Seligor's Castle. The home of Seligor, Diddilydeedot, Dodie, and Dr. Do-Diddily and the Dee-Dot's.

Seligor's Castle is where Seligor, Dr. Do-Diddily and the Dee-Dot's,
Diddilydeedot in Dreamland,
and Dodie's Dream World all work on their websites.
They are all within the children range, though Dodie's does have a lot more classical stuff on it and the little ones might find it a bit boring.
I have just opened a couple of wee nursery pages though just in case you have one on your knee, :)

Each site has it's own home page and index, and I have been very careful not to repeat to many rhymes etc, though Toby and Tilly are in both the Castle and Dreamland and now Diddilydeedot around the world. I have mad up most of the play lists from YouTube and google. But please always check these as sometimes you get the odd person who thinks its smart to change the content. I have looked through almost 7,000 videos on you tube alone, so you can imagine how many there are.
Many of the stories, myths tales, rhymes come from books well past their hundredth birthday. I have always collected old books and up until recently sold many on Amazon. But now I use all my spare time on the websites and blogging sites.
Then there are songs to sing, many, many new rhymes to learn and pass on to the future generations.
I have been on line over fours year now and also have my Zoomshare, Wordpress, Delicious, Twitter and Facebook. Best wishes xxx Seligor

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

You'll never walk alone. Hillsborough 1989 - 2009

THIS REALLY HURTS SO VERY MUCH, WE WILL NEVER FORGET.
SELIGOR XXX


Who else?

Liverpool Football Club's museum curator Stephen Done introduces the painting that captured the moment when the Anfield stadium became a shrine to lost lives.

We have a very important painting on display in the club museum called Flowers for Liverpool.
If you look at it you can probably tell that the subject matter is the flowers that were laid at Anfield in the aftermath of the Hillsborough disaster.

Flowers


It was painted by the late Adrian Henri, the brilliant Liverpool painter and poet.

He was inspired to paint it after being overwhelmed by the scene that greeted him when he arrived at Anfield to pay his own respects.

The whole pitch was covered in flowers in what was almost like a shrine dedicated to those that had tragically lost their lives.

The painting is almost abstract because you have to look at it a little bit to work out exactly what it is. Slowly you start to see the wrappers of the flowers, the red ribbons, the scarves and the hints of lines written in remembrance.

It is a lovely painting and yet there is also the obvious element of sadness and tragedy.

Henri was a massive Liverpool supporter. Sadly he is no longer with us. I was always a great fan of his poetry and his painting, so I was delighted that not long after I got my job here, back in 1997, I met him at the Bluecoat Gallery and we had a really long chat together - but we didn't talk about art - it was all football!

The painting is very special and is as fitting a tribute to those who lost their lives in Hillsborough as we have on show.




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