Sometimes
I’m sickened by the idea of the ornamental garden. Especially big lonely ones where no-one is
interested enough to go, apart from a man with a machine. Huge, immaculate lawns worry me. Glittering
unused swimming pools make me sad. Identical, showy, pointless plants in
countless small gardens; lack of
imagination, thought, interest. All that
landscape fabric. All that hard
surface. Artificial lawns, for God’s
sake. Put it all down to wild-life sanctuaries or proper vegetable growing,
let’s stop messing around turning everything into suburbia. Love it, or live in a flat in a city with a
balcony barbecue (is that possible? Perhaps I just made it up, for sheer
rhetoric).
But I’m not
sickened when someone makes an effort, even if I don’t like it and think
they’ve got it wrong. And even if
they’ve taken on more than they can handle, so it’s all falling to bits. I
don’t want them to get discouraged and fall by the wayside, I want them to find
the pleasure again. Because
gardening out of choice, running your own little world, is also a huge luxury,
one that has flourished for ever. And
I’ve always thought of people who never get the chance – a truly
terrible deprivation, though not perhaps
Guantanomo Bay.
So today’s
themes are work, survival and whether hard work makes better gardens, or better
people. I have a garden up my sleeve to
illustrate my points. It’s Veddw House Garden,
whose gardener/owner, Anne Wareham, is irritable about the act of gardening, but loves a good result. And my song is the mysterious
Workingman’s Blues, where the struggle makes a victim of a sinner. You can find it on the album Modern Times. I think it will attract you, it has
a lovely melody seemingly inappropriate to the theme, but all the better for
that, sweetly enticing you to look some hard truths in the face.
Let’s take
a look at the garden first. I visited it a
couple of years ago, so things may be different now. It’s in border country, between England and
Wales, in the Wye Valley. A hunkered
down cottage close to the bottom of a long slope. On one side, at the back of the house, the
slope forms a great bowl, heavily fringed with woods. Anne has done a magnificent thing here, you
see it and it seems so easy and obvious, so meant, that you think you yourself
would have thought of it, or anyone would.
Not so, not like this anyhow.
From the
woods, through a series of banked enclosed garden rooms and rhythmic hedges, the green seems to drain
down to an area of greater intensity, where close lines of yew form the pull
and the stop to the flow. Drain sounds
bad, but it’s not, it’s a force field and a holding pattern. There’s a formal pond at the base, reflecting
the sky.
Being slightly outside lets you sense the pull, the flow and the stop without being dominated by the hedges. To me it was one of those spots, not magic, not spiritual, just one of those places where the design creates a special feeling, of being contained and supported, of being fully here, tickling the part of the brain that interprets place and surroundings.
The green strength flows down,
but it does not drain away, it just intensifies and stills. You can sit below this main event at the back of the
house, looking slightly up at it, across a semi-circle of grass and between two
exuberant, comfortable borders.
Being slightly outside lets you sense the pull, the flow and the stop without being dominated by the hedges. To me it was one of those spots, not magic, not spiritual, just one of those places where the design creates a special feeling, of being contained and supported, of being fully here, tickling the part of the brain that interprets place and surroundings.
But there’s
more to this place than a significant spot, a relatively humble house and
beautiful, complex and sophisticated grounds.
Anne has investigated local history and threaded some of her findings
through the garden, including "gravestones" which give you names of locally
significant but lost places. There is
also a short hedged replica of the mapping of the fields around, where people
worked so hard against the odds, wresting potatoes from the land. And there is writing – quite a long
plaque with quotes about starvation and
difficulty in the 1850s. It’s
beautifully calligraphed, in gold on black, paying full honour to those who lived around here in the past. But it’s even better placed, by a fence with
the wild woodland beyond, looking intractable.
I will admit, I normally dislike writing in gardens. I don't like it on clothes, or food, or textiles either. Purist you see, I like stuff to speak for itself, if it can. But this plaque is both perfectly poignant and perfectly informative.
So you have a sense, from the humble, hunkered cottage, the complex weaving
of boundaries, the death in the gravestones, the details of the names and
shapes, you have a sense of the people who inhabited and worked this land in
the past. And then, from the higher
edges of the hollowed land, you look across to the hills, and you see again the
harshness of life for the working poor, before machinery, struggling up and
down those slopes, “rearing up their cottages, with great toil and
perseverance”, some drawn into petty frauds and thefts because of hunger, some
dehumanised by their poverty, apparently in need of the guiding hand of
religion.
So all
these things add up, and you notice more that adds to the theme, like the interesting black
fences, neat and smart but also vaguely homespun and rackety.
And the box
balls down the steps. They’re different
than most, more like a Sunday School on benches, spreading into the
aisles. They have a homely, innocent
look here, but I fear age and grooming
will have smartened them up.
The taller clipped yews amongst the gravestones
have the placing and height of adults wandering in a cemetery.
The
cotoneaster horizontalis here struck me as ramshackle and humble too, crowded together. I would have preferred it without the
clematis.
And the
empty-headed upper class blue hosta, luxuriating in a fancy over-attended
party. Just not my thing perhaps, but
it should not be here, not so many, glaring bluely up at the sky.
The
bergenia elsewhere is so much nicer, a decent green and a humbler
plant, shining like kindness, working away in the shadows, near the foundations of an old collapsed
cottage, now used as seating.
Most
planting is perfectly in balance with the structure and the theme - foamy,
grassy, gently wild-looking. Soft spray of smallish repeated flowers with
nothing too showy or exotic. Tall mauve
campanulas (lactiflora), alchemilla mollis
and fireweed, or willow herb (epilobium angustifolia).
The plants are simple, the cover complete, forged from the wild, tipping
back to the wild. It looks as though it
looks after itself but of course it doesn’t.
A glance at the plan shows how huge, unexpectedly symmetrical, and complex the whole garden is, with
only two or three people working on it. You can find it on the Veddw website.
So this is
a garden that gives you something to think about in two ways. First a reluctant gardener, who dislikes the
activity but has the resolute energy to create a magnificent ornamental garden
for its own sake and for her love of beauty.
Second, the creation is a garden which rejects the aristocratic paraphernalia
of the English heritage school in favour of a loving recognition of all those
who scratched a living, working themselves to death on these hills. Some would have managed pretty well, and
occasionally lifted their heads and gloried in leaves, air and light, watching
the birds. Some would have suffered from
the first to the last. Perhaps they were
born out of their time and place, longing, without knowing it, for
centrally-heated offices, public transport and coffee shops.
And I am
not the person to say that that second group,
struggling with hunger and illness on top of the work, are lesser people
than the first, struggling too. I don’t
believe it , genuinely not. Mainly
because of my own constitutional incapacities, which help me recognise the extraordinary, completely foreign, abilities
of others, in all sorts of indoor spheres.
But also because the Italian land where I partly live shows all the
evidence of the decline and difficulty of a family maladapted to their destiny
and time, shows it in land too damaged for hay to be cut, dying fruit trees,
and the mess and confusion of rubbish and wasted building materials.
Some people just don’t like working outside. Some just do. I may be the latter but I will always seek the short cut and the easiest hand-based option - others, who want to, using the machines.
Some people just don’t like working outside. Some just do. I may be the latter but I will always seek the short cut and the easiest hand-based option - others, who want to, using the machines.
I have met
people who tell me that they finally feel able to admit that they don’t like
gardening, have no patience or interest with it and feel a lot better for
getting this criminal failure off their chest.
I see one of my sisters has become one of those. There it is.
So let us
leap freely to the song ,which doesn’t say any of that, but is rightly titled
and mostly about hardship and poverty, the battle to keep going being the main
thing. The protagonist rattles about –
from the railways, to working on ships, to farming and finally a penned animal
slaughtered in a field. He is always the
victim of something, from the great economic forces that make his work suddenly
worthless, to the fretters and fussers who don’t like the way he lives. He nurses scattershot grudges as he struggles
and fails.
Not the
easiest person to get along with,
leaving his boots and shoes all over the place, dogmatic, insistent, slightly threatening,
nagging everyone to hurry up, this working man is not an attractive character
to me. But I don’t deny his suffering,
the gently sung song makes you feel tender towards his self-centred pain and his angry
resilience in the face of oppression of every kind. He’s exhausted, lost and
hungry: these are his blues.
It’s this
kind of tenderness towards the agricultural workers of the past that Veddw House Garden
seems to evoke, once you’ve read that plaque.
Yes, you could say we who view the garden and enjoy the theme – which is
not the only one - are being sentimental, a little fanciful, feeling a sweet trickle of pity posing as
nostalgia. But we’re always faced with
that dilemma of not being quite authentic when we contemplate those who suffer privation. We would not be them,
not if we can help it.
The song
raises questions about economic changes that ravage livelihoods but it places
no real blame. The world goes round
again, the money getting shallower and weaker.
That’s a wonderful anthropomorphic image in the song – surely no-one has
ever made economic depression so palpably enfeebling. The working man wants to damage his nameless,
ill-defined oppressors, but the song is not a call to arms, it’s a genuine
song, about the market economy, the way things are, and ever have been, for the
dispossessed are trapped into dependence on their exploiters.
Perhaps
hard lives do indeed make hard people.
But I don’t think that is always
true. Savio, the man who grazes his
animals on our Italian land rises at 5 and often works till 10 at night. He never has a holiday. But equally he never raises his voice, to
daughter, son or animal. And despite the
heat he has never not smiled when we talk.
There are many such, everywhere, and of course he is his own boss. A degree of control makes most things
bearable.
Let’s go
back to the exhausted gardener, arms savaged by rose-thorns, nails blackened,
filthy-footed, broken-backed, skin burnt and bitten. All through choice. Is this a good way to carry on? Many people here in Italy are clear that it
is not. I have been implored, by
complete strangers, not to create too much work for myself. Though I really don’t know how else to live,
so I anxiously defend my right to take on more than I can handle.
I do see that the heat can be discouraging, as can cold. But, in the end, you don’t have to love it all, no-one could, not about anything; you just have to love it enough. As Veddw House Garden shows – and I have not even begun on the beautiful, extensive plantings on the other side of the house – the end result may be good enough to justify whatever labour is required and may even scotch the blues. I don’t expect much from my results, and certainly nothing remotely comparable. But I do know that working at my garden, admittedly mainly when I want to, will keep me cheerful. That’s the absolute luxury of liking the work that you have to do. Like most people, I’d rather have that than caviar with cashmere and ambergris.
I do see that the heat can be discouraging, as can cold. But, in the end, you don’t have to love it all, no-one could, not about anything; you just have to love it enough. As Veddw House Garden shows – and I have not even begun on the beautiful, extensive plantings on the other side of the house – the end result may be good enough to justify whatever labour is required and may even scotch the blues. I don’t expect much from my results, and certainly nothing remotely comparable. But I do know that working at my garden, admittedly mainly when I want to, will keep me cheerful. That’s the absolute luxury of liking the work that you have to do. Like most people, I’d rather have that than caviar with cashmere and ambergris.