It is worth remembering that Rabbie Burns was born and bred to farm. He had a strong love for the countryside...
If you would like to read the poem, click here! This poem engenders much imagery, not least the impressive sculpture on Poet's Walk, the pathway that joins the modern museum with the original cottage. It's HUGE! About eight feet tall - no sae wee or timorous!
Close quarters! It was blissful to sit in the paddock in the early autumn sunshine and listen to the birds and insects.
Many of his works allude to scenery, flora and fauna, and the interaction between Man and Nature. One of the many small things that caught his eye led to one of his most enduring poems. This was one of the pieces that my father would suddenly break into reciting when the mood took him!
If you would like to read the poem, click here! This poem engenders much imagery, not least the impressive sculpture on Poet's Walk, the pathway that joins the modern museum with the original cottage. It's HUGE! About eight feet tall - no sae wee or timorous!
At the cottage, we learn more about Burns' farming and family background. The cottage is now set up in period fashion, with animals at one end and people at the other...
Close quarters! It was blissful to sit in the paddock in the early autumn sunshine and listen to the birds and insects.
I had been blessed with late September warmth and spent most of the day wandering through these places. Eventually, though, it was time to move, so back into The Grey and off we drove, finding a delightful parking spot in the hills near Crawfordjohn by a babbling burn and nary another sound. Sigh... nature. Nothing can beat it!
Thanks for posting these photos of the cottage, which I didn't find time to visit when in Ayr.
ReplyDeleteCheers, Gail.
PS Thanks for so much more too. Readers need to know that Nobby's YAM-aunty is a truly wonderful human being.
Indeed, that "lightness of being" comes through in all her posts, especially her Sunday posts. I have been reading as long as I have followed Bertie and Nobby. I guess I've felt not quite erudite enough to comment regularly.
DeleteHari OM
DeleteOh Fay, you flatter me - as does Gail. Erudition is never a requirement for comment here!!! Thank you for being a constant reader. Yxx
wow that is such an interesting lace!!! we want that big moose!!! how great to see all this things and to feel transported back in this time for a while....
ReplyDeleteTruly Amazing
ReplyDeleteThank you for such a beautifully presented and detailed look at Robert Burns.
ReplyDeleteI had no idea that Robert Burns wrote English that I wouldn't understand!
ReplyDeleteHari Om
DeleteHe didn't...he wrote Scots... Yxx
Thanks for sharing your visit to the museum, the poem and a bit of Robert Burns life. The large mouse sculpture is wonderful. Take care, Happy Friday and have a great weekend.
ReplyDeleteI was unaware of Burns’ intimate connection to nature, and this only causes my already serious appreciation of him to soar to new heights.
ReplyDeleteFirst of all thank you x 87 for the definitions at the beginning. I recently watched a YouTube on words and in Scotland and Australia(Stephen Frey). It was quite interesting. Funny about Aussies making all words have way too many vowels. Some of the Scottish(don't remember who the fella was) 'words' were recognizable once I heard them an sometimes similar spellings with a few extra letters.
ReplyDeleteI'm sure somewhere someone has a similar YouTube on Southernese.
Rabbie what an endearing nickname. Clapping he made the mouse very relatable and cute. I enjoyed the museum and the Christening gowns.
Happy Friday Hugs Cecilia
Wonderfully documented!
ReplyDeleteThere may be a lot of Burns' lines or descriptive phrases rattling around our language without most of us knowing their origins - timorous beastie being just one of them
ReplyDeleteAnother wonderful post today....the Scottish language is so very poetic!!
ReplyDeleteYou visit the most interesting places!
ReplyDeletethis is amazing, I even read some of the quotes out loud and tried to talk that way, could not do it but had fun. LOVE the house photos and the gowns and cradles and stones, all of it in fact
ReplyDeleteHi Yam - he had an interesting life didn't he ... I think he spent time out in the Caribbean as a tax man - I see he did. Brilliant photos - evocative of his time there ... thanks for posting - cheers Hilary
ReplyDeleteWhat an interesting place to visit. Thanks for brining us along.
ReplyDeleteThat looks like fun! I like words.
ReplyDelete