Why is it so great? I have come to love bagpipes, perhaps because they conjur special moments in my life, perhaps because they are rooted in my maternal heritage. But I know many cringe at their screech and whine. Outdoors writer Bill Monroe transcends both views when he equates the lonely sound of a bagpipe to an equally lonely one in nature – making them each more beautiful. The simple line opens a tribute that Monroe wrote upon the burial of longtime friend Tom McAllister, whose ashes were taken home to a favorite island in the Metolius River, under the watch of the Oregon Cascades. The entire piece is just 11 short paragraphs, yet conveys a lifetime of affection and strong sense of character, and challenges any notion that deadline writing can't be poetry.
“A singing bagpipe joined the wind in the pines.”
—Former Oregonian outdoor columnist Bill Monroe
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