August 10, 2012
Britishness at it’s purest

Taken from Jim Caple’s hilarious but sad article on scalping (touting) at the Olympics. Along with the draconian ad police proof that English officiousness is at its purest when at its pettiest. Imagine if someone told me that something I bought I cound never re-sell. And then the TV guys complain about vacent seats.

Police arrested a Canadian who offered to sell two tickets at face value –- about $75 — to a tennis match. They jailed him for two nights. I’m not kidding. Two nights in jail for trying to re-sell a ticket at face value! Sheesh, in that case, a ticketing website “service charge” should be grounds for a lifetime sentence…Fortunately, there is one back-door avenue to get tickets. Each national federation receives an allotment of tickets, and some sell their unused ones at their official team houses. This is allowed even though the houses charge a commission as high as 30 percent. Still, it’s about the only way to get tickets. Thank God the Czechs have embraced capitalism since the Iron Curtain fell, because the British apparently are above such things. 


Except when it comes to T-shirt and beer prices.

-Jim Caple here 

Saddly such habits and practices are far to familiar for anyone who has ever spent anytime in England. Where the customer comes last and pays for it. While I miss many many things about living abroad, dealing with English admin is not one of them.

(Source: ESPN)

July 28, 2012
"Watching it made me proud to be a Lancastrian. Danny Boyle is from just down the road to me and so much of my life was in this, everything I believe in, the history from the industrial revolution right through to the NHS."

— Wayne Hemmingway, about the opening ceremony. Good. Were there Yorkists? Succession fights? Red and White roses? Proud to be a Lancastrian, havn’t heard that since the 15th Century. Get with the ap Twdrs bro. And, note, he olny believes in History from the Industrial Revolution-NHS. So like 200ish years. Even America is older than that bro. 

(Source: huffingtonpost.co.uk)

July 15, 2012

London. Tiroler Hut. April 2011…and tonight. A hidden gem near Bayswater. Londoners check it out. But watch out. They serve by the litre. And they will make you play cowbells. And sing. And it is awesome. You will not regret your time there. 

July 15, 2012
North Parade. One of my favourite streets in Oxford (Taken with Instagram). Home of The Rose and Crown, On the Hoof, Luna Caprese, Chez Gaston and others. Quiet but fun. RC is one of Oxford’s last true free houses and Luna claims to be her oldest continuously operating eatery. Chez Gaston is a great lazy Sunday lunch and On the Hoof helps one recover from one of the pub’s celebrated impromptu lock ins. 

North Parade. One of my favourite streets in Oxford (Taken with Instagram). Home of The Rose and Crown, On the Hoof, Luna Caprese, Chez Gaston and others. Quiet but fun. RC is one of Oxford’s last true free houses and Luna claims to be her oldest continuously operating eatery. Chez Gaston is a great lazy Sunday lunch and On the Hoof helps one recover from one of the pub’s celebrated impromptu lock ins. 

July 10, 2012
Forgotten bike.  (Taken with Instagram)

Forgotten bike.  (Taken with Instagram)

July 10, 2012
All Souls (Taken with Instagram)

All Souls (Taken with Instagram)

July 6, 2012
Life goes slower in Oxford summers. (Taken with Instagram). Btw, the house at the end of this lane is my dream house in Oxford. My favorite pub across the way, quiet street, big garden, medieavl brickwork, ready access to N Oxford, Stown and the Bod. Really, if someone would loan me a cool 2m I think I could swing it. 

Life goes slower in Oxford summers. (Taken with Instagram). Btw, the house at the end of this lane is my dream house in Oxford. My favorite pub across the way, quiet street, big garden, medieavl brickwork, ready access to N Oxford, Stown and the Bod. Really, if someone would loan me a cool 2m I think I could swing it. 

July 5, 2012
Sir Thomas Bodley (Taken with Instagram)
Straight up dude. Founded the Library. Was Duke of Gloucester. 
From Wikipedia:
Bodley’s greatest achievement was the re-founding of the library at Oxford. In 1470, the library had been presented to the university as a gift from Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, the youngest son of Henry IV. However, during the Reformation of the 1550s, the library had been stripped and abandoned, remaining virtually untouched until the return of Bodley in 1598. The library was later named the Bodleian Library in his honour. He determined, he said, “to take his farewell of state employments and to set up his staff at the library door in Oxford.” In 1598 his offer to restore the old library was accepted by the university. Bodley began his book collection effort in 1600, using the site of the former library above the Divinity School, which was in near ruin.
Although Bodley lived over 400 years ago, modern libraries benefit from some of his ideas and practices.
One important idea that Bodley implemented was the creation of a “Benefactors’ Book” in 1602, which was bound and put on display in the library in 1604. While he did have funding through the wealth of his wife, Ann Ball, and the inheritance he received from his father, Bodley still needed gifts from his affluent friends and colleagues to build his library collection. Although not a completely original idea (as encouragement in 1412 the university chaplain was ordered to say mass for benefactors), Bodley recognized that having the contributor’s name on permanent display was also inspiring. According to Louis B. Wright,

He had prepared a handsome Register of Donations, in vellum, in which the name of every benefactor should be written down in a large and fair hand so all might read. And he kept the Register prominently displayed so that no visitor to the library could escape seeing the generosity of Bodley’s friends. The plan, as it deserved, was a success, for its originator found that, ‘every man bethinks himself how by some good book or other he may be written in the scroll of the benefactors.’[1]

For over four centuries, this innovative idea has continued to motivate friends of libraries everywhere.
Another significant event related to Bodley was the agreement between the Bodleian Library and the Stationer’s Company, in which “the Company agreed to send to the Library a copy of every book entered in their Register on condition that the books thus given might be borrowed if needed for reprinting, and that the books given to the Library by others might be examined, collated and copied by the Company.”[2]
This was the beginning of legal deposit libraries, and today the Bodleian is one of six such libraries in the United Kingdom and Ireland. In 2003, the Copyright Act of 1911 was expanded to include information on CD-ROM and websites. This regulation is in place to ensure the collection and preservation of all published materials as an accurate, up to date historical record.
Read More Here

Sir Thomas Bodley (Taken with Instagram)

Straight up dude. Founded the Library. Was Duke of Gloucester. 

From Wikipedia:

Bodley’s greatest achievement was the re-founding of the library at Oxford. In 1470, the library had been presented to the university as a gift from Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, the youngest son of Henry IV. However, during the Reformation of the 1550s, the library had been stripped and abandoned, remaining virtually untouched until the return of Bodley in 1598. The library was later named the Bodleian Library in his honour. He determined, he said, “to take his farewell of state employments and to set up his staff at the library door in Oxford.” In 1598 his offer to restore the old library was accepted by the university. Bodley began his book collection effort in 1600, using the site of the former library above the Divinity School, which was in near ruin.

Although Bodley lived over 400 years ago, modern libraries benefit from some of his ideas and practices.

One important idea that Bodley implemented was the creation of a “Benefactors’ Book” in 1602, which was bound and put on display in the library in 1604. While he did have funding through the wealth of his wife, Ann Ball, and the inheritance he received from his father, Bodley still needed gifts from his affluent friends and colleagues to build his library collection. Although not a completely original idea (as encouragement in 1412 the university chaplain was ordered to say mass for benefactors), Bodley recognized that having the contributor’s name on permanent display was also inspiring. According to Louis B. Wright,

He had prepared a handsome Register of Donations, in vellum, in which the name of every benefactor should be written down in a large and fair hand so all might read. And he kept the Register prominently displayed so that no visitor to the library could escape seeing the generosity of Bodley’s friends. The plan, as it deserved, was a success, for its originator found that, ‘every man bethinks himself how by some good book or other he may be written in the scroll of the benefactors.’[1]

For over four centuries, this innovative idea has continued to motivate friends of libraries everywhere.

Another significant event related to Bodley was the agreement between the Bodleian Library and the Stationer’s Company, in which “the Company agreed to send to the Library a copy of every book entered in their Register on condition that the books thus given might be borrowed if needed for reprinting, and that the books given to the Library by others might be examined, collated and copied by the Company.”[2]

This was the beginning of legal deposit libraries, and today the Bodleian is one of six such libraries in the United Kingdom and Ireland. In 2003, the Copyright Act of 1911 was expanded to include information on CD-ROM and websites. This regulation is in place to ensure the collection and preservation of all published materials as an accurate, up to date historical record.

July 4, 2012
Turf Tavern. Wet. (Taken with Instagram)

Turf Tavern. Wet. (Taken with Instagram)

July 2, 2012
Wet morning walk. Tanx Oxford. (Taken with Instagram)

Wet morning walk. Tanx Oxford. (Taken with Instagram)

July 1, 2012

Oxford x Instagram

Summer Morning c. Rad Cam. 

(Source: )

June 29, 2012
The Shooting Party by Isabel Colegate provides an interesting counterpoint to Fitzgerald’s This Side of Paradise. Both novels dissect upper class society on the eve of World War I. Both are acutely aware of their characters own awareness of standing on the edge of something. Both are written by class insiders too. Whereas Fitzgerald writes, quite literally, from the trenches, Colegate writes in retrospection but from a culture- post WWII Britain- that explicitly rejected the values and habits of the gentry.  Fitzgerald caused a stir by writing about times as they were, Colegate’s audacity lay in writing about a deeply unpopular time, and in the daring to suggest that rich people might have inner lives too. Now, however, is not the time to debate the merits of ‘working class’ fiction. The power of Colegate’s work rests in its simplicity. It covers 24 hours in Nettleby Park. The action never leaves Oxfordshire, nor does the author resort to any particularly ‘literary’ or avant guard trappings. She simply tells a story of a society on the edge of collapse. Sir Randolf Nettleby hosts a variety of guests for a grand fall shoot. His goal is simply for things to go off right. He represents, in many ways, the best of the old guard. He treats everyone with civility and his humanity has a way of making friends of enemies. His aim is not to impress his guests with the greatest shoot in history nor to prove his skill as a marksmen, but to simply be a good host. Unfortunately society in the form of his guests will not allow that. Competition, grossly ungentlemanly in Sir Randolf’s eyes, breaks out among two of the leading lights. Small, inadvertent slights amplify each other and finally reach a tragic, accidental, and avoidable crescendo that grimly foreshadows the coming slaughter in Europe. I guess what strikes me in both Fitzgerald and Colegate is the sense of something coming. The sense that an old world is fading and a new approaching and that the new is entirely unknown. Sir Randolf’s impulse to ‘head for the hills’ is understandable, but ultimately his choice not to is as heroic as his life will allow him to be. Both books are good reading for our times, reassurance that things have changed before and Colegate’s look back past two wars is proof that humans can endure and need not head for the hills just yet. 
PS, Downton fans will eat this up. It is an episode in book form. 

The Shooting Party by Isabel Colegate provides an interesting counterpoint to Fitzgerald’s This Side of Paradise. Both novels dissect upper class society on the eve of World War I. Both are acutely aware of their characters own awareness of standing on the edge of something. Both are written by class insiders too. Whereas Fitzgerald writes, quite literally, from the trenches, Colegate writes in retrospection but from a culture- post WWII Britain- that explicitly rejected the values and habits of the gentry.  Fitzgerald caused a stir by writing about times as they were, Colegate’s audacity lay in writing about a deeply unpopular time, and in the daring to suggest that rich people might have inner lives too. Now, however, is not the time to debate the merits of ‘working class’ fiction. The power of Colegate’s work rests in its simplicity. It covers 24 hours in Nettleby Park. The action never leaves Oxfordshire, nor does the author resort to any particularly ‘literary’ or avant guard trappings. She simply tells a story of a society on the edge of collapse. Sir Randolf Nettleby hosts a variety of guests for a grand fall shoot. His goal is simply for things to go off right. He represents, in many ways, the best of the old guard. He treats everyone with civility and his humanity has a way of making friends of enemies. His aim is not to impress his guests with the greatest shoot in history nor to prove his skill as a marksmen, but to simply be a good host. Unfortunately society in the form of his guests will not allow that. Competition, grossly ungentlemanly in Sir Randolf’s eyes, breaks out among two of the leading lights. Small, inadvertent slights amplify each other and finally reach a tragic, accidental, and avoidable crescendo that grimly foreshadows the coming slaughter in Europe. I guess what strikes me in both Fitzgerald and Colegate is the sense of something coming. The sense that an old world is fading and a new approaching and that the new is entirely unknown. Sir Randolf’s impulse to ‘head for the hills’ is understandable, but ultimately his choice not to is as heroic as his life will allow him to be. Both books are good reading for our times, reassurance that things have changed before and Colegate’s look back past two wars is proof that humans can endure and need not head for the hills just yet. 

PS, Downton fans will eat this up. It is an episode in book form. 

June 28, 2012
The Wayfarer’s Dole: A Day in Winchester

Free beer alert- The Hospital of St. Cross in Winchester has been dispensing The Wayfarer’s Dole gratis since 1136. I love my work, it takes me to such interesting places, on Wednesday I spent the day in Winchester. Ostensibly I was there to analyze a manuscript at Winchester College- which I did do- but I made sure I got up early enough to have time to nose around before my appointment at the Archives.

Read More

June 26, 2012
Country rambles with my two favorite walking partners. I heartily endorse 24 hours split evenly between sleep and  walks followed by good English cooking as the best way to mitigate the ill effects of international travel. 

Country rambles with my two favorite walking partners. I heartily endorse 24 hours split evenly between sleep and  walks followed by good English cooking as the best way to mitigate the ill effects of international travel. 

3:11pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/ZmxX6yO9LEY4
  
Filed under: personal england walks dog 
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