Loving these on point descriptions of my home county, helping me to see it more clearlybig council estates in every village. 100% sold off. not one left in public hands. you can tell by the construction and the massive gardens. a layer of history. they cost 400k now. a type of person is dying off, other types of people are being created in their place. all these rural people whose house has earned more then they have. living inside a small fortune that can only be cashed in if they move two hundred miles away from home. the pubs are almost all gone, there are more and more coffee shops instead.
@zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks@zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks@zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooks @zerobooksLoving these on point descriptions of my home county, helping me to see it more clearly
And Lewis also wrote the space trilogy - plus a load of more highbrow things which are really meditations on religion... or perhaps just Christianity...it could be argued that the inklings ( and by association, Oxfordshire ) have had more of an effect on modern culture than the Bloomsbury set or some other artsy fartsy London clique - I doubt film adaptations of Virginia Woolfe have been watched as by many people as the Hobbit / LOTR or even the various Lion, Witch and Wardrobe TV programmes...
Yeah I know, I just wanted to call him "that guy from Blur."Alex James
They were aligned to the new labour north London clique iircThe Primrose Hill set was a 90s tabloid one: Kate Moss, Jude Law, the Gallaghers, Patsy Kensit and a bunch of others.
Choppand SnortemChipping Norton is notorious, isn't it — where Rebekkkah Brooks and Jeremy Clarkson live
"Please do not dispose of unwanted crowns here, as they can end up stuck on swans' necks."Here's Buckinghamshire's
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What do they use them for, though? Eating? Shooting? Or does Randy Andy have even more unspeakable predilections than the ones we know about?Apparently Buckinghamshire was known for breeding swans for the Royals.
Swan meat was regarded as a luxury food in England in the reign of Elizabeth I. A recipe for baked swan survives from that time: "To bake a Swan Scald it and take out the bones, and parboil it, then season it very well with Pepper, Salt and Ginger, then lard it, and put it in a deep Coffin of Rye Paste with store of Butter, close it and bake it very well, and when it is baked, fill up the Vent-hole with melted Butter, and so keep it; serve it in as you do the Beef-Pie."[35]
The Illustrious Brotherhood of Our Blessed Lady, a religious confraternity which existed in 's-Hertogenbosch in the late Middle Ages, had 'sworn members', also called 'swan-brethren' because they used to donate a swan for the yearly banquet.