|
Showing 1 - 7 of
7 matches in All Departments
Samuel Johnson and James Boswell spent the autumn of 1773 touring
through the Lowlands and Highlands of Scotland as far west as the
islands of Skye, Raasay, Coll, Mull, Inchkenneth and Iona. Both
kept detailed notes of their impressions, and later published
separate accounts of their journey. These works contain some of the
finest pieces of travel writing ever produced: they are also
magnificent historical documents as well as portraits of two
extraordinary men of letters. Together they paint a vivid picture
of a society which was still almost unknown to the Europe of the
Enlightenment. Entertaining, profound, and marvellously readable,
they are a valuable chronicle of a lost age and a fascinating
people. For the first time, Ronald Black's edition brings together
Johnson's and Boswell's accounts of each of the six stages of the
two men's journey - Lowlands, Skye, Coll, Mull and back to the
mainland. Illustrated with prints by Thomas Rowlandson, it includes
a critical introduction, translations of the Latin texts and brief
notes.
John Gregorson Campbell (1834-91) was one of the most outstanding
folklorists working in Scotland during the nineteenth century.
Based on materials which he had gathered in the 1850s and 1860s,
his Superstitions of the Highlands and Islands of Scotland and
Witchcraft and Second Sight in the Highlands and Islands were
published posthumously in 1900 and 1902. Engagingly written in an
anecdotal style, they introduce us to a galaxy of fairies, witches,
ghosts and supernatural creatures, as well as general superstitions
and the beliefs and rituals of the traditional calendar. Having
been written as a single work, they are now reunited as one volume.
In a lively introduction, Ronald Black illuminates Campbell's work
with extensive explanatory notes and a radically revised biography
of the collector, supported by bibliography, maps and index.
Poetry is something that we all share, each time that we think a
thought. We think in poetry, only some of us are not able to put it
in words but thoughts of poetry live in our hearts. We are filled
with emotions and that is what poetry is. You need to just open
your heart to the words written for they are the words coming from
a heart just like you. From our pain and our sacrifices to our joy
and happiness, when you read this we will be able to see that we
are all the same seeking love and a dream that we can claim. There
are times when we may feel lost and there is nothing that we can
do. The truth is that there will always be options for us to
choose. Only with our ever changing emotions at the time we are
blind to see. For every action there is an opposite reaction. There
are things that we know that we can do yet we get caught up in the
things that we are going through. There are times when we are happy
and times when we are sad. It is a delicate balance in the lives
that we live. Each of us will need to come to grips with the way
that we feel. We are never alone although we think at the time that
we are alone. We need to find the courage to reach out and say that
we are here. Is there anyone out there that care about the lives
that we live? At the end of the day if we listen closely we will be
able to hear a voice saying that I am here, you are not alone. Ever
changing emotions is what will live in our hearts. We just have to
decide the things that we want to do and find the courage to follow
them through. The Life that I have had to live has been very
difficult but the love in my heart kept me strong even when I
sometimes may have felt alone. I have cried my share of tears and I
have suffered many years but I kept the love in my heart. We are
human and we make mistakes but as long as we live there will always
be another road for us to take. I pray that the poems that you are
reading help you to understand that we all go through life's ever
changing emotions. We have to live in the moment and if that moment
continues to last then we should remember that our lives are made
up of our past, present and our future. For as long as we live we
can change the way that we feel. Love and forgiveness is what we
should always hold most precious in our lives. Love and forgiveness
can forever live in our hearts. Poetry is something that we all
share, each time that we think a thought. We think in poetry, only
some of us are not able to put it in words but thoughts of poetry
live in our hearts. We are filled with emotions and that is what
poetry is. You need to just open your heart to the words written
for they are the words coming from a heart just like you. From our
pain and our sacrifices to our joy and happiness, when you read
this we will be able to see that we are all the same seeking love
and a dream that we can claim.
Poetry is something that we all share, each time that we think a
thought. We think in poetry, only some of us are not able to put it
in words but thoughts of poetry live in our hearts. We are filled
with emotions and that is what poetry is. You need to just open
your heart to the words written for they are the words coming from
a heart just like you. From our pain and our sacrifices to our joy
and happiness, when you read this we will be able to see that we
are all the same seeking love and a dream that we can claim.
In the course of his long poem An Airce, 'The Ark', the Jacobite
poet Alexander MacDonald shows the Campbells being subjected to
trial by water for the part they played in defeating Prince
Charles's army in 1745-6. Some will be drowned outright, he says,
some just given a good ducking - and some will be honourably
treated. He names forty individuals; Ronald Black puts their lives
and deeds under the microscope to see how far they deserved their
allotted fate. The result is a well-balanced portrait of the
leading men of Argyll in the eighteenth century and a refreshingly
new perspective on one of the most colourful episodes in Scottish
history: the rising of the '45 as seen through the eyes of
Highlanders who helped to crush it. The Campbells of the Ark
includes a detailed study of the sixty-three locally based
companies of the Argyllshire Militia of 1745-6, covering every
corner of this fascinating county, from Kintyre to Ardnamurchan,
from Islay to Genorchy.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R164
Discovery Miles 1 640
|