Philip
Marsden’s new book explores an idea as much as it explores a country. It
journeys westward through Cornwall from Bodmin Moor to Scilly, alighting on the
rocky eminences where granite has boiled up through the Earth’s crust and
crystallised into highlands and headlands. It’s rugged country, raked by
south-westerlies ‘bred of the Atlantic’ and eaten at by seas surging into the
throat of the Channel. Western Europe reaches one of its fine points here, like
Cape Wrath in Sutherland, Lleyn and St David’s Head in Wales, and Cornuaille in
Brittany. In such places we come across peaks and juts of rock which look and
feel like those in West Penwith: ‘look’ because they draw our eyes and feet
like magnets, ‘feel’ because the whitish crystals of quartz, like petrified
pupae, that stud their surfaces are so useful as we climb the crags west of
Newlyn and north of Sennen.
Marsden
believes that the stone artefacts which crown so many of the Cornish uplands –
the circles, henges, quoits and megaliths – were made and placed there because
people found those heights important. Natural landmarks were valued, even
worshipped, and people were impelled to carve and erect the liths to mark and
celebrate them.We do lift up our eyes unto the hills. We use them to guide our
ways by land and sea. We are relieved when the next rise of land comes into
sight. Hills are perfect sites for burial grounds, and giant calendars, or to
celebrate a solstice or a chieftain’s life and death.
The
beauty of Marsden’s book is that, although it is thoroughly researched and
rigorously argued, it comes across as the result of experience, the close
frequenting of that characterful region. It calls up what it is to walk among
moors of wind-shorn whin and rustling bell-heather, or to step down beyond the
rim of Land’s End, to leave behind the shops full of plastic galleons and
‘gift’ mugs and clamber through buttresses fledged with hoary lichen. Marsden’s
way is to walk off down a lane, catch sight of a standing stone or a curiously
roughened hilltop, find out what has been discovered about its origins and
bring alive again the inquirers and artists who have gone before him. William
Borlase was the vicar of Ludgvan in Penwith.
At 52 he felt ‘his energies
starting to dim’ but then, in May 1748, he ‘happened to bump into two
distinguished antiquarians’ – also parsons, needless to say – and what he told
them about local antiquities so amazed them that he was encouraged to set off
on a renewed career of walking, collecting, describing and corresponding. All this
bore fruit in print, in Antiquities of Cornwall and Natural History
of Cornwall – the first wide-ranging records of the region. In that
pre-specialist age, Borlase was omnivorous, versatile. He recorded the weather
twice a day for decades. He measured stone circles. He studied fish and birds,
and kept a pet chough. He corresponded with Pope, and exchanged ‘a batch of
glittering Cornish rocks’ for a copy of the poet’s works.
Phillip Marsden
Above all he wrote to
fellow parsons, asking them whether they knew of any ‘rude obelisks of stone,
either straight, or circular line … any basins cut into the surface of your
rock’. All this comes under Marsden’s scrutiny in the Morrab Library in
Penzance, ‘a two-storey warren of high-ceilinged Georgian rooms’ looking out
over a subtropical garden to Mount’s Bay, where he reads Borlase’s letter
books, manuscripts and bundles of parish records.
Marsden
is a fellow of Borlase, and of Sabine Baring-Gould and Charles Henderson in the
later 19th and early 20th centuries, in his eagerness to find out about that
extremity of England which has the largest concentration of standing stones in
Britain. No serious theories have explained this, and it is daft to turn the
matter into a stamping-ground for weird fancies and fantasies. This has been a
tendency. John Heath-Stubbs called West Penwith...
a
hideous and wicked country,
Sloping to hateful sunsets and the end of time.
Sloping to hateful sunsets and the end of time.
A painter
friend of Marsden’s ‘watched low clouds drift in over the sea and felt that
each one was smothering her, wrapping her up like a shroud. She was on a train
back east the next day.’ Marsden himself seems to ascribe the suicide of John
Davidson, a poet who drowned himself at Penzance in 1909, to the ‘uneasy’
spirit of the place and calls it ‘a testing-ground for the great mysteries’.
Might the
dark cast of all this not be supplanted, or at least balanced, by the words of
the rock-climbing guidebook which says about the great cliffs at Bosigran that
‘beyond there is nothing but night and America’? These words epitomise for me
the epic quality of that end of England. You feel as though you are at the prow
of a ship on a voyage that follows the sun across the ocean.
It depends on the
frame of mind that you bring to the zawns and the headlands and the moors. Near
the start of Rising Ground Marsden brings back to life a mason called
Daniel Gumb who lived early in the 18th century, with his wife and family, in a
hut built of granite near the Cheesewring, that natural ‘sculpture’ of great
rock lobes that crowns a hill on Bodmin Moor. He was known as the ‘mountain
philosopher’, and was neither a churchgoer nor a Dissenter. On the roof of his
hut he carved a triangle like the one used to illustrate Pythagoras’ theorem.
Gumb, Marsden suggests, was driven by the same
urge that drove our Neolithic ancestors to arrange the moorstones into circles
… the same questions that tease us now: what law, what force, what patterns
exist in the vastness of space? And always, behind the questions, the doubt,
the depth-sounder beam probing the emptiness for something solid, the fear that
there might be none of these things at all.
Well,
Gumb was practical and not religious. As a craftsman living among the materials
of his work, under a sky unpolluted by smoke or man-made light, would he really
have seen space as empty, without solidity? Might he not have realised that our
Earth shares space with hundreds – thousands, millions – of perfectly solid
bodies and knots of materials, not necessarily sites of life but entities as
real, as available to our physical senses, as the granite and the shapes that
nature and people have crafted from Cornish stone?
For the
most part Marsden is well grounded in the real world, as he observes and comes
to understand the often ritual forms our forebears made out of their
surroundings. He doesn’t pretend that they can be explained by some overarching
theory, druidical or otherwise, as seems to have been the habit among inquirers
for centuries. In Pagan Britain Ronald Hutton shows that the beliefs
supposed to underlie ancient practices have often been imposed with little
evidence.* Roman
writers went in for ‘atrocity propaganda’ to portray the Britons they had
conquered as savage barbarians. In Dorset some elderly women were buried with
their severed heads at their feet. This could be seen as ritual execution, but
it may equally have been a part of a rite of passage.
Marsden, it’s a relief to
find, is not at all inclined to over-interpret the henges, menhirs and stone
circles. He respects the communal labour that went into their making and
remarks that ‘all this heaving and shoving and hauling’ had nothing ‘to do with
the grind of daily life, with the necessity to eat, to provide food and
shelter’. Instead he sees the huge numbers of stony sites, in Cornwall and all
over the world, as providing a focus for people’s sense of place: ‘The natural
features and the man-made monuments mingle and interact, suggesting that there
was little difference in the way they were perceived.’ He quotes the
anthropologist Diana Eck’s Sacred Geography of India, where she writes
that ‘anywhere one goes in India, one finds a living landscape in which
mountains, rivers, forests and villages are elaborately linked to the stories
of gods and heroes’ and pilgrims have ‘generated a powerful sense of land,
location and belonging through journeys’.
Marsden’s
own journey, his hunt for ‘a mythology of place’, starts with a brief stay in a
hut in the northwest corner of Bodmin Moor. ‘The next day I left early to walk
out to Stowe’s Pound. Mist covered everything.’ Later that summer, after months
of work on the near-ruin that was being turned into a home for him and his
family, ‘I set off for Leskernick Hill. The night’s gale had eased, but a low
cover of cloud still raced overhead.’ The place is a huge confusion of stones:
the remains of huts, compounds, stone circles and one monolith. ‘All these –
the monuments, the settlement, thousands of years of reverence for this place –
derived ultimately from the simple arrangement of hills.’
On he
travels: ‘I followed the lonely stretch of coast between Tintagel and Port
Isaac. The clifftop path wove through a mass of old slate quarries, worked-out
dells, blasted rock faces and single standing columns, which looked like the
chimneys of bombed houses.’ He revisits his old home on the northern edge of
the Mendips, shortly before his parents move out for good: ‘Early the next
morning, I rose at dawn to walk over the hill to Glastonbury. I’d tried once
before, one January years earlier, but fell in a rhyne down on the Levels and
lost heart.’ So the author’s recent past, which we feel as his present,
interweaves with his origins. Later, he is tracing the River Fal, near whose
headwaters he now lives, to its beginnings among china clay pits, ‘pushing
aside head-high growth, crouching and crawling at times’.
So it
goes on, a narrative lasting several years, artfully made to sound almost
continuous. The outcome is that the extraordinary richness of daily perceptions
and antiquarian knowledge assembled in Rising Ground never feels like a
tray of specimens laid out for inspection. Marsden tacks westward from one
vantage point to another, making an attempt to understand how this terrain
represents a fundamental human mindset: a desire to place landmarks, to help
locate and settle our place in the world. It is all thoroughly human – it is
peopled. The men and women he meets are as present as the land. No reader will
soon forget the man from Redruth, one of a group of ‘pagans’ in the Admiral
Benbow pub in Penzance who meet to discuss pre-Christian sites and start with a
rite:
The man recalls a visit
to Carn Brea with his grandfather: ‘He kicks back the grass round the top there
and grabs my ’ands and presses them down into the bare soil. “Feel that, boy?
Does ’ee feel it?” I felt nothing but the mud. “That, boy! ’Tes the beating
heart of Cornwall!”’ We won’t forget Marsden’s friend in Abkhazia, the
non-state on the Georgian shore of the Black Sea which has been damaged by
secessionist war. When Marsden asked to be taken up to the family a’nyxa
or ritual site up in the hills, the man had to refuse, because the place had
been mined.
David Craig 2015:
A version of this review first appeared in The London Review of Books. Vol 37/No5
- Rising Ground: A Search for
the Spirit of Place by Philip Marsden
Granta, 348 pp, £20.00, October 2014, ISBN 978 1 84708 628 0
A version of this review first appeared in The London Review of Books. Vol 37/No5