In a fit of research on change ringing, I came across a reference to your dissertation (it must have been you, yes?) on change ringing and its relation to social custom in English towns. But I find that you never distilled the thesis to an article or otherwise published on the subject. Quite sensibly, you moved on to writing that would provide some remuneration. In any case, is there some way I could obtain a copy. I haven't looked but I suppose it is on Dissertation Abstract. But in any case please advise.
And seeing that you are in Perth . . . I am coming to Edinburgh and forward to St. Andrew's to deliver my son to his first year of studies there at the end of September, although I may allow his mother this privilege and visit a month later. We did visit last April which was the first experience of Scotland for all of us. At last I understand why Scots are so offended when someone mistakes them for being English. They are altogether a different people.
Finally, the change-ringing is a newly emerging interest for me. I am living in Boston and have found the several active towers here. I have only ivisited a tower and sat through a practice and was invited to get the feel of a ring. Very very appealing, so to say. Sctland has many fewer towers (it not being England!)and it rather surprised me that St. Andrew's had none.
Best wishes, Joseph Taylor (can.patller@gmail.com)
P.S. I have just remembered that there is a link to "randon unpublished work" that I have not explored yet. Perhaps the bell materials are there. P.P.S. The girlfriend of the young man attending St. Andrew's is aimed toward a career as a pilot and I have sent here the link to the Ninety-Nines.
not a piano but a bell ringer
Date: 2007-08-31 06:42 pm (UTC)And seeing that you are in Perth . . . I am coming to Edinburgh and forward to St. Andrew's to deliver my son to his first year of studies there at the end of September, although I may allow his mother this privilege and visit a month later. We did visit last April which was the first experience of Scotland for all of us. At last I understand why Scots are so offended when someone mistakes them for being English. They are altogether a different people.
Finally, the change-ringing is a newly emerging interest for me. I am living in Boston and have found the several active towers here. I have only ivisited a tower and sat through a practice and was invited to get the feel of a ring. Very very appealing, so to say. Sctland has many fewer towers (it not being England!)and it rather surprised me that St. Andrew's had none.
Best wishes,
Joseph Taylor (can.patller@gmail.com)
P.S. I have just remembered that there is a link to "randon unpublished work" that I have not explored yet. Perhaps the bell materials are there.
P.P.S. The girlfriend of the young man attending St. Andrew's is aimed toward a career as a pilot and I have sent here the link to the Ninety-Nines.