Well new post what shall I write on your immaculate surface today? Well it is the weekend, I don't feel too good because of the curry I ate last night. We are having visitors. Today it will be Adam the architect down from London for the day to discuss the finalised plans for the house disruption ;) I have said what I want in the kitchen, no dishwasher and my painted with flowers cupboard which is one piece of furniture I kept. I bought it in Whitby, and I still regret selling the little cottage there, though Whitby is not the place to grow old in.
Sunday will be Andrew's aunt and partner visiting, she is interested in back to back houses, apparently we have some in Tod. We have a ginnel at the back, which just means a narrow passageway between the houses. It is very bumpy and potholed and through the asphalt the old cobbling pokes through. On the main road there are a few upmarket old houses and commercial buildings. It is the spread from the centre of town as the town expanded into the countryside through the Victorian times. The old Folklore Centre is one of them. It has now closed down, as has the cafe there but sited next to the Hippodrome, which is run by a charity, the Folklore Centre will one day take its place as an upmarket cafe I suspect, its housing value improved.
How can a posh London architect come "down" to Todmorden from London and not "up" as London is in the inhospitable nether zone known as Down South and Todmorden is in the land of milk and honey commonly known as "Up North"? Honestly Thelma, you may be knowledgeable about historical matters but your sense of direction seems to be quite stunted. Do you know your west from your east?
ReplyDeleteYes. West Wales is on the l/s and East Anglia sits to the East and is on the r/s of that thin narrow bit of land we happen to call England with Scotland sitting at the top. Also because the English language can be used in many different ways, I could say 'from down South'. Further, the South is not all about London but the South West encompasses the beautiful landscapes of the Cotswolds, Wiltshire and Gloucestershire, not forgetting Surrey or Sussex. Up North though has dark menacing towns built on the backs of poor weavers.
ReplyDeleteIt would be interesting to see how Manchester develops in the future with Andy Burnham as mayor, would the city eventually become the equal of London and surpass it one day?
I do like my dishwasher and we only run it once a week (or maybe twice if we have had visitors). The city I live in has grown since my family moved here in 1966 - back then it was 14,000 people and now it is over 150,000!
ReplyDelete