<SPAN name="ch13"><!--Marker--></SPAN>
<h2> CHAPTER XIII </h2>
<h3> VALE OF THE WYLYE </h3>
<blockquote>
Warminster—Vale of the Wylye—Counting the
villages—A lost church—Character of the
villages—Tytherington church—Story of the
dog—Lord Lovell—Monuments in
churches—Manor-houses—Knook—The
cottages—Yellow stonecrop—Cottage
gardens—Marigolds—Golden-rod—Wild flowers
of the water-side—Seeking for the characteristic
expression
</blockquote>
<p>The prettily-named Wylye is a little river not above twenty
miles in length from its rise to Salisbury, where, after
mixing with the Nadder at Wilton, it joins the Avon. At or
near its source stands Warminster, a small, unimportant town
with a nobler-sounding name than any other in Wiltshire.
Trowbridge, Devizes, Marlborough, Salisbury, do not stir the
mind in the same degree; and as for Chippenham, Melksham,
Mere, Calne, and Corsham, these all are of no more account
than so many villages in comparison. Yet Warminster has no
associations—no place in our mental geography; at all
events one remembers nothing about it. Its name, which after
all may mean nothing more than the monastery on the
Were—one of the three streamlets which flow into the
Wylye at its source—is its only glory. It is not
surprising that Caleb Bawcombe invariably speaks of his
migration to, and of the time he passed at Warminster, when,
as a fact, he was not there at all, but at Doveton, a little
village on the Wylye a few miles below the town with the
great name.</p>
<p>It is a green valley—the greenness strikes one sharply
on account of the pale colour of the smooth, high downs on
either side—half a mile to a mile in width, its crystal
current showing like a bright serpent for a brief space in
the green, flat meadows, then vanishing again among the
trees. So many are the great shade trees, beeches and ashes
and elms, that from some points the valley has the appearance
of a continuous wood—a contiguity of shade. And the
wood hides the villages, at some points so effectually that
looking down from the hills you may not catch a glimpse of
one and imagine it to be a valley where no man dwells. As a
rule you do see something of human occupancy—the red or
yellow roofs of two or three cottages, a half-hidden grey
church tower, or column of blue smoke, but to see the
villages you must go down and look closely, and even so you
will find it difficult to count them all. I have tried, going
up and down the valley several times, walking or cycling, and
have never succeeded in getting the same number on two
occasions. There are certainly more then twenty, without
counting the hamlets, and the right number is probably
something between twenty-five and thirty, but I do not want
to find out by studying books and maps. I prefer to let the
matter remain unsettled so as to have the pleasure of
counting or trying to count them again at some future time.
But I doubt that I shall ever succeed. On one occasion I
caught sight of a quaint, pretty little church standing by
itself in the middle of a green meadow, where it looked very
solitary with no houses in sight and not even a cow grazing
near it. The river was between me and the church, so I went
up-stream, a mile and a half, to cross by the bridge, then
doubled back to look for the church, and couldn't find it!
Yet it was no illusory church; I have seen it again on two
occasions, but again from the other side of the river, and I
must certainly go back some day in search of that lost
church, where there may be effigies, brasses, sad, eloquent
inscriptions, and other memorials of ancient tragedies and
great families now extinct in the land.</p>
<p>This is perhaps one of the principal charms of the
Wylye—the sense of beautiful human things hidden from
sight among the masses of foliage. Yet another lies in the
character of the villages. Twenty-five or twenty-eight of
them in a space of twenty miles; yet the impression, left on
the mind is that these small centres of population are really
few and far between. For not only are they small, but of the
old, quiet, now almost obsolete type of village, so
unobtrusive as to affect the mind soothingly, like the sight
of trees and flowery banks and grazing cattle. The churches,
too, as is fit, are mostly small and ancient and beautiful,
half-hidden in their tree-shaded churchyards, rich in
associations which go back to a time when history fades into
myth and legend. Not all, however, are of this description; a
few are naked, dreary little buildings, and of these I will
mention one which, albeit ancient, has no monuments and no
burial-ground. This is the church of Tytherington, a small,
rustic village, which has for neighbours Codford St. Peter
one one side and Sutton Veny and Norton Bavant on the other.
To get into this church, where there was nothing but naked
walls to look at, I had to procure the key from the clerk, a
nearly blind old man of eighty. He told me that he was
shoemaker but could no longer see to make or mend shoes; that
as a boy he was a weak, sickly creature, and his father, a
farm bailiff, made him learn shoemaking because he was unfit
to work out of doors. "I remember this church," he said,
"when there was only one service each quarter," but, strange
to say, he forgot to tell me the story of the dog! "What,
didn't he tell you about the dog?" exclaimed everybody. There
was really nothing else to tell.</p>
<p>It happened about a hundred years ago that once, after the
quarterly service had been held, a dog was missed, a small
terrier owned by the young wife of a farmer of Tytherington
named Case. She was fond of her dog, and lamented its loss
for a little while, then forgot all about it. But after three
months, when the key was once more put into the rusty lock
and the door thrown open, there was the dog, a living
"skelington" it was said, dazed by the light of day, but
still able to walk! It was supposed that he had kept himself
alive by "licking the moisture from the walls." The walls,
they said, were dripping with wet and covered with a thick
growth of mould. I went back to interrogate the ancient
clerk, and he said that the dog died shortly after its
deliverance; Mrs. Case herself told him all about it. She was
an old woman then, but was always willing to relate the sad
story of her pet.</p>
<p>That picture of the starving dog coming out, a living
skeleton, from the wet, mouldy church, reminds us sharply of
the changed times we live in and of the days when the Church
was still sleeping very peacefully, not yet turning uneasily
in its bed before opening its eyes; and when a comfortable
rector of Codford thought it quite enough that the people of
Tytherington, a mile away, should have one service every
three months.</p>
<p>As a fact, the Tytherington dog interested me as much as the
story of the last Lord Lovell's self-incarceration in his own
house in the neighbouring little village of Upton Lovell. He
took refuge there from his enemies who were seeking his life,
and concealed himself so effectually that he was never seen
again. Centuries later, when excavations were made on the
site of the ruined mansion, a secret chamber was discovered,
containing a human skeleton seated in a chair at a table, on
which were books and papers crumbling into dust.</p>
<p>A volume might be filled with such strange and romantic
happenings in the little villages of the Wylye, and for the
natural man they have a lasting fascination; but they
invariably relate to great people of their day—warriors
and statesmen and landowners of old and noble lineage, the
smallest and meanest you will find being clothiers, or
merchants, who amassed large fortunes and built mansions for
themselves and almshouses for the aged poor, and, when dead,
had memorials placed to them in the churches. But of the
humble cottagers, the true people of the vale who were rooted
in the soil, and nourished and died like trees in the same
place—of these no memory exists. We only know that they
lived and laboured; that when they died, three or four a
year, three or four hundred in a century, they were buried in
the little shady churchyard, each with a green mound over him
to mark the spot. But in time these "mouldering heaps"
subsided, the bodies turned to dust, and another and yet
other generations were laid in the same place among the
forgotten dead, to be themselves in turn forgotten. Yet I
would rather know the histories of these humble, unremembered
lives than of the great ones of the vale who have left us a
memory.</p>
<p>It may be for this reason that I was little interested in the
manor-houses of the vale. They are plentiful enough, some
gone to decay or put to various uses; others still the homes
of luxury, beauty, culture: stately rooms, rich fabrics;
pictures, books, and manuscripts, gold and silver ware, china
and glass, expensive curios, suits of armour, ivory and
antlers, tiger-skins, stuffed goshawks and peacocks'
feathers. Houses, in some cases built centuries ago, standing
half-hidden in beautiful wooded grounds, isolated from the
village; and even as they thus stand apart, sacred from
intrusion, so the life that is in them does not mix with or
form part of the true native life. They are to the cottagers
of to-day what the Roman villas were to the native population
of some eighteen centuries ago. This will seem incredible to
some: to me, an untrammelled person, familiar in both hall
and cottage, the distance between them appears immense.</p>
<p>A reader well acquainted with the valley will probably laugh
to be told that the manor-house which most interested me was
that of Knook, a poor little village between Heytesbury and
Upton Lovell. Its ancient and towerless little church with
rough, grey walls is, if possible, even more desolate-looking
than that of Tytherington. In my hunt for the key to open it
I disturbed a quaint old man, another octogenarian,
picturesque in a vast white beard, who told me he was a
thatcher, or had been one before the evil days came when he
could work no more and was compelled to seek parish relief.
"You must go to the manor-house for the key," he told me. A
strange place in which to look for the key, and it was
stranger still to see the house, close to the church, and so
like it that but for the small cross on the roof of the
latter one could not have known which was the sacred
building. First a monks' house, it fell at the Reformation to
some greedy gentleman who made it his dwelling, and doubtless
in later times it was used as a farm-house. Now a house most
desolate, dirty, and neglected, with cracks in the walls
which threaten ruin, standing in a wilderness of weeds,
tenanted by a poor working-man whose wages are twelve
shillings a week, and his wife and eight small children. The
rent is eighteen-pence a week—probably the
lowest-rented manor-house in England, though it is not very
rare to find such places tenanted by labourers.</p>
<p>But let us look at the true cottages. There are, I imagine,
few places in England where the humble homes of the people
have so great a charm. Undoubtedly they are darker inside,
and not so convenient to live in as the modern box-shaped,
red-brick, slate-roofed cottages, which have spread a wave of
ugliness over the country; but they do not offend—they
please the eye. They are smaller than the modern-built
habitations; they are weathered and coloured by sun and wind
and rain and many lowly vegetable forms to a harmony with
nature. They appear related to the trees amid which they
stand, to the river and meadows, to the sloping downs at the
side, and to the sky and clouds over all. And, most
delightful feature, they stand among, and are wrapped in,
flowers as in a garment—rose and vine and creeper and
clematis. They are mostly thatched, but some have tiled
roofs, their deep, dark red clouded and stained with lichen
and moss; and these roofs, too, have their flowers in summer.
They are grown over with yellow stonecrop, that bright
cheerful flower that smiles down at you from the lowly roof
above the door, with such an inviting expression, so
delighted to see you no matter how poor and worthless a
person you may be or what mischief you may have been at, that
you begin to understand the significance of a strange
vernacular name of this
plant—Welcome-home-husband-though-never-so-drunk.</p>
<p>But its garden flowers, clustering and nestling round it,
amid which its feet are set—they are to me the best of
all flowers. These are the flowers we know and remember for
ever. The old, homely, cottage-garden blooms, so old that
they have entered the soul. The big house garden, or
gardener's garden, with everything growing in it I hate, but
these I love—fragrant gillyflower and pink and
clove-smelling carnation; wallflower, abundant periwinkle,
sweet-william, larkspur, love-in-a-mist, and
love-lies-bleeding, old-woman's-nightcap, and
kiss-me-John-at-the-garden-gate, some times called pansy. And
best of all and in greatest profusion, that flower of
flowers, the marigold.</p>
<p>How the townsman, town born and bred, regards this flower, I
do not know. He is, in spite of all the time I have spent in
his company, a comparative stranger to me—the one
living creature on the earth who does not greatly interest
me. Some over-populated planet in our system discovered a way
to relieve itself by discharging its superfluous millions on
our globe—a pale people with hurrying feet and eager,
restless minds, who live apart in monstrous, crowded camps,
like wood ants that go not out to forage for
themselves—six millions of them crowded together in one
camp alone! I have lived in these colonies, years and years,
never losing the sense of captivity, of exile, ever conscious
of my burden, taking no interest in the doings of that
innumerable multitude, its manifold interests, its ideals and
philosophy, its arts and pleasures. What, then, does it
matter how they regard this common orange-coloured flower
with a strong smell? For me it has an atmosphere, a sense or
suggestion of something immeasurably remote and very
beautiful—an event, a place, a dream perhaps, which has
left no distinct image, but only this feeling unlike all
others, imperishable, and not to be described except by the
one word Marigold.</p>
<p>But when my sight wanders away from the flower to others
blooming with it—to all those which I have named and to
the taller ones, so tall that they reach half-way up, and
some even quite up, to the eaves of the lowly houses they
stand against—hollyhocks and peonies and crystalline
white lilies with powdery gold inside, and the common
sunflower—I begin to perceive that they all possess
something of that same magical quality.</p>
<p>These taller blooms remind me that the evening primrose, long
naturalized in our hearts, is another common and very
delightful cottage-garden flower; also that here, on the
Wylye, there is yet another stranger from the same western
world which is fast winning our affections. This is the
golden-rod, grandly beautiful in its great, yellow,
plume-like tufts. But it is not quite right to call the tufts
yellow: they are green, thickly powdered with the minute
golden florets. There is no flower in England like it, and it
is a happiness to know that it promises to establish itself
with us as a wild flower.</p>
<p>Where the village lies low in the valley and the cottage is
near the water, there are wild blooms, too, which almost
rival those of the garden in beauty—water agrimony and
comfrey with ivory-white and dim purple blossoms, purple and
yellow loosestrife and gem-like, water forget-me-not; all
these mixed with reeds and sedges and water-grasses, forming
a fringe or border to the potato or cabbage patch, dividing
it from the stream.</p>
<p>But now I have exhausted the subject of the flowers, and
enumerated and dwelt upon the various other components of the
scene, it comes to me that I have not yet said the right
thing and given the Wylye its characteristic expression. In
considering the flowers we lose sight of the downs, and so in
occupying ourselves with the details we miss the general
effect. Let me then, once more, before concluding this
chapter, try to capture the secret of this little river.</p>
<p>There are other chalk streams in Wiltshire and Hampshire and
Dorset—swift crystal currents that play all summer long
with the floating poa grass fast held in their pebbly beds,
flowing through smooth downs, with small ancient churches in
their green villages, and pretty thatched cottages smothered
in flowers—which yet do not produce the same effect as
the Wylye. Not Avon for all its beauty, nor Itchen, nor Test.
Wherein, then, does the "Wylye bourne" differ from these
others, and what is its special attraction? It was only when
I set myself to think about it, to analyse the feeling in my
own mind, that I discovered the secret—that is, in my
own case, for of its effect on others I cannot say anything.
What I discovered was that the various elements of interest,
all of which may be found in other chalk-stream valleys, are
here concentrated, or comprised in a limited space, and seen
together produce a combined effect on the mind. It is the
narrowness of the valley and the nearness of the high downs
standing over it on either side, with, at some points, the
memorials of antiquity carved on their smooth surfaces, the
barrows and lynchetts or terraces, and the vast green
earth-works crowning their summit. Up here on the turf, even
with the lark singing his shrill music in the blue heavens,
you are with the prehistoric dead, yourself for the time one
of that innumerable, unsubstantial multitude, invisible in
the sun, so that the sheep travelling as they graze, and the
shepherd following them, pass through their ranks without
suspecting their presence. And from that elevation you look
down upon the life of to-day—the visible life, so brief
in the individual, which, like the swift silver stream
beneath, yet flows on continuously from age to age and for
ever. And even as you look down you hear, at that distance,
the bell of the little hidden church tower telling the hour
of noon, and quickly following, a shout of freedom and joy
from many shrill voices of children just released from
school. Woke to life by those sounds, and drawn down by them,
you may sit to rest or sun yourself on the stone table of a
tomb overgrown on its sides with moss, the two-century-old
inscription well-nigh obliterated, in the little grass-grown,
flowery churchyard which serves as village green and
playground in that small centre of life, where the living and
the dead exist in a neighbourly way together. For it is not
here as in towns, where the dead are away and out of mind and
the past cut off. And if after basking too long in the sun in
that tree-sheltered spot you go into the little church to
cool yourself, you will probably find in a dim corner not far
from the altar a stone effigy of one of an older time; a
knight in armour, perhaps a crusader with legs crossed, lying
on his back, dimly seen in the dim light, with perhaps a
coloured sunbeam on his upturned face. For this little church
where the villagers worship is very old; Norman on Saxon
foundations; and before they were ever laid there may have
been a temple to some ancient god at that spot, or a Roman
villa perhaps. For older than Saxon foundations are found in
the vale, and mosaic floors, still beautiful after lying
buried so long.</p>
<p>All this—the far-removed events and periods in
time—are not in the conscious mind when we are in the
vale or when we are looking down on it from above: the mind
is occupied with nothing but visible nature. Thus, when I am
sitting on the tomb, listening to the various sounds of life
about me, attentive to the flowers and bees and butterflies,
to man or woman or child taking a short cut through the
churchyard, exchanging a few words with them; or when I am by
the water close by, watching a little company of graylings,
their delicately-shaded, silver-grey scales distinctly seen
as they lie in the crystal current watching for flies; or
when I listen to the perpetual musical talk and song combined
of a family of green-finches in the alders or willows, my
mind is engaged with these things. But if one is familiar
with the vale; if one has looked with interest and been
deeply impressed with the signs and memorials of past life
and of antiquity everywhere present and forming part of the
scene, something of it and of all that it represents remains
in the subconscious mind to give a significance and feeling
to the scene, which affects us here more than in most places;
and that, I take it, is the special charm of this little
valley.</p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
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