SUNDAY BLOG: Monstrous and Awful

WHAT A LOVELY SUNNY DAY. KEEP HAPPY, DON’T LISTEN TO THE NEWS!

Cave Hill from Loughside Park

The Cave Hill dominates Belfast, strong and silent and beautiful.  This time of year it looks like there’s an old musquash fur coat draped down the slopes with the gold and ocher of the many trees.  Most of us take it for granted but there is a lot of work keeping such an historic monument in prime condition and this achievement was celebrated recently when the Lord Lieutenant for the county borough of Belfast, Fionnuala Jay-O’Boyle CBE presented the Cave Hill Conservation Campaign with the Queen’s Award for Voluntary Service for 30 years dedicated work. Over 100 volunteers and guests gathered at Belfast Castle for the occasion when chairman Cormac Hamill accepted the QAVS award.  Cormac has been champion of the Cave Hill for years.  He admits he was an Armagh boy who fell for a North Belfast girl and ended up living beside the hill.  “I was a country boy and the Cave Hill was important, it was the only place I could get my head above Belfast!”  

Cormac Hamill accepting the crystal award from the Lord Lieutenant of the County Borough of Belfast, Fionnuala Jay-O’Boyle CBE

Thanks to Cormac and the many volunteers who have kept this marvellous landmark in pristine condition and battled the vandals.

Donal McDaniel with the Lord Lieutenant

Find out more about the educational side of the organisation, the many talks and walks and the magazine at www.cavehillconservation.org 

War Of Words

I simply can’t understand the war that is raging about Irish and Ulster Scots, sure we all use words from each, it’s ingrained in our every day speech.  Let’s celebrate this instead of allowing it to come between us.  Our traditions are interlinked and we should treasure this, something Liam Logan, author of One Rhymes, and Linda Ervine bring before their audiences at speaking events throughout Northern Ireland, as Liam says, Linda the Protestant loving the Irish language and he’s the Catholic delighting in Ulster Scots.  

Tom McDevitt with Barney McCoole

Ulster Scots first came to my ear working with Tom McDevitte who was a regular on television as Barney McCoole hanging over the farm gate and telling us he was ‘Livin’ in Drumlister and clabber to the knee’.

Before he died I had a long talk with Dr. Ian Anderson who was founder of the chair of the Ulster Scots Language Society. I asked him the 64 million dollar question – is it a dialect or a language?  Ever the diplomat he replied: “Some say it’s a dialect and others say it’s a language.”  Liam, expert on the subject, would agree.

Which ever it is, it’s a beautiful lilting way of expressing yourself, isn’t a ‘gulder’ more impressive than a shout, bad wee skitter gets the message across where a naughty little boy has little impact and there’s more feeling to ‘thole’ than to suffer.  However, Liam warns about a common word – ‘fouter’.  We often fouter about but this is an Ulster Scots word from medieval French origins for the ‘ physical act of love making’.  

This broadcaster, author and journalist points out that language changes through time. He likes to tell the story of Christopher Wren. “When Wren was walking past St. Paul’s Cathedral with Charles ll, the architect asked the king’s opinion.  “Monstrous and awful” was the reply.  Actually he meant ‘huge’ and ‘fills me with awe.’”  Liam also told me that Greeks named the Barbarians after the way they spoke, to the Greek ear it was ‘bar-bar-bar-bar-bar’!  Hence Barbarians.  Obviously translating is a skill.

Bible Studies

Interestingly I once interview Heather and Philip Saunders who at the time, and working through the Wycliffe Bible Translators, translated the Gospel according to St. Luke into Ulster Scots and their hope was to present the entire New Testament to the world and who knows, perhaps even the entire Bible in Ulster Scots, a Herculean task. 

Thanks to Master McAlarey, Liam learned some historic poetry when he was at school, Macaulay’s Horatio at the Bridge, Noyes ghostly The Highwayman and closer to home W.F. Marshall, the Bard of Tyrone, and so his native speech was in the air he breathed in north Antrim and gave him a lexicon for life. Liam is well known on radio and television for his programmes featuring the Ulster Scots and Nine Rhymes is his third book beautifully illustrated by another Dunloy boy Billy Mawhinney. 

Nine Rhymes is just that, nine expressive works full of humour and wisdom all varied and fascinating to read – out loud is best.

If ye minded ivry minute o yer life, ye couldnae think

Aal ye mine is bits and odds, whiles it’s jist a blink

There stuff that’s kina hazy an ither bits that’s clear

Here’s a tale haes styed wae me for nearly fifty year.

And so the tales go on about The Return o John Mann,  Granny We Hardly Knew Ye and A Kailye Frae Santy – (After a visit from St. Nicholas by Clement Clarke Moore)

The nicht afore Christmas an a roon the hoose

Naw yin thing was stirrin, naw even a moose

The socks were a hung bae the chimley wae care

Hopin Oul Santy would shane be doon there.

The only thing about Ulster Scots is the fact that my spell check has almost had a nervous breakdown!  Well worth it.

And Nine Rhymes available £9.99 available in Waterstones bookshops

Walking Stick In Hand A Farmer Walks The Co Antrim Dark Hedges

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Off to watch the rugby! Mixed feeling about Scotland and Japan, Would have been Scotland for me until they talked of taking the law into their own hands and trying to put pressure on the organisers, on the other hand Japan has been magnificent both in sport, in hospitality, in attitude and in the way they have coped with the dreadful weather conditions acknowledging the death and destruction yet honouring their responsibilities to the players and fans of this Rugby World Cup. I think this means I’ll be shouting for the Land of the Rising Sun.