
Michael Halfpenny’s delightful picture reminds me of the famous children’s Nursery Rhyme…
Hickory Dickory Dock
The Mouse ran up the Clock
The Clock struck One!
The Mouse ran down
Hickory Dickory Dock
This Rhyme was first published in 1744 and was intended to introduce children to the basics of time!
Robert Morey is Howling at the Moon this week…
Astride the heavy timbers, the stone grey walls are bare, they echo to my whisper…. As though the dead are there!
I stood outside The People’s Palace on The Mile End road, one hot July afternoon in 1980. Somehow standing there I could feel her presence on that wintry evening all those years ago. She would have been hesitant, afraid, and yet thrilled. She would have walked up those few enlightening steps, gripped tightly and disapprovingly by her mother. Herbert Marks would have stood beside the pillared archway, smiling, his face lit to the cold night air… Dear Herbert who’s stomach ulcers in time would become the better of him… was the most sweetest of men. They would have entered this great hall arm in arm and performed with an exacting elegance under chandeliers that sparkled like a thousand tiny gems. Here gowns would have been filled with paraded ladies of charm, whilst men squinted through solitary eyeglasses and ordered waiters and drinks around.
In my hand was her silver pendant, it gleamed at me from its loneliness. It had hung around her neck that evening… a heart shaped pendant that opened to a tiny portrait of her… later she had added a picture of her beloved Charles.
The stone steps leading to the terraced balustrade were worn now with the progress of time and footsteps, and the archway of pillared marble, chaffed and pitted by the chilling winter winds that rose from the east of the City… and as I stood there with my thoughts… a shiver ran through my veins.
Tesco boss Say’s: ‘Student education is not a high standard…’ Well perhaps University fees should rise to 7.000 a year. A degree can be worthless as there are lots of graduates that work in fast food establishments and never make use their degrees. Entering University should not be a right of passage and The Conservatives proposal would suit only the most capable. Getting drunk and wasting your loan is no way for young adults to educate themselves! And using University as a Job Centre dodge is also no answer! With the American system you simply get what you pay for!

The Wardown Park Lake on The River Lea
The gentle serenity of Wardown Park Lake on The River Lea in Luton, is in sharp contrast to my earlier blog on the disgusting state of The River Lea in Bedfordshire England - and you would never believe that Bedfordshire is a farming and irrigation community!

The Royal Mail
Has the Royal Mail union gone completely off it’s rocker! With their looming threat of industrial strikes, and when most folks are trying to hold-on to their jobs in a recession, are we going to see taped-up letter boxes… Yet again?

The River Lea
Ancient history shows the River Lea in Bedfordshire England flows… or perhaps not in this case into Luton City Centre… but should it really look like this?… Is this the best we can offer our natural heritage?

St Paul's on Ludgate Hill
Sitting on the highest point of The City of London is St.Paul’s Cathedral on Ludgate Hill. Established on the grounds of a Roman trading post for the city of Londinium, it is thought to be the fifth St. Paul’s Cathedral built here, and many thousands of visitors pour out from the nearby subway of St. Paul’s each day to marvel at it’s simple beauty.

- Kim Cattrall
I fell in love with Kim Cattrall many years ago… and now she is appearing in Noel Coward’s ‘Private Lives’ directed by Richard Eyr at The Theatre Royal in Bath from the 8th of February, and The Vaudeville Theatre in The West End from the 22nd of February… You can get more of the Arts and Events with Patrick on webs.com… Use my links bar.

The Lighthouse Building at King's Cross
King’s Cross in North London was once known as Battle Bridge! Here a bridge once crossed the River Fleet, and it was here that Boudica headed her Iceni tribe in battle against the Roman Army then guarding the city of Londinium and it’s inhabitants.
The name King’s Cross comes from an unpopular monument erected to King George IV and a Cross that once stood on the site of the now King’s Cross station.
Robert Morey continues his camera-walk around Londinium