Mithering Heights: Difference between revisions
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Mithering Heights begins practically at the [[Least Gate]], budding off from [[Pallant Street]] and, as it approaches the City, takes in an intersection with [[Spa Lane]] and [[Tump Lane]], finally meeting [[Brookless Lane]]. its importance in the other direction is that this is the beginnings of the widdershins (anti-clockwise) spiral road to the top of [[the Tump]], eventually becoming the Old Tump Hill Walk* (begins C2). At its nearest point to the City Wall, a side-street buds off to [[Endless Street]] and the lesser thoroughfare of Garstairs*(A3). | Mithering Heights begins practically at the [[Least Gate]], budding off from [[Pallant Street]] and, as it approaches the City, takes in an intersection with [[Spa Lane]] and [[Tump Lane]], finally meeting [[Brookless Lane]]. its importance in the other direction is that this is the beginnings of the widdershins (anti-clockwise) spiral road to the top of [[the Tump]], eventually becoming the Old Tump Hill Walk* (begins C2). At its nearest point to the City Wall, a side-street buds off to [[Endless Street]] and the lesser thoroughfare of Garstairs*(A3). Garstairs houses riding stables offering the usual range of equestrian services "to the sons and daughters of gentlefolk". | ||
==Annotation== | ==Annotation== |
Revision as of 22:34, 7 November 2015
Mithering Heights begins practically at the Least Gate, budding off from Pallant Street and, as it approaches the City, takes in an intersection with Spa Lane and Tump Lane, finally meeting Brookless Lane. its importance in the other direction is that this is the beginnings of the widdershins (anti-clockwise) spiral road to the top of the Tump, eventually becoming the Old Tump Hill Walk* (begins C2). At its nearest point to the City Wall, a side-street buds off to Endless Street and the lesser thoroughfare of Garstairs*(A3). Garstairs houses riding stables offering the usual range of equestrian services "to the sons and daughters of gentlefolk".
Annotation
To mither is one of those loan-words Northern dialects of English (including Scots) acquired from Scandinavian languages. Still freely heard in Lancashire or Yorkshire, the verb means to pester, aggressively solicit, to whine, whinge and generally be annoying. It is often used in the context of a parent reproving a child for demanding and persisting in making demands, often in a whiny or whingy way, despite frequent and heated rebuttals from the parents.
For instance: Will you stop mithering or I'll give you a right clip round the ear! I've already said no!
The other association is too obvious and suggests a tale of passion and forbidden love, with a Discworld twist, marketed by Velmans and Jones, publishers...
Discworld children such as Wentworth and Pewsey could be described, by their aggravated elders, as being one embodied and incarnate mither...