The Barber Too
Archive for category STORIES ABOUT EVERYTHING AND ANYTHING
Journey by Starlight
Posted by admin in Astronomy, STORIES ABOUT EVERYTHING AND ANYTHING on August 5th, 2009

“Imagination is more important than knowledge”
Albert Einstein
There is a website called “Journey by Starlight” which is said to be a blog for the curious and scientifically perplexed. It is basically about Einstein’s Theory of Relativity.
“This is the story of a great journey that started with a great thought. One day in 1895 a boy looked into a mirror and wondered what the universe would look like if he could travel on a beam of light. That sixteen year old boy was Albert Einstein and that one thought started him on the road to discover his Theory of Relativity. The great man has been reinvented as Albert 2.0 to come back and blog about a journey through space on a beam of light and explain the science behind everything from atoms, blackholes to global warming. The most recent posting is on this page. If you’ve just joined and want to start at the beginning use the index on the left. If you’re bored try these links below just for fun.”
It incorporates an Alien Contact Calculator which uses something known as “The Drake Equation.” The calculation at the moment shows that there are probably another 25 civilisations in the Galaxy.
Great site.
Bonnie Prince Charlie’s daughter
Posted by admin in Barrowfield House, Glasgow, History of Glasgow, PHOTOGRAPHS, STORIES ABOUT EVERYTHING AND ANYTHING on August 4th, 2009

I once thought Bonnie Prince Charlie might have stayed in my grandmother’s house.
You think I’m crackers, don’t you?
Well it’s almost true.
The above is Barrowfield House.
My grandmother was born and brought up in Barrowfield House in Bridgeton which had been bought by her father probably towards the end of the 19th century. But it must have been Mark 2 Barrowfield House built in the 18th or 19th century to replace this one. Unfortunately it was demolished long ago and I don’t think there’s even a photograph left of it although there is one somewhere of my grandmother and her older brother and her dog (a German Shepherd called Clyde) in the grounds which backed on to the River Clyde.
Anyway, the original Barrowfield House was acquired in the late 17th century by a John Walkinshaw. a supporter of the Jacobite cause and a Stuart envoy to Vienna. He had a daughter, Clementina Walkinshaw who met up with Bonnie Prince Charlie and they had a child Charlotte who was eventually legitimised and given the name The Duchess of Albany. Charlotte nursed him when he died.
Robert Burns, who thought Charlotte should have been crowned Queen of Scotland, wrote a poem about her:
By Robert Burns
My heart is wae, and unco wae,
To think upon the raging sea
That roars between her gardens green,
An’ the bonnie Lass of Albany.
This lovely maid’s of royal blood,
That ruled Albion’s kingdoms three,
But oh, alas! for her bonnie face,
They’ve wrang’d the Lass of Albany.
In the rolling tide of spreading Clyde,
There sits an isle of high degree,
And a town of fame whose princely name,
Should grace the Lass of Albany.
But there’s a youth, a witless youth,
That fills the place where she should be;
We’ll send him o’er his native shore,
And bring our ain sweet Albany.
Alas the day, and woe the day,
A false usurper wan the gree,
Who now commands the towers and lands -
The royal right of Albany.
We’ll daily pray, we’ll nightly pray,
On bended knees most fervently,
That the time may come, with pipe an’ drum,
We’ll welcome hame fair Albany.
How to shine shoes in 5 minutes
Posted by admin in STORIES ABOUT EVERYTHING AND ANYTHING on May 15th, 2009
Ornithology – it is 100 years since bird ringing began
Posted by admin in STORIES ABOUT EVERYTHING AND ANYTHING on May 9th, 2009

THE SWALLOW THAT FLEW TO SOUTH AFRICA AND INTO THE RECORD BOOKS
“Nobody knew. Nobody dreamed. Nobody even considered the possibility that a bird the size of a penknife might fly 6,000 miles from South Africa to Britain every year, as a matter of course, and then fly back.
At the start of the 20th century, people were just beginning to get an inkling of the wonders of bird migration, but they had little idea of its true scale and extent – until John Masefield’s swallow came along. “
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