timeripple: (star of the county down)
[personal profile] timeripple
Happy Birthday to [livejournal.com profile] niare!

Now, I know you're all desperate to know what I've been doing for the past two weeks. You all want to make hundreds of comments about how much you love me and want to read more about Goat-Girl and tell me how the Fiddleheads are doing (has that woad thing happened yet?) and stuff like that. You may also complain about your midterms and I will sympathise, probably using an aorist participle. *ahem* Back to the important stuff.

15 October 2004
Being thoroughly awoken by three singing pigs is no ordinary event. Thank you, Melanie!

16 October 2004
Hair Update: O for a pair of pink Fiskars safety scissors! The split ends are rampant, and I’m not accustomed to my new scissors. For one thing, the handle can’t make up its mind whether it’s blue or black, and the proportions are a little strange. The blades are more suited to cutting paper than making tiny cuts of protein strands, however dry and paper-like they may be.


8-10 October Weekend: IFSA-Butler homestay visit in Insch. More specifically, the countryside surrounding Insch. I was a little wary, but in fact it was a most excellent weekend. My host family was wonderful, from their kind hospitality to their fabulous company; from their horses to their cats who helped to make us welcome. On Saturday we were escorted first to Glenfiddich Distillery, whereupon we gazed, awed, at a whisky bottle with a 40,000-pound price tag. In the gallery was a plaque proclaiming that two members of the founding family inspired the Cheerybles in Dickens’ Nicholas Nickleby. We picnicked at the gloriously ruined Huntly Castle where I had a most triumphant time sticking my nose in dank cellars, peering out of unusually ornate windows, clattering up and down stairways in odd corners, gawking at what might have been stables, following a medieval road “into the past and onto the golf course” (my comment), and looking round every magnificent tree surrounding the ruins. I’m not sure if there’s a connection to Huntlie Bank, but there was a river, and it was the right sort of place; any of several might have been the Eildon Tree in imagination. We drove round up to the coast to see a fishing village used in the filming of a movie called Local Hero, which we saw part of. I especially liked the bit with the rabbit. To round off the evening was a party at the home of one of the host families, complete with a fair amount of squawking from my underused fiddle, as I was threatened with dire consequences if I didn’t play. Luckily somebody dug up a book and was able to figure out some piano accompaniments, so I felt a bit less foolish, having less attention on me, and some of the worst screeches were more or less drowned out.

Tuesday, Session: A funny thing happened. A couple of who I presume to be American tourists, very drunken ones at that, joined us. One of them kept bursting into song in an irritatingly piercing voice at odd moments, and another wandered over and started petting people’s heads asking for a tune. In desperation the old hands turned to me: “Play something, quick!” So during a lull in the caterwauling I dredged up Batchelder’s Reel. I’d no idea I could play it that fast, but play it I did, and with a reasonable amount of success – that is, I could detect no scorn in their faces when I finished, and somebody asked the tune’s name. I may yet turn out a proper fiddler some day! I’m no Natalie MacMaster-at-age-19, but I think I may be improving nevertheless.

22 October 2004
My neighbors have been singing karaoke. The same song. For the past three hours. The tune that has so enraptured them? “All I Want for Christmas is You”.

23 October
I am strangely excited to be writing about Alcaeus’s “ship of state” poetry, although I find my essay topic distressingly vague (or maybe it’s just my philosophy-study-honed tendency to want things stated explicitly. Or maybe I’m still adjusting to linguistic differences out here. For example: apparently when a building is open daily from 9-5 it’s closed on weekends). However, Melanie’s PotC soundtrack is immensely helpful. I am understandably less gleeful about Theognis, although there is one poem of his that I find particularly interesting, and will proceed to quote. Deal with it.

from Miller, Andrew M. Greek Lyric: An Anthology in Translation. pp.83-84, lines 39-52

Kyrnos, this city is pregnant, and I fear that it may give birth to a man
who will chastise and correct our wicked arrogance.
For though the citizens here are still of sound mind, their leaders
are on a fixed course to fall into great wickedness.
No city yet, Kyrnos, has ever been destroyed by noble men;
but when it pleases the base to grow arrogant,
and they corrupt the people and grant judgments to the unjust
for the sake of their own private gain and power,
do not expect that city to enjoy unshaken calm for long,
not even if it lies now in great quietness,
once base men set their hearts on things like these,
gains that come with hurt to the people.
For from these things come factions, the internecine slaughter of men,
and tyrants – may they never be pleasing to this city.

I think we read some of these poems, as well as the bit about Hesiod advising his brother, in Nautical Archaeology. *beams* Good times, good times. I am back on familiar territory and the chocolate biscuits are plentiful.

25 October 2004
Yesterday: castle trip with the Shire. Whee! The program consisted of Linlithgow Palace, then Blackness and Bothwell. In which we climbed many stairs, wandered through empty rooms, crammed ourselves into small dark spaces, and kept a pigeon count. Also, it rained. And then it didn’t. And then it did again. Upon seeing two of us fair maidens sitting genteel-like in the watchtower, someone remarked that it was the perfect place for damsels to sit and embroider and sigh over lost love. I'll leave it to your imagination to figure out what we said in response, but it involved taking over the world, rude words, and the use of the rainpuddle on the floor for the flotation of a model armada.

It was fabulous! If we’d said “Excellent!” one more time, we’d’ve needed a pair of air guitars. All in all a most triumphant weekend.

Date: 2004-10-25 06:55 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kayselkiemoon.livejournal.com
You may also complain about your midterms and I will sympathise, probably using an aorist participle.

*grin/wince*

as I was threatened with dire consequences if I didn’t play.

see? you're fabulous, no two ways about it ^_^

dude, reading your posts makes me want to blow off my life and come visit you. alas, i haven't the money, even if i did have the guts (to blow off school, obligations, etc.) but i'm visiting in spirit!

Date: 2004-10-25 09:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] timeripple.livejournal.com
Having sympathised, know that I too am visiting various folks in spirit, including but not limited to ye olde friends in Wellesley!

Date: 2004-10-25 09:01 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nimoloth.livejournal.com
...any of several might have been the Eildon Tree in imagination.

If it's Eildon, it may be a reference to somewhere down in the Borders - the Eildon Hills are down there. I played a piece called The Three Perils Of Man by Bruce Fraser (women, drink and the devil), and part of it was subtitled The Eildon Hills.

----------

I totally love old castles, the more ruined the better! My favourite is Auchans, near Dundonald in Ayrshire (the unrecognized companion to Dundonald Castle). But lots are really cool. We did a re-enactment at Stirling Castle once - that was relly good :). My ancestral castle, Pollock Castle, is just south of Glasgow on the edge of the moors, what is now East Renfrewshire or thereabouts. Unfortunatley some numpty demolished it in 1954 when he inherited it. Idiot! It was still lives in up to then. Now there's a modern mansion and just the foundations which I have yet to see. And the M77 cut straight through the grounds and the old motte and bailey.

Date: 2004-10-25 09:09 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] timeripple.livejournal.com
in the Borders - the Eildon Hills are down there.

Excellent! *plots madly*

My ancestral castle, Pollock Castle, is just south of Glasgow on the edge of the moors, what is now East Renfrewshire or thereabouts. Unfortunatley some numpty demolished it in 1954 when he inherited it. Idiot!

Duuuude. That's... cool and deeply sad all at once. But mostly cool.

Date: 2004-10-25 10:12 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kayselkiemoon.livejournal.com
The Three Perils Of Man by Bruce Fraser (women, drink and the devil)

hahaha ^_^

I totally love old castles, the more ruined the better! My favourite is Auchans, near Dundonald in Ayrshire (the unrecognized companion to Dundonald Castle). But lots are really cool.

dude. I've never visited even one castle, old or otherwise! (though i have been to some towers) it seems new england just isn't a good location for castle-touring. *sigh* more reasons to visit scotland, and soon!

My ancestral castle, Pollock Castle, is

anyone who can throw that phrase into a conversation and not be lying is just terribly hot. *blushes because kate's "i'm an american" sign is clearly blinking* but, just, ... dude. *grins*

Date: 2004-10-25 10:15 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kayselkiemoon.livejournal.com
I've never visited even one castle

ok. fine. i take that back, i've been to Versailles, and i suppose the french monarchy's royal seat qualifies as a castle if anything does. but it was too... present pretty. does this make any sense? I want tons of stone just sitting about in the middle of shrubbery, lots of random stairs that end up no where, leaks in the roof, bits of roof missing entirely! i want to discover the ruins of camelot, goddammit! *laughs*

Date: 2004-10-25 02:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] timeripple.livejournal.com
Dude. *cough*Greece*cough* Okay, so maybe not castles per se, but still cool ruins, no? My envy concerning certain other people having been present is undying, too.

Date: 2004-10-25 05:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kayselkiemoon.livejournal.com
still cool ruins, no?

yes, that's true. *sighs dreamily* I want to go back! it's been over three years and i start to feel as if i maybe dreamed it all instead...

My envy concerning certain other people having been present is undying, too.

*grin* *keeps grinning* yeah, that was awesome.

Date: 2004-10-25 03:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nimoloth.livejournal.com
Chateaux's aren't really the same thing at all. Except in the Dordogne region where they really do look like castles, all fortified stone on clifftops overlookign the river.

Date: 2004-10-25 05:52 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kayselkiemoon.livejournal.com
Chateaux's aren't really the same thing at all.

exactly. ^_^ i want an enchanted forest castle, not all the gold paint and ornamental walkways!

Date: 2004-10-25 03:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nimoloth.livejournal.com
You might have one too (there are many hundreds of castles in Scotland, and many are associated with several families) - what's your second name and I'll investigate. Can probably find your coat of arms too, if it's not too weird a name and British in origin. I found mine:



And the motto is 'audacter et strenue', meaning (more or less) Boldly And Quickly (although I haven't studied Latin). The crest is a boar shot through with an arrow.

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