Love this!
Made by the staff at Truro public library
From an initial google search it would appear I could post endlessly on this topic.
In 1794 Jane Austen’s father gave her this portable “writing box.” When open, it provides a slope on which to rest the paper while writing. Its various compartments include a space for an inkpot and a lockable drawer for paper and valuables. Between 1795 and 1799 Austen produced first drafts of what would later become Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice, and Northanger Abbey, perhaps using this very writing desk. While traveling through Dartford in 1798 she almost lost it—and her savings of seven pounds—when it was accidentally placed in a horse-drawn chaise heading for Dover. When Austen died in 1817, aged 41, the desk was inherited by her sister Cassandra. It was later passed down through her eldest brother’s family. In 1999, Joan Austen-Leigh, Jane Austen’s great-great-great-niece, generously entrusted it to the care of the British Library.
Naomi and I had a wonderful time yesterday sitting by the fire and having coffee.
Ah....the simple pleasures of life.
I guess this might become a thing of the past.
Queen Elizabeth II at the writing desk in her study in Balmoral Castle, Scotland I January 1972
Sketching, Illustration, Design and Everyday Life.
Copyright by © Nina Khashchina except where noted.J.K. Rowling certainly got a lot of reluctant readers to read. That should be mentioned along with her accomplishments.
I stole this from Linda' blog. I don't think I knew very much about J.K. Rowling. It's a pretty amazing story.
"At age 17, she was rejected from college.
Linda posted this on her blog:
"If you think you are smarter than the previous generation....50 years ago the owners' manual of a car showed you how to adjust the valves. Today it warns you not to drink the contents of the battery"
We met at The Four Olives and so enjoyed our time with them. They are off to Las Vegas. We look forward to hearing all about it!
He gave us lots of good advice about many things.
Thanks, kid, love you so much!
I do remember my line about ID when I was underage. You needed to be 21. I went to my purse to get my ID laughing and commenting "I'm 24 and have three kids". The waiter usually waved it off and I didn't have to produce it. I do remember it shocked a date of mine and when I told him I was 15 years old he was even more horrified. That was pretty much the end of the night and our relationship.
You had a lot of fun birthday cakes. This one was obviously from your Superman mania days. I think you even had Superman underwear :)
" Parisians will soon be able to experience the Seine River in a whole new way. Beginning in 2025 — following the city’s hosting of the 2024 Summer Olympics — the river will be open for public swimming, per The Week.
The spokesperson says: “At just after 11am this morning two people entered Room 43 of the National Gallery. The pair appeared to glue themselves to the wall adjacent to Van Gogh's Sunflowers. They also threw a red substance—what appears to be tomato soup—over the painting. The room was cleared of visitors and police were called. Officers are now on the scene.” Both campaigners were arrested.
Just Stop Oil released a statement saying that the group “is demanding that the UK government halts all new oil and gas projects”. It adds: “Today’s action comes after two weeks of continued civil resistance by supporters of Just Stop Oil. The disruption is in response to the government’s inaction on both the cost of living crisis and the climate crisis.”
I'm sure I've posted on this topic before but I do love seeing this happening since the art gives people joy and it makes road crossings safer. What a win-win!
Our first and last experience in a maze was in Hampton Court close to London. It seemed like fun thing to do but we had real trouble getting out. We kept meeting the same people who were also trying to get out. At first we were all laughing and then our expressions got grimmer. We blundered out somehow.
Now, this is a maze I think I could handle :)
Well, I have read of a lot of shortages but didn't expect this one! This appeared in the Desert Sun:
Love seeing the San Jacinto mountains and palm trees.
"One of the most obvious side effects of the global pandemic has been supply chain issues, causing shortages in everything from new cars to baby formula.
But there is a shortage of something that you might not expect hitting one desert golf facility: a lack of sand for bunkers.
For Desert Princess Country Club in Cathedral City, the shortage meant plans to replace sand in 51 bunkers on the 27-hole golf facility were derailed. And it meant golfers were hitting shots into bunkers covered only with black rubber liners rather than sand.
“We are going to write it off this year because of (the upcoming) prime season,” said Rodney Young, in his first full year as head golf professional at Desert Princess. “We can’t be doing bunker projects. So we are going to reset and reorganize and see if we can’t get it done next July.”
In the last week the course finally found about 500 tons of sands from a source in central California, meaning the greenside bunkers on the Lagos nine-hole layout were finally filled with white sand. But the rest of the work on the Vista and Cielo nines will wait until next summer."
From "Interesting Facts"
I wasn't surprised about the Space Station costing so much but rather blown away by the most expensive movie ever made. I don't think I've seen it.
NEXT FACT
The most expensive movie ever made is Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides, which cost a whopping $410 million. That’s a pretty penny to be sure, but it’s less than half a percent of the most expensive human-made object in history: the International Space Station, whose price tag comes in at $100 billion. Launched in 1998 after more than a decade of careful (and often difficult) planning, the ISS is a collaboration between five space agencies: NASA (United States), Roscosmos (Russia), JAXA (Japan), ESA (Europe), and CSA (Canada). It has been continuously occupied since 2000, with a full-time international crew conducting microgravity experiments and other research.
We always enjoy this place and last night we had the wonderful company of Donna and Sherrill.
Thanks so much for a lovely evening. We forgot all about the Blue Jays losing :)
We so enjoyed our dinner and conversation. We ordered in from Minerva's and have leftovers for tomorrow so no cooking:)
Thanks so much!
Before it was romanized as Hong Kong, the special administrative region of China that has long beguiled visitors was known in English as He-Ong-Kong. That moniker dates back to 1780 and is thought to be a phonetic reading of hÄ“ung góng, a Cantonese name that translates to both “fragrant harbor” and “incense harbor.”
Hong Kong has long been one of the world's most important commercial ports. The apparently sweet-tasting waters of the Pearl River may have been responsible for the “fragrant” designation; as for the other, a number of incense factories used to be found in the city’s Kowloon district. An alternate explanation comes courtesy of John Davis, who served as Governor of Hong Kong from 1844 to 1848 and said that the name came from “Hoong-keang” (“red torrent”). According to him, the name honored the red soil found beneath a waterfall on Hong Kong Island.