About Me

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Bristol , United Kingdom
Poet and poetry facilitator. Co-founder of the Leaping Word Poetry Consultancy, which provides advice for poets on writing, editing and publishing, as well as qualified counselling support for those exploring personal issues in their work - https://theleapingword.com. My sixth poetry collection, Love the Albatross, is now available from Indigo Dreams or directly from me.
Showing posts with label Church of the Holy Trinity with St Edmund. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Church of the Holy Trinity with St Edmund. Show all posts

Friday, 5 November 2021

All Hallows and the stories we tell ourselves

There's always a few jobs to do after a funeral. On Tuesday I went to the cemetery and crematorium to move my mother's funeral flowers to my grandmother's grave. 


Can't say I'm fond of formal flower arrangements myself, but the cross was right for my mother, and I liked the colours and the personal significance of the Michaelmas daisies. 

My grandmother's grave had some Herb Robert growing on it, which I'm fond of and would have left growing, but I know my aunts aren't and wouldn't have, so I did a spot of weeding and put my hand on something spiky. It turned out to be a tiny holly bush that had probably self-seeded from a Christmas wreath, so I took it home and planted it up. It felt like a gift from my grandmother, thirty years after her death, and I hope it will eventually grow big enough to produce berries - if it's female - and attract blackbirds and thrushes.


I also had to catch up on other jobs that had gone undone over the previous month, like an oil change for my car. On the way back from the garage, I walked over Horfield Common, which was looking beautiful in November sun. 


 

I always look to the skyline for the familiar landmarks, and there they are: to the left of the pair of trees, Freezing Hill (which I still haven't visited); to the right, Kelston Roundhill (which I have).



I spent a little time wandering through the churchyard of Holy Trinity with St Edmund (Horfield Parish Church), and I realised that it must have been years since I'd walked right around it, as there was a beautiful monument I hadn't acquainted myself with before, even though it's been there long enough to have acquired a smattering of lichen and moss. 



Jenny Nicholson was murdered on 7th July 2005 in the London bombings. She was 24. The inscriptions are a quotation from Sonnet 116, and another from Charlotte Bronte: 'I am no bird and no net ensnares me: I am a free human being with an independent will'. 


In between these jobs, I drove my daughter back to her home on the south coast. As it happened, St Wulfran's Church at nearby Ovingdean had popped up in my social media feed that morning, so we diverted for a quick picnic in the sunshine. 







The village was the birthplace of Charles Eamer Kempe, the Victorian designer and friend of William Morris, who was closely involved in its 'restoration' in the 1860s. It was at this time that he designed the painted ceiling.


The reredos was also designed in the late 19th century.


Most of my photos of Kempe's windows, which were donated to the Church before his death in 1907, didn't come out too well; here's a few that were OK. 




We wandered around outside for a bit looking for the Kempe family vault but failed to spot it. I found a very early primrose growing on an unmarked grave, however ... 


... and an instruction to badgers with opposable thumbs.


In an extension of the churchyard there was a view of the sea ...


... and another memorial to a life that ended abruptly amid much publicity. 


I've been thinking a lot lately about the stories we tell ourselves to give shape to our lives and those of the people closest to us, but how hard must it be to find that shape if someone you love dies when their lives were just starting? 





Saturday, 4 July 2020

More TED Walks in the ... well, we think it's still the time of Coronavirus Pt 9

Not been anywhere. Crap weather, for the most part.  Also, it's the worst bits about life that seem to have been reinstated, despite the continuing presence of Coronavirus - working from work, Wetherspoons, golf, shopping as a hobby, queuing traffic. The best bits - poetry events and writing groups, theatre and gigs, hugging people you love, and feeling safe - have not. 


Though there's still the meadow and the common to explore in good weather and bad. And I even caught an almost midsummer sunrise from my bedroom window one morning ...


... and a picture book moon over thistles.


And wildlife! Here's some of my wildlife photography. (I'm prepared to wait for seconds to get the perfect shot.)


A rabbit


A bumble on bramble


A wood pigeon stripping cherries from a tree


A kestrel


A flock of rooks and jackdaws 


A dead hedgehog (or a very uncomfy slipper). My cousin reliably informs me that this is the work of a badger. 


The fox who is always waiting for us in the road when we get home, ready for a stand-off with the eponymous TED


My photos of trees and flowers are generally more successful. 

Here's some June blackberries ...


... and two of my favourite trees which we don't see so often now most of the golf course is out-of-bounds.

(It was dusk on a Saturday night and no one was playing.) 



And this is the magnificent ash in the ditch, nearly hidden from view now by brambles and bindweed.  


Purple hogweed seeds


Wild carrot, entering the Queen Mother's Hat circa 1965 stage of seed-setting


My favourite not-an-umbellifer, yarrow ... 


... and another beloved, the red-berried rowan


Golden rod


I've stopped wondering whether this year's ubiquitous crow garlic is the triffid component of Covid-19, and now think it might be the cure, right under our anosmic noses. After all, there's lungwort for pulmonary problems, and woundwort for wounds. So why not crow garlic for Corvid-19?


As well as walking over the golf course to the meadow and Charlton Common, we've also had cause to walk past Horfield Common the other evening. It was lovely. 



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The Church of the Holy Trinity with St Edmund
And it made a change to be watching the sunset from a different viewpoint from usual, in this case the former parade ground opposite what used to be Horfield Barracks but is now a housing development full of assorted shoe boxes ... 


... even though the meadow and Charlton Common sunsets remain a huge bonus of life in (varying stages of) lockdown.


Charlton Common


Solstice sunsets on the highest part of the Welsh Hills 






Getting a bit Old Testament






These walks in the same small area have been as much a mapping of an era (and a very strange one at that) as of place and the changing seasons. Bud to flower to berry. Floret to seed. I've committed Lady Macbeth's speech to memory for hand-washing purposes and can now identify at least some of the more common umbellifers. I've made an important decision about my future. And already the jackdaws and rooks are starting to flock again, and the setting sun is beginning its crawl back along the Welsh hilltops towards winter.