Airs and graces
Mandy Sayer | March 02, 2009
Article from: The Australian
At Katoomba, in the heart of the Blue Mountains, the local characters rival the majestic scenery.
I’d heard about the small Blue Mountains town long before I first stayed there. In the ’30s and ’40s my father led a jazz band in “Homesdale”, one of the popular holiday resorts on the main street where the musicians also boarded. As a child I’d listened to many a story about their boyish pranks (stealing road signs and blocking off all traffic access to the resort; carrying the bed of the heavy-sleeping bass player, with him still slumbering naked in it, on to the tennis court at sunrise). Seventy years on, Katoomba, with its history of attracting vacationers and honeymooners, is still a fertile place for playful and irreverent behaviour.
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For me, however, the charm of a given town is not only realised through breathtaking landscapes and beautiful buildings, but also through the people who live there year-round. In one second-hand bookstore, my husband discovered the 75-year-old owner sitting by a heater behind the counter, swathed in a blanket, teaching Latin to a teenage boy. The next day, when Louis was mooching between the shelves, he noticed the same man teaching Sanskrit to a buxom woman who turned out to be Katoomba’s resident belly dancer. A fairly accomplished linguist himself, Louis struck up a conversation with the owner (in English) and discovered he also provided informal tuition, as he presided over the store, in Ancient Greek, Coptic, Hebrew and Aramaic. His well-read wife, apparently, spoke even more languages than he did.
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Monday, March 02, 2009
MOONLIGHTING IN ANCIENT PHILOLOGY in Blue Mountains NSW, Australia: