Friday, 7 August 2015

St. Enodoc's Chuch, North Cornwall



Last month I visited the beautiful coastline of North Cornwall with one mission in mind.  Setting off from Exmouth, the journey to Daymer Bay, near Rock and Padstow took 1 hour and 45 minutes.  Not a long journey to travel to what always seems to me another country.  Like crossing the Styx, crossing the River Tamar is indeed a journey into a different realm but of the positive kind.  More a country than a county, to visit Cornwall is to visit a land rich in a unique culture and history.  Even the geography, with its wild moorland, Mediterranean fauna and high-thicketed lanes, prone to sudden sea-mists lends a sense separateness on the senses.    However, despite my assertion above, there was one aspect of mortality that I had in mind when visiting the secluded St Enodoc's Church, Trebetherick, and that was to visit the grave of Sir John Betjeman, the former Poet Laureate.

Betjeman conjures up for me, memories of O-Level English Literature and being introduced to a poet who ought not to make any connection with me.  He was from a privileged background, wrote about churches, architecture and made middle–age observations on middle-class life.  How on Earth could this man make any connect with a fifteen-year old boy interested only in science fiction, fantasy and music?  But he did.  His poems made a direct connection not only with me but with most of the other students in the class.  His poems were witty (Upper Lambourne) and somehow tinged with sadness and regret (A Child Ill, Norfolk).  They also had a subversive quality, (Slough for example) which would appeal to most youths “Come friendly bombs and fall on Slough/It isn’t fit for humans now”.  Despite his genteel and toffish exterior, he had a subversive quality and embodied  a conservatism with a small c with his unique sensibility towards the aesthetic and spiritual quality of buildings.  Betjamen bemoaned the destruction of a pastoral and historic Britain by face-less bureaucrats, small-town aldermen and city-planners whom he argued, had  ripped  the hearts out of towns and cities, replacing them with sanitised and homogenised functional architecture which in turn sapped the individuality and spirituality from the inhabitants of such places and thus achieving more destruction to post-war Britain than the Luftwaffe had ever done to challenge the national psyche and sense of identity. 

His poems were beautifully constructed and accessible and that is perhaps one of the reasons they remain so popular among people from all backgrounds and why Betjeman remains still in the public memory.   That first O-Level year I studied Betjeman, Robert Frost, Edwin Muir and Edward Thomas and while I admired the qualities of all the poets and respected their craft, only Betjeman and Frost remained affixed to my memory.  They taught me that profundity need not reside in elaborate words but in simple, straight-forward language. 

St. Enodoc’s Church is small and unassuming; a fitting resting place for a man who wrote so fondly of Cornwall and Devon but more particularly of the dividing line between land and sea. Only on revisiting his poetry prior to journeying to Cornwall did I realis just how much, in terms of binary opposites, images and themes,  sea and sand, water and land, the imaginary and the real recur, throughout his work.

  

The chapel overlooks the lovely Daymer Bay and access for me that day was achieved via a golf course.  From this approach one can only see the churches almost stooping steeple rising from the grassland which is once surreal and intriguing.  While warily looking out for low flying golf balls, I negotiated the course and within five-minutes was at the church’s entrance with its unusual Lychgate made from the local stone and slate with the coffin shelf being placed at its centre rather than at one side.



 As one walks through the entrance, John Betjeman’s grave is immediately to the right.  It is modest yet ornate, containing flourishes in the Victorian and Edwardian tradition.








It was a beautifully warm Cornish summer day and the view from the graveyard over the bay and St. Minver lowlands was stunning.  I was not alone.  During the thirty-minutes I spent exploring the churchyard and the church, at least twelve other people arrived.  They all visited Betjeman’s grave and had their photograph taken there.  Access to the church is also by the South West Coastal path and later learned that there is a Sir John Betjeman walk which I assume many of these people had taken.






A while ago I posted Betjeman’s poem ‘Norfolk’.  I feel it fitting to post ‘Cornish Cliffs’.

(c) Stephen Evans 


Cornish Cliffs    - John Betjeman

Those moments, tasted once and never done,
Of long surf breaking in the mid-day sun.
A far-off blow-hole booming like a gun-

The seagulls plane and circle out of sight
Below this thirsty, thrift-encrusted height,
The veined sea-campion buds burst into white

And gorse turns tawny orange, seen beside
Pale drifts of primroses cascading wide
To where the slate falls sheer into the tide.

More than in gardened Surrey, nature spills
A wealth of heather, kidney-vetch and squills
Over these long-defended Cornish hills.

A gun-emplacement of the latest war
Looks older than the hill fort built before
Saxon or Norman headed for the shore.

And in the shadowless, unclouded glare
Deep blue above us fades to whiteness where
A misty sea-line meets the wash of air.

Nut-smell of gorse and honey-smell of ling
Waft out to sea the freshness of the spring
On sunny shallows, green and whispering.

The wideness which the lark-song gives the sky
Shrinks at the clang of sea-birds sailing by
Whose notes are tuned to days when seas are high.

From today's calm, the lane's enclosing green
Leads inland to a usual Cornish scene-
Slate cottages with sycamore between,

Small fields and tellymasts and wires and poles
With, as the everlasting ocean rolls,
Two chapels built for half a hundred souls.