Francis Pryor takes the long view on Britain and Europe: "Despite what some would have us believe, Brexit wouldn’t mark a return to a glorious past, so much as a dismal future, where our principal legacy would be the destruction of a truly innovative system of multi-national government."
"The British state, under Margaret Thatcher, committed one of its most violent acts against its own citizens, at the Battle of the Beanfield, when a group of travellers — men, women and children — who were driving to Stonehenge from Savernake Forest to establish what would have been the 12th annual Stonehenge Free Festival were set upon by tooled-up police from six counties, and the Ministry of Defence." Thirty-one years on, Andy Worthington asks where the spirit of dissent is in Britain today.
Matthew Jenkin on how getting children out of doors can pay dividends in academic performance and also improves their concentration and confidence.
Ely Place is a street in central London that used to be part of Cambridgeshire, explains Flickering Lamps.
Caroline's Miscellany explores abandoned passages at Euston station that are a perfect time capsule from 1962.
J.K. Rowling just can't let Harry Potter go, says Sarah Lyall.
No comments:
Post a Comment