Beside the A19 |
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Frédéric
Gros, A Philosophy of Walking
Sunday
starts in the car park of The White Ensign. At the top of the pub, as
decoration more than functioning weather vane, is a ship. Before today, I have
never seen it. I’ve driven past this pub, which now doubles up as a curry
house, down King George Road, one of the main arterial roads connecting South
Shields, hundreds of times, and I’ve walked down it many times, too. But to
stand here, look up, and notice that it has a ship on its roof? I’ve obviously
not stood here and just looked before.
In a week’s
time, I will be in Portland, Oregon; in a fortnight, Whistler, British
Columbia; in three weeks, Vancouver; in a month, Cheshire. In four weeks I will
travel further than Bede likely ever travelled in his lifetime.
Photo credit: Keith Parker |
Now, looking back, I am thinking of all of this,
twenty nine days after looking up at the replica ship on top of the pub, which
is roughly half way between St. Paul’s and St. Peter’s, typing these words from
a laptop in my flat in Chester, two more days before I once again travel: this
time only 180 miles – but still, compared to Bede’s time, a considerable
distance, which I will make much, much quicker than he could ever have
envisaged – back to South Tyneside.
There’s a
quote I’m looking for, but can’t find. Or a mantra; something discussed over
both legs of Stringing Bedes and an idea that I’ve been mulling ever since. It
goes something like this: the mind travels slower than the body; the mind may
still be in a place the body has left behind.
Walkers on Cleadon Hills |
I’ve been
back in the UK just under a week. The jet-lag has been horrendous. Travelling
out a month ago, landing in San Francisco, I was relatively unscathed. All
sorts of theories, tips and advice abound as to how to avoid – or mitigate – jet-lag
(East/West is best; sleep whenever you can/don’t sleep at all; eat these
foods/don’t eat these foods, etc.) but the simple fact is that if it’s going to
get you, it’s going to get you. At each intersection on my trip up the Pacific
North West coast of the USA and Canada, I have left a part of my mind behind.
Somewhere over the Atlantic, a portion of my brain is still suspended thirty
thousand feet above the clouds.
So, in
2015, being a Westerner (as a Brit, watching news of the refugee crisis from
hotels and B&Bs in North America, you quickly realise that your most
important possession is your passport – that ticket to cross borders more or
less at will) you can travel at all sorts of speeds, in all sorts of vehicles,
covering great distances very, very quickly. We take this for granted, but what
does it mean? What might the opposite – stopping in a place, or moving through
it very slowly – mean for us?
On both
legs of the Stringing Bedes walks, we stopped near the entrance/exit of the
Tyne Tunnel to listen to the traffic. Once you’re on foot, and used to being on
foot (ten minutes, an hour, you’ll soon feel your own rhythm), the presence of
even a single car passing on a quiet suburban road sounds too much. Alongside
the A19, the traffic is an onslaught; a physical shock to the senses. It
becomes something absurd, actually. You begin to wonder, having picked wild
cherries and plums from the streets, what it means to see giant Lidl trucks carrying
pre-packaged, processed foods to be sold from huge refrigerators in shops
across the region. You begin to wonder where all of the taxis can be taking
people; where everyone is going and why they have to get there so quickly.
The mandatory trolley |
Much of
this dissipates, of course. You go to Tesco and the banquet of items laid out
before you is more amazing than it is grotesque. You fill up your car (and if
you do this in the States, you suddenly understand why the automobile is King),
drive away, and the acceleration at your feet feels good.
But can
moving slowly, at a walking pace that chimes with the heart’s rhythm –
periodically stopping, not saying anything, not checking a phone and trying to
clear your mind of the mental to-do list that keeps plaguing you and focusing
instead on the call of a Chiffchaff – can that feel as good?
Bede
himself may not have been a great traveller (we have some evidence that he
visited the Holy Island of Lindisfarne), but his monasteries at Wearmouth and
then Jarrow were founded upon a connectedness to the landscape that was not
simply parochial: in seeking learning and enlightenment, the Abbots of
Wearmouth-Jarrow looked, and often travelled to, Europe, bringing back bibles, sacred
objects and sometimes even visiting scholars from places such as Rome, all for
the benefit of their church communities. It is thought that portions of the
glasswork in the monasteries may have come from the Mediterranean, where
skills, techniques and resources were more abundant. The monasteries, with
their strategic positions near the mouths of both the Tyne and the Wear, not
only supported domestic trade and transport, then; they connected Northumbria
to a wider European identity.
It really does smell like pineapple! |
At all
points during this project, it has been important to cross-refer our own
thoughts and actions with those of the age of Bede. In traversing an ‘interpreted
environment’, we do so knowing that we tread in the footsteps of all of those
that come before us, bearing our own baggage. But how do we see Bede in this
landscape, which we rightly assume to be very different to how it was in the
seventh century? One of the ways, I think, is what we take away from it, with
us, when we’re elsewhere. Along the route of the walks, I enjoyed the learning
curve of the local flora and fauna. At the start of the walks, for instance, I
had never heard of Pineapple Weed: didn’t know what it was, never mind how to
identify it. After repeat sightings, however, I began to see it ‘automatically’.
So much so, that by the end of the final walk I was, just as Keith Bowey had
shown me a month earlier, readily picking it up and surprising people when I
told them to crush it in their fingers and smell for the aroma of pineapples. I
went on to see Pineapple Weed at various places along the Pacific North West
coast: from the cliff tops of Harris Beach in Oregon, to the summit of Grouse
Mountain in Vancouver, I seemed to be followed by these tiny, yellow weeds. And
in a small way, I felt connected to Bede, because it was along Bede’s Way, a
place I have spent large parts of my life, that I first learned about something
apparently small and insignificant, which when witnessed in an entirely alien environment,
made me feel connected.
On a
beach in Northern Oregon, alongside a stretch of road that I can now barely
remember except for its name – highway 101 – between small towns that I have
little recourse to memorise other than for their coffee, their gas, their free
toilets, I found Sea Rocket. Along the small formation of dunes at the Northern
edge of Seaburn Beach in Sunderland, you can find the same genus of dune plant,
nestled into small mounds of sand, tiny pink flowers jutting from rubbery stems.
It is likely, in moving between the twinned monasteries, that Bede and his monks
and abbots, having landed on this beach after sailing a coracle out of the Tyne
and south down the coast past Marsden and Whitburn, would have encountered the
very same plant.
Sea Rocket |
As
mentioned in the first of my Stringing Bedes blogs, periods of contemplation
were a key element of the walks. Contemplation, though perhaps not as
marketable as the somewhat zeitgeist trend for mindfulness, is a rare commodity
in today’s hectic world. Perhaps because of the somewhat frenzied nature of my
final hours on the last walk (I had to cut it short by two hours in order to
get to the airport in time, whisked back in ten minutes – in a car, of course –
to collect my bags in South Shields. What had taken just ten minutes in my Mam’s
Peugeot had on foot taken four hours), and possibly because some part of my
consciousness is still confused as to whether it should be in North America or
the North of England, it has been a challenge to begin to do what this project’s
namesake intends and string together coherent thoughts about Bede and his
significance for a contemporary audience.
Invariably,
my response turns towards my art form: poetry and writing. I consider some of
the broad themes identified by both the other artists on the walks and the variety
of people who joined us at one point or another. Looking back and recalling
those discussions, it strikes me that the word ‘sense’ is perhaps the biggest
brush stroke I could start from. I intend the double meaning, for the landscape
is first sensed – we notice and attune to patterns in colours, recurrent
soundscapes and smells – before it is made sense of. As children, we run excitedly
onto the beach and dig our hands into the sand with a feeling of awe and
wonderment as we reveal a receding layer of water below. We do this long before
we understand anything to do with the sea, its currents, groundwater, tides or
gravity. Our current sense of the world, however, tells us that the opposite is
true: that we apply sense – logic, rationale, reason – to a landscape before we
react to it ‘emotionally’. Take this, amongst many, examples, from Hawaii. It is one of countless stories of indigenous resistance to ‘rational’ science
and the ‘sensible’ economic doctrine which seeks to augment everything with
commodifiable use or value.
Lying in
Cornthwaite Park in Whitburn, belly full of sandwiches and fruit, three, maybe
four miles in my legs, sun warm but not abrasive on my face, the sound of the
sea in the near distance lapping at the shore, the laughter of kids playing on the
swings, I thought, is this not a moment of tranquillity that Bede would have
been proud of? Yes, instantly transported to 2015, he would have been baffled,
probably even terrified, by how the extent to which his world had changed, but
lying beneath the trees in the park, the same sky above him, he might have just
felt at home.
Looking south to Roker Pier from Whitburn Steel |
Stringing Bedes: A Poetry and Print Pilgrimage
is a Heritage Lottery Funded project exploring the landscape between the twin
monastic sites of St. Paul’s, Jarrow and St. Peter’s, Wearmouth. Combining
artistic responses to public walks with heritage and educational activities,
its aim is to illuminate the world of Bede for a contemporary audience. I
blogged about the first part of the project here, and further information can
be gained at subsequent community heritage events, the first of which takes
place on Wednesday 21st October at Roker Methodist Church in
Sunderland.
Pineapple Weed found in north America thanks to a Bede walk .It is largely true that 'we see what we know' - the ' weed' now has a history ,a resonance and is recognised.
ReplyDeleteThe weather vane ship on the pub roof made visible by slowing
down and opening up, now forms a minor landmark in our local knowledge.
Thank you Bede
Yes, Peter, absolutely. We read the landscape as a series of signs, I think. Each pointing back and forth.
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