Did she dress in rags and feathers from Salvation Army counters?fra828 wrote:In LV1, a small group of us visited Mrs Oliver and her husband in their home in Ware- and Mr O, long-haired and hippyish- sooo cool! - played Leonard Cohen's 'Suzanne' on his guitar. I think Mrs O sang.
"They were sweet and meant well"
Moderator: Moderators
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- Button Grecian
- Posts: 1612
- Joined: Tue Oct 30, 2007 12:53 pm
- Real Name: michael scuffil
- Location: germany
Re: "They were sweet and meant well"
Th.B. 27 1955-63
Re: "They were sweet and meant well"
Should have put that on 'Leonard Cohen' thread!michael scuffil wrote:Did she dress in rags and feathers from Salvation Army counters?fra828 wrote:In LV1, a small group of us visited Mrs Oliver and her husband in their home in Ware- and Mr O, long-haired and hippyish- sooo cool! - played Leonard Cohen's 'Suzanne' on his guitar. I think Mrs O sang.
Re: "They were sweet and meant well"
Yes, I really was bored!! Not lame, though.chaosriddenyears wrote:You are right Jo, Miss Griffith-Williams was lame - she also sniffed alot and seemed to have a permanent cold. She not only sounded boring, I think she really was truly bored!
Miss Coles was a fabulous history teacher and inspired me as well with a great love of history. She taught with passion and wit and people in history literally came to life before my eyes- she knew details about clothes, living conditions and just everyday life that made everything so very vivid. Her knowledge of her subject was breathtaking and she would pace up and down in her fervour!
It was always a good story! Which is what history should be I think.
bgw
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- GE (Great Erasmus)
- Posts: 161
- Joined: Sun Feb 15, 2009 12:35 am
- Real Name: Mary Bowden (Gaskell)
Re: "They were sweet and meant well"
Ouch!bgw wrote:Yes, I really was bored!! Not lame, though.chaosriddenyears wrote:You are right Jo, Miss Griffith-Williams was lame - she also sniffed alot and seemed to have a permanent cold. She not only sounded boring, I think she really was truly bored!
Miss Coles was a fabulous history teacher and inspired me as well with a great love of history. She taught with passion and wit and people in history literally came to life before my eyes- she knew details about clothes, living conditions and just everyday life that made everything so very vivid. Her knowledge of her subject was breathtaking and she would pace up and down in her fervour!
It was always a good story! Which is what history should be I think.
Mary Bowden (Gaskell)
5.10, 3.6: 64-71
5.10, 3.6: 64-71