Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Richard Jefferies

'The commonest pebble, dusty and marked with the stain of the ground, seems to me so wonderful; my mind works round it till it becomes the sun and centre of a system of thought and feeling. Sometimes moving aside the tufts of grass with careless fingers while resting on the sward, I found these little pebble-stones loose in the crumbly earth among the rootlets. Then, brought out from the shadow, the sunlight shone and glistened on the particles of sand that adhered to it. Particles adhered to my skin - thousands of years between finger and thumb, these atoms of quartz and sunlight shining all that time, and flowers blooming and life glowing in all, myriads of living things, from the cold still limpet on the rock to the burning, throbbing heart of man.' Richard Jefferies, 'Hours of Spring'.

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John Richard Jefferies (6 November 1848 - 14 August 1887) was an English nature writer, noted for his depiction of English rural life in essays, books of natural history, and novels. His childhood on a small Wiltshire farm had a great influence on him and provides the background to all his major works of fiction. For all that, these show a remarkable diversity, including Bevis (1882), a classic children's book, and After London (1885), an early work of science fiction. For much of his adult life, he suffered from tuberculosis, and his struggles with the illness and with poverty also play a role in his writing. Jefferies valued and cultivated an intensity of feeling in his experience of the world around him, a cultivation that he describes in detail in The Story of My Heart (1883). This work, an introspective depiction of his thoughts and feelings on the world, gained him the reputation of a nature mystic at the time. But it is his success in conveying his awareness of nature and people within it, both in his fiction and in essay collections such as The Amateur Poacher (1879) and Round About a Great Estate (1880), that has drawn most admirers. Walter Besant wrote of his reaction on first reading Jefferies: "Why, we must have been blind all our lives; here were the most wonderful things possible going on under our very noses, but we saw them not.
(Source: Wikipedia)
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Free Reading in Project Gutenberg

Jefferies, Richard, 1848-1887




A Literature of Place by Barry Lopez

In the United States in recent years, a kind of writing variously called "nature writing" or "landscape writing" has begun to receive critical attention, leading some to assume that this is a relatively new kind of work. In fact, writing that takes into account the impact nature and place have on culture is one of the oldest--and perhaps most singular--threads in American writing. Melville in Moby-Dick, Thoreau, of course, and novelists such as Willa Cather, John Steinbeck, and William Faulkner come quickly to mind here, and more recently Peter Matthiessen, Wendell Berry, Wallace Stegner, and the poets W.S. Merwin, Amy Clampitt, and Gary Snyder.

If there is anything different in this area of North American writing--and I believe there is--it is the hopeful tone it frequently strikes in an era of cynical detachment, and its explicitly dubious view of technological progress, even of capitalism.

The real topic of nature writing, I think, is not nature but the evolving structure of communities from which nature has been removed, often as a consequence of modern economic development. It is writing concerned, further, with the biological and spiritual fate of those communities. It also assumes that the fate of humanity and nature are inseparable. Nature writing in the United States merges here, I believe, with other sorts of post-colonial writing, particularly in Commonwealth countries. In numerous essays it addresses the problem of spiritual collapse in the West and, like those literatures, it is in search of a modern human identity that lies beyond nationalism and material wealth.

I want to concentrate on a single aspect of this phenomenon--geography--but in so doing I hope to hew to a larger line of truth. I want to talk about geography as a shaping force, not a subject. Another way critics have of describing nature writing is to call it the "literature of place." A specific and particular setting for human experience and endeavor is, indeed, central to the work of many nature writers. I would say, further, that it is also critical to the development of a sense of morality and human identity.

No writer may presume to speak for his colleagues in defining these matters, but as someone who is identified with "nature writing" I'd like to try to explain the importance of place to me. I am someone who returns again and again to geography, as the writers of another generation once returned repeatedly to Freud and psychoanalysis.

It is my belief that a human imagination is shaped by the architecture it encounters at an early age. The visual landscape, of course, or the depth, elevation, and hues of a cityscape play a part here, as does the way sunlight everywhere etches lines to accentuate forms. But the way we imagine is also affected by streams of scent flowing faint or sharp in the larger ocean of air; by what the North American composer John Luther Adams calls the sonic landscape; and, say, by an awareness of how temperature and humidity rise and fall in a place over a year.

My imagination was shaped by the exotic nature of water in a dry southern California valley; by the sound of wind in the crowns of eucalyptus trees; by the tactile sensation of sheened earth, turned in furrows by a gang plow; by banks of saffron, mahogany and scarlet cloud piled above a field of alfalfa at dusk; by encountering the musk from orange blossoms at the edge of an orchard; by the aftermath of a Pacific storm crashing a hot, flat beach.

Added to the nudge of these sensations were an awareness of the height and breadth of the sky, and of the geometry and force of the wind. Both perceptions grew directly out of my efforts to raise pigeons and from the awe I felt before them as they maneuvered in the air. They gave me permanently a sense of the vertical component of life.

I became intimate with the elements of that particular universe. They fashioned me. I return to them regularly in essays and stories in order to clarify or explain abstractions or to strike contrasts. I find the myriad relationships in that universe comforting. They form a "coherence" of which I once was a part.

If I were to try to explain the process of becoming a writer, I could begin by saying that the comforting intimacy I knew in that California valley erected in me a kind of story I wanted to tell, a pattern I wanted to evoke in countless ways. And I would add to this two things that were profoundly magical to me as a boy: animals and language. It's relatively easy to say why animals might seem magical. Spiders and birds are bound differently than we are by gravity. Many wild creatures travel unerringly through the dark. And animals regularly respond to what we, even at our most attentive, cannot discern.

It is harder to say why language seemed magical, but I can be precise about this. The first book I read was The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. I still have the book. Underlined in it in pen are the first words I could recognize: the, a, stop, to go, to see. I pick up the book today and recall the expansion of my first feelings, a slow, silent detonation: words I heard people speak I could now perceive as marks on a page. I myself was learning to make these same marks on ruled paper. It seemed as glorious and mysterious as a swift flock of tumbler pigeons exploiting the invisible wind.


My travel is often to remote places--Antarctica, the Tanami Desert in central Australia, northern Kenya. In these places I depend on my own wits and resources, but heavily and more often on the knowledge of interpreters--archeologists, field scientists, anthropologists. Eminent among such helpers are indigenous people; and I can quickly give you three reasons for my dependence on their insights. As a rule, indigenous people pay much closer attention to nuance in the physical world. They see more. And from only a handful of evidence, thoroughly observed, they can deduce more. Second, their history in a place, a combination of tribal and personal history, is typically deep. This history creates a temporal dimension in what is otherwise only a spatial landscape. Third, indigenous people tend to occupy the same moral universe as the land they sense. Their bonds with the earth are as much moral and biological.

Over time I have come to think of these three qualities--paying intimate attention; a storied relationship to a place rather than a solely sensory awareness of it; and living in some sort of ethical unity with a place--as a fundamental human defense against loneliness. If you're intimate with a place, a place with whose history you're familiar, and you establish an ethical conversation with it, the implication that follows is this: the place knows you're there. It feels you. You will not be forgotten, cut off, abandoned.

As a writer I want to ask on behalf of the reader: How can a person obtain this? How can you occupy a place and also have it occupy you? How can you find such a reciprocity?

The key, I think, is to become vulnerable to a place. If you open yourself up, you can build intimacy. Out of such intimacy may come a sense of belonging, a sense of not being isolated in the universe.

How does one actually enter a local geography? To respond explicitly and practicably, my first suggestion would be to be silent. Put aside the bird book, the analytic state of mind, any compulsion to identify, and sit still. Concentrate instead on feeling a place, on deliberately using the sense of proprioception. Where in this volume of space are you situated? The space behind you is as important as what you see before you. What lies beneath you is as relevant as what stands on the far horizon. Actively use your ears to imagine the acoustical hemisphere you occupy. How does birdsong ramify here? Through what kind of air is it moving? Concentrate on smells in the belief you can smell water and stone. Use your hands to get the heft and texture of a place--the tensile strength in a willow branch, the moisture in a pinch of soil, the different nap of leaves. Open a vertical line to the place by joining the color and form of the sky to what you see out across the ground. Look away from what you want to scrutinize in order to gain a sense of its scale and proportion. Cultivate a sense of complexity, the sense that another landscape exists beyond the one you can subject to analysis.

A succinct way to describe the frame of mind one should bring to a landscape is to say it rests on the distinction between imposing and proposing one's views. With a sincere proposal you hope to achieve an intimate, reciprocal relationship that will feed you in some way. To impose your views from the start is to truncate such a possibility, to preclude understanding.


Many of us, I think, long to become the companion of a place, not its authority, not its owner. And this brings me to a final point. I think many wonder, as I do, why over the last few decades people in Western countries have become so anxious about the fate of undeveloped land, and so concerned about losing the intelligence of people who've kept up intimate relations with those places. I don't know where the thinking of others has led them, but I believe curiosity about good relations with a particular stretch of land now is directly related to speculation that it may be more important to human survival to be in love than to be in a position of power. It may be more important now to enter into an ethical and reciprocal relationship with everything around us than to continue to work toward the sort of control of the physical world that, until recently, we aspired to.

The simple issue of our biological plausibility, our chance for biological survival, has become so basic a question, that finding a way out of the predicament--if one is to be had--is imperative. It calls on our collective imaginations with an urgency we've never known before. We are in need not just of another kind of logic, another way of knowing. We need a radically different philosophical sensibility.

When I was a boy, running through orange groves in southern California, watching wind swirl in a grove of blue gum, and swimming ecstatically in the foam of Pacific breakers, I had no such imperative thoughts. I was content to watch a brace of pigeons fly across an azure sky, rotating on an axis that to this day I don't think I could draw. My comfort, my sense of inclusion in the small universe I inhabited, came from an appreciation of, a participation in, all that I saw, smelled, tasted, and heard.

We keep each other alive with our stories. We need to share them, as much as we need to share food. We also require for our health the presence of good companions. One of the most extraordinary things about the land is that it knows this--and it compels language from some of us so that as a community we may converse about this or that place, and speak of the need.

Barry Lopez is the author of eleven books, among them Arctic Dreams, which won the 1986 National Book Award, and his newest book About This Life. He is a recipient of a Distinguished Recognition Award in fiction from Friends of American Writers as well as PEN Syndicated Fiction and Pushcart prizes for his stories.

This essay is based in part upon a presentation by the author at the Salamanca Writers Festival in Hobart, Tasmania, in March 1996.

This essay first appeared in this form in the University of Portland's Portland Magazine, Summer 1997. Used by permission of Sterling Lord Literistic, Inc. Copyright 1997 Barry Lopez.


Friday, June 18, 2010

WHERE THE WILD THINGS WERE

As a society - with our societal belief in consumption as a right, and desire as a finer force than need - we seem to tunnel on, deaf to the noise of the roof and walls collapsing behind us. Nevertheless, I want to offer a suggestion to close the gap between knowledge and place.

The suggestion - which echoes a similar call made by Lopez exactly 20 years ago in America - is that a series of classic works of nature writing from England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland should be established and published. It would be a series of local writings, which concentrated on particular places, and which worked always to individuate, never to generalise.

It would, however, honour a form of care, and a form of attention, to the landscapes of the British Isles. It would discover in landscapes values which transcend the commercial and the consumerist. And it would restore to visibility a tradition of nature writing which has slipped from view these past 50 years.

Such a series, as I imagine it, would reach backwards in time as well as outwards in space:

to Gilbert White's A Natural History of Selborne (1789),

to Duncan Ban MacIntyre's great long southern Highland poem, "In Praise of Ben Dorain" (1750s),

to Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (late 14th-century),

to the medieval Irish saga of Buile Suibhne (Sweeney Astray, in Seamus Heaney's translation), which travels between the ancient wild places of Ulster.

It would of course include Tim Robinson in Aran and Connemara,

J A Baker in coastal Essex - the wonderful lost land of the Dengie Peninsula -

Jim Perrin in Snowdonia,

Henry Williamson's Tarka the Otter in Dartmoor.

Other possibles would be Ronald Blythe's Akenfield in Suffolk;

Bruce Chatwin's On the Black Hill for the Welsh marches;

Gavin Maxwell on Camusfearna;

Geoffrey Household's Rogue Male for Dorset;

sections from Cobbett's Rural Rides;

Auden on north Yorkshire;

W H Murray on Glen Coe.

These are only the most obvious names. There would be many more, as yet unknown to me: in other languages (Gaelic, Welsh, Breton), other genres (scientific studies, prose-poems); and other, less immediately glamorous, landscapes.


There would, to my mind, be two prerequisites for a book to be included in this series.

Firstly, it would have to evince the belief that - in Lopez's fine phrase - the "fate of humanity and the fate of nature are inseparable".

Secondly, it would have to suggest, however obliquely, that the natural environment must be approached not with a view to conquest, acquisition and short-term use, but according to the principles of restraint and reciprocity.

In this sense, each book in the series would be a subtle work of hope. Each would set itself against the unbalance and ignorance of the present time. Each would guide us some way towards the common ground.


NATURE WRITING Mapping nature

Cornwall
Freedom of the Parish by Geoffrey Grigson

Devon
Tarka the Otter by Henry Williamson
Ted Hughes's poetry
Dart by Alice Oswald
Lorna Doone by RD Blackmore (also Somerset)
A Black Fox Running by Brian Carter

Dorset
Thomas Hardy's Wessex novels
John Llewelyn Powys's Somerset and Dorset essays

Somerset
Portrait of the Quantocks by Vincent Waite
Alfoxden Journal by Dorothy Wordsworth
Coleridge's letters and journal from the Quantock years
Lorna Doone by RD Blackmore (also Devon)

Wiltshire
Ridgeway Country by HM Timperly
The Story of My Heart by Richard Jefferies

Sussex
Nature in Downland by WH Hudson
The South Country by Edward Thomas

Kent
Window on a Hill and Small Moments by Richard Church

Berkshire
Where The Bright Waters Meet by Harry Plunkett Greene

Oxfordshire
Lark Rise to Candleford by Flora Thompson
Lifting the Latch by Sheila Steward

Herefordshire
A Herefordshire Pomona by Hogg and Bull

Essex
The Hill of Summer by JA Baker

Suffolk
The Rings of Saturn by WG Sebald
Corduroy, Silver Ley, The Cherry Tree by Adrian Bell

Norfolk
Waterland by Graham Swift
Coot Club by Arthur Ransome (it contains, its advocate explained, "wonderful atmospheric description of the Norfolk Broads as it was in his time. The concern for birds and their nesting requirements, the care for the environment, and man's thoughtless destroying of that environment written many years before Friends of the Earth was born")

Hampshire
Hampshire Days by WH Hudson

Gloucestershire
Cider With Rosie by Laurie Lee

Pembrokeshire
The Captain's Wife by Lettice Peters

Cardiganshire
Wings Over the Valley by John Green
Welsh Journal by Jeremy Hooker

Snowdonia
Wild Wales by George Borrow
Skywalls by Clyde Holmes

Cheshire
Alan Garner, especially The Voice That Thunders

Shropshire
Mary Webb's novels (which were so stung at by Stella Gibbons in Cold Comfort Farm)
A Shropshire Lad by AE Housman

Yorkshire
The Hawthorn Goddess and The Rape of the Rose by Glyn Hughes
Life on Limestone by Anna Adams
Ted Hughes's Yorkshire poems
Remains of Elmet by Ted Hughes (with photographs by Fay Godwin)
Swaledale: Valley of the Wild River by Andrew Fleming
Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë

Cumbria
Hills of Lakeland by William Heaton Cooper
Selected Poems by Norman Nicholson
Cockley Beck, A Celebration of Lakeland in Winter by John Pepper (a finely written account of a man living alone in a mountain cottage for nine winters)
The Grasmere Journal by Dorothy Wordsworth
And of course William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and Robert Southey

Northumbria
A Border County by Henry Tegner

Roxburghshire/Berwickshire
Harvest of the Hills and Wigtonshire by Angus Winchester
My Childhood by John McNeillie

Aberdeenshire
A Scots Quair by Lewis Grassic Gibbon
The Living Mountain by Nan Shepherd (rightly described by Robert Wilkinson as "an exquisite prose meditation")

Inverness-shire
Song of the Rolling Earth by John Lister-Kaye
Gavin Maxwell's Ring of Bright Water trilogy

The Western Isles
Sorley MacLean, Selected Poems
Island Years by Frank Frazer Darling

Assynt and Sutherland
Norman McCaig, Selected Poems

The Orkneys
George Mackay Brown's novels and poems


· Robert Macfarlane is the author of Mountains of the Mind (2003), which won the Guardian First Book award, and The Wild Places, a book about wildness in Britain and Ireland.


Nature Writing

Rock of ages

Robert Macfarlane on how Tim Robinson read messages from history in Aran limestone

The history of the British Isles could be well told through its five great rocks — granite, sandstone, slate, chalk, and limestone. There are others, of course: schist, shale, basalt, the clays. But these five form a strong mineral pentangle within which the islands and their pasts are contained.

Each of these rocks has its character, and each its literary keepers.

Granite is Ted Hughes's stone, and that of DH Lawrence in Kangaroo.

Chalk belongs to the southern downlanders: EM Forster, GK Chesterton, Gilbert White.

Sandstone to Hugh Miller.

Slate to Jim Perrin, Caradog Prichard, Kate Roberts.

Limestone has been blessed with two exceptional 20th-century writers. The first of these is WH Auden, who so loved the high karst shires of the northern Pennines. What most moved Auden about limestone was the way it eroded. Limestone is soluble in water, which means that any fault-lines in the original rock get slowly deepened by a process of soft liquid wear. Thus the form into which limestone grows over time is determined by its first flaws. For Auden, this was a metaphysical as well as a geological quality: he found in limestone a very human honesty — an acknowledgement that we are as defined by our faults as by our substance.

The second of the great limestone writers is Tim Robinson. On the west coast of Ireland, in County Clare, between the granite of Galway and the sandstones of Liscannor, rises a vast limestone escarpment, pewterish in colour on a dull day, silver in sunshine. The limestone begins in the area of north-west Clare known as The Burren — from the Gaelic boireann, meaning "rocky place". From there it extends in a north-west direction, dipping beneath the Atlantic, to resurge thirty miles offshore as three islands: Árainn, Inis Meáin, and Inis Oírr — or the Aran Islands, as they are also called.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Book Review

Showing how to summarize a book

ON (ABSURD) HUMAN CONDITION

The Myth of Sisyphus by Albert Camus

This is the finest theoretical work on absurdity.

Camus compares the human condition to the fate of Sisyphus, eternally condemned to push a rock up a hill, a fable that will resonate with all those obliged to work for a living.

But Camus argues, convincingly, that Sisyphus can be happy with his rock.

The book is short, exquisitely well-written, and full of sentences that should be on coffee mugs, T-shirts and fridge magnets everywhere.

A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again by David Foster Wallace

This hilarious and terrifying account of a Caribbean Luxury Cruise is scrupulous documentary realism but also a contemporary fable.

The perfect symbol of the age is a cruise liner – a gigantic mobile pleasure palace conveying outsize infants in pastel leisurewear round a series of shopping venues.

Wallace reports, in amazement: "I have heard upscale adult US citizens ask the Guest Relations Desk whether snorkelling necessitates getting wet, whether the skeetshooting will be held outside, whether the crew sleeps on board, and what time the Midnight Buffet is."




Monday, April 12, 2010

Lay Morals by Robert Louis Stevenson

CHAPTER I

The problem of education is twofold: first to know, and then to utter.

Every one who lives any semblance of an inner life thinks more nobly and profoundly than he speaks; and the best of teachers can impart only broken images of the truth which they perceive. Speech which goes from one to another between two natures, and, what is worse, between two experiences, is doubly relative. The speaker buries his meaning; it is for the hearer to dig it up again; and all speech, written or spoken, is in a dead language until it finds a willing and prepared hearer.


Every generation has to educate another which it has brought upon the stage.

People who readily accept the responsibility of parentship, having very different matters in their eye, are apt to feel rueful when that responsibility falls due. What are they to tell the child about life and conduct, subjects on which they have themselves so few and such confused opinions?


As a matter of experience, and in nine hundred and ninety-nine cases out of a thousand, he will instil into his wide-eyed brat three bad things: the terror of public opinion, and, flowing from that as a fountain, the desire of wealth and applause. Besides these, or what might be deduced as corollaries from these, he will teach not much else of any effective value: some dim notions of divinity, perhaps, and book-keeping, and how to walk through a quadrille.


http://robert-louis-stevenson.classic-literature.co.uk/lay-morals-and-other-papers/


Pack Ice

What is pack?

Speaking very generally indeed, in this region it is the sea-ice which forms over the Ross Sea area during the winter, and is blown northwards by the southerly blizzards. Thus it is that floes from a few inches to twenty feet thick go voyaging out to join the belt of ice which is known as the pack.

It is clear that winds and currents are, broadly speaking, the governing factors of the density of pack-ice. The tendency of the pack is northwards, where the ice melts into the warmer waters. But the bergs remain when all traces of the pack have disappeared, and, drifting northwards. And the last stages of these, when the bergs have degenerated into 'growlers,' are even worse, for then the sharpest eye can hardly distinguish them as they float nearly submerged though they have lost but little of their powers.

A berg shows only about one-eighth of its total mass above water, and a berg two hundred feet high will therefore reach approximately fourteen hundred feet below the surface of the sea. There are two main types of Antarctic berg. The first and most common is the tabular form. Bergs of this shape cruise about in thousands and thousands. A less common form is known as the pinnacled berg, and in almost every case this is a tabular berg which has been weathered or has capsized. The number of bergs which calve direct from a mountain glacier into the sea is probably not very great. Whence then do they come?

To the biologist the pack is of absorbing interest. If you want to see life, naked and unashamed, study the struggles of this ice-world, from the diatom in the ice-floe to the big killer whale; each stage essential to the life of the stage above, and living on the stage below:

THE PROTOPLASMIC CYCLE

Big floes have little floes all around about 'em,
And all the yellow diatom couldn't do without 'em.
Forty million shrimplets feed upon the latter,
And
they make the penguin and the seals and whales
Much fatter.

Along comes the Orca and kills these down below,
While up above the Afterguardattack them on the floe:
And if a sailor tumbles in and stoves the mushy pack in,
He's crumpled up between the floes, and so they get
Their whack in.

Then there's no doubt he soon becomes a Patent Fertilizer,
Invigorating diatoms, although they're none the wiser,
So the protoplasm passes on its never-ceasing round,
Like a huge recurring decimal ... to which no
End is found.


Extracts from Apsley Cherry-Garrard, The Worst Journey in the World