All well, but I’m feeling very feeble – and there are still
three more rows to go before Clue One of the MKAL is finished. Alan Bennett is
good, and fairly conducive to knitting, but awfully gloomy. There will be two more this
evening. There’s no sign yet of my favourite – it was Patricia Routledge, the
first time round, who was dying of cancer (like, gloomy). She knew, the doctors
knew, her workmates knew, but nobody ever said it out loud. Bennett is awfully
good at that sort of thing, language that conveys more than its explicit meaning.
(I was surprised to find the word “cancer” in “Dr. Thorne”.
Lady Arabella – was that her name? – was suspected of it. Nothing came of it.
Perhaps Trollope was preparing a plot-line for himself and then abandoned it.)
I investigated pi today, but it’s too much for me. You’re
right, of course, Tamar, the Egyptians were on to it. Also the Chinese.
Archimedes did rather well at working out a value, considering that he had no
decimal point or zero to work with. An irrational number like that must have
been very frustrating to the orderly Greeks, after – was it after? – the elegance of the Square on
the Hypotenuse.
Helen came this morning. We went to the chemist (=drug
store) on Broughton Street where I got my next batch of blood-thinners. We saw
Kathy, who had just opened the shop (http://www.kathysknits.co.uk/).
I must go in and have a look the next time I’m there. Then we went to the
corner shop where I bought an apple for what has turned out to be not a very
successful beetroot soup.
The Yarnery, in St Paul, where I may someday teach again, has opened to limited hours and with masks required as well as social distancing. I thought of adding DV, after where I may teach again. My Irish grandmother and her sisters always added that in there letters, the Catholic equivalent of InshAllah, I guess. I just thinned out my beet seedlings, it will be a while before there are any beets to eat, the the thinned out greens are tasty.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the Latin exercise-- I had to go look up DV, which doesn't happen often as I was a French major and am now a lawyer (though I only had very minimal Latin). Here we have the expression "Good Lord willing and the creek don't rise." lol
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