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#514633 - 04/22/09 06:51 PM
Gathering round the hearth...
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Jellyfish
Registered: 04/09/09
Posts: 172
Loc: NJ, USA
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A warm hearth is a great comfort and a gathering place for family, friends, neighbors, and travelers, the heart of Irish hospitality. Welcome to Irish Culture, come often and stay long.
Come in 'round the peat fire, sit down, and rest yourself. What's on your mind today? Do you have a joy or a question or a worry? A memory to share, stories to tell? Post them here.
Our forebears love to be remembered---as will we---and they stay most alive when we talk about them, when we share memories of them. It eases our own passing through this mortal coil to remember those who went before us. Feel free to talk about your people, their lives and loves, their stories, idiosyncracies, and even, God forbid, their mistakes. The best stories live in families, and who knows who we'll meet on the road if our eyes are open?
I'll be tending this hearth in Meenacross, at the crossroads overlooking the bay---making tea, baking scones, making butter and jam, washing spuds, tending hens, milking, midwifing, and putting the ashes in the garden. I love the company and look forward to meeting you all.
Let us all keep the hearth fires burning with good cheer and good stories, and the wisdom of the generations.
Gr�,
Edited by Mary - Irish Culture (04/22/09 08:10 PM)
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#520357 - 05/12/09 08:49 PM
Re: Gathering round the hearth...
[Re: Mary - Irish Culture]
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Jellyfish
Registered: 04/09/09
Posts: 172
Loc: NJ, USA
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It's funny, the other day, I was reading a bit John (himself) had written:
Baltimore - Baile an T� Mh�ir - Townland of the big house. There are a few places in America that have Irish language place-names. There is a Baltimore in west Cork, but the Irish for that Baltimore is D�n na S�ad. However, there is another Baltimore, in County Longford and it is called Baile an T� Mh�ir in Irish.
The Baltimore in Maryland is named after Cecilius Carver, the second Baron Baltimore who was a member of the Irish House of Lords and later became the founding proprietor of the Maryland Colony. (His father George, the 1st Baron Baltimore was to get the proprietorship but died shortly before he was able to receive it. So, there's more to Baltimore than meets the ear. My dad used to get happy when we drove through Baltimore, and he'd see O'Donnell Street.
I always thought Bayonne must be an Irish word because there were so many Irish-born people (and then their families) living there, and the name sounds so good with a brogue. It was only recently that I came across Bayonne on a map of France.<G> Ah well.
Does anybody have a favorite Irish place name that has been "transplanted" elsewhere, like Dublin, Ohio?
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