Originally posted by Padraig
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Further reflections on the funeral
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Anna
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post- showing your pre-decimal roots, Padraig! Me, too: weren't tanners and 'alf-crowns brilliant?!
hence
'alf an Oxford; Oxford-scholar; scholar-dollar; ''alf a crown''
Can you wing that?
Apologies ferneyhoughgeliebte (pheew) a little note of explanation. We old predecimals in Ireland used the same currency North and South. We did not check if we were using Irish or English money. A penny was a wing. Guess why!
Last edited by Padraig; 21-04-13, 15:39. Reason: would ferneyhoughgeliebte (phheeew) know his wings from his pennies?
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amateur51
I think the old half-crown was about the size of the current £2 coin, wasn't it? - when I was a tiddler I used to feel like a millionaire if a kindly visiting rello slipped me one of those upon departure
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amateur51
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Originally posted by Padraig View PostApologies ferneyhoughgeliebte (pheew)
a little note of explanation. We old predecimals in Ireland used the same currency North and South. We did not check if we were using Irish or English money. A penny was a wing. Guess why!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penny_(...-decimal_coin)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Anna
Ratz! Cannot find the Pookah in the pocket with baccy, which is so funny. Only got this: The Pooka MacPhellimey, a member of the devil class, sat in his hut in the middle of a firwood meditating on the nature of the numerals and segregating in his mind the odd ones from the even. He was seated at his diptych or ancient two- leaved hinged writing-table with inner sides waxed. His rough long-nailed fingers toyed with a snuff-box of perfect rotundity and through a gap in his teeth he whistled a civil cavatina.
Honestly, all I can say before I go offline, Flann O'Brien, whether A Swim Two Birds or The Third Policeman, is a riotous laugh. And, it's a crying shame so he is not known better.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Anna View PostRatz! Cannot find the Pookah in the pocket with baccy, which is so funny. Only got this: The Pooka MacPhellimey, a member of the devil class, sat in his hut in the middle of a firwood meditating on the nature of the numerals and segregating in his mind the odd ones from the even. He was seated at his diptych or ancient two- leaved hinged writing-table with inner sides waxed. His rough long-nailed fingers toyed with a snuff-box of perfect rotundity and through a gap in his teeth he whistled a civil cavatina.
Honestly, all I can say before I go offline, Flann O'Brien, whether A Swim Two Birds or The Third Policeman, is a riotous laugh. And, it's a crying shame so he is not known better.
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Simon
Originally posted by Mary Chambers View PostI'm relieved to see that the much-stressed 'British composers' being played do not include Britten or Tippett, who I suspect would not only turn in their graves but probably rise up, appear in St Paul's and call "Stop!".
How fortunate we are that not everyone thought like the two composers you mentioned, though. Nicht war?
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amateur51
Originally posted by Simon View PostOh, I'm sure they wouldn't. I'm sure they'd be pleased that people were singing and enjoying their music, even though they were politically poles apart from Lady Thatcher.
How fortunate we are that not everyone thought like the two composers you mentioned, though. Nicht war?
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Simon
Originally posted by Anna View PostIt was a wonderful funeral
And, for many of us, of course, a fitting tribute to a great stateswoman.
I was glad that there were able to be present representatives from the Falkland Islands, whose freedoms she helped to save.
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