The May day is sunburnt and brisk along Moray’s cliffs. I soldier on gripped by the common cold, for there’s no time to curl inward beneath the blankets. I unspool myself along the coastal A-roads instead, diving down to pebbly beaches and skirting gorse-covered ridgelines: Whitehills, Findlater Castle, Cullen, Portknockie. Here, at the journey’s farthest reach, a faint path winds down the emerald turf to a tongue of rock and driftwood hushed by the North Sea’s sibilance. A primordial arches from the surf, groaning, its low tone hollow as a bone: Bow Fiddle Rock.
I can smell its salty breath and feel the vibration through the coast’s spine. It towers over a lone figure taking photographs or paying homage or begging to change the universe. This sand became sandstone baked into rock by the Earth’s heart, then heaved up and crumpled like a lost love letter between Avalonia and Laurentia. It has never been closer to the cosmos than right now, just like us, and then I think we’re all drafts, endlessly cut and edited, rewritten, revised, rebuilt. Art is never complete, never perfect, it is simply created and given, and by its imperfections begets more of itself.
What a marvellous gift you have with words Keith
Love reading your stories
Makes the yearning to go back to Scotland stronger each time
The 3 of us are planning to return next September all being well
For further exploration
Thank you so much
Alison
Thank you, Alison, and good on you for planning a return! That’s amazing!
Aelyth, from thousands of miles away I inhale this Scotland beauty from your words. Captivating! Looking forward to returning soon.
Blessings, Melissa
Thanks for the note, Melissa. Happy travels.
I simply cannot accurately express to you how much I LOVED today’s post. You’ve absolutely found your visual/poetic expressive mark.
Dear Chuck, thanks for the kindness. Means a lot. Hope you’re well.