Laura R.
Yelp
I already find cemeteries beautiful and interesting, so the fact that this one has a Harry Potter association meant that we were definitely going to check it out. As we entered, there was a cute little statue of a dog, Greyfriars Bobby. This infamous little pup was a Skye terrior known for "guarding" his owners' grave for years and years (I read 14, somewhere). I'd heard of dogs doing such things, but I hadn't actually heard of Greyfriars Bobby. The monument to this pup was a fountain erected in 1872 and placed opposite the entrance of the church. The grave commemorating him reads: "Let his loyalty's devotion be a lesson to us all." Which I absolutely love.
Beautiful and well-maintained, this Kirkyard includes some interesting things. There's a Culinary Herb Garden planted with Lovane, and what looked like Sage and Mint, among other herbs. I like the idea that they saunter to the garden and snip off a few pieces here and there. You'll also see renovated bars over graves to deter grave robbers from selling bodies to the anatomy schools during the 1800s. And of course grave markers bearing the last names of Riddle and McGonagall, which any Harry Potter fan will find familiar. Though Rowling has never overtly admitted to being inspired from the kirkyard, it's known that she would frequent the café and this kirkyard, so it's very probable she was inspired by their names.
It took us a while to locate the Riddle and McGonagall graves, which are beyond Flodden Wall (which was used as a wall to control trade and tax, though I think the original intent was as a defensive structures). At any rate, it's an interesting medieval wall, and it's imbedded with headstones. But how badass would that be, to be buried beneath an ancient wall, with your headstone affixed to it? Tom Riddle's (senior) headstone is on it. He died November 1806, aged 72, and he shares a headstone with Thomas Riddle Jr. who died at 26 years old in 1802, and his two daughters. Next to that stone, the Riddle lineage continues with other members of the Riddle clan.
And in that same area, tucked away into a corner, was William McGonagall. "I am your gracious majesty/ever faithful to Thee,/William McGonagall, The Poor Poet/That was in Dundee." And this is one of those graves that actually bares a small black and white photograph of the deceased. McGonagall was known as one of the worst poets in English literature, which I find absolutely charming.