Tuesday 26 February 2013

The other project


I have referred to it elsewhere on this blog as "the other project." Well, if you are interested in finding more about it, I have uploaded it onto Authonomy where it is free to view in its unedited form. To view it you will need to be a member of Authonomy; a website run by Harper Collins which allows authors to showcase their work in the hope of receiving constructive criticism and (hopefully) attracting the attention of the editors at Harper Collins or even another publisher.

So, what is the other project? The title it is currently lurking under is "Cædmon: The Lord's Poet."


"Here, my friend, take the harp. I am sure you can entertain us with a fine lay!"

When his lord makes him swear an oath never to sing his greatest composition again, and carrying a burden of additional lies and slanders, Cædda seeks refuge in anonymity and exile as a slave near remote Streneshalh.

His past returns to haunt him when a menacing stranger appears at the Winterfilling Feast, calling upon him to sing.

Eluding his pursuer, he finds refuge in an isolated cow byre. As he contemplates his life story and his immediate situation, he must make a final decision.

Can the Lord’s Poet avoid retribution again, or is it time to rise to the challenge and embrace his destiny?

Wednesday 6 February 2013

Candlemas (again)

Steve Ashley sings a "Candlemas Carol" which begins:

"Oh, Candlemas beware old man
The wind gale and the storm,
For if you think that winter's dead
It's barely been born,
And if you think that the spring has come,
With the bright sun in the sky
An icy wind blows icy tears
From the corner of your eye"

I posted last year about Candlemas, and here I am again. This year it is much colder and I am more inclined to appreciate Steve Ashley's point. So, how to reconcile the conflict between a logical division of the year by length of the day and our observation that there continues to be cold weather after winter (and for that matter warm weather after summer).

I see two factors at work here, the first being that it should be possible to divide the year up into two "great seasons" of warmth and coldness and that the boundary would therefore be the equinoxes, the dates when the day and the night are both twelve hours long (give or take a few minutes). With this pattern, half of spring would fall within the greater winter and the other half would fall in the greater summer. The same apply to autumn.

The other factor is the physical laws relating to the conservation of heat. It feels like summer through August and into September because the energy provided by the sun is still present as warm atmospheric conditions and warm land surfaces. February and early March feel like winter because a lot of the sun's heat is taken up  just with heating that mass of air and the upper layers of the surface.


Blog tidy-up

I have created a new page on this blog which brings together the posts that relate to the book. You can find all of this information here. I have deleted the older posts that this information is derived from.