This week a photo from the archives …

Sharon Listening to Trace
London Zoo; June 2008
Click the image for larger views on Flickr
Here’s another in our series of the strange and weird from our local auction house.
Left’s start off with something which is an occasional visitor, but turns up in a flock in this sale: stuffed birds (all separate lots) …
A stuffed songbird on a branch in a Victorian glass cabinet
A taxidermy barn owl in shrubs, under glass dome on mahogany base
A taxidermy barn owl on tree stump under glass dome on mahogany stand
Taxidermy: a Hen Harrier on wooden base under glass dome
A taxidermy kestrel on rocky base in glass and wooden case
Followed quickly by …
A rare mounted vintage animal head, probably a blackbuck, with one with normal horn, the other withered, on a wooden shield, with fragmentary taxidermist label from Byculla, Bombay
But then …
Two goatskin rugs, unused
The goats must have been mighty cold!
After which we sadly have to descend into the relatively ordinary …
A collection of cigarette cards; (some in albums) on the topics of dogs, The Reign of King George V, motor cars, railway engines, etc. also loose cards including fish, English period costumes, History of Army uniforms, Typhoo tea cards, ‘Cellarius’s Ancient Atlas New edition 1835’, and a leather bound album of old photographs concealing a hidden musical box
An Elizabeth II silver clown orchestra of five musicians, each performing on loaded circular base, 6″ and smaller, London import marks for 1974
An antique brass turban box plus a Johnson and Ravey brass cased mechanical spit
A large decorative silver coloured vase, a decorative bird in cage, a silver plated hinged pen box plus other decorative ethnic bowls, jars and dishes
A good selection of vintage shoe horns to include one Bakelite and metal, plus oriental leather canvas and beaded shoes, etc.
A collection of animal figurines including a large zebra, frogs, parrot, a Russian horse, cats, and a collection of Laurel & Hardy fridge magnets, a Nao figurine of a girl, and a Beswick figure of a Robin.
A large pale [sic] and lid [actually it’s a churn, not a pail] plus two further smaller pales [sic] with handles, and another, also a wicker log basket
An antique oriental bronze temple
In pieces!
An unusual Edward VIII commemorative toilet roll holder, circa 1936, with an unopened pack of Tri-Sol medicated toilet paper (price 6d), together with twelve Wedgwood Edme undecorated coffee cups and saucers
An interesting Chinese bronze large cover, possibly to a brazier, Ming dynasty or later, cast with the eight trigrams and with inscriptions, with two handles, 39 cms across
Just the lid; nothing to go with it!
A box of old fishing floats, several glass and wrought iron table lamps, a box of wooden items including animal figurines and boxes, a quantity of old horse shoes, a box of vintage tins, some commemorative, and a box of glassware including pressed coloured glass and a Cornishware storage jar and cover, plus others
A charming lot comprising a handsome Marks Garage, lot also includes a small quantity of vehicles, some boxed including a Corgi Toys Bentley Continental Sports Saloon, a Corgi Classic 9031 Renault, unboxed vehicles include a Ford Zephyr, by Meccano, a Dinky Aveling-Barford and a yellow Dinky Super Toy Mobile Crane, lot also contains a silver plated tea pot on stand and milk jug and sugar bowl, etc.
A Vintage ‘BP Zoom’ metal petrol pump
An unusual garden ornament in the form of an obelisk on concrete plinth
A vintage Agricastriol hand delivery pump for oil in original green cabinet
And finally three things I never thought to see, and certainly ot away from the big auction houses …
A single manual harpsichord by William Dowd, Paris 1975, in a blue painted case with gold line decoration, the sound board painted with flowers and raised on a turned painted stand. This lot comes with a padded removers case, a small leather attaché case of tools and a red pouch of tools.
A two manual harpsichord by William Dowd, Paris 1975, the blue painted case with gold line decoration raised on stop fluted tapering legs. This instrument comes with a padded removers case and a red pouch of tools.
And especially …
A Brookes Champion Standard B17 reproduction penny farthing
Nude girls perform Shakespeare’s The Tempest in New York’s Central Park. Which is absolutely brilliant. Good on them. It just goes to show there is sanity and common-sense around and this should be encouraged — and not just those with the courage to perform but the vast majority of the audience too.
I have, as I promised I would, just added an update to my earlier To Brexit or Not to Brexit? post.
There was a highly amusing, but actually quite serious, piece in the Guardian on Tuesday (17 May) from comedian Frankie Boyle. It went under the headline
This week we’ll take a quick look at street names. Not just any street names but the less salubrious ones that could have been found in historic London.
John Rocque’s 1746 map of London, a brilliant resource, shows an absolute warren of little alleys, courts and slightly larger lanes. Many, of course, took their names from local inns, churches, commercial establishments or trades. Hence …
Thread Needle Street, which now houses the Bank of England.
Black Friars, named for the nearby monastery.
Of Alley (near Strand) which is one of a group of streets named for the various components of landowner George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham’s name and title.
Dunghill Mews, off Trafalgar Square, which is now the site of the Canadian High Commission.
Whore’s Nest, a self-explanatory name of a courtyard in Southwark along with the nearby Dirty Lane, Foul Lane and Little Cock Alley.
And then, of course there are the even more ribald. London was not the only place to sport a Gropecunt Lane, in fact London apparently had several so named. To which we can only add Shitteborwelane (now Sherborne Lane) off the now King William Street, which was so named to the vast amounts of ordure it once contained.
But one of my favourites, and not at all salacious, is the relatively recent Ha-Ha Road in Greenwich.

This will probably be the last of the photographs here from our early April trip to York — but there are quite a few more on my Flickr photostream. This is a montage of 5 or 6 shots of York Minster from the SW.

Our mid-monthly round up of recently encountered quotes, inspirational, educational and amusing.
If porn is inherently & in all contexts destructive, then SEX is inherently & in all contexts destructive.
[Emily Nagoski]
Most people can’t fathom why naturist families have such positive, wholesome relationships. Children from clothes free families grow up with relatively few body confidence issues.
[British Naturism]
Save the Earth; don’t give birth. This is the really radical ecological message people aren’t willing to face: the most damaging thing you can do environmentally is breed.
[Mark Walsh & Dane Burman quoted on Facebook]
It’s hard to win an argument with a smart person, but it’s damn near impossible to win an argument with a stupid person.
[Bill Murray]
I sympathise a little with Hunt [UK Health Secretary] — he was born into military aristocracy, a cousin of the Queen, went to Charterhouse, then Oxford, then into PR: trying to get him to understand the life of an overworked student nurse is like trying to get an Amazonian tree frog to understand the plot of Blade Runner. Hunt doesn’t understand the need to pay doctors — he’s part of a ruling class that doesn’t understand that the desire to cut someone open and rearrange their internal organs can come from a desire to help others, and not just because of insanity caused by hereditary syphilis.
[Frankie Boyle]
You go through life blind but with the delusion of sight. Try not to be fooled by what you think you see & what other people think they see.
[Brad Warner on Twitter]
The proposals the Secretary of State outlined did not appear to depart significantly from the Human Rights Act — we note in particular that all the rights contained within the ECHR are likely to be affirmed in any British Bill of Rights. His evidence left us unsure why a British Bill of Rights was really necessary.
… … …
If a Bill of Rights is not intended to change significantly the protection of human rights in the UK, we recommend the Government give careful thought before proceeding with this policy.
… … …
Given the seemingly limited aims of the proposed Bill of Rights, the Government should give careful consideration to whether, in the words of the Secretary of State, it means unravelling “the constitutional knitting for very little”. If for no other reason, the possible constitutional disruption involving the devolved administrations should weigh against proceeding with this reform.
[House of Lords European Union Select Committee; Report The UK, the EU and a British Bill of Rights; May 2016]
To bring about structural change, lasting change, awareness is not enough. It requires changes in law, changes in custom … You consolidate your gains and then you move on to the next fight from a stronger position.
[Barrack Obama]
Earl Cathcart: My Lords, the noble Lord, Lord Hunt, has twice mentioned weights and measures authorities enforcing this [tobacco regulations] in a heavy-handed or a light-touch way. Can the Minister comment on which he thinks they will do?
Lord Prior [the Minister]: I certainly hope that enforcement will be more Italian than traditionally British, if I may put it that way.
[House of Lords debate on the new Tobacco Regulations from the EU]
Wind chimes are made from the metallic bones of robots that tried to overthrow us. Hang them outside your house as a warning to the others.
When you are dead, you don’t know that you are dead. It is difficult only for the others. It is the same when you are stupid.
Not every day is a good day,
live anyway.
Not everyone tells the truth,
trust anyway.
Not everyone will love you back,
love anyway.
Not every game will be fair,
play anyway.
We act as if the Earth was a craft ball someone told us to bedazzle.
[Rob R Dunn]
It looks as if all the updates and changes are good,
so I’m declaring refurbishment complete and removing the odd test post.
If anyone finds anything which needs snagging then please let me know.
Once again, apologies for the inconveniences caused and thank you for your forbearance.