Jump to content

Recommended Posts

I'm tired of political argument - let's try something new.


My beautiful things are:


Sunset & sunrise at sea - ideally alone


The view from the top of an unnamed mountain in Norway that I climbed with a friend in 1974


An iceberg


The Aurora Borealis


A pub, nestled in a dale beside an old church in Yorkshire, after a long and grueling walk in high summer


Kota Kinabalu


The Eiger & Mont Blanc (looking not climbing)


Mrs MM on wedding day - walking under an arch of swords held up by friends


Son no. 1 - playing violin at a wedding


Son no. 2 catching his first trout


The River Test in May with trout running


I may think of others later

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/3194-beautiful-things-ive-seen/
Share on other sites

Good call Marmora Man!


(Typing that made me feel that perhaps you ought to be wearing a mask, a cape and some tights with your pants on the outside. but I digress...)


Dawn over the alps in winter, no one about and the lights of Grenoble shining through the blanket of cloud in the valley below. I had a large sackful of warm baguettes on my back at the time, which added a certain je ne sais quoi.


Dusk in Hong Kong, looking out from the Peak over the South China Sea; islands floating in light and mist and all that.


A near-empty pub with a roaring log fire in the middle of a cold and rainy day. Everyone else was a work. Can't remember what I was doing or why I wasn't at work too. I do know that I was cold, tired and thirsty and very glad of a cosy sit down with a pint and the chance to drink it in peace and quiet. It was somewhere in West London; I forget where now. Shame, as it had a lovely, almost Platonic quality of pubness to it that I'd love to revisit.


The Venus de Milo. I was in the Louvre but didn't know it was there. Wasn't expecting to see it at all and so, when I stumbled upon it, was able to see it fresh and free of all the preconceptions I would probably otherwise have taken to it.

Thunderstorms from a distance. You see them in the late afternoon on the Highveld in SA when you are driving out somewhere between nothing and nowhere. It is flat as far as the eye can see and you can see the storms forming on the horizon and making their way across the landscape. Scattering electricity across the sky as they go.


Until you end up underneath one yourself that is. Then you can?t? see bugger all.


A perfectly restored cherry red 1st generation ford mustang outside my office yesterday.


And how could I not recount the sight of a pint of Guinness settling.

What I like most about the title of this thread is the "that I've seen" bit... I've always taken "Beauty is in the eye of the beholder" to not mean "well you might think it's nice but I think it's pig-ugly" but to mean "it was beautiful because, in that single moment, i saw something that no-one else saw"


To take an example from a film - a lot of us have seen deer, but that scene in Stand By Me where he's alone and sees the deer, and sees not just the deer but life that has passed and what will come... that's where the beauty is. To my mind anyway


( I suppose I could have just said there is a difference between subjective beauty and objective beauty - but that isn't quite what I meant)


So I agree with the beauty in most of the examples so far but I'll have to think a bit longer for some of my examples

my newborn baby on having just emerged into the World, gazing lovingly into my eyes (yes I know they can't see properly so young but they can see blurred images), I felt like she was really gazing into my soul saying, so you're the one who's been making all that noise then! Big believer in singing to unborns.


An image from childhood growing up on farm in Scotland, section of woodland, so quiet and so green, shadowed by tall trees but with the sun glimpsing through and cascading down upon the biggest collection of forget me knots/bluebells I've ever seen, I can even remember the smell and thought it was my own magical secret place.


Being priviliged enough to see and witness the reunion of a mother who had been separated from her three young children for a whole year whilst she fled her war torn natural country to escape persecution, not a dry eye in the area.

Following the birth of my daughter, I was having a cigarette on the 8th floor of Kings (those were the days) at night, looking over the lights of London. I'm sure post-birth euphoria had a lot to do with it, but the vista just encapsulated endless possibilities and life stretching ahead.


I had a dream ..

Ant has just reminded me - when I lived in Devon the view, driving westward on the A30 after Exeter when half of Devon seemed to open up below with Bodmin Moor in the distance, just after the Whiddon Down roundabout. In rain or shine it was beautiful.


I'll also add London at night - from One Tree Hill.

A double rainbow over the Grand Canyon - made even better because up until that point rain and fog had hidden the Canyon.


A sheet lighting storm over the mountains of Albania viewed from Corfu.


The Old Royal Palace in Bangkok.


Concorde flying over SE22 at 7pm every evening.


The pre-Raphs in Tate Britain.

Ant, I will admit to a certain gruff admiration for the sight of a flock of swallows gathering over a dusky East Sussex valley, flitting anxiously in the last of the year's sunshine, uncertain of their future, unlikely, many of them, ever to return from their forced flights into the hostile south.


It's at times like that you really think .... "sic transit gloria mundi", and all that stuff.


(Also, "it's getting cold out here, can we go to the pub now?")

annaj on our wedding day


warm orange evening sun glinting off the Colloseum in Rome


blood red sky behind the houses of parliament, seen from the 10th floor of St.Thomas' Hospital


And many, many more.


Living in NZ I used to be frequently late to work as I stopped to watch the sunrise in the bay. Moments where you're struck by how beautiful something looks can be so personal - I've always wanted to get better at photography to try and share how I see things. For a while I thought that the magic was that it couldn't be done, and that you really did have to be there... then I discovered Peter Lik photography.


Blurry Good thread, MM.

Wow! LizzygotDizzy, that was perfectly put.


For me, the most beautiful things I have seen;


My new au Polish au pairs skin when she turned up at Gatwick airport back in January - it was fresh dewy perfect - she had to go...clearly!


My husbands gigantic bonus cheque just before Christmas (sigh).


Gary Barlow wearing rubber trousers at Wembley Arena in 1995 (I think) - OHMYGOD!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • I had a peek when a door was opened the other day. I saw a large open basement (no floor at shop level) and stairs to 1st floor. The basement appeared to be across both buildings but it was the quickest of looks so I may be wrong. It may also be that the ground floor over the basement has not yet been put in place. 
    • Yes, that compromise is in not extending the event to two weekends, and keeping it to the one currently.  Yes, I am getting that too, but just go anyway. I intend to.  I will talk to FOPR, and see if there is any interest for a petition from those going to the consultation tm. We just need some volunteers to get together and do the leg work. I've done political party canvassing before, and so can organise a ward by ward schedule. I think it's fair to say that any goodwill some of us had towards working with Gala has gone with this proposed expansion. They are not the same people that started the event with We Are the Fair. At least one of those people actually lived next to the park. The people running things now have no connection to the park or local area and quite frankly are taking the p*** now. Might be worth officially demanding to know where the money the council gets from the festival is actually spent as well. 
    • It's a fantastic little place  
    • Sadly we need young people from developing countries with higher birth rates to do the work that Brits wont do, including many jobs in health and social care.  How you square this with minimum wages to get work visas I don't know.  A different subject for another thread.   Shortage of skilled workers is another topic.  We could return to the fact that young people from Europe no longer come to the UK for a limited time, to do both skilled and unskilled jobs, but that would bring us back to Brexit and the crazy decision we made as a nation. Some nice analysis by Sky News, tend not to use them as a rule but was surprised by the quality of this piece: https://news.sky.com/story/how-many-illegal-migrants-are-in-britain-the-key-numbers-driving-the-immigration-debate-13428405  
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...