Billy was a rabbit
Billy was a frog
Billy was a blackbird
Billy was a dog
Billy was the only slave
Of a mad magician
Who used to change his shape
To suit each new position
So Billy was a carthorse
When he pulled the plough
But when the milkman didn't come
Billy was a cow
Billy was a hairless cat
To warm his master's bed
But when the pipes were frozen
He used dragon's breath instead
Billy wasn't very bright
And didn't think it strange
That when he questioned why this was
It was called "resisting change"
Billy was the only slave
In his master's hall
But knew that he was fortunate
To have a job at all
And Billy counts his blessings
Despite the constant stress
As there are private companies
Who'd do the job for less
So Billy learns to cram himself
Into each different form
And sometimes he's an elephant
And sometimes he's a worm
Sometimes he's a crocodile
And sometimes he's an ape
Just as his master forces him
Into each different shape
And as there is no helping hand
And all the work to do
Billy isn't Billy
Billy is a zoo
So it's pretty much like working in the public sector under a conservative government
Thursday, 23 February 2012
Tuesday, 21 February 2012
Day bag
When the children were little, Husband and I never went anywhere without the "day bag", which we kept packed with all those things - nappies, wipes, bottles, toys, more wipes - that small children need during the course of the day. As far as possible it was kept ready packed, with just a quick top-up needed each day of things which had run out or which needed to be fresh.
Son and Daughter have left home for university but the old folk still have the "day bag" for holidays and days out. What does it hold now? A rather sad collection of essentials for the not-so-young - prescription medicines, reading glasses, binoculars, spare plastic carrier bags.
Son and Daughter have left home for university but the old folk still have the "day bag" for holidays and days out. What does it hold now? A rather sad collection of essentials for the not-so-young - prescription medicines, reading glasses, binoculars, spare plastic carrier bags.
Sunday, 19 February 2012
Cosy
We have stayed in a good few self-catering properties in our time, both at home and abroad. Generally the standard has risen over the years - I haven't forgotten the concrete shed in Samos twenty years ago where it was only possible to move around if one of us stayed on the bed, where the bathroom backed on to the chicken-house and where the kitchen equipment amounted to one very large saucepan that would have taken a whole goat, and one very small saucepan that contained barely half a pint, and nothing in-between - and possibly the improvement is partly due to our spending a bit more on it as we got older, slightly richer and a lot more demanding.
However, the one thing that it always missing is a tea-cosy. Even in England, and even where the kitchen is full of the most specialist equipment, a plethora of pans and cupboards full of crockery, we have never found a tea-cosy to cover the teapot (which itself is always supplied as standard). Discussing this again yesterday, Husband said he had heard a radio phone-in where people didn't even know what a tea-cosy was.
I know that many people make tea in a mug. I do it myself at work. But at home we always make a pot, and often a big pot, and if we didn't use a cosy then our second cups would be tepid, never mind the third and fourth cups.
Tea-cosies used to be a staple at church fairs, bring and buy sales and all sorts of fund-raising events because they are easy to make (I prefer knitted ones with holes for handle and spout). Not so long ago, there were lots of novelty ones shaped like cats or cottages, but even these are not so easy to find nowadays.
And if tea-cosies are becoming rarer, what about their small cousins, egg-cosies? I can't remember the last time I saw an egg cosy for sale. Are they following anti-macassars and lace doilies into extinction?
(In case you are wondering, we use either a folded tea-towel draped over the pot or, as at present, Husband's woolly hat. The warmth of the pot has the added advantage of drying it off after a wet day out although it must be said that it is getting less fragrant as the week wears on).
However, the one thing that it always missing is a tea-cosy. Even in England, and even where the kitchen is full of the most specialist equipment, a plethora of pans and cupboards full of crockery, we have never found a tea-cosy to cover the teapot (which itself is always supplied as standard). Discussing this again yesterday, Husband said he had heard a radio phone-in where people didn't even know what a tea-cosy was.
I know that many people make tea in a mug. I do it myself at work. But at home we always make a pot, and often a big pot, and if we didn't use a cosy then our second cups would be tepid, never mind the third and fourth cups.
Tea-cosies used to be a staple at church fairs, bring and buy sales and all sorts of fund-raising events because they are easy to make (I prefer knitted ones with holes for handle and spout). Not so long ago, there were lots of novelty ones shaped like cats or cottages, but even these are not so easy to find nowadays.
And if tea-cosies are becoming rarer, what about their small cousins, egg-cosies? I can't remember the last time I saw an egg cosy for sale. Are they following anti-macassars and lace doilies into extinction?
(In case you are wondering, we use either a folded tea-towel draped over the pot or, as at present, Husband's woolly hat. The warmth of the pot has the added advantage of drying it off after a wet day out although it must be said that it is getting less fragrant as the week wears on).
Thursday, 9 February 2012
Society? What society?
All it takes is a little bit of snow.
I quite like snow, as long as I can look at it through a window. It is when I have to walk up the street, catch the bus, stand on the platform and wait for a train, that I don't like snow so much.
And what surprises me a little more each year is how few people nowadays clear the bit of pavement in front of their houses or in front of their shops. I will excuse the elderly and the infirm of all ages. But even in households with several able-bodied adults, very few come out with a shovel or a broom and make the little effort to be community-minded.
And what enrages me is how many of those who make no effort to clear the pavement, do make a considerable effort to clear their drives, so their cars can get easily in and out. That's what matters nowadays - the car. Not the pedestrian.
So when our government invokes the Big Society, I know that there is no such thing, just the blinkered selfishness that the same government represents.
I quite like snow, as long as I can look at it through a window. It is when I have to walk up the street, catch the bus, stand on the platform and wait for a train, that I don't like snow so much.
And what surprises me a little more each year is how few people nowadays clear the bit of pavement in front of their houses or in front of their shops. I will excuse the elderly and the infirm of all ages. But even in households with several able-bodied adults, very few come out with a shovel or a broom and make the little effort to be community-minded.
And what enrages me is how many of those who make no effort to clear the pavement, do make a considerable effort to clear their drives, so their cars can get easily in and out. That's what matters nowadays - the car. Not the pedestrian.
So when our government invokes the Big Society, I know that there is no such thing, just the blinkered selfishness that the same government represents.
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