Times are quiet and dark, by dark I mean the way afternoons get darker and darker faster each day. We wait for the 21st December when the turnaround happens and then once more we shall surge towards the light and growth. I suspect that was why Xmas was devised a whole event of light and present giving. I miss actually going to the garden centre near Chelmsford, the place sporting displays of coloured baubles and lifelike animals that clustered in unreal tableaus. Books to read, candles to buy and tea to sit down to after you had saturated yourself with the gaudiness of the season.
It is 7.30 I hear music somewhere in the house, my daughter has been haunted over the last few days by a Melanie song, which I used to play when she was young. Melanie did not have a very good voice but she had that raw energy of the day. The song - 'Look what they've done to my song ma' Finding it on YouTube, the next song is from 2009 and it is Peter Seeger and co singing 'This Land is My Land'. Obama sits in the audience. Somewhat ironic 16 years later.
Knitting wise, having put down my needles for a few days, picked them up and knitted the second fingerless glove for myself. I have one in black and the other in grey. This is because that at this time of year with black wool it is difficult to distinguish the stitches. The black one caused me much frustration. I tried because Matilda wanted a pair but I thought to myself she will probably lose them anyway. And the saga of my lost suitcase still haunts me. Childish of course but I only used it once and then she went off to London with it. Last time I asked she just waved her hand generally and answered - it's somewhere in London ;)
Lillie is back this weekend, she arrived late last night, there is of course a parade of the scouts in Todmorden on Sunday which is tomorrow for Remembrance Sunday. I reckon she will be up for an OBE in 30 years time for service to the scouts.
Even amidst fierce flames the golden lotus can be planted
This also is written on her gravestone, it means resilience and hope and is taken from the Bhagavad-Gita.
Mary Oliver's poems are so simple and truthful. I love the thought of bees 'rumbling.'
ReplyDeleteYes I follow the poetry thread on Mary Oliver, she is such a good nature poet.
DeleteOh, when you mentioned Melanie, I thought of "I've got a brand new pair of roller skates and you've got a brand new key?" I remember loving that song and it might be in my head for a while today!?! :)
ReplyDeleteI think actually I like that song better Ellen, my daughter is getting cross about the earworm though.
DeleteIt is fascinating to me that people apply their own opinions to redefine somebody else's life. Do they think for one moment that their action/vandalism matters?
ReplyDeleteI am not sure wherever it is feminism or what but the truth should be allowed to rest. Three hawthorn berries had been left, according to the person who presented the photo, a symbol of Celtic mythology.
Deletehttps://celtic.mythologyworldwide.com/the-mystical-hawthorn-a-tree-of-connection-in-celtic-culture/
I very much like both songs you mentioned. I just know now, one of them is going to become today's earworm. I heard a way to get rid of an earworm the other day, but I've forgotten what it was now.
ReplyDeleteShort time memory is a curse Andrew ;)
ReplyDeleteI've been to Sylvia Plath's grave! I blogged about it a couple of years ago. I didn't inflict further damage on her headstone, but Ted Hughes WAS pretty awful to her.
ReplyDeleteI've been a lifelong Melanie fan. She had an unusual voice, but very good in its own way -- strong, as you said.