I remember studying
Charles Lamb’s “Essays of Elia” and William Hazlitt’s essays for A Level; I
loved them all, but especially Hazlitt’s piece
on walking. It struck a chord back then and just the other day, as well:
“One of the pleasantest things in the world is going a journey; but I like
to do it myself. I can enjoy society in a room; but out of doors, nature is
company for me. I am then never less alone than when alone…” So, “dear readers”, as Mr.
Lamb used to write, here follows an essay on the joys of a solitary ramble
around Stroud. Don’t get me wrong, I thoroughly enjoy walking and thinking at
two and a half miles an hour with friends and family, but sometimes it’s a joy
to do it like Greta Garbo, but with the script of Hazlitt.
So let’s hear from the man himself again, for
one last time: “Give me the clear blue sky over my head, and the
green turf beneath my feet…Instead of an awkward silence, broken by attempts at
wit or dull common-places, mine is that undisturbed silence of the heart which
alone is perfect eloquence”.
With this in mind and a
welcome day off, I walked down Rodborough Hill and into town. It was a Tuesday,
but memories of the 1831Captain Swing Riots passed through my mind: “No work
today, boys, it’s Rising Monday!” The pre-industrial tradition of Saint Monday
floated around my head too, when handloom weavers and so on would take the day
off if they fancied it; a pastime destroyed by the tyranny of the factory clock
and hooter. But hey ho, in these days of the post-industrial service economy, I
had Tuesday off and was free. A walk beckoned, but first I had to deal with
William Blake’s “mind-forg’d manacles”, or rather what we today call, a list of
things to do.
Now there’s another way to
look at lists rather than through the Blakean trope, and that’s the Sergeant
Pepper Day in a Life style: a sort of stream of consciousness Zen type thing,
but with a periodic break with pen and paper to maintain a list of musings, events
and reflections - the sort of thing that can be done only on one’s own. And
having serendipitously read Katie Kitamura’s thesis the weekend before in the
Guardian, as to why lists are a raging against the dying of the light: “…as
long as we’re making lists…we’re keeping faith with some idea of perpetuity”,
what chance did I stand?
Whatever. Off we jolly well go. I walked down the Slad
Road, past the tumbling stream, an old mill or two, Uplands Post Office at
Springfield House, and then turned right into Libby’s Drive. I bumped into
Tony, who suggested I call in to see his wares at “Trainspotters”, but couldn’t
find the right warehouse, so hearing the sound of saw and hammer, wandered into
an old mill for directions. “No speak English,” said the carpenter, but I
managed to locate Tony’s bazaar (“I am setting up a series of Love Walks, some
of your group might want to join us…walks for single people”) before turning up
a lovely old footpath, past the evocatively named “Dyer’s Mead”.
This footpath felt
venerable and worthy of veneration: telegram boys in the Great War; cloth mill
workers; handloom weavers; medieval peasants; stone age itinerants – who knows
in whose footsteps I trod that day, on that worn down, polished-stone pathway. But
the crumbling dry stone walls, all dripping with moss, did not prepare me for
the shock of the signpost, with news of the threatened development of Baxter’s
Field, just down below Summer Street.
Oh Cider. Oh Rosie. O
tempora. O mores.
I walked a few metres
along Summer Street, before finding the footpaths that took me up to Bisley Old
Road, turnpiked Bisley Road and thence Stroud Cemetery. These secluded
footpath-thoroughfares are a treasure: Troy Town wooded nooks and crannies, rus
in urbe brick and stone, chickens and woodland. They lead past streets with
names like Belmont Road and Mount Pleasant, past whistling builders playing out
the Ford Madox Ford painting of “Work”. This
walk to top of the town Stroud in February sunshine, with its Five Valley
cyclorama and River Severn panorama, has that unique and distinctive charm of
the mill town in the Cotswolds vibe that makes Stroud Stroud.
I walked through the
Cemetery, past the unnamed pauper burial area, past Great War gravestones, past
crocuses and snowdrops, down through the gate and left towards Horns Farm. Here
the walk takes you right, into the woods, past an old quarry and where, on this
cloudless late February morning, wild garlic was just beginning to show. I sat
down on a wall eating a cheese and onion sandwich, the ground dry as a bone
above the spring line, but below, one could hear the characteristically talkative
Five Valley trickle.
The walk then takes you up
the hill and into shadow, and on this late winter day, across the frost’s
Plimsoll Line, and into the land of frozen water. The arc of this walk then
takes you back towards Stroud; glance to your right and hold the old workhouse
in your thoughts, as you take in the beauty of the landscape. When the Poor Law
Amendment Act was brought in in 1834, the driving force was to make conditions
inside the workhouses worse than the worst paid job outside, and to prevent
poor relief occurring outside the workhouses. Think of that as you enjoy the
wide sweep of the expansive view; workhouses were often designed to prevent
inmates having any view of the outside world at all, in the attempt to
criminalise and punish poverty.
The mind can turn in on
itself when it has no window on the world, but when out walking, the mind can
wander creatively, therapeutically and laterally - when you don’t have to
continually look at directions, instructions or a map: the “skull cinema”, as John
Hillaby once put it. This Zen-like mindfulness and absence of adult cares are
some of the joys of solitary walking; I’d reached Claypits Lane without
realising it: another wonderful name derived from the fundamentals of the
landscape.
I turned around to see a
pale moon rising above the equally appropriately named “The Heavens”, before
dropping down the hill to reach the main road and the “Shop’N Drive”. It all
started to go wrong here: garages and cars and a text from my daughter saying she
needed to borrow money; but a glance up towards Butterow and a sight of the
Primitive Methodist Chapel and nearby toll house sent the mind off again, away
from the petty mundane material concerns of the here and now. Farewell mind –forg’d manacles and hello
Hazlitt.
I reflected on the
significance and meaning of it all as I walked the canal towpath. What could be
the synopsis of the wonders of this day’s solitary walking? What Twitter style
summary could I write about all the variegated events, thoughts, events,
observations and reflections involved in this individual ramble?
You Never Walk Alone.
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