Things are about to change

Speculation is no doubt rampant worldwide. However the simple, bald and undeniable truth is that things are about to change. This is so quite apart from any media frenzy heightened as it may be by the glitter of royalty.  With King Charles III stepping back and possibly down to William the entire world is on the precipice of change and likely to be overshadowed by climate and pollution. This bodes ill for MAGA among other global interests.

If the King were to become so ill that he is unable to carry out his full duties on a temporary basis, he would be able to delegate some of them to two or more Counsellors of State. The current Counsellors of State are Camilla, William, Harry, Princess Anne, Prince Edward, Prince Andrew, and Princess Beatrice. If the King became completely unable to carry out his constitutional duties, to the point where the state could no longer function properly, his powers can be withdrawn and assumed by a regent. Under a 1937 law, that would be the next in line to the throne, which is Prince William.

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Languishing by the sea

Liz Taylor and Richard Burton were parading upon the large screen television when I drifted into the drawing room earlier this afternoon. The technicolor production of V.I.P.s (1963) was iconic. With an astonishingly young Maggie Smith, Rod Taylor, Margaret Rutherford (of Miss Marple fame), the portly (though extremely well attired) Orson Welles and handsome Louis Jordan.  Elsa Martinelli (of whom I had never heard) gave a creditable performance too.  The costumes were by Pierre Cardin exhibiting Miss Taylor in an uncommonly discrete reversible mink/overcoat, the first example of which I had seen at Pat Flesher Luxury Outerwear in Ottawa, Ontario.

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International Court of Justice

Last week, as the International Court of Justice (ICJ) issued a provisional ruling in South Africa’s lawsuit against Israel, it sent an authoritative message to the world: Allegations of genocide against Israel are not meritless. Notwithstanding Hamas’s unlawful conduct that started the war last October, the court clearly indicated an overwhelming disapproval of the way that Israel has been fighting the war—stating, notably, that Palestinians face a “real and imminent risk” to their right to be protected from acts of genocide.

The ruling issued by the ICJ ordered six provisional measures including for Israel to refrain from acts under the Genocide convention, prevent and punish the direct and public incitement to genocide, and take immediate and effective measures to ensure the provision of humanitarian assistance to civilians in Gaza.

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Afternoon retreat

It isn’t every day that invites the lethargy and revitalization of an afternoon retreat.  But today is one of those days.  The weather is windy and cool. The sea and the sky are grey. And I’ve accomplished what for me are the routine essentials of daily living; namely, getting out of bed before nine o’clock in the morning, undertaking the usual ablutions and refreshment of clothing, bicycle ride and car wash.  Sadly perhaps that’s it.  And to be honest I say so without apology or regret.  In fact if I were to outline to anyone of my age a favourable way to spend one’s day, I cannot think of any manner more ideal – other than communion of one sort or another with one’s family or friends, reading a good book, performing a hobby or playing the piano.  All of which is to say that I acknowledge the limitation of my daily enterprise but I am willing to accept that others have a far more expansive regime than I.

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Staring at the wall

It’s Sunday morning.  Traditionally a time for leisure and thoughtful repose.  Thankfully, in spite of having gone to bed late last night, I awoke before nine o’clock this morning.  Immediately I attacked a technical computer problem which is what kept me going until after midnight. I got it working in part, then abandonded the ambition in the interest of preserving my sanity and to acknowledge the lack of imperative.  Some things really don’t matter.

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A peep of the beach

One of the advantages of having recurringly visited Hilton Head Island, SC over the past 20 years is that we have acquired – albeit unwittingly – an estimable knowledge of the place. Specifically a grasp of what is within the proximity of Sea Pines where we have perched during our sojourns here. Historically I might have further qualified the acquaintance as being within cycling distance of our habitat for that is normally how we have insinuated the environment. This ambient limitation has however noticeably expanded; which is to say, the variance of my cycling communication has dwindled. This hindrance has in turn arisen by reason of nothing more astonishing than the effluxion of time and predictable human decomposition. While I generally snap my fingers at this predominantly unattractive evolution, I accept too that the constraint is real and not easily overcome. A degree of accommodation is required.

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The lobbyist

Very often we hear it spoken disparagingly of lobbyists. No doubt it is as much a collateral indignation of popular conversation as defence practice is of the legal community.  Either way it is equally clear that both viewpoints are sustainable. It is a useful reminder that writing to one’s legislative member, urging a certain way to vote (whether for climate change or gun control for example) is lobbying.

Lobbyists communicate the views of special interest groups to lawmakers, including members of Congress. They aim to influence how lawmakers write or vote on legislation related to particular issues—immigrant rights, health insurance, clean energy, housing development, transportation, and many others.

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Having a nice day

Things today couldn’t have got off to a better start. Nor was it only the vindication of having arisen before eight o’clock this morning that assured the magnificent perfectly brilliant day wasn’t already half-spent. The purification rather was a massage of my aching feet and rigid lower limbs. I almost hesitate to mention the euphoria that arose because its sounds so common and uncommon in the same breath. Little do we estimate the abuse our stilts and pads take every living day. They are without a doubt the long suffering units of our anatomy. If any other part of our corpus were subject to such perpetual abuse I am quite certain there’d be at least some recognition or evidence of the endurance. But until those quarters in the nether reaches are treated to the theurgy of a massage we otherwise live in not-so-blissful ignorance.

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Blending in with the wallpaper

It has to be one of the things we so enjoy about Hilton Head Island that it has acquired a familial tone to it.  We’re about as well acquainted as one may expect to be with our estate agent (whom we have known for well over a decade and whom we find to be singularly helpful and completely trustworthy); we’ve developed neighbourhood familiarity at a local beanery; we know our way about our preferred areas of the island without having to rely upon GPS; we recognize the inevitable changes and improvements (as well as confessing the aging of both ourselves and certain of our environment); and, most significantly we rejoice in being back, being home among steady and stimulating personalities and soul-stirring landscape.

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The Oxford English Dictionary (OED)

Sir James Murray’s estimate that the dictionary would be completed by 1891 proved to be wildly optimistic; it was not until 1928, well after his death, that final volume was published. The last printed edition of the OED was published in twenty volumes in 1989 and is now only available to subscribers electronically, a medium which allows for almost instantaneous updates and amendments.

Citations and definitions of each word were laboriously transferred on to slips of paper, around three tons worth by his death, from which they were eventually distilled into entries for the dictionary. To speed the process up Murray sent an Appeal for Readers around the Anglophone world asking for volunteers to supply him with suitable quotations illustrating how various English words were used over the centuries. Respondents were asked to avoid concordances of the Bible, Shakespeare, and Edmund Burke as they had already been trawled through. One of the most prolific postal contributors was William Chester Minor, a murderer staying at Her Majesty’s pleasure at Broadmoor Asylum for the Criminally Insane, who sent in over 12,000 citations.

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