The Great Snake Scare of 1828 May 16, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernA cute little WtH story from deepest Devon (Tavistock) about a cryptid snake. Beach knows that nineteenth-century newspapers had a great time making up serpents and other monsters, cue ‘the 200-foot-long Hideous Ice Worm‘ with hat tip to Invisible. But in this case local tradition seems to have done the job for them. I think […]
Nashville Debutante Fights Imperial Japan May 15, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary***With thanks to Larry*** A wish-i’d-been-there moment from 1941. Cornelia Fort was a twenty-three-year-old pilot and instructor flying a Cadet out of Honolulu in that year. Incredibly though CF had only been flying for a matter of months she was already deemed good enough to work as an instructor, putting a young Hawaiian through his […]
The Leprechauns of Liverpool and the Bowling Green from Hell May 14, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, ModernBeachcombing has been spending some time in the last few days looking at the fairy lore of Irish immigrants: spurred on by his continuing failure to find the New York changeling case. Not surprisingly the city of Liverpool stuck out: Liverpool was flooded by Irish workers in the nineteenth century, particularly after the horrors of […]
Review: I’m the Teacher, You’re the Student May 13, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : ActualiteUniversity campuses have seen many changes in the last fifty years: digital technology, new teaching methods, ‘political correctness’… But the change that really matters has been the extraordinary growth in student numbers. Take the UK and the US. About 60% of young men and women now undertake third-level education in these two countries, whereas in […]
Immortal Meals #8: The Ash Wednesday Supper May 12, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, ModernGiordano Bruno (pictured badly) was a sixteenth-century philosopher with a thing about infinity. Giordano also had an infinite capacity to create irritation. Indeed, his travels around Europe have a fascinating pattern of greeting, slighting and sprinting. Typically, GB is obliged to leave his last home in a hurry because of offence caused to the church […]
Welsh Pre-Marital Sex, c. 1850 May 11, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernA German tourist in Wales in the 1850s. Our hero befriends, Sarah the girl of the house where he is staying and on whom, Beach suspects, he had something of a crush. However, Sarah, who is the only member of the house who can speak English, is walking out with Owen, the elder son of […]
Badgers, Pigs and Asses: Celtic in English May 10, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, Medieval‘While I was on the ass, going to feed my dun hog, carrying only a matlock and some bannock, I saw a brock coming down from the tor that’s shaped like a bin’. It is not exactly poetry. But this sentence might stand as a memory aid for students of English. The interest lies not […]
Geologist Galivants with Spirits and Fairies May 9, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernJohn Beaumont (obit 1751) was a celebrated, to use an anachronistic word, geologist. He also experienced ‘the other side’ with a rush of spirits and ghosts that would have thrilled a wind-sock. One passage from his An Historical Physiological and Theological Treatise of Spirits, Apparitions, Witchcrafts, and Other Magical Practises are well known because they […]
Aggressive Ghost in Fourteenth-Century Germany May 8, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, ModernBeach is taking a long trip today on a plane with his three-year-old daughter: a first visit to the patria with Little Miss B who is thrilled because she is going to see otters AND eat fish and chips. In this time of holiday and reduced writing he has lined up several reserve posts taken […]
Selling Wives May 7, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernOne British author writes in 1910 ‘Within the last twenty years there have been at least a dozen cases reported in the press of men in a low station in life who have sold their wives, under the impression they could legally do so if all parties were willing. One husband parted with his […]
Indecent Lifting and Heaving May 6, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, ModernBeach recently came across the custom of ‘lifting’ for the first time courtesy of Invisible and Two Nerdy History Girls (an excellent blog should you get the chance). The girls describe an instance of lifting in Shrewsbury. This is part of the relevant extract: the full extract is to be found chez Nerd following the […]
The Last Invasion of Britain? May 5, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernIt is sometimes said that the last invasion of Britain took place 22 April 1778 at Whitehaven in Cumbria. On that date, John Paul Jones, a Scot and an American patriot led his ship, the USS Ranger, against the small Lakeland Port (another post, another day) in an unlikely annex to the War of Independence. […]
Lost in Transmission May 4, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, Medieval, ModernWords echo through the centuries like coins dropped down an infinite well. And as they are passed on they are smoothed and confused in the mouths of the people. The best examples we have of this are, of course, placenames: in the space of eighty generations Londinium becomes London, Mamucium becomes Manchester and Euboricum becomes […]
Zombie Planes May 3, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Actualite, Contemporary***Dedicated to Ricardo*** Beach is properly modest about his knowledge of aeronautics – apart from perhaps the prehistory of flight. But he is as moved as the next man to see the spitfire test in First of the Few or (1.37.40) or, for that matter, Corky sweating in Tales of the Golden Monkey as a […]
The Babel of History May 2, 2012
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, Contemporary, Medieval, ModernThe past according to a much worn-line is ‘a foreign country, they do things differently there’. Of course, if this were all then history would be a doddle. It would be enough to fill the Cutty Sark with sabres and give the natives music sheets for their acres. But, unfortunately for those who like […]