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Funny moment a few minutes ago. Corvids picking through the trash bin next door, so I got my camera to document the event. A man walking down the alley abruptly called out and jumped a bit, the birds popped up from the garbage can and caught him by surprise as he passed by. I called out a cheery good morning and we had a laugh. | Funny moment a few minutes ago. Corvids picking through the trash bin next door, so I got my camera to document the event. A man walking down the alley abruptly called out and jumped a bit, the birds popped up from the garbage can and caught him by surprise as he passed by. I called out a cheery good morning and we had a laugh. | ||
=== Barrister Bane === | |||
No one cared who I was 'til I put on the wig. | |||
== In the News == | == In the News == |
Revision as of 06:34, 7 May 2020
Online diary of Karl Jones for Thursday May 7, 2020.
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Diary
Song of the Day for Howard Kranz
Third in a series of songs for Howard and me to cover.
"Sailing to Philadelphia" by Mark Knopfler with James Taylor.
I am Jeremiah Dixon I am a Geordie Boy A glass of wine with you, sir And the ladies I'll enjoy All Durham and Northumberland Is measured up by my own hand It was my fate from birth To make my mark upon the earth He calls me Charlie Mason A stargazer am I It seems that I was born To chart the evening sky They'd cut me out for baking bread But I had other dreams instead This baker's boy from the west country Would join the Royal Society We are sailing to Philadelphia A world away from the coaly Tyne Sailing to Philadelphia To draw the line The Mason-Dixon line Now you're a good surveyor, Dixon But I swear you'll make me mad The West will kill us both You gullible Geordie lad You talk of liberty How can America be free A Geordie and a baker's boy In the forest of the Iroquois Now hold your head up, Mason See America lies there The morning tide has raised The capes of Delaware Come up and feel the sun A new morning is begun Another day will make it clear Why your stars should guide us here We are sailing to Philadelphia A world away from the coaly Tyne Sailing to Philadelphia To draw the line The Mason-Dixon line
- Sailing to Philadelphia @ YouTube (studio version)
- Sailing to Philadelphia @ YouTube (Knopfler live in concert)
From the album "Sailing to Philadelphia" (2000)
Background
The Mason–Dixon line, also called the Mason and Dixon line or Mason's and Dixon's line, was surveyed between 1763 and 1767 by Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon in the resolution of a border dispute involving Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Delaware in Colonial America. It is still a demarcation line between four U.S. states, forming part of the borders of Pennsylvania, Maryland, Delaware, and West Virginia (part of Virginia until 1863). Later it became known informally as the border between the free (Northern) states and the slave (Southern) states. The Virginia portion was the northern border of the Confederacy. It came into use during the debate around the Missouri Compromise of 1820, when the boundary between slave and free states was an issue. It is still used today in the figurative sense of a line that separates the North and South politically and socially (see Dixie).
Four-Eyed Raven
Lost at Game of Thrones again today. His Four-Eyed Raven beat my Three-Eye.
Memo to self: no more Corvids for a while, find another familiar.
Sicario: Day of the Soldado
Matt Graver (Josh Brolin): "It's a nice day for a drive, huh?"
Steve Forsing (Jeffrey Donovan): "Ah, beautiful day. Blue skies, large caliber weapons. I love getting out of the office."
—Sicario @ IMDB
Made me cry
The scene with the deaf man made me cry.
Jeffrey Donovan
Observation: actor Jeffrey Donovan has played both John F. Kennedy and Robert Kennedy in major motion pictures.
Ely corvids
Two kinds of corvids here in Ely: the smaller variety, crows proper, like I remember from the Twin Cities, and the larger variety, which I take to be ravens.
I often see them in twos or threes. Two will be:
- Two crows behaving in a manner that suggests friendship or a least mutual tolerance
- A raven chasing away a crow
In threes, it's often two crows hassling a raven in flight.
I say "hassle" but maybe they are playing. I don't see pecking behavior, I can only guess at the threat level. The big ones drive away the small ones, no doubt about that.
Funny moment a few minutes ago. Corvids picking through the trash bin next door, so I got my camera to document the event. A man walking down the alley abruptly called out and jumped a bit, the birds popped up from the garbage can and caught him by surprise as he passed by. I called out a cheery good morning and we had a laugh.
Barrister Bane
No one cared who I was 'til I put on the wig.