Yes, Friends, it's all over today's news! The age of Columbus is not dead! And nor is his spirit, according to a heart-warming story in this morning's Onion News!
Kudos Ryan, for going "where no man has gone before" !!!And kudos, too, for accepting mysterious stranger Kevin's offer of leftover food and cake! Cake is the great leveller, isn't it, and always seems to draw people together, not drive them apart, which is nice!
Did Christopher Columbus offer a slice of cake - a "sponge genoise" maybe (?) - to those first native Americans that he encountered back in 1492, after he famously "sailed the ocean blue?
typically diverse co-workers "bonding" over a birthday cake,
which is nice!
It's perhaps symbolic that Columbus is suddenly back in favour again, with Donald Trump arranging for Columbus' statue, thrown into Baltimore Harbour by racial justice protestors back in 2020, to be scrubbed down and re-erected in the grounds of the White House, according to the Washington Post.
As part of the Black Lives Matter campaign, recall that Bristol's leading theatre The Colston Hall, was renamed "The Bristol Beacon", and that the schools that my dear brother and sister 'Our Steve' and Kathy attended, back in the 1960's - Colstons Primary School and also, for Kathy, Colstons Girls' School, were similarly re-branded.
It's nice to know that Bristol's diverse local communities are being fully consulted on the sensitive issue of the exhumation, and are now also re-bonding, perhaps over a slice of cake, as always the "great leveller" (see Onion story above !!!!). As far as I know, unlike Columbus's "sponge genoise", there is no specific cake named after Bristol, although "Bath buns" come pretty close. Cheers !!!
And reading all these cake-related news stories this morning, here in rural, semi-forgotten Liphook, Hampshire, brings a particularly satisfied smile to the lips of me and my wife Lois.
my wife Lois and me - a recent picture
(left) the cake Lois makes today for her church's "drop in coffee morning", and (right)
Lois and me sampling a cake or two at a recent drop-in session
I usually describe this kind of weather as "dismal", but until today I never knew where the word "dismal" originally came from. Luckily, with good timing (!), Susie Dent, of the Radio Times' "Dictionary Corner", steps up to fill in some of the blanks in my mind on this very important question (!).
The word "dismal" actually comes from the Latin "dies mali" meaning "bad days", and as a response to this idea, the Church designated two days each month on the calendar as "dies mali", when doing anything challenging was not officially advised.
However, poor old medieval writer Geoffrey Chaucer got it wrong, bless him. He thought that the word 'dismal' came from the French "dix mals" (English: ten evils), as a "nod" to the biblical "ten plagues of Egypt". What madness, wasn't it !!!!
What a crazy language we speak !!!!
However, with today's absolutely "dismal" weather, and Lois busy in the kitchen today making her cake, we can't do any of the usual things we do together. So the bad weather today is a good opportunity for me also, to "get ahead of the curve", as regards next week's online meeting of the U3A group, the Intermediate Danish for Old Codgers Group, which Lois and I "lead", for our sins!!!
Our group is currently reading Danish murder mystery "Judaskysset" (The Judas Kiss), by Danish crime-writer Anna Grue, and it's my job to produce the fortnightly "vocab lists" for our group's members.
Our group meetings are only fortnightly, and a lot of fun, but they also involve me in a ton of work, to put it mildly! Today, by preparing in advance all the vocab lists we'll need at next Thursday's meeting, as I say, I can at least "get ahead of the curve", but I'm slowed down by a mysterious "curvaceous" character (no pun intended!!!!), who pops up in the story, being interviewed by police detective Flemming Torp.
(left) Lois and me trying to control another rowdy online meeting of our local
"Intermediate Danish for Old Codgers" group, and (right) the Danish murder mystery that
our group is currently reading, "Judaskysset" (the Judas Kiss), by Anna Grue (centre)
Danish detective Flemming Torp (Andre Babikian) in the TV and film version
ot Anna Grue's Danish murder mystery Judaskysset (The Judas Kiss)
The mysterious curvy woman, who's just popped up in the story, is called Kamma Mortizen, and she's obviously been in the story earlier, but neither Lois and I can remember who she is - what madness, isn't it!!!!
In the chapter that our group is reading this week, this Kamma, who's being interviewed by Danish detectives, has apparently concealed her voluptuous curves [Danish: yppige kurver] under a crochet'ed poncho with long fringes, which must have been disappointing for Flemming, the detective who's interviewing her. Old Flemming likes his women "curvy", to put it mildly!






































































