Donna
I'm Falcon Crazy
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<3 FLY FREE "CHARLOTTE" <3
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« on: 05-Feb-10, 09:52:32 PM » |
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IN ANCIENT ROME there was a group of religious officials called augurs, whose job was to interpret the opinion of the gods on important decisions, something they did by studying the behaviour of birds, especially eagles, hawks and falcons.
Their role is dramatised in Robert Gravesâs classic book I Claudius , when a wounded eagle falls from the sky in front of the eponymous hero. The augurs interpret this to mean that the stuttering, limping Claudius must become emperor and save Rome.
And like many accurate predictions before and since, this one is ignored, because everybody thinks Claudius is an idiot.
The world has moved on since Roman times. But the notion that bird behaviour might have supernatural significance lingers to this day. Christian iconography continues to give doves a role in blessing important events. More profanely, humans on the receiving end of falling bird manure are said to be assured âgood luckâ.
And we still speak of âinaugurationsâ and âinauguralâ events: terms that go all the way back to those priests who studied bird movements (no pun intended) before pronouncing on the prospects of a public enterprise.
I MENTION all of this only by way of prelude to wondering aloud whether there is any significance, good or bad, in reports that there is a peregrine falcon nesting on the roof of the Central Bank in Dublin.
Probably not, is the answer. Falcons like to nest in precipitous places, whether cliffs or tall buildings: because thatâs where they can best exploit their superb eyesight and their awe-inspiring dive speeds which, at 200 miles an hour, make them the fastest animals on Earth.
Even so. According to Birdwatch Irelandâs website, the first sightings of the Central Bank bird were in late 2007; which in retrospect seems ominous. Whatever about the falcon, the Irish banking system went over a cliff soon afterwards, and the diving speed of property prices has been inspiring awe in onlookers ever since.
No matter that nesting on tall buildings is typical of falcons. Given the importance of this particular building, the ancients would have called in the augurs. Then they would have sought a second opinion from that other class of Roman diviners, the haruspices, who specialised in studying the entrails of sacrificed animals, from which they too thought they could interpret the will of the gods.
(Modern-day consultants arguably continue the haruspicesâ line of work. Indeed, the mockery they sometimes have to endure is not new either. Even by later Roman times, entrail-studiers had fallen into disrepute among educated classes. Cato the Elder is recorded as wondering how one haruspex could look at another without laughing.) Reports that the Central Bank falcon has been adding to Temple Barâs problems with fast-food packaging â in this case by dropping the carcases of small birds â seems somehow portentous too.
Augurs would probably need more detail about the locations. But putting myself in their shoes, I would say that if a dead bird fell at the rear of the bank, on Cope Street, it could be a message of qualified hope to the Irish people: ie that we must manage as best we can until we turn the corner, from Cope Street to somewhere else.
Whereas if the bird fell at the eastern side of the bank, on Anglesea Street, it could be a more worrying sign. Apart from anything else, it might hit an already-nervous trader entering the Irish Stock Exchange, thereby triggering market panic, and setting the recovery back years.
IF YOU still doubt the lingering power of Roman augury, consider another word we use in everyday English: âauspiciousâ. This too comes to us via the augurs: from âavisâ meaning âbirdâ and âspecereâ, âto observeâ.
Thus the original âauspicesâ were omens so derived. And the phrase âunder the auspices ofâ also has supernatural origins; although it now features mostly in discussions about public bodies. One recent usage, for example, was an Irish Times Editorial about Nama, in which we warned against secrecy about the value of properties paid for by the taxpayer, âunder its auspicesâ.
In these circumstances, I make no apology for considering the name of the man appointed to lead one of the inquiries into Irelandâs banking crisis â Klaus Regling â very auspicious: even though it was hardly a factor in the Governmentâs choice.
My German is not extensive, so Iâm indebted to alert reader Jake Walsh for explaining Mr Reglingâs nominative significance as he attempts to mop up after an era of financial laxity. âIn case youâre not aware,â Jake writes, âRegel in German means rule, regeln is the verb âto ruleâ, regler means regulator and closest of all, regelung , is a regulation or settlement. Apt or what?â Apt indeed. In fact, maybe this was the message of the peregrine falcon. âPeregrineâ meaning âforeignâ, or âimported from abroadâ, perhaps our feathered friend was emphasising the need to look overseas for someone to lead the bank inquiry.
And while weâre on the subject, how should we interpret news of the imminent return to Ireland of another peregrinating bird: RTĂâs Charlie? No, I donât know what it means either. But I recall that one of the veteran journalistâs greatest exposĂ©s was a bank scandal involving a Fianna FĂĄil TD. If Mr Regling believes in auspices, maybe he should inaugurate his Irish investigation by giving Charlie a job.
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