by Billy Kay
‘A, fredome is a noble thing…’ John Barbour’s famous words from The Brus resound across the centuries, and the ideal of freedom born in this period became engrained in the Scottish psyche, affecting everyone brought up as a Scot. Over four centuries later, Robert Burns still testified to the emotive power resonating from those days…’The story of Wallace poured a Scottish prejudice in my veins which will boil along there till the flood gates of life shut in eternal rest” I am convinced that in the great period of European nationalism of the late 18th and 19th centuries, it was this Scottish heritage that galvanised people like James Boswell to adopt the cause of Corsica, George Gordon, Lord Byron to die for the liberation of Greece and Lord Cochrane to fight for freedom in South America.
Without a particle of romance in my composition my life has been one of the most romantic on record