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.
Dismal dark depressing dull damp disappointing December. Hmm. Lets remind ourselves of summer when there were shadows in pictures. Lets concentrate on where the light isn't: Sometimes its the shadows that define a picture. Here are some of hard light examples from the Mediterranean, and each one will have needed some exposure compensation. The first images hints at a sunny day. This one gives you the evidence: A clear blue sky glimpsed between shadows. This third image, also from the much rebuilt and restored fort at Paphos , allows us to see more of the building. A pleasing succession of arches and the reward is the sunshine at the end And finally one last shadow picture: One for Arthur C Clark: The Monolith in Newbury Kennet Centre car park. Its been there for 4.2 Billion years. No one knows what it does.
What could be more civilised than a nice cup of tea in the Hotel Lounge after a good meal in the Restaurant? Here we find ourselves at The Swan in Southwold after Dinner. The menu is expensive but comprehensive, and the price of the meal includes tea or coffee and a small plate of cakes. Lovely! By the way, I always make a point of asking for a Nice Cup of Tea at tea shops and Restaurants. This is a conversation opener, but it also comprises part of your contract with the proprietor . Should I then find myself with a nasty cup of tea I can present my case to the European Court of Human Rights explaining that the incident has infringed my inalienable right to the pursuit of happiness. As a result of this trauma, I will say I am now unable to work and my future lies in ruins. I should then be able to sue the establishment concerned for a small fortune. This, finally, will allow me to retire in wealth and comfort, rather than the dismal prospect currently
The third rock on the left is the Gents, ladies to the right, please.
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