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rusty

15th November 2015, 18:33
Our local lifeboat launched this afternoon in response to a "shout". When they returned to shore they discovered that their cars had been ticketed by a parking warden!
They had parked on yellow lines, but for heaven's sake!
The council are " investigating"!
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pigale

15th November 2015, 19:04
Rosalind, I too can remember huge passages from Racine, or Corneille (our famous tragedists - I'm sure you have heard of them), and a great deal of poems by various great men. Memory does work that way - often easier to remember things of long ago than things that happened the day before.

Having said that I have always been blessed with a good memory and still am - the main thing is to make it work as often as possible.




Rusty, this parking ticket lark is ludicrous !
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elle

15th November 2015, 19:16
Hi, Rusty!
Yes, it was very sad news - I've been a bit tied up for a while, dealing with the aftermath and talking to various folk.
Quick for Margaret, but a shock for family and friends she leaves behind.

I remember watching a film about Isadora Duncan - oh, many years ago! Isadora was played by Vanessa Redgrave. I thought then that it was very good. Did you see it?
I didn't know that about her children. You are a mine of information.
I'm glad your horse racing went well - even if Faugheen came second. That is good for Willie that the first three horses home were all trained by him!
I liked the "walking on water" and the "wellie" bit!
I'm afraid that I haven't heard of "The Guns of August" - is it about the First World War? You will be becoming an expert in that field with all the specialised reading that you have been doing!

I've just read what you said about the lifeboat being called out and the crew being issued with parking tickets!
I'm surprised that the men don't have cards to put onto their windscreens - like doctors do? saying "On Call" or something equally relevant?
But I'm sure it will all get sorted - otherwise no- one will get rescued in the future!!!!
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elle

15th November 2015, 19:21
Ros, thank you for your condolences.
Strangely enough , the poem you were quoting is relevant, as our friend's name is Margaret......very apt.

And your Shakespearean quote... I can't remember the next line, either, but it's Lorenzo speaking, from "the Merchant of Venice" , isn' it?
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rusty

15th November 2015, 19:38
Last Sunday a lot of folk got booked at a Remembrance service, but their tickets were scrubbed the following day.
I am not sure what system the lifeboatmen use but obviously something went wrong today. The boats (there are two, a deep sea one, and an inshore one) are launched regularly.
The inshore boat is at the Road Bridge regularly on standby, when some poor soul is threatening to jump off.
We lost a boat and all the crew many years ago.
The Mona in 1959.
I did not see the film about Isadora, but she was involved in a few road accidents.
Yes, the Guns of August is about the start if the Great War.
The author died in 1989. It gets superb reviews.
It is in some lists as one of the top 100 non-fiction books of the last century.
Yes, I loved the crack about Willie and the wellies
Humour is still alive and well in France!
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elle

15th November 2015, 19:57
Will this be the Tay Road Bridge, where the life boat is more or less on stand -by? (my Geography knowledge is very poor!)
Why so many would be suicides from there? Is it easily accessible for the public to climb up/ jump off?
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chrise

15th November 2015, 20:11
McGonagall wrote a poem about the Tay Bridge:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Tay_Bridge_Disaster
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elle

15th November 2015, 20:29
Ah yes, I have encountered the incorrigible William McGonagall before !
Reputedly the "worst poet" in History!
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rusty

15th November 2015, 20:53
Yes, Elle, the Road Bridge.
Why there, I don't know.
It is not difficult to get to. There is a walkway all the way across.
Bridge is about one and a half miles long, over the river.
Potential suicides are not unusual at all. I think that most of them are talked into not jumping, thankfully.
Very disturbed people.
When these incidents occur, the Bridge is closed to traffic and lifeboats are in attendance. All part of the Emergency Services.
It causes chaos for the motorists, trying to cross, obviously.
The other thing that closes the Bridge is high winds.
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elle

15th November 2015, 22:17
Hi, Rusty!
I have just come off the phone after my weekly 'hour long' chat with my cousin in Blackburn! I don't know what we find to talk about, but the time just whizzes by!
(She was another person I had to tell about Margaret's death as they also knew each other )
So was this the bridge that was closed to traffic the other night when you had a visit from 'Abigail'?
Is the bridge close to you? Does your (elder) son have to cross it when he comes to see you?
Our 'wind' has died down and the rain didn't arrive, so not too bad a day here .
I'm getting stuck into "The Life Of Pi" now.... only about a quarter of the way through as yet.......I'm planning to watch the film (of the book) on TV on Tuesday (I think that is the day?).
I'm hoping for reasonable correlation between book and film! You know how I hate it when there are major discrepancies!
Are you aware that there is tennis showing each afternoon on BBC2 all week? The ATP World Tour Finals held at the O2 in London.
I'm just telling you in case you want/ have time/ to watch!
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