Tag Archives: robert macfarlane

War Against Nature

Now comes poet, rambler and philosopher of the commons, Robert Macfarlane, with a few choice remarks following the senseless felling of the iconic tree at Sycamore Gap along Hadrian’s Wall:

I just see this as part of a piece with a much broader hostile environment towards the living world in this country. Our focus really shouldn’t be on the offender here. I think it’s on the culture. Nature is under attack in these islands and has been for a long time.

There’s a line by [the poet] WH Auden written 70 years ago. He says: ‘A culture is no better than its woods.’ Well, we have not looked after our woods well. This is part of the broader war on nature.

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[That Sycamore] was a film star – it starred in Robin Hood Prince of Thieves. It was a tree that ashes were scattered under, marriages were made under, and it was a shelter for tired walkers. It stood in that gap in the wall, and it survived the winds that howl through that notch. It stood in a wall that was a symbol of repression really, but it flourished there. It was a landmark in the region.

The best way to remember the loss of the tree, I would say, is with the gain of the forest. We are drastically deforested, we have the second lowest forest cover in Europe. Let us reforest the uplands. Let us see a Sycamore Gap forest rise for the loss of a tree.

 

As for the Auden poem, here is the quote in the context of the stanza:

A small grove massacred to the last ash,
An oak with heart-rot, give away the show:    
This great society is going to smash;
They cannot fool us with how fast they go,
How much they cost each other and the gods.
A culture is no better than its woods.

 

 

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This Great Choir

Now comes our fellow mountain rambler Robert Macfarlane with two brief excerpts from the exceptionally well-conceived magazine Emergence. As an intermezzo, we offer a link to a “border ballad” by Richard Skelton, whose music is one of the voices in “this great choir” that keeps us going here at DP.

 

 

CHOIR BLOCKAGE

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Membranes Into the Future

Now comes the voice of one our favorite writers here at DP: Robert Macfarlane. Below, brief excerpts from a. recent interview conducted in the philosophical environs of his most recent book, Underlands. Images are three iterations of Bruce Nauman’s Three Dead End Adjacent Tunnels Not Connected, dating from 1981.