The GFG Blog

2014Oct

Funerals for Football Fans

Charles
Oct 01
4 comments
Posted by David Hall Although Lorry Drivers are top of the Vintage Lorry Funerals customer league table, they are closely followed in the number two position by Football Fans. Some Football Fan business has been derived from the 1950 Leyland Beaver’s red and blue livery and funerals have taken place for
Categories:  Hearses

2014Sep

Branding

Charles
Sep 26
4 comments
Posted by John Porter Strangeways prison, Manchester 1982, pre riot. I was a student on placement and during my first week asked an officer what the red and white cards meant outside each cell. “White means CofE and red is for ‘left-footers’ – Catholic.”  Nothing for Jewish, Muslim, Sikh or any other religious
Categories:  celebrants, Christian belief, Religious funerals

Et in Arcadia ego

Charles
Sep 24
1 comment
Posted by Richard Rawlinson I first came across this Latin phrase as a teenager reading Evelyn Waugh’s Brideshead Revisited. Narrator Charles Ryder finds the words inscribed on a skull displayed in his bedroom. ‘Even in Arcadia, there I am,’ is the translation. Death, the great equaliser, prevails even in the most
Categories:  Attitudes to death, Ossuary

Free until the point of death

Charles
Sep 23
16 comments
  Click the letter and you’ll make it bigger and readable. It’s from Angie Gunn, Mortuary Services Admin Co-ordinator at Stockport NHS Trust. It’s been sent to all local undertakers. “From 1 Oct, once all paperwork regarding the release of a body has been received, you will be contacted by
Categories:  funeral directors, Legal rights

It’s what they would have wanted

Charles
Sep 21
4 comments
The woman who had died was young, her end sudden and tragic. She had fallen from a yacht and drowned. The funeral was big, loud and emotional. In the days following, many came on their own to lay flowers quietly on her grave. One weekday lunchtime a man was depositing
Categories:  Dead people's rights

Going out in credit

Charles
Sep 19
No Comments
It is a long established principle of English law that there is no property in a corpse. As church lawyers in the middle ages used to say in that scholarly way of theirs (with a solemn nudge and a wink), a dead person – a cadaver – is cara data vermibus:
Categories:  Death masks, funeral cost

Last poem

Charles
Sep 17
5 comments
Japanese Maple by Clive James (who is dying) Your death, near now, is of an easy sort. So slow a fading out brings no real pain. Breath growing short Is just uncomfortable. You feel the drain Of energy, but thought and sight remain: Enhanced, in fact. When did you ever
Categories:  Poetry

What would Doctor Who’s funeral be like?

Charles
Sep 17
No Comments
Posted by Melissa Stewart How does the Doctor’s experience of intergalactic death care compare with our earthly experiences? What would he think of arrangements in an average high street chain? In the 1985 episode ‘Revelation of the Daleks’, loosely based on Evelyn Waugh’s ‘The Loved One’, we learn a little
Categories:  natural burial

Yer gotta hav it!

Charles
Sep 15
3 comments
Guest post by John Porter Anyone who says to me “You have to”, I nearly always reply with “why?” and then “why?” again! The fact is I don’t have to do anything. I can choose whether to or not – that’s different. “Not so,” I hear some say, “you have
Categories:  celebrants

Packed to the rafters

Charles
Sep 12
6 comments
One night in the early 1700s,  Henry Trigg was making his way home when he heard a disturbance in the churchyard. Looking closer, he saw, to his horror of course, grave-robbers making off with a freshly-buried corpse.  He continued on his way, resolving never to let the same thing happen to him. (He
Categories:  burial