Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Rising Ground: A Search for the Spirit of Place review - Philip Mars

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Rising Ground: A Search for the Spirit of Place review - Philip Mars

    Rising Ground: A Search for the Spirit of Place review - Philip
    Marsden's love letter to Cornwall

    A thought-provoking exploration of Cornish lives and landscapes has an
    affinity with the work of Richard Mabey and Simon Armitage



    Kate Kellaway
    The Observer, Sunday 12 October 2014


    The coast near Penwith: 'Philip Marsden's book is, above all, a
    tribute to Cornwall and its enduring beauty.' Photograph: Alamy

    There must be a moment in many a traveller's life when there is a
    sudden awareness that the unexplored place - as deserving of attention
    as any distant destination - is home. This is what happened to Philip
    Marsden - author of books about Ethiopia, Russia and Armenia - after
    he moved, with his family, to a creek-side house in Cornwall. He fell
    in love with the place. He writes about it with a historian's eye and
    singular sensitivity. At one point, he acknowledges that his ancient
    farmhouse is bordering on uninhabitable but seems to rejoice at the
    wisteria thrusting its way through the bedroom window and the
    unexpected bramble that has invited itself into the sitting room. It
    is only when his son, Arthur, announces that "there is like a big
    mouse in the hall" that he sees the feral has gone too far. Yet, at
    the same time, he struggles with an unease about the overhaul the
    house is about to receive at his hands. He wonders what the people who
    built it would feel about "our planned ceiling lights". Happily, he
    does not listen to his doubts. Houses, after all - like languages -
    change. And besides - one cannot help but speculate - the people who
    built the house might have loved the electricity and thoroughly have
    approved of the ceiling lights.

    In a wider context, Marsden's respect for the past is the book's great
    strength. The book is, above all, a tribute to Cornwall and its
    enduring beauty. It is, in part, a tour of tors and a reminder that
    stonescapes outlive literary wayfarers. Marsden heads westward towards
    Land's End, taking in Bodmin, Tintagel and the strange white landscape
    of china-clay country. His book has an affinity with the work of
    Jonathan Raban,Richard Mabey and Simon Armitage - each writer able, in
    his different way, to take on landscape as close work. And there is no
    self-serving romanticism here. Marsden writes in an elegant, retiring
    way (he could actually get away with keeping himself on a slightly
    looser rein and include more personal detail). HBut that is not his
    way: he is more likely to introduce someone else warmly than to show
    his own hand or heart.

    While the book's aim is to discover the spirit of place, what it
    reveals and celebrates best is the spirit of people - reaching back to
    neolithic man. He is superb at describing walkers and scholars united
    in topophilia (love of place): figures in a landscape. There is John
    Whitaker (1735-1808), a most unusual vicar with green eyes and false
    teeth made of ebony (imagine the smile) who wrote a parochial history
    of Cornwall. Then there is the remarkable antiquarian Charles
    Henderson (1900-1933), Cornwall's answer to Nikolaus Pevsner, who
    started recording as a child. (One is relieved to read that, aged 12,
    he was noting his consumption of chocolate biscuits alongside the
    obsessive detailing of Cornish churches). Most fascinating is his
    portrait of Cornwall's poet Jack Clemo (1916-94) who was
    intermittently blind and whose voice is described as "the conscience
    of the post-industrial age, crying from the white wilderness of
    Cornwall's clay dumps". (I didn't know of him - and look forward to
    reading his poetry.) An incidental postscript: one cannot help
    noticing that the walkers and recorders are, without exception, male.
    And almost as if to suggest that this situation is unlikely to change,
    when Marsden returns from his wanderings, his wife is at work on one
    of their garden's raised beds, a planted figure in contrast to his
    own.

    But perhaps the most striking thing of all about the book is that its
    contemporary details seem anachronistic in their ancient context. The
    modern age seems paper-thin, lightweight, even faintly ludicrous. In
    Penwith, Marsden observes a poster for salsa courses and another for
    the Alpha course "Life is Worth Exploring" outside the church hall.
    The invitations come across as incongruous. It seems clear that
    exploring this fine book would be the superior alternative with its
    reminder that it is "diligent attention to the world" that "makes life
    worth living".

    Rising Ground is published by Granta Books (£20). Click here to buy it for £16

    http://www.theguardian.com/books/2014/oct/12/rising-ground-review-philip-marsden-search-for-the-spirit-of-place

Working...
X