Up here in Nova Scotia we have been blessed in certain regions with a dying language - Gaelic.
Now, if you have ever heard Gaelic you will know it has a rhythm and beauty of its own...a hard/soft poetry of sorts.
Today as we face yet another winter storm I thought I would share.
Chi mi'n geamhradh as a ghaoith
Chan eil an sneachd fada bhuinn
"I see winter in the wind.
The snow is not far from us."
Gaelic Thought
- Jackie Olsen
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Gaelic Thought
Thanks, Mary,
it does have a lyrical quality to it. Have you ever read THE 21 LESSONS OF MERLIN? If I remember correctly the author recites old verses and spells in Gaelic.
Do you speak Gaelic? How about a verse for SPRING coming (we're facing an ice storm tonite, but maybe we can send the storm WAY north!)
Jackie
it does have a lyrical quality to it. Have you ever read THE 21 LESSONS OF MERLIN? If I remember correctly the author recites old verses and spells in Gaelic.
Do you speak Gaelic? How about a verse for SPRING coming (we're facing an ice storm tonite, but maybe we can send the storm WAY north!)
Jackie
Gaelic Thought
Jackie, I never learned to speak Gaelic, my father spoke it but not fluently. You have to hear it to appreciate it....like so many languages, the written word loses something when it hits the page.
There is a popular group from Cape Breton, Nova Scotia - The Rankin Family - they have a song - a lullaby that they perform in Gaelic and it doesn't matter that you can't understand the words - you get the feeling simply from the pronounciation. It is a pity that such a beautiful language is slowly dying. I guess it is a sign of the times...many of the traditions in this area are lost to time.
I haven't read the book you refer to but I'll hunt around and see what I can find.
In the meantime, I'll see what I can do to score some verses for spring.
There is a popular group from Cape Breton, Nova Scotia - The Rankin Family - they have a song - a lullaby that they perform in Gaelic and it doesn't matter that you can't understand the words - you get the feeling simply from the pronounciation. It is a pity that such a beautiful language is slowly dying. I guess it is a sign of the times...many of the traditions in this area are lost to time.
I haven't read the book you refer to but I'll hunt around and see what I can find.
In the meantime, I'll see what I can do to score some verses for spring.
Gaelic Thought
Not quite spring-related but I'm working on it.
Theid seoltachd thar spionnadh.
Cunning(cleverness,smarts) will defeat physical strength.
Pronounced "Haech shoal'tach har spee'ona"
Theid seoltachd thar spionnadh.
Cunning(cleverness,smarts) will defeat physical strength.
Pronounced "Haech shoal'tach har spee'ona"
- Jackie Olsen
- Posts: 619
- Joined: Fri Sep 18, 1998 6:01 am
- Contact:
Gaelic Thought
How martial-arts appropriate! Thanks, Mary,
Jackie
Jackie