|
  
EPILOGUE

NON OMNIS MORIAR.
(“I shall not wholly die.”) Horace.
‘King Drust of the Hundred Battles, Brude son of Bile, Oengus son of
Uurguist, Constantin son of Wrguist and Kenneth son of Alpin.’
Wonderful names from Scotland’s heroic past. What men they were and what
sights they must have seen and experienced. Sights that we can barely
imagine today. Huge battles on sea and land with weapons like swords,
spears and axes. Scenes of wanton destruction and the most awful acts of
barbaric cruelty, all unquestionably played out against a background of
exceptional personal courage and willing self-sacrifice. The Picts, we
recall, lived in the world of the Warlord.
Yet was there not another side to their society? Of course there was. They
had a vibrant and exciting culture. The music of their harps and triple
pipes mixed freely with laughter and songs in great wooden halls where the
mead flowed like water and the banquet on the table was a deer or a wild
boar that had been killed with a hunter’s arrow just the day before. They
were a people who truly loved life and who probably expected their way of
living to last for ever.
What a proud inheritance and what a remarkable history they have left for
us. Did these men (and of course women) think about the future and did
they wish to be remembered? We must automatically assume that they did,
for why else would they have set up such beautifully carved standing
stones, which show all of the aforementioned scenes, throughout the whole
of Pictland?
Which surely begs the question:
Do the Scots of today honour the memory of their Pictish and Dalriadan
ancestors who sacrificed so much to defend their identity, and stands
Kenneth Mac Alpin’s Scotland where it did?
Walter Bower, Abbot of Inchcolm and author of the ‘Scotichronicon’,
writing in Latin in the 15th century and quoting from, it is believed, a
much older chronicle, (though he does not give its provenance) describes
the Scots’ enduring love of liberty:
“going barefoot, undernourished and dressed in
rags... or hair shirts with which they were roughly covered. And in all
these misfortunes and hardships they could never be prevailed upon to
submit to or obey a foreign king, but on the contrary, they were always
obedient and loyal under their own kings’ rule and chose to lead no other
life than this that was no better than the life of wild beasts,
so long as they had
their freedom.”
It is the opinion of this author that each and every Scot knows the answer
to the question asked above, as it instinctively lies within himself. All
he has to do is search for it and recognise it for what it is.
The End
 |