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Now druid free, please add something :-)
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supercrutch | Report | 20 Jan 2013 13:13 |
I am debating whether to add a comment or twenty about Malta, we owned a timeshare there until a year after my botched op. |
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Rambling | Report | 20 Jan 2013 13:16 |
Punches air! ...because someone mentioned Cohen before I felt compelled to do so ;-) |
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JustJohn | Report | 20 Jan 2013 13:19 |
Gwynne. I suppose poetry is a very personal thing. That was exactly the type of poetry I heard all those years ago. |
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Rambling | Report | 20 Jan 2013 13:46 |
Well I was hunting on youtube for a piece of poetry read in both Gaelic and English or Welsh and English to compare...but no joy so far. However found this Stephen Fry discussing the Irish language, which is quite interesting. |
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Guinevere | Report | 20 Jan 2013 13:47 |
2 great Canadian poets wrote them. Their work is lauded world-wide, by people with a much deeper understanding of literature than you seem to have, John. |
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AnnCardiff | Report | 20 Jan 2013 14:09 |
I've been on the death ride buses in Malta Sue - I think I read recently that they have been scrapped |
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JustJohn | Report | 20 Jan 2013 14:22 |
I would never claim to know much about poetry or art, Gwynne. Have to defer to the experts. But, like many, I know what I like. A poem gets into my soul, a painting gets into my soul. I used to be able to recite by heart much of L.Allegro - "hence loathed Melancholy Of Cerberus and blackest midnight born, In Stygian Cave forlorn 'Mongst horrid shapes, and shreiks, and sights unholy" And sonnets on his blindness, and on becoming 23 years old. In Welsh, the one that reached fabulous heights for me won the Chair at Bangor Eisteddfod in 1902. Called "Ymadawiad Arthur" (Arthur's Departure) by T Gwynne Jones. It is about the island of Avalon - a sort of Shangri-lah. Beautifully crafted poem. The opening line: "draw dros y don mae bro dirion" (yonder, across the waves, there is a gentle vale) |
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TheBlackKnight | Report | 20 Jan 2013 14:26 |
John I have been reading the tread again & would like to know How did you get into University? What qualifications did you get? I only ask because i'm interested. :-D |
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Merlin | Report | 20 Jan 2013 14:30 |
BK, I think he got an "Ology" :-D For Rabbiting. |
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AnnCardiff | Report | 20 Jan 2013 14:32 |
I do like what you're researching Merlin :-D :-D :-D |
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JustJohn | Report | 20 Jan 2013 14:42 |
BK. Got one O level (Maths) at 15. Failed other 6. |
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Guinevere | Report | 20 Jan 2013 14:59 |
John, I need no lesson from you about Dylan Thomas, please don't be so patronising. I studied his poetry in some depth as a student, with excellent tutors. |
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TheBlackKnight | Report | 20 Jan 2013 15:04 |
...because initially John you said you only had 1 O'level & I was thinking how times must have changed. |
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JustJohn | Report | 20 Jan 2013 15:54 |
BK Think we tend to get our quals to get better jobs. Needed 4 O levels to get a banking job. Bank said an Economics degree would help my banking career further. Got quite a few more post grad quals for work in my 20's and 30's - marketing, personnel. |
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Guinevere | Report | 20 Jan 2013 16:08 |
Looked back at my post, can't see the word stupid there, John. You must have been imagining things, as you'd know if you'd bothered to look higher up the page and check. |
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jax | Report | 20 Jan 2013 16:40 |
O levels to get a Banking job in 1970? |
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JustJohn | Report | 20 Jan 2013 17:09 |
Jax. It was 1963/64. I hope someone will confirm my memory that you needed at least 4 O levels including English and Maths to get a bank clerk job. And I rather think it was 2 O levels at least for post office clerk job. I remember taking an entrance exam aged 16 with about 100 others for 2 Post office clerk jobs in Walsall at that time - because I think I was waiting for my second year of O level reults and doubted I could improve on my first attempt of only one O level. |
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TheBlackKnight | Report | 20 Jan 2013 17:34 |
DT had a father that taught English & DT could not talk in welsh. |
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Guinevere | Report | 20 Jan 2013 18:11 |
Dylan's father David was an English Lit graduate who believed English a superior language, although he and his wife spoke Welsh fluently and he occasionally taught it. Dylan would have had Welsh speaking friends and he could have learned the language properly had he chosen to but he didn't. |
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BrendafromWales | Report | 20 Jan 2013 18:48 |
Think I will have to agree with John here regarding qualifications for jobs. |