The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #122690   Message #2697269
Posted By: Emma B
10-Aug-09 - 05:57 PM
Thread Name: BS: Hate laws
Subject: RE: BS: Hate laws
Just to take one of those little pleasant side roads off a controversial thread for a moment, akenaton's description reminded me I was lucky enough to sit next to Duncan Willianson at a story telling/sharing session

This is a review of his autobiography

The Horsieman: Memories of a Traveller...

With ten books to his name and storytelling visits to far-flung places, Williamson is widely known and much lauded for his storytelling.
This autobiography tells of his life's work as a traveller, hawking his wares, collecting stories, and now as an international storyteller, the mouthpiece for his nomadic forbears. Son, grandson and great-grandson of nomadic tin-smiths, basket-makers, pipers and storytellers, Duncan Williamson describes his travelling life.

The narrative takes him from a childhood on the shores of Loch Fyne, to work on the small hill farms in summer, walking with barrows and prams, and later with horse and cart the length and breadth of Scotland.
He recalls camping with hundreds of traveller families from the 1940s to the 1960s, his marriage to cousin Jeannie Townsley and all the various traditional skills and arts which must be perfected for a man to maintain his family adequately.
The narrative, based on 30 hours of taped recordings, tells of the traveller trades, construction of tents, maps of routes travelled, traditional camping sites, stories, songs, music and cures which have been the express knowledge of the travelling people of Scotland, and a keystone in their survival down through the ages. Local legends, traveller's beliefs and customs are all narrated in a perfectly natural context, within the traveller "horseman's" experiences - portraying the character and strength of Scotland's most distinctive race. Scottish Tinkers

A true gentleman and Traveller of the road