Tag Archives

River Ouse

SIC TRANSIT GLORIA MUNDI

David Selzer By David Selzer0 Comments1 min read1.3K views

Passengers feel the train brake before they see,

from the embankment above the hectares

of marshes, the landscape begin to slow.

The many acres of grasses and flashes

have snipe, little ringed plover, lapwing,

water shrew, otter – and cattle grazing

at their edges. The River Sow flows

through the wetlands, and, far beyond the town,

joins the Trent, Ouse, North Sea. Between sedges,

low over pools in summer, swallows hunt.

 

We pass under the M6 viaduct,

its traffic relentless, silent above us.

On a low rise is the ruined Norman keep.

The annual Shakespeare festival

takes place with the castle as backdrop.

One of the Earls of Stafford was also

Duke of Buckingham, Richard Crookback’s

ally, implicated in the murder

of the young princes in the Tower.

Shakespeare has Richard, now King, ask the Duke,

– suspecting his betrayal – ‘What’s o’clock?’

 

Lastly Stafford’s two blocks of high rise flats

come into view, and the brick towers

of its nineteenth century prison.

Lesser figures from the Easter Rising,

Michael Collins among them, were held

in the gaol. There is a photo of them,

in civvies, suits and ties, crowded together

on a walkway, taken from below,

Collins fifth from the right at the back.

Someone has put a cross above his head.

 

 

 

TAVISTOCK SQUARE

David Selzer By David Selzer3 Comments2 min read1.7K views

 

Am I alone in my egotism when I say that never does the pale light of dawn filter through the blinds of 52 Tavistock Square but I open my eyes and exclaim,’Good God! Here I am again!’…?” Virginia Woolf

The Woolfs’ house was on the south side of the Square.

From there the couple ran the Hogarth Press.

The place was razed by a stray bomb in the Blitz –

but they had moved, the year the war started,

to their house in Sussex near the river Ouse.

In the Square’s gardens there is: a cherry tree

planted in remembrance of Hiroshima

and Nagasaki; a stone memorial

to conscientious objectors; a bronze statue

of Ghandi sitting cross legged in his dhoti;

and much else that speaks softly for peace,

for tolerance, for charity, for hope.

Hasib Hussain’s target was the Northern Line

from King’s Cross – but it had been suspended

earlier that morning. He tried to phone

the other three – but got no answers.

He boarded the number 30 somewhere

on Euston Road. The bus – the first three bombs

having already jammed the traffic –

was diverted down Upper Woburn Place

into the Square. Outside the BMA

he killed himself, and thirteen strangers.

He was 18, an FE student,

a member of  his local cricket

and football teams. Late that night his parents,

worried he had not returned from his trip

to London with his friends, rang Scotland Yard.

Virginia, two years after they had moved,

walked into the Ouse. Her body was found

some weeks later. A bronze bust of the writer

is in the south west corner of the Gardens.

‘Am I alone in my egotism…?’