Triumphing over the vertical approach to
Irene’s house I was met, as usual, by the baying of hounds. Included in the intimidating pack was one
fearsome looking dog who, to add to the discomfort of the putative visitor, was
thoroughly muzzled.
It is only if you are regular visitor that
you know that the bark is the whole of the “attack”. Any advance of a visitor results in an
equally swift retreat by said dog. The
muzzle is there to protect other dogs not humans!
Among the many animals (apart from the two
ladies) who live in Irene’s home, the most interesting is the blind dog. This extraordinary animal shows alternating
bouts of uncanny prescience about obstacles in his path and then bumps his head
on a chair leg. He is, however, happy in
his inexplicably perilous world and his guiding light (so to speak) is any
movement of his beloved mistress.
Watching him go down stairs is heart-stoppingly tense, but every move
for his aged limbs is a triumph.
He is friendly to a fault and, as a card-carrying
dog person; I duly rewarded his nearness with unrelenting scratching. My activities were closely observed by the misnomerly
named cat, Blossom. Tiring of my
complete indifference she meandered towards me uttering was I understand cat
people call “plaintive” cries. Which I
ignored. She then crawled over the sofa
on which I was sitting. Which I
ignored. She then retreated and regarded
me with a glare as malevolent as any I have seen a feline display – and I have
seen many!
By the time we had to leave the dog was
weak with ecstasy and when I sent to the loo he followed me and waited like a
lost soul outside the door for my return to scratching.
The driving to Montserrat was
straightforward motorway until the last windy bit, so we made good time.
Our first duty was to book a table (with
view) for one of the celebrated lunches that you can get in the
restaurant. Not the self-service one,
though we did give a pitying look at the huddled masses queuing for their meal
when we later came to claim our table!
Off to kiss the Idol with the taking of
many pictures on the Grown Up Camera along the way. The queue to Kiss the Idol was stretching way
out of the church so we knocked that on the head and decided to look at the
Idol from the vantage point of the nave.
The church was packed and I quickly
realized that this was nothing to do with piety but rather the fact that the
famed choir of the church was about to sing.
And sing they did to a chorus of clicks and whirrs and a blaze of light
from the audience (“congregation” would be going a level of sanctity too far!)
as cameras, iPhones, iPad, tablets and video cameras snapped into record mode.
The singing was pretty and instantly
forgettable and then it was time for lunch.
Which was excellent. Our buffet salad starter was one of the most
delicious I have ever had. The lamb in
the main course fell off the bone and the lemon sorbet was superb.
Duly stuffed we wound our way back to the
Church of the Idol and went down (by lift – I said we were stuffed) to the art
gallery.
The Caravaggio of St Jerome Penitent is
excellent and outshines everything else in the room in which it is displayed,
though I have to say that the little El Greco they have is remarkable for the
almost monochrome, quasi-abstract background.
The real treasures here are Catalan and the
collection rivals that of MNAC in some of its aspects. My favourite painting is by Casas and shows a
young woman preparing for her bath. This
is a subtle study in pastel tones and has a misty delicacy which I find breath
taking. It is not a spectacular painting
but it is one that impresses itself on the memory and always repays a visit
because no reproduction does it justice.
An excellent day out which thoroughly
justified the lazy day on the beach today to compensate for all the effort of
eating and looking yesterday!
The ways of our University System are
gnomic to say the least. I have been
trying to get out of doing a foundation course in my present OU degree because
I have already done one. Admittedly it
was some 32 years ago in the early eighties, but I really didn’t want to do it
again.
I was told when I started this OU degree
that everything that I had done previously was “out of date” and I would have
to start anew. The phone call today
raise and then realized the possibility that I could be reinstated on the
course that I started all those years ago!
So, in one telephone call, the six years
that I was going to have to study for my degree has been cut to three! I will wait for the confirmation of what I have
been told before I start making any plans because living in Spain makes one
wise in the ways of bureaucracy and the little mind games that they can
play.
But, on the face of it, the OU has done the
decent thing and I am very impressed by the fact that I had the phone call (in
response to an earlier query) and a decision about my status was decided in
hours and an email sent immediately.
The OU is truly one institution where they
place students first! God bless them and
Harold Wilson too!
And that must be a sentiment which is not
often typed nowadays!
In what was surely a barely veiled
political comment the lady from the OU referred to “our dear government”
cutting money to the OU and demanding that students pay higher fees more in
keeping with students in conventional institutions. Perhaps my reinstatement is a reflection that
I have paid (much, much lower fees) for a variety of other courses and that has
to be part of my time-extended course.
Who knows! Who cares! My studies have changed for the better and
the cost of my degree has been lessened by almost eight thousand pounds!
All things work together for good! And who am I to disagree with Candide!