Landmarks (31 page)

Read Landmarks Online

Authors: Robert Macfarlane

BOOK: Landmarks
11.51Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘I am a woodlander … a tree is itself a river of sap’
: ibid., p. x.

‘The central value of English … and environmental education’
: Roger Deakin, ‘Dark Horses: Environmental Education and English Teaching’, unpublished lecture delivered at the Royal Festival Hall, 21 September 1990.

‘The dandelion in full flower … is itself incomparable and unique’
: D. H. Lawrence,
Reflections on the Death of a Porcupine and Other Essays
(1925; Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988), p. 358.

‘[r]edstarts flew from tree to tree … is what makes it graceful’
:
WL
, p. 91.

‘park-bench green … footballer in a striped vest’
:
NFWTF
, pp. 43, 208.

‘Angels are the people we care for and who care for us’
: Roger Deakin, unpublished notebook entry.

‘only interested in everything’
: Les Murray, quoted by Roger Deakin,
WL
, p. 3.

‘go on and on … settle for ever in one place’
: Edward Thomas,
The South Country
(London: J. M. Dent, 1909), p. 161.

‘I am Hansje, born and bred … to see the earth clarified’
: letter from Hansje te Velde to Robert Macfarlane, 15 November 2011.

Chapter 5: Hunting Life

‘cloud-biting anchor shape’
:
P
, p. 30.

‘Autumn … like the arch of Orion’
: ibid., p. 29.

‘Dear Sam … an infinity of sight’
: letter from J. A. Baker to Don Samuel, September/October 1945, Baker Archive, Albert Sloman Library, University of Essex.

‘a prickly customer’ … ‘loner’ as an adult
: Doreen Baker, undated interview with David Cobham, edited transcript, Baker Archive.

‘Binoculars and a hawk-like vigilance … myopic human vision’
:
P
, p. 93.

‘Patching Hall Lane … singing lustily’
: ibid., p. 282.


Sunday May 9th

as a bird’s throat’
: ibid. Compare Nan Shepherd: ‘It is, it is, the blackbird singing! / The beat of time is in the note. / Yet its own infinite arises / From that small perishable throat.’ ‘Blackbird in Snow’,
ITC
, p. 17.

‘plunged into the wet wood … sharing that joy’
:
P
, p. 284. When Baker came to re-describe this incident in
The Hill of Summer
, he omitted Sid from his account and implied he was alone. See ibid., pp. 204–5.


Saturday November 20th 1954

revellers in the wind’
: ibid., p. 289.

‘Tuesday November 1st 1955

autumn slum of trees’
: ibid., p. 311.

‘clear varnish of yellow … Rembrandt oil-painting’
: ibid., p. 296.


Wednesday April 23rd 1958
… tricky and strange’
: ibid., p. 372.

‘glorious light … or a falcon, presumably’
: J. A. Baker, ‘Peregrine Diaries’, entry for 6 January 1957, Baker Archive.

‘the possibility of it’s … flashed across my mind’
: ibid., entry for 10 January 1957, Baker Archive.

‘The north wind … pleached lattice of the hedges’
:
P
, p. 103.

‘Four short-eared owls soothed out of the gorse’
: ibid., p. 67.

‘Savagely he lashed himself … rim of the black cloud’
: ibid., p. 70.

‘like a small mad puritan with a banana in his mouth’
: ibid., p. 105.

‘glowed purple and grey like broccoli’
: ibid., p. 113.

‘five thousand dunlin … gleamed with golden chitin’
: ibid., p. 52.

‘the pages dance with image … that marshland drama’
: Kenneth Allsop, review of
The Peregrine
,
London Evening News
, 23 March 1967.

‘sabring fall from the sky’
:
P
, pp. 124–5.

‘A falcon peregrine … splinters of white wood’
: ibid., p. 49.

‘The peregrine lives … maps of black and white’
: ibid., p. 46.

‘rings of small black stones’
: ibid., p. 55.

‘into dark twiggy lines … blue and silver mouth’
: ibid., p. 128.

‘Wherever he goes … there be purified’
: ibid., p. 48.

‘Evanescent as flame … the white helix of the gulls’
: ibid., p. 51.

‘a strong feeling of proximity, identification’
: ibid., p. 126.

‘The body of a woodpigeon … We shun men’
: ibid., p. 92.

‘The [book’s] strange and awful grip … hawk’s feathers, skin and spirit’
: Allsop, review of
The Peregrine
,
London Evening News
.

‘his usual loose-limbed panache’
:
P
, p. 73.

‘the hunter becoming the thing he hunts’
: ibid., p. 92.

a British raptor specialist called Derek Ratcliffe had published a landmark paper
: D. A. Ratcliffe, ‘The Status of the Peregrine in Great Britain’,
Bird Study
10 (1963), 56–90. Ratcliffe’s paper, among other factors, led to a control of DDT use in British agriculture, and the peregrine population saw a slow climb. In countries where pesticide use was not controlled the results were catastrophic: 2,000 breeding pairs in Finland in 1950 had been reduced to 16 pairs by 1975.

‘the filthy, insidious pollen of farm chemicals’
:
P
, p. 31.

‘Few winter in England … the ancient eyries are dying’
: ibid., pp. 108–9.

‘As I approached I could see … We cannot tear it away’
: ibid., pp. 112–13.

‘I hope to have the good fortune … Friday Feb 10th’
: undated letter from reader, Baker Archive.

Chapter 6: The Tunnel of Swords and Axes

‘rough sea-billows … among them are the lost-words that I sought’
: see
The Kalevala
, trans. John Martin Crawford (London: G. Putnam, 1889), Runes XVI and XVII, pp. 161–80.

one of which shelters a Quaker burial ground from the eighteenth century
: this plantation has been cut down since the time of writing.

‘limned the edges of its streams … eaves of its woods’
:
L
, p. 48.

‘seventeen thresholds that grant access to the moor’
: ibid., p. 133.

Hare-gate:
an opening in a hedge … winter is filled with a torrent’
: ibid., pp. 195–6.

‘Could I reconstruct … with which to sound the landscape’
: ibid., p. 149.

‘Where before I collected fragments … to call upon the landscape’
: ibid., p. 137.

‘Perhaps there is a glimpse … by virtue of their difference, their strangeness?’
: ibid., pp. 138–9.

‘place-name poetry … beauty of certain lexicons’
: Autumn Richardson and Richard Skelton,
Wolf Notes
(Cumbria: Corbel Stone Press, 2010), p. 27.

‘Ulpha is still inhabited … can be uncovered and celebrated’
: ibid., p. 9.


gathered pace, taking in tributaries … in the Late Bronze Age)

: Richard Skelton,
Limnology
(Cumbria: Corbel Stone Press, 2012), endnote.

‘receding below the threshold … of all melodies’
:
L
, p. 126.

Chapter 7: North-Minded

‘the malevolent north’
: see Margaret Atwood,
Strange Things: The Malevolent North in Canadian Literature
(Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1995).

‘it is possible to live wisely on the land, and to live well’
:
AD
, p. xxviii.

‘stand toe-to at the water’s edge … boots in six hours’
: ibid., p. 252.

‘the classic lines … extended, and quiet’
: ibid., p. xxiii.

‘monotonic … plains of open water’
: ibid., pp. 229, xxiii.

‘chitinous shell … staghorn lichen next to them’
: ibid., p. 254.

‘the grace of accuracy’
: Robert Lowell, ‘Epilogue’, in
Robert Lowell: Collected Poems
, ed. Frank Bidart (London: Faber and Faber, 2003), p. 838.

‘removed and exceptional part of Scotland’
:
DM
, p. 8.

‘a pencil-stripe of light … relentless daylight over Norway’
: ibid., p. 60.

‘green silence … the returning cold’
: ibid., pp. 63, 18, 21.

‘A little stone jetty … extraordinary water’
: ibid., p. 38.

‘noticed everything … put away for the winter’
: ibid., p. 73.

‘[f]ine gradations … runs the length of the room’
: ibid., p. 71.

‘to capture the moment, lost and yet preserved forever’
: ibid., p. 7.

‘which dies even as … catch its likeness’
: ibid., p. 147.

‘conservatorie’
: Thomas Browne,
Urne-Buriall
(1658), in
Religio Medici and Urne-Buriall
, ed. Stephen Greenblatt and Ramie Targoff (New York: NYRB Classics, 2012), p. 114.

‘the predatory loss that shadows all human pleasure’
:
DM
, p. 14.

‘basalt rocks bordering the Baltic … the high sun on the sea’
: ibid., p. 6.

‘black dog flickers … edge of the lawns’
: ibid., p. 65.

‘We have gathered things … the place where we live’
: ibid., p. 24.

‘moony silver … the bright sky into itself’
: ibid., p. 66.

‘breaks forward into the sunlight … light into itself’
: ibid., p. 74.

‘hold the dimming sky … islands in the archipelago’
: ibid., pp. 64, 70.

‘All the years I have been writing … laughing, painting out of doors’
: ibid., p. 40

‘In a winter-hammered landscape … ignorance falling away from us’
: Barry Lopez,
About This Life: Journeys on the Threshold of Memory
(1998; London: Harvill, 1999), p. 122, and
AD
, p. xxviii.

‘The sharpness of the morning frost … magnifying lens’
:
DM
, p. 165.

‘depthlessly clear’
:
AD
, p. xxiv.

Chapter 8: Bastard Countryside

‘drosscape’
: see Alan Berger,
Drosscape: Wasting Land in Urban America
(New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2007).

‘edgeland’
: see Marion Shoard, ‘Edgelands’, in
Remaking the Landscape
, ed. Jennifer Jenkins (London: Profile, 2002), pp. 117–46.

‘crapola’
: Philip Guston, quoted in Philip Roth,
Shop Talk
(New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2001), p. 135.

‘bastard countryside … the noise of humankind’
: the passage was added by Victor Hugo to the 1861 edition of
Les Misérables
. I use the translation given by T. J. Clark in ‘The View from Notre-Dame’, in
The Nineteenth-Century Visual Culture Reader
(London: Routledge, 2004), p. 179.

‘the messy limbo … outer-Outer London’
: Kenneth Allsop,
Adventure Lit Their Star: The Story of an Immigrant Bird
(1949; London: Penguin, 1972), p. 9.

‘asphalt … noose’
: Iain Sinclair,
London Orbital
(London: Granta, 2002), pp. 17, 140.

‘frontier line to civilisation’
: Richard Jefferies, Preface to
Wild Life in a Southern County
(1879; Toller Fratrum: Little Toller, 2011), p. 15.

‘Why, we must have been blind … but we saw them not!’
: Walter Besant,
The Eulogy of Richard Jefferies
(1888; London: Chatto & Windus, 1905), p. 167. Besant, it should be noted, was not wholly approving of Jefferies, considering his talent narrow and certainly confined to non-fiction.

‘broke most radically with … human history’
: Eric Hobsbawm,
Industry and Empire
(London: Penguin, 1967), p. 15.

‘Wilderness! … I have never forgotten it’
: Charles Dickens,
Nicholas Nickleby
(1839), ed. Jill Muller (New York: Spark, 2005), p. 439.

‘London looks so large … so barren and so wild’
: Charles Dickens,
Little Dorrit
(1857), ed. Harvey Peter Sucksmith (Oxford: Oxford World’s Classics, 2008), p. 131.

‘unseen influence … under the calm oaks’
:
NNL
, p. ix.

‘quitting the suburb’
: ibid., p. 85.

‘rubbish heaps … garden flowers about the metropolis’
: ibid., pp. 90, 154.

‘coloured … like a continuous garden’
: ibid., p. 169.

‘very large cinder and dust heap … any stray morsels of food’
: ibid., pp. 87–8.

‘berry year … eight in a stalk’
: ibid., p. 119.

‘put forth green buds … flowers not sown in order’
: ibid., pp. 130, 133.

‘fully two thousand … their very wings seem to flap together’
: ibid., p. 129.

‘It would be very easy … method of knowing’
: ibid., p. ix.

‘Everyone must find their own locality … you find yours yonder’
: ibid.

‘keep[ing] an eye … as it really is’
: ibid., pp. xi, 11.

‘bluebells … unseen, except by rabbits’
: ibid., p. 23.

‘The landscapes I have in mind … regarded as invisible’
: Paul Nash,
Outline: An Autobiography
(London: Faber and Faber, 1959), p. 229.

Other books

Toxic Secrets by Jill Patten
We All Killed Grandma by Fredric Brown
Religious Love by Horton, T.P.
Conan the Rebel by Poul Anderson
Scion by McDonald, Murray
Superviviente by Chuck Palahniuk