Valentinus

(I posted this earlier, and then it just plain vanished. Fortunately a friend caught it in his RSS reader so it is herewith reproduced. My apologies if you’re getting to enjoy it for the second time).

Today is St Valentine’s Day, the day when we honour the life of a bishop, a priest or a martyr, or possibly someone else, who probably died around 270AD, unless he didn’t, but is noted for doing something, though God knows what (literally – “… whose names are justly reverenced among men, but whose acts are known only to God.”). Oh, and the whole thing was made up by Chaucer. Or not.

This remembrance takes different forms. In England there are two traditions. Those who have recently passed puberty will spend hours agonizing over how much of their pocket money they can spare on a dangling cubic zirconia or other trinket clad in genuine 3 carat gold, which must in turn be received with declarations of undying love from the object of their affection, followed by an hour’s frottage before mum comes to collect you.

In contrast, those for whom puberty is but a memory officially start the celebration with a cry of “oh bollocks!” Note that this can be as late as 5pm, while listening to the radio during the commute home. This is followed by a sprint round the nearest garage to get flowers, chocolates, gravy browning etc. Once the inevitable resentment from the spouse/significant other has subsided there may be a brief bout of frottage before spouse/s.o. goes to pick up her frustrated teen.

In both cases the intent is strictly sexual, with perhaps just a smattering of lurv. This helps to explain why the English find the American custom of giving Valentine gifts to your children bloody creepy.

Pub Culture

I’ve been away for a few days at a family funeral. As is often traditional, the funeral itself was followed by a few hours at the pub toasting the departed. I’m quite a fan of spending a few hours over a couple of pints with friends, but I’m a long way from this particular set of relatives. Among the skills I lack to fit in are the ability to drink a lot, the desire to inhale the smoke from burning leaves, and perhaps most importantly the ability to form opinions and expound upon subjects I have no interest in. I phrased that last one carefully – I can form opinions free of the burden of knowledge with the best of them, but I rarely do so if I have no interest. By contrast my pub-mates of the last week would hold forth readily on subjects which I knew they knew nothing about, and in some cases where nobody knew much because it was utter conjecture. This did not limit their ability to make definitive statements on these topics, of course.

I’ve always known I’m boring, perhaps my inability to compete at random blather is one of the symptoms.

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Cultural differences

Andy posted about cultural differences between India and the west, in particular about the problems with water. On a related note I was tangentially affected by a similar difference today. The guys I help in India went home early to avoid potential riots after a government tribunal announced how water would be distributed between neighbouring states.

I hardly ever get sent home to avoid water riots.

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Smeghead

I just watched an unaired pilot for a US version of the British series Red Dwarf. Perhaps not surprisingly it’s awful. The actors lack charisma along with any sense of comic timing, to the extent that Jane Leeves (from Frasier) seems great. The laugh track is hideous, the direction is lazy, and every change to the original script seems to be for the worse.

Naturally I watched all of it, and all through I couldn’t help wondering about Robert Llewelyn, who played the character of Kryten in the British version as well as the pilot. In the original he’s very good, and seems to be equally able in this, but surely he must have known just how bad everything around him was. How socially awkward would that be?

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Florid

I’m currently reading The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, Unbeliever, by Stephen Donaldson. It’s one of those classics of fantasy fiction that I’ve always meant to get to, and over the course of a year or so I’ve finally managed to get half way through book two. It starts off very drily, hence the extended reading period, but has picked up nicely and is proving an entertaining read.

Anyway, I just wanted to share a sentence I read as an example of the main downfall of the book, which is the horribly ornate language Donaldson uses. It’s rare when a book makes me longer for the simple conciseness of Tom Bombadil, but this may just be it:

Leaping to his feet, he shook his fists at the sky like a reefed and lonely galleon firing its guns in bootless defiance of the invulnerable ocean.

Not quite so fancy, but just as jarring (and perhaps my favourite line from the book):

Troy barely restrained an ejaculation.

And no, it’s not what you’re thinking. At least it’s not what you’re thinking if you have a mind like mine. You poor thing.

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