The best Christmas card I received this year... |
Saturday, 24 December 2011
Sunday, 18 December 2011
Stocking Fillers...
A special Christmas treat. Festive themed stories (written
in no more than ten minutes) by my far more talented friend and my own paltry
effort.
Christmas Crackers
Christmas Crackers
Crackers
are a necessary component of any Christmas table spread. Perched in between
plates, one to each, they perch and await opening. The brilliance of crackers
is in their ability to immediately stimulate Christmas cheer. Opening crackers
is a sociable event, which brings a deal of confusion and... Well, excitement
is too strong a word, so let's say motion, to any given table. Now, I come with
a theory. My theory is that crackers are essentially designed to promote cheer,
from every angle. First of all, there's the opening. Maybe no laughs yet, but a
good deal of movement – a nice start point. Then there's the confusion of
working out who “won” each given cracker pull, and picking out the junk inside
them. This is important. Again, participants need exchange objects, move things
around, and generally try to make right out of mess. Once everything is
established, Christmas 'hats' firmly on heads, there comes the meat of the
crackers. The joke.
Now, you may not think the joke important. Meaningless and
silly, even. However, they're integral to my theory. The jokes are inevitably
the same as the previous year, so people will remember them. Either that, or
they're so predictable that at least one person at the table will blurt out the
answer before it's revealed. The crucial role that these jokes – along with the
toy or whatever else – plays is this; they make people feel good about
themselves. “What a stupid joke!” one man might yell, while a lady rolls her
eyes about Sherlock Bones, the skeletal investigator. These jokes are so poor,
that people will easily make more witty and elusive gags about and around them.
It's a perfect set-up to hearty table discussion.
Some might imagine the writer of these jokes as a dunce,
flicking through a book of unoriginal puns and scribbling down obvious ones,
eager to get it done. Perhaps they have a more realistic image, of a lone
marketing worker copying down a list from an archive. Regardless, they were all
written a long time ago. Myself, I like to imagine a weathered old man with a
great long beard, a cheeky twinkle in his eye as he pictures tables full of
people mocking his gags. This old man doesn't mind when you call him an idiot.
He doesn't mind because that just means you've got the joke, and he's laughing
with you.
* * *
Head ducked against the bitter wind he moved quickly across
the icy street. Brown slush collected in piles where mud and melting snow
mingled together. His haste caused him to lose his footing momentarily on the treacherously
broken cobbles and his breath misted before his eyes in a grunt of surprise. Once
his boots had again found safe purchase he glanced up at the faint candle glow coming
from the houses that lined the street. They flickered contentedly in the early
evening gloom. There was only one house that he was looking for though. One
candle, one window and one welcome. His feet were damp, the cold long ago
taking away all feeling from his toes, yet a warm feeling stirred in his heart.
As he continued forward his careworn face eased into a smile and swollen,
reddened fingers rapped on a wooden door. It creaked open slowly at first
before finally being swung back impatiently. He found himself engulfed by sudden
warmth. A fire crackled within the room merrily, soft arms reached out embracing
him, and a gentle voice whispered in his ear, “Merry Christmas, my love.”
Sunday, 11 December 2011
A Work In Progress
I am currently drafting the next instalment of Death to
Palaeography, in which things get a little hairy for our palaeographer.
“Good God girl! Are you good at nothing?!”He exploded.
“Actually I’m quite a good harpist.” She replied indignantly.
The corners of his stern mouth twitched with amusement.
It seems however a little like tempting to fate to post something in which ‘death’ and ‘palaeography’ feature together in the same week that I have my own palaeography exam. *Gulp* Wish me luck!
“Good God girl! Are you good at nothing?!”He exploded.
“Actually I’m quite a good harpist.” She replied indignantly.
The corners of his stern mouth twitched with amusement.
It seems however a little like tempting to fate to post something in which ‘death’ and ‘palaeography’ feature together in the same week that I have my own palaeography exam. *Gulp* Wish me luck!
Sunday, 4 December 2011
Everywhere Peace, Everywhere Serenity
After a stressful week of cramming Latin nouns and verbs into my tiny brain, and with the knowledge that the next few weeks hold equally as much deadline-fuelled fear, I remember with fondness the self-contained, quiet isolation of the Cisterican monks. Where hidden away in the peaceful beauty of the Yorkshire countryside was Byland Abbey, which a handful of monks once called their home.
Byland Abbey, West Front with rose window. |
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