Month: <span>May 2009</span>

tyreYeah, so that’s our tyre. On the way back from our honeymoon (just after passing Horsham) over a year ago, we broke down.

Today we were off to visit friends in Horsham (The same friends who helped bail us out last time) and about an hour and a quarter out of Melbourne we heard this lovely grating sound {cue image on the right}. The spare naturally had something wrong with it as well, RACV could tow within 20k’s to an unknown tyre centre, but we exploited our other options and Geoff’s wonderful sister and her husband drove out (with what we thought was a tyre that would fit), of course that tyre was the right size but the bolt positions were different, so we grabbed the crappy spare and drove around and found a tyre place and the guy tentatively put a new tube in it and said that we really shouldn’t be driving on it, but home we are.

Laura – my sister – now knows all about tyre sizes, thanks to her Google research (pre Anita and Stu driving out) and I have the feeling that Geoff and I will never drive to Horsham again.

*A note here, we tried to book in for a tyre change the other day but the place was full, so we thought we’d risk it. Epic Fail. Don’t risk it. It wastes lots of time.

Life

April 30th (in America) is: Poem in Your Pocket day.

I love words goodly writ. But I don’t really have a favourite poem. My husband says the word poem: P-ome and I say it Poe-em. Regardless of how you say it, po-ems – and well written prose are the stuff of enlightenment – in a truly literary sense. Please share any quality author/book/poet/poem recommendations. I’m quite in love with Rainer Marie Rilke, but need some more variety to supplement the many fine novels still on my shelf.

As I do not have a poem to share, I will share a short story by Hans Christian Anderson (of whom I’m am using to make a book for my Publication Design class). I have chosen mostly lesser known work:

The Sunbeam and the Captive

It is autumn. We stand on the ramparts, and look out over the sea. We look at the numerous ships, and at the Swedish coast on the opposite side of the sound, rising far above the surface of the waters which mirror the glow of the evening sky. Behind us the wood is sharply defined; mighty trees surround us, and the yellow leaves flutter down from the branches. Below, at the foot of the wall, stands a gloomy looking building enclosed in palisades. The space between is dark and narrow, but still more dismal must it be behind the iron gratings in the wall which cover the narrow loopholes or windows, for in these dungeons the most depraved of the criminals are confined. A ray of the setting sun shoots into the bare cells of one of the captives, for God’s sun shines upon the evil and the good. The hardened criminal casts an impatient look at the bright ray. Then a little bird flies towards the grating, for birds twitter to the just as well as to the unjust. He only cries, “Tweet, tweet,”  and then perches himself near the grating, flutters his wings, pecks a feather from one of them, puffs himself out, and sets his feathers on end round his breast and throat. The bad, chained man looks at him, and a more gentle expression comes into his hard face. In his breast there rises a thought which he himself cannot rightly analyze, but the thought has some connection with the sunbeam, with the bird, and with the scent of violets, which grow bluxuriantly in spring at the foot of the wall. Then there comes the sound of the hunter’s horn, merry and full. The little bird starts, and flies away, the sunbeam gradually vanishes, and again there is darkness in the room and in the heart of that bad man. Still the sun has shone into that heart, and the twittering of the bird has touched it. Sound on, ye glorious strains  of the hunter’s horn; continue your stirring tones, for the evening is mild, and the surface of the sea, heaving slowly and calmly, is smooth as a mirror.

Books Life Words

Have you ever come on anything quite like this extravagant generosity of God, this deep, deep wisdom? It’s way over our heads. We’ll never figure it out.

Is there anyone around who can explain God? Anyone smart enough to tell him what to do? Anyone who has done him such a huge favour that God has to ask his advice?

Everything comes from him; Everything happens through him; Everything ends up in him. Always glory! Always praise! Yes. Yes. Yes.

(Romans 11:33-36 MSG)

Christianity Words