The Tall Girl from Somerset Chapter 2 ´Rain and a walk´
ANNE
Berringford, Somerset October
1964
Rain and a walk
Anne
pushed her hair back from her eyes and looked up. Yes, it was
raining. Early October rain. Very early October. Not
cold. That would come, though, in November. She had walked for a
couple of hours over the Mendips and was nearly home. Ahead were the flat green fields that
stretched from her village, Berringford, as far as the coast. Her
country. ‘God’s own country’, Uncle Henry had called it one evening
just after Easter as he had looked across the fields to Weston and the setting
sun. Anne looked up. Beyond the line of the shore was the
Bristol Channel, a streak of white and brown on its way down to
Exmoor. She could hardly see the hills of Wales across the
sea. What did they say here? ‘If you stand on Tollbury
Hill and the mountains of Wales look close, it is going to rain. If
they look a long way off, it has just rained and if you cannot see them at all,
it is raining!’ Who had told her that? Was that Uncle Henry
too? It sounded a bit like him. She looked down again, smiled, concentrated on
the stony path in front of her, for it was slippery now, and pulled her hood
over her head. Then she carried on, walking faster as the rain fell
harder.
‘Come on, Anne. Don’t give
up. Never give up. Just another twenty minutes. You’ve
done Dark Down, the backbone of the Mendips. You’ve passed the peak
of Tollbury. The rain is pretty bad, but the rain has never
mattered! The weather never matters. What matters is to be able to
go on. To face things. To face tomorrow. To face starting something new. To
keep going. Pull your hood tighter. Keep the rain out. One more
rise, and I can hardly see it through the rain, and then it’s down the hill,
across the A38, careful of the traffic, the cars come down the hill very fast
there, up the muddy lane, down the wide rocky road they call the batch, through
the cottage garden, which seems someone's home and, in fact, is someone's
home but the footpath still runs through it, and then down the little path
between the high hedges. Back
home. Back to Erewhon and to tea and the
fire, and there will be toast, and then you have to get ready for tomorrow.’
‘Tomorrow is Monday, but it’ll be OK.’
It
was OK, and next day Anne left home and went to Oxford to study
law.
HENRY
The best years of your life and 'The Merchant of
Venice'.
I was always Uncle Henry, and I still am, I
suppose, though now I’m a
great uncle if we’re strict about
it. I saw Anne, well, I saw them all, Anne and
her parents, three times a year, at
Christmas, at Easter and then once in the
summer. This was our pattern, and it
lasted for many years, through the 50s and
early 60s, all the years of her childhood
anyway. It’s still the normal shape of
the year for me, I suppose. Every
year the same! You see I live in Chiswick,
and they lived in Somerset, in the village
of Berringford at the foot of the
Mendip Hills, so there was
a distance. It took much longer to get about in those
days. In the 50s and 60s
England was a much bigger place than now. The
journey from Somerset to Yorkshire took
a whole day. We would drive slowly
through the cities, through the towns and through
the villages We saw church
towers from a distance and then we came up to
them. We saw the big gardens
of the houses just outside the village and then the
pub and the post office and
the pond as we reached the centre. There were no motorways then, you see, and
I think we were all the better for
it. We savoured England as we drove through
it. We knew where we were.
Not that often, was it, three times a
year? But at least I was always available. I
may not have done a great deal with my
life, but I’ve always been around when
wanted. I
suppose that’s something. It’s not much, but it’s something, and in
spite of all the dreams we have when we
are 18, in the end we have to rely on
these little things. They matter, the
small things we have actually done. I hope
they will pull us through.
Anne finished school and was just about to go to
university, I remember. That’s
not an easy time, you know. Going
back over 60 years, I remember how I felt
when I started. Is it that
long? That sounds an awfully long time, but the years
just pile up, you know. They
accumulate.
You expect so much of university, and, to make
things worse, people
expect so much of you! They tell you
that you’re about to embark
on the best years of your
life. Embark! It’s a place, not a boat for heaven’s
sake. Well, they are for some people,
I suppose! The best years, I mean. I
enjoyed them, but then I am middle of the road;
neither clever nor stupid,
neither full of energy nor lazy.
‘It is no mean happiness, therefore, to be
seated in the mean.’ That’s from 'The
Merchant of Venice’. Nerissa was right. She was in the
mean too, I suppose.
My English teacher at Waterbury, Mr Morgan, used
to say that the ordinary
characters in Shakespeare existed just to show
us our place among the
others, the great ones. He said that
we are really on the level of the servants and
the country yokels. I think he was
exaggerating a little, but he had a point,
didn’t he! He made us think. How he hated
it when we retailed the views of the
critics in our essay. ‘But what do you think?’ he would say. ‘I’m
not interested
in what the book says. What do you think?’
Anyway, like Nerissa, I am middle of the road
and there’s something to be said
for it. Where would we all be without
the man in the street or the man on the
Clapham omnibus? How could the great
ones stand out if there were no
ordinary people like us to stand out from?
So she went to university. Yes, perhaps they are
the best years for some. But
they are not a happy time for a lot of
others, and I don’t think they were for
Anne. I have a suspicion that
she wasn't happy at Oxford, though she never
said much to me. Young people have
such a capacity for suffering, such a
capacity for putting themselves through the mill. When
you’re old, you can’t
even suffer with intensity! Thank
goodness! University! It can be three years
of purgatory, self-inflicted purgatory, but
none the less painful for that!
Ah well! Let’s go on. Yes, I think
we’d better move on.
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