Tag Archives: quotes

Tree Gibraltar Point, Lincolnshire - dramatic setting

More Thoughts on Planting Trees

Derbyshire Trees

“A society grows great when old men plant trees in whose shade they know they shall never sit.”

It’s supposed to be an ancient Greek proverb, but it isn’t. I’m fascinated by the way these things twist and turn and a 1950s sentence in a book becomes both “ancient Greek” and a proverb. However, I’m just as bad – I often say that my grandmother told me something when she didn’t. She did tell me that the weather was bad due to Russian satellites, not to trust American servicemen offering nylons and not to buy rabbits without the skins. The last is the only really useful advice of the three. Despite “the spirit of the blitz” it was known that skinned cats were sold as rabbits, and butchers were prosecuted for it. I never really enjoyed rabbit meat as I always find it too sweet, so I haven’t eaten rabbit since 1982, when I was on an economy drive.

Backlit Sumac Tree in the MENCAP garden

I have planted a few trees over the years, but I’ve also had a few problems with one of the neighbours, who thought I could control where the leaves fall. I can’t, and the law, sensibly, doesn’t expect me to.  Over the years we have lost two birches, a hawthorn, a crab apple and a laburnum from the neighboring gardens. Suburban gardens really aren’t made for tree planting. I may write to the government and suggest they start community arboretums. Or arboreta.  That’s the trouble with Latin plurals – you add an “s” and it looks wrong, you change it to the correct ending and it looks pretentious. I have to be careful of my tendency to pomposity now that I have a conservatory.

You could plant, or have a tree planted for you, in a field on the edge of town where it had room to grow free and contribute to the view and the environment. More trees would grow, nature would benefit, and neighbours would not complain.

Meanwhile, they sky is grey, the back garden is moving in a stiffish breeze and it feels like November.

Trees on a hill near Slaidbirn

 

Monday – Bloody but Unbroken

The Featured Image is also my coded warning that you are about to enter a poetry post. If the word culture affects you like it affected Hermann Goering, you may want to look away now. Apart from the fact Goering never said it, and the original version is, to be honest, a lot less snappy. I often find quotes are like that when you actually check them out.

That calls for another quote.

When the legend becomes fact, print the legend.

I think I mentioned last week that I was sending some haiku off to an editor that has already turned me down twice. I may improve, or I may wear him down, but one way or another I’m not going to admit defeat.

Well, today, just a week after sending, the email came back. To be fair, he doesn’t hang about. I’ve been waiting for eight weeks for one editor to get back to me, which isn’t long compared to some, but os long enough when you are waiting for an answer.

To be honest, I almost prefer a quick rejection to a long drawn out acceptance. And I definitely prefer a quick rejection to a slow one. You can send the haiku out again once they come back. In fact that’s how I ended up with the submission in question – eight of them had been sent out before.

The one that was accepted had been turned down once before, which just goes to show…something…

I’m not sure what.

And yes, it is another acceptance. I was so convinced it was going to be a No that I spent ten minutes sitting grinning at the screen. I now stand at submissions 10, acceptances 4, rejections 2.

Again, that noise you hear is the smugness alarm.

The rest of the day was truly awful, but who cares.