Monthly Archives: October 2016

Salisbury, plain and complex

p1040057

Waking to a day of monochrome grey we sampled Rollestone’s finest breakfasts [smoked salmon with the scrambled eggs] before heading out for The Next Adventure…

p1040056

This entailed turning right at Airmen’s Corner [so called for the Royal Flying Corps’ first fatalities, July 1912] and pretty much directly south to the runnymede [i.e. wet meadow] of the future Salisbury, where monks moved from Old Sarum after some unreconcilable differences between Church and State in the early 13th century

p1040070

p1040073

to build a famously magnificent Cathedral in just 38 years [1220 – 1258], which we explored for an hour or so on our own.

p1040077 p1040082 p1040100 p1040101 p1040105

In the Chapter House under a stone frieze of The Bible’s Greatest Hits lives a very fine example

p1040118

of the Magna Carta, just sitting there in all its tiny goosequilled [feathers from right wings for the left-handed or more likely left-wing quills for righthanders] calligraphic glory.

p1040122

Late morning was the tower tour and ascent, seeing up close how the huge edifice was fit together

p1040123

p1040127

with tons of wood on the inside, even more tons of rocks on the outside, tons of lead for the roof and even for the glass, bits of which had survived the centuries.

p1040128

High in the tower were more recent individual panes etched by donors from many nations

p1040129

…or un-etched, offering

p1040142

dizzying views from within,

p1040143

without

p1040151

p1040154

p1040155

and within the tower proper.

p1040155a p1040164

p1040171

Salisbury High Street, where the Church of St. Thomas contained a few of the formerly ubiquitous but now extremely rare 15th century frescoes [most having been obliterated in/by the reformation, with the best survivors too elevated and dark to properly photograph],

p1040182

was textural also.

p1040176

p1040184

p1040202

Crazy masonry, dog-friendly signage and

p1040185

the new Wessex Wing in the Salisbury and South Wiltshire Museum a revelation,

p1040209

p1040215

p1040219

whereas its older displays, predictably idiosyncratic, left us if nothing else

p1040223

mesmerized by the 14′ tall Salisbury Giant [ca. 1400] and his mischievous companion Hob-Nob.

p1040225

Late [too late for tea in the museum cafe] afternoon we

p1040228a

followed the advice of an enthusiastic “modern” [17th century] historian well-met in the Wessex Wing and finish off the day with a visit to Old Sarum, first settled around 3,000 BC, site of the original Cathedral ca. 900 – 1200, its castle finally abandoned in 1322.

p1040231

p1040245

The Cathedral’s foundations remain visible in the grass outside the walls, which are evidence of bronze and later age fortifications composed of many stones, predominantly flints.

p1040244

p1040247

p1040251

p1040258

Skies lowering, light fading, we proceeded north to the outskirts of Amesbury, then west on the 303, where just before the Airmen’s Corner turn was a glimpse of Tomorrow’s Destination.

p1040260

p1040263

p1040268

At the Manor it was a wonderfully flaky cod for dinner with nary a Bustard [save the taxidermy] in sight.

 

M