A little story about snoozing...

I thought it was incense, peppermints, and strawberry wine, or sommat like that. And hey, my family is Welsh. We're supposed to be running the place, got kicked out by the English - well, the Normans at the time.

Best Regards,

Bill Mattocks -> Madoc
 
I was forced by my significant other to attend a Tom Jones concert when he played the House of Blues here in December (free tickets, so I grudgingly gave in). While I still don't care for his music, I do have to admit he knows how to entertain a crowd.
 
dkirchge said:
I was forced by my significant other to attend a Tom Jones concert when he played the House of Blues here in December (free tickets, so I grudgingly gave in). While I still don't care for his music, I do have to admit he knows how to entertain a crowd.

Felt the same way about a Cher concert. I went to see Cindi Lauper, and she was great. But Cher put on a show. There is a difference. I was blown away.

Best Regards,

Bill Mattocks
 
zuikologist said:
The Welsh language should be dead with a song like that.

It nearly was. It was illegal to teach Cimru in Welsh public schools for many years, the language didn't do so well. Now it is back, for which I am glad, though I don't speak a word of it.

Best Regards,

Bill Mattocks
 
Yes, well...we're Welsh, or at least that was where we were living before we decided to become cowboys. We left Wales in 1635. I was pretty young, and so I hardly remember the place. The language is...well it reminds me of Picasso as opposed to Currier & Ives. Although it is interesting, and I'm glad they're keeping it half alive. Now there is a theory that a Welshman discovered America. Have you heard about that?
Jon
 
Jon Goodman said:
Yes, well...we're Welsh.....The language is...well it reminds me of Picasso as opposed to Currier & Ives....

Jon,

This is one for the ages. Finally someone has explained to me why the Welsh use all of those consonants all strung together! 😎
 
Jon Goodman said:
Yes, well...we're Welsh, or at least that was where we were living before we decided to become cowboys. We left Wales in 1635. I was pretty young, and so I hardly remember the place. The language is...well it reminds me of Picasso as opposed to Currier & Ives. Although it is interesting, and I'm glad they're keeping it half alive. Now there is a theory that a Welshman discovered America. Have you heard about that?
Jon

That would be Madoc ap Gwynnedd, which family history insists is my ancestor. There is a plaque to him in Mobile Bay, Alabama - the place where he supposedly landed. As far as I know, the truth may be that there was no real Madoc, and the story was invented by Dr. John Dee, a bit of court intrique designed to reinforce a patent claim to America when the Spanish and French dared to assert their finders-keepers rights there.

However, there is a Madoc family line from Wales, and Mattocks is a derivative of that name. Other than that, I know not.

Best Regards,

Bill Mattocks
 
Hi, George.

Actually, I can for the first time in recorded history reveal how the Welsh language was created. You historians might want to get a pen and paper for this, because this is the real stuff, and you definitely won't find this in any textbooks. Not yet, anyway. Thousands of years ago, a Welshman named Mervitryll "Merv" Griffin commissioned a young fellow named Pattrycocccwd "Pat" Sajak to build a large rotating wheel onto which were painted symbols of early Welsh money (called "cows") and some spaces marked "bankrupt." Behind this wheel stood a beautiful lady named Vanyddwyed "Vanna" White. As members of the general population randomly spun the wheel, "Vanna" would flip over covers which revealed the letters (all consonants), and these would form Welsh words. The process went on for days, until a large book (geirlyfr, or "dictionary") was compiled. Unfortunately, the Welsh were not very lucky people, and so their words consisted mostly of consonants. You see, according to the rules of "Merv's" system, consonants are free, but vowels must be purchased with money (in this case "cows").

As for Picasso, some of his paintings give me the idea he washed a bunch of LSD down with a bottle or two of Tequila, took a 10 second look at the Mona Lisa and then staggered home to paint her from memory before he got straight again.
Jon
 
A shenachie, eh? Great crack!

Since my family came to America via Ireland, we were often told that the Welsh were Irish who couldn't swim. Or was it the other way around?

Best Regards,

Bill Mattocks
 
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