FrankS
Registered User
FrankS
Registered User
So, no trees?
delft
Established
We're heading for a white christmas:
Dirk

Dirk
bigeye
Well-known
Spent last night playing with the view camera - testing on the tree to sort out flash (wireless, 2x 285s), low-light focusing and a new processing tank. I didn't know if the Supermatic shutter would trip X sync. Too many variables for one test at once, but it worked!
Merry Christmas
- Charlie
Merry Christmas
- Charlie
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Roger Hicks
Veteran
What amuses me is that Americans sing the wrong words to the tune. I'll never forget my astonishment at heariing The Red Flag played in rhe PX on the US Navsta Bermuda in '66 or '67:
The people's flag is deepest red
It's sheltered oft our martyred dead
And as their limbs grew stiff and cold
Their martyrs' blood stained every fold
and later (from memory)
The people's flag is deepest red
Stained with blood our fathers shed
Though traitors flinch and cowards fear
We'll keep the red flag flying here
Florence Gibbons (my great grandmother) joined the Party in 1917 and died in about '65; the last Party member in the family, as far as I know. From http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1562087/Pc-hid-in-loo-to-spy-on-dockyard-workers.html
There are also lists of suspected Chatham communists, such as Mrs Florrie Gibbons, of 75 Second Avenue, Gillingham: "Age about 45 years, 5ft 8in, thin features, pale complexion, respectable."
According to a record from July 1934: "She has lately appeared in court on behalf of poor women who have applied for assault, etc, no doubt taking the opportunity to preach Communism to them in the role of a social worker."
She was never known as 'Florrie' in the family, but always as 'Flo'. I always called her daughters (my grandmother's sisters) 'The Political Aunts': they were on the hard left of the Labour Party. My father started on the soft left and moved right (a Torygraph reader today) and my brother and I started on the right. He's gone further right and I've moved back a bit towards the Left -- though as a life-long Liberal (joined in 1966, though no longer a Lib Dem) I've never even voted Labour, let alone Communist.
Cheers,
R.
The people's flag is deepest red
It's sheltered oft our martyred dead
And as their limbs grew stiff and cold
Their martyrs' blood stained every fold
and later (from memory)
The people's flag is deepest red
Stained with blood our fathers shed
Though traitors flinch and cowards fear
We'll keep the red flag flying here
Florence Gibbons (my great grandmother) joined the Party in 1917 and died in about '65; the last Party member in the family, as far as I know. From http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1562087/Pc-hid-in-loo-to-spy-on-dockyard-workers.html
There are also lists of suspected Chatham communists, such as Mrs Florrie Gibbons, of 75 Second Avenue, Gillingham: "Age about 45 years, 5ft 8in, thin features, pale complexion, respectable."
According to a record from July 1934: "She has lately appeared in court on behalf of poor women who have applied for assault, etc, no doubt taking the opportunity to preach Communism to them in the role of a social worker."
She was never known as 'Florrie' in the family, but always as 'Flo'. I always called her daughters (my grandmother's sisters) 'The Political Aunts': they were on the hard left of the Labour Party. My father started on the soft left and moved right (a Torygraph reader today) and my brother and I started on the right. He's gone further right and I've moved back a bit towards the Left -- though as a life-long Liberal (joined in 1966, though no longer a Lib Dem) I've never even voted Labour, let alone Communist.
Cheers,
R.
Gumby
Veteran
Huh ?
Gumby
Veteran
So, no trees?
I'll post ours as soon as I can figure out how to get it off of my cell phone. It is a beautiful tree... nicer than most we've had in the past.
Roger Hicks
Veteran
Huh ?
Dear Ed,
You need to hear American Christmas carols. 'O Tannenbaum' (sung in translation as 'O Christmas Tree') is sung to the tune of the Red Flag.
Cheers,
R.
Gumby
Veteran
Ahhhh .
Matus
Well-known
dave lackey
Veteran
Gumby
Veteran
I'll post ours as soon as I can figure out how to get it off of my cell phone. It is a beautiful tree... nicer than most we've had in the past.
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 characters
Attachments
gdi
Veteran
Dear Ed,
You need to hear American Christmas carols. 'O Tannenbaum' (sung in translation as 'O Christmas Tree') is sung to the tune of the Red Flag.
Cheers,
R.
I am no expert on such trivia, but I think the socialists/labour may have co-opted the Christmas tune rather than vice versa (it is a very old song). When I was a kid (here in the US) it was just as likely that you would hear the German version of "Oh Tannenbaum" as the American/English version.
Roger Hicks
Veteran
I am no expert on such trivia, but I think the socialists/labour may have co-opted the Christmas tune rather than vice versa (it is a very old song). When I was a kid (here in the US) it was just as likely that you would hear the German version of "Oh Tannenbaum" as the American/English version.
I am sure you are right. But The Red Flag is much more familiar in the UK.
Cheers,
R.
Gumby
Veteran
Lauriger Horatius. 1799.
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