Originally posted by Caliban
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How do you spend Sundays ?
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scottycelt
Originally posted by Mary Chambers View PostComing a day late to this. I love Sundays because I can be more or less certain of an uninterrupted morning. No postman, delivery man or window-cleaner etc. knocking at the door. I've been retired for ages, but I still find Sunday quite different from any other day of the week because it's so peaceful and relaxed. I potter (very good at that), listen to Radio 3, watch television, look at what people are saying on here - but then I do that every day. I often speak to family or friends on the phone, but rarely go out.
Back in the days of childhood I was not permitted to play in the garden by my parents out of respect for the feelings of our good friends and Presbyterian neighbours next door. I'm sure they would have done precisely the same if the situation had been reversed.
All that's now largely disappeared. Many just please themselves and to hell with what their neighbours think.
Frankly, I normally can't wait for Monday when most of the noisy blighters are back to work ...
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostAs it turned out My father does that!! After going to mass etc and he is 94!!"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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amateur51
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostThat's interesting. I don't find Sundays so peaceful and relaxed anymore. There used to be a special atmosphere. Supermarkets and big stores shut, pubs on restricted hours and even closed in some places. Then Thatcher and her social vandals came along with all this wretched 'deregulation' as if rules and regulations served no purpose and restricted personal freedom. Rules & Regulations are normally there for a purpose. One person's 'freedom' can be another's 'slavery'!
Back in the days of childhood I was not permitted to play in the garden by my parents out of respect for the feelings of our good friends and Presbyterian neighbours next door. I'm sure they would have done precisely the same if the situation had been reversed.
All that's now largely disappeared. Many just please themselves and to hell with what their neighbours think.
Frankly, I normally can't wait for Monday when most of the noisy blighters are back to work ...
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Originally posted by scottycelt View PostThat's interesting. I don't find Sundays so peaceful and relaxed anymore. There used to be a special atmosphere. Supermarkets and big stores shut, pubs on restricted hours and even closed in some places. Then Thatcher and her social vandals came along with all this wretched 'deregulation' as if rules and regulations served no purpose and restricted personal freedom. Rules & Regulations are normally there for a purpose. One person's 'freedom' can be another's 'slavery'!
Back in the days of childhood I was not permitted to play in the garden by my parents out of respect for the feelings of our good friends and Presbyterian neighbours next door. I'm sure they would have done precisely the same if the situation had been reversed.
All that's now largely disappeared. Many just please themselves and to hell with what their neighbours think.
Frankly, I normally can't wait for Monday when most of the noisy blighters are back to work ...bong ching
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Originally posted by scottycelt View PostBack in the days of childhood I was not permitted to play in the garden by my parents out of respect for the feelings of our good friends and Presbyterian neighbours next door. I'm sure they would have done precisely the same if the situation had been reversed.Last edited by mangerton; 14-01-13, 16:46.
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Originally posted by mangerton View PostAs a Presbyterian ex-child, I can assure you that you are quite correct. Playing on a Sunday anywhere was forbidden. Sitting in the garden quietly reading an improving book was however permitted.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Beef Oven
Originally posted by french frank View PostI can remember the one time my mother took my brother and me to the cinema on a Sunday. My mother reasoned that as the film was 'The Little World of Don Camillo' and as Don Camillo was a priest (remember the comic novels by Giovanni Guareschi? - Don Camillo the parish priest, Peppone the Communist mayor?), it would be suitable for a Sunday. And our family wasn't at all strict - that was just the times, when shops didn't open on Sundays either ...
After Church, the Curate came back with us. I sent Carrie in to open front door, which we do not use except on special occasions. She could not get it open, and after all my display, I had to take the Curate (whose name, by-the-by, I did not catch,) round the side entrance. He caught his foot in the scraper, and tore the bottom of his trousers. Most annoying, as Carrie could not well offer to repair them on a Sunday. After dinner, went to sleep. Took a walk round the garden, and discovered a beautiful spot for sowing mustard-and-cress and radishes. Went to Church again in the evening: walked back with the Curate. Carrie noticed he had got on the same pair of trousers, only repaired. He wants me to take round the plate, which I think a great compliment.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostI can remember the one time my mother took my brother and me to the cinema on a Sunday. My mother reasoned that as the film was 'The Little World of Don Camillo' and as Don Camillo was a priest (remember the comic novels by Giovanni Guareschi? - Don Camillo the parish priest, Peppone the Communist mayor?), it would be suitable for a Sunday. And our family wasn't at all strict - that was just the times, when shops didn't open on Sundays either ...
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostThat's interesting. I don't find Sundays so peaceful and relaxed anymore. There used to be a special atmosphere. Supermarkets and big stores shut, pubs on restricted hours and even closed in some places. Then Thatcher and her social vandals came along with all this wretched 'deregulation' as if rules and regulations served no purpose and restricted personal freedom. Rules & Regulations are normally there for a purpose. One person's 'freedom' can be another's 'slavery'!
Back in the days of childhood I was not permitted to play in the garden by my parents out of respect for the feelings of our good friends and Presbyterian neighbours next door. I'm sure they would have done precisely the same if the situation had been reversed.
All that's now largely disappeared. Many just please themselves and to hell with what their neighbours think.
Frankly, I normally can't wait for Monday when most of the noisy blighters are back to work ...
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amateur51
Originally posted by french frank View PostI can remember the one time my mother took my brother and me to the cinema on a Sunday. My mother reasoned that as the film was 'The Little World of Don Camillo' and as Don Camillo was a priest (remember the comic novels by Giovanni Guareschi? - Don Camillo the parish priest, Peppone the Communist mayor?), it would be suitable for a Sunday. And our family wasn't at all strict - that was just the times, when shops didn't open on Sundays either ...
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amateur51
Surely the definitive answer from [just] post-war Britain ...
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