I'm afraid to admit that when I'm driving in my car and not listening to iTunes, I listen to a local radio station that features the 'Awesome Eighties'......much to my husband's horror. He has trained our children to make disparaging remarks about this particular station. My loyalty remains undaunted. Yesterday, they played one of my all time favourite songs, Kate Bush's Wuthering Heights. You can refresh your memory with the 'Red Dress' version here:
When it came on, I was in the midst of school pick ups and stuck in the interminable wait involved in trying to get a park in the school car park so I had time to listen to all of the words. They never fail to send a shiver down my spine. All of that pretence of singing from the other side. So then I started thinking about the book and what a disturbing, emotionally manipulative and abusive plot it has......dressed up as a love story. I must say that out of all the Bronte sister's books I prefer Jane Eyre, even though it too shares some of these elements....AND has a mad wife locked away in the attic to boot....yet at least they get there in the end. By making Mr Rochester blind and burning his estate to the ground, he and Jane can be happy. Happy.....not dead and tapping at the window in the middle of the night.
So then I remembered that when I was at boarding school in Sydney, a long, long time ago, the house I was in was 'Bronte'....not surprising as it was also the name of the suburb next door....yet there was also a house called 'Casterton' which lo and behold was the school where the Bronte sisters were educated. I have just utilised the magic that is Google and discovered that my old school in Sydney had been founded and modelled on the very same Casterton School which the Bronte sisters attended. Funnily enough I always felt an affinity reading about Jane Eyre's experience at school.....having been a boarder in the 1980's when I was still in primary school.....spooky.
About this time I finally parked the car.
I've been to the Bronte Parsonage in Haworth:
During the UK road trip my now husband and I took soon after we became engaged. I must give him credit....he drove the car to Jane Austen's house as well.....he only insisted on seeing HMS Victory for himself. And of course, on a more recent holiday, he drove the motor home to Nancy Mitford's grave. But anyway, back to Haworth 1997 and here's me patting a sheep up on the moors at Top Withens which was supposedly the inspiration for the location of the Earnshaw family's house in Wuthering Heights:
Last night I went to our Art Collecting Group meeting. I wore this:
My mum may have done a fab job looking after my children last weekend......but she faded my fluoro pink jeans in a hot wash. The jacket was on sale at ASOS and the Chanel handbag was dug out for the outing to Derby Day.....it was a gift from my husband for our 5th wedding anniversary, which we spent sans enfants in Paris. He may live to tease me.....yet he's not all bad.
Too bad about my jeans, however, I will be embracing hot pink again tonight when I don this tangle of fabric to go to the Indian Cultural Society of Tasmania's Annual Dinner:
A mum at school gave me a sari tutorial yesterday.....it was a tad complex so I'm hoping that I can remember exactly when to pleat and when to tuck.
Wish me luck.
Rx
PS Am thinking about leading an expedition with the children down the road to Salamanca this afternoon to see Charles and Camilla. Hobart crowds are notoriously tiny so we would be guaranteed a good view......so long as it's not raining.
luff the jeans and luff that Wuthering Heights song- is on my iPad.
ReplyDeleteLuff it that you've been to Swinbrook. Like all the best people to see Old Naunce.
I luff Camilla. Say hello for me x
Wondering who I can go and see next. Unfortunately, it was teeming rain for the royal visit so didn't get to pass on your best to Camilla as was wearing my Hermes scarf and they warn you in no uncertain terms about getting rain on them....and was going out last night so had to preserve my hair from rain induced frizz. Saw Charles though....or 'that old man in a grey suit' as described by my 5 year old! Rx
DeleteLove Kate Bush's Wuthering Heights. I get shivers just thinking about it. What a funny affinity you do have with your school experience. Schools always have such strange ways of naming things. I think there's a new, very dark, version of Wuthering Heights coming out (you know, the other versions are far too fluffy and romantic, aren't they?!). Have you read Wide Sargasso Sea? I remember really enjoying the imaginings of the life that the first Mrs Rochester had before she went mad. As for the sari, I'm sure there'd be a sari tutorial on YouTube if you get stuck. Have a good night xx
ReplyDeleteShivers. Yes, bizarre school experiences for me which I suppose go along with the fact that my parents lived on a remote Indonesian island before they moved to the remote Australian island.....Tasmania. Can't wait to see the new 'Wuthering Heights'. My 11 year old daughter has been watching the Kate Winslet/Emma Thompson etc version of 'Sense and Sensibility' at school and is enraptured....a good adaption is so good and a bad one so, well....bad! Rx
DeleteThere is some very special dancing in that clip. Very special indeed.
ReplyDeleteHope you have a wonderful time all saried up. Enjoy!
PS - Still laughing here re dog flap.... Told The Farmer and he was hysterical. Too funny.
Very special dancing...and hand movements.....what exactly was going on in the 80's?! Loved every minute of being saried up once I was fixed up by a professional sari wearer. Fun....although a bit cold here in Hobart. Whenever I think about the dog flap I burst into loud, uncontrollable giggles and scare my children. That girl is a cack! Rx
DeleteI am sure you will look beautiful in your sari- such fun!
ReplyDeleteI remember reading Wuthering Heights in my late teens, once was enough for me.
Sari wearing is such fun! Yes, 'Wuthering Heights' really isn't a very nice story it makes you wonder how those sheltered, motherless, clergyman's daughter's came up with their plots. Rx
Delete1. My niece attends your old school.
ReplyDelete2. Am wondering if we have mutual friends.
3. I have a photo of me (aged 11 or so) standing on the wall behind you in sheep patting photo.
4. Today I wore my neon pink boyfriend shorts and my husband laughed at me and made snide comments about me thinking I was 20 not 40.
5. I love your neon pink Sari! Hope you got it on ok!
xx
1. My daughter is desperate to go to school there yet I want to smother love my children having been a boarder....yet I must say that I do love their uniforms....much better than the horror we had to wear when I was there!
Delete2. Possibly!
3. Isn't Top Withens amazing....I loved our trip to Haworth and made sure I ate Yorkshire pudding and drank a pint in the pub!
4. Husbands really have no taste when it comes to fashion.....luckily mine is colour blind!
5. I love it too, one of my best ever souvenirs....struggled to get it on properly!
Rx
The pink jeans still look fab. I've never been one to know who sang what but listening to the song did bring back memories of my time at boarding school in the '80's. It gave me goosebumps. I have to confess last year I went to the Eagles concert not knowing who they were until I got there and recognised every songs mostly from school dances! It was a great night. Bonita XX
ReplyDeleteIt is a goose bump kind of song. I'd struggle to name an Eagles song....tad excited though as I'm going to a Blondie concert next moth with one of my best school friends who can sing every word of 'Rapture'....including the rap...impressive, eh?! Rx
DeleteI'm atrocious with the names of bands. I'll have to listen to the band on itunes later to see if I recognise the music. I'm currently sitting in the hall waiting for my son to drop off to sleep so must be quiet! We're off to the Cold Play concert in a couple of weeks. I'll have to brush up on their music too. X
DeleteSo much goodness, as always. So glad you led The Expedition. J x
ReplyDelete