This will be the last regular post on the blog now that the Presidency has been handed on. I hope you have enjoyed the miscellany of things. There are some posts which never quite made it, and I still have ideas, but 301 posts (including this one) in sixteen months has been quite busy. Of course the quality has been variable, and sometimes just a picture has had to do. The original idea was to post once a month or so, but I got enthusiastic and it has been much more than that. Sometimes I have had time to post daily, whereas over last summer the rate dropped down to less than once a week for a while.
Readers have come from all the continents except Antarctica, and at the time of writing there have been just under 25,000 page views. The busiest month was February 2011 with 1,645 page views from 1,020 unique visitors. People have stayed on the site too. At any one time according to the tracking software about 15% of my readers stay on the blog for more than 20 minutes, which is a long time for a website.
My family will be pleased that will not be forever taking pictures of Haileybury related things to put up on the blog. I have a set of pictures which did not get used for a series on 'nooks and crannies,' which was rather scorned by a friend who, seeing a photo of the urinal at the back of the pavilion on Lower Pavilion on my phone wondered whether people really want posts on 'places where I urinated when I was a teenager.'
Thank you all for reading. I shall leave the blog on the internet, and you can use the links on the right of the page to read the old posts. I am investigating how to make Haileyburiana available as a book using Print on Demand and will put up a notice if that can be done.
Finally, the Master said in his address to the AGM that in the 150th year he would ask the Director of Music to teach the school the Vivat, which has not, I think been sung at Haileybury for 20 years (the hymn Lift up Your Hearts, having largley taken its place). Here is an attempt at a Sesquicentennial verse:
Now we've been here thrice fifty years
Vivat Haileyburia!
Living out our hopes and fears
Vivat Haileyburia!
Girls have come to join the boys,
In other lands they share our joys,
And still this song our tongue employs
Vivat Haileyburia!
I fear it is not as good as AG Butler's original:
Then close your ranks and lift your song!
Vivat Haileyburia!
That life is short, but love is long;
Vivat Haileyburia!
And all through life, where'er we be
School of our hearts, we'll think of thee
And drink the toast with three times three
Vivat Haileyburia!
Almost as good as the chorus of the Ipswich School song:
ReplyDeleteLeg of lamb and chicken breast,
This was Wolsey's alma mater,
Jesus, make his followers blest.
thanks for your posts here, Luke. I've enjoyed browsing nostalgically from time to time over the last year. I've also enjoyed the opportunity to slightly horrify my friends and family with pictures of the old dorms.
ReplyDeleteAccording to Wikipedia plus other sources, George Nugent Merle Tyrrell was at school here and he is extremely well known in spiritual circles for all his work on spirits, apparitions life after death etc. There is an netry for him on this website. https://allaboutheaven.org/sources/1401/124/tyrrell-g-n-m
ReplyDelete