Saturday 17 June 2023

Baltimore





swarthy (adj.)
"dark-colored," especially of skin, 1580s, unexplained alteration of swarty (1570s), from swart + -y (2). 
Related: Swarthiness.
also from 1580s


Entries linking to swarthy





swart (adj.)
Old English sweart "black, dark," of night, clouds, also figurative, "wicked, infamous," from Proto-Germanic *swarta- (source also of Old Frisian, Old Saxon, and Middle Dutch swart, Dutch zwart, Old Norse svartr, German schwarz, Gothic swarts "dark-colored, black"), from PIE root *swordo- "dirty, dark, black" (source of sordid). 

The True Germanic word, surviving in the Continental languages but displaced in English by black

Of skin color of persons from late 14c. 

Related: Swartest.

-y (2)
adjective suffix, "full of or characterized by," from Old English -ig, from Proto-Germanic *-iga- (source also of Dutch, Danish, German -ig, Gothic -egs), from PIE -(i)ko-, adjectival suffix, cognate with elements in Greek -ikos, Latin -icus (see -ic). 

Originally added to nouns in Old English; used from 13c. with verbs, and by 15c. even with other adjectives (for example crispy). Adjectives such as hugy, vasty are artificial words that exist for the sake of poetical metrics.

schvartze (n.)
also schvartzer, "black person" (somewhat derogatory), 1961, Yiddish, from schvarts "black" (see swarthy). 

Perhaps originally a code word to refer to Black Servants when they were within earshot, as its German cognate, Schwarze, is said to have been used :

“In Baltimore in the 80s of the last century, the German-speaking householders, when they had occasion to speak of Negro Servants in their presence, called them die Blaue (blues). 

In the 70s die Schwartze (blacks) had been used, but it was believed that the Negroes had fathomed it.”

— H.L. Mencken,
 "The American Language," 
Supplement I, 1945

Thursday 15 June 2023

Lightning




First Predicament of Perspective

Get the crow-bar, Gloria.


Rock’n’Roll Wrestling Women Versus the Aztec Ape

Although Dubliners claim that a Cork man is only a Kerry man in human form,* there is reason to believe that Cork men are the most Irish, and therefore the most subtle, persons on the planet.


* Dubliners also believe, or claim to believe, that the wheelbarrow was invented to teach Kerry men to walk on their hind legs. On the other hand, Kerry people claim that to house the insane of Ireland one would have to build a mental hospital in Belfast, another in Limerick and then put a roof over Dublin.

It was a Cork jury which once voted a defendant, “not guilty, if he promises not to do it in this town again.”

The Town Hall of Cork City has four clocks facing the four quarters. They are all consistently inconsistent, to introduce an appropriately Irish bull. That is, no two of them ever tell the same minute and they usually don’t even agree as to the hour. Locals call them the Four Liars.

A visitor from some heathen and exotic place possibly England — once commented, “How typically Irish even the clocks don’t agree!

A Cork man, overhearing this, quickly explained, “Well sure now, if all four of them agreed, three of them would be superflous.”

Cork people all believe that Time was invented by the English as a treacherous way of making a man work more than is altogether good for him.

And the only Irish philosophers to have world class status, Erigena and Berkeley, both denied that Time exists at all, at all.

All Irish bulls are pregnant.

— Robert Anton Wilson.

ALL IRISH BULLS ARE PREGNANT.


pregnant (adj.2)
["convincing, weighty, pithy, full of meaning"] late 14c., "cogent, convincing, compelling" (of evidence, an argument, etc.); c. 1400 as "full of meaning;" from Old French preignant "pregnant, pithy, ready capable," which is probably from Latin praegnans "with child, pregnant, full" and thus the same word as pregnant (adj.1).

All uses seem to be derivable from the sense of "with child." But in some sources this English pregnant has been referred to French prenant, present participle of prendre "to take," or to the French present participle of preindre "press, squeeze, stamp, crush," from earlier priembre, from Latin premere "to press, hold fast, cover, crowd, compress." The two English adjectives are so confused as to be practically one word, if they were not always so.
also from late 14c.



Making U⚡S, Better


“Imagine a Distant Planet 

In a Far-off Star System

Light-Years from Here

We've never seen Them 
in Our Telescopes,
We know nothing 
about Them,
but They Look 
a BIT Like Us....

A Star that's in 
The Last Days 
of it's Life
and imagine that 
Their Planet is under 
Threat of Destruction —

And Those 
Fantastic Scientists 
decide that there's 
only one thing 
that they can do
and that's to send 
A Child —

Out into Space —

Who might carry,
The Physical Attributes and Mental Attributes
that These People have 
engendered over 
The Centuries —

And imagine then, that
This Child, coming to Earth
suddenly is gifted 
with Powers that come 
from that Great Society 
that gave birth to him  --
and he not only 
brings Great Powers 
with him, but he brings 
A Morality with him --

Imagine what he could do 
to Our World 
and Our Planet,
with the AIM of 
Making U⚡S, Better..."




Saturday 10 June 2023

Cacca







*kakka

also kaka-, Proto-Indo-European root meaning "to defecate." According to Watkins, "imitative of glottal closure during defecation."

It forms all or part of: caca; cachexia; caco-; cacoethes; cacophony; cucking stool; kakistocracy; poppycock.

It is the hypothetical source of/evidence for its existence is provided by: Greek kakke "human excrement," Latin cacare, Irish caccaim, Serbo-Croatian kakati, Armenian k'akor; Old English cac-hus "latrine."

Etymologists dispute whether the modern Germanic words (Dutch kakken, Danish kakke, German kacken), are native cognates or student slang borrowed from Latin cacare. Caca appears in Modern English in slang c. 1870, and could have been taken from any or several of the languages that used it.

Thursday 8 June 2023

Quidditch









Steve McQueen - 
The Great Escape 
(motorcycle scene)



The Battle of Endor

 
* It is of some real interest to note — particularly in relationship to the discussion of the dangers of Creativity presented in Rule I — that The Seekers chase The Snitch both inside and outside the playing field that provides boundaries for all the other players. 




While outside, they can careen through the wooden foundation of the Quidditch stadium. This would not be a problem, if they weren’t simultaneously being chased by a Bludger, a solid, massive, flying ball capable not only of knocking them off their brooms, but of crashing through and seriously damaging that same structure. 




If they succeed in catching The Snitch, as we have indicated, they generally attain Victory. But they risk damaging the very foundations of The Game while doing so — just as creative people do when they pursue their innovative yet disruptive visions.

  * It is also of great interest to note, in this regard, that the metal Mercury can be used in the mining and purification of Gold —



Gold dissolves in Mercury, and Mercury can, therefore, be used to draw out the small amounts of the precious metal typically found in ores. The Mercury is then boiled off (it has a low boiling point) so that only The Gold remains. 



The proclivity of Mercury for Gold has given rise to the symbolic idea that the liquid metal has an “affinity” for What is most precious : that Mercury will seek What is Noble and Pure and Incorruptible — like Gold itself, speaking symbolically once again — and concentrate it in usable amounts




So, the fundamental idea is that The Pursuit of Meaning, guided by Mercury, Messenger of The Gods (The Unconscious, as far as modern people are concerned), will enable The Seeker to collect what is, like Gold, of The Highest Value. 



For The Alchemists who created drawings like the one we are analysing, that Highest Value came to be the ultimate development of The Psyche, or Spirit, or Personality.
 
* This is part of the reason science developed so long after religion and ritual — so incredibly recently, and by no means everywhere at once.
 
 * Furthermore, in the mythological world, unlike the objective, logical world, things can be one thing and their opposite at the same time. 

And this representation in the mythological world is more accurate than the objective, in the experiential manner described previously : Nature, for example, is Creator and Destroyer, just as Culture is Protector and Tyrant. 

It might be objected : Nature and Culture are not singular things. They can be differentiated, so that their paradoxical components are separated, understood, and dealt with. 

This is all True : but the paradoxical components are often experienced simultaneously and so unified. This occurs when anyone is betrayed, for example, in a love affair. 

Beast and Man, Medusa and Beloved-Woman are often united experientially in the same hypothetically unitary figure. 

This can be a terrible discovery when made in real life.
 
* The same idea is expressed in Taoist cosmogony, when The Yin and The Yang differentiate themselves into the Five Elements : Wood, Fire, Earth, Metal, and Water. 

The ancient Greeks believed, similarly, that Earth and Sky (Gaia and Uranus) gave birth to The Titans, elemental deities of great Strength and Power.
 
* E pluribus unum.
 
* Ea makes Man from the blood of Kingu, the most terrible of Tiamat’s Monsters. A bright graduate student and later colleague of mine once suggested that this was because of all God’s creatures, only Man could deceive; only Man could voluntarily bring Evil and Discord into The World.
 

Friday 2 June 2023

Unit


moon (n.)
"heavenly body which revolves about The Earth monthly," Middle English mone, from Old English mona, from Proto-Germanic *menon- (source also of Old Saxon and Old High German mano, Old Frisian mona, Old Norse mani, Danish maane, Dutch maan, German Mond, Gothic mena "moon"), from PIE *me(n)ses- "moon, month" (source also of Sanskrit masah "moon, month;" Avestan ma, Persian mah, Armenian mis "month;" Greek mene "moon," men "month;" Latin mensis "month;" Old Church Slavonic meseci, Lithuanian mÄ—nesis "moon, month;" Old Irish mi, Welsh mis, Breton miz "month"), from root *me- (2) "to measure" in reference to the moon's phases as an ancient and universal measure of Time.

A masculine noun in Old English. In Greek, Italic, Celtic, and Armenian the cognate words now mean only "month." Greek selēnē (Lesbian selanna) is from selas "light, brightness (of heavenly bodies)." Old Norse also had tungl "moon," ("replacing mani in prose" - Buck), evidently an older Germanic word for "heavenly body," cognate with Gothic tuggl, Old English tungol "heavenly body, constellation," of unknown origin or connection. Hence Old Norse tunglfylling "lunation," tunglœrr "lunatic" (adj.).

Extended 1665 to satellites of other planets. Typical of a place impossible to reach or a thing impossible to obtain, by 1590s. 

Meaning "a month, the period of the revolution of The Moon about The Earth" is from late 14c.

To shoot the moon "leave without paying rent" is British slang from c. 1823 (see shoot (v.)); the card-playing sense perhaps was influenced by gambler's shoot the works (1922) "go for broke" in shooting dice. The moon race and the U.S. space program of the 1960s inspired a number of coinages, including, from those skeptical of the benefits to be gained, moondoggle (based on boondoggle). 

The man in the moon "fancied semblance of a man seen in the disk of the full moon" is mentioned since early 14c.; he carries a bundle of thorn-twigs and is accompanied by a dog. Some Japanese, however, see a rice-cake-making rabbit in the moon. The old moon in the new moon's arms (1727) is the appearance of the moon in the first quarter, in which the whole orb is faintly visible by earthshine.

moon (v.)
c. 1600, "to expose to moonlight;" later "idle about, wander or gaze moodily" (1836), "move listlessly" (1848), probably on the notion also found in moonstruck. The meaning "to flash the buttocks" is recorded by 1968, U.S. student slang, from moon (n.) "buttocks" (1756), "probably from the idea of pale circularity" [Ayto]. See moon (n.). Related: Mooned; mooning.
also from c. 1600
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Trends of moon

adapted from books.google.com/ngrams/
Entries linking to moon

boondoggle (n.)
"wasteful expenditure," especially by the government under guise of public good, April 1935, American English; earlier it was a name for a kind of braided leather lanyard made by Boy Scouts and worn by them around the neck or hat. In this sense it is attested from 1930, and according to contemporary accounts the thing and the word were invented around 1928 by the Order of the Arrow of Scouts in Rochester, N.Y. The name might be arbitrary; once it became a vogue word, some newspapers claimed it had been a pioneer word for "gadget," but evidence for that is wanting.
The Prince of Wales was given one by the Rochester Scouts at the Jamboree in the summer of 1929, and wore it, and the boondoggle first came to public attention. In early April 1935, a dispute erupted in New York City over wastefulness in New Deal white-collar relief work programs, including one where men made boondoggles all day. Headline writers picked up the word, and it became at once a contemptuous noun or adjective for make-work projects for the unemployed.
What is all this boondoggling anyhow? If we don't know, it isn't because we haven't been trying to find out. First used by a witness in a Federal relief investigation, the word has swept the country. [Frances Shattuck Nyberg, "Getting Around" column, Baltimore Evening Sun, May 10, 1935]
*me- (2)
*mē-, Proto-Indo-European root meaning "to measure." Some words may belong instead to root *med- "to take appropriate measures."
It forms all or part of: amenorrhea; centimeter; commensurate; diameter; dimension; gematria; geometry; immense; isometric; meal (n.1) "food, time for eating;" measure; menarche; meniscus; menopause; menses; menstrual; menstruate; mensural; meter (n.1) "poetic measure;" meter (n.2) unit of length; meter (n.3) "device for measuring;" -meter; Metis; metric; metrical; metronome; -metry; Monday; month; moon; parameter; pentameter; perimeter; piecemeal; semester; symmetry; thermometer; trigonometry; trimester.

It is the hypothetical source of/evidence for its existence is provided by: Sanskrit mati "measures," matra "measure;" Avestan, Old Persian ma- "to measure;" Greek metron "measure," metra "lot, portion;" Latin metri "to measure."

moonstruck
shoot
amenorrhea
half-moon
honeymoon
menarche
meniscus
mensal
menses
menstrual
menstruate
menstruation
menstruous
Monday
month
moonbeam
moon-calf
moon-dial

Tuesday 30 May 2023

A∴A∴



Craig Ferguson Speaks 
From The Heart



Bligh



The Captain Bligh Conspiracy

History Channel Documentary 
looking into Captain Bligh,
The Royal Navy's most infamous mariner, 
but was he really  the nasty brute 
that popular culture portrays? 

On the trail  an Australian descendant of the man  
endeavour’s to uncover the truth.

Haiti



Toussaint L'Overture and 
The Haitian Revolution  Paul Foot



Talkie

Talkie, Talkie-Talkie, Happy-Talk --
Talk about Things You Like to Do....

Does Anyone Want Any Toast? | Red Dwarf | BBC
      
BOOT UP SEQUENCE INITIATED

VISUAL SYSTEM CCD 517.3
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE SYSTEM K177
MACHINE IDENT:  
,,TALKIE TOASTER,,
=============
MANUFACTURER:   TAIWAN
CRAPOLA INC. RECOMMENDED RETAIL PRICE:
=============
$£19.99 PLUS TAX


AURAL SYSTEM : ON-LINE

Red Dwarf - White Hole: Genius Holly & Talkie Toaster


Saturday 20 May 2023

Beat







“We’re Organ-Donors 
for The Rich —

If We TRY to Play 
like The Yankees in here
We Will Lose 
to The Yankees
out THERE

and I HATE to Lose —
I Hate to Lose even more than 
I like to Win.”




“As William Blake wrote at the start of the nineteenth century, ‘For the eye altering, alters all.’ 

Existentialism also flowered in the United States, but American existentialists were considerably more engaged with life than their Irish and French counterparts. Jack Kerouac was an athletic, Catholic-raised writer from Massachusetts. He gained a scholarship to Columbia University on the strength of his American football skills, but dropped out and gravitated to the bohemian underworld of New York City. This subculture inspired his book On the Road, the most famous of all the Beat novels. On the Road was written during an intense three-week period in 1951. It was typed, single spaced and without paragraph breaks, onto a continuous 120-foot-long scroll of paper that had been made by taping together separate sheets of tracing paper. Kerouac hammered away at the typewriter for long hours at a stretch, fuelled by amphetamines and not stopping for food or sleep. The scroll meant that he did not need to stop in order to insert a new page. 

The result was a stream-of-consciousness outpouring of pure enthusiasm which had the rhythms of jazz. It was as if he was constantly ramping up the energy of his prose in order to outpace and escape the nihilism of the world he wrote about. Kerouac’s writings are peppered with references to the Buddhist concept of satori, a mental state in which the individual perceives the true nature of things. The true nature of things, to someone experiencing satori, was very different to the true nature of things as perceived by Sartre or Beckett. 

It was Kerouac who coined the phrase ‘the Beat Generation’. The name arose in conversation with his friend John Clellon Holmes. As he later recalled, ‘[John] and I were sitting around trying to think up the meaning of the Lost Generation and the subsequent existentialism and I said “You know John, this is really a beat generation”; and he leapt up and said, “That’s it, that’s right!’’’ 

Although many people in the underground drug culture of the 1940s and 1950s self-identified as both ‘hipsters’ and ‘Beats’, the term ‘Beat’ has since gained a more specific definition. The phrase ‘Beat Generation’ is now used mainly to refer to the American writers Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg and their muse Neal Cassady. Original nihilistic Beat writers such as Trocchi are left out of this definition. 

There are also attempts to include the American writer William Burroughs in the Beat Generation, despite Burroughs’s unique ability to escape from any category he is placed in. 

This narrowing of focus has led the American poet Gregory Corso to remark ‘Three writers do not a generation make.’ 

Kerouac had originally picked up the word ‘beat’ from a street hustler and junkie who used the term to sum up the experience of having no money or prospects. Kerouac’s imagination latched onto the word because he saw another aspect to it, and one which complemented its original meaning of referring to a societal outcast. 

For Kerouac, the word implied beatitude

Beatitude, in Kerouac’s Catholic upbringing, was the state of being spiritually blessed. Shunned outcasts who gain glimpses of grace and rapture are a constant theme of Kerouac’s work, and the word summed this up in one immediate single-syllable blast. The word became attached to the wild, vibrant music that the Beats were so attracted to, and it was this connection to ‘beat music’ that lies behind the name of The Beatles. 

Unlike the more nihilistic European Beats, the American Beat Generation flavoured their version of existentialism with Eastern mysticism. By the middle of the twentieth century a number of Eastern texts had become available in Western translations. Richard Wilhelm’s 1924 German translation of the I Ching was published in English in 1950, for example, and the American anthropologist Walter Evans-Wentz’s 1929 translation of the Bardo Thodol, better known as the Tibetan Book of the Dead, gained widespread attention following its 1960 reissue. 

These texts described a spirituality that differed greatly from the hierarchical monotheistic religions of Judaism and Christianity, with their subservient devotion to a ‘Lord’. They talked about divinity as being something internal rather than external. They viewed spirituality as a matter of individual awareness. 

There are distinct differences in the definitions of words like satori, beatitude, enlightenment, grace, rapture, peak experience or flow, but these terms also have much in common. They all refer to a state of mind achievable in the here and now, rather than in a hypothetical future. They are all concerned with a loss of the ego and an awareness of a connection to something larger than the self. 

They all reveal the act of living to be self-evidently worthwhile. In this they stand in contrast to the current of individualism that coursed through the twentieth century, whose logical outcome was the isolation of the junkies and the nihilism of the existentialists. 

But interest in these states, and indeed experience of them, were not widespread. They were the products of the counterculture and obscure corners of academia, and hence were treated with suspicion, if not hostility. The desire for personal freedom, which individualism had stoked, was not going to go away, especially in a generation that had sacrificed so much in the fight against fascism. 

How could we maintain those freedoms, while avoiding the isolation and nihilism inherent in individualism? Reaching out towards satori or peak experience may have been one answer, but these states were frustratingly elusive and too difficult to achieve to provide a widespread solution

The writers of Casablanca had difficulty finding the right ending for the film, but the script they turned in at the last minute created one of the great scenes in cinema. 

It takes place at Casablanca airport during a misty night, and includes a waiting plane, a dead Nazi, and a life-changing decision. Humphrey Bogart’s Rick Blaine makes the decision not to leave Casablanca with Ilsa, the love of his life. 

He instead convinces her to leave with her husband and help him in his work for the Resistance. 

‘I’m no good at being noble,’ he tells her, ‘but it doesn’t take much to see that the problems of three little people don’t amount to a hill of beans in this crazy world.’ 

This is the moment when he admits that there is something more important than his own individual perspective and desires. Although he previously declared that he stuck his neck out for nobody, he now risks his life and liberty in order to allow the Resistance leader to escape. 

Rick ended the film leaving for a Free France garrison so that he too could fight the good fight. 

Hollywood movies fought off nihilism by offering hope, either through personal love, symbolic escape or the vaguely defined better future of the American Dream. 

Occasionally, they would offer warnings. Oscar-winning films such as Citizen Kane, There Will Be Blood or The Aviator were tragedies which depicted the ultimate isolation of those who got what they wanted

Casablanca’s screenwriters were helped by the fact that the film was set and made during the Second World War. This gave them a clear ‘greater good’ which they could appeal to. Rick was able to leave his spiritual and personal isolation in order to dedicate himself to the anti-fascist cause. 

But the film continued to resonate with audiences long after that war had been won, because Rick’s escape from nihilism remained powerful on a symbolic level. The promise that there was something better than individual isolation was something that audiences craved. 

That something better, whatever it was, would take effort, and involvement. But that effort would make it worth working towards. 

Existentialism lingered in Europe, but America was too industrious to navel-gaze. As the Second World War receded into memory, the United States was about to show the world exactly what mankind was capable of. 

It was time, President Kennedy boldly announced, to Go to The Moon....."

Friday 12 May 2023

Another.




The emotion of Love is an act of 
personal identification with an 
external Other, when the awareness of that person is 
so overwhelming that any 
illusion of separation between 
The Two collapses

There is a reason why 
the biblical term for 
physical Love was 
To Know’ someone. 

As such it is distinctly different from the isolating Individualism so dominant in the rest of the century. What it is not, however, is 
an easily extendable organisational principle 
that can readily be applied 
to Society as a whole. 

Christianity had done its best 
to promote Love during the 
previous two centuries. 
The Church ordered 
its followers to Love, 
through commandments 
such as ‘Love Thy Neighbour’, 
as if this was reasonable 
or possible

But ordering people to Love 
was about as realistic 
as ordering people 
not to Love. 

Love just doesn’t work that way, 
and it doesn’t inspire confidence 
in The Church that it 
seemed to think it did

It is noticeable that the more individualistic strains of American Christianity, which bucked the global trend of declining congregations, put less emphasis on that faith’s original teachings about Love and Social Justice. 

The love culture of the hippies was brought low by the egofuelling cocaine culture of the 1970s and 80s. Attempts at describing a non-individualistic perspective were dismissed for being drug-induced, and therefore false. The hippies’ stumbling attempts to describe their new awareness had been too vague and insubstantial to survive these attacks and they were written off as embarrassing failures by the punks. Yet slowly, over the decades that followed, many of their ideas seeped into the cultural mainstream. 

One way to understand the Twentieth Century’s embrace of Individualism is to raise a child 
and wait until he or she 
becomes a teenager. 

A younger child accepts their place in The Family hierarchy, but as soon as they become a teenager their attention shrinks from the wider group and focuses on themselves. Every incident or conversation becomes filtered through the ever-present analysis of ‘What about Me?’ Even the most loving 
and caring child will exhibit thoughtlessness and self-obsession. The concerns of others become minor factors in their thinking, 
and attempts to highlight this 
are dismissed by the 
catch-all argument, 
It’s not fair.’

There is a neurological basis for this 
change. Neuroscientists report that adolescents are more self-aware and self-reflective than 
prepubescent children. 

Aleister Crowley may have been on to something when he declared that The Patriarchal Age was ending and that The ‘Third Æon’ 
we were entering would 
be The Age of 
The Crowned and 
Conquering Child.




Wednesday 10 May 2023

Madness


Psychoanalytic Theory 
posits that Narcissism is related 
to attention-seeking behaviour. 

In The Theory, 
an excessive need 
for attention or admiration 
is termed narcissistic supply.

A 2019 study on adolescents with narcissistic tendencies and the use of social media explores this relation between Narcissism and attention seeking behaviour. 

In the study it was found that adolescents’ social media behavior was used as a means of gaining acceptance, validation
and attention

The research suggests that 
the need of motives behind 
social acceptance 
mediated the link 
between social media use 
and narcissism

The research also found that attention seeking behavior increases when these adolescents experience social rejection or threats to their ego/self-image.


Henry Irving married 
Florence O’Callaghan 
on 15 July 1869 
at St. Marylebone, London, 
but his personal life took second 
place to his professional life. 


On opening night of The Bells
25 November 1871, Florence, who 
was pregnant with their second 
child, criticised his profession : 
“Are you going on making 
A Fool of Yourself 
like this all Your Life?” 

Irving exited their carriage 
at Hyde Park Corner, walked 
off into the night, and chose 
never to see her again. 

He maintained 
a discreet distance from 
his children as well, but 
became closer to them 
as they grew older. 

Florence Irving 
never divorced Irving, 
and once he had been knighted 
she styled herself “Lady Irving”; 
Irving never remarried.

Hysteria



hysterical (adj.)
1610s, "characteristic of hysteria," the nervous disease originally defined as a neurotic condition peculiar to women and thought to be caused by a dysfunction of the uterus; literally "of the womb," from Latin hystericus "of the womb," from Greek hysterikos "of the womb, suffering in the womb," from hystera "womb," from PIE *udtero-, variant of *udero- "abdomen, womb, stomach" (see uterus). Compare hysteria.







“By the time Harry Bull returned to Borley to work as a curate, His Father’s eyesight and coordination had begun to deteriorate. As Reverend Bull became increasingly immobile, his son took on more parish and social responsibilities. 

Finally the Reverend went blind, and he died in the Blue Room at the Rectory on 2 May 1892 at the age of 59. The cause of death was recorded as locomotor ataxia, a neurological condition affecting the spine, which results in blindness and a loss of motor skills – the symptoms of syphilis

Syphilis was the much-feared, unspoken corruption at the heart of Victorian Life. The creeping terror of this disease was not only in its symptoms, but in the stealthy, undetectable nature of its progress. Invisible during the early stages, untreated it spread throughout the body, progressively destroying the skin, the mucous membranes, bones and internal organs – inflicting horrific mutilations on those who suffered from it. 

Ultimately, a softening of the brain would then lead to insanity. It was particularly prevalent among middle- and upper-class men. The social stigma of the disease meant that the voluntary hospitals remained unsympathetic to sufferers and many resorted to ineffective remedies from chemists and quacks. Ignorance about the nature of the infection led many men to put their faith in superstition, some believing, for instance, circumcision to be a cure. 

In 1884, a man in Liverpool defended himself against a charge of raping a fourteen-year-old girl, believing that by having sex with a virgin, he would cure himself by passing The Disease onto her. 

Quack doctoresses’ in a Liverpool brothel were also said to provide such cures, providing disabled children for the purpose. 

Syphilis could be transmitted to the next generation and some of the signs of infection passed to children were deafness, saddle-nose – where the bridge of the nose collapses – inflammation of the cornea and Hutchinson’s teeth, a malformation of the incisors. 

Following Reverend Bull’s death, the Rectory and the patronage of the living passed to the main beneficiary, his eldest son, Harry, with an implicit understanding that he would make provision for his sisters, though £100 was left specifically to Dodie. 

Reverend Bull was buried in the churchyard, touchingly alongside his son Cyril, who had died in infancy. As a memorial to his father, Harry commissioned a stained-glass window that was placed to the south of the nave in the church, celebrating the relationship between the rector and his congregation: ‘I am the good shepherd: the good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep.’ 

At twenty-nine, Harry Bull was tall and athletic with a heavy moustache. Like his father, he enjoyed outdoor pursuits – shooting, hunting, walking and tennis. In contrast to his father, he seemed to have little interest in women or family life and appeared to be very much a confirmed bachelor. He was especially fond of boxing and would pay the local boys to spar with him. 

One curious incident took place, when he had been visiting the East End of London. He was set upon by two thugs. Whether this was a street robbery – or even a sexual pick-up gone wrong – is unclear. But he was able to hold his own and knocked the two assailants out cold. 

He had a dog, Juvenal, and also began to collect cats, between twenty and thirty of them, which he adored, calling each one by name. At the same time, he’d feed countless strays, which he never turned away. Though regarded as eccentric by the locals, he was a popular ‘puckish, lovable man’.

At his first Christmas as the rector, he hosted a supper of roast beef and plum pudding as well as turning the drawing room into a miniature theatre at New Year, complete with footlights and scenery. The family presented a play, Why Women Weep, in which Harry took centre stage as the leading man. His brothers having forged lives away from Borley, the Rectory was now dominated by women : his mother and seven sisters, all unmarried – ‘old maids’, as Dodie had predicted.

Borley Rectory, once vibrant with the energy of a large growing family and their friends, had assumed the air of a convent.

The Ghost Hunters

The Ghost Hunters  - 1975 BBC Borley Rectory Documentary


Originally broadcast Thu 4th Dec 1975, 
22:15 on BBC One London

Ghosts abound in Britain. 
Thousands of people have seen and heard what they believe to 
be phantom footsteps, abnormal phenomena, and ghosts of all 
shapes and sizes, sometimes even moving above ground level.

In tonight's documentary 
Hugh Burnett visits some of the people 
who have tried to track them down, 
or heard and seen things they cannot explain. 
The film ranges from a haunted house, a haunted inn, 
even a theatre haunted by a butterfly - to Borley Church 
where many strange occurrences have been recorded.

Contributors
Film cameramen: Fintan Sheehan
Film cameramen: Eddie Best
Film cameramen: Tony Leggo
Film recordist: Chris King
Editor: Don Fairservice
Producer: Hugh Burnett



Wednesday 3 May 2023

Colour-Sergeant Spence






“In late summer we were shipped to Wales and put through a punishing exercise called Long Reach. A nonstop march, yomp and run over several days, up and down barren countryside, with a load of gear strapped to our backs, equivalent to the weight of one young teenager. 

Worse, Europe was suffering a historic heat wave, and we set out at the crest of the wave, the hottest day of the year. A Friday. 

We were told that the exercise would run through Sunday night. Late Saturday, during our only enforced rest, we slept in bags on a dirt track. After two hours we were awakened by thunder and hard rain. I was in a team of five, and we stood up, held our faces to the rain, drinking the drops. It felt so good.

But then we were wet. And it was time to march again. Sopping wet, in driving rain, marching now became something altogether different. We were grunting, panting, groaning, slipping. 

Gradually I felt my resolve start to give way. At a momentary stop, a checkpoint, I felt a burning in my feet. I sat on the ground, pulled off my right boot and sock, and the bottom of my foot peeled away. Trench foot. 

The soldier beside me shook his head. Shit. You can’t go on. I was gutted. But, I confess, also relieved. 

We were on a country road. In a nearby field stood an ambulance. I staggered towards it. As I got close, medics lifted me onto the open tailgate. 

They examined my feet, said this march was over for me. I nodded, slumped forward. My team was getting ready to leave. Goodbye, lads. See you back at camp. 

But then one of our colour sergeants appeared. Colour Sergeant Spence. He asked for a word. I hopped off the tailgate, limped with him over to a nearby tree. 

His back to the tree, he spoke to me in a level tone. It was the first time in months he hadn’t shouted at me. Mr Wales, you’ve got one last push. You’ve literally got six or eight miles left, that’s all. I know, I know, your feet are shit, but I suggest you don’t quit. 

I know you can do this. 
You know you can do this. 
Push on. You’ll never forgive yourself if you don’t. 

He walked away. I limped back to the ambulance, asked for all their zinc oxide tape. I wrapped my feet tightly and rammed them back into my boots. 

Uphill, downhill, forward, I went on, trying to think of other things to distract myself from the agony. We neared a stream. 

The icy water would be a blessing, I thought. But no. All I could feel were the rocks in the bed pressing against the raw flesh. 

The last four miles were among the most difficult steps I’ve ever taken on this planet. 

As we crossed the finish line I began to hyperventilate with relief. One hour later, back in camp, everyone put on trainers. For the next several days we shuffled about the barracks like old men. But proud old men. 

At some point I limped up to Colour Sergeant Spence, thanked him. He gave a little smile and walked away. 

57.