things I've learned in Britain
Nov. 19th, 2016 07:55 pmthat are not related to mobile phones:
1. At the feet of the statue of Dorothy L. Sayers, there is a statue of her cat.
2. Sheep may safely graze on the burial mounds at Sutton Hoo.
3. Materials conservation at a historic house converted into a museum is a lot more like housekeeping than it is in the academic libraries where I know it.
4. If the essential eating-while-standing-outdoors food in Hawaii is a shaved ice on the beach at Haleiwa in August, the equivalent in England is fish and chips on the shore of the North Sea in November. I have now had both.
5. The only dilapidated building in the entirety of Stratford-upon-Avon's neat and clean town centre is Shakespeare's (supposed) birthplace.
6. There is an entire book on the history of the London Underground map. I now have a copy of this book. (Are you not surprised?)
7. The Two Noble Kinsmen, by Shakespeare and Fletcher, is a much better Fletcher play than it is a Shakespeare one.
8. On the other hand, the unpromisingly dry Milton Comus was alchemized at the Globe Theatre's indoor playhouse into a riotous hoot.
9. When Charles Darwin published On the Origin of Species, he had not yet grown his famous beard. You'd never recognise him.
10. A transplanted Yorkshirewoman explained to me that the last words of the song lyric "On Ilkla Moor baht 'at" mean "without a hat." I had had no idea, and had guessed it meant "about eight o'clock."
1. At the feet of the statue of Dorothy L. Sayers, there is a statue of her cat.
2. Sheep may safely graze on the burial mounds at Sutton Hoo.
3. Materials conservation at a historic house converted into a museum is a lot more like housekeeping than it is in the academic libraries where I know it.
4. If the essential eating-while-standing-outdoors food in Hawaii is a shaved ice on the beach at Haleiwa in August, the equivalent in England is fish and chips on the shore of the North Sea in November. I have now had both.
5. The only dilapidated building in the entirety of Stratford-upon-Avon's neat and clean town centre is Shakespeare's (supposed) birthplace.
6. There is an entire book on the history of the London Underground map. I now have a copy of this book. (Are you not surprised?)
7. The Two Noble Kinsmen, by Shakespeare and Fletcher, is a much better Fletcher play than it is a Shakespeare one.
8. On the other hand, the unpromisingly dry Milton Comus was alchemized at the Globe Theatre's indoor playhouse into a riotous hoot.
9. When Charles Darwin published On the Origin of Species, he had not yet grown his famous beard. You'd never recognise him.
10. A transplanted Yorkshirewoman explained to me that the last words of the song lyric "On Ilkla Moor baht 'at" mean "without a hat." I had had no idea, and had guessed it meant "about eight o'clock."
no subject
Date: 2016-11-19 11:59 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2016-11-20 06:49 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2016-11-20 11:41 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2016-11-21 06:26 am (UTC)I did not know that. I approve.
no subject
Date: 2016-11-21 10:48 pm (UTC)