A Postcard from England, Old and New…
My grandfather, Fred Brackenbury, came from a long line of prize-winning English shepherds. ‘My father was a shepherd’, he said once. ‘And his father. And mebbe his father…’. Here is Fred, eighty years ago, with some of his charges, and one of his faithful collies!
Fred won many prizes for the farmers he worked for. In the 1920s, his employer gave him a framed photograph of one of his Champion sheep. It is a Lincoln, now a rare breed…
Fred was born in the reign of Queen Victoria and died in 1972. He never learnt to drive, but used a horse and cart. Here is one of his most celebrated shepherding ponies, called Buttons, with a very young shepherd on board!
And here I am, with one of my grandfather’s orphan lambs in the 1950s, defying my unsuitable Sunday clothes!
I photographed all these old pictures on my grandmother’s Victorian desk, from her lost family farm. Times change. I have spent my adult life living in a small town. For decades I worked in my husband’s small metal finishing company. But we spent almost all our spare time on the Gloucestershire hills, where our rough-coated ponies lived on a farm! We spent days under summer sun clearing fields of ragwort: a poisonous yellow-flowered weed with very tough stems! Does it live in the US, Celi? Here is the last pony who benefited from our weed-clearing – the almost saintly Would-be-Good (Woody).
Here she is in a summer lane, with Cow Parsley growing on the verges! And here she is enjoying the highlight of her day: her bucket.
In the small gaps between horses, field and day job, I also published nine collections of poems, many about the countryside and horses. Here is one about my accident-prone though beloved first pony…
After the X-ray
If he had stayed
in the four white walls
or alone in his patch, the untidy hedge
strewing its roses through empty hours
he would never have met the dark mare
whose neck he licked by the elderflower
whose kick snapped his straight cannonbone.
For sixteen weeks he must stand in the straw
watching the light wash and ebb.
All warmth will have flowed past when he stumbles out
November’s wind raw on his leg..
Was it worth it? He shuffles, he cranes to the lane,
calls her, and calls her again.
Here are Woody and I on a farm track! Here is a poem about the hares I saw there with my husband, when Woody was nearly thirty..
Down Unwin’s track
And the rain stopped. And the sky spun
past the hills’ flush of winter corn.
The mare strode out as though still young.
You walked. I almost said, last year
I saw a hare run with her young
just past the broken wall, just here.
Two flew in circles. First, one rose
upon its great back legs. It boxed
at air. The second flinched, then rose.
England has blackbirds, mice. To find
these strong black shapes makes the heart race,
as barley, under icy wind.
Boxing is courtship, failed. One broke,
tore past us to the rough safe hedge.
She crossed the sun. Her colours woke,
ears black, back russet, earth new-laid.
Her legs stretched straight. The late showers made
bright water fly from every blade.
Alison Brackenbury
http://www.alisonbrackenbury.co.uk
(Published in my ninth collection, ‘Skies’, published by Carcanet in 2016)
Very sadly, Woody’s sight became dangerously bad due to untreatable cataracts. She had to be put down last summer, aged thirty-one. We had looked after her for twenty-three years (with many buckets!) We miss her terribly. But we still spend hours on the farm and also go further afield into the countryside, seeing the wild birds my grandfather loved so much. So, finally, here are warm January greetings from a cold England, as country walkers and their dogs head home through the mist, on a muddy canal path once trodden by the huge barge horses!
A Happy Homecoming to all who tramp through the mud!
Alison Brackenbury
http://www.alisonbrackenbury.co.uk




41 responses to “Guest Post – the old and new”
You have to love those sheep dreadlocks.
Love seeing the world through the eyes of another land and your poetry. As we say in the South – Come on back y’hear?! I’ve been reading Rosamund Pilcher and these pictures fill out some of what she describes so beautifully, so thank you.
Beautiful! Thank you, Alison!
Hello and thank you Alison, for both pictures and poems, from a hot, sunny South Africa. Laura
Thank you Alison, for sharing some of your history and yourself in this post 🙂
Beautiful! Everything, words and photos! Thank you!
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Pleased to meet you, Allison! A lovely post!
Such a beautiful post. I’m curious, Allison, have you ever read the book “Meadowland: The Private Life of an English Field” by John Lewis-Stempel? Somehow your writing and your observations and your poetic turn of phrase remind me of him. I was mesmerized by that book, as I was, too, by your post. Thank you!
I so enjoyed your post Alison! Loved hearing about your Grandfather and his life and yours growing up in the beautiful area of Gloucestorshire!! Love your pictures you shared!! You and your little lamb!! just like us Kids!! Love that beautiful picture of you and Woody riding the trails! And the treasured years of close companionship with Woody!! Great to have you for our guest Alison!! I’ve been to England several times ~ love your country!! Take care!!
Alison- your poetry is so emotionally lovely and visual. Your photos are wonderful-thanks for sharing them .
I am still staring at the sheep.
Love the pics!. I just finished a book on a twelve day walk across the Outer Hebrides “Poacher’s Pilgrimage” by Alistar McIntosh and am currently reading one called “Isolation Shepherd” by Ian R. Thomson about sheep herding and life in 1950’s Loch Moar,Western Ross…Delightful works
Oops that’s Iain R. THOMSON
Thank you for your wonderful guest post, photos, and poetry!
Hi, Alison! I always duck in later in the day when my chores have finished and before the evening’s work sets in. This is my before supper desert – reading this blog and the comments. Thank you for such a beautiful post and the scrumptious photos! I felt like I was there! And thanks, again!