Village:
‘The notion
of the world as a village is becoming a reality’
-
James Wolfenstein
On
reflection, I’ve always lived in a village.
I was brought up in Kirkby. Now,
technically this is a village. Mentioned
in The Doomsday Book, it has a Norman church, a weeping stone and more cottages
than can you can throw lumps of cob at.
Today, it has several famous sons and daughters, an industrial estate
that rises and falls with the tide of industry and a much undeserved reputation
for loose morals, crime and general banjo pluckery. Hence the old Scouse joke:
Q: Why wasn’t Jesus born in Kirkby?
A: Because they couldn’t find three wise men and a virgin.
Time changes,
empires fall, and jobs are left. Removal
vans are packed and books are assembled in alphabetical order. I now live in Lapford, an archetypal sleepy
English village in mid-Devon. Once upon
a time, it was home to the Ambrosia Creamery.
We have one pub, which we’ve still not visited. We have two ghosts, one of which is Thomas
Becket, who comes through the village annually to avenge his murder. I’ve never heard him, but I have seen several
paranormal investigators, lurking about like unicorn hunters.
These things,
I see, coming downhill. We live at the
top of said hill, overlooking Dartmoor.
We drink a lot of tea, so I generally falls to me to get a pint of
milk. The nearest shop, in the broadest
sense of the word; is a garage twenty minutes downhill. This concept, like most things, plucked at
the strings of my nervous system. Not
just the journey, but the outlandish, almost alien concept of walking in the
road. I’ve mastered it now, staying to
the right on the way down, left on the way up.
Moving in as close as the kerb as I possibly can, when a car, a lorry or
the one bus that services the village trundles or rumbles by.
You get used
to the gentle, sensuous sloping of the ground beneath your walking boots. Any other form of footwear is a form of
foolery, you could call it Tootsercide. However, you get used to that, take in
the landmarks of houses, the church, and the pub. Occasionally, you notice something just that
little bit out of the ordinary, such as the time I saw pheasants hanging from a
garden gate. You don’t get that in
Kirkby.
See also: the
mere concept of nodding acquaintance. I
had people I saw in Liverpool, but never knew their name. I have them here too; the people at the bus
stop mostly. I’ve chatted to them about
the disadvantages of storage heaters, the redevelopment of Exeter Bus Station
and the general lack of public transport.
We generally arrive at some sort of democratic consensus, just as the
bus arrives, to take us the fantastical destinations like Crediton or even Exeter
itself.
Ultimately,
living in a village is like getting a hug.
It’s comforting and secure, slows the pulse and soul down to subsonic
levels. I firmly believe that living in
Liverpool would have brought on some sort of collapse, either that of the
cardiac or cerebral variety. It’s
affected my writing too. I usually place
myself in the window, cup of tea adding the merest hint of steam across the
laptop’s screen. When I need
inspiration, I look out of the window, down the hill and across to
Dartmoor. It was Winter when we arrived
and the sky is lightening, imperceptibly.
The birds that hop and skip across our path are changing at much the
same rate. Generally, this gives me the
little push of inspiration to start, push or finish that article.
Which lead me
to where I am now. It’s a late Spring
morning in Devon, the sun is determined to poke through the clouds, Winter is
determined to have that last word.
Seasons are like old married couples, they live in a form of loose
harmony that sparkles with as much love as disgruntlement. I can see the beginning of that hill and the
green triangles that slope upwards towards Dartmoor. Often, this view has given me that last
little push of inspiration to get a piece of writing finished. Not coffee, or incense or beach walking. These seem to me now as arcane
processes. Maybe they were things I left
behind in Liverpool.
I had visions
of being the token Scouser. I had the
vague idea of not fitting in, that maybe fresh air and green fields would be
too much for me. I had visions of people
not understanding me, maybe my pronunciation of the phrase ‘purple chicken’, would be too much for
people. That I would have been like a Tarbuck 2.0, playing the jolly Scouser
for the assembled crowd. ‘Arr Ey, Werz Me Giro?’, that kind of bullshit. And slowly, like red and blue insects, I met
other Scousers. Our neighbour. And then:
member of staff in a branch of Waterstones in Exeter used to live round the
corner from my old flat in Lark Lane.
We’re everywhere. There’s a song
about that.
Ultimately,
village life has calmed me down, infected me, and changed me for the
better. Reality peeps in occasionally,
but I now when I get off the bus and walk uphill (every other hour), or get out
the car and lock the door, I’m home. The
shopping is packed away, the kettle (or occasionally the Nespresso machine)
goes on and I am home. Liverpool seems a
long way away, geographically and mentally.
There is a small ache when I visit, but not enough to move back into
that delicious form of madness on a full time basis.
Where you
were born, shapes you. Where you live
makes you. A city makes you hard, on
edge, deeply suspicious. A village makes
you calm, relaxed, acceptant. A village
is not a Panglossian system of living, nor is it an Orwellian one. It’s on a level of something, unlike incest
or folk dancing; you should try at least once.
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