All well here, I guess. I could wish that the BBC news told
me more about New York than it does, but that seems an unreasonable cavil. How
steadying and reassuring are those calm voices, no matter how dreadful the
news. So it must have been during the war.
My mother taught me the word "an-genga", "lone-goer", an epithet -- perhaps the epithet -- of Beowulf. I have no syllable of Anglo-Saxon. She applied it to herself, and offered it to me. And I have been glad to embrace it, especially, perhaps, now. I like being alone.
I have reached row 29 of the Cameron Shawl borders (counting
down to zero from 110). This is the row in which the final filler patterns
begin, as the Trees of Life slim down into nothing. AND I am within a few feet
of the end of the second ball of yarn. That’s real progress, in lace knitting.
The new VK turned up yesterday – well timed, in this vale of
tears. Nel mezzo del cammin di
nostra vita, as we say in Italian. There’s nothing that
grabs me, alas. Had I but world enough and time, No. 7, The Grandfather
or No. 9, The Gradient. But I’m short of both.
I still haven’t pushed the button for Foldlines, but I probably
will.
We’ve had our first perhaps-casuality. Helen and David’s
youngest son Fergus was stricken with vomiting and a fever last night.
Vomiting, of course, is not a COVID syndrome, but fever is. To what extent do
the rest of the household need to isolate themselves from the world even more
severely than they are already doing?
My niece C. (with whom I went to Kirkmichael last week) is
contemplating joining forces with her daughter, another C., different name. The
younger C., of course, is the one who is expecting a baby soon, and would be
glad of her mother’s company while her husband is at work. The husband, also of
course, is the point of danger, potentially bringing the virus home to wife and
mother-in-law.