Friday, October 31, 2014
Haddon Hall, Bakewell Derbyshire
Friday, October 24, 2014
The Autumn Colors of Oxford
England's Autumn colors are beautiful but much more subtle when compared to the seasonal colors of New England. What you see here are splashes of colors against a fairly constant green backdrop. Sometimes it's the shrubbery and vines here that boast the brightest Autumn colors. (By the way, Fall is an American word)
In New England, you can see entire forests transformed into a glorious blaze. There is nothing quite like the brilliant red of maple trees and the vibrant yellow of the trees of New England. I feel fortunate to be able to enjoy them them both!
Oxford Autumn Colors
Magdalen Tower
The tree-lined Poplar Walk at Christchurch
Christchurch
Christchurch Meadow
The Thames at Iffley Lock
St. Mary's Church Yard
Old Iffley Village
Egrove Park
Looking down Headington Road from the Brooks Campus Bridge
New England Fall Colors
Where is your favorite place to see the Autumn colors?
Saturday, October 11, 2014
The Blood-Swept Land of Poppies at the Tower of London
I finally got to see the Poppy Installation at the Tower of London. The installation far exceeded my expectations. It was simply stunning, dramatic, and so, so moving -- the pictures don’t do it justice. The installation will be completed on Nov. 11, Remembrance Day, when exactly 888,246 poppies will fill the moat -- one for each British and Commonwealth fatality of the First World War. The installation’s mammoth scale echoes and honors the war’s enormous toll -- a fitting remembrance on this 100-year commemoration of the Great War.
The installation is the creation of Paul Cummins, a ceramicist artist and renowned theater stage designer Tom Piper. They were inspired by a line in a will of an unidentified local man who died during the war. Describing the battlefields, the soldier wrote, “The blood-swept lands and seas of red, where angels fear to tread.” That first clause is now the title of the installation.
The Tower of London’s moat is the perfect spot to safely handle this slow-growing and delicate art project that is on such a massive scale. Its fortifications
make it so that the public can see the poppies but they can't touch them. In addition, in 1914, the
moat was also a training ground for military volunteers.
The poppies themselves are modeled after the flouncy poppy of Flanders Fields, where Col. John McCrae wrote his famous poem. The ceramic poppies are available to buy for £25 each and the net proceeds will be shared equally amongst a group of carefully selected veterans charities.
For more
information:
http://poppies.hrp.org.uk/
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/history/world-war-one/11021743/Row-on-row-the-poppies-flow-at-the-Tower-of-London.html
My extraordinary cousin Diane Tueller Pritchett. |
The poem that was the inspiration for the installation:
Blood Swept Lands and Seas of Red
The blood swept lands and seas of red,
Where angels dare to tread.
As God cried a tear of pain as the angels fell,
Again and again.
As the tears of mine fell to the ground
To sleep with the flowers of red
As any be dead
My children see and work through fields of my
Own with corn and wheat,
Blessed by love so far from pain of my resting
Fields so far from my love.
It be time to put my hand up and end this pain
Of living hell. to see the people around me
Fall someone angel as the mist falls around
And the rain so thick with black thunder I hear
Over the clouds, to sleep forever and kiss
The flower of my people gone before time
To sleep and cry no more
I put my hand up and see the land of red,
This is my time to go over,
I may not come back
So sleep, kiss the boys for me
Where angels dare to tread.
As God cried a tear of pain as the angels fell,
Again and again.
As the tears of mine fell to the ground
To sleep with the flowers of red
As any be dead
My children see and work through fields of my
Own with corn and wheat,
Blessed by love so far from pain of my resting
Fields so far from my love.
It be time to put my hand up and end this pain
Of living hell. to see the people around me
Fall someone angel as the mist falls around
And the rain so thick with black thunder I hear
Over the clouds, to sleep forever and kiss
The flower of my people gone before time
To sleep and cry no more
I put my hand up and see the land of red,
This is my time to go over,
I may not come back
So sleep, kiss the boys for me
Wednesday, October 8, 2014
Night Bus from London to Paris
I've discovered how easy and cheap it can be to hop across the channel from London to Paris. The Eurostar (high-speed train) is great and takes just over 2 hours from St. Pancras station to Gare du Nord in Paris. If you book 4 weeks or more in advance it can be reasonable, but can be rather pricey if you don't plan ahead.
Flights can be reasonable too, but the best prices are for flights out of Luton, Stansted and Gatwick, to Charles de Gaulle airport. This adds extra travel time and cost getting to and from these out-of-the-way airports.
But, for about 50 pounds round trip, you can take a Euroline night bus from the Victoria Bus Station in London to the International Bus Station Galliéni (metro station) in Paris. I took the 8pm London Tube bus from Oxford to the Victoria Bus Station. My bus left London at 10:30pm and drove through the night arriving in Paris at 7am (8am Paris time) . The bus was clean and comfortable and on the way there I had two seats to myself so I could curl up tight and lie down. I actually slept pretty well.
The bus on the way back was more crowded so there was no chance to stretch out. (The seats do recline). We left Paris at 10:30pm arrived in London by 7am. I was back in Oxford by 9am. Suddenly Paris doesn't seem so far away.
For more information about the Euroline bus to Paris:
http://www.eurolines.co.uk/offers/london-to-paris?utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_term=bus%20london%20to%20paris&utm_campaign=France%20-%20Paris
The reason for my visit to Paris: 3 glorious days with my dear friend Julie
In Paris, calories don't count!
Lunch! |
Dessert my last night there! Divine. |
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