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The Rock is about 22 miles from where I'm sitting right now. I've not been in since they completed the restoration work.

Did you kiss the Blarney Stone? I wouldn't have thought you needed it, but it couldn't hurt.

I'm very glad you and yours are having a good time.
 
I have to confess that I did not kiss the stone, but my sister-in-law and one brother did. (I’m eloquent enough??)

We went to the Dublin House Party tonight and we loved the music and the Irish dancing.

I think I mentioned before I have two nieces who began Irish dancing when they were 4 years old and advanced to dance competitively. One of my absolute favourite things in the world is watching Irish dancing.

Tonight at the show they ended with my one niece’s favourite song to dance to- Tell Me Ma
 
If every city snowplow driver was not born with a heart of cold stone, they must surely all acquire one after getting nasty stares from homeowners, when said drivers push mounds of icy snow across newly cleared driveways. But at least it gives said homeowners something to commiserate about as they work together to clear it all away. And, for those people who hire a snow-cleaning service, it gives them something to smile about as they look out their windows, sipping the first coffee of the day.
 
Snowplows here push snow to the center of the road. After heavy snow, they pick up the wind rows with giant snowblowers that transfer the snow into trucks, which transport it to designated dumping areas. Of course that's on main roads and roads where rich people live, not out here in the boondocks. where the snow generally blows into drifts with stretches of bareroad between. Some neighbor with a big truck comes along and bust the drifts so the rest of us can get through and we call it good.
 
I have to confess that I did not kiss the stone, but my sister-in-law and one brother did. (I’m eloquent enough??)

You're positively effusive, Louanne.

My mother kissed the stone when she was in Eire, but it didn't seem to affect her much.

Speaking of local legends of elocution, I used to travel to Phoenix every year, crossing the Hassayampa River just west of there. I recalled something H. Allen Smith* wrote about it:

"The Hassayampa is a river in Arizona, and there is a legend which says that if you drink from its waters, you will never tell the truth again. I didn't ever get near it, though I know there are some niddering idiots who will say that I am fair bloated with its waters."

Since there wasn't a drop of water in the "river" whenever I crossed it, I must paradoxically assume that whoever told him that must have drunk their share of it.

*Smith was a well-known and successful humorist and travel writer in the previous century, although he seems to be almost unknown today. The quote is from We Went Thataway, about his tour around the US. He also wrote Waikiki Beachnik, about pre-statehood Hawaii, and Two Thirds of a Coconut Tree, whose title came from a building code in Tahiti that specified the limit of the height of a building.
 
I had opportunity today to read the Irish Declaration of Independence from 1916 and I thought it significant that it was addressed to both Irish men and women.

It begins:

IRISHMEN AND IRISHWOMEN: In the name of God and of the dead generations from which she receives her old tradition of nationhood, Ireland, through us, summons her children to her flag and strikes for her freedom….
 
Yet Irish women didn't get full voting rights until 1922.

I only know that because I've been researching women's rights in that era for a book. It's not something that was stored in my brain until recently. ;)
 
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