Thursday, July 2, 2020

Chalk; or waiting for the plumber;)

Finding old blogs, this from 2010, Pat mentioned 'meditation' this morning, and to be honest I always need to be doing something, so my acts of meditation were in fact those long walks round places like Avebury, Wayland Smithy long barrow, West Kennet Barrow, I could go on.  Wandering amongst the stones of the past is a meditation.  

So a poem by Jeremy Hooker, and a video on a  meditation on chalk, which everyone should watch.


Chalk; A poem by Jeremy Hooker

This poem came from a library book long out of print, called Soliloquies of a Chalk Giant by Jeremy Hooker.  The book had to go back to the library but I managed to copy a couple of the poems, and I must have written to him about the provenance of another poem.  Hooker came from Southampton but a lot of his working life was spent in Wales as a lecturer.  His heroes were Edward Thomas and  Richard Jefferies and his writing here captures the essence of chalk on the downlands and the long line of prehistory as those first neolithic people settled on this dry upland.  So as I have no title I shall call it Chalk, to go with a youtube video on meditation that Bovey Belle has put up on her blog  and also to speed  BBs recovery too getting better.
Collecting a stone, feather or a shell stays with us from childhood, the act of collecting a wild flower or some token is a reminder of the natural world and our place in it.  Macfarlane would always collect a stone from where ever he walked, the bright whiteness of quartz, or the the dark stones of the cliffs.  Natural chalk figures can be found round Avebury, take the Green Road up to the downs and you can pick strangely shaped lumps of chalk or even flint nodules their shiny surface sometimes like striped toffee. Such collections will litter a window sill with their untidiness, I remember picking up a small bluestone stone, and marvelling at the slaty-blue colour not quite believing that this particular type of stone was quarried here on Carn Menyi  in South-West Wales and transported all the way down to Stonehenge in Wessex.  But at the same time that small fragment of stone held in my hand felt like something special, and now with the new theories they are saying that the building of Stonehenge was a way uniting  the many clans and tribes from all over Britain perhaps those special bluestones were transported down to the sea to follow the paths of sea and rivers till at last they arrived in another land.......
From my walk yesterday, I bought home the barred brown feather of a hawk and some wild oat grass I think, as the grasses and the red flowers of the docks are at their best alongside the pale pink of the mallows...

Chalk

A memorial of its origins, chalk in barns and churches
moulders in rain and damp;petrified creatures swim
in its depths.

It is domestic, with the homeliness of an ancient
hearth exposed to the weather, pale with the ash of
countless primeval fires. Here the plough grates on an
urnfield, the green plover stands with crest erect on
a royal mound.

Chalk is the moon's stone; the skeleton is native to its
soil. It looks anaemic, but has submerged the type-sites
of successive cultures. Stone, bronze, iron; all are assimilated to
its nature;
and the hill-forts follow its curves.

These, surely, are the works of giants; temples
re-dedicated to the sky-god, spires fashioned for the
lords of bowmen;

Spoils of the worn idol, squat Venus of the mines.

Druids leave their shops in the midsummer solstice;
neophytes tread an antic measure to the antlered god.
Men who trespass are soon absorbed, horns laid beside
them in the ground. The burnt-out tank waits beside
the barrow.

The god is a graffito carved on the belly of the chalk,
his savage gesture subdued by the stuff of his creation.
He is taken up like a gaunt white doll by the round hills,
wrapped around by the long pale hair of the fields.




10 comments:

  1. What a lovely way to start the day - a beautiful evocative poem (I was at Avebury too!) and then the chalk meditation, which has me at peace. Beautiful music to accompany it too (Vaughan Williams?)

    I feel a kinship with Jeremy Hooker, with his heroes being mine too. I found a book of Richard Jefferies only this week - it had strayed into my archaeology section.

    Like McFarlane, I have long collected stones (I remember doing it in the front garden at home - we had a very gravelly stony soil and I used to pick out the interesting ones. I have two broken Kimmeridge ammonites on my desk, one much worn from the waves, and another - the soil inside another ancient ammonite shell, turned to flint. A piece of Dartmoor granite and a striated quartz and red sandstone pebble.

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    1. Paul collected stones and ammonites they are scattered around on various surfaces. I collect less now, the nearer one gets to the final hour the less one collects;). There is so much chalk around Avebury, if you go to East Kennet long barrow, the badgers have scratched it up and thrown it out of their holes.
      We have known each other for a long time Jennie and I am very grateful for your friendship.

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    2. And I your friendship too Thelma. I am out of kilter with archaeology these days - even in Lockdown so many calls on my time - but I always enjoy what you discuss. I wish we could meet up again - oh, and how I would love to visit Avebury and the West Kennet long barrow again too. We are allowed some freedom on Monday here . . .

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  2. That meditation on chalk has started my day off well Thelma - very restful.

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    1. I think as a meditation it reminds us that sitting in a yoga style trying to achieving another layer of existence is not necessarily the only way, the mind meditates, a whole stream of memories float through.

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  3. I left my car by Wayland's Smithy once, and in the morning it had a new set of tyres.

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  4. ;) Come on, Wayland shod horses not cars!

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  5. I read Jeremy Hooker's poem and listened to Andrew Norris's meditation with keen attention. They speak of fundamental things. I hope that some of their attention to chalk and the earth beneath us seeps into my own creative reservoir. Thanks for sharing Thelma.

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  6. Well you can thank Jennie (Codlins and Cream) for the video, for she introduced me to it. But the poem captures the actual landscape of prehistory whether it is geological or human. I had forgotten how much of my time was caught up in Avebury and the surrounding wealth of prehistory.

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    1. I had quite forgotten it, so it was lovely to re-visit it again. My brain needs a good kick up the behind I think as it has been very lazy of late.

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