Hidden Edinburgh – and the footsteps I dare to walk
upon. Remembered and forgotten too. I wandered there. Edinburgh exists on many
levels and its easy to wander down closes or hidden alleyways or behind the
castle, and under bridges and walkways.
Festival. Meetings of
people who couldn’t possibly have meet another way – people from all walks of
life, nationalities, artistic disciplines and establishment and
anti-establishment, and those not ‘official.’
There is the obvious tourist Edina, the castle tours, tartan taff, bagpipes, the military tattoo - yet look further underneath – the cobbled narrow lanes, and there’s an Edina, of the once bustling Mercat cross, of Scotland’s enlightenment, where once great thinkers exchanged ideas – of drinking dens, coffee houses and taverns.
Once places like the Mercat Cross in the 18th century and the Abbotsford bar, where places for great conversations – with great poets such a Hugh MacDiarmid, Iain Crichton Smith and others.
Conversations charlotte sq rooftops |
Edinburgh Fringe festival 2017! - had a Record year with over 3,500 shows
The festival Includes – The Edinburgh Tattoo, Edinburgh Art Festival, Edinburgh International festival, Edinburgh international book festival and the Fringe. With 2 million 700 thousand ticket sales this year and up 9% on last year. Reduced Shakespeare, Vive La Fringe…..More than only Edinburgh, a multi-cultural festival.
Compared to other international cities, Edina is just the right size for a major cultural celebration of all the arts. Edinburgh’s biggest festival is comedy – but there is also many other highlights of major dance, music, literature and arts events well worth exploring.
Aberdeen Aberpella |
Story-telling
was the way people learned about the past. EIF takes chances, is constantly
moving – and a smorgasbord of difference on the global stage;
St Kilda opera, The James Plays,
Grit, by Martyn Bennet, St Giles St Magnus.
‘Conflict is
truth speaking to power.’ The Arts
thrive on difference. In these strange times of odd ‘isms’. Reflect, produce,
project.
*The Mercat Cross
William
Creech, who was also a councillor and Baillie, was one of Edinburgh’s leading
booksellers and publishers. His shop was at the Mercat Cross at the Luckenbooths, where there was seven timber
-fronted tenements perched on the north side of St Giles High Kirk that
included the offices of Robert Burn’s publisher, Creech and Allan Ramsay’s
bookshop, which in 1728 was one of Scotland’s earliest lending libraries. From
Creech’s shop door one could look down the canyon of the high st towers towards the
forth and the fields of east Lothian beyond…..
A walk
across Edina’s historic cobbled streets will take you past the locations for
some of Scotland’s greatest writers, both past and present - Ian
Rankin, Alexander McColl Smith, Kenneth Graeme, J M Barrie, Norman MacCaig,
Sorley MacLean, Robert Louis Stevenson, Arthur Conan Doyle, Irvine Welsh,
and of course Walter Scott and Robert
Burns (who stayed in Lady Stairs Close on his time in Edina in 1787.