Saturday, March 21, 2026

Lines written in early spring

 

Bumblebee sleeping in flowers of Three-cornered Leek. Frome, 6 March 2026.

I'll imagine all of these bumblebees are the very common Buff-tailed Bumblebee (Bombus terrestris), whose queens emerge quite early -- not that I really know anything about bumblebees, but anyway they don't look like Early Bumblebee (Bombus pratorum).

The Comma butterfly is Polygonia c-album. One of the first butterflies to emerge from hibernation, in March. (I saw a Peacock butterfly too, but it wouldn't stay still for a photo.)

Three-cornered Leek or Three-cornered Garlic (Allium triquetrum) is native to SW Europe. Introduced in the British Isles and began to spread in the wild from around 1850, initially in Cornwall and now in much of the SW. In Sweden it's called Sloklök ("drooping onion") but it isn't established in the wild there, at any rate not yet.

Dandelion (Taraxacum officinale). But that doesn't really tell the story. In the south of its range it reproduces sexually in the same way as most other plant species. But the further north you go, the more this is replaced by non-sexual apomixis, leading to large numbers of minutely different microspecies, often with their own ecological niches. About 70 microspecies have been recognized in Germany, about 250 in the British Isles, and nearly 1,000 in Sweden. The Swedish name is Maskros ("maggot-rose").


Bumblebee sleeping in flowers of Three-cornered Leek. Frome, 9 March 2026.

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Lines Written in Early Spring


I heard a thousand blended notes,
While in a grove I sate reclined,
In that sweet mood when pleasant thoughts
Bring sad thoughts to the mind.

To her fair works did Nature link
The human soul that through me ran;
And much it grieved my heart to think
What man has made of man.

Through primrose tufts, in that green bower,
The periwinkle trailed its wreaths;
And ’tis my faith that every flower
Enjoys the air it breathes.

The birds around me hopped and played,
Their thoughts I cannot measure:—
But the least motion which they made
It seemed a thrill of pleasure.

The budding twigs spread out their fan,
To catch the breezy air;
And I must think, do all I can,
That there was pleasure there.

If this belief from heaven be sent,
If such be Nature’s holy plan,
Have I not reason to lament
What man has made of man?



(By William Wordsworth. From the first edition of Lyrical Ballads (1798).)


Comma on Dandelion. Frome, 14 March 2026.

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"What man has made of man".

A reader of 1798 could think of:

the Reign of Terror in France (1793-1794);

the latest war in Europe, ongoing since 1792 (and harking back to the brutalities of e.g. the Seven Years' War (1756-1763));

the slave trade (not banned until 1807), or slavery itself (keeping the existing slaves was legal under British law until 1833);

the oppressive conditions of the industrial revolution.

the age-old oppression of the poor and powerless by the rich and powerful, as much evinced in the other poems of Lyrical Ballads.

Wordsworth's line is powerfully generalized. But at any rate we're talking about shaping the lives of other people: exploitation, manipulation, control, oppression, dehumanization, predation; tampering with someone else's freedom to live a natural life in a natural community and enjoy the pleasure of spring. 



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You know how we spend loads of time thinking and talking about what we want to do but aren't yet doing and may likely never do; but things we actually are doing, we don't need to talk about them so much, we're just getting on with them. Conversation is often about compensation (to be cynical); yet it's also about reminding, stirring the depths. 

It can be like that with poetry too. Wordsworth's simple yet inexhaustible poem continues to feel central just because we didn't act on what he's saying, though an eight-year-old child can see that it's spot-on. In fact in the two centuries since he wrote the poem, we've doubled down: more killing, more technology, more technological killing, more dehumanization. Wordsworth's poem is there in the centre of our culture to compensate and to stir, the poem's existence a frail hope in itself, like the existence of early spring. 

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I suppose we should take "early spring" as meaning some time around the equinox. Spring started a bit later in those days. But anyway, primroses and periwinkles are very early flowers.

I'm thinking about how differently Wordsworth would have seen early spring, compared to my photos. Evidently he wouldn't have seen Three-cornered Leek in 1798. He probably wouldn't have known there were different bumblebee species. He wrote poems titled "To a Butterfly", but he never mentions any specific butterfly species. The idea that dandelions might be many species rather than one wouldn't have interested him at all. In fact Wordsworth was rather against the growing enthusiasm for focussing on species and types; for botanists and geologists grubbing about collecting specimens and ticking their lists, as he says in The Excursion. For him nature was something grander and more interlinked; it was almost God, it was a manifestation of God's plan anyway, it wasn't something you could pin down with your IDs. Oh, and in 1798 there were no cameras, let alone macro lenses. 

I heard a thousand blended notes...

It's a beautiful rendering of the chorus of birds in early spring, without picking out individuals. What did he hear in Alfoxden that morning? I imagine robins and wrens in prominent mid-range, blue tits and goldfinches at the higher pitches, sparrows chirping, at mellower pitch a song-thrush or blackbird, and maybe the distant cooing of wood-pigeon or chattering magpies or the cawing of rooks. And that's probably all wrong, a 21st-century urban sound imposed on an 18th century valley in the Quantocks. But no matter about the details: Wordsworth's early spring can still be our early spring in 2026, more or less. 
 
Wordsworth knew plenty of species, of course; his name is forever associated with some of them: the daffodil, the green linnet (greenfinch), the yew and the hazel, the small celandine ... though he tells us he only became aware of the latter as an adult. Or in this poem the primrose and the periwinkle. The expression "trailed its wreaths" is enough, in my opinion, to identify this as the lesser periwinkle, Vinca minor (Vinca major is more arching than trailing). Like Three-cornered Leek it was an introduction from southern Europe, but a more ancient one and well-established in Wordsworth's day.




Bumblebee on Dandelion. Frome, 17 March 2026. 


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Sunday, March 08, 2026

Charity Drops




Another move imminent, and time to send some more things to the charity shop. I've at least dipped into most of them.

Beaumont and Fletcher are author-names that will always be paired, like Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö. (And that's a rather inelegant way of contriving to mention The Man Who Went Up In Smoke, another recent and speedy read that was moved on too swiftly to even get in the photo; books like that circulate fast. It's the second in their 10-novel sequence, maybe not as searching as Rosanna but more satisfying overall; a month later I'm still turning over the immaculate design in my mind, the floundering Martin Beck finding his way through tiny details, dissonances, possibilities... In one respect the novel describes a definitively lost era, when passport photos were hardly checked because they never looked like their subjects anyway. But is our world better now?)

Anyway, Francis Beaumont's career as a dramatist was brief and he mostly wrote with his friend John Fletcher but The Knight of the Burning Pestle seems to be by him alone. It's a play I'd never really tuned into until I found this book (in a charity shop), and I was quite surprised to learn of its enduring popularity and how many times it's been staged, especially in the last 100 years. Without repeating the details you can look up in Wikipedia, it's basically a fantastical fourth-wall-breaking burlesque city comedy, and is probably a lot of fun to act in. Beaumont's style, witty without malice and prone to sheer enjoyment of different registers and melodies, is very appealing. An interesting thing is the clear influence of Don Quixote, not long after the publication of the First Part and some years before the first English translation. It's a less reverential and predictable influence than what came later. The pairing of the distracted Knight with the shrewd Sancho Panza became a template for English authors to build their own master-servant teams; to interrogate, moderate, and in the final analysis usually celebrate the class distinctions of their time. Once a book becomes an established classic our readings tend to align with each other, like the helpless tweeters we are. The well-born Francis Beaumont was certainly no enemy to class distinctions, but his untutored reading of Cervantes found other potential, and his own fantastical knight is a romantic grocer's apprentice.

Something else I can't help wondering. The Wife tells us this story about Ralph:

When he had lost our child, (you know it was strayed almost alone to Puddle-Wharf, and the criers were abroad for it, and there it had drowned itself but for a sculler,) Ralph was the most comfortablest to me: "Peace, mistress," says he, "let it go; I'll get you another as good." (Act II Scene 6)

Calling to mind an anecdote about Alfred Jarry: 

Jarry also took to carrying a loaded revolver. In response to a neighbour's complaint that his target shooting endangered her children, he replied, "If that should ever happen, ma-da-me, we should ourselves be happy to get new ones with you." (Wikipedia .)

Could the inventor of absurdist theatre have been an admirer of The Knight of the Burning Pestle? Surely not? And yet it wouldn't be wholly inappropriate... 

Online text:

 https://gutenberg.ca/ebooks/beaumontfletcher-knightpestle/beaumontfletcher-knightpestle-00-h-dir/beaumontfletcher-knightpestle-00-h.html

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From the incomplete Happy Families pack. The game was invented in 1851. On older packs the pictures are often grotesques like these ones, which were not credited but are reminiscent of Sir John Tenniel's illustrations for Alice in Wonderland (1865).

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I'm still waiting for the day when I truly connect with Tennyson's poetry. I need an angle, even just a single poem that I more than enjoy and more than admire, a poem I really care about. But it still eludes me. Take Morte d'Arthur, much of which I know by heart. 

So all day long the noise of battle roll'd
Among the mountains by the winter sea...

Tennyson discovered life at its most intense -- or perhaps most picturable -- within the chamber of death, when the life that was a life has come to feel like a vain dream. But I'm thinking: How comes it that Arthur and Bedivere are alone by the mere? What happened to everyone else? Tennyson himself felt the question pressing, and when he later came to write the Idylls of the King he fully described this strangest of battles, yet even added to its mysterious power. 

The three queens come, and the tallest and fairest rests Arthur's head in her lap, but I'm aware that their own powerful presence arises from being voiceless, and that Tennyson's poem is consciously at the end of an era, centuries of exclusive conversation within the male mind. 

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The suffragettes were willing to die to change that, and some did. Reading them now, I still find a spirit of radicalism beyond what would be expressed in any modern newspaper. Not the first wave, who tried to make their case within the established structures of society. That seemed to go nowhere, because MPs didn't need to care what women thought, but probably without the first wave there couldn't have been a second wave who committed to going further. The case was made, but only revolution could implement it. Once implemented, society tried to forget all about the revolutionaries and their disagreeable behaviour; even more so, the disagreeable counter-measures of outraged authority. But in the west, whatever your politics, it's hard to imagine a democracy in which women have no share. (And doubtless in some parts of the world that's a very cogent reason for not having democracy at all.)

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From the Apocrypha (passed on to me by my Dad, who found it useful when studying ancient coins), I decided to sample the Book of Judith, vaguely recalling a host of sensational paintings and frequent references to the story in medieval literature.  

But taak kepe of the deeth of Oloferne;
Amydde his hoost he dronke lay a-nyght,
Withinne his tente, large as is a berne;
And yet, for al his pompe and al his myght
Judith, a womman, as he lay upright
Slepynge, his heed of smoot, and from his tente
Ful prively she stal from every wight,
And with his heed unto hir toun she wente.

(Chaucer's Monk's Tale)

The Book of Judith is very good reading. It starts off like chronicle history: 

In the twelfth year of the reign of Nabuchodonosor, who reigned in Nineve, the great city; in the days of Arphaxad, which reigned over the Medes in Ecbatane ... (Judith 1:1)

But this Nabuchodonosor is king of the Assyrians (1:7), and that can't be right: the name isn't Assyrian but Babylonian (e.g. Nebuchadnezzar II, whose reign began a few years after the final collapse of the Assyrian empire). 

The name Arphaxad isn't Median either; it's been repurposed from a son of Shem in Genesis. 

No wonder some people have suggested that the Book of Judith is best seen as a pseudohistorical adventure story. It's a well-shaped treatment in 16 chapters of a single storyline, building up our expectation by a circuitous approach (totally unlike real chronicle histories that record diffuse events). The first couple of chapters describe how the Assyrian king comes to be offended by all the peoples along his western frontier and orders a fearsome retribution, to be carried out by his top general Holofernes at the head of a massive army. Only in the third chapter do we home in on the Israelites and the dire implications for them. A mildly interested Holofernes asks "So who are these Israelites anyway?", and the heathen Achior says, basically, "Pretty tough cookies, don't take them for granted" and nearly gets himself killed for his negative attitude. Holofernes first has to deal with the border hill-town of Bethulia*; he cuts off the water supply and waits. After a while the suffering townsfolk start barracking the town authorities to capitulate. And only now, at the eleventh hour and half-way through the book, do we hear of a pious and beautiful widow named Judith... 

You can see the sort of cheaply effective artistry on display here. There's a certain fittingness to one of the earliest American feature films being Judith of Bethulia (1914); though I must say compared to Thomas Bailey Aldrich and D. W. Griffith the original Book of Judith seems quite subtle. It survives in Greek, but was perhaps originally composed in Aramaic c. 150-100 BCE. It isn't in the Hebrew canon. Catholic and Orthodox Christians accept it as scriptural, but not Protestants. 

* Fictional place-name; commonly identified with Shechem. 

An excellent account of Judith of Bethulia by Nitrate Glow: https://nitrateglow.wordpress.com/2024/03/28/beauty-vs-beast-thoughts-on-judith-of-bethulia-1914/ .


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Liverpool's Hidden History is about Catholicism in SW Lancashire, especially under the Persecution of Elizabeth I and later. Liverpool was still a very small town. The whole area was a centre of staunch recusancy. Church services took place in secret. The government considered a practising priest as equivalent to a traitor and hence liable to execution by being hanged, drawn and quartered. 

That happened to Ambrose Barlow in 1641. He was perfectly prepared for martyrdom. Here's some extracts from a friend's memoir:

A notable thing he told me at Easter was two years. That he had been about 20 years in England and no one day thereof omitted to celebrate. ...

His house was the only sure refuge that I knew for poor folk and penitents. His solemn days of invitation were three; Christmas, Easter and Whitsunday, and then he entertained all that would dine with him. Their cheer was boiled beef and pottage, mince pies, goose and groats, and to every man a grey coat at parting. ...

When he travelled abroad he went the ordinary way, and even through the town of Leigh when his business was that way, and I think he was as well known there as their parson. Some talk much of discretion, but his fortitude hath sure brought out good fruit. Upon a time speaking of some of the gentry, that would not be seen by any at Mass, he said: I like not those that will be peeping at God. ...

Although it be a common thing amongst many good men that would be loath to fight to wear swords, yet our martyr would wear none; and thus merrily he answered me when I took notice thereof, saying: Indeed I dare not wear a sword, because I am of a choleric nature . . . he loved to observe how time passed, but he had no pocket watch; and once I asked him why he had not a watch to take abroad with, as it was usual; and he answered me that it was pride, pride . . .

At that time, being Easter was two years, when I had his last blessing, he told me upon occasion, as oft he had done before, that they would not leave till they had him at Lancaster; whereat I did wonder that he should have such a conceipt,  things going so well with Catholics that there was great hopes of better and better . . . But he told me that Mr [Edmund] Arrowsmith, the last martyr at Lancaster, had appeared to him and did bid him to have a care of his words when he came before the judges; to which I answering in these words: I am sure, Sir, that you will talk to them . . . at my blunt reply he did laugh heartily...

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Maria Goretti was another martyr, one of the youngest recent saints. She came from a poor but devout family who were sharecroppers near the Lazio coast, south of Rome. At 11 she was running the household so her mother could work in the fields with her brothers, when another farm-labourer, 20-year-old Alessandro, tried to coerce sex with her. She said "No, God doesn't want this. If you do this you'll go to hell." It was July 5th, 1902; the threshing was in progress and hid all sound. He stabbed her 14 times. On her death-bed she forgave him; so did her family. Years later Alessandro fully repented and after release from prison spent the rest of his long life as a lay brother. 

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I suppose the era of field guides is coming to an end, replaced by smartphones. Anyway, I felt I didn't really need John Gooders' bird guide any more, though its clarity and vast information have been much admired. It's forty years old now, and some things have changed dramatically; kites, rare then, are now an everyday sight. You are far more likely to see an egret than a hawfinch. The Yellow-Legged Gull is now a thing. 

Like every field guide it has its eccentric moments, electing to call the dunnock the Hedge Accentor and describing the wren's explosive song as a warble. 

There was an art to describing bird-song in books, and we still need it; without it we can hear recordings on our smartphones but we can't talk about the songs or share our impressions or how we recognize them. You can use onomatopoeic coinages like tuk-tuk-tuk (often surprisingly unhelpful) or you can attempt descriptive words; John Gooders writes of the Grasshopper Warbler's "ventroloquial reeling". Perhaps "ventriloquial" means that it sounds like mimicry even though it isn't. He's talking about the song's uncanny resemblance to the sound of a fly-fisher's reel.  

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That copy of A Doll's House witnesses to my vague feeling of wanting to read Ibsen again, but I didn't manage it this time. However, a timely cold meant that I did finally read The Great Gatsby, something I promised myself a few years ago. Of course I read it hungrily and with delight -- Well, who doesn't? The world probably doesn't need any more thoughts on such an exhaustively discussed book, but if I think of anything I'll put it in another post.

To add to the enjoyment, my copy (rescued from the paper-recycling skip at the dump, as were the suffragettes) was prismatically annotated by an enthusiastic student. 



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