Today’s big news is that Fergus (Helen’s youngest son) passed his driving test. Second attempt. Great joy all round.
Having dispatched him back to Bristol University,
Helen came here and instead of making me walk, put me through some exercises and
showed Daniela what I should do every day. (I’m pretty sure I distinguished “every
day” amidst the Greek they speak to each other.) They are simple-sounding
exercises, surprisingly tiring. They are recommended in a booklet the NHS gave
me, for doing before hip surgery as well as after.
So that was a strenuous morning, but the knitting
progressed somewhat. I now lack but one row of tedious knitting to finish off
the numerals and the apostrophe -- ’23 -- in my Calcutta Cup panel. There are
then two more simple rows on top of the cup itself, to suggest the elephant
which occupies that space in real life. And then the containing square to be
finished off. It would be nice to get the tedious bits done tomorrow morning so
that I can knit a bit during the afternoon rugby – Scotland v Wales.
In the good old days, Wales turned out en masse for
their matches here in Edinburgh – with their sisters and their cousins and
their aunts and their daffodils and their leeks. I hope it is still so. I move
so little that I wouldn’t know. There are none in Drummond Place.
And I’m getting on fine with Sense and Sensibility,
although you’re right, Tamar (as always) – it’s not very cheerful. I can’t have
read it very often. I remember the basic situation, and Willoughby of course –
no one could forget Willoughby. But there have been some surprises – I had
forgotten that there was a duel. And I don’t know, even now, what fate awaits
the heroine.
Wordle: Ketki and Mark were today’s winners: home in
three. Four for the majority, including me. Roger trailed in with six. He got
stuck in the same Wordle-configuration as Rachel and Alexander and I: grn, grn,
grn, ???, grn. Mark and Ketki seemed to
need only the central letter to go straight for the solution. The others got the same score of four from
different directions.
I've rea "S&S" many times and I don't remember a duel either. Perhaps it's time to re-read it. We do watch the Emma Thompson/Kate Winslet film so often that we can recite the dialogue. Alan Rickman as the Colonel....
ReplyDeleteThe films change things and sometimes I get confused. I recall the duel as being in the past, but now I think it was just off-stage, reported third or fourth hand, as Austen usually does that with the more shocking events.
ReplyDeleteGoodness, you have made rapid progress with the Cup knitting.
Now that Helen has gone over it, you may feel more confidence in the exercises, that you are doing them correctly, I mean. I have been doing very mild ones for my arms and I have noticed an improvement already.
The exercises, both before and after the surgery, make an amazing difference to how well one recovers and to how much mobility is regained. Good for you for getting prepared.
ReplyDeleteJennyS
Oh, and I am very partial to all of Jane Austen's works. I can never decide which one I enjoy the most. I am about to embark on a re-read of all six, maybe a few weeks apart to allow time for viewing different adaptations and so on. I shall get out my S and S this afternoon, since you have reminded me of it.
ReplyDeleteJennyS
How did I forget - congratulations, Fergus! D
ReplyDelete