Featured T13 post from last week: Tricia pulled off a very creative TT.
Last week I let my kids come up with suggestions for T13 topics. A fair number of you wanted to see what I, and my kids, could do with item # : 13 identical slices of cheese. Well, where it is:
What? Not enough? But there are 13 of them. All right, fine. We did kind of have a little fun figuring out where the slices should go.
1. Got eaten. Almost didn’t make it into the picture.
2. On top the kitchen cupboard.
3. On top of a lamp.
4. Got eaten
5. Got eaten
6. On another lamp. No picture because it was a boring lamp.
7. On a door knob. The Girl liked door knobs and tried to put them on a couple more, but I made her find another place.
8. … like in the refrigerator. Too bad it didn’t make it into the right part of the fridge.
9. Another one got eaten. We are talking Munster here. Who could resist?
10. On the dresser.
11. On the sewing machine. But I’m NOT going to try to turn it into a skirt.
12. On another lamp, also boring.
13. And finally here for you on the computer.
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And here.
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Susan Helene Gottfried
colleen
PopArtDiva
FickleMinded
WriterCarmen
Lanie Fuller
Matthew James Didier
GeoJunkie
Mozi Esme
Mary
Boomer Lady’s Babbling
Celticlibrarian
Mr. Al sent this week’s By George! in last night. I know I should have stayed up for it, but I didn’t so it’s late and I haven’t even read it yet. Forget about having a picture with it. Anyway, I hope it’s good.
In our time when communication with anyone nearly anywhere on the planet instantaneously is a fact of life, it’s hard to imagine a time when communication was more or less limited to the people one could speak to face to face. Letters were largely the habit of the Better Sorts, who could afford private letter carriers. Even a rudimentary education was beyond most people, particularly in the countryside.
But the situation had changed enough by the early 19th century that London could support a fair number of newspapers. These were not newspapers in the sense that we think of them today. They were more or less op-ed pages with some news, and much gossip,sprinkled throughout. They also made no bones about their political affiliations.
The Tories had their papers and the Whigs theirs. No one expected papers to be impartial, they were supposed to support the cause. And tell the world what the Better Sorts were doing behind closed doors. To this end, newspaper publishers, being good businessmen, realized that there was money to be made not only by selling papers to the faithful, but by accepting money to run stories favoring particular candidates or other significant persons.
As I mentioned earlier, London in the early 19th century was mad for gossip. The fastest way to spread it was through the papers. It was only natural that the Prince and Princess of Wales would approach papers already in the Whig or Tory camp and ask that their side of the story be given a public airing.
It gave the Prince a venue in which the worst stories of his wife’s behavior would reach the widest possible audience. It gave the Princess the platform she desired to show the world how badly her husband was treating her. It would seem that the Prince had to pay considerably more for his good press than Caroline. But as the Prince was well aware, life just wasn’t fair sometimes.
All of the people involved knew that it it never hurt to make sure publishers saw things their way with a little gift. Or even supplying the stories to be printed. If the stories were true, all the better. But if they were not… The Princess had the Morning Chronicle on her side, as well as The Pilot and the Star. While Tory papers could be counted on to be loyal to all things Tory, they had to tread carefully as regarded the Prince Regent.
It was one thing to run articles about Caroline’s bad behavior, it was another to run articles praising the Prince Regent. Lady Charlotte Lindsey informed Lord Brougham, Caroline’s media handler, that the publisher of the Evening Star was offered 300 pounds a year to become the Prince’s friend. The offer was declined. According to one historian; “Championing the Princess was far more profitable than supporting the Regent.”
The former publisher of the Morning Post, Peter Stewart, claimed “some permanent situation under government.” The basis of his claim was that a small annuity he had received would be “doubled or tripled as a permanency whenever His Royal Highness by the accession of power was able to do so.”
The Rev Henry Bate Dudley loyally came to the Prince Regents defense in the pages of the Morning Herald. For those loyal services he received a baronetcy and a stall at the cathedral at Ely. The good reverend thought his loyalty had to been bought rather cheaply and pressed a claim for more. It was rejected. He then “obtained by blackmail an annuity of 300 pounds.” Not a word on what this gentleman of the cloth was blackmailing the Regent with, only that he was successful. Damn!
What was true for the Prince Regent and Princess of Wales was true for all of the Better Sorts. The papers of London could be a powerful weapon against an adversary. If incriminating letters fell into the wrong hands, a bit of legwork to shop them around to the papers is all it would take to destroy a reputation. Libel laws only protected, in theory, people who had had lies printed about them. If your enemy happened to possess information that was true, things could go very badly. For Princess Caroline,she was going to discover that even bought friends had their limit. And that even those who wished her well could not hide the fact that she had begun to behave very badly indeed.
– Mr. Al
The boy has been playing around on Google lately. He says the thing most people want to know is how to set the table. I’m not sure if I believe it, but I happen to have an expert on tap – someone who used to teach Meal Management at a university – so I’m putting together a short series of blogs talking all about it.
He said a few minutes ago that the thing people fear the most is heights.
Heights? More than death or taxes? Apparently so.
Personally, I’m more afraid of losing people I care about than heights, but I tend to back away from the crumbling lip of the Grand Canyon or low retaining walls on the roofs of sky scrapers. I consider it a healthy fear.
How about you? What are you afraid of?
This email said something about painting the trucks in Europe to look like the products inside. Or, almost anyway.
When I got done making my pie last week I found I had a fair amount of crust dough left. Ever wonder what to do with it? I don’t like these enough to make them on their own, but I’m glad to do it to use up the extra dough.
Roll out all the rest of the pie crust. Spread butter on top. Sprinkle cinnamon and sugar. I like to put about a tsp of cinnamon in half a cup of sugar, mix, then sprinkle together. Roll into a tube. Cut the tube at quarter inch intervals.
Bake on cookie sheet at 400 F until brown.
Click the picture to go to the hub
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If you posted a recipe or a food photo, leave a comment and I’ll add your link here. Um… in about a week.
Tamy made a Farmer’s Breakfast
Zriz made Banana Cake/Bread (nothing like the one I did a few weeks ago)
Kristen did Butterscotch Ice Cream Sauce
Sreisaat did Indian Style Meat Patties
Tess W showed us a tea party
Suzie (Casamento, not Suzie of Suzie’s House) made Granny’s Cheap and Yummy Chili
Sarah showed us how to make One Fish Lemon, also known as Neung Pla Manao
Roshida showed us a very nice platter
Jack: Takes you back, don’t it?
Jill: I’ll say! It’s been so long since we visited the old place.
Jack: Well get an eye full now because now that we’re going to rent it out, we won’t be here much.
Jill: Know what I’m going to miss the most? All the space! This house is huge!
Jack: Sure is! Our new trailer house could fit inside the living room of this place. Look at that fireplace. I remember putting whole logs in it just fine. And I know you liked all the counters in the kitchen and the down stairs bathroom.
Jill: And the up stairs bathroom!
Jack: Upstairs bathroom? Darling, I hate to tell you, but it’s the smallest room in the house.
Jill: I know, I know, but look how big the tub is!
Today’s theme is Space
Previously in Jack and Jill Gosh, Thanks
Saturday photo scavenger hunt
The rules for Photohunt can be found here.
Be sure to visit the home page.
Judge Jennifer Armatage steepled her hands before her thoughtfully. She loved her job, despite all the ambiguities. She loved the sense of purpose, the importance of choosing the best path for the salvation of a family or a child. She prided herself on allowing even the youngest child a chance to have his or her say. But how far could she let it go?
“Young man, are you saying it is all a conspiracy?” She addressed her question to the 12 year old boy currently caught in a custody dispute.
“Yes,” Ben Hammaker answered. “I am.”
Featured Thursday Thirteen from last week:
Actually, there were two I couldn’t choose between:
Jenn provided us with free TT banners!
Claudia of Out On a Limb fame links to some very useful programs
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I was telling my kids I needed a subject for my Thursday Thirteen list. In the mood to be helpful, they started throwing out suggestions. Here are thirteen of them.
1. Fingers
2. Cookies
3. Muffins
(I’m kind of getting the feeling they don’t understand what I’m looking for.)
4. Meat chunks (can you tell it’s supper time?)
(I stop and explain how it works)
5. Things my kids came up with (this whole thing is their idea.)
6. leaves
(That was the boy’s suggestion. He wasn’t listening.)
7. Curtain pulls
8. Reasons to not make cr@py shows.
9. Reasons to not watch war movies.
(He’s still not listening. The girl is making sure I write all this down.)
10. Wads of cash.
11. “Things your kids want.” followed by “There’s more than 13, don’t put that there.”
12. Slices of cheese. (“all identical”)
13. Things the kids raided the frig for.
You know, I might actually use – well, at least one of these.
In order to get the permalink from this post you must both put your URL in the Mr. Linky thing and leave a comment
More Thursday Thirteen participants can be found here
And here.
As always, I welcome the link to your Thursday Thirteen in my comments as well as in Mr. Linky..
The Eclectic Witch
Thorne
Tricia
Susan Helene Gottfried
WriterCarmen
Paige Tyler
On a limb with Claudia
Mary
ScrapbookinGal
Sue
Matthew James Didier
Becky68
Eaton Bennett
julia
Mozi Esme
Chameleon@CoffeeBreak
13 Facts I Love about my Dolphin
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Mr. Al has now brought us well into the Regency, touching on such topics as Tsar Alexander, and Boue Brummel, but what of his dear wife, Princess Caroline?
The Prince’s treatment of his wife netted her a great deal of public sympathy. While he could exclude her from his personal life and from official functions, his control over her personal life was limited. He had to support her, parliament made sure of that. As long as she had her own household, he couldn’t really control who visited her. He was especially put out by the fact that many members of his own family would accept her invitations to come visit.
I know, I already have a post up for today, but I want to get this into my archives because it doesn’t happen every day.
Today is Square Root Day. You know: 3/3/09. I feel so privileged to be alive today. 🙂
I’m not ready. Worse, I don’t think my kids are even close to being able to handle this.
Today’s feature is a guest blog with friend and American Title Award winner Helen Scott Taylor. Welcome Helen!
Before I wrote my recent release The Magic Knot, I spent a while deciding on the paranormal/fantasy world in which to set the story.
I thought of the usual vampires and shape shifters, but so many authors have written marvelous books about these paranormal beings, I wanted to try something different. During my research, I discovered the fairy world provides scope for almost anything to happen. Within the fairy world, there are all types of beings, from vampires to shape shifters, hideous monsters to the preternaturally beautiful god-like race of the Irish Tuatha Dè Danaan. Many fairy creatures and races possess magical abilities and the range of gifts and skills is limitless.
For any writer wanting to flex the imagination and create a new and exciting fantasy world, the fairy world provides a wonderful starting point.
I wanted to use a setting I knew well, so I chose Cornwall in England. This area is rich in folk law. When I researched the different fairy races said to inhabit Cornwall, the Cornish piskies jumped out at me as the obvious choice. Piskies are known as pixies in other parts of England and are usually thought of as small mischievous beings. For the purposes of my story, my half-human, half-Cornish pisky heroine Rose is human sized.
The Irish Tuatha Dè Danaan are a beautiful race of human-sized fairies descended from Greek gods who arrived on the emerald Isle millennia ago. They are trooping fairies, which means they live together in groups. As soon as I read about this mysterious race, I knew I’d discovered my hero’s identity. But to make things a little more interesting, Niall O’Connor, the hero of The Magic Knot, is not purebred Tuatha Dè Danaan. He is half leprechaun. And yes, in my world leprechauns are little people. Luckily, Niall and his identical twin brother Michael take after their father in looks and stature. But Niall is rather touchy about his leprechaun blood.
In my fairy world featured in The Magic Knot, each fairy embodies the qualities of one of the elements. The leprechauns and Cornish piskies are Earth elementals, the noble old blood Tuatha Dé Danaan are either Fire, Air, or Water. This gives them their powers, strengths, and weaknesses.
Earth is the mother, the element of birth and renewal. Earth elementals are steady, grounded, and generous, with their feet firmly on the ground. Confident and steadfast, Earth elementals have an instinct for survival, which makes them excellent protectors.
Air elementals are intelligent with great imagination, and can be very persuasive. They are good at conceiving new ideas and seeing changes coming. They have an affinity to music. They may ‘have their heads in the clouds’ and be difficult to pin down. Their spiritual beauty is reflected in the intricate formation of snowflakes.
Water elementals are the nurturers, the calm center that supports loved ones to help them conquer problems. Sensual, graceful, and often very beautiful, Water elementals have strong emotions, and love deeply.
Fire elementals embody passion, enthusiasm, and desire. They are quick and bright, but often emotionally volatile. Forceful and highly opinionated, Fire elementals think they know best. They are considered to be ‘hot blooded’.
To find out which element you are, go to my website www.helenscotttaylor.com and take my elements quiz. Then come back and tell us what element you are!
– Helen Scott Taylor
And the winner of the Chocolate bear is Fiona, whose name was drawn by The Boy. Fiona, send your shipping info to me at AliceAudreyJ at Yahoo dot com, and I’ll get that bear right out to you.
6 cups thin sliced apples
2 Tbs tapioca – uncooked
3/4 c sugar
½ tsp cinnamon
1/4 tsp nutmet
1 tsp lemon juice
Cut up apples. Mix all ingredients together. Set aside for 15 minutes. Make a double layer pie crust. Very important the pie has a crust top and not just some decorative crust pieces placed on top. Without the full covering, you get apple leather bits on the top layer and cooked apple pie underneath. This is not as good as it sounds. Also, if you don’t cut holes in the top crust then the top crust will balloon out in the oven and collapse into ugly lumps once it cools. Bake at 400F for 45-50 minutes.
In the picture above I sprinkled cinnamon sugar on top of the crust, just for kicks.
Click the picture to go to the hub
If you did a recipe today, leave your link in the comments and I’ll link to you here.
Sherry with a meatloaf recipe
The Social Frog with Easy Reuben Sandwich Slices
Roshida did a picture of Manado food
Elizabeth at The Hinge showed us her churche’s welcome night. You should see it!
Lisa has an Ashkenasic Sour Cream Coffee Cake which I didn’t even see when I went by. Not sure what that’s about.
Divine and Simply Divine showed us the cake she baked at Christmas
Jack: Help!!!
Jill: What’s up with Raoul?
Jack: He’s mad because he still can’t get the dress off. Bye, Raoul! And thanks!
Jill: Here, let me get you down from there. But what on Earth are you thanking him for?
Jack: He has good taste in beer.
Today’s theme is thankful.
Previously in Jack and Jill Mistake
Saturday photo scavenger hunt
The rules for Photohunt can be found here.
Be sure to visit the home page.