Brigid: A Goddess Made Saint

Last week I came across a new podcast that I am loving. It’s called Bad Bridget and looks at Irish women who went to America 150 years ago. It’s a fascinating insight into women and girls as young as 11 who left Ireland to escape poverty. Some got work and sent money back, others weren’t …

This Too Shall Pass

I think it’s fair to say we’ve reached the cheesed off phase of all this. We’ve put a brave face on, we’ve tried to see the positives, we’ve overextended ourselves to accommodate every emotion known to man, and now we’re all exhausted. Pandemics, in general, are hard going, pandemics in January are a tough old …

2020 Review

I don’t know about you, but when I’m scared witless, I find a spot of singing can really help. Perhaps I channel my inner Maria Von Trapp a bit much, though you’d have to say it worked out pretty well for her. She escaped the convent, learned to make clothes from curtains, fell in love, …

War Babies

This week we lost an unlikely couple in John le Carre and Barbara Windsor. 2020 has already grimly reaped: Terry Jones, Ennio Morricone, Seamus Mallon, John Hume, Dave Prowse, Larry Gogan, Vera Lynn, Little Richard, Bill Withers, Eddie Van Halen, Sean Connery, Honour Blackman, Kirk Douglas, Alan Parker, Michel Roux Snr, Marian Finnucane, Nicolas Parsons, …

State of the Art

Visit a zoo anywhere in the world, and chances are you’ll see an elephant. Similarly, most museums will have Bronze Age spearheads. Galleries, however, are far more unique in their collections. You will only find: Vermeer’s Woman Writing a Letter, with her Maid, Degas’ Two Ballet Dancers in a Dressing Room, or Picasso’s Still Life …

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