Navigation
Powered by Squarespace

 

Welcome to the blog of the NeverTooLate Girl.

With the aim to try out, write about and rate the things that people say they'd like to do but haven't quite gotten around to, this website gives you the real and often humourous inside gen on whether it's really worth it.

Read about it,think about it, do it.

 The Top 20 Never Too Late List

  1. Learn to fly - RATED 4/5.
  2. Learn to shoot - RATED 4/5.
  3. Have a personal shopper day.
  4. Attend carols at Kings College Chapel on Christmas Eve - RATED 2.5/5.
  5. Have a date with a toy boy.
  6. Do a sky dive.
  7. Eat at The Ivy - RATED 4/5.
  8. Drive a Lamborgini.
  9. Climb a mountain - CURRENT CHALLENGE.
  10. Have a spa break - RATED 4.5/5.
  11. See the Northern Lights.
  12. Get a detox RATED 4/5.
  13. Read War & Peace - RATED 1/5.
  14. Go on a demonstration for something you believe in.
  15. Attend a Premier in Leicester Square.
  16. Go to Royal Ascot.
  17. Buy a Harley Davidson - RATED 5/5
  18. Study for a PhD - RATED 4/5.
  19. Visit Cuba - RATED 4/5.
  20. Be a medical volunteer overseas - RATED 3/5. 

 

 

Follow me at http://twitter.com/NeverTooLateGrl

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

« The next adventure? Seeking the Aurora Borealis (the Northern Lights to me and you). | Main | Nine lessons and carols at King's College Chapel on Christmas Eve, part 4 »
Wednesday
Dec262012

Nine lessons and carols at Kings College Chapel on Christmas Eve – would I recommend it for the Never Too Late List? 

Most people will have heard carols from King’s at some point over the years either on CD at home as part of their Christmas Eve tradition or on the radio or TV.  The choir have voices like angels, the lessons remind us of the true meaning of Christmas and the service, invented at the college in 1918, is now inextricably associated with Christmas for many people both at home and abroad.  To get into the service by reservation you have to be part of the college great and the good (I spotted Mary Beard while I was there) or hold an important civic position, for example the mayor, though this is probably beyond most of us.  For a common or garden grunt such as me it meant a six a.m. start, over an hour’s drive and close to six hours of queuing. The chances of getting a good seat when you get in is very random (as I said in a earlier post, I was relatively lucky), the lighting is pants in much of the nave so it must be very hard even with reasonable eyesight to read the words to the carols, and the lessons themselves, whether by a young chorister or by the Provost can’t be heard very well at all.  It’s a beautiful building and most of the joy of being there is sitting in the quiet before the service begins, looking at the architectural splendour and musing on its history – there are still the remnants of graffiti left by Parliament soldiers during the Civil War on the north and south walls for instance.  And in more contemporary times the college has produced some notable alumni such as Robert Walpole, the first Prime Minister of Great Britain, E. M. Forster, the novelist, John Maynard Keynes, the Economist and Alan Turing, the mathematician, all or most of whom must have attended services in the chapel at some point, though not necessarily the Nine Lessons and Carols. 

Am I glad I did it? Yes I suppose so, mainly because of the strong association with Christmas Eve and having listened to it on the radio so many times.

Would I do it again?  No  But for some this was their third time and someone else had driven all the way from Manchester to attend.

Would I recommend it to others? Probably not.  Listen to the service on the radio and then, if you want to see the chapel itself, especially the altar and Ruben’s painting, go to a normal service.

Never too Late Mark? Two and a half out of five.

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

Reader Comments

There are no comments for this journal entry. To create a new comment, use the form below.

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
Some HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>