The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1955, Qupperneq 32

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1955, Qupperneq 32
30 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Winter 1955 A Visit In Bonnie Scotland This summer it was my pleasure to visit Scotland. Come with me and 1 will take you to some of the places of interest I was privileged to see. The Empress of Scotland docked at Greenock on the Firth of Clyde about six-thirty dn the evening of May 23rd. There was an air of excitement as many of the passengers were return- ing “home” to visit relatives and friends after several years’ stay in Can- ada and other parts of the world. Scot- land welcomed us with open arms with the sun shining over the hills and the heavens a deep azure blue. My com- panion was a Scottish girl who was visiting relatives in Scotland and I was received as a relative, too. I shall always feel a special kinship for the Scottish people, but particularly, of course, for my new found cousins. Burns Cottage, Alloway, in Ayrshire, is visited by hundreds of tourists every year. In the Burns Cottage Catalogue the opening paragraph is —“When on 15th December, 1757, William Burnes married Agnes Broun, daughter of a Kirkoswald farmer, he brought his bride to the ‘auld clay biggin’, built by his own hands, which has since be- come one of the chief shrines of world pilgrimage. Here, in the ‘but’ or kitchen, was born to them their eldest son, the Poet of Humanity, in the widest sense of the words, upon whom ‘a blast of Jan war’ win’ blew hansel’ on the twenty-fifth day of the year 1759. William Burnes, as the surname was spelled, owned the cottage until 1781, when it was bought by the Incorpora- tion of Shoemakers in Ayr for £160. They rented it to various tenants one of whom turned it into an ale house. They realized the value of their property and made it attractive to patrons of the ale house and to visitors who came to Robert Burns birthplace. In 1881 the Alloway Burns Monument Trustees purchased the property from the Corporation and have made it a national shrine Which is open to the public. There is an admission charged for the upkeep of the cottage and property. It is kept in excellent state of repair and is a credit to the trustees of the fund. There are many articles of furniture, etcetra, in the cottage and museum. To mention a few—Robert Burns writing desk, an oak chair, Holy Bible, several letters written by the poet, as well as original manuscripts of his poems. Perhaps the two most famous lochs in Scotland are Loch Lomond and Loch Katrin. All lakes in Scotland are called lochs with one exception, Lake of Menteith. A drive around Loch Lomond on a bright sunny day is a must for the traveller. There are towns and hamlets along the way where one could spend hours. The countryside is so peaceful with cattle and sheep graz- ing on the hills. One feels very humble in the places made famous by the bards of old. At one point on Loch Lomond, about twenty-five feet off shore, there is a statue of a three year old boy which bears the inscription, “To Our Beloved Son.” The story goes that a little boy drowned at that point and bis parents erected the statue in his memory. There is no name so his ident- ity is not known.

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The Icelandic Canadian

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