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<h2> CHAPTER III </h2>
<h3> WINTERBOURNE BISHOP </h3>
<blockquote>
A favourite village—Isolated situation—Appearance
of the village—Hedge-fruit—The
winterbourne—Human interest—The home
feeling—Man in harmony with nature—Human bones
thrown out by a rabbit—A spot unspoiled and unchanged
</blockquote>
<p>Of the few widely separated villages, hidden away among the
lonely downs in the large, blank spaces between the rivers,
the one I love best is Winterbourne Bishop. Yet of the entire
number—I know them all intimately—I daresay it
would be pronounced by most persons the least attractive. It
has less shade from trees in summer and is more exposed in
winter to the bleak winds of this high country, from
whichever quarter they may blow. Placed high itself on a
wide, unwooded valley or depression, with the low, sloping
downs at some distance away, the village is about as cold a
place to pass a winter in as one could find in this district.
And, it may be added, the most inconvenient to live in at any
time, the nearest town, or the easiest to get to, being
Salisbury, twelve miles distant by a hilly road. The only
means of getting to that great centre of life which the
inhabitants possess is by the carrier's cart, which makes the
weary four-hours' journey once a week, on market-day.
Naturally, not many of them see that place of delights
oftener than once a year, and some but once in five or more
years.</p>
<p>Then, as to the village itself, when you have got down into
its one long, rather winding street, or road. This has a
green bank, five or six feet high, on either side, on which
stand the cottages, mostly facing the road. Real houses there
are none—buildings worthy of being called houses in
these great days—unless the three small farm-houses are
considered better than cottages, and the rather mean-looking
rectory—the rector, poor man, is very poor. Just in the
middle part, where the church stands in its green churchyard,
the shadiest spot in the village, a few of the cottages are
close together, almost touching, then farther apart, twenty
yards or so, then farther still, forty or fifty yards. They
are small, old cottages; a few have seventeenth-century dates
cut on stone tablets on their fronts, but the undated ones
look equally old; some thatched, others tiled, but none
particularly attractive. Certainly they are without the added
charm of a green drapery—creeper or ivy rose, clematis,
and honeysuckle; and they are also mostly without the
cottage-garden flowers, unprofitably gay like the blossoming
furze, but dear to the soul: the flowers we find in so many
of the villages along the rivers, especially in those of the
Wylye valley to be described in a later chapter.</p>
<p>The trees, I have said, are few, though the churchyard is
shady, where you can refresh yourself beneath its ancient
beeches and its one wide-branching yew, or sit on a tomb in
the sun when you wish for warmth and brightness. The trees
growing by or near the street are mostly ash or beech, with a
pine or two, old but not large; and there are small or dwarf
yew-, holly-, and thorn-trees. Very little fruit is grown;
two or three to half a dozen apple- and damson-trees are
called an orchard, and one is sorry for the children. But in
late summer and autumn they get their fruit from the hedges.
These run up towards the downs on either side of the village,
at right angles with its street; long, unkept hedges,
beautiful with scarlet haws and traveller's-joy, rich in
bramble and elder berries and purple sloes and nuts—a
thousand times more nuts than the little dormice require for
their own modest wants.</p>
<p>Finally, to go back to its disadvantages, the village is
waterless; at all events in summer, when water is most
wanted. Water is such a blessing and joy in a village—a
joy for ever when it flows throughout the year, as at Nether
Stowey and Winsford and Bourton-on-the-Water, to mention but
three of all those happy villages in the land which are known
to most of us! What man on coming to such places and watching
the rushing, sparkling, foaming torrent by day and listening
to its splashing, gurgling sounds by night, does not resolve
that he will live in no village that has not a perennial
stream in it! This unblessed, high and dry village has
nothing but the winter bourne which gives it its name; a sort
of surname common to a score or two of villages in Wiltshire,
Dorset, Somerset, and Hants. Here the bed of the stream lies
by the bank on one side of the village street, and when the
autumn and early winter rains have fallen abundantly, the
hidden reservoirs within the chalk hills are filled to
overflowing; then the water finds its way out and fills the
dry old channel and sometimes turns the whole street into a
rushing river, to the immense joy of the village children.
They are like ducks, hatched and reared at some upland farm
where there was not even a muddy pool to dibble in. For a
season (the wet one) the village women have water at their
own doors and can go out and dip pails in it as often as they
want. When spring comes it is still flowing merrily, trying
to make you believe that it is going to flow for ever;
beautiful, green water-loving plants and grasses spring up
and flourish along the roadside, and you may see comfrey and
water forget-me-not in flower. Pools, too, have been formed
in some deep, hollow places; they are fringed with tall
grasses, whitened over with bloom of water-crowfoot, and poa
grass grows up from the bottom to spread its green tresses
over the surface. Better still, by and by a couple of stray
moorhens make their appearance in the pool—strange
birds, coloured glossy olive-brown, slashed with white, with
splendid scarlet and yellow beaks! If by some strange chance
a shining blue kingfisher were to appear it could not create
a greater excitement. So much attention do they receive that
the poor strangers have no peace of their lives. It is a
happy time for the children, and a good time for the busy
housewife, who has all the water she wants for cooking and
washing and cleaning—she may now dash as many pailfuls
over her brick floors as she likes. Then the clear, swift
current begins to diminish, and scarcely have you had time to
notice the change than it is altogether gone! The women must
go back to the well and let the bucket down, and laboriously
turn and turn the handle of the windlass till it mounts to
the top again. The pretty moist, green herbage, the graceful
grasses, quickly wither away; dust and straws and rubbish
from the road lie in the dry channel, and by and by it is
filled with a summer growth of dock and loveless nettles
which no child may touch with impunity.</p>
<p>No, I cannot think that any person for whom it had no
association, no secret interest, would, after looking at this
village with its dried-up winterbourne, care to make his home
in it. And no person, I imagine, wants to see it; for it has
no special attraction and is away from any road, at a
distance from everywhere. I knew a great many villages in
Salisbury Plain, and was always adding to their number, but
there was no intention of visiting this one. Perhaps there is
not a village on the Plain, or anywhere in Wiltshire for that
matter, which sees fewer strangers. Then I fell in with the
old shepherd whose life will be related in the succeeding
chapters, and who, away from his native place, had no story
about his past life and the lives of those he had
known—no thought in his mind, I might almost say, which
was not connected with the village of Winterbourne Bishop.
And many of his anecdotes and reflections proved so
interesting that I fell into the habit of putting them down
in my notebook; until in the end the place itself, where he
had followed his "homely trade" so long, seeing and feeling
so much, drew me to it. I knew there was "nothing to see" in
it, that it was without the usual attractions; that there
was, in fact, nothing but the human interest, but that was
enough. So I came to it to satisfy an idle
curiosity—just to see how it would accord with the
mental picture produced by his description of it. I came, I
may say, prepared to like the place for the sole but
sufficient reason that it had been his home. Had it not been
for this feeling he had produced in me I should not, I
imagine, have cared to stay long in it. As it was, I did
stay, then came again and found that it was growing on me. I
wondered why; for the mere interest in the old shepherd's
life memories did not seem enough to account for this
deepening attachment. It began to seem to me that I liked it
more and more because of its very barrenness—the entire
absence of all the features which make a place attractive,
noble scenery, woods, and waters; deer parks and old houses,
Tudor, Elizabethan, Jacobean, stately and beautiful, full of
art treasures; ancient monuments and historical associations.
There were none of these things; there was nothing here but
that wide, vacant expanse, very thinly populated with humble,
rural folk—farmers, shepherds, labourers—living
in very humble houses. England is so full of riches in
ancient monuments and grand and interesting and lovely
buildings and objects and scenes, that it is perhaps too
rich. For we may get into the habit of looking for such
things, expecting them at every turn, every mile of the way.</p>
<p>I found it a relief, at Winterbourne Bishop, to be in a
country which had nothing to draw a man out of a town. A
wide, empty land, with nothing on it to look at but a
furze-bush; or when I had gained the summit of the down, and
to get a little higher still stood on the top of one of its
many barrows, a sight of the distant village, its low, grey
or reddish-brown cottages half hidden among its few trees,
the square, stone tower of its little church looking at a
distance no taller than a milestone. That emptiness seemed
good for both mind and body: I could spend long hours idly
sauntering or sitting or lying on the turf, thinking of
nothing, or only of one thing—that it was a relief to
have no thought about anything.</p>
<p>But no, something was secretly saying to me all the time,
that it was more than what I have said which continued to
draw me to this vacant place—more than the mere relief
experienced on coming back to nature and solitude, and the
freedom of a wide earth and sky. I was not fully conscious of
what the something more was until after repeated visits. On
each occasion it was a pleasure to leave Salisbury behind and
set out on that long, hilly road, and the feeling would keep
with me all the journey, even in bad weather, sultry or cold,
or with the wind hard against me, blowing the white chalk
dust into my eyes. From the time I left the turnpike to go
the last two and a half to three miles by the side-road I
would gaze eagerly ahead for a sight of my destination long
before it could possibly be seen; until, on gaining the
summit of a low, intervening down, the wished scene would be
disclosed—the vale-like, wide depression, with its line
of trees, blue-green in the distance, flecks of red and grey
colour of the houses among them—and at that sight there
would come a sense of elation, like that of coming home.</p>
<p>This in fact was the secret! This empty place was, in its
aspect, despite the difference in configuration between down
and undulating plain, more like the home of my early years
than any other place known to me in the country. I can note
many differences, but they do not deprive me of this home
feeling; it is the likenesses that hold me, the spirit of the
place, one which is not a desert with the desert's melancholy
or sense of desolation, but inhabited, although thinly and by
humble-minded men whose work and dwellings are unobtrusive.
The final effect of this wide, green space with signs of
human life and labour on it, and sight of animals—sheep
and cattle—at various distances, is that we are not
aliens here, intruders or invaders on the earth, living in it
but apart, perhaps hating and spoiling it, but with the other
animals are children of Nature, like them living and seeking
our subsistence under her sky, familiar with her sun and wind
and rain.</p>
<p>If some ostentatious person had come to this strangely quiet
spot and raised a staring, big house, the sight of it in the
landscape would have made it impossible to have such a
feeling as I have described—this sense of man's harmony
and oneness with nature. From how much of England has this
expression which nature has for the spirit, which is so much
more to us than beauty of scenery, been blotted out! This
quiet spot in Wiltshire has been inhabited from of old, how
far back in time the barrows raised by an ancient, barbarous
people are there to tell us, and to show us how long it is
possible for the race of men, in all stages of culture, to
exist on the earth without spoiling it.</p>
<p>One afternoon when walking on Bishop Down I noticed at a
distance of a hundred yards or more that a rabbit had started
making a burrow in a new place and had thrown out a vast
quantity of earth. Going to the spot to see what kind of
chalk or soil he was digging so deeply in, I found that he
had thrown out a human thigh-bone and a rib or two. They were
of a reddish-white colour and had been embedded in a hard
mixture of chalk and red earth. The following day I went
again, and there were more bones, and every day after that
the number increased until it seemed to me that he had
brought out the entire skeleton, minus the skull, which I had
been curious to see. Then the bones disappeared. The man who
looked after the game had seen them, and recognizing that
they were human remains had judiciously taken them away to
destroy or stow them away in some safe place. For if the
village constable had discovered them, or heard of their
presence, he would perhaps have made a fuss and even thought
it necessary to communicate with the coroner of the district.
Such things occasionally happen, even in Wiltshire where the
chalk hills are full of the bones of dead men, and a solemn
Crowner's quest is held on the remains of a Saxon or Dane or
an ancient Briton. When some important person—a Sir
Richard Colt Hoare, for example, who dug up 379 barrows in
Wiltshire, or a General Pitt Rivers throws out human remains
nobody minds, but if an unauthorized rabbit kicks out a lot
of bones the matter should be inquired into.</p>
<p>But the man whose bones had been thus thrown out into the
sunlight after lying so long at that spot, which commanded a
view of the distant, little village looking so small in that
immense, green space—who and what was he, and how long
ago did he live on the earth—at Winterbourne Bishop,
let us say? There were two barrows in that part of the down,
but quite a stone's-throw away from the spot where the rabbit
was working, so that he may not have been one of the people
of that period. Still, it is probable that he was buried a
very long time ago, centuries back, perhaps a thousand years,
perhaps longer, and by chance there was a slope there which
prevented the water from percolating, and the soil in which
he had been deposited, under that close-knit turf which
looked as if it had never been disturbed, was one in which
bones might keep uncrumbled for ever.</p>
<p>The thought that occurred to me at the time was that if the
man himself had come back to life after so long a period, to
stand once more on that down surveying the scene, he would
have noticed little change in it, certainly nothing of a
startling description. The village itself, looking so small
at that distance, in the centre of the vast depression, would
probably not be strange to him. It was doubtless there as far
back as history goes and probably still farther back in time.
For at that point, just where the winterbourne gushes out
from the low hills, is the spot man would naturally select to
make his home. And he would see no mansion or big building,
no puff of white steam and sight of a long, black train
creeping over the earth, nor any other strange thing. It
would appear to him even as he knew it before he fell
asleep—the same familiar scene, with furze and bramble
and bracken on the slope, the wide expanse with sheep and
cattle grazing in the distance, and the dark green of trees
in the hollows, and fold on fold of the low down beyond,
stretching away to the dim, farthest horizon.</p>
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