The Disappearance Diaries of an Apprentice Hermit
1 in tight lines a dozen houses line the winter wheat – already: frail bungalows with front lawns, at the village edge; homes, already, transitory as inns, and clamped to a new access road that slices though the down. diggers have quarried the chalk - upended it; torn out the clay beneath - heavy, dark, greasy as abattoir meat embedded with flints, clewing to a long-departed sea. in a web of cul-de-sacs, of silent gardens of chipboard walls history is being forgotten; the land is practicing how to die. SNODLAND, MARCH 1977 2 clouds clog the river’s fallen level - a dry day at the furthest edge of summer; at the month’s almost-final, almost-end-point, flat and still; indestructible. hay, cropped in silent meadows rests in long gold lines; the battles to be fought are far away; nothing is corruptible; now is all there is. THE RIVER BEULT, AUGUST 1977 3 wade in the corn waves undisturbed; come home - there is no toll; the hip-grass will conceal and recall; fearing no fall, the dusty green will restore the world, its marks, its scars - bring it to a field of sun - to this home, crushed out within it. NEAR CRANBROOK, AUGUST 1977 4 of course there are grander things than this Victorian rebuilding of medieval stone; but not for me. for eight years i have been its steadfast visitor, a pilgrim of sorts, returning to a place where nothing is urgent; where custom points, like transepts, to the enfolding fields and woods first written in Doomsday. THE CHURCH OF ALL SAINTS, BIRLING, MARCH 1978 5 amongst the few remaining leaves of last year’s autumn, daffodils shake in a slight breeze; they lord it over the wilderness - the stone angel drowsy under moss; the mausoleums, rectangular, preoccupied; the crooked tombstones, dreaming of places other than this; the sleeping columbaria spread between the shot green shavings of recent trees - defiant, redeeming. BIRLING CHURCHYARD, MARCH 1978 6 winter rain has darkened the hayrick’s sides; now a nine-hour sun expands upon it, restores it, saves it with lengthening days; returning all. SNODLAND, MAY 1978 7 only on the road between the trees; only on Birling Hill do i evade the day; slip the sun under leaf; freewheel on the scarp, believing only in Cistern Wood and Coney Shaw, in Stonebridge and Ley; in the fields that flit by, worshipping only the swift dark woods, the down’s allegiant oak, and beech, and chestnut - saved by speed each time i turn into the ceaseless haze. ON BIRLING HILL, JUNE 1978 8 now the cool weaves white; the high day ends; the ridge simplifies; the downland tightens – a narrow gate, darkly green - trees open to an ageless sky; a time for nightjars, nightingales, sparrowhawks; and i am washed away. TROTTISCLIFFE, JUNE 1978 9 this is a road for sunday walkers, wanderlusters who go just so far, their communion curtailed by an absence of magic, fitted in between reading the papers and lunch, as is customary now. THE SNODLAND TO BIRLING ROAD, JUNE 1978 10 clouds shift; over the hill the moon swells, the grass, dark this side, lights up - ignites a sudden thoroughfare showing me the way, night by night, as i cycle sections of the old pilgrim road, all difficulties shattered, past fields of clover, cowslip; past Blackbusshe, Badgells Wood, past the Battle of Britain cross,
12 episodios
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