Some photos from this past Sunday. Loli and her students ride their beautiful horses in La Cañada.
Tuesday, April 25, 2017
Tuesday, April 11, 2017
Aldous Huxley Wrote a Poem about Almería
Aldous Huxley in Almería, ninety years ago.
Almería: December 3, 1930
Winds have no moving emblems here, but scour
A vacant darkness, an untempered light;
No branches bend, never a tortured flower
Shudders, root-weary, on the verge of flight;
Winged future, withered past, no seeds, nor leaves
Attest those swift invisible feet: they run
Free through a naked land, whose breast receives
The whole fierce ardour of a naked sun.
Thou hast the Light for lover; fortunate Earth!
Conceive the fruit of his divine desire.
But the dry dust is all she brings to birth,
That child of clay by even celestial fire.
Then come, soft rain and thunder clouds, abate
This shining love that has the force of hate.
Tuesday, April 04, 2017
The Sun Has Gone Out
Here’s where we are, and our
apologies for another Brexit-related editorial. Michael Howard – a past Leader
of the Conservatives and an ex-home secretary under John Major – suggests (no
doubt in jest) that Britain would go to war against Spain over Brexit. Mrs May
produces her walrus-laugh for the cameras, Spain is appalled by this political
gaff and gunboat diplomacy, the British residents in Spain are understandably alarmed,
and Gibraltar is stuck (forgive us) between
a rock and a hard place.
Now, Spain wants Gibraltar –
that’s no secret – but it’s not stupid. It has offered a joint sovereignty with
the UK, giving Gib full access to the EU – or failing that, it would consider
the colony to be outside the borders of the European Union and would, simply,
close the gate. It has never suggested ‘invasion’, so Michael Howard needs to
be robustly disciplined by his boss.
One Spanish commentator we
like suggests that Spain keep Gibraltar... and give the UK Benidorm instead.
The United Kingdom, of course,
is interested in trade. Brexit was about closing down everything else, but
never trade. The UK inexplicably hopes for the same amount of trade with the EU
as it currently enjoys – but it won’t get it without a price.
Well, we know that Spain
wants Gibraltar. It will also – out of pique – put a spoke in London’s wheel by
relaxing its opposition to a second referendum for Scotland. Fine,
what else does Whitehall have to discuss in the next two years? What, in short,
of the other twenty six EU states?
Holland might want the British to consume
more drop; Germany would like that 1966
goal disallowed; France apparently wants London to negotiate with Brussels in
French (Heh!). We all know what the Republic of Ireland wants and maybe, for
all we know, Romania’s proposal is that the British need to drive on the other
side of the road by 2020. Maybe Portugal wants a larger slice of the fisheries
and Greece wants its marbles back (so, for that matter, does Michael Howard).
You can’t fight all of these
wars, Mrs May, not if you want to keep the trade in place.
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