IN August, the knotty brambles that wrap around our fields, woodland and lanes are âheavingâ with blackberries, wrote Sylvia Plath, âbig as the ball of my thumbâ and âfat with blue-red juices. These they squander on my fingersâ. For Seamus Heaney, they are âa glossy purple clotâ ripened by the season that is drawing to a close. âLike thickened wine: summerâs blood was in it,â he wrote in Blackberry Picking (1966).
Putting on a show from bright green to crimson and the darkest of blacks, the blackberry transforms our hedgerows in a final hurrah as summer segues into autumn. What is perhaps most striking about this fruit is its abundance: an invitation to gorge oneself to the point that lips and hands are stained purple. As the American poet Mary Oliver wrote in August (1983):
When the blackberries hang swollen in the woods,
in the brambles nobody owns,
I spend all day among the high branches,
reaching my ripped arms, thinking of nothing, cramming
the black honey of summer into my mouth
This act of gathering, this meditative pastime that goes back millennia, inspired Victorian artists, in particular. Painters such as Myles Birket Foster, Joseph Paulman, Walter Bonner Gash and Elizabeth Adela Forbes all depicted women and children blackberry picking against the beautiful backdrop of the British countryside. In these idealised works, there are no stained aprons or scratched limbs, but instead the unconstrained energy of childrenâs play. This device comes across in many of Fosterâs paintings, including Children Gathering Blackberries (1899), which depicts girls crowding around a blackberry bush, grabbing at its thorny branches.
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Tales as old as time
By appointing writers-in-residence to landscape locations, the National Trust is hoping to spark in us a new engagement with our ancient surroundings, finds Richard Smyth
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Farming is a profession, not a lifestyle choiceâ and, therefore, the Budget is unfair
Night Thoughts by Howard Hodgkin
Charlotte Mullins comments on Moght Thoughts
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Jane Wheatley examines the dire situation facing the king of fish
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It's alive!
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There's orange gold in them thar fields
A kitchen staple that is easily taken for granted, the carrot is actually an incredibly tricky customer to cultivate that could reduce a grown man to tears, says Sarah Todd
True blues
I HAVE been planting English bluebells. They grow in their millions in the beechwoods that surround usâbut not in our own garden. They are, however, a protected species. The law is clear and uncompromising: âIt is illegal to dig up bluebells or their bulbs from the wild, or to trade or sell wild bluebell bulbs and seeds.â I have, therefore, had to buy them from a respectable bulb-merchant.
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Stay the hand that itches to deadhead spent roses and you can enjoy their glittering fruits instead, writes John Hoyland
A best kept secret
Oft-forgotten Rutland, England's smallest county, is a 'Notswold' haven deserving of more attention, finds Nicola Venning