Archive for January, 2009

Acrostic / Cross Sticks / Cross Stitch Samplers

Posted by admin on January 30th, 2009

An acrostic is not a cross stick or even a Cross Stitch which is one of the oldest forms of embroidery. Curiously Acrostic Poems/Prose are popular subjects for embroidery when a Cross Stitch will be used! Acrostic Puzzles are also very popular.

The more common form of acrostic is a poem where the first letter of each line forms a word (often a name, or a religious slogan) when read vertically. The term itself comes from the Greek word acros which means “at the end” and stichos, a line, such as a line of poetry. A word square acrostic is where words or phrases read the same vertically as horizontally, rather like a crossword puzzle.

Valentine Acrostic

Vows are forever.

Age will not impede your beauty.

Love is ours for a lifetime.

Embrace me in your arms.

Never let me go.

Tomorrow is ours.

I will always love you.

Near to my heart you will stay.

Every day with you is a treasure.

TREE by Ryan Healy

The branches stretch wide overhead,
Revealing patches of blue through the green.
Everyone should lie down beneath a tree and
Enjoy the view from here.

Stroud (A town in England (of Cider With Rosie fame)) by Paul Hansford -

Set among hills in the midst of five valleyS,
This peaceful little market town we inhabiT
Refuses (vociferously!) to be a conformeR.
Once home of the cloth it gave its name tO,
Uphill and down again its streets lead yoU.
Despite its faults it leaves us all charmeD.

Acrostic Puzzles are very common where you find the answer from the vertical letters (not necessarily the first character)

Acrostic Sampler (Embroidery/needlework)

Acrostic Sampler

Acrostic Sampler

The Sampler depicts trees and grapevines and a floral vine border surrounding an acrostic verse for “virtue.”

ref http://www.hawthorneinsalem.org/

Samplers were embroidered by teenage girls to show their domestic skills they usually had a religious or moral theme. They are often collectors items

Three Survivors from WW1, Now Just Two

Posted by admin on January 30th, 2009

WW1 was one of the greatest disasters ever to fall on mankind. Millions marched to war, millions died of war of hunger of illness. If you were in a front line regiment it was often a miracle to survive more than a few weeks. Men or rather Boys died at 16, 17, 18 many never even saw an enemy soldier and many so young they had never had a girlfriend.

Of those who died and had a sweetheart or young wife, she was very likely to remain a Widow or spinster for the rest of her life, there being such a shortage of men in that age group.

William Stone, one of the three remaining veterans of the great war, was laid to rest in a churchyard in Oxfordshire.
William Stone of Oxfordshire has just been buried (Jan 2009) leaving Henry Allingham, 112, and Harry Patch the Last Fighting Tommy, 110, as the last flesh and blood links to the 1914-1918 conflict, and robbed Britain of the only living man to have fought in both world wars.

There are no Axis survivors left at all and just a few Americans.

So death claims them all in the end, the heroes, the cowards, the lucky, the long-livers , words fail me.

Suddenly I can Remember Jokes

Posted by admin on January 22nd, 2009

I’ve been pushing my boundaries in ALL directions recently. I’ve even learnt to remember and tell jokes, it’s great fun hearing adults groan and kids laugh

I’ve started with two old favorites :-

Knock Knock Who’s There

A Man Walks Into a Bar

Let me know if you’ve got any of your own

Dr Who : Music of the Spheres

Posted by admin on January 15th, 2009

Musica universalis (lit. universal music, or music of the spheres) is an ancient philosophical concept that regards proportions in the movements of celestial bodies – the Sun, Moon, and planets – as a form of musica (the Medieval Latin name for music). This ‘music’ is not literally audible, but simply a harmonic and/or mathematical concept (Quote Wikipedia).

Dr Who has taken the concept literally and why not and “David Tennant” has written his own Ode to the Universe forĀ  the marvellous Doctor Who Proms 2008 .

You can see all this on YouTube along with versions of “Music of the Spheres” by The Clangers, Mike Oldfield and a version of Outer Limits .

Writing in The Times, Caitlin Moran said that the Doctor’s homily to music and self-expression was “the most affecting moment” in the Prom, bringing “what could have been a wonderful, yet surreal and overwhelming introduction to orchestral music” down to “a rather lovely question. Did you like this orchestra, kids? What would you do with one? (Wikipedia Quote)

Try to see the whole Prom still on the Red Button on UK Freeview