and at 'em sooner, that's all.
There's little chance of that happening I reckon, but it's a nice thought. Roll the solstice, Christmas and New year into one event, have three or four days of celebration/holiday, and then carry on with life. I'd prefer solstice; since living in the middle of nowhere, I really do notice the change in daylight hours, and I am sooo pleased when the days start to get longer. I'm up for all those new year energies straight away. Only everyone around me is focused on Christmas. OK, let's have a shindig, great. Then let's get into the new year! But no, we all have to wait a week and have some kind of party again! No wonder there are some forced smiles around at most of the new year's bashes I've been to. This year was cool, I enjoyed it. Really. Ok Ok it is a bit baah humbug, but only a bit. Let's get up and at 'em sooner, that's all.
Books for free
Here's the first 30-odd books that are sitting here free for anyone for the cost of postage. Unless of course you happen to be passing, in which case call in, have a browse and take what you want. I'll get the rest of them up here soon, and put a link on the sidebar to the final full list. I'd be happy to hear some suggested swaps, but the point of this distribution is to have less stuff! The formatting hasn't gone too pear-shaped.)
Surname | First name | Date | Title |
Hopkins | Gerard Manley | 1976 | Poems and Prose |
McFadden | Steve | 1992 | Ancient Voices Current Affairs |
Hands | Geoffrey | 2004 | The Handbook of Digital Photography |
Black | Rhona M. | 1979 | The Elements of Palaeontology |
Collins | Publisher | 1990 | A Roomfull of Birds - Scottish Short Stories |
Lawson | Gary | 1992 | Unnatural Selections |
Ballard | J.G. | 1984 | Empire of the Sun |
May | Julian | 1982 | The Many-Coloured Land |
Wodehouse | P.G. | 1987 | Life at Blandings |
Peake | Mervyn | 1978 | Gormenghast |
May | Julian | 1982 | The Golden Torc |
May | Julian | 1983 | The Non Born King |
Peake | Mervyn | 1987 | Tutus Groan |
Peake | Mervyn | 1983 | Tutus Alone |
Lewis | Norman | 1989 | The Volcanoes Above Us |
Trueman | A.E. | 1972 | Geology and Scenery in England and Wales |
Coelho | paulo | 1992 | The Pilgrimage |
Richards | John Winterson | 2003 | Xenophobe's guide to the Welsh |
Yapp | Nick | 2004 | Xenophobe's guide to the French |
Rowe | David | 1991 | Collins Gem Wine |
Kennedy | Angus J. | 2001 | The Rough Guide to the Internet |
Twain | Mark | 1972 | The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn |
Van der Post | Laurence | 1967 | The Hunter and the Whale |
Fitzpatrick | Mary | 1999 | Tanzania Zanzibar & Pemba |
Kay | Jackie | 1998 | Trumpet |
Chatwin | Bruce | 1989 | What am I doing here |
Vonnegut | Kurt | 1994 | Palm Sunday : Welcome to the Monkey House |
Suskind | Patrick | 1986 | Perfume |
Dickens | Charles | 1974 | Bleak House |
Austen | Jane | 1972 | Pride and Prejudice |
Lewis | Don | 1979 | My Lords, Ladies and Gentlemen … Reverend Sirs |
Willmot | Eric | 1987 | Pemulwuy: The Rainbow Warrior |
Baker | Margaret | 1972 | Christmas Customs and Folklore |
Okri | Ben | 1998 | Infinite Riches |
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