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Friday, January 12, 2024

Busy, Busy, Busy --- January 12, 2024

Locator: 46522B.

Incredibly busy today, but I'm going to delay blogging about the Bakken for most of the day, while I get caught up on some reading.

I'll eventually be back. 

Good luck to everyone.

PSA: the price of eggs  -- starting to go up again. 

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Measure For Measure

The play, wiki

My notes here

Why was the play set in Vienna?

It would be hard to make this play into a family (G-rated) movie for Americans. It would be banned, without a doubt, in Florida.

The Elizabethans loved it; the Victorians, not so much: From wiki: 

In late Victorian times, the subject matter of the play was deemed controversial, and there was an outcry when Adelaide Neilson appeared as Isabella in the 1870s.

The Oxford University Dramatic Society found it necessary to edit it when staging it in February 1906, with Gervais Rentoul as Angelo and Maud Hoffman as Isabella, and the same text was used when Oscar Asche and Lily Brayton staged it at the Adelphi Theatre in the following month.

Adelaide Neilson: wiki

I assume Ms Neilson was the Meryl Streep or the Julia Roberts of her day. 

Born in Yorkshire. There's a special place in my heart for Yorkshire. If I had all the money in the world, I would have a home in Pateley Bridge. Specifically, at the northwest corner at the intersection of the B6265 and Lupton Bank.

Ironically, having spent much time in Pateley Bridge, and more specifically "on" Lupton Bank," I've never asked where the name "Lupton" comes from.

Wow, wow, wow, here goes. Again, from wiki:

The Lupton family in Yorkshire achieved prominence in ecclesiastical and academic circles in England in the Tudor era through the fame of Roger Lupton, provost of Eton College and chaplain to Henry VII and Henry VIII.
By the Georgian era, the family was established as merchants and ministers in Leeds.
Described in the city's archives as "landed gentry, a political and business dynasty", they had become successful woollen cloth merchants and manufacturers who flourished during the Industrial Revolution and traded throughout northern Europe, the Americas and Australia.
The Luptons in Yorkshire: Lupton is a placename surname connected with Lupton in Cumbria (formerly Westmoreland).
The surname in Yorkshire is recorded in 1297 in Subsidy Rolls (Robert Lupton), in the 1379 poll tax in Thornton in Lonsdale (Thomas de Lupton), in Pateley Bridge (Leonard Luptonn) in 1551 and (George Lupton) in 1553 and in 1599 in Keighley (Judithe Luptonne). Father Robert Lupton was the Vicar of Skipton in 1430.

And it's time to move on.

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