GEORGE
MACKAY BROWN
Photo Gallery ~ Stromness
Waterfront
Stromness – called by the Vikings Hamnavoe which means
'haven inside the bay' – has a fine
natural harbour, sheltered from the west
by a steep hill called Brinkie's Brae
and from the east by two little tidal islands,
the Holms.
from For the Islands I Sing
© Estate of GMB 1997
GMB lived in Stromness all his life, with very few excursions outside Orkney.
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![]() Hamnavoe's morning broke On the salt and tar steps. Herring boats, Puffing red sails, the tillers Of cold horizons, leaned Down the gull-gaunt tide from Hamnavoe Loaves and Fishes © GMB 1959 |
![]() The kirk, in a gale of psalms, went heaving through A tumult of roofs, freighted for heaven. from Hamnavoe Loaves and Fishes © GMB 1959 |
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What is Stromness
but a tumbling stone wave, a network of closes, a marvel of steps
from the seaweed up to the granite of Brinkie's Brae . . . |
photographs © Sue Tordoff 2001