The graves of those we loved,
How beautiful they lie;
From every care and strife removed;
Beneath heavens canopy.
'The Churchyard', John Clare
IT was a family affair, a gathering of my wife’s clan, and the route took us within a couple of miles of Helpston. So, not for the first time, and probably not for the last, I visited John Clare’s grave. Not quite a pilgrimage, but a paying of respects, because we can never pay our dues to Clare, the one true voice of Nature from the English countryside (‘We will not plunder music of his dower’, July 12). It spoke through him, he was its tribune. ‘I found the poems in the fields/And only wrote them down,’ Clare once penned, a statement usually parsed by literary critics to prove the poet’s self-conscious, humble-born insecurity when he compared himself with fellow Romantic poets, the bourgeois-born Wordsworths, the faintly squirearchical Shelleys. Strip away the lichen encrustation of academic critical ana-lysis, however, and Clare was being both arch and literal, a proper pawky peasant: he knew his ability to craft verse. He knew also that, so close was his communion with the flowers, the birds, the animals around his Northamptonshire village in the Georgian century, that he could transcribe their voices, articulate their lives in truths. You can see this in The Skylark, where the bird, after it ‘winnows the air’ (a perfect threshing image of its beating wings), does ‘drop agen/To nests upon the ground, which anything/May come atto destroy’.
Denne historien er fra September 27, 2023-utgaven av Country Life UK.
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Denne historien er fra September 27, 2023-utgaven av Country Life UK.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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Kitchen garden cook - Apples
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The original Mr Rochester
Three classic houses in North Yorkshire have come to the market; the owner of one inspired Charlotte Brontë to write Jane Eyre
Get it write
Desks, once akin to instruments of torture for scribes, have become cherished repositories of memories and secrets. Matthew Dennison charts their evolution
'Sloes hath ben my food'
A possible paint for the Picts and a definite culprit in tea fraud, the cheek-suckingly sour sloe's spiritual home is indisputably in gin, says John Wright
Souvenirs of greatness
FOR many years, some large boxes have been stored and forgotten in the dark recesses of the garage. Unpacked last week, the contents turned out to be pots: some, perhaps, nearing a century old—dense terracotta, of interesting provenance.
Plants for plants' sake
The garden at Hergest Croft, Herefordshire The home of Edward Banks The Banks family is synonymous with an extraordinary collection of trees and shrubs, many of which are presents from distinguished friends, garnered over two centuries. Be prepared to be amazed, says Charles Quest-Ritson
Capturing the castle
Seventy years after Christian Dior’s last fashion show in Scotland, the brand returned under creative director Maria Grazia Chiuri for a celebratory event honouring local craftsmanship, the beauty of the land and the Auld Alliance, explains Kim Parker
Nature's own cathedral
Our tallest native tree 'most lovely of all', the stately beech creates a shaded environment that few plants can survive. John Lewis-Stempel ventures into the enchanted woods
All that money could buy
A new book explores the lost riches of London's grand houses. Its author, Steven Brindle, looks at the residences of plutocrats built by the nouveaux riches of the late-Victorian and Edwardian ages
In with the old
Diamonds are meant to sparkle in candlelight, but many now gather dust in jewellery boxes. To wear them today, we may need to reimagine them, as Hetty Lintell discovers with her grandmother's jewellery