Showing posts with label traditional. Show all posts
Showing posts with label traditional. Show all posts

Saturday, 1 August 2020

The Haunted Landscape

The Haunted Landscape: Magic and Monsters of the British Isles was a conference arranged by the London Fortean Society which took place at Conway Hall on 23rd November 2019. There were many and varied speakers on a plethora of subjects; all loosely bunched around the burgeoning term Folk Horror.

Folk Horror itself was formally introduced to the world on 16th October 2016 at an event at the British Museum. Deriving from and referring to aspects of the sinister that are perceived by some to exist within society’s general picture of the bucolic and unthreatening British countryside, such as the worldview in films like The Witchfinder General, TV programmes like Penda’s Fen and countless books, this conference gave a context to the subject matter whilst bringing it to the attention of the wider world. In short, the idea is that something lurks beneath the greenery that bears us malice and ill-will; something that is not normally perceived in direct sunlight and in direct contrast to the seeming relaxing restfulness of trees, fields and sky.

The London Fortean Society is an association of people of whom I will write about in the future. Suffice it to say here that they arrange fascinating talks by folk from and around the edges of the paranormal community who know their subject and have an affinity for it.

Conway Hall is a venue in central London dedicated to free and independent speech. The union of Forteana and the Hall, therefore, is a happy and fortuitous one.

I have, since I can remember, had interests that strayed from the path of normality. There may be reasons for this. When I was a child our father, when it was Hallowe’en, would get a book from the local library and read spooky tales to us by candle and torchlight. We would all gamely hack at turnips to create jack o’lanterns, which is the way it was done before pumpkins were employed, then huddle round in the gloom to drink in the safe horror and enchantment that the time of year is notorious for. This was at a time when I believe that we may have been the only family celebrating Hallowe’en in the neighbourhood. The autumnal fire festival that is Guy Fawkes’ Night was the climax, of course, when effigies were placed on questionably-safe, community-built bonfires of prodigious size. Some of my favourite reading around this time of life were books, illustrated with luscious artwork, of Robin Hood and King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table. To continue the theme, some of my preferred toys were Crusader Knights made by a company called Timpo. Without realising it I was looking at and playing with caricatures of the Knights Templar; something that would have a large impact on my life as an adult. Throw such TV programmes as Worzel Gummidge and Catweazle into the mix and there you have the seeds for a life less ordinary. Below I look briefly at the talks given at Conway Hall on that day.

The Rites and Wrongs of Autumn
The meeting started off in a lively fashion as Doc Rowe displayed his collection of pictures of Morris people and other villagers commemorating the arrival of that most atmospheric of seasons; autumn. Here were folk decked out in home-made costumes of varying complexity, having what seemed to be a thoroughly good time bringing in that time of year in celebrations that are rooted in their locality and of varying complexity. Rituals are recorded that took place quite a few years in the recent past. Photographs and film are some of the media used here, combining the recent past with older ceremonies. The good Doc has an online archive where his collection may be viewed if your interests incline in that direction.

Magical House Protection: The Archaeology of Counter-Witchcraft
Brian Hoggard researches the objects and marks that everyday people used to keep malevolent magic at bay. Folk in our past believed that others had sufficient magickal powers to wreak great evil at a distance, and that this could be directed against specific individuals. The anti-witchcraft items range from simple marks scratched into surfaces such as walls to odd and sometimes repulsive objects such as witch-bottles containing nails, both ironmongery and finger, hair and urine; from horse skulls to whole dead cats immured so that they would become the protecting spirit of the place. Much more on this immersive subject can be found on Brian’s website.

The Croglin Grange Vampire
Deborah Hyde regaled us with the folk tale of this denizen of the undead, said to have lurked in and around Croglin in Cumbria. It was supposed to have attacked a woman there, whose brothers eventually hunted it down to a local crypt. Deborah deconstructed the story, pointing out that no-one has found a Croglin Grange but that there are two similar buildings called Croglin High Hall and Croglin Low Hall. There are also sufficiently strong similarities between this narrative and that of Varney the Vampire, a story serialised in the Victorian publications known as penny dreadfuls, to throw suspicion onto it as having any authenticity outside of being fictional.

Fairies: A Dangerous History
It was mainly in Victorian times that fairies were tamed into the tiny humanoid children well-known in picture books of the time. Before that they were capricious and dangerous creatures it was considered extremely unsafe to cross. Much country folklore is concerned with staying on the right side of these ethereal beings or, once under their influence, of how to extract oneself with the minimum of repercussions. Richard Sugg is lecturer in Renaissance Literature at the University of Durham. Despite this he finds time to raise our hairs on our necks by informing us of the misdeeds of the Fair Folk, especially in Ireland, where possibly due to the country being mainly rural well into the twentieth century, sightings of and belief in leprechauns persists to this day.

Hollow Places: The Dragon Slayer’s Tomb
How many of us now have heard of the mighty dragon-slayer, Piers Shonks? He was awarded the honour of a tomb in the Hertfordshire church of Brent Pelham for his prodigious deed. Piers himself was a giant, so that would have given him a head start against his reptilian foe, which was curled in a cave beneath the roots of a yew tree outside the village. Piers, accompanied by a servant and his three hounds, which some said had the power of flight, soon polished off the unfortunate serpent. Christopher Hadley took us on a journey across the centuries where the tomb of a dragon slayer is actually embedded in the wall of a rural parish church.

England’s Historic Graffiti: Voices Preserved in Stone. Graffiti is generally considered undesirable, especially when executed in spray paint on public surfaces. This takes on a different twist, however, when discovered in buildings that predate the creation of aerosols. Normally incised into wood, stone or brick, this more intimate means of expression can offer us an insight into the everyday thoughts of everyday people that mainstream histories may overlook. Crystal Hollis has inspected such markings in depth from a chapel in the USA to churches in Suffolk.

Wolves in the Wolds: The Weird case of Old Stinker
AKA the Beast of Barmston Drain, the Hull Werewolf. The wolves that roamed these islands may have been killed as people expanded and the packs were seen as an economic liability, but tales of their existence cling on in the tales of British werewolves. Even though, despite being present right up until the 16th century, wolves ceased to be a threat to the average Briton when the Saxon kings held sway. Folk memory reaches back beyond the modern and empirical, bringing us face-to-face with the dark and unknowable. Dr Sam George, who is Senior Lecturer in Literature and Convener of the Open Graves, Open Minds research project at the University of Hertfordshire, brought this strange and unlikely case to our attention.

English Witches and their Familiars
Time to revisit the world of witches, only instead of protecting ourselves from them, we look at one of the most intriguing ways that witches were reported to have extended their influence into the wider world. Dr Victoria Carr shared some of her research with us about the popular pet and sidekick of the witch. It can be an uphill task attempting to comprehend just how much fear was caused by the concept of the witch and, by extension, their familiars, in our post-Enlightenment, post-industrial world. We can conjure horrors undreamed of by our ancestors and project them onto cinema screens. Arguably no terror created by our artifice, whether it be on a computer screen or moulded from latex, will ever match the unnameable, ill-formed demons of our own imaginations. The witches’ familiar could be any animal, even the overlooked, seemingly humble garden snail, of which at least one was intended as an assassin(!).

Up the airy mountain, Down the rushy glen, We daren’t go a-hunting, For fear of little men…
Paul Devereux, a veteran of Forteana, examines the invisible paths across our land, death roads, spirit ways and fairy paths. These were a real and powerful part of the landscape to those who went before us. Associated with, but not necessarily synonymous with ley lines, people have reported strange happenings on these lines, which were linked with the spirits of the departed. These happenings affected the lives of the people involved in a powerful way. The talk culminated in Mr Devereux telling us of a startling encounter that he himself had had with an entity associated with the spirit ways.

It was quite a day! The talks, whilst containing common strands, were varied, entertaining and informative, opening the listener’s mind to the mysterious and sinister place that the British countryside had been to those who dwelt there in the past. Every speaker was enthusiastic and knowledgeable, making it hugely enjoyable to listen to them. It was Folk Horror in action, showing us both painstaking research combined with the indefinable, eldritch atmosphere that impregnates the mysteries of the land.

Monday, 31 August 2009

Morris Dancing - Unloved Englishness


We are all very familiar with the modern contempt that Morris dancing is held with.  So many things come and go as far as fashion is concerned, and it seems that this tradition became associated with a pastoral way of life that nearly all of the country had left behind when the factories beckoned and football and the music hall moved into those places people’s hearts reserve for their loyalty to such things.  Morris dancing was, as was the way with many things that were associated with a lost way of rural life, ‘revived’ on several occasions, the most recent being in the 1960s that accompanied a wider folk music revival.  Before then it has been dated back to dancers at court in the fourteenth century.  The dances devolved over the centuries, spreading from the royal household to church festivals, then, as the Puritans took over, hardly anything at all.  When they moved from kingly splendour, so did the costumes, and the poorer folk tended to forego the splendour of court costumes in favour of ribbons and bells attached to their everyday clothing, the continuation of which can be seen in today’s Morris costumes.  As with most gaiety, it didn’t come through the thirteen years of Cromwell’s Commonwealth well and, like Christmas, faced a steady decline.  When the Industrial Revolution broke up many communities in the countryside and workers flooded to the towns and factories, much in the way of tradition was not only forgotten, but deliberately cast aside as being out of step with new life in the cities.  It was preserved by four teams in Oxfordshire and Gloucestershire and sought out by folklorists from the late nineteenth century onwards as they rediscovered it.


Despite the generally accepted tradition that Morris dancing is so-called because it was brought into England via soldiers returning from the Crusades, and hence corrupted from Moorish dancing, what evidence there is does not back this up.  Shakespeare mentions Morris twice; “I have seen/Him caper upright like a wild Morisco,/Shaking the bloody darts as he his bells. (2 Henry VI Act III scene i)” and “As fit as ten groats is for the hand of an attorney, as your French crown for your taffeta punk, as Tib's rush for Tom's forefinger, as a pancake for Shrove Tuesday, a morris for May-day, as the nail to his hole, the cuckold to his horn, as a scolding queen to a wrangling knave, as the nun's lip to the friar's mouth, nay, as the pudding to his skin. (All's Well that Ends Well Act II scene ii)”.  This shows that Morris dancing was established by his time of writing and a tradition so common that the audience understood these references.
As would be expected with such a venerable pastime, there are many regional differences in dance, music and costume.  These have come down to us under mainly regional names, although even these, as with other ancient traditions, could vary a fair amount from town to town.  Other old dances, however, such as the Abbots Bromley Horn Dance, are distinct from the Morris tradition and (in this case, most certainly) predate it substantially.  It is worth noting that the Horn Dance is still performed to this day and can be seen on Wakes Monday, the day following Wakes Sunday, which is the first Sunday after September 4th.
The real beauty of Morris dancing, apart from preserving a part of our national heritage that property developers and local councils cannot touch, is that it is very much active and real.  As with much English culture, Morris has been successfully taken with expatriates to some rather far-flung corners of the globe.  As would be expected, it is the English-speaking nations that mainly embrace the eclectic nature of this style of dancing, with a slight, yet welcome, surprise being that of the Hong Kong Morris.  
Many local events have a performance by a local side, and they can occasionally be seen outside (and quite a lot inside) pubs and inns.  There are large annual events that are intertwined with Morris.  The most famous of these is The Rochester Chimney Sweeps Festival, which takes place around the May Day holiday.  Here is a large gathering of sides from all over the country and the festival also involves a parade of the dancers and their accompanists, plus performances by the cream of the nation’s folk musicians.
On a personal note, whenever I have watched Morris dancing, it affects me in the same way that looking around an old stone church or drinking in a village pub with exposed wooden beams.  It’s soothing yet electric – a direct connection to our past.  It does not matter that the church has been desecrated by Cromwell’s Puritans and revamped by well-meaning Victorians.  It does not matter (too much) if the old pub has brilliantly-lit lager pumps.  In that same spirit, it does not matter if the Morris dances are not strictly local, or if the ribbons are polyester and the bells made in China.  What matters is that something that was relevant hundreds of years in our past is still relevant, living, lively, entertaining and part of us to this very day.
I last saw Wolf's Head and Vixen Morris in the foyer of Fairfield Halls during Witchfest, where I was sitting on a bar stool with a glass of mead in my hand.  They have a distinctly modern twist on their dress, adding such touches as dark glasses to their all-black ensemble, but their dancing adheres to a distinct tradition and it is a joy to watch and a sight to gladden the heart.  Long may they dance!

Sunday, 30 August 2009

Famous Potatoes - Folk Band




They come from Leigh-on-Sea, which is now a suburb of Southend-on-Sea in Essex.  I went to the same school as the lead singer, and the same church as some of the rest of the band. Despite living very near to (and working in) one of the few areas that might be called traditional and villagey in the area, their music is much more heavily involved with American folk.  As a result, they have carved a distinct niche in the local scene and are in demand all over the South-East.  Be sure to catch them at the Leigh Folk Festival - an annual get-together that does what it says, etc..

Leigh still retains a distinctly laid-back air, and the old town has a thriving cockle fishing industry; you can see the boats puttering back and forth with strange, corrugated hoses wrapped in the rigging.  The hoses actually hoover up the shellfish that are brought back and cooked in the cockle sheds that are still a main feature of the western beach.  All manner of seafood can be purchased here, short of actual white-fish.  The winkles are also a locally-caught speciality.  The pubs have a history of villainy and smuggling and there are four in a tiny, tiny space, so you can actually do a pub crawl and hardly travel at all!  How good is that?

Saturday, 22 August 2009

Introduction - after a(n old) fashion

Just to kick things off, by mentioning how I became interested in all (or most) things traditional and British.

The spires of St. Michael's Cathedral and (to the right) Holy Trinity, Coventry
When I was a boy at junior school, one of the books I was given was about King Arthur. Another was tales of Robin Hood. Even though, along with other boys of that time, I was also interested in cowboys, indians and pirates, it was to these two that I kept returning. The Quest for the Holy Grail especially fascinated me, even then; something I have to say that has never left me.
It continued at my grammar school. We had many, many day trips from school, much to my sister's chagrin. I wouldn't exactly say I was a swot, but when we arrived at the destination which, of course was historical, the other boys lost no time in "losing" their work sheets and sloping off to buy cigarettes and such. I actually preferred to look around what we went there for, and to enjoy the feeling of being in contact with the past. I felt a rush from doing that; it was almost like time travel for me. It still feels like that now.
Music, especially, is one of the ways that I feel in touch with aspects of the past. Let me say now that I'm pretty sure that I don't want to live there! Firstly, I have savage myopia. I'd be stumbling around virtually blind. Coupled with no modern medicine, communications, transport links, etc., I reckon it's better to be nostalgic. However, that doesn't mean that we should not celebrate the good stuff from the past, including that which helps give us our identity today. When I was in my late teens I was trying to be a Christian. I was attending polytechnic in Coventry at the time. I was a member of the Methodist church and normally went there, but on this occasion I fancied something more traditional. Advent was here and, although Methodist Central Hall had its charms, it was as if someone had started building cinemas about fifty years early. It even has fold-up seats. Everyone knows about Coventry Cathedral, irreverently known as the Godbox due to its rectangular architecture. What visitors hardly knew about is that there is a large church, Holy Trinity, adjacent to the cathedral. This was constructed from the same local red stone as most of the older public buildings in Coventry and was built in the 12th century. When it was floodlit, it stood out as orange and grey against the darkening sky, more like a cut-out than a 3D object. Breathtaking. When I went along on my own, the service was a candlelit carol service. The gothic architecture and womb-red stone lit from within by flickering candles, combined with carols, some of which were written hundreds of years ago, seemed yet again like a form of time-travel to me. Surely this was what it must have been like to have worshipped in mediaeval times!
After this, I purchased a copy of the "Oxford Book of Carols". I'm no real musician, and just about played the bass guitar, but I started to look to the past for music and more inspiration, both artisitic and spiritual.

Southend Pier - Inspiration
It's just orbited around and around since then.