Daily Archives

June 9, 2018

Looking Back from Where I Came (Especially for My Girls)

Finlaggan…….Where to Begin

Where to even begin…….This one image has so many threads that are woven into a fabric that produces a visually and palatably beautiful tapestry, as well as, a tactile touch that is both comforting and soothing.  I guess the best place to begin is with the significance of where this represents the past.

From https://www.islayinfo.com/finlaggan_clan_donald.html:

It is no joy without Clan Donald;
it is no strength to be without them;
the best race in the round world,
To them belongs every goodly man.
The noblest race of all created,
in whom dwelt prowess and terribleness;
a race to whom tyrants bowed,
In whom dwelt wisdom and piety.

The staves of the Gaelic lament by the Mac-Mhuirich Bard in the Book of the Dean of Lismore at the loss of the MacDonald Lords still echo through the Isles. The line of the Great Sea-Lord Somerled, with whom the history of the western seaboard in the Middle Ages began, has run its course, and with the death of Angus Og at Finlaggan in 1490, it has, for all intents, met its tragic end. The Lordship, that vast, eternal sea kingdom, with its heart in ancient Finlaggan, has faded to near obscurity. But let there be no dirge for the Lost Lordship, no retrospective on the place of the Lords of the Isles in Scottish history – what’s here at Finlaggan is history, a pervading sense of the political and social ambience that underscored the significance and magnificence of the place in the medieval Gaelic seaworld.

If it were solely from this heritage, recently revealed to me, this single bottle would represent one of the most prized possessions of Scotch I have or have had.  However, there are other threads to this cloth that endears this particular bottle deeply to my soul – more on those later.

Cultural Destinations

Boundaries…….Of Our Own Choosing

I have been fortunate to be personal witness to a number of experiences so far in my life from many settings:

Black cab ride past Big Ben in London

Bullet train passing a majestically rising Mount Fuji

Stars and a crescent moon ascending up from the Gulf of Oman in Muscat

Tango practice in a park in Buenos Aires

Drinking sangria in the Plaza Mayor in Madrid

Site of the Caribbean from atop one of the Pitons in St. Lucia

Awe-struck from the first glimpse of the Coliseum in Rome

The suggestive excitement from a performance at The Crazy Horse cabaret in Paris

The grandeur that makes the Grand Canyon just that

Yet as varied and specific each of these sites and experiences are to the individual location, there is always evident those things that are common.  Whether in a foreign location, or merely a different locale in the States, there are always people together; families play and share time.  Parents keep both an excited eye on the happiness of their children at play and a wary attention which is the universal sign of protection.  Games are played, food is shared, moments are made.  No matter how far-flung we perceive others in the world to be, at the heart, we share more than we may care to recognize.  Recognizing what we share chaffs against our need to have boundaries – to group this vast world into ever tightening divisions so that we can assure ourselves – for God only knows what reason – that there is an “us” and a “them”.  If we could somehow break free of that dependency to separate and segregate, we might find, in the end, that we are much more together in this existence than apart.

 

Image:  https://goo.gl/images/95gH8j