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Kensington Gardens
This is the third time we’ve stayed at this hotel. I’d assumed that the open space at the end of the road was Hyde Park. It isn’t; it’s Kensington Gardens. I’d always pictured Kensington Gardens as shrubberies and rose beds, but it turns out to be parkland- lawns and paths and bits of art.
The most prominent bit of art is the Albert Memorial. Oh my! For most of the 20th century it was mocked as a knick-knack- an over-sized version of the sort of thing the Victorians liked to put on their mantle-pieces. Well, yes, but whether you think it’s beautiful or not, it’s certainly interesting- an expression in stone and mosaic of the high Victorian world view. It has huge statuery groups representing the four continents (no Australia or Antarctica) also smaller groups representing commerce, manufacturies, agriculture and something else- and that’s just round the edges of the central spire where Albert sits in his capsule, freshly-applied gold leaf gleaming, like a divine astronaut awaiting lift-off.
Albert was a good thing. A driven and hard-working man, an amateur musician and architect, who helped invent the modern Christmas by introducing the Christmas tree into Britain.
I took pictures. But I can't upload them until I get home.
As I sit here writing this I’ve got George Bush on TV telling me how he has a mission from beyond the stars. I wonder what his memorial will look like…..
The most prominent bit of art is the Albert Memorial. Oh my! For most of the 20th century it was mocked as a knick-knack- an over-sized version of the sort of thing the Victorians liked to put on their mantle-pieces. Well, yes, but whether you think it’s beautiful or not, it’s certainly interesting- an expression in stone and mosaic of the high Victorian world view. It has huge statuery groups representing the four continents (no Australia or Antarctica) also smaller groups representing commerce, manufacturies, agriculture and something else- and that’s just round the edges of the central spire where Albert sits in his capsule, freshly-applied gold leaf gleaming, like a divine astronaut awaiting lift-off.
Albert was a good thing. A driven and hard-working man, an amateur musician and architect, who helped invent the modern Christmas by introducing the Christmas tree into Britain.
I took pictures. But I can't upload them until I get home.
As I sit here writing this I’ve got George Bush on TV telling me how he has a mission from beyond the stars. I wonder what his memorial will look like…..
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Funny you should say that ...
http://www.strobes.uklinux.net/4/
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If he has his way, it'll be a bunch of my generation sitting on park benches and living in cardboard boxes in our declining years.
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I plan to watch Miyazaki animation movies all day long, my little protest against the inauguration activities today, which have taken over the television.
(When I think hard about it, I get really scared about social security reform. My retirement was possible in part because of an assumption that my benefits wouldn't be cut.
Right now I'm making the most I will ever make again. I'd hoped for at least a tiny cost of living increase each year in social security, but now I can look forward instead to seeing those benefits decrease and decrease, until I am living on Raman noodles and cutting my pills in half.)
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I wish it was some alien from Titan giving Bush the 'mission from beyond the stars'--say, the plans for a space ship to take us there.
No way. Even if aliens beamed themselves onto the rug in the Oval Office, Bush would just have security make them beam right back to Titan.
He's got God's agenda to accomplish first, and he's got his sleeves rolled up.
God's on his side. He knows what he has to do.
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knows no doubt.
P.S. I'm reading a novel by Connie Willis called Passage. And guess what, it's about scientists investigating NDEs. I don't know where she's going yet- but down some odd byways I think.
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I'd wish to be able to see it soon, but that would mean that we'd be stuck with Cheney for the remainder of the four years.
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