Skellig and Imogen’s Wings

Skellig cannot be seen primarily as a commercial commodity without significant diminution of its unique character, writes Paddy Bushe.


Skellig and Imogen’s Wings
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Paddy Bushe
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Skellig Michael Kerry

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Early in October. ber, I stopped to have a look at the monumental Fontaine Saint-Michel in the heart of Paris. The bronze statue of the winged Archangel Michael brandishing his sword over the supine figure of the vanquished Devil, set in an architectural structure reminiscent of a triumphal arch, and surrounded by other bronze figures representing various virtues, seemed a long way from the remote simplicity of Skellig Michael (Sceilg Mhichfl or just Sceilg, as I usually call it), both geographically and culturally. But I was conscious that they shared a belief, a myth that underpinned a devotion that spanned the distance between this centre of European civilization and a bare pyramid of rock off the western edge, the ultima thule of that civilization for many centuries. The crowds streaming by in all directions were no doubt largely secular, but the inheritance of that tradition is as important as it is visible.

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