Where a cricketer was born, and a battle raged desperate
And mustard grew, and Stratford boys early or late
May have come, and rivers, green Avon, brown Severn, meet. (Tewkesbury)
I wonder what he’d have thought of this picture, one I have known for over seventy years. Belonging originally to my grandparents, it was one of several small watercolours by an English artist, WJ Boddy, who signed and dated this view of Tewkesbury and its famous Abbey tower in 1900. My father inherited these paintings and, after his death, my mother (herself a good watercolourist) treasured them, and now this picture is mine. I cherish it because Tewkesbury, its Abbey and especially its stained glass all mean a great deal to me.
It meant a great deal to Gurney, who struggled increasingly after the War and wrote this short poem as if standing, as it were, exactly where the artist had stood to sketch:
What sorrow raised you mighty, for I have forgotten joy
And know only sufficient black urge of pain,
Upon the fair thing standing up there in light promising rain,
Mask above meadows. (From the Meadows - the Abbey)
Tewkesbury meant a great deal to MR James, too. In Abbeys, published by the Great Western Railway in 1926, he describes Tewkesbury Abbey as ‘probably the most splendid building to be described in this book’, which (to be clear) only focuses on abbeys within the reach of the GWR. Later, he claims that ‘Tewkesbury hardly yields to any church save Westminster [Abbey] in the number of great personages who rest beneath its roof.’ Hmmm.
Strictly speaking, this isn’t a watercolour. It’s ink and wash on grey paper – wash with added body colour, to be pedantic. Everything in the foreground in drawn in brown ink over a brown or grey wash. The roof of the half-timbered cottage is wash first, then ink detail and highlights; ditto the wall of the malt house on the right, with the slanting shadow falling across the window of the cottage behind. The white highlights are body colour (probably poster paint): this can be applied thickly, as with the highlights on the cottages, or more thinly. See how the smoke is opaque as it leaves the tall chimney but quickly thins as it partly obscures the tower. Boddy gives the impression of precise attention to the Norman features: the louvred belfry windows, and the blind arcading around each wall; below, there are even ghostly outlines of the original nave and S. transept roofs. These are things you’d have to get closer to the Abbey to see so clearly in real life.
The tower certainly looms over the rooftops of the town. Is it fairer to say the cottages huddle beneath it or that the tower seems almost to be jostling them towards the river? This is, strictly, the Mill Avon: a short canal cut from the Avon itself, just below its confluence with the Severn a little higher upriver. Having for much of my life taken more than a passing interest in punts and punting, I have always enjoyed the little punt in the foreground of the picture, though at first I was puzzled by its shape. The huffs at either end (and at the boatman’s end particularly) seem to be raised too high; they give an almost oriental character to the little craft. But I had forgotten there is – at least, there used to be – a distinctive Severn punt, older and less streamlined than the sleeker Thames punt, designed definitely for work, not leisure.
But look now at the Abbey tower. This photo clearly exposes the liberty William Boddy has taken. Far from being literally a towering presence, Tewkesbury’s tower – seen from this angle and distance – scarcely rises above the chimneys of the buildings. But my admiration for what Boddy has achieved is only enhanced by my realising (belatedly) that his picture shows me more than the eye can see. Like all good art, it’s an eye-opener. The tower now rises, an architectural Leviathan, to dominate the town and half the sky too.
MR James would have approved of Boddy’s representation of the tower, which he calls ‘probably the noblest Norman tower we have’. He adds: ‘The height of it, 132 feet, is not great but its effect is entirely independent of that’. Which is, surely, exactly what my picture shows: the tower standing ‘in high eminence’ – that phrase is Ivor Gurney’s – above the mist and smoke of the town.
The ‘square stone’ of Tewkesbury’s tower was, for Gurney, a symbol of ‘what is best of England’:
The slow spirit going straight on,
The dark intention corrected by eyes that see,
The somehow getting there, the last conception
Bettered, and something of one’s own spirit outshown;
Grown as oaks grow, done as hard things are done.
For this Gloucestershire lad, the patience and effort needed to achieve something as magnificent as Tewkesbury’s tower mirrored his own dogged determination (‘something of one’s own spirit outshown [i.e. revealed]’) to produce lasting work both in poetry and music. As for William Boddy, I am just grateful to him for this picture I have always loved.
Adrian Barlow
Illustrations: (i) Tewkesbury and the Abbey Tower (1900) by WJ Boddy; (ii) Title page of Abbeys, by MR James (1926); (iii) Photograph of Tewkesbury from the Mill Avon canal (1901), picture credit: Tewkesbury Historical Society.
Note: The poems by Ivor Gurney that I have quoted here were written after the First World War, when his mental health was beginning to deteriorate rapidly, In her defining biography of Gurney (Dweller in Shadows, 2021) Kate Kennedy writes movingly and convincingly about how in this distressing period Gurney continued to develop as poet of real stature and significance. The poems I have quoted here can be found in P.J. Kavanagh: Collected Poems of Ivor Gurney, 1984)
I have written before about Gurney:
Hello Adrian, I began reading your article with a smile at the mention of the Sunday School outing. I'm a survivor of many such outings. I was really interested in your painting and the comments on it, especially with Ivor Gurney drawn in. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteDebbie
Many thanks, Debbie. I wonder how many children of today will carry into their future memories of Sunday School outings
DeleteA fascinating article. Isn’t it Gurney who is buried at Twigworth churchyard on the way to Gloucester from Tewkesbury?
ReplyDeleteCharles
You are quite right: Gurney is buried in Twigworth churchyard, alongside Herbert Howells. Twigworth Church itself is closed ( the building,sadly, is unsafe) but the churchyard is still open.
DeleteGood to see a blog again. Your writing is beautiful as always and so full of memories. It is remarkable how some photographs (particularly church interiors) bring strong memory and emotion. Thank you as ever
ReplyDeleteMichael
Thank you! I enjoyed that and I'll be reading it again.
ReplyDeleteWas William Boddy a spiritual person? The tower seems to rise ethereally above the townscape.
ReplyDeleteTerry, I think your description of the tower rising ‘ethereally’ may be more appropriate than my description of it rising like the Leviathon. I’m afraid I really only know of Boddy through those paintings of his I remember from my childhood or have since seen online.
DeleteWas William Boddy a spiritual person? The tower seems to rise ethereally above the townscape.
ReplyDeleteThat is lovely, Adrian.
ReplyDeleteAlthough Ivor Gurney is reasonably well-known as a composer I don't think that he has sufficient recognition as as a poet, particular as a war poet where, in my view, he stands almost equally with Sassoon and Owen. 'The Silent One' and to 'To His Love' are poignant examples of the what he could achieve. It may be that his history of severe mental illness carried a stigma when his contemporaries where achieving late fame.
One the topic of Tewkesbury in a more upbeat mood nothing, I think, beats the so-called 'Brensham Trilogy' of John Moore. All three books capture the feeling of the town and its surrounding villages in the early part of the last century and are still very amusing and perceptive.
Martin, many thanks for your reflections about Gurney as poet. I agree with you that he remains something of an outsider, not part of the ‘’inner circle” of war poets that everyone has heard of. He was, by nature something of a lone spirit, though he valued friendship very highly, and his increasing mental instability after the war meant that his poetry ( or at least his profile as a poet) became easier to overlook or dismiss. His work has always had its admirers, however, and I regard Kate Kennedy’s ‘Dweller in Shadows’ - which I refer to in my concluding Note - as arguably the most penetrating and thoughtful ( as well as thought-provoking) yet written of any of the war poets. Hers is the only book that treats his music and his poetry on equal terms and makes the case for his post-war poetry to be taken as seriously as his Wartime writing.
ReplyDelete