Talking of things which arrive unexpectedly through the post, I have just received a copy of the booklet published to coincide with the Garden Museum’s Lucian Freud exhibition – like the exhibition, small scale, but extra special, showing the full strength and variety of Freud’s work and the intensity of his engagement with plant life, quoting his teacher and mentor, Cedric Morris, who said, ‘when I see plants, I do not see prettiness but, rather, ruthlessness, strength, and lust’.
Author Archives: Charles Saumarez Smith
Christmas Cards
Having been away the week before Christmas and what with postal strikes and the fact that the GPO punishes anyone who puts our address as 133-135, instead of 135 only (I suppose they regard 133-135, rightly, as pretentious), we have returned to an unexpected mountain of Christmas cards, which I thought might be depressing, but is actually oddly, and unexpectedly, uplifting: messages from old friends; the odd change-of-address; much artwork; interesting choice of cards; news from people we haven’t seen because of COVID; a sense of connectness. Since I’ve abandoned card sending, doing it electronically instead (and also somewhat haphazardly), this is a way of thanking those of my blog followers who sent cards.
I particularly liked the old postcard of a brass in Saffron Walden Church with the greeting GAUDETE NATO SALVATORE, now that Happy Christmas is politically suspect.
Happy Christmas
Happy Christmas to all my readers, wherever you are, and best wishes for 2023.

Our Lady of Lourdes, Benllech
The RC church in Benllech was built in 1967, an outpost of the church in Beaumaris for summer visitors. Vatican moderne:-

Llaneugrad
We went on a Christmas Eve expedition to see St. Eugrad, a tiny church set to the edge of surviving eighteenth-century parkland, still active, but closed:-


There is a dovecot to the side of a nearby field:-

Winter sun
There are compensations for being in Wales at the time of the winter solstice: the fierceness of the sun when it emerges in the midst of rain; the emptiness at this time of year, exaggerated by the closure of the Menai Bridge, so that Anglesey feels a proper island:-





Laurie Magnus
I feel slightly sorry for Laurie Magnus taking on the role of this government’s ethics advisor.
Where to start ?
Some of the current accusations against Dominic Raab ? Or the increasing evidence of high-level corruption in the awarding of COVID contacts ? Or the way the honours system has been corroded and the House of Lords packed with Tory donors ?
How does one clean up the Augean stables when one is given extremely limited powers to do so ?
I look forward to his first report.







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