Have you noticed? Tour around your average National Trust property and it soon becomes obvious that previous generations seem to have been fortunate and very well heeled. It seems nobody lived in poky little houses. They didn't have to look at wood chip wallpaper and sit on cheap MFI furniture. They had beautiful oak panel walls and real leather seats in their well stocked library. Outside the house would sit in many acres of land, and sometimes many thousands of acres. All in all the people we chose to commemorate appear to have been wealthy, while the poor and the merely average have passed silently into history unremarked and unremembered.
"....things move from a highly ordered state to a disordered state. This is the principle of entropy ." The Second Law of Thermodynamics would have us accept that Entropy is maintained or increases in all physical interactions. It seems when things rust away, they are just following this principle. So rust and disorder are woven into the fabric of the Universe, which seems a rather deep prospect that I leave you to ponder. Meanwhile I am still much concerned about what this old sign, spotted on a Devon stately home, used to say....
Down the farm lane, in the Big Barn, next to the pile of large straw bales, I found several stacks of rusty metal chairs recently. I suspect they are waiting to be used. Quite what metal chairs are doing in a working farm barn is a mystery. However, it is well known that farmers don't throw anything away, because "you never know", so maybe there's a plan...
That looks like a milled steel surface, or am I mistaken?
ReplyDeleteClose. Milled Aluminium. Good eh?
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