Grandson is in Lincoln with 6 assignments to complete and several exams coming up so local elections not a priority with him at moment and as he hasn't aranged a proxy vote or postal vote his vote will remain unused this time round the rest of us are going to vote when Judith's finished work.
As for the bank holiday as Judith works Wednesday to Friday and I'm retired we have all Mondays off any way.
It is called the May Day Bank Holiday.
Thanks, @Bluetit1802 .
@Guzzler , about the only holiday I try to actually keep now is Christmas. As for Easter and Good Friday and Whitsunday/Pentecost, I sort of observe them, in passing, as it were. I used to go to church for them all but haven't done that since I moved to the city where I live now. It's too hard to get to church. I miss it, but about half of what I miss is the friends I was with at those services. For the rest, I love the hymns and the liturgy, but it's too difficult to get to church on my own.
I visited my old church today, just walking around on my own, enjoying the quiet and the beauty. If asked, I would say I do not believe in ghosts, but at times and places like today, I realize there is ... something. I could almost actually hear echoes and see glimmers of activities I took part in there. And the portraits of past clergy called up memories of more; like John Lennon said, "Some are dead and some are living," and some, well, I don't know where they are.
But that is what Easter is all about, isn't it?
No he didn't annoying thing is some of his friends did and voted in Lincoln.Did he not register for a vote in Lincoln? Both my grandchildren have done this in Manchester where they are at uni, even though they come home in the holidays. As it happened, the grandson ended up with poll card at home and in Manchester. He could have voted twice.
I took the opportunity while visiting Keiran at Lincoln to have a look round the cathedral was interested to see it as my 19th great grandmother Katherine Swynford is actually interred there.In the city where I grew up there are two cathedrals neither of which are very old but even as a child I would go in on my own. It sounds odd but though I have been an atheist for about thirty years I still enjoy the sense of peace and calm that sitting in a place of worship brings. These days, though, it is mediaeval churches, abbeys and castles I visit (but these are events that have become very rare). Winchester is a cathedral on my bucket list as is Exeter cathedral. One day.
I took the opportunity while visiting Keiran at Lincoln to have a look round the cathedral was interested to see it as my 19th great grandmother Katherine Swynford is actually interred there.
I also like Liverpool RC cathedral went there last when my son was playing trombone in his school band at the cathedral .
Exeter cathedral is well worth the visit not been to Winchester yet.
I took the opportunity while visiting Keiran at Lincoln to have a look round the cathedral was interested to see it as my 19th great grandmother Katherine Swynford is actually interred there.
I also like Liverpool RC cathedral went there last when my son was playing trombone in his school band at the cathedral .
Exeter cathedral is well worth the visit not been to Winchester yet.
Castles to see before I expire, Stirling, Edinburgh, Ludlow and the ruins of Tintagel.. Then in succession the coastal castles of Wales the first of which has to be Beaumaris.I regret that I haven't visited any of England's medieval cathedrals. I have visited St Paul's, and Westminster Cathedral, but they're both relatively new. I've also visited Westminster Abbey, and the lovely St Edward's church in Stow-on-the-Wold.
And Notre-Dame de Paris.
Castles to see before I expire, Stirling, Edinburgh, Ludlow and the ruins of Tintagel.. Then in succession the coastal castles of Wales the first of which has to be Beaumaris.
I think that you would love a visit to the Holy Island of Lindisfarne. Dripping wet in history and a vista that surely can't be beaten. Close by the castles of Dunstanburgh and Bamborough and not so very far to York Minster. Sigh...I would like to see Caernarfon and Caerphilly. And Warkworth, and Neuschwanstein.
I think that you would love a visit to the Holy Island of Lindisfarne. Dripping wet in history and a vista that surely can't be beaten. Close by the castles of Dunstanburgh and Bamborough and not so very far to York Minster. Sigh...
Reminds me of the song Bobbie Shafto's gone to sea.And Brancepeth Castle, which features in one of my favorite poems.
.
Reminds me of the song Bobbie Shafto's gone to sea.
The song is said to supposedly relate the story of how he broke the heart of Bridget Belasyse of Brancepeth Castle, County Durham, where his brother Thomas was rector, when he married Anne Duncombe of Duncombe Park in Yorkshire. Bridget Belasyse is said to have died two weeks after hearing the news, although other sources claim that she died a fortnight before the wedding of pulmonary tuberculosis.
Even if the song was not composed about him, his supporters almost certainly added a verse for the 1761 elections with the lyrics:
Bobby Shafto's looking out,
All his ribbons flew about,
All the ladies gave a shout,
Hey for Bobby Shafto!
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?