"O God, I could be bounded in a nut shell and count myself a king of infinite space, were it not that I have bad dreams." - Hamlet Act II scene ii
31 October 2011
Update
30 October 2011
Mushrooms
29 October 2011
Stanedge
27 October 2011
Population
26 October 2011
Stanage
Stanage Edge, or simply Stanage (from "stone edge") is a gritstone escarpment in the English Peak District, famous as a location for climbing. The northern part of the edge forms the border between the High Peak of Derbyshire and Sheffield in South Yorkshire. Its highest point is High Neb at 458 metres (1,503 ft) above sea level. Areas of Stanage were quarried in the past to produce grindstones, and some can still be seen on the hillside—carved, but never removed.
25 October 2011
Oughtibridge
- "I stopped off at The Cock for a quick one."
- "The Cock was full to overflowing on Bank Holiday Monday!"
- "She worked at The Cock for years!"
- "Oh look! There's a seagull on top of The Cock!"
- "Have you ever been round the back of The Cock?"
- "The Cock needs a new cleaner"
Pearls
24 October 2011
Happiness
I thank the Lord I've been blessed
With more than my share of happiness
To me this world is a wonderful place
And I'm the luckiest human in the whole human race
I've got no silver and I've got no gold
But I've got happiness in my soul
Happiness to me is an ocean tide
Or a sunset fading on a mountain side
A big old heaven full of stars up above
When I'm in the arms of the one I love
Happiness, happiness, the greatest gift that I possess
I thank the Lord that I've been blessed
With more than my share of happiness
Happiness is a field of grain
Turning its face to the falling rain
I can see it in the sunshine, I breathe it in the air
Happiness happiness everywhere
A wise old man told me one time
When you go to measuring my success
Don't count my money count my happiness
Happiness, happiness, the greatest gift that I possess
I thank the Lord I've been blessed
With more than my share of happiness
Happiness, happiness, the greatest gift that I possess
I thank the Lord I've been blessed
With more than my share of happiness
22 October 2011
Pubs
Sheffield's foremost Irish pub, "The Dog and Partridge" on Trippet Lane:-
CAMRA 's regular national pub of the year, "The Kelham Island Tavern":-
21 October 2011
Power
20 October 2011
Poem
A Widower
We lived within these walls -
Janet , our babies
And me.
I can still hear echoes -
The ringing of the phone,
Those late for school mornings,
Birthdays and bonfires,
Laughter and tears -
We lived it all.
That’s her favourite perfume.
That’s her side of the wardrobe.
That’s a letter from outpatients.
That’s the bed
Where we made
Our children in the dead of night
Like breathing air.
That’s Sally’s room.
That’s Paul and Jeffrey’s.
This is the fridge
Yes it’s almost bare.
This is her hairbrush
With strands of her hair.
And that, that was Janet’s chair -
But I can never sit there
I sit by the phone.
It makes me feel
Somehow less alone.
And sometimes they ring
The children I mean
Bulletins from their new lives
And places they have been
Later with silence re-released
I stare at our mantelpiece
That day in April, 1974
Standing in confetti
By the very same church door.
Water
18 October 2011
Idiots
During the conversation, "Nyanza Roberts" replied: "by town, do you mean top end of holderness road?
"That's bout as far anyone in east Hull goes.
"No wonder everyone is thick....inbreeding must damage brain development."
"Debbie Johnson" then said: "You're really on one today mrs... !! Xx."
"Nyanza Roberts" replied: "Haha, I'm actually in a good mood.
"If anyone reading this is offended, then get a grip."
Another teacher, "Jane Johnson", then said: "Massive queue of Westcott year 5/6 kids in poundland! x".
Copies of the conversation were pinned to lampposts and trees in the school's neighbourhood. The banality of what was said and how it was said makes me shudder. Professional people are not saints and given the pressures of work in the modern world, everybody needs to let off steam from time to time but Facebook is not the place to do it.
Parents reading letters of apology from the school
There have been plenty of examples of serious work problems even sackings caused by unwise Facebook comments. Those presumably well-educated teachers at Westcott Primary should have been wise enough not to let their guard down so publicly. However, what is more reprehensible is the sense that when all is said and done these young teachers look down on their pupils and the community they serve, forgetting that without these people they wouldn't be in receipt of comfortable teachers' salaries.
From now on, how can they hold their heads up high at parents meetings or even in front of their classes? Idiots!
Voice
16 October 2011
Flooding
15 October 2011
Unthank
ME I wouldn't mind in the least and besides the picture I took of that farm must have been from fifty metres away. I don't know what your problem is.
14 October 2011
Mockery
13 October 2011
Inspiration
I do thee entreat
that you listen to my earnest bleat
that you should get to know me better
(before you see me as a sweater
or a woolly rug beneath your feet}
and I guess that my hunch is,
that if I become your Sunday lunches
that you will find it hard to sleep,
feel guilty when you’re counting sheep
when you know I love you bunches.
I feel you have the right to know
just how much I love you so
and I think that you ought’a
(if you wish to take this lamb to slaughter)
consider that I am your best friend -
Beau.
And is both singular and plural—
It gives grammarians the creeps
To hear one say, “A flock of sheeps.”
From where I stand the sheep stands still
As stones against the stony hill.
The stones are gray
And so are they.
And both are weatherworn and round,
Leading the eye back to the ground.
Two mingled flocks -
The sheep, the rocks.
And still no sheep stirs from its place
Or lifts its Babylonian face.
Never pellets can this sheep excrete
'cos this one's made of paint'd 'crete.
And thinking of the dumb things thou hast said
Wilt thou recall those halcyon days of old
When thou didst on thy friends these posts unfold?
O Yorkshire lad, they trusted thou wast true
Who gave to them each day a piece of ewe.
11 October 2011
Ode
Ode to Beau
Quietly, so quietly you gorge upon our grass.
Silently, so silently the daylight hours pass.
I woke to hear you just past dawn
Sheepishly munching on our lawn.
Like tiny waves your fleece it curls
Tight and springy with lanolin whirls
Your voice is deep and reassuring
Your wise brown eyes are so alluring.
Oh Beau , I’ve spent my whole life counting sheep
Jumping over gates to send me to sleep.
I never thought in my wildest dreams,
My fantasies and hair-brained schemes
That I’d ever receive a genuine sheep -
A real life Merino for me to keep!
Folk wonder why I called you Beau -
I shake my head 'cos I don't know.
10 October 2011
Beau
Partner
8 October 2011
Pierces
Like a memory it falls
Soft and warm continuing
Tapping on my roof and walls.
And from the shelter of my mind
Through the window of my eyes
I gaze beyond the rain-drenched streets
To England where my heart lies.
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