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Hardly antony jr soprano level error. My granduncle was mayor in sligo aeons ago and had my dad up to do chutes and gardening crap and saw England win the 66 world cup on his tv. Sounded like the simpsons with bush and bart. Lovely vid Morgoth
@@happyhammer1 Which is something a man in the 1930s understood very well, but the (((bankers))) were not happy and destroyed him. Same will happen again at any attempts to escape usury etc. It requires all the public on mass to go with an idea, and back the guy leading it to the hilt, just like in the 1930s but this time no brother wars.
You were in my neck of the woods Morgoth. You probably passed by my house on your way to Ben Bulben. Always believed that one of the best things about Ireland was our low population. Such a tragedy that so many Irish seem to have forgotten or lost the connection to our land and want to turn it into a multicultural hellhole.
You Irish are blessed in having a sea between you and the sources of your enemies. In Montana, there is absolutely nothing we can do about all the bastards invading our natural beauty. I really hope that our harsh climate gets really particularly harsh, and drives all those too weak to handle it away.
Surely our low population is a symptom of disease, poverty and death. The mass death and emigration of Ireland is horrible not only for the pain it inflicted but the potential that was never realized. Don't let the ills of the modern world completely cloud your judgment.
@@norrismcsquirter9874 100%, God's country truly. I've been up Errigal many times. Out to the Glenties, Falcarragh, Kincasslagh, Dungloe. My heart belongs there.
Masterpiece. As an Irishman, you, a northern Englishman, defined everything, that is right and wrong with Ireland. I hope you were treated well. And yes it is a beautiful landscape.
>Fights for hundreds of years against foreign invaders. Finally secures it's Independence. >Bends the knee to Brussels and invites hoards of foreign invaders to their shores Why are you like this Ireland?
Been waiting for this, Thx Morgoth 🙏🏻 Hail the Irish people, as well as me other cousins around the world fighting for their own survival in this anti White world. We all need to support the Irish people for finally taking a stand against the sneaky hater’s attempting to completely destroy us by covert means using their control of the currency 💷
Ireland gives me the same vibes as the Yorkshire moors, albeit with a smaller human footprint. It's great when you have such places close enough to walk to.
Beautiful place. Too bad newer generations are not being taught the many struggles the Irish went through to preserve their unique culture and traditions. I visited last year and I'm only sorry I didn't go sooner. Such wonderful people, beautiful culture....no wonder the New World Order hates them so much. St. Patrick would go full crusade mode of he saw what is happening.
Aksherli... Saint Patrick was a gender fluid non binary queer differently abled non conforming trans woman of colour, from the Congo! Zhe was a distant cousin of Cheddar man! #Prophecy
'St. Patrick' was a Romano-Brit who was captured by Irish raiders and taken to Ireland in slavery. After a number of years doing gruelling work he managed to escape and return to Great Britain. He then went into personal crusade mode, returning to Ireland to spread Christian ideology. So, if anything, St. Patrick today would be a British progressive 'globalist'.
I'm from a small town in Lancashire, left many years ago, went down south for uni, met then married a girl from Andalusia, moved there and never looked back. My brother joined the Army because there was "nowt goin", then married a German girl. Me and him are allowed our get away once a year, where it's just the two of us. We always go to Ireland, enjoy a walk and a talk and a few pints. England is just insufferable now. It's completely contrary to what we stand for. Neither of us have any Irish blood, we just feel more at home in rural Ireland.
That's nice to read being a local, though up North. Have worked in Bavaria but Andalusia sounds very nice too. I did make the front page of the London Evening Standard once but that's another story though Ireland Related. I guess my 15mins of fame Andy Warhol moment.
Thanks for visiting Morgoth. I'm from the West & feel like you understood the significance of the untamed landscape. It's ancient & you feel it when you just stand in it for a moment
I have to say, having just done 2 years in Ireland for work, the place is no different to England in terms of politics, in fact I'd say it's worse. The Irish people are utterly broken and cheer their own demise more than I feel at home (Yorkshire).
They're knee-jerk anti-British, left wing and have a massive inferiority complex. That means the globalists can run rings round them and gaslight them with ease.
NO YOUR NOT BOTH my parents and my whole family are IRISH Moved here in 2012 i am an ESSEX women worked i the city of London for 40years wake up, speak up i am more Irish then all of my Cousins IRELAND WILL SURVIVE BECAUSE ITS BIGGER THEN THE IRISH IRISH that live there. To understand that you have to have left or be 1dt generation IRISH
I’ve been away from England for four months now. I miss my country dearly. You say that England is designed to be this place of efficiency and maybe that’s true in the cities thanks to economic forces being stronger there, but when you go to places like Cornwall you can still feel that beauty you describe. I would suggest that London is the main city whose shadow hangs over the British isles, just as the concrete towers of London leave their shadows over the older buildings.
I wish I could say that I agree with you, but I don't. I am from a small town in Lancashire that has been completely bastardised. I last went back to England in 2017. A field that I used to play in as a child now has had a load of Barret Homes homes on it. The 400 year old oak tree I used to climb has gone. Why? To house materialistic filth, who want an easy commute to Manchester, just so they can pay for their Amazon Prime and have the latest car on finance. I miss the small town I grew up in. But I couldn't care about about the England of 2021. A mindless gaggle of consumers living depressing materialistic lives, in soulless housing estates.
@@unusedsub3003 I'm sorry to hear that. It's not a static thing unfortunately. The modern city is like a black hole, twisting and distorting everything around it before eventually consuming it.
Benbulbin is an interesting focal point of Irish culture, history, and identity. Geologically it was laid down in carboniferous tropical shallow sediment seas, the cliffs were carved out by glaciers that covered the land during the ice age. The area is full of important Neolithic monuments dating back thousands of years. It is mentioned several times in Irish mythology and is said to be the site of Diarmuid and Grainne's tomb. And then of course there's the Yeats connection: A mixture of poetry, mysticism, revolution, and modernity.
I went out to the hazel wood, Because a fire was in my head, And cut and peeled a hazel wand, And hooked a berry to a thread; And when white moths were on the wing, And moth-like stars were flickering out, I dropped the berry in a stream And caught a little silver trout. When I had laid it on the floor I went to blow the fire a-flame, But something rustled on the floor, And someone called me by my name: It had become a glimmering girl With apple blossom in her hair Who called me by my name and ran And faded through the brightening air. Though I am old with wandering Through hollow lands and hilly lands, I will find out where she has gone, And kiss her lips and take her hands; And walk among long dappled grass, And pluck till time and times are done, The silver apples of the moon, The golden apples of the sun.
It's funny how globalization has helped bring us together. I sense we will see a growing friendship between Brits, Irish, Americans, and other English speaking nations as time goes on.
Visiting from the American West, out in the high plains, the landscapes of Lancashire and Yorkshire was something out of a dream. The sunset on the Irish Sea had unfathomable depth. More bricked in than the Irish countryside here, but not without charm, and enough to miss a place in your very bones. There's still good in this world. Overall, you've done a good job expressing things that left me at a loss for words.
I was watching an old RTE doc from 2001 on male su**ide in Ireland. The subject was depressing enough, but something about docs, films, and shows made in the Isles around 1970-2001, makes me very nostalgic and melancholic, especially stuff from the 90s, which is weird because I’m an Amerimutt and I’m in my 20s. It’s as if I’m witnessing a life slowing disappearing, a life the people living in it had no clue was coming to an end. The 1990s triumphalism, the end of history, it was all just another fad of the past. Fred Dibnah docs hit me the same way. He was in one doc with his grandson, and yet Mr. Dibnah had no idea that his grandson would be a minority in his own homeland, a land men like Fred built.
Very true, just with old 90's music or 90s-2000's fantasy video games you can see a certain aesthetic and passion and soul to it all. An edge that is forbidden now and a thought process that has been removed even though this was all only 20 years ago and many people still remember it. I think the most chilling thing is that the people from those times now reject them. That a boy growing up then or a man at his peak then, can be twisted and contorted I to hating what he himself once was.
@@theclumsyprepper Yeah I think some of you Americans are a little hard on yourselves. Europeans have a commonality . Who cares if you are ethically swedish and a bit Irish and french anglo etc USA had its own thing going ,it's own identity was made . But has been eroded more over the year.
Beautifully done. Completely captures the Celtic mysticism of the place which is at one with the West of Britain, carved out in a time before the invasions of our islands began. This is my spiritual world. That this island spawned the likes of Peter Sutherland is sacrilegious.
As an American who has traveled all over Europe, Ireland holds a special place in my heart as one of the most beautiful countries I ever visited. When they call Ireland the "emerald isle" it isn't just a cliche- it is literally the greenest landscape I've ever seen in my life. It isn't enough to read or watch a video about it, you really need to go there and experience it for yourself.
@@wittywoo9559 I agree. They had an immigrant problem 20 years ago when I was there. I can only imagine how bad it is now. Back then there were already Africans in many parts of Dublin.
@@solinvictus39 now its undocumented unvetted paperless middle eastern African males 18 to 50 ..with no respect for the land it's people or culture ... soon there will be no Ireland if this is allowed to happen .. how do you guys feel about that ?
Stunning landscapes. Excellent video Morgoth. It's heart breaking what's happening over there, they have such a small population to start with. It's frightening to think it could be gone in our lifetime.
The further west you go in Ireland, the closer you get to its roots. Its fancy leaves might shimmer in Dublin in June, but out west, you can see the graft that gave us this Isle. The west is akin to the honourable scars one gets on one's hands from a hard weeks work. Enjoy.
18:50 Text is exactly as you said: *_"1st Marquess of Dufferin and Ava KP"_* KP stands for (I believe) Knight of St Patrick - an order. Amazing monument to a man, and something we won't see again in our lifetime. And breathtaking beauty of Ireland you've shown us here, Morgs. The island needs to be preserved - for its own sake, if for nothing else.
Tolkien said the Irish landscape was forbidding and only was tolerable because the Irish people were so decent. Compared to Oxford it's probably intimidating.
Tolkien was weird like that. I think it goes back to the general anti-Irish prejudice of the times and looking down on anything Celtic by the English middle classes. For a man who was so interested in ancient Nordic cultures and legends I've never been able to understand why he was so uninterested in an ancient culture right on his own doorstep!
@@thadtuiol1717yes, I am still surprised by well-bred Anglos that are anti-Celtic, but I grew up poor so didn't get it. I guess it's a bit like received pronunciation.
Nice to see you on the Emerald Isle mate. Born and bred on the South Coast. Now living in the shires. Though not the idyllic, surrounded by it but outside it. The 12 hour shift minimum wage version of the shire. Though I do spend my time off venturing into the idyllic and cannot fail to be captured by it beauty and saddened by the realisation that it will all be lost. I look for a sign in the picture postcard villages, hamlets and farms that the tide is turning but all I see are Ukrainian and rainbow flags. Hope you had a great time in Ireland mate and got to try a proper pint of the black stuff.
Landscapes like these can give you a powerful experience of the numinous. It's not something that can be mediated, only directly felt; but still we try to put that feeling into words.
I like the serious tone of even your holiday video here, I don't find it downbeat. In fact it's quite a relief, you share genuine, honest impressions in a sea of postmodern happy fakeness.
I agree. Morgoth knows his place in the universe. He knows the landscape holds much more gravitas than his fleeting existence and nothing he can say or do can express that any better than just taking it all in with solemn dignity and giving thanks for being alive to experience it.
Within living memory (MY memory), anyone passing through a cross road would doff the cap to the spirits that lived at that junction. Most of the time, the person would be on a cart pulled by donkey. The loss that's taken place in less than a life time is astonishing: the lose of connection to the landscape and the the physicality of the metaphysical. Thanks Morgoth. hope you and Mrs Mrogoth had a wonderful time.
This is wonderful stuff, Morgoth! One thinks of our forebears who looked on these same mighty landscapes and went on to make their own order, which we stand in the shadows of now. You're going to do that hairy Scottish chap out of a job!
My old man was from place called ardtrasna not far from benbulben I spent many happy holidays there love the place my old chap never really left although I'm well and truly English a part of me belongs there English heart Irish blood
Love the mist clinging to the hills. I'm in Texas(which is hellish most of the year) we've had foggy cool weather recently and it just makes my soul calm and content. Hope you feel refreshed by your travels
@@thadtuiol1717 no shit, but anywhere I would fancy living climate wise is inhabited by loonies. I sure as hell dont want to live where my daughters could be raped by migrants. At least its rural out here and the people are good.
The juxtaposition has always been between Empire and the common man. Empire can do great things. Even bad things can be great and awe inspiring although terrifying as well. In the past I think those guiding empire were incredibly more nuanced and intelligent. It's a balancing act of convincing the people to go along. This modern soulless version is clumsy and ham fisted. They only have deception and force and it isn't going to work. Thank you for sharing the trip and thoughts.
The working Class English, Scots, Irish and Welsh got ZERO from Empire! Our ancestors were just the mug cannon fodar laying down their lives for it, so Tory Ba*tards, lords and ladies and Royal Parasites could live in stately homes in the countryside!
What you said about the beauty of the natural world helped in developing spiritual feelings is similar to something that happened to me. A few years ago while on holiday I stood at the tip of an island. All I saw around me was the ocean, with the pale orange of a not fully setting sun peeking out from the clouds. I was a tiny man stood on a tiny jut of land, facing nothingness for miles and miles. I felt an irresistible urge to pray and show gratitude for being there at that moment.
Now way Morgorth, I live in Sligo, under Ben Bulbin. It is a magic place, even by Irish standards. I am so happy you made it over here, and you are most welcome back anytime!
"In the place of the authentic religion of earlier times came a shallow enthusiasm for the 'achievements of humanity', by which nothing more was meant than progress in the technics of labour-saving and amusement-making. OF THE SOUL, NOT ONE WORD WAS DISCUSSED." - Oswald Spengler, Man and Technics
More eloquence and abstract awareness by Morgorth, his musings are deeply interesting and cathartic to listen to. This man has a book/s in him or poetry to be written. Love his search for self in a world that wants to obscure self identity.
The great irony is we don’t appreciate how beautiful our native lands are, and they are being destroyed by forces attracted to them for reasons which are nothing to do with that beauty. An immigrant is more likely to moan about the weather and how shops shut on Sundays than admire the incredible landscape. Yet still they come.
One thing that is particularly pronounced in the west of Ireland is the sheer remoteness of it. While it has always been like that, it was particularly devastated by the great famine of the 19th century. Massive numbers of deaths as well as huge numbers of emigration led to some towns effectively disappearing from existence. The province of Connaught declined in population by around 30%.
Great video Morg, glad you enjoyed your stay. A couple of things.. The shape of the Titanic Visitors Centre is not about an iceberg, in actual fact, all four sides are replicas of the bow of the ship. (I had a small part to play in the construction of the building). Another reason for the monstrous ‘glass clad’ buildings in between the beautiful architecture is that some of them were flattened during our grubby conflict. I know that they didn’t have to design those things, but hey. Anyway, please return anytime you wish.👍🏻
They paved paradise...They took all the trees and put them in a tree museum, n they charged the people a $ just to see 'em,...Hey, farmer, farmer, put away that DDT now, give me spots on my apples, but leave me the birds and the bees, please! Big Yellow Taxi by Joni Mitchell! 👍
Magic indeed. I came to Ireland sixteen years ago and when I stepped off the plane I got the feeling like I've finally came home after a long absence. I love this country and can't imagine living anywhere else.
The fleeting hour of life of those who love the hills is quickly spent, but the hills are eternal. Always there will be the lonely ridge, the dancing beck, the silent forest, always there will be the exhilaration of the summits. These are for the seeking, and those who seek and find while there is still time will be blessed in both mind and body. Alfred Wainwright. I have been going to The Lakes for a decade and wild camping there every month. Waking in that environment is an incredible experience, especially up high. You are alone with the environment and nature. I always get home refreshed and feeling more like 'the old me'. The 'before me'. If thats even a thing.
Scott Mannion Castle Tour 2023. Codreanu the Romanian nationalist used to visit such places in his homeland, he would travel to ancient sites and draw strength from the ancestors who lived and defended those places many centuries ago, knowing of their sacrifices for the land that was both his and theirs. God bless.
Great video Those remote rural Irish scenes are beautiful and contain a truth completely absent from the lives of most people today Healthy, natural and real Not a trout pout, a petrol station Costa or an aggressive Audi driver to be seen
Glad you liked the place, Morgoth. The Irish and the Geordies (can I call you that?) have similar temperaments. Bring your rod the next time; some great fishing, both fresh and salt water, to be had here. Bass fishing is my favourite. Brilliant analysis towards the end with the identity-erasing eyesore of a monolith.
I have been around the world several times and their is no place on earth for me than Southern Ireland, i truly feel like i am where i should be, weird i know
Thanks Morgoth, both my parents were IRISH my whole family is Irish I Moved to IRELAND in 2012 live facing the Shannon have always understood, felt and had a yearning in my Soul to be here Can't explain it just know i am were i am ment to be I am more IRISH then all of my Cousins Sending you love and STRENGTH from an ESSEX women now living in IRELAND 🙋🎻🎶🇨🇮🇬🇧
You might not remember me, I used to help out with artwork on your blog. I love the video, just wish I’d have kept in touch and bought you a steak & Guinness whilst visiting my home town of Belfast. All the best Lad.
When i went to the basilica in krakow, I didn’t think of it critically. It felt magical and otherworldly. My mind went silent as if it too was simply staring silently and open mouthed
Mr. and Mrs. Morgoth driving in to Sligo with Belbulben looming in the background. Absolutely lovely. If you ever make it over again lad come down to Wicklow. It is more pretty than a picture. And I will treat yerself and Mrs. Morgoth to a slap up feed and a few pints. It would be an honour. Thank you for all of your work.
I would agree that modern buildings are soulless and lack any cultural relevance to the people who inhabit these Isles , when you look at old photographs and the buildings that once stood , it leaves a longing to belong in the past
Well said. They're building a new library in Ennis and it's a monstrosity, all steel and glass. It's colossal too, totally overshadowing Glor building. It looks like an office building to be honest, really cold and impersonal.
If you knew the myths and legends that have taken place under your feet at Benbulben, it's all very GoT. We are taught our myths at school, at least we were when I grew up.
I don't think they teach them anymore. My former partner is born and bred in West Clare and he has no idea about Irish history and mythology. Doesn't speak Irish either. His daughter will soon turn eighteen and she can't wait to leave school so she doesn't have to learn Irish anymore. She's more interested in pretending she's actually a boy.
Your video resonated with me and thanks for finding the words to describe the relationships between Ireland, Great Britain, England and the lands that bind us. I’m from Kent but can still get away from the many soulless aspects to modern life. Walking the North Kent Marshes staring at the big skies and all the thousands of birds that inhabit it gives me an inner peace that eludes me at other times. As you say we need to get away from the ‘likes’ and notifications of the technocratic modern world. Nature is always a winner!
I always appreciate these quiet, self reflective videos you do out in nature. It's funny when you were at the horse shoe mountain how you brought up comparing it to pop culture. When I first saw it all I could think was "it looks like a sleeping giant in the land. No wonder people back in the day had such folklore and myths." I wasn't reminded of Game of thrones, but of the history and mythology of man itself. I also always like your off the cuff loose takes like when you were swearing on top of the mountain, haha. And I appreciate your sentiments and impartial take on Empire later in the video. And it is interesting how you bring up that the English empire was very much concerned with it's own greatness and all that. Whereas the little man in the shire doesn't care about statues of Victoria being erected in Ireland, or wars in India; he just wants to live his small life on his farm. It's an interesting take on the paradox of the English, and it's nice to see a man from England talk about what the English Empire has wrought upon the land without pride getting in the way. You are always a source for reflection and deep analysis and thinking. Glad you had a nice vacation in the Emerald Isle. It seems beautiful and rich, cheers.
We're really in a conflict for all time. The result will have implications for centuries. That sounds exaggerated, but it's not, we're really fighting over what kind of people will exist, nothing less.
A moving piece on Ireland; the Island of Ireland, from Morgot's Review Channel. Makes me proud to be of our beautiful land of (Éire). Land of Hearts Desire (i.e. lovely Sligo) gets an admiring mention also. Thanks Morgot. Job very well done - 😉👍👏👏👏👏🙏
My favorite video of yours from back in the day was the one you made about whiskey. I had just returned from my first trip to Ireland, and connected strongly with your commentary in it because of some or my own feelings and realizations I had there. It’s wonderful now hearing your own direct perspective on that magical and blessed land. The most beautiful country in the world, IMHO. Wish I was still there. ☘️
Excellent video Morgoth. Being in a place like that certainly humbles the soul. Witnessing the glorious and magnificent landscape reminds me of my time in Western Canada several years back. There was a key moment as I made my way up a mountain path. I looked back to see the sun shining through the trees and hitting the rock. “This is objectively beautiful” I thought. At that point, I had the realisation that my surroundings were not the result of an unguided cosmic accident. It was the handiwork of an artist. There is a creator. It was a profound and very humbling moment. The next key point was acknowledging that this creator (God) has a Son. God bless, Marcus.
We were a place time forgot, but the march of progress is catching up. The country has changed dramatically over the last twoscore years since it joined the then EEC, and even more radically so in the last ten years or more. Thank you for sharing and I hope you enjoyed your stay here Morgoth! ☘
Thank you for this very interesting video on your travels through Ireland. Please, please do so more !! Take a trip down to the south west, to Kerry, the scenery is stunning. The problem with the North West of Ireland is that the scenery is very dramatic, but the weather is inclement - its always raining there :-) This gets kind of depressing after a while. Sligo is blessed with fantastic mountain, coastal and loch scenery its one of my favourite place in the summer time - but I couldn't stick it all year round. When you travel down from the North you can see the landscape change. Its obvious that agriculture is more industrialised/commercialised in the North. You also notice the transition from hedgerows (in the North) to stone ditches (walls) in the republic. The scenery in the North seems to be neater and tidier - i'm not saying that's a good thing - just my impression. The Irish were eager to break free of English rule only to allow themselves to be subjugated by an even bigger overlord. I'm afraid that the Irish 'missionary complex' psyche will be their undoing. Considering the Irish are so well travelled and have intimate knowledge of the drawbacks of multicultural living in North America, it seems surprising that there is not more push back to EU/Globalist scheme to dilute the native population. Its so obvious ! anyone with eyes can see whats happening. The Irish (especially their political caste) are completely captured by the EU, there is absolutely no chance of halting the changes planned for Ireland if they remain within the EU.
Thanks for your lovely video about our fair country. Come back any time. Heading to Sligo myself at the weekend and looking forward to seeing the majestic Benbulben again, and you captured it so well here.
Magnificent Horseshoe Ridge, my wife, from West Ireland and I went there last year but didn’t climb it. We love the West Of Ireland for all the reasons you covered here.
Stunning....my dear Morgoth.... I believe you’ve just encountered the Burkean “Sublime”....a beautiful video....sums up what I feel when I get into the country....it absolutely puts things into perspective....