Yester Kirk |
Graveyards
are always worth a visit when stravaiging about the countryside. The
older ones attached to a kirk never fail to provide a story or two
(Blog 2/7/2015).
On
the way back from a necessary but fairly uninteresting visit to Edinburgh,
I thought I deserved a turn on to the road less travelled and left
the coast and the dual carriage-way for the Lammermuirs.
Sign posts |
Following
some very specific sign-posts, I arrived in Gifford, perhaps the
birth place of that noted misogynistic Calvanist, John Knox, a claim
that is also made for the neighbouring Haddington. What that railer
against the "monstrous regimen(t) of women" would have made
of the current equality of the sexes in all walks of life and not
just politics, would be interesting.
A
gravestone to a former minister, James Witherspoon, mentions his son,
John, who was the only clergyman to sign the American Declaration of
Independence.
A
look round the quiet kirk-yard showed the prominence of the Hay
family, the Earls and Marquesses of Tweedale as well as other little
historical insights. Two, dedicated to officers of that forerunner of
the global economy, the East India Company, gave a reminder of Empire
and the Raj.
They lived in Yester House, once the seat of the Earls of
Tweeddale. Menotti composed several operas but his most well known
must be Amal and the Night Vistors, a
children's Christmas opera specifically conceived for television.
Yester House |
It
is surprising where a five minute stroll can take you on a turn off
the road.
Gifford is also the site of the Goblin Ha' at Yester Castle, giving its name to a local hotel. Mentioned in Marmion by Walter Scott, it is a fascinating place but too far off the track to explore today. I'll have to come back again.