I have just returned from the 6th (I think) International Robin Hood Conference at Gregynog, Powys, where I gave a paper on the Roman bandit Bulla Felix. I drove back home through the drowned fields of Shropshire. Imprinted in my mind this stark image, glimpsed briefly through a hedge: a field of barley, nearly ripe, standing in water almost up to the ears.
Titania complains to Oberon:
And never since the middle Summers spring
Met we on hil, in dale, forrest, or mead,
By paved fountaine, or by rushie brooke,
Or in the beached margent of the sea,
To dance our ringlets to the whistling Winde,
But with thy braules thou hast disturb’d our sport.
Therefore the Windes, piping to us in vaine,
As in revenge, have suck’d up from the sea
Contagious fogges: Which falling in the Land,
Hath everie petty River made so proud,
That they have over-borne their Continents.
The Oxe hath therefore stretch’d his yoake in vaine,
The Ploughman lost his sweat, and the greene Corne
Hath rotted, ere his youth attain’d a beard:
The fold stands empty in the drowned field,
And Crowes are fatted with the murrion flocke,
The nine mens Morris is fild up with mud,
And the queint Mazes in the wanton greene,
For lacke of tread are undistinguishable.
William Shakespeare (1564–1616)
from A Midsummer Night's Dream (c. 1595)
When I first read this, aged eleven, I was stirred and delighted by the poetry. Well-fed western child of the sixties that I was, I had no experience that would have allowed me to conceive of the horrors lurking just beyond the surface of these lines: the stunted, sickly children, the starved vagrants dying in ditches. We shall survive our ruined harvest, but only because we long ago learned the art of making lifeless currency multiply and grow as if it were corn – an art that every orthodox Elizabethan would have professed to consider unnatural and evil.
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(no subject)
Date: July 27th, 2007 05:03 pm (UTC)The childing autumn, angry winter, change
Their wonted liveries, and the mazed world,
By their increase, now knows not which is which:
And this same progeny of evils comes
From our debate, from our dissension;
We are their parents and original."
I always think of that passage when I see the wacky weather - particularly if I suspect our shoddy treatment of the environment is partly to blame.
Anyway, I am glad you made it home safely. It was nice meeting you.
I wish I could have heard your paper, but I was in seminar room 1 giving my wacky presentation. (It's a bit disappointing that I think the first one that Stephen Knight was actually in the room for was the least serious of all my efforts. But at least people laughed).
Allen
(no subject)
Date: July 28th, 2007 07:57 pm (UTC)It was nice meeting you, too, and I am sorry I had to miss your paper. That's the worst thing about conferences; there are always clashes.
I ran into a few shallow floods and one big detour on the way home, but it wasn't too bad. Would have been a lot more problematic if I'd been heading south. I have wondered how the other people from the conference managed getting home; there was so much anxiety that last morning about the travel conditions. But you are now safely back in Canada, I see.