The World is Wondrous Large

Legananny Dolmen, Northern Ireland
Legananny Dolmen, Northern Ireland
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yes, this dolmen is in the middle of a farm yard

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In the Neolithic Age savage warfare did I wage For food and fame and woolly horses’ pelt.

I was singer to my clan in that dim, red Dawn of Man, And I sang of all we fought and feared and felt.

Still the world is wondrous large,—seven seas from marge to marge— And it holds a vast of various kinds of man… ~Rudyard Kipling from “In a Neolithic Age”

Today we acted like archeologists in Northern Ireland, traveling the countryside looking for the numerous “dolmens” or stone formations from 4000-5000+ years ago constructed during the Neolithic period in human history.  These are considered “portal tombs” and like Stonehenge, may also have astrologic significance to these prehistoric peoples.  Interestingly, they are scattered across the Irish countryside, mostly found in farmyards and fields, with hardly a sign to show the way to find them.  In two cases, we needed to parkbeside a barn, open  (and close) several gates so the cows and sheep don’t get out,  to make our way to the dolmen.

The world is wondrous large indeed, as Kipling says in his homage to the Neolithics (and in the rest of the poem critiquing his fellow “modern” man).  To think that humans, way before the pyramids, way before Abraham walked the earth, managed to figure out how to honor their dead by constructing formations of multi-ton stones on top of one another.  They are so perfectly balanced to exist as they were intended for thousands of years.  A vast various kind of man did this, a singer to his clan, in the “red dawn” of human history.

I am awed and humbled.

Nothing I have done could ever last like this.

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Kilfeaghan Dolmen
Kilfeaghan Dolmen
This dolmen is above the Irish Sea
This dolmen is above the Irish Sea
Goward Dolmen at the foot of the Mourne Mountains
Goward Dolmen at the foot of the Mourne Mountains

2 thoughts on “The World is Wondrous Large

  1. Yes, it does humble one to see the beauty and the art that ancient man has left for us to see and to ponder how it was all done. Especially, for us, who live in an era of three-to-five-year obsolescence for things that we manufacture … and perhaps a millenia for the nuclear fallout and poisoned water and earth that our civilization will bequeath to those who come after….

    And Emily — beautiful woman — do not minimize your contribution to this present time in our history and your part in it. Your words as a poet and your compassion as a physician do, and will continue to, live in the hearts of those who are fortunate enough to benefit from them. Hopefully, they will be shared and continue on in other lives at another time. That is really all that any one individual can do in one lifetime.

    Peace — and continue to have an exciting time….

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  2. Emily, I’ve been reading your vacation backwards in time. I can see these poems and pictures in a lovely inspirational book. Your journey is beautiful and timeless. I know so many read on just the ebooks, but there is nothing like a book in hand: the touch of the binding as it rests in your hand, the rustling as the pages turn, the odor that no computer has. To take your book to bed with you, or up in a tree to read within the leaves, or in the stall with your haflinger resting by you. Just a thin, inspirational book Emily….oh yes, I can that with your lovely words and photo’s.

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