Sunday, 3 May 2026
Remember me to Leicester Fields
Saturday, 2 May 2026
It came just the same
Early this morning, I headed down to the coffee shop under branches of cherry and plum blossoms now past their prime. The petals have descended overnight leaving a ring across the grass and pavement resembling heavenly bodies hurled outward from a celestial big bang.
Spring has nearly finished arriving. The lilacs are blooming on the corner of our street. The plane trees, always a bit behind, are finally leafing out. Outside our window, an ancient tree, that looks for all the world like a profile of a lady's head with upswept hair, has attracted the local urban deer. I watched a doe, black nose upturned in anticipation, balance on her hind legs to nip off the blossoms. This week, the fallen flowers carpet the ground, where the fawns can feast on four legs.
Returning from a recent reluctant shopping foray, I strode down the hill on Linden Avenue, and remembered I hadn't bothered to search out the magnolias. Across the street, two blooms still clung on for dear life.In so many ways, I almost missed spring this year. A small part of me believed it might not come. How can spring come, now that Demeter is no more?
But I don't, despite all appearances, exist within a Greek myth.
Not even a Greek tragedy.
More like a human comedy.
Make that a tragicomedy.
Friday, 1 May 2026
Shades of pale
Sunday, 1 February 2026
The mourning after
Stella is the proprietor of my favourite coffee house, a gentle lady, glowing warmly at the regulars. She could be anywhere between 35 and 60.
She's busy at the sink in the back corner, as I drop off my coffee cup and plates, along with those of elder daughter, who is reading her Kindle back at our table, awaiting my return from the washroom.
"You'll miss her," says Stella over her shoulder.
"I will," I reply.
"It's so nice she was able to have a long visit." The penny drops.
"Oh. You mean my daughter."
I then have to explain that my daughter hasn't remained in Victoria since mid-December. She flew back to London, as scheduled, on Twelfth Night.
Demeter fell, catastrophically, four days later. We spent that day and the next in Emergency. Double-Leo Sister came down with her husband and her younger son, who texted his cousin during the "night watch" from the private room set up for palliative care. "End-of-life care," he told elder daughter, who phoned me at midnight.
I'd been deeply asleep, exhausted. She told me her cousin had said to come. "Is it all right if I come?"
"Darling," I mumbled drowsily. "You must do what's best for you."
She arrived the following evening, having thrown her things in a suitcase, still jet-lagged from her previous flight from a few days before.
I didn't tell Stella all this, of course. But she was chagrinned. I assured her that it hadn't been written across my chest; she was not to know.
While I was in the washroom, Stella sought out elder daughter to apologise. Earlier, Stella had called out cheerily to elder daughter, placing her order with the barista, saying how nice it was that she had been able to stay so long.
Elder daughter hadn't wanted to call out, across the coffee shop, that her grandmother had died. That she had been the one alone at the bedside, when Demeter drew her last breath.
Maybe we should bring back the custom of black armbands.
Saturday, 20 September 2025
On nodding terms
Strange where misery can lead you.
Sunday, 27 July 2025
Good night, sweet wince
Maybe you were saddened by the news of the recent death of Ozzy Osborne. I wasn't gladdened by the news, but it was my sister playing "Paranoid" at ear-splitting levels when we were kids -- and that was mainly because Black Sabbath was what her friends were into at the time.
Without their actually embracing devil worship of course.
I think.
Anyway, I'm genuinely entering a period of mourning today, because I learned that Tom Lehrer has died. He's figured in this blog more than once.
I have pretty much every song he ever recorded - even the three songs he wrote and sang for the children's programme Electric Company - and so many of them have been floating through my head with their witty and acerbic (sometimes a tad disturbing) lyrics: "Poisoning Pigeons in the Park", "The Masochism Tango", among so many others, even though, relatively speaking, his output was quite small.
I have a soft spot for this one, which one might describe as a deep cut:
And here's the man himself, performing in Copenhagen nearly sixty years ago:Friday, 4 July 2025
Sounds like Hades to me...
In what seems to be turning into a chilling summer theme, I offer this latest bit of literate humour from Wrong Hands' John Atkinson.
Thursday, 3 July 2025
Maybe I should just avoid comedians with names starting with "J"...
Wednesday, 2 July 2025
Pride and prejudice
Iphis texted me earlier this week. He wanted to drop by our house for a meal.
- Neat! I responded. - Are you in town for Canada Day or for Pride?
- For Pride! I don't celebrate Canada Day. What are you up to on Wednesday?
- Younger daughter and the Resident Fan Boy usually hit the library on Tuesdays, but, because of that holiday you don't celebrate (clutching my pearls, which makes it *really* difficult to text), they'll probably do it Wednesday -- unless you have a really exciting suggestion for lunch....
- I know, the scandal! Not liking nationalism and big crowds of loud strangers!?! I could do dinner Wednesday.
I agree to the Wednesday dinner, but think to myself: Nationalism and big crowds of loud strangers? Isn't that a description of Pride?






