Sunday, October 28, 2012

This week has been quite busy.  Tuesday we spent an hour with the chaplain of the University of Winchester, in which we briefly described our Young Single Adult program, then exchanged questions and answers about everything from what it’s like to be a university chaplain, to baptism for the dead, to Mitt Romney.  We were graciously received, and enjoyed the experience.  We hope to have more such discussions in the future.

The Moving Van and Movers
Wednesday, we rented a van and drove to Plymouth, where the missionaries loaded it with furniture and other items from a flat from which a missionary couple had recently gone home and were not being replaced.  We returned to Southampton that evening and distributed some of the furniture (dressers, sofa, kitchen table and chairs, computer desk) to three local sets of missionaries.  We had some misgivings about driving on unfamiliar English roads with a 7-foot wide, 18-foot long vehicle, when we have felt squeezed on these roads with our little Vauxhall Astra wagon.  In fact, Paul was hoping to be disqualified from renting a truck with only a US license.  However, things all worked out beautifully, especially with the timing.  For example, we were to drop off some kitchen items in Weymouth for the missionaries there, but they had left their phone in their flat and we could not contact them.  Had they been there, we would have lost a couple of hours unloading and reloading to reach their stuff and would have arrived back in Southampton too late to get help unloading the big things here.  To psyche himself for the trip, Paul had been reciting a favorite phrase of Gordon B. Hinckley, “Things will work out,” and they really did.  We covered 380 miles that day, unloaded furniture at three locations, and returned the van to the lot around 11 pm.  Since then, driving a car here has seemed like a piece of cake.  Incidentally, one of the pleasures of traveling in England is savoring the quaint place names we encounter.  For example, one highway sign we passed pointed the way to towns named Piddlehinton and Puddletown.  Affpuddle and Tolpuddle are also nearby.  We are told the names come from the River Piddle, but since “piddle” in a place name has a tendency to provoke smirks if not outright derisive guffaws, some of the towns changed piddle to puddle.  

On Friday we incorporated a sightseeing trip into our return to Weymouth to deliver the items we couldn’t leave on Wednesday.  We visited the ruins of Corfe Castle, which must have been magnificent in its day.  It covers the top a fair-sized hill.  Built originally by William the Conqueror, it was expanded in subsequent centuries.  The castle was partially demolished in the 1600s after its owners found themselves on the wrong side of the English Civil War.  Evidently the foundations were not set on bedrock, because some of the walls tilt severly.  On the other hand, some of the crooked walls may be the result of the demolition.   And on the other, other hand, the hill on which it stands is made of chalk, which may not be the best support for a stone castle.  After Corfe, we stopped briefly at Kingston Lacy, an elegant country estate built by the same people who lost the castle in the civil war but regained their status after the restoration of the monarchy in 1660 and decided not to return to the old neighborhood.  We didn't have time to go inside, but we hope to return when it reopens in the spring.


Sheep Graze Below Corfe Castle, View from Bottom of Hill

Castle Gate



Long Walk from Gate to Castle

Settling Problems, If Not Addressed, Produce Big Cracks

Ruins 

More Ruins



This Wall Was Once Vertical

Another View of Corfe Castle Ruins

Much of Corfe Was Built with Stones from the Demolished Castle

Kingston Lacy, Built by the Family that Lost the Castle


Paul has sometimes been drafted to sit in on English lessons the young missionaries teach to local residents from other countries.  He is the token native speaker when our Filipino and Polish elders are the teachers.  

 And now the language lesson:  What we call a “buggy” in West Virginia and what most of the rest of America calls a “shopping cart”, Brits call a “trolley.”  Orange juice comes with or without “bits” rather than pulp.  Both countries have post offices, but the Royal Mail delivers the post over here, while the Postal Service delivers the mail over there.  And last week an announcement was made pertaining to church cleaning assignments for the members, that they “posted a new rota for cleaning the loos.”  


2 comments:

  1. Nice driving Dad! And I love the pictures of the castle, town, and manor. It just amazes me! We'd sure love to visit! And thanks for the language lessons. I think I'm going feel much more cheerful during my cleaning this week when I think about cleaning the loos! Thanks for sharing!

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