Monday, 20 January 2014

Catch up


It’s been an awful long time since I did anything about the blog – the reasons are many and various. We had a succession of guests over Christmas/New Year, and then in the first week of January, went South.  There were several reasons for this. One was to see the Greatest Living Shakespearean, who was passing through London en route to I Tatti and had an evening spare, there were various work related considerations, and also, there had been an SOS from Rory the Sculptor. Two or three years ago, he was commissioned to produce seven martyrs for the screen of St Albans Cathedral, replacing the ones destroyed at the Reformation. They are a mixed bag of Protestants and Catholics; Oscar Romero, Alban Roe, Amphibalus and Alban (inevitably), George Tankerfield, a protestant martyr I hadn’t heard of who was burned just outside the cathedral, Elizabeth of Russia,  and Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Rory took it into his head to use the Professor as the model for Alban Roe, noted for, among other things, playing cards with his warders the night before he was hung drawn and quartered. Rory was most urgent that, as the project neared the finishing line, he needed to see the Professor again, so off we went to Cirencester. It’s pretty soggy up here, quite uncharacteristically so, but the south-west was completely waterlogged. One of our friends in Oxford reported that her garden was completely full of water and she had sandbags at the back door, and certainly, the view from a westbound train was a dismal vista of silvery sheets of water with dispirited bushes and trees marking the lines of what would normally be roads. It was lovely to see Rory, but after lunch, we took off in his spectacularly decrepit car for his workshop. This is a congeries of disused sheds in a corner of the local agricultural college, and is entirely without heating. Icy mist shimmered up from the saturated ground, and we got colder and colder. It was all very interesting, we considered Elizabeth of Russia’s nose and what could be done about it, and I was even, I think, able to be mildly useful on the topic of Roman military uniform; the Professor was rephotographed from all angles, and eventually we tottered off, frozen, in the direction of London, and from thence, home. Where what with one thing and another, we both went down with hideous colds. Apart from unavoidables, invigilating and marking, we are both staying as quiet as possible and trying to get better. I’m mostly all right now, though the Professor is still making noises like a sea lion. But the first of the snowdrops are out, and it has finally stopped raining.

PS: the ever helpful Tony discovered why we had electrical problems on Christmas day, which was a bit of a relief. Not the bothy, I am thankful to say, since fault-finding would mean digging up 60 yards of buried cable, but the little oil fired heater in the greenhouse, which has gone rogue in some fashion. Easily replaced. We had forgotten that all the outside electrics come under 'bothy' in terms of the circuit breaker layout

4 comments:

  1. I am very intrigued by the inclusion of Oscar Romero in the pantheon. I'm off to El Salvador in the coming weeks and we always make a pilgrimage to his little home on the hospital grounds where he lived, and died.

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  2. Oscar Romero, the only one of Rory's subjects within living memory, was clearly someone very much out of the ordinary. Rory was deeply pleased that Romero's brother, when he paid a visit to the work in progress, thought it a good likeness and truthful. It's a new dimension in horror for a monumental sculptor in that line of business if there's anyone in a position to object. BTW, I'm feeling miles better, the Prof is coughing up lumps and not yet out of the wood. I hope you are safe and well in El Salvador.

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  3. I go with a Habitat for Humanity group from Charlotte that are old friends. They have been going a couple of times a year for 20 years now and the trip is extremely well organized. We who have been going in February for many years are a kind of "cult" group and have made good friends with the staff there, who are brilliant. They take incredibly good care of their gringos. What a wonderful compliment to have Romero's brother's nod. The nuns at the hospital, by the way, have recently started to really put a "sell" on the sainthood push for him. It's been interesting to see how what they say when you are there has changed over the years. Henry was sick again with the "crud" going around here, but avoided the actual flu, which is also rampant. I have, thus far, remained unscathed. Good wishes to the Professor on his recovery!

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