Yes Friends, do YOU ever get tongue-tied on your first date with somebody new? Onion News has some ideas today on some things you can include, so read this game-changing advice, not forgetting to take notes, so get your junior notebooks out - do it now !!!!!





And you have to admit that that approach does set the right "tone" for what could be a promising relationship, right off the bat, doesn't it! And reading the story this morning here in semi-pastoral Liphook, Hampshire, sets a slightly ironic smile flying to the lips of me and my wife Lois, to put it mildly!
my wife Lois and me - some recent pictures
"Why the ironic smile, Colin?", I hear you cry! Well, you've probably guessed the answer as soon as the question left YOUR lips, I'm guessing!
Yes, Lois and I are both 79, pushing 80, would you believe! And the question of what our own "famous last words" should be, is bound to come up soon, especially since, on our return yesterday from an overnight break on the English Channel near Emsworth, Hampshire, we find that our friendly Royal Mail postman has, in our absence, "plopped" this week's copy of Lois's news digest magazine "The Week" through our letterbox, which has a few helpful tips.

Yes, as luck would have it, this week's magazine is brimming with ideas for "famous last words" that its readers could perhaps choose for themselves, and here's "Colin's pick of the bunch". Yes, I'm going to "go" with crazy Sir Edmund Beckett, the first Baron of Grimthorpe's choice.
Grimthorpe simply left his wife this urgent dying note: "We are low on marmalade" - and that's what you call genius!
The phrase won't quite work for me, as it stands, however, because Lois has just this week made me a stack of seven 1 lb jars of her 2026 home-made marmalade, with another batch on the horizon for this week, so going by the anxious note on our calendar, for this week, at least, I'm going to have to "go" (!) with "we are low on mint sauce and [low-fat spread] Bertorelli", which is a bit more long-winded, but never mind, it does the job!
(above) Lois showcasing some of her classic home-made marmalade batches through the
decades, and (below) news of Baron Grimthorpe's dying note to his wife,
"We are low on marmalade", plus the reason for novelist Julian Barnes' summary
disapproval of death - "I don't think it's got anything in it for me"....what madness!!!!
What a crazy world we live in !!!!
Forgive us, if you will, but Lois and I are both feeling pretty tired today. We came back just yesterday from that exhausting one-night-away on the English Channel coast, and we're both feeling a bit light-headed this morning as we sit in the village hall outside Petersfield, where Lois's church holds its Sunday Morning Meetings.

Luckily, however, Lois has her wits about her this morning, because, always anxious to be "pulling her weight", bless her, she's volunteered to go on a "sisters' rota" for preparing the "emblems" - the bread and the wine. She'll be doing it 4 or 5 times a year, she thinks, so we turn up for the meeting about half an hour earlier than usual today, so Lois can get a demonstration from fellow-church member Ann. Since COVID, the wine is served in individual plastic mini-cups, and when it's Lois's turn to do it, she'll have to bring the used cups back home with her for a thorough wash, and then take them back in with her the following Sunday etc.
Sounds complicated, doesn't it, to put it mildly! But I'm confident that Lois will cope - she's much more practical-minded than me. Not that that's anything that's very difficult to achieve haha!
Fortunately, the UK as a whole, has always had more than enough practical-minded people to be getting on with - witness perhaps our greatest gift to the world: our railways, as we learn tonight from the second and final part of the fascinating Channel 4 series.
Yes, the new railways - what a game changer, enabling ordinary Brits to go to work in comfort, or visit relatives, or go to the seaside for their summer holidays.
The criss-crossing of the country by a massive network of railways also amounted to a complete social revolution, and, for example, the new railway compartments were one of the few places where Victorians were forced to get up-close and personal with strangers, whether they wanted to or not!
This new social experience for Victorians provided perfect material for Victorian artists, who loved to tell a compelling story.
In 1855, Abraham Solomon painted this picture of a scene in a railway compartment which he called: "First Class: The Meeting [and at first meeting loved]".
What we see is a group of three figures: (left) a father who's slumped in the corner fast asleep, and (centre) his daughter, who's deep in conversation with a young man, who's clearly paying her a lot of attention. To Victorians, however, such a scene would have been deeply shocking.
The picture came in for a lot of criticism at the time, and Solomon was forced to come up with a new version, in which the young woman's old dad is awake and sitting between the two young would-be lovers:
By the end of the 19th century, however, things had loosened up a lot and the opportunity for "taking liberties" when a train entered a tunnel, for example, had become one of the most popular stock comic scenes in the British cinema of the time, as in this 1899 "short".
Yes, pretty soon they get to know each other very well, because the train goes into a tunnel and everything goes black!
What madness!!!
And what a crazy world they lived in, back in those far-off times!!!!
Will this do?
[Oh just go to bed! - Ed]
22:00 We go to bed - zzzzzzzz!!!!!