
After my last lecture yesterday afternoon I decided I'd walk to North Kensington Library. The Chelsea Library didn't have the next book in Simon Scarrow's series, and I wanted to read the book on the train to Canterbury tomorrow - so I decided I'd make trip of it. Now, obviously I could have taken the bus or the tube, but being stingy and felling up for the exercise I trudged off, although I didn't really know exactly where I was going. I headed north off campus and through Hyde Park, before I took a left and started walking down a broad residential street. Both pavements and the street between them were covered in some sort of sandy tarmac. It was hard and smooth, but not black, giving the street a slightly exotic feel. Along both sides there were large, impressive detatched houses behind locked gates. I quickly realised that I was walking down the main embassy street in London, and my heart gave a strange jolt as I recognised the Royal Norwegian Embassy. As I walked down the long street the houses just got bigger and more imposing, especially the Japanese embassy was quite impressive. When I finally got to the end of the street I made a left onto a busy road lined with shops on both sides. The contrast was striking, although still in the West-End this road had none of the majestic feeling about it. I had to pop into an estate agent to get redirected towards the library, where I ended up borrowing the three next Simon Scarrow books, not just the one. By this time I was hot, and I'd resorted to carrying my jacket over my arm. I knew I needed to to some shopping, but due to the fact that I was now three miles away from halls I didn't want to buy anything just yet - untill I stumbled upon the Portobello Road market. I ended up bying six oranges and a huge bunch of green grapes, which I munched on more or less continuously while negotiating my way back to halls.

On Friday I also talked to Ms Sandanandan, the Undergraduate Academic Administrar of the Chemistry Department. I told her that I wouldn't attend late afternoon Friday lectures because of my religious convictions. Well, as I've written earlier, my religious convictions are ever so slightly in termoil at the moment. Despite this I decided I wasn't prepared to go to letures. Since talking to Ms Sandanandan it has struck me how I've always maltreated the Sabbath, and still do. Living in a religious bubble most of my life I've often taken it for granted. This week-end I've be thinking. What justifies my claim not to attend lectures on Friday nights, not to play volleyball competitively on Saturdays? I might say that I don't see anything wrong with playing recreational sports on the Sabbath, or hanging out with friends, even spending time with family; but do these things justify skipping lectures, or telling my employer that I can't come in to work? After all, I don't tell my lecturers that I'll be missing their lectures because I want to spend time with my family, or because I want to read a novel; that quite simply won't do. I don't tell them that I won't be able to make it because I need to catch up on some sleep either. Yet often these are the things we spend our Sabbaths doing. We eat the grape, but spit out the seeds; we accept the part of God's gift that we like, and spit out the rest. Despite shunning legalism, Sabbath keeping seems to be all about what we can't do; but do the things we do justify our time off? Either I need to decide to keep the Sabbath properly, or give up my lame excuse for a day off.