matty wrote:I'd narrowed it down to one of four people before even opening the thread - had Posh down as evens fav, Glenn you were 7-2!!
Posh wrote:On a separate note I think its wrong to build a statue to Wainwright. He was an intensely personal man and would have had no interest in the trappings of success or the furore that surrounds it these days. His books, their continued use and the walks and fells he's made so popular is all the rememberance he needs.
shrimper wrote:Posh wrote:On a separate note I think its wrong to build a statue to Wainwright. He was an intensely personal man and would have had no interest in the trappings of success or the furore that surrounds it these days. His books, their continued use and the walks and fells he's made so popular is all the rememberance he needs.
Having now listened to the piece I disagree on that point.
I think that had he still been (just) alive and been asked if, after his death, the people of Kendal might use his name and affectionate memory to initiate something like this to remember him by - explaining the benefits it might bring - he'd have harrumphed (it's a proper word, look it up) and mumbled something like: "Please yourselves - as long as I'm not around being asked to shake hands with mayors and stuff, I couldn't care less!"
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