It was a sad day today in our neighboring town of Thame at
Robin Gibbs funeral. He had lived for 30 years in the Old Rectory across from
St. Mary’s Church and was well known and liked in the town. His casket was
draped in the flag of Ellan Vannin, the name in Manx Gaelic of The Isle of Man,
where he and his brothers were born. The Bee Gees adapted a poem of the same
name as a song which ends with the words which seem so appropriate today;
“And in all my times
of sorrow
And on some lonely
shore
I'll go back to Ellan
Vannin
To my childhood days
once more”
The Isle of Man in the middle of the Irish Sea
is a truly unique and beautiful place inhabited since 6,500 BC and never
incorporated into either the Roman Empire (Julius Caesar referred to it as Mona
in 54 BC) nor is it part of The United Kingdom, the Commonwealth or the European Union (EU). ). Its parliament, the Tynwald is of Celtic / Norse origin and over 1,000 years old, and is the oldest
parliament in the world with an unbroken existence.
It had a
unique Gaelic-Norse culture and the motto on its three legged (Trie Cassyn) flag
is; “Quocunque jeceris stabit” – loosely translated as “wherever I’m thrown, I will stand”
– probably a fair summation of Robin Gibbs life and achievements.
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