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Author Topic: Poetry on Rails  (Read 3083 times)
Red Squirrel
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« on: May 10, 2014, 15:49:52 »


 .. I don't do poetry...


When I read this, I thought 'surely I can change his mind?' If this can't, maybe nothing can!

This is part of The Whitsun Weddings, by Philip Larkin (I'll only quote a bit, for copyright reasons):

Quote

That Whitsun, I was late getting away:
    Not till about
One-twenty on the sunlit Saturday
Did my three-quarters-empty train pull out,
All windows down, all cushions hot, all sense
Of being in a hurry gone. We ran
Behind the backs of houses, crossed a street
Of blinding windscreens, smelt the fish-dock; thence
The river^s level drifting breadth began,
Where sky and Lincolnshire and water meet.

All afternoon, through the tall heat that slept
    For miles inland,
A slow and stopping curve southwards we kept.
Wide farms went by, short-shadowed cattle, and
Canals with floatings of industrial froth;
A hothouse flashed uniquely: hedges dipped
And rose: and now and then a smell of grass
Displaced the reek of buttoned carriage-cloth
Until the next town, new and nondescript,
Approached with acres of dismantled cars.

...continues


Don't know about you, but I'm there, sat in a Mk.1 compartment, bouncing on the softly-sprung cushion as the bogies rattle over the rail ends...

Coincidentally it's 50 years since Larkin wrote this, you can relive the experience:

Quote

Larkin's Whitsun Weddings celebrated with 50th-anniversary train ride

It was the train journey that inspired one of Philip Larkin's best-known poems. Half a century after his seminal collection, The Whitsun Weddings, was published, the book's title poem, about the 200-mile trip from Hull to London King's Cross ^ a drowsy train ride "all windows down, all cushions hot" ^ is to be recreated in a unique event that will further confirm Larkin's reputation as one of the nation's favourite poets.

Read the full article in The Guardian


Actually I think I'll give the re-enactment a miss...
« Last Edit: May 10, 2014, 16:54:04 by Red Squirrel » Logged

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Rhydgaled
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« Reply #1 on: May 10, 2014, 17:49:15 »

Don't know about you, but I'm there, sat in a Mk.1 compartment, bouncing on the softly-sprung cushion as the bogies rattle over the rail ends...

Coincidentally it's 50 years since Larkin wrote this, you can relive the experience:

Quote

Larkin's Whitsun Weddings celebrated with 50th-anniversary train ride

It was the train journey that inspired one of Philip Larkin's best-known poems. Half a century after his seminal collection, The Whitsun Weddings, was published, the book's title poem, about the 200-mile trip from Hull to London King's Cross ^ a drowsy train ride "all windows down, all cushions hot" ^ is to be recreated in a unique event that will further confirm Larkin's reputation as one of the nation's favourite poets.

Read the full article in The Guardian


Actually I think I'll give the re-enactment a miss...
From a look at the link, the 're-enactment' just seems to be a normal Hull Trains service. No chance of 'all windows down' on a class 180...
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----------------------------
Don't DOO (Driver-Only Operation (that is, trains which operate without carrying a guard)) it, keep the guard (but it probably wouldn't be a bad idea if the driver unlocked the doors on arrival at calling points).
Chris from Nailsea
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« Reply #2 on: May 10, 2014, 20:23:53 »

Quote
Dilton Marsh Halt

John Betjeman

Was it worth keeping the Halt open,
We thought as we looked at the sky
Red through the spread of the cedar-tree,
With the evening train gone by?

Yes, we said, for in summer the anglers use it,
Two and sometimes three
Will bring their catches of rods and poles and perches
To Westbury, home for tea.

There isn't a porter. The platform is made of sleepers.
The guard of the last train puts out the light
And high over lorries and cattle the Halt unwinking
Waits through the Wiltshire night.

O housewife safe in the comprehensive churning
Of the Warminster launderette!
O husband down at the depot with car in car-park!
The Halt is waiting yet.

And when all the horrible roads are finally done for,
And there's no more petrol left in the world to burn,
Here to the Halt from Salisbury and from Bristol
Steam trains will return.
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William Huskisson MP (Member of Parliament) was the first person to be killed by a train while crossing the tracks, in 1830.  Many more have died in the same way since then.  Don't take a chance: stop, look, listen.

"Level crossings are safe, unless they are used in an unsafe manner."  Discuss.
Andrew1939 from West Oxon
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« Reply #3 on: May 11, 2014, 17:06:16 »

For those interested in Poetry on Rails there will be a special CLPG» (Cotswold Line Promotion Group - about) charter from Oxford to Moreton-in-Marsh on Tuesday. 24 June 2014 with one intermediate stop at Adlestrop to commemorate the centenary of the journey made Edward Thomas. The traiin is timed to depart Oxford at at 11.28 and a 15 minute stop will be made the site of the former Adlestrop Station where there will be a reading of the well known poem. The train will contine to Moreton and return to Oxford 15 minutes later but holders of the special ticket be able stay longer for the delights of Moreton and return to Oxford by any public service train that day. Tickets cost ^20. see http://www.clpg.org.uk/content.php?pagename=CLPG039-s-Special-Trains ffor more details.
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Red Squirrel
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« Reply #4 on: May 11, 2014, 17:34:54 »

The engine rattled. Someone received a text.
No one left and no one came:
There was no platform. What I saw
Was some scruffy old lorries - rusting away...
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« Reply #5 on: May 11, 2014, 21:50:59 »

Going back to the Adelstrop poem, there was a big article about this in today's Sunday Telegraph (page 24). (I am sure someone with greater IT wizardry will post a link to it....)
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Chris from Nailsea
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« Reply #6 on: May 11, 2014, 22:06:43 »

Cue Chris from Nailsea, then.  Grin

From the Telegraph:

Quote
Adlestrop: a lost station, but words that still beguile

100 years on, William Langley visits Adlestrop, scene of the 'unwonted^ stop that inspired Edward Thomas's much-loved poem


The old station sign and bench with the Edward Thomas poem etched onto a plaque  Photo: Christopher Jones for The Telegraph

A hundred years ago, a steam train carrying an unknown poet made an unscheduled stop at a Gloucestershire hamlet called Adlestrop. Absolutely nothing else happened.

Edward Thomas, aged 36 and bereft of inspiration, dutifully jotted the details of this fleeting non-event into his notebook, and from them fashioned a poem that has become not only one of the nation^s favourites, but also an authentic literary mystery.

Adlestrop, just 16 lines long, composed of simple words and observations, has been compared to the works of Elgar and Henry V^s speech before the battle of Agincourt. Its appeal is fiercely debated, but readers appear to find in it something incorporeally English, poignant and gripping.

Thomas never saw his verse in print. Three years after the fateful train journey, he was killed, serving as a second lieutenant with the British Army in France. Next month, however, his work will be commemorated in the place he made famous.

At first glance, Adlestrop (population 80), set in the velvety folds of the north Cotswolds, looks to have barely changed since 1914. There is no pub, no modern housing and the heady whiff of wood smoke and meadow blossom hangs over the only street ^ defiantly named Main Street. Today, though, its picture-pretty thatched cottages fetch colossal prices ^600,000 to a million-plus^ according to a local estate agent. Just up the lane is Lady Angela Bamford^s starry rustic gastro-palace, Daylesford Organic, and scattered in the hills around are the country houses of the infamous Chipping Norton Set.

The village, says postmaster and lifelong resident Ralph Price, 68, has no need ^ or wish ^ to trade on Thomas^s name, but hopes to use next month^s anniversary to set right some of the misunderstandings surrounding the poem and the myth it has created. ^We get lots of visitors who want to see the place as Thomas saw it,^ says Ralph, ^but, of course, he never did see it. And then they want to see the station, but that^s not there any more.^

Adlestrop station, a lost gem of Edwardian railway architecture, was closed in 1966, under the Beeching programme of cuts that wiped out much of Britain^s rural rail infrastructure. The trains still speed by on the London Paddington to Hereford route, but the spot where Thomas^s train drew up ^unwontedly^ is now derelict land, closed to the public and filled with scrap vehicles.

Mr Price^s father, Cyril, and grandfather, Albert, both worked at the station, which lies about a mile west of the hamlet. He still finds it hard to understand ^ or forgive ^ the way the closure was handled.

^They sent a work crew out who burnt down the buildings, the old goods shed, anything they couldn^t burn they demolished. Later they came and flattened the platforms, too, so you^d never know there ever was a station there. Some things were taken away and sent to Swindon. The village wasn^t consulted about anything. We asked if we could at least have the station signs, and British Rail said we could have one, but then they sent it to Honeybourne, down the line, and said if we wanted it we^d have to get it from there. It was as if they didn^t want there to be any memory of the place.^

One elderly, brown-and-cream Adlestrop sign now adorns the village bus shelter. The other is believed to have been sent to a museum near Oxford, where it was later destroyed.
^The station,^ recalls Ralph, ^was a big thing for the village. It was our playground when we were children. We^d help tend the flower beds, and herd the livestock when it came off the trains. The railwaymen were very proper back then. Always very smart and they wore flowers in their lapels, but they let you do things kids could never do now. We used to ride on the footplate down to Moreton-in-Marsh, the nearest town.^

At the time of his Adlestrop stop, Thomas, the son of a civil servant, was in an advanced state of self-torment. A modest career as a literary critic and journalist had served only to highlight what he saw as his own inadequacies as a writer. His marriage to the adoring Helen Noble was in trouble, undermined by his bouts of depression and sense of uselessness. To a friend^s suggestion that he should try his hand at poetry, Thomas gloomily replied: ^I couldn^t write a poem to save my life.^

Yet poetry did save his life ^ if only temporarily ^ for Thomas was close to suicide when, in 1913, he met the American poet Robert Frost, who persuaded him to give verse a try. Frost, a fellow depressive, spotted the hidden talent within the Englishman. ^It took me to tell him what his problem was,^ Frost wrote later. ^He was suffering from a life of insubordination to his inferiors.^

Thomas was on his way from London to Frost^s home near Ledbury on June 24 1914 when the train pulled up at Adlestrop. In his notebook he scribbled ^thro the willows cd be heard a chain of blackbird songs at 12.45, and one thrush and no man seen, only a hiss of engine letting off steam.^ The poem that resulted was a golden key, miraculously unlocking all the creative energies that Thomas had unconsciously suppressed, and a stream of dazzling work poured out of him.

^The poem has a sense of time and place that affects people very strongly,^ says Anne Harvey, a critic and editor of the anthology Adlestrop Revisted. ^I think it touches on a particularly English sensibility, the idea of being a traveller in an unfamiliar place, and, of course, it carries the overtones of the war coming, and that soon this peacefulness would be gone.^

In July 1915, Thomas enlisted to fight in the Great War. There was no requirement for him to join up. He was 37, married with three children, and could easily have stayed comfortably in his new West Country home fulfilling his new passion for poetry. In all likelihood he felt that the England he had so perfectly captured in Adlestrop was in danger, and he had to do his bit to defend it. On April, 9, 1917, the first day of the Battle of Arras, he was killed.

The organisers of next month^s commemorative day had hoped to hire a steam engine of suitable vintage to draw up beside the old station site, but according to Mr Price, the cost would have been ^40,000, and even a place as wealthy as Adlestrop can^t stretch to that. Instead Great Western is loaning a diesel, from which a celebrity ^ as yet unnamed ^ will read the poem.

Thomas, as Ralph says, never set foot in Adlestrop. The train stop was brief. ^No one left and no one came.^ Which, by and large, is how the village still prefers it.

Adlestrop, by Edward Thomas

Yes. I remember Adlestrop^
The name, because one afternoon
Of heat the express-train drew up there
Unwontedly. It was late June.
The steam hissed. Someone cleared his throat.
No one left and no one came
On the bare platform. What I saw
Was Adlestrop^only the name
And willows, willow-herb, and grass,
And meadowsweet, and haycocks dry,
No whit less still and lonely fair
Than the high cloudlets in the sky.
And for that minute a blackbird sang
Close by, and round him, mistier,
Farther and farther, all the birds
Of Oxfordshire and Gloucestershire.
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William Huskisson MP (Member of Parliament) was the first person to be killed by a train while crossing the tracks, in 1830.  Many more have died in the same way since then.  Don't take a chance: stop, look, listen.

"Level crossings are safe, unless they are used in an unsafe manner."  Discuss.
Chris from Nailsea
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« Reply #7 on: May 20, 2014, 11:50:58 »

From the Witney Gazette:

Quote
Special train makes track to mark centenary of Edward Thomas's poem Adlestrop


From left, Gordon Harris, chairman of the committee co-ordinating the centenary celebrations, committee member Ralph Price, whose father was the last stationmaster at Adlestrop, and Victoria Huxley at the village^s bus shelter

MODERN-DAY Cotswold Line trains speed past the site of Adlestrop station but a stop there one summer day in 1914 inspired the poet Edward Thomas to write some of his most famous verses.

One hundred years later, on Tuesday, June 24, that moment will be commemorated by the reading of Thomas^s poem Adlestrop on a special train that will stop near the site of the station, which closed in 1964, near the boundary between Oxford-shire and Gloucestershire.

John Ellis, the chairman of the Cotswold Line Promotion Group, which is organising the train with First Great Western, said: ^We would like to invite anyone who enjoys Edward Thomas's poetry to join us on this unique train. It will carry just 200 passengers and we have sold more than 60 tickets already, so early booking is recommended.^

The train is one of a number of events to mark the centenary, with a celebration in the village the same day, featuring talks and readings about the poem, organised by the Friends of the Dymock Poets, which fosters interest in the work of poets who lived in the Gloucestershire village between 1911 and 1916.

This event is fully booked, with about 80 people taking part.

There will be a break shortly before noon for participants to walk to a field above the village to watch the train make its stop.

Residents of Adlestrop have also organised a centenary poetry competition. The winner of the ^400 first prize will be announced by poet and broadcaster PJ Kavanagh, who is judging the entries, on June 24 at the celebration.

Victoria Huxley, author of Jane Austen and Adlestrop, who organised the contest, said: ^We have had almost 200 entries from all over the world, though most are from Oxfordshire and Glou-cestershire. And through the entry fees we have raised almost ^2,000 for the village church.^

The village^s annual open day, on Sunday, June 15, will feature a reading of the poem by the actor Robert Hardy at the bus shelter which houses one of the Great Western Railway running-in boards from the station and a GWR (Great Western Railway) bench bearing a plaque with the words of the poem.

For details of the afternoon^s events, see adlestrop.org.uk

The Adlestrop Centenary Special train will leave Oxford at 11.28am, reaching Moreton-in-Marsh at 12.15pm, after stopping near the bridge where the A436 from Salford Hill crosses the line.

While the train will return at 12.30pm, reaching Oxford at 1pm, passengers who want to visit Adlestrop can use their tickets to return from Moreton-in-Marsh on FGW (First Great Western) services later in the day.

Fares are ^20 for adults and ^10 for children aged five to 15.

For more details and to download a booking form, see the special trains page at clpg.org.uk or call CLPG» (Cotswold Line Promotion Group - about) secretary Brian Clayton on 01386 701528. Please enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope with all ticket applications.
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William Huskisson MP (Member of Parliament) was the first person to be killed by a train while crossing the tracks, in 1830.  Many more have died in the same way since then.  Don't take a chance: stop, look, listen.

"Level crossings are safe, unless they are used in an unsafe manner."  Discuss.
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