
At this time of year, in this country, we are utterly dependent on artificial light. We have to turn lights on to see where we wish to go, turn table lamps on to create a warm cosy atmosphere and to read by and turn the car lights on to see the way ahead.
Imagine living in the Highclere of 150 years ago, or 500 years ago or 1000 years ago. It would have been dark for 16 hours of each day and we would have had to rely on candlelight or firelight, moonlight or starlight to move around, sit and talk to people or cook a meal.
One of the first steps forward was invented by a Scottish engineer Capt. Thomas Drummond in about 1825. Following on from the work of others, Drummond invented a form of brilliant light created by the incandescence of lime – “calcium light, torch that burns calcium oxide (lime) and gives off intense white light”. At first it was called Drummond light and used for lighthouses but was later adapted to use on the Victorian stage, where it illuminated the principal actors. It became known as limelight and from thence came the figurative use of the phrase “in the limelight “on stage meaning the centre of attention.
It could also be used to create special effects such as sunlight or moonlight. However, it had to be monitored very carefully as it burned as it was a major fire hazard. By the end of the 19th century most theatres switched to the much safer light source – electricity but the expression “in the limelight,” still remains in use today.
Much of our language is about finding the light, looking for the first light of the day and so on. I may well be hoping for a lightbulb moment for my next Instagram idea and far better to send a tricky email in the cold light of day when calm clear thoughts with less emotion will help steer a challenging situation.
Today we have a better scientific understanding of visible light: visible radiation in scientific parlance – electromagnetic radiation which can be perceived by the human eye. For centuries we tried to calculate its speed, work out how it bends and turn refraction into mathematical expressions.
Perhaps we take light for granted now that it is so matter of fact. We control it with the flick of switch and take it utterly for granted until a storm brings down the power lines. We use up natures’ assets to light up the world without thinking that perhaps we do not need to light up things as much as we do. We forget to value darkness or the fact that lights seem to shine brighter in darkness.
From the dawn of time much of our storytelling, thought and idiom turns around the concept of light. Whether in Egyptian mythology or Norse legend or Bible stories, the world began in swirling dark voids and then there was light. Marking the New Year once more such thoughts eddy round us as we reach for hope, peace and some sort of light to show us the way.
Perhaps we think about our New Year’s resolutions to be nice to each other – “all sweetness and light” as we fall asleep at the end of each day and go “out like a light”.
Happy New Year
Good Morning or Good Afternoon where you are1 Your photos, whether, inside the Abby or outside, regardless of the time of year, always looks so ROMANTIC. I hope that you and yours, have a very Happy New year, and peace and good will to ALL that visit your home. Sincerely, John l. Roberts, Tonawanda, N.Y. USA!
Happy New Year! I walk in the early mornings and look forward to seeing the sunrise. I don’t take it for granted. This morning I greeted a hungry masked bandit (an adorable raccoon) that came right up to me as if I were it’s friend. It was amazing but also trash day. The bins were out. This cute guy was just hoping for a meal and continued on it’s way, a few inches from me, and not scared in the least. No photo taken. It would’ve scared it away. The reward, I’m left with an incredible memory to carry me through my day. If the dim porch light had been burning brighter, it might never have happened. This was in a busy city, early morning hours, so what a blessing for us both to meet, while I drank coffee.
Sweet story!
Nice posting and I loved learning about the lime light device. We have collected lighting devices for 50 years.
Happy New Year!
Lovely the pictures of lime light and did you and lord Carnarvon have a wonderful Christmas and lam fan of Downton Abbey and lovely highcelere castle
This post was quite poetic and yet factual. You are quite correct I. Stating we take light for granted. Knowing that light is a girl from God is beautiful in its simplicity.
It us the natural man in us that take so many blessings for granted.
I enjoy the comfort of darkness in the winter months at times. It seems that winter brings a sense of rest and respite for plants, the earth, certain animals and we tend to slow down a little. Yet their is an opposite for that as well, for we do need the light in our lives so that we feel lifted, safe, encouraged and motivated more. It is very hard to imagine the Castle staying warm or lit during just 200 years ago. It must have been a daily chore for those living and working there. I applaud you for being so eloquent in painting a picture with your words. I love how you pint out that there is opposition in all things that we need for personal growth. I also love when you pay homage to the history while being present. Live your emails. Thank you for your candor, insights , history , present times and future goals.
Yours
Moya
As each day adds more sunlight, those who garden start to plan what to grow. As a garden designer/author, I share a key ingredient to success: knowing how much sunlight falls where.
We use recycled batteries to light flickering candles for 8 hours in every window of our 1890 home. It is charming as a Christmas display and so practical. History, beauty, and less electricity cost!
P.S. Please see comments on your article of the Lincoln letter; found answers! The expert emailed he would appreciate seeing it when he gets there someday.
Very interesting. Happy New Year.
What a wonderful essay. Thank you so much for your musings. I do find this time of darkness to be difficulté but a brightly lit fire always lifts my Spirit.
Happy New Year!
Lovely the pictures of limelight and did you and lord Carnarvon have a lovely Christmas and l am fan of Downton Abbey and lovely highcelere castle
Happy New Year, best wishes to all at Highclere Castle!!
Happy New Year Lady and Lord Carnarvon. May the new year continue to shine its light on you and your loved ones. A big thank you for sharing your lovely home and fascinating stories with us.
Happy New Year Lady Carnarvon!
As always, so very interesting. Enlightening even! A very happy new year to you and all you hold dear.
I so enjoy reading your blogs! And I love knowing where the word “limelight” comes from!! Thank you:)
A thought provoking post this early morning as I am sitting in the dark waiting for the sun to come up over the mountains and the lake here in Northern California.
Lady Carnarvon,
We hope for more bright days when we wish each other a hopeful New Year. Thank you for shining many lights upon subjects in your columns we otherwise would not see.
May you have many more bight ideas to share with us in 2025!
Best wishes for your New Year,
Martha G.
That is very kind!!!
How tall are you? You look very tall in your photos! Wishing you a very happy new year.
Most of my sisters are taller than I – I am 5’7″ I still think in yards, feet and inches!!!
Nice article. Very thoughtful
Happy New Year.
Dear Lady Carnarvon
Happy New Year to you and all your loved ones and thank you from the bottom of my heart for all the bright and heartwarming Mondays.
Only the best for Highclere Castle and all who love and care for it.
Hoping to be able to visit you one day, and with great joy and gratitude, best regards, yours
Karin
Dear Lady Carnarvon,
Thank you for your posts.
I want to wish you and Lord Carbarvon, the Happiest of New Years .
We all enjoy the history, humor and hope . You have a wonderdul way of shinning light on trials and challenges that you experience. Hope and faith are definitely light that we all need in our lives.
Thank you again for sharing so much and for painting a picture of life there at High-level Castle.
Have a Blessed New Year.
Thank you for for lighting up our Mondays and our lives!
Happy New Year to you and and everyone – family, staff, & all creatures great and small –
there at Highclere!
Thank you for such interesting information. Your writings are so enjoyable to read.
Wishing you and your family a Happy and Healthy New Year!
Wow, at 77 I can still learn something new! Seriously, at breakfast today I enjoyed being “enlightened” about the meaning of “in the limelight.” I never knew about the calcium oxide early source of illumination. Good job! Dana Arbaugh, San Jose, CA.
I learned something new!
Well, I learned something today. Thank you for explaining the term “in the limelight”. I never knew how that phrase came about.
My grandma, born in 1894, did not take electricity for granted. Anytime a storm kicked up, she turned off lights, tv, radio. Electricity was a fragile thing when she was growing up and a little bit scary too. I’m remembering the scene in Downton Abbey where the Dowager Countess is shielding her eyes from the new electric light. So funny!
Happy New Year to you!
It interesting where these old sayings come from, it is always fascinating to find out.
I enjoy your posts,it is a great way to start my Monday.
Happy New Year.
Lady Carnarvon………..Thank you for shining a “light” on a subject we rarely give a second thought. I hope you and Lord Carnarvon have a chance to relax take a deep breath as we enter into a new year.I hope you have a very health and prosperous ne year. Do the dogs get a special treat at new years?
First light – that magical moment when the darkness is broken by the first flash of morning light is my favourite tine of the day. I have been an early riser since a small child. I loved tiptoeing down our long hallway to the kitchen where our mother would be sitting quietly having her first cup of tea before starting a long busy day. I would sit quietly with her – just the two of us sharing a hot cup of tea together. The quiet before the bustling of our large busy family home. Our special time together and often before that first light.
I was lucky in 2010 that a dear friend painted a canvass she called “first light. As soon as I saw it, I just had to buy it and hang it over my bed. She captured that moment so beautifully, it deserved a special place.
Thank you for sharing your “limelight” with us. Another inspiring read.
I wish you, your family and your Highclere family, a wonderful New Year. May 2025 hold many amazing new memories waiting to be made and joy in sharing them.
This time of year here in the midwest of the US we have 14 hrs of darkness and only 9 hrs of light! I look forward to the days getting longer even if it only 8 seconds per day! Loved your article on the limelight”.
Thank you so much for sharing your blog with us each week. I so look forward to reading each one. I also love the bits of history and trivia you share with us.
I was fortunate enough to visit your lovely home and hear you tell the group gathered about the birth of a litter of puppies you were caring for.
I look forward to visiting again . Thank you for opening your home and sharing your stories
Happy New Year
Happy New Year to you, your husband, family and all who endeavor to bring us the Highclere Castle we have come to love through Downton Abbey and now your books and blogs. May the new year bring peace and joy to all. Sincerely, Jayson Lambert-Roszak.
Perhaps we should all turn to the
Light of the World!
Lady Carnarvon,
Your writing today reminded me how grateful I am to be able to enjoy light, natural or man-made.
I hope you and your family have a delightful 2025!
Looking forward to your stories in the new year.
Very witty column Lady Carnarvon!
Thankyou for your illuminating prose!
And thankyou for all the excellent stories and photographs throughout the year!
May there be many more in 2025!
Happy New Year!
Best wishes
FLEURINA DECORTES de GILBERT
Orange City East
Central Western NSW
Australia
My wife Tracy and would like to wish all of you a very Happy and prosperous New Year.
Robert Douch. Vancouver, Canada
How evocative, so beautifully written. Wishing you all a wonderful 2025.
Thank you for another poignant article. You truly have a gift, and we are all the richer for it. Happy New Year!
I’ve really enjoyed reading your thoughtful and interesting emails this year. And following your posts on Instagram. Thank you for sharing so much of your lives in words and photos. Give those gorgeous doggies a big hug for New Year. Wishing you a very happy 2025.
Wishing you much bright, warm and shiny light in your New Year! May 2025 bring much happiness, good health, and prosperity to you, your family, and your staff! Hauoli Makahiki Hou!
Happy new year to you all ,
Another interesting read ,and such lovely picture of Highclere in the dark
Surprised to see Dutch words, in one of the pictures, ‘groen , rood, … Any idea who the maker of this was?
Thanks for continuing to share your home with us. I will never forget our visit to Highclere and meeting you in 2023. Wishing you and the family a Happy New Year.
Joan Mizzi-Fry, Orillia Ontario
Just read this out to my other half – he loves facts like the ‘limelight’ one. Very interesting. Thank you.
A Happy New Year to you all at Highclere Castle
Dear Lady Carnarvon:
Thank you for this Monday’s blog. Now I know where the phrase “in the limelight” derived from.
Wishing you, Lord Carnarvon, and everyone at Highclere Castle a Happy New Year.
Until 2025, “auld lang syne”.
Perpetua Crawford
Good Day Lady Carnarvon – beautifully written and I love the subject. As I age light has other meanings and thoughtfully I am cognizant of each day being just a bit longer from the shortest day of the yr.
Happy New Year! – Regards, Corinne
So let your
Light shine among men
And they followed the star to find the new King
This little light of mine, I’m going to let it shine
Thank you Lady Canarvon for reminding us what a gift light has been for us all. Warms us, the soil, and grows our crops…shows us the way, and for Christians at this Holy time brings us to worship the One true light.
Best regards to all for a healthy and prosperous New Year, and may we have peace on this beautiful planet.
Judy Laschober Arcadia, California, USA
Lady Carnarvon,
Happy New Year to all at Highclere Castle!
Love this blog about light. We have many windows in our home and appreciate all the natural light. In fact, it was the windows that was the selling point when we purchased our condo 5 years ago. Although, right now here in Michigan, sunlight has been scarce.
I’m ready for spring!