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Tuesday 17 March 2009

Happy St. Patrick's Day and the 'Gift of the Blarney'......

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St. Patrick's Day
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Leprechauns peeking,
Around a willow tree,
Pussy willows waking,
Longing to be free.
Colleens and shamrocks
And castles old and gray,
Put them all together
To make St. Patrick's Day.
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A Happy St. Patrick’s Day Greeting to you all and thanks for dropping by. Being the daughter of a true Irishman today holds a special meaning for me, although now-a-days I usually spend this day quietly at home. Sadly my father is no longer alive but I remember many a St. Patrick’s Day when my father returned home singing an Irish tune. Along with the songs my father had the ‘Gift of the Blarney’ for he would try and charm my mother after he had returned home late and in a very merry state...lol.........

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Speaking of ‘the Blarney’, how many of you have kissed the Blarney Stone? I hope to go to Blarney one day but will be content with just visiting the castle judging by the position of the Blarney Stone.......To be able to kiss the stone itself you will require a very loyal and trustworthy companion, for he would have to hold your ankles while you lean back and downwards to grasp the iron rails, and if you’re lucky be able to kiss the stone. Being only 5ft 3ins tall with short legs I doubt even in my younger days I would have been able to achieve this difficult feat...hehe........

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View of the Blarney Stone from the ground
(Photograph by
Srleffler)


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The Blarney Stone is set within the castle of Blarney village, a few miles from the small City of Cork, Ireland. The castle seen today was built in 1446 after a fire destroyed the original building, which was built two centuries before........
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Blarney Castle
(Photograph by
Urban Hafner)

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The origins of the stone is shrouded in mystery but legend states that it was a magical stone from the beginning....There are many explanations for the Stone’s origins, many of a biblical nature. It is also said that the stone was possibly removed from Ireland and taken to Scotland and then returned to Ireland in 1314. The theory behind this statement is that the stone was originally half of the Stone of Scone and was presented to Cormac McCarthy by Robert the Bruce in recognition of his support in the Battle of Bannockburn. McCarthy then installed the stone at Blarney Castle, where it became known as the Blarney Stone.
However, others say that it was the
Lia Fáil—a magical stone upon which Irish kings were crowned....Regardless of the whys and what for’s, there is no disguising the fact that the Blarney Stone has a magical air about it.....

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'Tis there's the stone that whoever kisses
He never misses to grow eloquent;
'Tis he may clamber to a lady's chamber,
Or become a member of Parliament.
"A noble spouter he'll sure turn out, or
An out and outer to be let alone;
Don't try to hinder him, or to bewilder him,
For he is a pilgrim from the Blarney stone."
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~ Francis Sylvester Mahony ~


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The custom of kissing the Blarney Stone also has many theories for why it began and for how long it has been practiced. Why should kissing the stone give you ‘the Gift of the Gab’? One local legend claims that ‘an old women, saved from drowning by a king of Munster, rewarded him with a spell, that if he would kiss a stone on the castle's top, he would gain a speech that would win all to him’. What is known however is when the word Blarney became part of the English language. It is claimed that on a visit by Queen Elizabeth I to Cormac Teige McCarthy, Lord of Blarney, she requested an oath of loyalty to retain occupancy of land. McCarthy apparently responded with ‘subtle diplomacy’ and the Queen is said to have proclaimed that McCarthy was giving her "(a lot of) Blarney", meaning ‘to placate with soft talk or to deceive without offending’........
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The custom of ‘Kissing the Blarney Stone’ is known throughout the world, a stone on a castle’s parapet not that dissimilar to other stones in the area. A stone that is said ‘to endow whoever kisses it with the eternal gift of eloquence (in Irish 'solabharthact') - the 'Gift of the Gab'’. Many of us have never seen the Stone and most likely never will, yet we use this expression in our everyday lives and believe in its magic. That can’t be a bad thing in this day and age.......Hope you enjoyed the day. Until next time...lol.......


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