Holme Fell: A Sample of Landscapes is the title of a collaboration between myself and Trev Eales, based on, coming out of, springboarding from, his photographs of the Lake District: Holme Fell in particular, and Hodge Close, an old quarry, as its central node or focus.
Here's a second poem and photograph. The project progresses and draws towards its completion and its becoming, or being made, public, i.e. PUBLISHED. More details later.
While the presentation of text and image may differ from this format, for this blogpost sampling of this ‘sample of landscapes’ I will present a poem and an image that relate quite closely together.
Here is a second piece from the sequence and a second image to accompany it.
10
Blue peaks, shiny but wrinkled,
under the ragged underbelly of thick cloud.
The sandy alluvial fingers of the middle distant fell.
Far off: icy caps, hunkering down,
unvisited.
A sample of landscapes
for human choice:
I cannot think myself unstunned
by their rival majesties even
through recourse to evasions
of the artifice of selection
and election,
a window on diverse
confluences
Unpopulated space but not unpeopled
(even through planet time):
the stone wall pens in speckled ground,
be-ribboned by its shadow,
and stony paths trail down upon thick woodland
On a road or track
at the base of the far blue rockface, tracing the valley:
a speck of white van or truck pinpointed
How much of that prickly sliced-raw cliff face
was once worked
the human unworked
by its sharp treachery?
John Casson, 27 November 1901, aged 25, Quarryman. Deceased was turning off a new working when a huge mass of rock fell from the side and buried him. No one suspected any danger from the quarry side, as it had been in the same condition for quite a dozen years.
This is the first poem to introduce documentary text into the 'flow' of the sequence, and, hopefully, of the book. (More of that later.) There are a number of such pieces, particularly as the text becomes more 'post-industrial'. No video this posting.
Trev Eales is a photographer specialising in landscape photography and rock concerts and festivals, based in his hometown of Barrow-in-Furness. He and I met at university in Norwich in October 1974, over half a century ago, and we’ve been in touch over those years. We meet up regularly in Lancaster for discussions and entertainment. He has a website here: Trev Eales Photography. You could spend hours lost in his back-catalogue. Here’s an interview with him about his work: Capturing the Festival Spirit with Trev Eales · Lomography. All good things come in threes, so here’s a third site: Articles by Trev Eales’s Profile | eFestivals.co.uk Journalist | Muck Rack. This is a list of links to Trev’s reviews of festivals and gigs for Louder than War, via the Muck Rack site.
All my
information is everywhere on this blog of course, but I did write (but never
delivered) a talk on my use of photographs in my writings, here: Pages:
Robert Sheppard: Talk for the Open Eye Gallery on Poetry and Photography
December 2016.
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The first 'showing' (also a Hub post for all the 'Holme Fell' posts) may be found here: Pages: Trev Eales and Robert Sheppard HOLME FELL: a Sample of Landscapes Number One


