7 March 2018

Immortal Warrior


Who Wants to Live Forever? 


There is much to see at the British Museum, as one might expect.

Though, for the Emperor, there was little to rival the original freeze depiction of a Persian Immortal warrior taken from the imperial palace at Susa (present day Iran).

It is the Ancient Greek historian Herodotus who tells us: 

''The Ten Thousand, who were all Persians and all picked men, were led by Hydarnes, the son of Hydarnes. They were called "the Immortals," for the following reason. If one of their body failed either by the stroke of death or of disease, forthwith his place was filled up by another man, so that their number was at no time either greater or less than 10,000.'' 

''Of all the troops the Persians were adorned with the greatest magnificence, and they were likewise the most valiant. Besides their arms, which have been already described, they glittered all over with gold, vast quantities of which they wore about their persons. They were followed by litters, wherein rode their concubines, and by a numerous train of attendants handsomely dressed. Camels and sumpter-beasts carried their provision, apart from that of the other soldiers.''

[Herodotus, Histories VII, 83]

3 March 2018

Ice Flowers








[Ice Flowers - Kinross - March 2018]

A cold Scottish Spring saw winter doggedly clinging on,  deep into March this year.  

The 'Beastie from the Eastie' had an offy nastie wee bite. 

O'bdy was frozen and nae'bdy was happy about it. 


23 January 2018

Plato on Snow



[Winter is here: We've had a fair bit this year]


[59e] ... when it is thus solidified, the part of it above the earth which is most affected by this process is termed “hail,” and the part upon the earth “ice” and the part which is less affected and is still only half-solid is called snow when it is above the earth, but when it is upon the earth and solidified out of dew it is called “hoar-frost.”

Plato, Timaeus.  

1 January 2018

New Year's Day - The Morning After


[Must have been one hell of a party! Even the bins wore party hats in Stirling on New Year's Day 2018]

2 December 2017

Christmas Tree

Christmas decorating came early to the imperial household this year.


A considerable effort was expended in the seasonal adornment of the palace - both inside and out.


In the darkest and most inclement season of the year, there is no doubt that the lights and their warmth console us through the gloom and offer respite form the barren cold.


A tree-mendous effort! 

30 November 2017

Pliny on the Guiding Force of Nature



[A frosty winter windscreen: taking on a cosmic effect -  Nov 2017]


"The world is sacred, eternal, boundless, self-contained, or, one should say, complete in itself, finite yet resembling the infinite, of all things certain yet resembling the uncertain, embracing in its grasp all things without and within. The world is the work of Nature and, at the same time, the embodiment of Nature herself." 

Pliny The Elder, Natural History, II.2

29 October 2017

Imperial Sabbatical


It can happen that even the most diligent of rulers might occasionally seek to escape the burden of office ... or birth.

A sojourn, a partial retirement or just a sabbatical, everyone needs a holiday as they say.

Famously, my great ancestor the Emperor Tiberius took himself away from Rome to his favoured isle of Capri for some considerable time: only to resume his rule after several licentious years, when he was all but obliged to do so.



[Mediterranean flowers in the Balearic's - October 2017]


In the Yeats that followed, other great Emperors absconded from the pressures of the capital, spending protracted periods abroad, on travels, on campaign and in private living. To rule is to suffer and every ruler needs to recharge now and again.