Quiet Days
Just A Hobby On The Internet.
Saturday, March 21, 2026
Friday, March 20, 2026
Long Live The NHS!
![]() |
| Dyson Centre. |
![]() |
| Linear Accelerator, |
![]() |
Sunday, March 01, 2026
The Pathless Country by James Harpur
It is Sunday and as I have the day to myself, I thought I
would tell you about the book I have enjoyed reading for the past couple of
weeks. It is called The Pathless Country, the debut novel by an Irish
writer James Harpur published in 2021. James was born in 1956 and
resides near Clonakilty in County Cork. He is best known as a poet, having won many
awards for the eight volumes of poetry published prior to this novel. If you have
read this blog page for a while you will know that I am an admirer of the
Indian spiritual teacher Jiddu Krishnamurti. In 1929 when Krishnamurti
dissolved the Order of The Star in The East which had set him up as the
new ‘world teacher’ he famously said, ‘I maintain that truth is a pathless land, and
you cannot approach it by any path whatsoever, by any religion, by any sect’.
This is what drew me to reading this book because when reading Krishnamurti’s entry
on Wikipedia it said that he is featured as a character in James Harpur’s novel
The Pathless Country. K isn’t the only famous person to appear in the book,
some of the most notable figures of British and Irish society in the early 20th
century walk across the pages of this book.
The central protagonist is a young
carpenter from Galway Patrick Bowley the son of Joe a Quaker, and
Bridie a Catholic. Joe experiences mystical visions such as whilst
working at Tullira Castle the home of playwright and republican Edward
Martyn he is transfixed by a painting of ballet dancers by Edgar Degas
which has a profound effect on him. He also has a brief romantic encounter in a
Galway church with Nora who later becomes the partner and muse of James
Joyce. Patrick eventually moves to London to live with his aunt Faith who
is influenced by theosophy and the suffragette movement. After attending a talk
by the socialist and theosophist Annie Besant at the Queens Hall Patrick
and Faith have a chance encounter with Jiddu Krishnamurti and his
brother Nitya. This leads to a friendship and regular correspondence between
Patrick and Jiddu. In London he also meets Agnes who becomes the love of
his life. Later, back in Ireland he visits Achill Island and encounters the
painters Grace & Paul Henry. I first thought they were fictitious characters,
but on investigation I found they were real artists of repute.
The first world war arrives and Ireland is in turmoil. Irish
soldiers are dying in their thousands fighting for the British Empire, while at
home people like Padraig Pearse are making fiery speeches demanding independence
from Britain. In the north the unionists under Edward Carson are
preparing to fight to stay with Britain. Militias are training for war
throughout the country. Agnes’s husband Dominic is killed fighting in France,
Agnes and Patrick are now free to marry. Due to Patrick’s Quaker sensibilities and
the influence of Krishnamurti he believes violence is not the way forward and
he begins giving speeches appealing for unity. This gets him in trouble with
the British authorities and the Irish republicans. Finally, he and Agnes set
off across Ireland on a pilgrimage of peace. The book reaches its gripping climax
when they arrive in Dublin on the eve of the Easter Rising 1916. I won’t
tell you anymore because you also might like to read this book. I thoroughly
enjoyed it because James Harpur has a poet’s eye for detail. There are some wonderful
descriptive passages of the Irish landscape and people. If you are interested in such subjects as spirituality,
philosophy, art, poetry, or Irish history then I think you might enjoy this
book as well.
![]() |
| Painting by Degas |
![]() |
| Painting by Grace Henry. |
Friday, February 13, 2026
Small Prophets
I’m a bit busy for the next month or so. It’s possible I might
not have time for much blogging for a little while. However, I thought I would just
tell you quickly about a wonderful new TV comedy series I have been enjoying. It
is called Small Prophets and is written and directed by the brilliant Mackenzie
Crook. If you have read my blog for a while you will know I am a big fan of
his work in such series as The Office, The Detectorists, and Worzel
Gummidge. I think Small Prophets is arguably his greatest creation yet. The
series stars Pearce Quiqley as Michael Sleep who is missing his
partner Clea who disappeared on Christmas Eve seven years previously. You
don’t need me to tell you what a comic genius Michael Palin is after Monty
Python, Ripping Yarns, and his film roles and wonderful travel
documentaries. After reading the script of Small Prophets Michael jumped at the
chance to play Brian Sleep who is Michael Sleep’s father. Brian lives in
a Care Home where he creates chaos for the other residents and carer Hilary.
Mackenzie plays Gordon who is Michael’s boss at the DIY store. Lauren
Patel is excellent as Michael’s workmate, friend and co-conspirator Kacey
. There are also great performances by Sophie Willan and John
Pointing as the nosey neighbours. Even the minor roles of Brigham played
by Ed Kear and eccentric neighbour Olive played by Shola
Adewusi are deserving of a mention. Mackenzie Crook always has great music in his programmes. In
the past the likes of Johnny Flynn and The Unthanks have been featured.
In this series the theme song is by a singer called Cinder Well.
I hadn’t
heard of her before but will certainly listen to more of her music in the
future. Mackenzie got the idea for the storyline after reading about a Swiss medieval
alchemist called Paracelsus. His dad Brian gives Michael the recipe for
creating little creatures called homunculi. They can predict the future
and only tell the truth. Before long Michael is busy growing the Small
Prophets in his shed. I won’t tell you anymore because I want you to watch
it yourself. It is shown weekly on BBC, but I was greedy and binge watched all
six episodes on BBC iPlayer. I just want to say that there are many worthy
institutions in Britain that should be preserved and treasured, but to my mind
the two greatest institutions to be proud of are the NHS and the BBC. There are
forces at work in the world who would like to destroy the BBC, but I don’t
think there is another television company in the world that nurtures such creative
talent and produces programmes of the quality of Small Prophets, so I say well
done to the BBC. I’m looking forward to the next series already.
![]() |
| Palin & Quigley |
![]() |
| Cinder Well |
![]() |
| Michael & Kacey. |
Monday, February 09, 2026
The Safekeep by Yael Van Der Wouden
It is now the ninth day of February, and it has rained here
every day this sodden year. That has meant that I have been cooped up indoors
most days. On the positive side I have read more than I have done in a long
while. Yesterday I finished reading The Safekeep, the debut novel by a
Dutch author called Yael Van Der Wouden. It was short-listed for The
Booker Prize in 2024. I ordered the book because a Yorkshire friend of mine
told me that she was reading it. When the book arrived, I made the mistake of
reading all the snippets of reviews by other writers in the front of the book,
by such people as Rachel Joyce, Ann Enright, Tracy Chevalier and Maggie O’Farrell,
and noticed they were all women. This made me slightly wary, wrongly thinking that
this was going to be chick-lit written for a female audience. It also made me
aware of what to expect in the plot.
The book is set in The Netherlands in 1961 fifteen years
after the war. The main protagonist is Isabel who lives alone apart from
a maid Neelke who comes in to help with the housework. She has two
brothers Hendrik and Louis. Hendrick has a partner Sebastian
who Isabel initially dislikes because he looks ‘foreign’. When they meet up at
a restaurant Louis introduces his new girlfriend Eva who Isabel also
takes an instant dislike to. The story gets underway when Louis asks Isabel if
Eva can stay at her house for a month while he is away on business. I knew from
reading the publicity blurbs that Isabel and Eva would form a relationship. The
tension between them is electric. The writing is very erotic, especially
chapter 10. The romance isn’t the main story however. Gradually a deep dark shameful
secret is revealed which concerns Dutch history during and after the war. I won’t
tell you any more in case you read the book yourself. I don’t think The Safekeep is one of the best books I have
ever read, not by any means. It is a page turner though, I had to know what happened next. It is a very promising debut novel, and I
think a lot remains unsaid. There could be another very powerful story to be told if
the author wanted to explore the history of the characters further, especially
during WW11. I will look out for more writing from Yael Van Der Wouden in the
future.
Wednesday, February 04, 2026
A Search In Secret India by Paul Brunton.
Yesterday the weather forecast told me that there was a 100%
chance of rain until the late evening. It was no day for venturing out on the
king’s highway, so to pass the time I thought I would write a piece about the
book I have just finished reading. It is called A Search In Secret India
by Dr Paul Brunton, first published in London in 1934. I first heard of
this book when Eckhart Tolle mentioned it in one of his talks on
Youtube. When my eBay paperback copy arrived, I was pleased to see a stamp in
it from the famous Shakespeare & Company bookshop in Paris where the
original owner of the book must have purchased it. Paul Brunton is the pen name
of Hyman Raphael Hurst (21 October 1898 – 27 July 1981), a British philosopher,
author of spiritual books, journalist and traveller. From an early age he had a
fascination for the mystic east and took an interest in such subjects as
theosophy and the occult. It was a chance encounter with a mysterious
Indian man in a London antiquarian bookshop which determined him to set sail
for Bombay in 1930 in search of the yogis and sages of India.
It was in Bombay that he had his first meeting with a
remarkable man, who just happened to be staying at the same hotel. He wasn’t
actually Indian; he was an Egyptian wizard or magician from Cairo by the name
of Mahmoud Bey who revealed that he learned his secrets from an old
Jewish magician who lent him musty old books about ancient magic. Paul Brunton asked
him to demonstrate some of his skills. Mahmoud asked Brunton to write down any
question on a piece of paper while he stood several yards away looking out of a
window. Paul wrote in pencil, “In which town did I live four years ago?”. He
was then asked to fold the paper as small as possible and clench it in his fist
along with the pencil. After a few minutes he was asked to unfold the paper. To
his astonishment he found the name of the town written on the paper under the
question. When pressed to reveal how he achieved this feat Mahmoud Bey said he
did it with the help of spirits called Jinns, one of which was his own
deceased brother. Brunton remained sceptical
but couldn’t think of any logical or scientific explanation.
After leaving Bombay Paul Bruton visited Meher Baba. (1894
– 1969) who claimed that he was the Avatar, or the total manifestation of God
in human form. He had taken a vow of silence and communicated by the use of an
alphabet board. I knew of Meher Baba before reading this book because Pete
Townshend of The Who and Melanie Safka were devotees of him. Melanie’s
song Candles In The Rain mentions Meher Baba. Paul Brunton wasn’t
impressed with him however. He doesn’t say that he was a fraud but felt that
Meher Baba was deluded about his own greatness. Brunton also had a brief
meeting with an aged Afghan female saint called Hazrat Babajaan who
Meher Baba had encountered in his youth, after which he had a spiritual
transformation. Brunton said of her, ‘some deep psychological attainment really
resides in the depths of her being, I am certain’.
As this book was written nearly 100 years ago, I find Brunton’s style quite dated, but it is still a compelling read. His attitude seems very colonial as well. He appears quite happy with the status quo of the British ruling India and doesn’t seem to have much time for Gandi and the independence movement. What I do like is his healthy scepticism of the people he meets. He has no time for the fakirs and tricksters he encounters. He has a lot of respect for many other people he met on his travels though, such as a man he called Brama who could display incredible feats of yoga including ceasing to breathe for hours, or even stop his heart from beating with no apparent ill effects. He also spent time with an elderly astrologer called Sudkei Babu. There was also Vishudhananda, the wonder worker of Benares who could produce any scent out of thin air and even bring deceased sparrows back to life. He was very impressed with Sahabji Maharaj who had founded a community near Agra called Dayalbach where the people combined modern methods of industry, farming, education, and housing with following their traditional religious beliefs of Radha Soumi. After reading the book I searched for Dayalbach on the internet and found that the community is still thriving to this very day. It was through meeting the religious leader of South India Shri Shankara that Paul Brunton was encouraged to visit Ramana Maharshi at his ashram at the holy mountain of Arunachula.
Brunton visited Ramana twice on this journey. Before meeting
Ramana he had prepared a list of journalistic questions to ask. After a short
while in his presence Brunton realised that questions were meaningless. He was
overcome by the energy of benevolence that emanated from Ramana who just sat in
silence beyond thought. Ramana taught that silence was the best communication.
He imparted wisdom into people’s consciousness without a word. He had been
content to live in obscurity, never leave Arunachula and never sought followers,
but they had arrived anyway and the ashram had grown up around him. Brunton’s
journey was coming to an end, and he was due to return home, but two days
before his ship was due to leave Bombay he changed his mind and returned to Arunachula
for a further month because Ramana had impressed him more than anyone he had
ever met. When it was finally time to leave, Brunton said of Ramana, ‘He has
taken me into the benign presence of my spiritual self and helped me,
dull Westerner that I am, to translate a meaningless term into a living and
blissful experience’.
Before this book was published in 1934 the name of Ramana
Maharshi was unknown in the west, but the book made him known throughout
the world. It has been translated into twenty languages and Ramana’s influence
continues to grow and spread through such teachers as Eckhart Tolle and
such practices as mindfulness and meditation. As the philosopher Bertrand
Russell once said, "Those who live nobly, even if in their day they live
obscurely, need not fear that they will have lived in vain. Something radiates
from their lives, some light that shows the way to their friends, their
neighbours perhaps to long future ages. I find many people nowadays oppressed
with a sense of impotence, with the feeling that in the vastness of modern
societies there is nothing of importance that the individual can do. This is a
mistake. The individual, if he is filled with love of mankind, with breadth of
vision, with courage and with endurance, can do a great deal. Every one of us
can enlarge our mind, release our imagination, and spread wide our affection
and benevolence. And it is those who do this whom ultimately humankind
reveres.”
![]() |
| Meher Baba. |
![]() |
| Hazrat Babajaan |
As this book was written nearly 100 years ago, I find Brunton’s style quite dated, but it is still a compelling read. His attitude seems very colonial as well. He appears quite happy with the status quo of the British ruling India and doesn’t seem to have much time for Gandi and the independence movement. What I do like is his healthy scepticism of the people he meets. He has no time for the fakirs and tricksters he encounters. He has a lot of respect for many other people he met on his travels though, such as a man he called Brama who could display incredible feats of yoga including ceasing to breathe for hours, or even stop his heart from beating with no apparent ill effects. He also spent time with an elderly astrologer called Sudkei Babu. There was also Vishudhananda, the wonder worker of Benares who could produce any scent out of thin air and even bring deceased sparrows back to life. He was very impressed with Sahabji Maharaj who had founded a community near Agra called Dayalbach where the people combined modern methods of industry, farming, education, and housing with following their traditional religious beliefs of Radha Soumi. After reading the book I searched for Dayalbach on the internet and found that the community is still thriving to this very day. It was through meeting the religious leader of South India Shri Shankara that Paul Brunton was encouraged to visit Ramana Maharshi at his ashram at the holy mountain of Arunachula.
![]() |
| Shri Shankara |
![]() |
| Ramana & Paul Brunton. |
![]() |
| Arunachula & Ramana. |
Sunday, January 25, 2026
Somebody Tried To Sell Me A Bridge by Van Morrison.
There was once a fraudster in New York who sold real estate,
(Sounds familiar!). His name was George C Parker (1860-1937) who sold public
buildings that he didn’t own to gullible people. His most famous exploit was
selling the Brooklyn Bridge. The scam was only discovered when the new ‘owners’
opened toll booths at the bridge to recoup their investment. George ended his
days with a life stretch in Sing Sing prison. His memory lives on with a saying
about gullible people, ‘If you believe that, then I’ve got a bridge to sell you’.
It also gave Van Morrison the title track of his new album of Blues
music Somebody Tried To Sell Me A Bridge. It is the third release
on Van’s Orangefield label after the excellent Beyond Words and Live At
Orangefield. Van created the label to release non-mainstream archive
material that wouldn’t otherwise be released on a major label. The sleeve
design is interesting because if you look at the shadow of the musician depicted
on the cover you will see that he has a tail. I guess this tells us to expect
blues music because amongst conservative Christian fundamentalists in America
in the early 20th century blues music was known as ‘The Devil’s
music’ as it was associated with juke joints, speakeasies, brothels, alcohol
and gambling. There are twenty tracks in all, mainly blues covers with just four
tracks written by Van and one by John Allair.
At nearly eighty minutes of music,
you are certainly getting your money’s worth. Van’s regular touring band are mainly absent from this
collection of songs, but he is joined by many illustrious blues friends such as
Taj Mahal who Van has worked with many times. Taj adds excellent
harmonica and vocals to four tracks including the politically incorrect Delia’s
Gone which I remember Johnny Cash singing at Glastonbury in 94.
Elvin
Bishop who I mainly know from the song Fooled Around and Fell In Love
plays guitar on five tracks. There is a great video on youtube of Van and Elvin from 1977 performing
Domino. Buddy Guy is still going strong at 89. You may
remember that it was Buddy who unveiled the plaque on Van’s former house on
Hyndford Street. I don’t think Van was very pleased about that at the time but
seems to have got over it now. I love Buddy’s guitar playing and vocals here on
I’m Ready and Rock Me Baby. You can see Buddy make a cameo
appearance in the recent multi-Oscar nominated film Sinners. John
Allair who has played piano and organ on many great Van albums contributes (Go
To The) High Place In Your Mind.
I hadn’t heard Anthony Paule until
recently, but he plays some excellent guitar on this album, and I think the
backing singers here Omega Rae, Nona Brown and Larry Baptiste are members of
his band. Dave Lewis like Van is also
from Northern Ireland. He played piano on the Magic Time album and
wrote Madame Butterfly Blues featured on this album. Mr ‘Boogie Woogie’ Mitch
Woods plays piano on twelve of the tracks. Eddie ‘Cleanhead’ Vinson whose songs Van has recorded
previously wrote the first two tracks. Other songs were written by such
luminaries as Junior Wells, John Lee Hooker, Fats Domino, Sonny Terry &
Brownie Magee, Leadbelly, Willie Dixon, Blind Blake, BB King, and Marie
Adams who wrote Play The Honky Tonks. I had never heard of Marie Adams,
so I just looked her up and found that she sang the original version of Ma,
He’s Making Eyes At Me which gave Lena Zavarone a number one hit in
the UK.
![]() |
| Buddy Guy & Van plaque. |
![]() |
| Taj, Van, Mitch. |
| Elvin & Van 1977 |
| John Allair |
If I had to choose a favourite song here, I think it is Van’s version
of Fats Domino’s Ain’t That A Shame. I can’t fault this album. It is
just what I expected when I ordered it. Van’s voice and sax playing are as good
as ever, although the four tracks he wrote himself aren’t among his best
compositions in my opinion. The musicianship of the players is excellent. I
think the problem for me is that I’m not the world’s greatest blues fan. My
initial enthusiasm to hear the songs began to wane after a while and I found
they began to sound a bit samey to me. Don’t let me put you off though. I know
a lot of music fans who are steeped in the blues will love this recording and
find it a very valuable addition to Van’s great body of work
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
Popular Posts
-
Dyson Centre. Sorry for not writing much for the last month or so, but I have been quite busy and otherwise engaged. I don’t usually talk ab...
-
Storm Bert seems to have blown itself out. It is a nice sunny day here now. I was just thinking about going for a walk when the post lady kn...
-
Jackson C. Frank died 25 years ago today on March 3rd 1999. He was a great and very underrated singer-songwriter, so I thought I...
-
It is another dark, windy and rainy day here. I won’t be going out today. I am listening to a CD called Folksongs & Ballads by Tia Blake...
-
It is Sunday and as I have the day to myself, I thought I would tell you about the book I have enjoyed reading for the past couple of weeks....
-
Sunday afternoon: The weather has changed here. Yesterday it was freezing, and suddenly today it is up to 12 degrees C. On the downside howe...
-
I’m a bit busy for the next month or so. It’s possible I might not have time for much blogging for a little while. However, I thought I woul...
-
I am very grateful that we still have a local record shop in our area because they are becoming a thing of the past. So, on Friday I rushed ...
























