Signs of spring - the Cornish daffodils on our mantelpiece ...
A walk down by the Lido this morning, before we found ourselves foiled by closed National Trust gardens (the effects of the big storm here earlier in the year); by train times, by ...
so we did catch a train to Truro, which has a rather fine, rather plain late Victorian neo-Gothic cathedral - built on a site that had been a church since 1259, but the foundation stone of the actual cathedral wasn't laid until 1880.
It manages to be remarkably unremarkable, unflamboyant, its stained glass windows complicated, but not especially - well, anything, unless one counts the rather unChristian violence involved in chopping off Charles I's head,
and then the fact that in this bas relief of Christ's crucifixion, the figure of Pontius Pilate was modeled on ... Bertie, the then Prince of Wales. That's an odd casting.
Outside, in the cathedral square, what looked like a woman holding a bouquet and a tennis racket until you see that actually it's more theatrical - it's a mask and a mirror.
Here's the cathedral from the river;
and now, back in Penzance, the view from the edge of the sea as we walked to our very good, very fishy dinner at the Tolcarne Inn in Newquay (and back again).
















































