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Cemetery in Hursley
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this is the flint wall to All Soul's Church. The building covered in ivy to the left is the King's Head, the pub Ed, Anselm, and I stayed at for a bit this last summer. I highly recomend a traditional English 'Lock in' as a way to spend a night.
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More on the whole 'wow, take closeups' idea.
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Around this time in my gigapan 'career' I got to wondering what would happen if you took gigapan closeups. The answer is, well, you get a closeup... On the left is the grave of the poet John Keble, after whom Keble College, Oxford, was names in 1870. See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Keble
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Detail of gravestones.
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I love this attenuated light. Everything from the churchyard feels ephemeral, the way a church yard should feel. Meanwhile, there were thousands of boy scounts somewhere in England on some big jamboree, and floods not that far from us were wiping out things.
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Grave stones planted by the back wall of All Saint's church. I don't _think_ that those are the actual graves-it has the look of the stones having been moved back out of the way to protect them, to preserve them, something. Or maybe those are not markers, but just memorials. It reminded me of the basement of S...
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I went on a bit of a walkabout outside of Hursley, and discovered why the English talk of 'walking holidays' and why they value walking through the countryside. Short answer: paths and trails and beautiful country.
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There is the little village of Hursley, captured in a panorama. There is me hanging out while it goes click click. There are artifacts of passing cars, and the 360 degree artifacts. And a driver-by "That's a dangerous place to be with me driving" - a commentary on his driving, not on my location.
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A Lychgate is covered gate into a traditional British cemetery. Check out the wikipedia article: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lychgate
It is formally (I hear :-) considered a part of the church. The coffin, or the body if uncoffined, is layed down in the lychgate and some part of the ceremony is conducted there....-
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