That wasn't the point OLM the guy wouldn't even try simply because he had been given 2 Hull cab numbers, you've given your experience I've given you mine glad to hear your mates are ok with Hull.
I've not experienced anyone slag off Hull either and I've lived in Hotham, North Cave and South Cave for approx 36 years. I always defend Hull, as I consider it my home City, it's where both of my kids were born.
Sorry but that's utter nonsense. You'd send in a seaborne force take North Ferriby and under normal circumstances it would be the Royal Marine Commandos. But these aren't normal circumstances because I live there and would knack the full bastard lot of them. Best send the SBS. I'm waiting with my dog. He's a shoodle.
A couple of things going on at Hull Minister... The Electric Fence installation (exploring the boundaries placed on people around the world facing hate crime) please log in to view this image Fishermen's Mission Exhibition please log in to view this image
Er, wrong thread, unless we're planning on installing one of those around Tymon to prevent him leaving..
They did actually keep stressing it was going to 'the edge of space', though technically it only went about half way.
angus young @angus_young61 Nordic-themed winter festival and an annual major arts installation commission lined up next year as part of #Hull2017 legacy.
Fish frozen, and most of it is in chippies, is far fresher than "fresh" fish from a wet fish shop, the fish is caught and frozen within an hour
Agree, same with some vegetables, peas for example. However if fish is cooked from frozen too quickly I find it can be a bit watery.
With fish it is actually the opposite, fish that is frozen it takes all the moisture out of the fish and is very dry, fresh fish is much more moist, not watery, but moister.
Frozen can be very white as a fresh fish should be, but freezing it does take a lot of the moisture out of the fish. Fresh fish, as long as it is fresh is much tastier and moist. Having said all that a fresh frozen fish is better that a fresh fish that is not that fresh, if you know what I mean.
please log in to view this image Philip Larkin: New Eyes Each Year is an exhibition at the University of Hull’s Brynmor Jones Library. Photograph: Philip Larkin archive Poetry Philip Larkin exhibition in Hull offers fresh insights into poet's life Hundreds of personal items gathered for City of Culture show that does not shy away from darker sides of his personality. Hannah Ellis-Petersen Tuesday 4 July 2017 19.19 BST Last modified on Tuesday 4 July 2017 19.44 BST Philip Larkin is many things to many people; to some a bleakly beautiful poet with a razor-sharp wit, to others a womanising misogynist whose casual racism is unforgivable. It is into this morally complex minefield that a new exhibition, held in Hull’s Brynmor Jones library where he was famously the librarian, has waded, offering a new perspective on Larkin, one of the city’s most treasured cultural figures. The exhibition, opened as part of Hull City of Culture 2017, has gathered together hundreds of personal items from Larkin’s life, from his book collection to his clothes, ornaments from his office and home, unseen photographs, notes and doodles and objects belonging to his many lovers, to piece together a new and fascinating picture of the poet’s life. Most of the objects were originally in Larkin’s home and have never been seen in public before. It is an exhibition that does not shy away from the complex, darker sides of Larkin’s personality. On display is the small figurine of Hitler, given to the poet by his Nazi-sympathiser father who once took Larkin to a Nuremberg Rally. Also on display are the empty spines of the diaries that Larkin ordered to be shredded after he died, which are commonly thought to have contained mostly pornography. please log in to view this image Facebook Twitter Pinterest Curator Anna Farthing with a figure of Adolf Hitler that belonged to Sydney Larkin, Philip’s father. Photograph: Danny Lawson/PA The women in his life, particularly Monica Jones, Maev and Betty, feature prominently in the show as well, directly addressing the often despicable way that Larkin treated them – how he struggled with intimacy his whole life – but also how biographers and historians have often dismissed them simply as “mystic muses”, rather than acknowledging the active roles they often played as his editors. “The challenge is always to not judge, and present the story in a way with lots of perspectives and hooks so people can make their own minds up,” said exhibition curator Anna Farthing. “I’ve had lots of different reactions to him as I’ve started to get to know him, from complete respect to being appalled.” Larkin’s own library of books from his home is on display, and Farthing emphasised how fascinating it had been to look through the books, all of which were filled with scribbles and newspaper cuttings, pressed flowers and dedications, and she described each as a “casket in its own right”. They also prove revealing. A copy of his novel Jill, given to Monica Jones who was his longtime lover, is inscribed at the front: “ To Monica, with love and thanks for helping make it decent, ie literate.” please log in to view this image Facebook Twitter Pinterest Larkin’s lover, Monica Jones. Photograph: Philip Larkin archive Farthing pointed out the significance of these words. “There is so much about the women in Larkin’s life being his muse – well, they were human beings in their own right,” she said. “Yet here you can see she wasn’t his muse, she was his editor. All the evidence suggests he sends her drafts of his work, he’s constantly asking for her opinion. In her copy of The Whitsun Weddings, he writes a dedication in the front of it for her and inside the book there’s a draft of a poem, which has Tippex all over it. So what we are seeing here is working documents that they shared.” Jones’s lipstick, her dress and objects of hers that were in Larkin’s house are also on display as part of the show, as well as what Farthing described as one of the most “heartbreaking” finds: unused dress patterns for small children, suggesting that she may have held out hope that she would be able to get Larkin to commit to her fully and start a family. The show also offers a rare insight into Larkin’s own tortured relationship with his appearance. He was fixated on it, and the show displays both his clothes – beige trousers, bright red shirts and thick black glasses – as well as the many pictures he took of himself. Larkin would weigh himself twice a day on two different sets of weighing scales, and the exhibition displays quotes revealing the depth of his self-loathing. Farthing said it was one of the biggest revelations in her research. “People presume that men don’t care about their body image and it’s a side of Larkin’s character that has been neglected,” she said. please log in to view this image Facebook Twitter Pinterest Philip Larkin: ‘His poetry is so clean and clear and his life was such a mess.’ Photograph: Philip Larkin archive “And maybe it’s because I’m a woman that I can see it instantly in his own neuroses. You just have to read his words: ‘my trousers seem to have been made for a much bigger creature, probably an elephant’ or ‘I staggered away from the table dreading my next encounter with the scales’. Those are not the words we expect to hear from Larkin, yet he was a man who had a real struggle with his own image.” Larkin’s love of jazz is widely known and the show has a backing soundtrack of jazz, both in a nod to this passion but also to give a slinky rhythm to the show. “The thing about libraries is that all sorts of things happen in the stacks,” said Farthing. So we want people to go into the small corners and the nooks and crannies of this exhibition and have an experience with another human – that sounds suggestive but what I mean is, have a little chat, ask questions. I mean, Larkin found all his lovers in libraries.” For Farthing, the exhibition is about exploring a side of Larkin that goes against expectation. The theme throughout is pink, which was Larkin’s favourite colour, and it focuses in on the scribblings, the unpublished thoughts and scratched out writings that are never seen in his sparse, clean poems. At the end of the show, people are also invited to pen their own letter to Larkin, which will then be pinned on to the wall. “I think what I have taken way most from putting on this exhibition is that is seems extraordinary that he produced the work because the poetry is so clean and clear and his life was such a mess,” said Farthing. “He’s clearly a narcissist with a borderline personality disorder, but to have achieved work that is so human and engaging and continually relevant, it seems that he did it despite his demons, not because of them.” https://www.theguardian.com/books/2...esh-insights-into-poets-life?CMP=share_btn_tw