6 September 2025

Ingoland, My Ingoland

I will arise and go now....

Roger McGough at St Mary's, Snettisham, September 3rd, 2025

Meteorological autumn already. Season of fruits and mellifluous substances.  I am up early and out, walking to the sea, breathing the fresh, slightly sharp air, 





enjoying a feeling of peace. Sometimes the world is too much with us, but not this morning. Sunflowers turn their heads to the rising sun, 



 


while berries ripen, grateful for the recent showers.





I love Ingoland (my name for the area of Norfolk where I live, drained by the river Ingol) or even Engerland, the land where my mother lay labouring to give me life.  I have always loved you.  From the days of branch lines, 





and steam trains, from the days of Winnie the Pooh, or where Trevor Dudley-Smith (Elleston Trevor) mused By A Silver Stream, I have lived and loved in a sweet bubble of family and friends, of farmers and hauliers in Sussex, of aunts and uncles and cousins in London and beyond.  I have loved Dame Edna Everage, Dame Kiri te Kanawa, Duke Ellington, Count Arthur Strong and others of the no(a)bility. I love village churches,





And old vicarages; Laurence Sterne and William Cowper, John Donne and George Herbert.





I used to drink in Levenshulme with Kendo Nagasaki and my friend Spen, who had done time for manslaughter as he came home from the army and found his wife in bed with another man, whose skull, it turned out, wasn’t adapted to a blow from a soldier.  I ate cow’s udder sandwiches with a workmate at Viner’s in Sheffield, swapped Raymond Chandler novels with Angela Lansbury’s uncle at Brown Bailey’s. I was a student when uprisings were de rigeur. I drank too much on occasions, and ate what I could from Lancaster market, wandered lonely as a clown in the Lake District, and fell into impossible love in Scotland, twice.....  Old flames, now dowsed.....



 


It was my country.  The country of Nelson.  The country of Shakespeare and Joyce and W B Yeats (You sure?  Ed.)

 

But I, being poor, have only my dreams;
I have spread my dreams under your feet;
Tread softly because you tread on my dreams.

 

W B Yeats

He Wishes For the Cloths of Heaven



 

 

We had Sooty and Sweep.  Andy Pandy.  The Flowerpot Men.  Bruce Lacey.  Mr Pastry.  We played in bombed out buildings and air-raid shelters.  There were two tv channels, and we only had one, and I had to go to Denys's house to watch The Lone Ranger....



 


Then, around the time that JFK and Pope Giovanni XXIII hit the big sleep, the Beatles wanted to hold my hand, and I grew a little bit up, (thank you Jackie Short, et alios....)



 


And along came the Liverpool Poets, Roger McGough, Adrian Henri and Brian Pattern, and her majester Lily the Pink with a scaffold to uphold her....  And life turned from B & W to colour.  From 350 lines to 525.  And, eventually, from analogue to digital.

 

  

 

And perhaps that’s where it went awry?  We used to drink ententes cordiales, and get along with our neighbours – after all, in 1966 we made amends for WWII in a penalty shootout, when I was at Warcop Army Camp.  What was going to go wrong?

 

Which brings me to Mr McGough....  



 


He has just been to stay.  He came to perform his show, “Alive and Gigging,” (not as some promoters would have it, “Alive and Giggling,”) at St Mary’s, Snettisham, the high church of Ingoland, and we had a wonderful evening.  Full house, many laughs, a few tears, much reflection on the world we have grown to inhabit.  

 

But there’s the rub.  

 

All the while, there’s an acid eating away at this world, dissolving the things we hold/held dear. My grandparents, and my parents, wore uniforms and lost their youths defending a world they believed in.  A generation stood against fascism and beat it back and proved it wrong.



 


But like the Hydra, it has come back, fag ash and Burberry, fake tan and golfing cheats, a creeping, crawling resurgence of things that ought to have drowned in sewers.  And we are all affected, all conflicted.  I want to love my enemas.  I could even give Nadine Doilies space (she, like me, never made it to the Hows of Lourds) but, like Martin Loofah’s reformation, the slate was not whipped clean and so there is still the seed of disquiet, the worm of hatred.  



 


Angerland, My Angerland....  So....

 

I must arise and go now, and go to Italy,
And a small cabin build there, of clay and bottles made:
Nine lean-tos will I have there, a cave for my honey-bee;
And live apart in the free-trade grave.

 

And I shall have some peace there, for peace comes dropping slow.....




 

Who am I/are you kidding?  We are all caught in the sticky spider’s web of life.  We are as insects who eat the world and leave nothing useful behind.  It is too easily beautiful to walk out on the shores of Ingoland and to ignore what is going on all around.  

 

Ow!  Ow! brief candle!
I’m but a walking shadow, a poor player
That struts and frets my hour upon the stage
And then is heard no more.

 

 



Which is why we are off to Italy.....  Better the devil you don’t know.....



 


I love my Engerland.  I love my country of birth, but I am not English.  I am not British.   I cannot fly the flag of some obscure saint who was probably martyred at Diospolis, now Lydda, in what was Palestine, around the end of the third or the beginning of the fourth century.  I am as English as W B Yeats, as James Joyce.  I am a European, and am uncomfortably proud of that. Don’t paint my house with red crosses. Don’t paint the roundabouts with symbols of some kind of purity.  Around 12.000 years ago no one lived here.  We are all migrants or descended from such.  No one is pure anything.



   



And to return to the beginning of this piece.  I have just had the privilege, honour and pleasure of hosting Roger McGough in my house.  At 87 years of age, in that awkward period between birth and death, he still raises a giggle and pokes fun at the world.  Whether you would consider him a National Treasure or not, some have called him the Patron Saint of Poetry.  Others say he has done more for poetry than champagne has done for weddings.  I would say he has brought light into a dark world and made many many people feel better about their worries.



 


At breakfast he told me of a poem-in-progress. I don’t have total recall, but it was about the stink of politics, and the punch line (yes, poems are like jokes) was that the Speaker of the House of Commons was calling for quiet....  “O Dour!  O Dour!  O Dour!

 

Arrest my case.....  

 

We are bound for Italy, where at least somethings are different.....



 


This is for Roger and my other fellow travellers through this world.





I am land.
I am happy for you live on me.
Till and plough, graze your cattle,
build your homes upon me.
I will feed, nourish, even bury you
But I am not yours.

Not yours to fight over.
To invade and plunder, divide and destroy.
I do not belong to you.
Even though you claim me, I am not yours.
I have no name, flag or anthem
Call me World.

Roger McGough
Call Me World






1 September 2025

Where civilisation ends

 My Girl from the Fens



You may, possibly, not have heard of The Ouse Valley Singles Club, so forgive me if I inform you that their style is often likened to 'George Formby meets the Clash,' and that they have shared stages with Chas and Dave, Pete Doherty, and The Boomtown Rats, and have headlined at the Peterborough Beer Festival, among other festive gatherings such as Bestival, Truckfest and Glastonbudget.....




OK, they are neither Mozart nor Sondheim. Nor are they quite CMAT. Their performances blend 1950s skiffle with the energy of punk and the swing of rock and roll, occasionally infused with a touch of reggae. They layer this with comic folk-like story-telling, often crossing the parameters of what is deemed to be politically correct but keeping it very tongue in cheek.

Anyway the reason I am drawing your attention to them is that I have just survived a visit to the Fens, a part of Britain normally avoided by both invaders and holiday makers, for reasons that we won't go into here.  It is a part of the world where civilisation ends (though where it begins these days is another question).  And one of the OVSC (Ouse Valley Singles Club)'s greatest hits is a song by the name of My Girl from the Fens, a song that has recently ear-wormed itself into my heart.




It's a catchy ditty, summing up the attractions of the folk that live worryingly near my home. It opens thus:

I love a girl
And that is that
She comes from the East
Where the land is flat
And on the surface
She may seem dumb
'Cause her cousin is her uncle
And he's married to her mum
But she's alright she's my Fenland Rose


And it gets worse.....




The second verse, which is not going to panic the Poet Laureate, nor frighten fans of Longfellow, goes like this:

If you meet a girl who comes from Wisbech
You might have trouble understanding her speech
Oh she sounds just like the Tasmanian Devil
And she gets a nosebleed above sea level
On our first date, we got a bit tipsy
She took me to a place
Where a farmer shot a gypsy
And then we went to King's Lynn
To do some shopping
She's the Cambridgeshire champion of carrot-topping

She's my girl from the Fens....

You see, for us that live beyond the reaches of Greater Anglia, these local references strike home and we chuckle (to avoid the shivers).....

But, don't be put off!  There's more to Wisbech than the muddy waters of the river Nene, or the now-closed Bingo Parlour, for example, and there are some (and I use the word carefully) places worth visiting, which include Peckover House and Garden, 




the Wisbech and Fenland Museum, the Octavia Hill (founder of the National Trust and a prominent social reformer) Birthplace House, and Blackfield Creatives' Wisbech Gallery..... 

Though I did come across this in Wisbech:




I find the third verse to be quite endearing, in a curious sort of way:

Well my Fenland girl has got the X-factor
At 6 years old she learned to drive a tractor
And at 8 she plucked turkeys, 9 she kept quails
She was born with the black soil under her nails
From Peterborough where they're a bit posh
To Spalding and Chatteris and the shores of the Wash
I will follow that girl
And my heart I do pledge
We will grow old together
Picking seasonal veg

She's my girl from the Fens

People here are definitely special, in a no-nonsense sense, though it is not all sugar beet and Chinese veg, shady characters dragging wheely-cases along narrow lanes, boarded up pubs and locked warehouses.  King's Lynn, for example, was once the third greatest port in England, with the Great Ouse still accepting shipping from all over the world,




And, scattered throughout the Fens, from Lincolnshire, across Cambridgeshire and Norfolk, there are many buildings of great interest, usually atop solid rises in the marshy surroundings.  Crowland Abbey, originally a Benedictine Abbey founded in memory of St Guthlac in the eighth century, has been much battered by history but is now the Parish Church of Crowland.  





The Church of St Peter, at Walpole St Peter, is, according to Nikolaus Pevsner, one of the most impressive churches of its date (c1350 - c1400) in Norfolk, and is a favourite of a number of royals, including the current King:







And across this watery world rises one of the greatest churches anywhere - Ely Cathedral - which reaches for the sky 66 metres (217 feet) above the town, which is already almost 30 metres above sea level, so the West Tower is one of the best viewpoints across the fens.






Anyway, back to the song.....  the last verse is quite down to earth, I will admit, but having pitched my camp in the area and feeling my feet taking root in the fertile slime of these reed beds, I can certainly relate to it.....




Well she smells of onions
She's got hair like wheat
She's my potato-eyed girl
Sweet like sugar beet
And she keeps all my wishes in a pickling jar
Our love is bigger than a combine harvester
She's my girl from the Fens
She's my girl from the Fens
On her heart I depend
She's my girl from the Fens
She's my girl from the Fens
Where civilisation ends, that's the Fens
She's my girl from the Fens




Now should this drive you to want to spend an evening with the Ouse Valley Singles Club, you could catch them at Doddington Village Hall on November 28th.....




And, by coincidence, the late Kit Hesketh-Harvey (of Kit and the Widow), who lived in Stoke Ferry, not far from Doddington, where he owned All Saints' Church, was a big fan of the OVSC, and this was one of his favourite songs....

And if that isn't a recommendation, I'm afraid I cannot say much more.....




*    *    *    * 


For CeeJay













23 August 2025

A Bunch of Flowers

For Aunt Dahlia.....





I am, temporarily, with Dahlia Travers at Brinkley Court, outside Market Snodsbury in Worcestershire..... Dahlia's nephew, the redoubtable Bertie Wooster, offered to whisk me up to the noble pile to taste Anatole's signature dish, and who were I to refuse?






And the bees have it - I mean it's the bees' knees.  Dahlias (and certainly not Agathas) abound.....






So beautifully formed.  I mean, unnecessary really, but organic forms, not geometric - or am I mistook?  






Why?  Why expend all that energy in developing such marvellous extensions of what can perhaps be described as natural sexuality?






Does a bee - or a wasp, or a fly -  think, "Whoa, that's a really beautiful flower......  I must suck that nectar?"  [Pace Shakespeare and sons]






Or, do these passionate florets compete?  Does one preen itself by night and look in the mirror in the morning and proclaim it to be the fairest of them all?  [No mirrors, Ed.]





And does Agatha grate her teeth and say, "Dahlia!  That's a Nuff!  Contain your inhibitions.  Daisy yourself, and be a little more modest!"






I suspect not.  This is a war.  Every One is in it for One's Elf!  There are no holes, bard....  Yellow, orange, pink, mauve, crimson, scarlet.....  True colours....

True colours are shining through
I see your true colours
And that's why I love you
So don't be afraid to let them show
Your true colours
True colours
Are beautiful like a rainbow

[Thank you Cyndi, Ed]






So what do we have?  Une bunchette de fleurs?  Fiori, a Priori?  






It really isn't surprising that we say it with flowers, is it?  These extraordinary delights are natural gifts for the ones we love and respect. From christenings to funerals, weddings to expressions of love, we take from nature to give to our friends, relatives and lovers.  What could be more beautiful?  From the mathematics of fractals to the Fibonacci sequence.






Apart from the colours, the multiple forms vary from orchid to mignon  single, from laciniated to pompom, from collarette to incurved cactus, and beyond.  Varied in so many ways, yet uniform in dimension and character, all striving for acceptance and in an unconscious way wishing to be loved.






Look at me!  Wonder at my pattern, at my hue.  Caress me and let me offer you my pollen.





What a world!  What a wonderful world!  





Who designed these marvels?  What blind watchmaker was behind the genetics?  My late allotment partner, John, bred dahlias, and died, without explaining quite what it was to create a new flower.....  Would it be glorious mischief?  An element of devilment?  Or is/was it the joy of creation?  The kick that comes from loving what you do/can do?






I will confess.  I wasn't at Brinkley Court.  I don't have an Aunt called Dahlia.  I never met Bertie W.  






I was actually in the walled garden at Houghton Hall, in Norfolk, guest of a generous friend, and all I want to say is thank you for taking me to see these marvellous flowers.....






So there we have it....




Flower-gathering

I left you in the morning,
And in the morning glow,
You walked a way beside me
To make me sad to go.
Do you know me in the gloaming,
Gaunt and dusty grey with roaming?
Are you dumb because you know me not,
Or dumb because you know?
All for me? And not a question
For the faded flowers gay
That could take me from beside you
For the ages of a day?
They are yours, and be the measure
Of their worth for you to treasure,
The measure of the little while
That I’ve been long away.

Robert Frost