Dowsing for Submarines September 17, 2010
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryBeachcombing, in his hoarding way, has been storing up references to the military use of dowsing over the past months: indeed, he has already posted on the question of British dowsing for machine guns in the Second World War and hopes to come soon to the fraught question of dowsing for land mines this fall. […]
The Nine Unknown – An Invisible Library September 15, 2010
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, ContemporaryIn Beachcombing’s ergot, ‘invisible libraries’ are books or collections of books that have never existed except in the fantasies of readers. And today he has a cracker. In Louis Pauwels and Jacques Bergier’s Morning of the Magicians there appears a description of the Nine Unknown Men of India and their notebooks. For those who do […]
The Tiv and Hamlet September 12, 2010
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, ModernLaura Bohannan (aka Elenore Smith Bowen) was an anthropologist who came out of Oxford in the late 1940s. She did research with her husband Paul among the Tiv of Nigeria and the pair published several books on this federation over the next two decades. However, Bohannan also gave a remarkable BBC radio talk entitled, depending on […]
Review: A Handbook on Hanging September 10, 2010
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, ModernBeachcombing recently stumbled upon and cannot now shut up about Charles Duff’s A Handbook on Hanging: Being a Short Introduction to the Fine Art of Execution (1928) in a Nonsuch reprint.* Yes, it gives a caricature of the history of hanging, while also communicating the case for and against abolition back in the days when the […]
Tom Wintringham and Lenin’s Tractor September 8, 2010
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryOf all the intellectual perversions of modern times perhaps none was as bizarre and perhaps none had more serious consequences than the fawning attitude of some western democrats towards the Soviet Union and its satellites from the 1930s to the 1970s. The paeans of nonsense that there were written about Lenin and Stalin now beggar […]
Image: Pius XII in a bombed out Rome September 7, 2010
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, MedievalWhat would have happened if photography had been invented not in the early nineteenth-century but a hundred years before Columbus crossed the waters blue? Well, Beachcombing imagines Franciscan monks running around with tripods and dark rooms being built next to monastic kitchens. The Church would have monopolised this new technology, not as an art, but […]
Eating Roadkill September 6, 2010
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryBeachcombing’s village of Little Snoring is on a busy road and Beachcombing has long learnt to avert his eyes as various poor mammals appear inert before him on the tarmac. But knowing the infinite ingenuity of his fellow human-beings Beachcombing was only partly surprised to learn last week that there is a literature dedicated to the […]
Centaur of Volos September 5, 2010
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, ContemporaryAll centaur-lovers with a honeymoon or a sabbatical coming up should buy a ticket to Knoxville, Tennessee and visit the second floor of the Hodges Library at the University there. Still encased in the Greek mud, in which it sank almost two thousand five hundred years ago, is a centaur, the only one you will […]
History and Akasha – A Walk on the Wild Side… September 4, 2010
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, Contemporary, MedievalBit of an unusual post today as Beachcombing plunges, with misgivings and fear, into Akasha. Akasha is – for those of you, like Beachcoming a week ago, who have not the foggiest – ‘an unseen substance which is all around us all and present in every atom of this world and of the universe. This […]
Tally-ho: From Fighter Planes to Norman Knights? September 2, 2010
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, Medieval, ModernBeachcombing has indulged himself in the last two months with a total of six RAF posts: all in commemoration of the seventieth anniversary of the Battle of Britain. He knows though that enough is enough and thought that he would start to wind down with ‘tally-ho’: he promises no more than a couple new air posts […]
Review: First Light August 30, 2010
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryBeachcombing confesses that he has gone a bit Battle-of-Britain mad in the past few weeks with several posts on ‘their finest hour’ and the RAF generally. His excuse? Well, this is, after all, the seventieth anniversary of the BoB and so he offers here another, a review of his favourite BoB book: First Light. First Light not only […]
Churchill’s Dream August 27, 2010
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, ModernBeachcombing wanted to offer today an obscure bit of Churchilliana, ‘The Dream’, that, incredibly, has never been published on the internet. Whether or not it is the best thing that Churchill ever wrote is to […]
24 August 1940: The Night That Hitler Lost The War August 24, 2010
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryThe answer to the question of when the Third Reich doomed itself to extinction depends naturally on whom you ask. Some will tell you Germany’s failure to secure the Mediterranean in 1942 was crucial. Others will point to the invasion of the Soviet Union […]
Women Drivers in Stalingrad August 22, 2010
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryBeachcombing has already offered readers a series of his WIBT (‘wish I’d been there’) moments and couldn’t resist the following vignette that though unimportant in intention and outcome catches something of the Soviet Union in its worst years. Stalingrad in late […]
Biggles Meets the Sandman August 19, 2010
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryBeachcombing offers a post today on an unlikely WIBT meeting between two writers: T.E. Lawrence and W. E. Johns. Lawrence should need no introduction. He was a British lieutenant colonel who helped foment the Arab Revolt against the Ottoman Empire (1916-1918). And with a self-publicising genius and an […]