A selection of writings, speeches, photographs and events as well as some of my favourite literary passages.
Sunday, 2 November 2014
Monday, 13 October 2014
Favourite Poems - Dirge Without Music
So it is, and so it will be, for so it has been, time out of mind:
More precious was the light in your eyes than all the roses in the world.
Down, down, down into the darkness of the grave
Into the darkness they go, the wise and the lovely.
Crowned with lilies and with laurel they go; but I am not resigned.
Lovers and thinkers, into the earth with you.
Be one with the dull, the indiscriminate dust.
A fragment of what you felt, of what you knew,
A formula, a phrase remains,—but the best is lost.
The answers quick and keen, the honest look, the laughter, the love,
—They are gone. They are gone to feed the roses.
Elegant and curled is the blossom. Fragrant is the blossom. I know.
But I do not approve.
More precious was the light in your eyes than all the roses in the world.
Down, down, down into the darkness of the grave
Gently they go, the beautiful, the tender, the kind;
Quietly they go, the intelligent, the witty, the brave.
I know. But I do not approve. And I am not resigned.
I am not resigned to the shutting away of loving hearts in the hard ground.
Dirge Without Music
Edna St. Vincent Millay
Dirge Without Music
Edna St. Vincent Millay
Monday, 6 October 2014
Grave Threat to Stockbridge and Longstock from Developers 2014
The representation of visual effect of the proposed building of 46 houses above Stockbridge and Longstock, as seen from the Down |
Stockbridge and the linked village of Longstock lie in the Test River valley, in some of the most picturesque and unspoilt countryside in Hampshire. The town of Stockbridge has a long and interesting history, having developed from its Roman origins as a key causeway across the river into a thriving centre for fishing and country sports, and is particularly famed for its unusual range of independent shops which flank the broad high street. At either end there is downland and open countryside, and on either side lie a fine grazing marsh and water meadows.
For the past year the town has been under threat from plans for a completely inappropriate development initiated by a well-connected local councillor seeking personally to benefit from the sale of the proposed site. Apart from the fact that having a councillor who is not able to represent his constituents on an important local issue (as he has to declare an interest and absent himself from any discussion), natural justice requires that our elected councillors should not be able to benefit from large-scale development in areas they represent.
Currently the developers, David Wilson Homes, have resubmitted their plans for consideration by Test Valley Borough Council before any decision has been taken, as the result of initial fierce local opposition. However, the revised plans do nothing at all to change the basic objections, and have been soundly condemned by many, including the National Trust. There is no doubt that the development itself would have a dramatic adverse visual impact on the town of Stockbridge and change its aspect and character forever.
The basic objections to the plans can be summarised as follows:
£ This urban style development is still far too
large; it is not suited to its rural location and will only serve to encourage
further inappropriate development in the countryside surrounding Stockbridge.
*Contrary to
Chap 7, Policy E1 & Policy E2 of the emerging TVBC Local Plan and Longstock
& Stockbridge VDS.
£ In the revised plans David Wilson Homes (DWH)
admit that the proposed
development of 46 houses and flats will be visually intrusive in this area of
open countryside. The suggested tree planting
will do little to address visibility, day or night. The proposal will significantly change the
appearance of the area and have no relationship with the established character
and development pattern of the surrounding villages. It will appear as a sporadic urban
development that is out of character and context with this part of the Test Valley. This site will permanently compromise and
irrefutably erode this rural area, irrevocably damaging the character of
Stockbridge.
*Contrary to
Chap 7, Policy E1 & Policy E2 of the emerging TVBC Local Plan, Longstock
& Stockbridge VDS and Chap 11 & 12 of the NPPF.
£ The affordable housing offered in this
development still does not meet actual need for all three parishes. Current housing figures as at August 2014 show
a total requirement for 35 properties;
1 Bed
|
2 Bed
|
3 Bed
|
4 Bed
|
Total
|
|
Actual Need
|
31
|
3
|
1
|
0
|
35
|
Proposed
|
3
|
11
|
3
|
1
|
18
|
It is clear that the affordable housing offered in
this development will not be filled by people with a local connection to the
three parishes, contrary to principles of rural affordable housing. These
18 affordable properties are simply being used to justify building 28 market
value houses in undeveloped countryside outside of the defined settlement
boundary.
*Contrary
Policy E2 and COM 8 of the emerging TVBC Local Plan and Para 7 and Chap 9 of
NPPF.
£
The site is not sustainable. There is limited employment in Stockbridge
and the surrounding villages which will result in residents from this
development commuting. There is only a
very limited bus service - no other public transport exists and roads are
unsuitable for cyclists. The site is too
far away from the nearest towns to encourage walking. This will result in an environmentally
unacceptable increase in traffic through Stockbridge. The economic benefits offered by this
proposal are overstated and would duplicated if this development were placed
anywhere within the Test valley.
Stockbridge cannot cope with such a significant increase in population,
it will overwhelm existing infrastructure and result in an unacceptable
reduction in service to its current residents.
*Contrary to Chap
4 Para 4.1 of the emerging TVBC Local Plan, Para 7 and Chap 3 & 4 of NPPF.
£ The development site already experiences
problems with rain water runoff which will be exacerbated once built upon. DWH are using run off statistics collated in 2012
prior to last winter’s flooding**. Siting
a development of this size above a flood plain fails to safeguard existing residents
from future flooding.
*Contrary to Policy E7 of the emerging TVBC Local Plan and Chap 10 &
11 of NPPF.
The local planning officer hearing the case is Mr Jason Owen of Test Valley Borough Council. He can be contacted on planning@testvalley.gov.uk or an online form exists for objection to be filed by 14th October
Tuesday, 9 September 2014
Sunday, 7 September 2014
Favourite Gardens - The Buildings, Broughton
Panorama of the grass garden |
I have posted many photos from this amazing garden before, but on yesterday's NGS visit, it was looking more beautiful than ever. As some of you know, it has been the inspiration for my own grass and gravel garden, which sadly will never reach this level of perfection.
Old Swan House gravel garden in September |
Click here for more photos from the Buildings
And here for more photos of Old Swan House in September
Thursday, 4 September 2014
Horst at the V&A: Photographer of Style
Horst's Vogue covers |
The V&A's superb exhibition of the works of the photographer Horst (1909 - 1999) runs from 6th September to 4th January 2015 is a fine account of his fascinating life and includes his most famous fashion images and portraits as well as some of the more informal shots of those in his gilded circle of friends. Horst lived with my uncle Valentine Lawford (known as Nicholas in the United States) from 1950 to Valentine's death in 1991 and was an occasional visitor at home and took a number of portraits of us (which fortunately did not surface at the exhibition).
Herry and Valentine at Danegate 1949. Photo by Horst |
For some photos of the event, click here.
Tuesday, 29 July 2014
Obituary: Ernie Stiles 1941 – 2014
Ernie at Harvestgate Cottage 2012 |
Ernest Stiles was
born on 17th May 1941 to Alfred and Edith Stiles at Hillcrest in
Meonstoke, within sight of the Bucks Head.
He was the youngest of three boys and is survived by his brothers Alfie
and Phil. Ernie went to Meonstoke School and then to Cowplain, and left school
at 15 - as was common in those days - and started work for my father Patrick
Lawford at Stocks Farm in October 1956. Ernie remained at Stocks all his
working life until Patrick Lawford died in 2002 and the farm was sold – a total
of 46 years.
Ernie met Sylvia
Painter when he was sixteen and she 14 and they married in 1963, when he was
22. Sylvia came from a family of eight from West Meon. Together they had four
children - Jane, Andrew, Phillippa and Richard, and there are three
grandchildren, Chloe, Rebecca and Jessica. Richard still lives with Sylvia at
home at Harvestgate while the others are in Bishops Waltham, the Isle of Wight and
Devon – and all are of course here today.
I would like to
tell a little of the story of Ernie’s life from the time he joined Stocks. On Saturday
14th October 1956 my father’s farm diary includes ‘Stiles Boy’ for
the first time in the list of those working there – which in those days
included Reg Whitear, then the head man, John Spreadbury, who had joined he
farm in October 1950, the year we moved in, George Langridge (who my brother
Piers and I called ‘long-nose’) and who later worked at Peake, Tyrell and ‘Shep’
Frampton, who had worked with my father at Litchfield. In those days there were
seven or eight men working regularly on the farm, and there were three cottages
in the village on the hill above the Buck’s Head, as well as two at
‘Blackhouse’ on the down under Old Winchester Hill - now an enormous pile
called Stocks Down Farm and rented to Dr Morris, who has been so good with
Ernie throughout his long illness (but I am getting ahead of myself).
In the those early
days Ernie had a BSA motorbike, which Sylvia remembers cleaning, and they used
to travel together to watch stock car and speedway racing in Southampton. They married on 30th November
1963, and the farm diary records the wedding - naturally on a Saturday – but by
Monday Ernie was back at work and he spent the rest of the week ploughing. He
and Sylvia moved into one of the Blackhouse cottages, which being high up under
Old Winchester Hill had by far the best view in the valley - at least they used
to until a later tenant, Stan Cutler, planted a Christmas tree in the front
garden!
Ernie’s life was bounded
by the farms and villages around Stocks, and he never travelled very far. To the north, there was the imposing bulk of Old
Winchester Hill, which was taken over from us by the Nature Conservancy in
1954, and behind it Peake Farm and the McPhails where Ernie was sometimes sent
to help. To the East was Parker's, and Tom Parker could often be seen up, riding
the boundaries in his polished riding boots or in the lane in a pony and trap,
and we all marveled at ‘the Cathedral’ – the huge drier and grain store which
he built over the hill from us. To the south and west were the Horns - Bob and
Stephen – and down Stocks Lane towards Meonstoke, the Biles’s at Harvestgate
Farm, which we bought on Tom Biles’s retirement in 1970. Ernie and Sylvia moved into Harvestgate Farmcottage and remained there to this day. Down Stocks Lane were the Minors and beyond
them Bruce Horn at Shavards, the Martins in Exton and above Corhampton, the
Rowsells. And Ernie worked with all of them, for as we shall see, he was also a
great beater.
When Ernie first came
to Stocks, he would have driven the old Fordson tractors without cabs and other
comforts, possibly still started by hand, but he became a good
ploughman, winning some ploughing matches. But my memories of Ernie then were more often on one of the
Fordsons with a buck rake on the front, moving stuff around the yard or carting
feed. Ernie had many years potato and sugar beet harvesting and used to take
trailer-loads of sugar-beet to Droxford station where the invariably wet and
muddy beet had to be loaded by hand onto the wagons using those strange
blunt-ended forks. In later years, he ran the drier, working for hours in the
heat and dust to clean and dry the grain and either bag it or move it into
great piles from where it could be loaded onto the grain lorries. Ernie would
work, as all the men did, late into the night and at weekends without
complaint, until the harvest was in and safely stored away. But that heat and
dust made his job particularly arduous.
Ernie had the
customary schooling, but I wonder if his teachers knew that he would turn out
to be good as he was at mental arithmetic? Bruce Horn remembers the terrifying
‘Tiger’ Harris at Cowplain who would hurl the blackboard rubber at you and once
cut open David Cook’s head. But Ernie was extremely quick; a skill learned
perhaps not from school but from playing darts, which was his main pastime. He
loved to play with friends like Tony Farnell, John Miles and George Hambly at
the Buck’s Head and at the Thomas Lord in West Meon and won many cups and trophies. Indeed his
daughter Jane told me that she wasn’t allowed to play darts with him until she
could score - and what a brilliant way
that was to get your children to lean arithmetic! And his skill was not only essential at
darts, but also invaluable on the farm, as my brother Fairfax remembers that he
always knew exactly how many bales there were in a rick, or bags in a stack in
the barn. And despite being slim, he was strong too, with Fairfax, who worked
with him for a year before going to Cirencester, again remembering that he (and
fellow-pupil David Williams) could together stack 200cwt sacks of wheat up to
three tiers high! We all know what ‘health and safety’ would say to that today
– not to mention the fact that Fairfax and I used to do some of the corn cart
from the age of about ten!
But in addition to
his traditional farm duties, Ernie was extremely helpful and reliable and he
became indispensible to my parents, undertaking many duties apart from tractor
driving, such as feeding the animals, pheasants, chickens and sometimes ducks –
if the fox hadn’t had them - as well as the dogs when my parents were away. When
there wasn’t one, he was also unofficial keeper, which suited his other love,
that of beating. Ernie beat at all the
shoots my father had at Stocks and at many of those on the neighbouring farms
as well. Rod Rowell, the Parker’s
keeper, knew him from his teens and just now from Scotland, couldn’t speak
highly enough of him. He admired not only his skill as a beater and always
being in the right place (or more particularly perhaps, of not being in the
wrong one!) but of his general cheerful common sense. As a beater, he probably
knew the woods and hedgerows of these farms better than anyone. But he never
shot, himself.
Rod also mentioned
something else, his kindness. and this is echoed by everyone one who knew him.
Nichola Hussey, who came to Stocks after us, found his kindness and reliability
a great strength, whether it was helping with horses, or dogs or even
children. Rod says, and anyone who knew
Ernie would agree, that he behaved always as though he didn’t think of himself.
Rod also found him well read and interested and knowledgeable about many things.
Simon Martin also recalls his sense of
fun. When doing his garden in Soberton, he used to call down the garden, ‘Tea,
Ern?’ and invariable they would both crack up laughing about it.
Ernie retired from
Stocks when my father died in 2002 and the farm was sold, but he continued to
work part-time for those around him and with his son Richard, and of course
continued beating. He spent a lot of time with his friend Ron Talman in
Soberton, and Bruce Horn used to take him to Salisbury Market, which he greatly
enjoyed. Bruce was amused to find that
the last time he had seen Stonehenge was on a school visit 50 years before, and
had never seen the Fovant badges.
In 2007 he fell
ill with leukemia, which meant that he had to have chemotherapy and thereafter,
constant transfusions, but he never complained and bore his illness bravely. Even
when weak, he still liked to go out as much as he could, walking the familiar
fields and hedgerows, refusing a stick or a scooter. Sylvia said that he never
admitted to being in pain, even at the end. He was well looked after by Dr
Arnold in Winchester Hospital, and Dr Morris at home, as well as his carers
Jenny and Jilly - and of course always Sylvia
who bore the brunt of his care. But
Ernie was a true kind ‘gentle man’ and in the best way, became part of that
beautiful landscape, which will always contain him now, as after this service his
family will spread his ashes on Old Winchester Hill.
Herry Lawford
Saturday, 19 July 2014
Obituaries and Eulogies
As the years draw on, I seem to be attending more and more funerals and have to write more obituaries and deliver more eulogies. And having seen the appalling treatment of Sally Farmiloe in so-called 'obituaries' of such a highly intelligent and interesting 'free spirit', I am even more convinced that a decent obituary that captures a person's character and the good things they brought to the world, is essential.
See recent obituaries
Monday, 7 July 2014
Drapers' 650th Anniversary Summer Fayre
The courtyard |
Stands in the Hall illustrating the many organisations with which the Drapers are involved. |
The Fayre was opened by the Master, Admiral The Lord Boyce and included displays and stands illustrating the Company's founding or long association with schools such as Bancrofts, Pembroke College, Cambridge, Hertford College and St Anne's College, Oxford, Thomas Adam's School, Wem, Blundell's, Howell's School, Llandaff, St Paul's Cathedral School as well as the Drapers' Academy, opened by the Queen in 2012.
In addition, the Company has long association with and supports the Royal Academy of Music, the Royal the College of Music, the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, and the City & Guilds London Art School as well as the 1st Battalion, Welsh Guards and HMS Monmouth.
The Company's properties include Drapers' Gardens and several other major City buildings, and three almshouse complexes housing almost 200 residents at Edmanson's Close, Tottenham, Queen Elizabeth's College, Greenwich and Walter's Close, Southwark.
There was also an excellent display of art created by members of the Company, including this lovely Cornish scene by Sophi Beharrell
At the end of the day, a picnic tea was taken in a marquee on Throgmorton Avenue, next to the Company's barge, the 'Royal Thamesis'.
The Company's Barge, the 'Royal Thamesis' |
Monday, 30 June 2014
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