Busy time

The Meeting House, part of the original Basil Spence designs
Much more recent Bramber House

Working all day, then straight out to Sussex University for a rather special lecture by a very special academic.

Each time I go back to the campus it seems to have stretched in every direction. The familiar original Basil Spence sections are now dwarfed by new (and I have to say, mostly much less interesting) additional blocks. But it is still a strange emotional experience – walking back through a past life, with shadows round every corner!

The lecture met expectations on all levels – so glad I got there.

Not needed for work today….

So I gave myself a day off. Just a bit of Etsying in the morning (finishing off a cowl and some leg warmers and making up an order). Since then – ignoring the potential HOURS of work on the house – I have just been reading. All day. Curled up upstairs, with the occasional coffee raid.

I actually dipped into half a dozen books- more than in the photo, but those are the ones I settled on. I enjoy being a butterfly – I often have several different books on the go at once. There is always one in my bag – but that has to be a smallish paperback or it wouldn’t fit in the zip….Then there are quite a lot (!) around my bed. Heavier tomes stay in piles near the sofa…in fact it occurs to me that I don’t move my books that much, rather I seek them out by joining them wherever they happen to be!

Today I made a start on the two smaller books above but spent most time on the middle one, which I finished. A History of Ignorance (or, in fact, of ‘ignorances’). I had not realised how many historians were currently considering this topic, which turns out to be massive. Peter’s book above has such an impressive range of detailed examples – and elegantly written as always. A great read!

PS – he is giving a lecture on the same topic at the University (Sussex) tomorrow so I may learn even more!

Hidden inside

Inside ‘the cathedral of the back streets’ that is. St Michael and All Angels, a well kept Grade 1 listed mid Victorian church in Brighton. Quite a contrast with yesterday’s offering – this building is rated as in the top 100 churches in England in Simon Jenkin’s ‘England’s Thousand Best Churches’. About 30 years after it was built an extension was added alongside – so it is sort of two churches in one, which does make an interesting interior.

But the best bit – not obvious from the exterior – has to be the Pre-Raphaelite stained glass, claimed to be the finest in Sussex. Work by William Morris, Burne-Jones, Ford Madox-Brown, Rossetti, and Philip Webb, amongst others.

Not obvious from the outside

I have been wandering around a few local churches again recently. So many of them tucked away in the back streets – often now disused or repurposed. You do get a sense of how central they were in the life of Victorian Brighton though.

Some are frankly depressing. This is St Andrews, in Waterloo street, once the parish church of Hove, serving the Brunswick Estate. I can just remember attending a service there.

You can’t even see inside it now – but the pungent smell of damp and decay reaches out to the street!

The photos at the top are a different story – more on those tomorrow.

From this:

To this:

Progress!

Back in position. It didn’t take long. I think I just wanted to see an Improvement – a concrete Result.

The rewards in teaching (still the best job in the world, by the way) can take a long time – about 5 to 7 years for academic achievement in secondary schools, though of course there are good moments along the way. But I think that is why I also feel the need to make stuff – the satisfaction of creating something tangible – from fleece to spun yarn to dye pots to hooks and needles to finished item in a couple of days.

Or even a super-shiny copper fish in a couple of hours!