It's not just haggis and ceilidhs, you know
edinburgh
edinburgh
In the dusk of early afternoon, Edinburgh glows blue. We
cross the bridge on Viewforth and follow the steps down to the canal, where
barges steam gently, yellow and red and green. The water is frozen, the ice
crinkled like plastic wrap over the rocks and frilled plants and litter below.
Stone skimmers, thwarted by winter, find new delights as their pebbles bounce
off the ice with a xylophone chime, and, though the ice prevails, white bubbles
rise and ponder at each stone’s touch. An open loaf of bread sits expectantly
halfway across. Someone remembered to feed the ducks.
We walk this route each day, past the ice, past the bright
barges, past the ducks with frozen feet. On Lothian Road exhaust smoke glows
gold in the car lights and mingles with the fogged cold dragon breath of
bustling humans. Dour lovers kiss at the bus stop and a homeless man in
fingerless gloves reads a well-thumbed book to his dog. The castle, grey and
impregnable, rises up as we pass Cambridge Street. Far above the grey cobbles
and stone stairwells and windswept wynds, the last veiled rays glance off its
windows.
Huddled beneath two red coats and two tight scarves and two
warm hats, we walk this route each day.
glasgow
The first weekend of term was spent in Glasgow. Sauchiehall
Street, like Melbourne’s Swanston, stretches from near the university to the centre
of town. My sister walked from Kelvingrove, and a parade of little girls in
princess dresses, fresh from a birthday party, did the same. I found the princesses
first. Elsa was in the lead, holding tight to her mother’s gloved hand, and Cinderella
and Anna followed shortly after, clutching party bags. With my bright yellow
scarf and bright red coat, Imogen was the one who spotted me, but I found her
as proud Rapunzel brought up the rear, tossing her hair.
It was a dry weekend, sun-filled and snowy, and
uncharacteristically so. I squinted in the sunlight at the entrance to the quads
as Imogen’s camera, Virgil, snapped at Glasgow University’s old stones.
Kelvingrove gardens were white and gold and at George Square Wellington wore his hat with pride. We ate mushroom burgers at the 78, snacked on chilli peanuts
while watching Gone Girl, and in the dark talked our way to morning.
Glasgow, wide and freeingly anonymous, is as close to
Melbourne as Scotland comes.
dundee
Little has changed. Clark’s still sells
late-night strawberry tarts. Henry’s still sells amaretto coffee. My sisters
still cut their own hair at 2am. My family are still loud with seasoned jokes
we need only half-tell. We are as we ever were: between us girls we have more
piercings, more hair-dye, and more makeup than ever before, but we are as we
always have been, just more so.
st andrews
And now I am back under scudding Renoir skies and ink-blot
trees, translating thirty lines of Virgil* a day and wearing my scarf a la Bardot to fight the biting North Sea wind.
I don’t quite know where this blog will lead now. I suppose
we’ll find out along the way.
*Not the camera this time.
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