Archive for the ‘England’ Category
June 15, 2013
Tags: Coleridge, Freud, Lyrical Ballads, The Prelude, Tintern Abbey, Wordsworth
A week ago I would have told you that I loved William Wordsworth. After reading the selections in the Norton Anthology of English Literature, I have concluded that it’s only a few of his poems that I love, and a few lines from here and there. I was all excited to read The Prelude because Read the Rest…
June 5, 2013
Tags: Norton Anthology of English Literature, Romantic period, Ulysses, William Blake, Women's Institute
It hit me the other day what I wanted to do for a summer reading project: read The Norton Anthology of English Literature Vol. I and II. Collective gasp all around. This venerable collection has been around a long time but I don’t believe anyone has actually read it—certainly not the college students for which Read the Rest…
June 28, 2012
Tags: Agincourt, Chris Hedges, Henry V, Kenneth Branagh, Patrick Doyke, Venerable Bede
I’m not sure I even realized that Shakespeare wrote a play called Henry V let alone that I would like it. Harold Bloom (my stuffy discussant) had very little to say about it other than Falstaff isn’t in it. He seems to judge every character by Falstaff or Hamlet. I get it: they’re transcendent characters. Read the Rest…
August 30, 2011
Tags: 'Allo 'Allo, Alfred Hitchcock, Dorothy Sayers, espionage, French resistance, Lord Peter Wimsey, paranoia, The Lady Vanishes, The Sorrow and the Pity, Wish Me Luck
I’ve slipped into one of my spy phases so even though I am compromising security, it’s currently the only thing on my mind. For purposes of this blog, all use of the word “drop” should be considered what Alfred Hitchcock called a MacGuffin: the plot device of using an often ambiguous thing which the characters Read the Rest…
April 10, 2011
Tags: Bath Abbey, Cadbury creme eggs, Chocolate Tiddly Reindeer, Edinburgh Woolen Mills, Highgate cemetery, Peeps, Sally Lund
I sent some marshmallow Peeps to my cousins in England. It was partially to reciprocate the chocolate Tiddly Reindeers they sent at Christmas, partly to contribute to good relations across the pond and partly because Peeps don’t weigh very much so the postage isn’t twice the cost of the item. Well, actually it is but Read the Rest…
January 28, 2011
Tags: Charles and Camilla, Richmond, Robert Barnard, Yorkshire
I just finished a book set in Yorkshire. You don’t need to know its title because it wasn’t very good and I’ll recommend a better book later on. The point here is that it got me thinking about Richmond, a splendid market town in North Yorkshire which I visited a few years back. I am Read the Rest…
December 31, 2010
Tags: Chinooks, high tea, piano students, Sorrento hotel, Tea, Tiddly Reindeer
Okay, we’re back. I use the third person royally because I actually live alone, not counting the three cats to whom I pay rent. However I am more introverted than not and I feel like I almost died of people this past week. I ate lunches, dinners, and high teas such as I don’t believe Read the Rest…
October 11, 2010
Tags: Bar Convent, Micklegate Bar, Robinson Crusoe, St Margaret of Clitherow, The Shambles, York
With Halloween appearing a full month ahead of itself, I’ve been thinking about Margaret of Clitherow’s hand. I saw The Hand when I traveled in England in the year 2005, in the city of York, of a good family, though not of that city, my father being a foreigner of Cornwall. That’s for you English Read the Rest…
September 5, 2010
Tags: Cake, England, Hay-On-Wye, Tea
I am an Anglophile. It started early in my life and was enhanced by finding an address for my Cornish relations in my great Aunt Ann’s address book after she died in the 1970’s. I wrote to my distant cousin Hazel, then 68 years old, and we began to correspond. Since then I have made Read the Rest…
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