It's been blowing half a gale and chucking it down with rain all day today, so the furthest I have been is the compost heap! Best to be inside looking out at it.
This morning I was sat up in my sewing room, trying to select the best half square triangles for the table topper. Some I unpicked and added an off white material to balance the design as I had sewn all the charm pack together using the off white print I had to balance the designs, until running out. Now I have unpicked a few which used up the plain fabrics - green/yellow/lilac/dark red - and combined with some off white I had at home.
I was looking across to the woodland and desperately wishing for the first hints of green. The Sycamore by the edge of the orchard has tiny green leaf-tips so perhaps more leaves aren't too far away.
Now the title today refers to the chapter in Robert Macfarlane's book The Old Ways, which I have been listening to on Audible in the car. I had only read perhaps half the book, so thought it would be nice to treat myself to it to listen to. It is Chapter 8 - Gneiss. Perhaps it isn't so much the content or subject of the chapter as the character, Steve, that it is written about. I have to say he wouldn't be my choice as a partner in life, as no way could I live with this: (turn away if you are eating a meal or don't care for skeletons and remains).
"On the south-astern coast of the Isle of Harris, in a three-house village called Geocrab, behind a fuchsia hedge, in a chilly thin-walled workshop, hanging by a meat hook from a rafter is a human skeleton. Its 206 bones are held together by sinews of braided sea-grass, which, as they pass through the vertebrae, are knotted alternately left over right and right over left. Stitched onto the bones are patches of meat cut from a dead calf, which together form a rough over-body. At the time of their first sewing - when they had been recently preserved using a solution of formaldehyde and sodium fluoride, administered with a horse syringe and prepared according to a mix-ratio perfected by the members of a mid-1920s zoological expedition to the Amazon - the meat patches were still plumply muscular." The Old Ways, Robert Macfarlane, published by Hamish Hamilton, 2012. This chapter continues writing about Steve and his artistic endeavours and ideas and he sounds a most unusual person. His end game plan for this skeleton is to take the top off of a giant boulder, hollow it out, hang the skeleton inside and then put the top back on. An idea so challenging it sounds almost impossible.
So, with this book, I am realizing how humdrum my life is by comparison, and my utter ignorance about some of the people and places Macfarlane mentions. At least I am on the same page when he writes/speaks of Edward Thomas and am completely linked up and educated about his poetry, prose and character.
Anyway, spare a thought for Tam tonight as she has been at the Hospital with Rosie since lunchtime, as Rosie has a very bad limp (swollen knee) and the GP thought it needed checking out as she had been sore on that leg before. I hope that nothing nasty has been found . . .

Well, I suppose if you are going to do a prank, go in boots and all :O
ReplyDeleteWe had a bit of traffic today - but you have an appointment for the tip?
I do hope Rosie gets better soon
Yes, an appt. for the tip. I didn't reckon on it taking damn near half an hour to go less than 1/4 mile across town though.
DeleteI hope Rosie is okay and will say a prayer that whatever is causing the limp is not too bad. I will say my live is very boring, hoping our trip improves that a bit come the late summer.
ReplyDeleteGod bless.
I have had an interesting life, more unusual than many, and a few adventures along the way. I am NOT as well read as Macfarlane though, and certainly not as well travelled. Where are you off to late summer?
DeleteOh My Goodness! That piece of writing is bizarre! I'd be buying the book under a boulder - as soon as the weather improves! Meanwhile, find something soothing - a Romantic poet perhaps, or a favourite childhood story.
ReplyDeleteIt was indeed. The rest of the book is very good, it was just this particular person who was peculiar - he reckoned to have eaten many many different sorts of wild birds, from heron (very very fishy) to blackbird. He had barrels of things rotting down to be later used in his art work . . .
DeleteI'm now crossing fingers that Rosie is OK and home again.
ReplyDeleteMe too - she was in overnight . . .
ReplyDeleteI do hope Rosie is back again at home and her bad knee diagnosed, must be frightening for both of them. I read Macfarlane years ago but can't remember that passage but will listen to the book on Audible.
ReplyDeleteStill at the hospital, having had to have another blood test (everything else was clear). Do listen to the Old Ways again. I am still absolutely bowled over by his bravery at walking out into the sea towards Doggerland!!!
ReplyDeleteVery odd piece of writing!
ReplyDeleteYou are very patient with your projects, I’m terribly impatient, unpicking etc not in my vocabulary.
Very best wishes to T and little R x
Alison in Devon x