Edinburgh |
Edinburgh knocks London into a cocked hat. For that matter, it knocks Birmingham into a
cocked hat. And pretty much any other
city in the UK that I’ve ever visited.
Davy was born in Edinburgh, and I went with him last week,
on a visit to his home city. (We thought
about going to Tunisia for a week, but then decided to go to Scotland instead.)
We drove up, got B&B in a beautiful old town house in
Mayfield, and spent the evening walking round the city. We ate kebabs in Nicholson Square, near the
University and then wandered past the magnificent neo-classical College of
Surgeons, and little shops selling legal highs and student fashions.
We climbed up to the Royal Mile and, as always, I was
thrilled by those tall, gaunt buildings, so handsome and so Scottish, and the
beautiful sweeping curve of the road down into Fleshmarket.
As dusk fell, and the lights came on, we wandered back down
towards Princes’ Street. Arthur’s Seat looked
very volcanic in the background; Scott’s Monument was Gothic and magnificent,
and there were the floodlit Scots Baronial piles of the Balmoral and the old
Scotsman building on North Bridge.
Nessie in national dress |
There is a buzz about Edinburgh that I don’t feel anywhere
else. I know that there’s plenty that’s
grim about the place, both historically and now; but it is such an invigorating
mix of broad boulevards and tiny steep closes; of grim ancient towers, grey neo-classical
palaces, exuberant Victorian Gothic, and little caffs; of great art and cuddly
Loch Ness monsters wearing kilts. The
people range from locals shopping for the kids’ tea, to year-round tourists
from every part of the world, to students dressed in the most outré clothing
they can devise. (I offered to buy Davy
a neon-tartan kilt and a tam with built-in red wig, so he could rediscover his
roots, but he said he didn’t want to.)
The Hind's Daughter - Guthrie |
The next day, at the Scottish National Gallery, we had to descend
deep beneath the ground in order to be amazed by the Scots Colourists and the
Glasgow Boys. Why these paintings aren’t
in the entrance hall, I’ll never understand.
They are magnificent.
Even when leaving this wonderful city, to go on to Fife, we
had the pleasure of driving over the Forth Road Bridge, and seeing the Rail
Bridge beside it. Oh beautiful railway
bridge of the silvery Tay! I am very
happy to say, and to post it here, on-line, that I shall remember this trip for
a very long time.
Susan Price's website: www.susanpriceauthor.com
Susan Price's website: www.susanpriceauthor.com
3 comments:
Aaaah ... so that's what a mews is for?
Sorry, but I do love a bad pun. Almost as much as I love a good wippiticism.
Lovely post! Must go back to Edinburgh some time, you have whetted my appetite.
Our slightly demented cat makes those noises when she wants to know if there's anybody in the house - and then does the last panel EXACTLY when she finds out!
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