Monday, 14 July 2025

Monday 14th July - more treasures

 There's been a bit of a delay, blame the tennis, but I have explored another row of drawers in the Korean Chest


The second row beneath the shelf


What have we got?

A little screwdriver set, and also a white plastic box box with a useful tiny screw driver and two miniature screws for mending glasses

A round wooden box with something in it, but which refuses to open, and another mysterious piece of card marked 'READING'

Another 'READING' card, and a packet of flints for cigarette lighters

This drawer was stuck shut; 

Two small inexpensive gilt frames 

Three corks from bottles, the sort which contained whisky or rum, a pendant on a cord, and the solution to the 'READING' mystery; this card also had 'SPECSAVERS' printed on it!

Two cups for chairlegs or tablelegs, the sort used to protect carpet.

BB managed to open the drawer. It seems that the piece of wood which forms the base of each cubby hole doesn't go all the way to the back. So he removed the drawer above and reached right in, managing to ease whatever was in the stuck drawer so it would open...

A set of poker dice, an neat little book light which clips over a book, and still works! And another card labelled 'SINGAPORE MULTI'. I have no idea what that could mean!


Now, that little box, that rattled and would open; BB very gently worked on it until the lid came off. It has a rather battered and dried out impression of my father’s family crest.

BB is very keen for the next installment; he really enjoys the challenge of opening stuck drawers and mysterious boxes!

There are three more rows of drawers, then the cupboard and the six drawers either side are still waiting to have their secrets revealed. 

Tennis

It felt weird not to be spending the afternoon glued to the television... but that's it for me until next Summer! 

Music 

Philip Glass Etude no 2, played by Yuja Wang. I'm not sure if Philip Glass actually started 'Minimalist Music' or not. Actually I think his idea of repeated notes slowly changing has a lot in common with the Balinese gamelan tradition.

Nowadays we hear what I call Minimalist Muzak all the time, the loathsome (in my opinion!) repetitive rocking between two notes that is the soundtrack to programmes like Masterchef while the camera lingers on the faces of the anxious chefs waiting to hear who is about to be sent home.

I think this Philip Glass piece is really interesting. 



12 comments:

  1. That chest really is full of mystery treasures- what fun discoveries will be next?

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  2. RannedomThoughts15 July 2025 at 08:50

    I have a set of those teeny, tiny screwdrivers and very handy they are too. Got them out of a christmas cracker.

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    1. I wondered if that's where these came from.

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  3. The Korean chest is amazing. It's a nice piece of furniture and all the drawers that may or may not open are so intriguing. It sounds like anything could be hidden behind the drawers or taped to the bottom of them. It sounds like the start of a mystery novel. And the stuff is so useful!

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    1. 'Taped to the bottom of them'! Now I need to go back and check them all!

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  4. The Philip Glass piece sounds devilishly difficult to play - too easy to get carried away and speed along.

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    1. I agree... and all that leaping around. She plays with such control and expression.

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  5. What excitement in opening those little drawers, never quite knowing what you will find!

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    1. I remember quite a few bits and pieces, or rather half remember them.

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  6. How interesting! It makes you wonder what the thought was to keeping those items.

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    1. I suspect a mix of 'put it there for now' and 'what shall we do with this'

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