About Me
- Deborah Harvey Poetry
- 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.
Sunday, 18 November 2012
A Riot of Biblical Proportions
It was our annual family murmuration yesterday, a time to catch up on news from various far-flung outposts in a non-funereal context. And there was some good gossip on offer, like my cousin Hayley delivering her own grandchild because the midwife insisted the baby (a little girl called Millie, 8lbs 6oz, since you ask) wouldn't be born till morning. But there was something more unusual from my cousin Pam, who'd been helping her mother sort through papers following my Uncle Meric's death.
My photos are rather hurried - my cousin was en route to Bristol's newest museum, the M Shed, where the pages will now be housed - but the pages (from 2 Kings Chapter 11, it would seem) are inscribed with the following in copperplate handwriting:
This was part of a bible which was plundered from the dwelling houses in Queen Square, Bristol, on the ever memorable Sunday the 30th day of October when the dreadful Riot and burning of that place was perpetrated by an infuriate and lawless mob.
Which poses all sorts of questions. How did my great-grandmother (for it was she who gave it to my uncle) come by such a thing? What on earth was a rioter doing looting a bible? Was the bible the then equivalent of a flat-screen TV as far as entertainment was concerned? And perhaps most pressingly of all, where's the d from the end of infuriate?
Monday, 12 November 2012
Remembering: Gloucester Part II
Can't possibly leave Gloucester Cathedral without exploring a few more places and sighing over the artefacts therein, like the Lancaut Font in the Lady Chapel.
I have a soft spot for the remote, ruined church at Lancaut on the banks of the Wye. I first saw it from the Welsh side of the river years ago and longed to get a closer look. Then, newly single and in possession of a car, I discovered a walk in a book, the route of which took me and Ted right past it. Inside there was a grave slab with a heart etched on it.
So it was especially lovely to see the font from the old church here. It is made of lead and dates from c1120-40. Can't help wondering how many children have been baptised in it, and what were their lives like.
Some rather lovely turn-of-the-century Arts and Crafts stained glass by Christopher Whall.
And, of course, the stupendous Great East Window which boasts the second largest expanse of mediaeval glass in the country.
Wooden parclose screen and Tower
Struts supporting the arches which support the Tower
The Romanesque nave built in the final years of the 11th century
Stained glass stone ...
The 15th century Tower and South Transept
The South Porch built at the beginning of the 15th century.
As the Treasury is closed on Sundays and the Tower and Crypt were closed for winter, I reluctantly left, squeezing my way past men in khaki and women in black who were filing in for the next Remembrance Service. The City Museum and Folk Museum were also closed, so I hobbled down to the docks on my poorly feet to make the most of the sun on water.
Taking a short cut back to the Leisure Centre to wait for Son the Elder, I found myself trundling down a road that looked disquietingly familiar, given that I barely know Gloucester at all. Then the penny dropped: I was walking down Cromwell Street.
Where so many women were murdered, there is now a tarmac walk way with a sign post pointing to the city centre.
Of course it's impossible for anyone old enough to remember those terrible discoveries in 1994 to be at all objective, though I would defy anyone to wander down that street without feeling a sense of foreboding.
I have a soft spot for the remote, ruined church at Lancaut on the banks of the Wye. I first saw it from the Welsh side of the river years ago and longed to get a closer look. Then, newly single and in possession of a car, I discovered a walk in a book, the route of which took me and Ted right past it. Inside there was a grave slab with a heart etched on it.
So it was especially lovely to see the font from the old church here. It is made of lead and dates from c1120-40. Can't help wondering how many children have been baptised in it, and what were their lives like.
Some rather lovely turn-of-the-century Arts and Crafts stained glass by Christopher Whall.
And, of course, the stupendous Great East Window which boasts the second largest expanse of mediaeval glass in the country.
Wooden parclose screen and Tower
Struts supporting the arches which support the Tower
The Romanesque nave built in the final years of the 11th century
Stained glass stone ...
The 15th century Tower and South Transept
The South Porch built at the beginning of the 15th century.
As the Treasury is closed on Sundays and the Tower and Crypt were closed for winter, I reluctantly left, squeezing my way past men in khaki and women in black who were filing in for the next Remembrance Service. The City Museum and Folk Museum were also closed, so I hobbled down to the docks on my poorly feet to make the most of the sun on water.
Taking a short cut back to the Leisure Centre to wait for Son the Elder, I found myself trundling down a road that looked disquietingly familiar, given that I barely know Gloucester at all. Then the penny dropped: I was walking down Cromwell Street.
Where so many women were murdered, there is now a tarmac walk way with a sign post pointing to the city centre.
Of course it's impossible for anyone old enough to remember those terrible discoveries in 1994 to be at all objective, though I would defy anyone to wander down that street without feeling a sense of foreboding.
Sunday, 11 November 2012
The Box of Delights: Gloucester Part I
And so to Gloucester for the next round of Roamin' Robots, at the behest of Son the Elder. I suppose I could have returned to Bristol after dropping him at the GL1 Leisure Centre, as it's only 30 miles away, but it was a beautifully clear and sunny day and anyway, why run the risk of having to do some housework when you can jaunt?
The last time I'd been to Gloucester, as opposed to through it, was as a small child on the bus with my mother and sister. My mum told me off for reading a book on the way because I'd get sick but I didn't. We went to the Cathedral - my father had explained to me what fan vaulting was in advance - and the livestock market where the pigs were bleeding from having holes punched in their ears. I came back with a model animal for my farm, which was my favourite toy.
I decided, therefore, that a return visit to the Cathedral was almost certainly long overdue, but before I even got there, there was an amuse-bouche positively smothered in childhood and tied up with a big pink bow of literary interest. Look, the Tailor of Gloucester's House!
Through the arch was the Cathedral, and after the dark brick of Chester, how lovely it was to set eyes on buttery West Country stone. The main morning service was still in progress when I arrived, so I took a wander around the Cloisters.
Now, you might well recognise these and so you should because great tranches of the Harry Potter films were shot here. I remembered how when I was teaching a class of German high school students during my year abroad, they had scoffed to see Gloucester Cathedral described in their textbook as world-famous. Well, it is now.
I was particularly pleased to spot this late Morris & Co window, c1920, and the watery-themed Victorian stained glass in the lavatorium.
Oh, but the stone! I wonder if the monks, copying scriptures with numb fingers, took solace in the staggering beauty of it, or did they become inured?
After a coffee in the Cathedral café, the Remembrance Day service was over and the godless could roam. There was more glorious glass for a start, these windows by Thomas Denny having been installed in the South Ambulatory Chapel in 1989 to mark the 900th anniversary celebrations of the current building on this site.
And this lovely work of art was installed in the Lady Chapel in 1992 to commemorate the Gloucestershire composer of English Church Music, Herbert Howells.
In fact, Gloucester Cathedral is as good at commemorating the dead as Chester is at wood carving. Here's a few of my favourite tombs and memorials.
The tomb of Thomas Machen and his wife, Christian, who died in 1614 and 1615 respectively and who both look pretty intimidating. They had seven sons and six daughters, and their Latin inscription reads 'It comes down to this: we die. Death is the final boundary of things'.
Their near neighbours and contemporaries, John Bower (d 1615) and Anne (d 1613) had nine sons and seven daughters, so there ...
... whilst poor Elizabeth Williams died in childbirth in 1622 at the age of 17. Her sister, Margery Clent, fared little better, dying the following year, also in childbirth, aged 21. Both women were daughters of Miles Smith, the then Bishop of Gloucester and one of the translators of the 1611 King James Bible.
This is Abraham Blackleech lying next to his wife, Gertrude, who erected their monument in 1639. We know that he was a gentleman and benefactor, and also that he had smelly feet. How? Look at the expression on the face of that bird of prey as it realises that it's stuck there propping them up for all eternity.
More about my jaunt to Gloucester anon.
The last time I'd been to Gloucester, as opposed to through it, was as a small child on the bus with my mother and sister. My mum told me off for reading a book on the way because I'd get sick but I didn't. We went to the Cathedral - my father had explained to me what fan vaulting was in advance - and the livestock market where the pigs were bleeding from having holes punched in their ears. I came back with a model animal for my farm, which was my favourite toy.
I decided, therefore, that a return visit to the Cathedral was almost certainly long overdue, but before I even got there, there was an amuse-bouche positively smothered in childhood and tied up with a big pink bow of literary interest. Look, the Tailor of Gloucester's House!
Through the arch was the Cathedral, and after the dark brick of Chester, how lovely it was to set eyes on buttery West Country stone. The main morning service was still in progress when I arrived, so I took a wander around the Cloisters.
Now, you might well recognise these and so you should because great tranches of the Harry Potter films were shot here. I remembered how when I was teaching a class of German high school students during my year abroad, they had scoffed to see Gloucester Cathedral described in their textbook as world-famous. Well, it is now.
I was particularly pleased to spot this late Morris & Co window, c1920, and the watery-themed Victorian stained glass in the lavatorium.
Oh, but the stone! I wonder if the monks, copying scriptures with numb fingers, took solace in the staggering beauty of it, or did they become inured?
After a coffee in the Cathedral café, the Remembrance Day service was over and the godless could roam. There was more glorious glass for a start, these windows by Thomas Denny having been installed in the South Ambulatory Chapel in 1989 to mark the 900th anniversary celebrations of the current building on this site.
And this lovely work of art was installed in the Lady Chapel in 1992 to commemorate the Gloucestershire composer of English Church Music, Herbert Howells.
In fact, Gloucester Cathedral is as good at commemorating the dead as Chester is at wood carving. Here's a few of my favourite tombs and memorials.
The tomb of Thomas Machen and his wife, Christian, who died in 1614 and 1615 respectively and who both look pretty intimidating. They had seven sons and six daughters, and their Latin inscription reads 'It comes down to this: we die. Death is the final boundary of things'.
Their near neighbours and contemporaries, John Bower (d 1615) and Anne (d 1613) had nine sons and seven daughters, so there ...
... whilst poor Elizabeth Williams died in childbirth in 1622 at the age of 17. Her sister, Margery Clent, fared little better, dying the following year, also in childbirth, aged 21. Both women were daughters of Miles Smith, the then Bishop of Gloucester and one of the translators of the 1611 King James Bible.
This is Abraham Blackleech lying next to his wife, Gertrude, who erected their monument in 1639. We know that he was a gentleman and benefactor, and also that he had smelly feet. How? Look at the expression on the face of that bird of prey as it realises that it's stuck there propping them up for all eternity.
Going back further in time, there are tombs of sundry Abbots, the Cathedral having been a Benedictine Monastery up until the Dissolution of the Monasteries, a 15th century effigy of Osric who founded the first religious house on that site in 679, and this rather dashing figure in painted bog oak of Robert Shortstockings, the rebellious eldest son of William the Conqueror who seems to have been the butt of many practical jokes and who never did manage to claim the English throne.
This is perhaps the most beautiful and famous of ancient tombs in the Cathedral, however - namely, that of King Edward II who was murdered at Berkeley Castle in 1327.
The guide book cites suffocation as cause of death. I hope it was rather than the more horrific method traditionally given.
An interesting bit of graffiti with serifs carved onto the tomb makes mention of Pearce Gaviston and Spencer [sic].
Two more modern memorials I loved were those of Douglas Tinling and Ivor Gurney, both in the Arts and Crafts idiom, although the latter's is a good deal later than Tinling's, who was a Canon of the Cathedral and died in 1897. Poor Ivor, composer and poet of the Severn and the Somme, who never recovered from his experiences during the Great War. It's fitting to remember him today, a casualty of war as much as any soldier fallen at the Somme.
More about my jaunt to Gloucester anon.
Saturday, 10 November 2012
A Poem for Remembrance Day 2012
Tobruk
for LRH
Silence,
not
for two minutes
but
sixty years.
Only
then does he start to talk,
not
to his family but his brothers,
those
soldiers in slippers,
with
cemetery teeth,
their
medals saucepan lids
pinned
to punctured chests,
their
stories shrapnel
lodged
in matter
from
a distant land called War.
Later,
I gather rusted splinters,
their
gist a desert expedition:
mirage
of wire,
signs
in barbed Gothic script,
hot
metal surfacing
through
oceanic sand, in front, behind. I panic,
turn
to trace his steps,
a
trail of breadcrumbs
swallowed
up by circling dunes;
not
knowing how this terror ends,
if
my father will survive
to
speak its name.
© Deborah Harvey 2011
My father was ground crew in the RAF during the second world war and saw service in Palestine, Egypt, Tripolitania and Italy.
This poem is from my collection, Communion, published by Indigo Dreams. If you like, you can read some more here.
Thursday, 1 November 2012
Like the Swiftest Arrow Whizzing from a Bow ...
Photograph: FogStock/Alamy
Plus, he and his partner, Dawn Bauling, have been in talks with the owner of Bossiney Books, who will pass on any contacts he receives that are not suitable for Bossiney, ie anything not specifically to do with walks.
PLUS, Tamar Books are also going to be using Bossiney's distributor, which means that Dart will get much wider coverage in its home region than would otherwise have been the case. Which in turn means I might well get to do more readings and therefore more jaunts with more nights in the biscuit tin by the sea! Ted is going to have to learn how to sit still during readings and/or pass himself off as a guide dog. And Dart's lovely cover by Dru Marland will have the names of two magical rivers on it instead of just the one.
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