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                    EVERY WEEK

JULY 17, 2024

500 shades of green

Why it is the eye’s favourite hue

Rex Whistler’s triumph and tragedy
Big hearts and funny faces: the bull terrier
Alan Titchmarsh’s favourite flower show























VOL CCXXIII NO 29, JULY 17, 2024 Miss Rebecca Corbett Rebecca is a farming entrepreneur, responsible for running diversified businesses on her family’s farm. She is engaged to Edward Vincent, whom she will marry in Lochbuie, Isle of Mull, in August, and the daughter of Charlie and Susie Corbett of Cheriton, Hampshire. Rebecca follows in the footsteps of her sister, Louise de Ferranti (née Corbett), who appeared on the Frontispiece on March 14, 2012. Photographed by Anya Campbell
Contents July 17, 2024 Light-hearted: artists May Summers-Perkins and Gina Baker with some of the 40 decorated lighthouse sculptures created for the Light the South charity fundraising trail being held at Southampton in Hampshire and Cowes on the Isle of Wight until September Yorkshire, God’s Own Country (Stephen Millership/www. stephenmillership.com) COVER STORIES 46 Our green and pleasant land Our eyes can detect more of its shades than any other colour and its many hues are bound up with everything from jealousy to British racing cars—it’s all gone green for Lucien de Guise 50 It’s a bullseye ‘Life is merrier when you live with a bull terrier’ owners tell Katy Birchall as she delves into the kindly and comic character beneath the muscular frame 98 Showing the way Goodwill and gardening go hand in hand at the ‘beautifully formed’ Royal Windsor Flower Show—and Alan Titchmarsh wouldn’t miss it for the world 24 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 THIS WEEK 36 Lyndon Farnham’s favourite painting The Jersey chief minister picks a work that encapsulates the island’s spirit and determination 38 ‘Most costly and church-wise’ In the second of two articles, John Goodall investigates the 17th-century expansion that provided Lincoln College, Oxford, with a quite outstanding chapel 44 The legacy Music will ring around the Royal Albert Hall again this summer thanks to Henry Wood and his Proms, reveals Octavia Pollock 54 All The King’s Whales and all The Queen’s dolphins With more species around our shores than anywhere else in northern Europe, Ben Lerwill keeps his eyes peeled for porpoises, whales and dolphins 56 The good stuff Hetty Lintell shells out on fine jewellery that is sure to impress 58 A stitch in time Debo Devonshire’s love of chic, chickens and Chatsworth in Derbyshire is celebrated in a new exhibition, discovers Kim Parker 62 Interiors Giles Kime explores large-scale wallpaper capable of transporting you to a whole new world 73 COUNTRY LIFE International Jersey earns royal approval (page 78), Antonia Windsor marks 150 years of La Corbière lighthouse (page 80), Paul Henderson spices up his life with Jersey’s East Asian - a week’s a long time without it Subscribe and receive six issues for £6* Visit www.countrylifesubs.co.uk/C76N *After your first six issues, your payment will continue at £46.49 every three months by UK Direct Debit. For full terms and conditions, visit magazinesdirect.com/terms. Offer closes October 1, 2024. cuisine (page 82), Nick Hammond brews his own island tea (page 86) and Holly Kirkwood picks the best properties for sale (page 88) 92 Over the hills and far away Tiffany Daneff marvels at the spectacular views that have been restored at the Old Rectory at Preston Capes, Northamptonshire 100 Kitchen garden cook Crunchy fennel is a summer highlight for Melanie Johnson 114 Time for some merriment Michael Billington is royally entertained as Shakespeare receives a modern, mirth-filled twist in Stratford and London EVERY WEEK 26 Town & Country 30 Notebook 32 Letters 33 Agromenes 34 Athena 66 Property market 70 Property comment 102 Arts & antiques 110 Art market 112 Books 117 Bridge and crossword 118 Classified advertisements 122 Spectator 122 Tottering-by-Gently Simon Czapp/Solent News/Shutterstock 104 First to fall Rex Whistler refused to leave fighting the Second World War to ‘young boys’, but his courage and leadership was to cost him his life, as Allan Mallinson reveals
Future Publishing Ltd, 121–141 Westbourne Terrace, Paddington, London W2 6JR 0330 390 6591; www.countrylife.co.uk Choose your battles ACHEL REEVES, our new Chancellor, didn’t exactly say ‘Look out, Nimbys’—not in public, anyway—in her first speech. However, what she did warn, on the subject of planning, was: ‘The answer cannot always be no.’ Ms Reeves has previously described England’s complex and turgid planning system as ‘the graveyard of economic ambition’; if her party is to fulfil its manifesto pledge of 1.5 million new homes by the end of Parliament, things will certainly have to speed up (Property comment, page 70). Already, the new Labour Government has tweaked the National Planning Policy Framework that barred onshore wind development to facilitate its manifesto promise to double the number of turbines. These are currently part of the scenery in many (less populated) rural landscapes in Europe, as well as in Wales and Scotland, and they have increased in size since the R PPA Front Cover of the Year 2023 Property Magazine of the Year 2022, Property Press Awards PPA Magazine Brand of the Year 2019 PPA Front Cover of the Year 2018 British Society of Magazine Editors Columnist of the Year (Special Interest) 2016 British Society of Magazine Editors Scoop of the Year 2015/16 PPA Specialist Consumer Magazine of the Year 2014/15 British Society of Magazine Editors Innovation of the Year 2014/15 arguments began. The number of solar panels—currently the subject of anguished protest in Oxfordshire and Wiltshire— is set to be trebled. Green Belt land—13% of England—will no longer be sacrosanct. Yet, at the same time, Labour’s manifesto pledges include three new National Forests, nine National River Walks, the planting of ‘millions’ of trees and the expansion of peatlands and wetlands. There is no doubt that reassessment of the green belt is well overdue—some of it is hardly green any more—and we desperately need more houses and newer infrastructure in what politicians call ‘the right places’. Yet, although the Prime Minister correctly suggests that the ‘ugly bits’ can be built on, what will be the criteria for ugliness? One man’s wasteland may be another’s secret haven. Will permitted development come down to an invidious beauty parade? Most conservation charities believe that Editorial Editor-in-Chief Mark Hedges News & Property Editor Annunciata Elwes 3961 everyone should live within reach of some sort of green space—the CPRE, which advocates ‘land recycling’, describes the green belt as ‘the countryside next door for 30 million people in towns and cities’—and the fact that biodiversity does not thrive in isolation is sinking in, hence the regularly bandied-about phrase ‘wildlife corridor’. Increasingly, however, wildlife itself does not recognise boundaries, as otters and foxes colonise cities. It is easy to poke fun at the efforts of ‘Nimbys’, but there is surely a streak of Nimbyism in all of us or, at the very least, a silent, vaguely guilty gratitude to those persistent people who make the effort to object to potential desecration. New MPs may find loyalties tested, torn between constituency pleas and Government policy. Seasoned objectors may need to choose their battles, deciding what they can live with and what they cannot—heads versus hearts. *V\U[Y`3PML7PJ[\YL3PIYHY` Editorial Enquiries Lifestyle and Travel Editor Rosie Paterson 6591 Content & Permissions ,_LJ\[P]L Cindie Johnston 6538 Editor’s PA/Editorial Assistant Amie Elizabeth White 6102 3\_\Y`,KP[VY /L[[`3PU[LSS07984 178307 *SHYL+V]L Telephone numbers are WYLÄ_LKI`0330 390 Head of Design +LHU<ZOLY Emails are name.surname@futurenet.com Senior Art Editor Emma Earnshaw (K]LY[PZLTLU[KPYLJ[VY HUK*SHZZPÄLK 2H[L)HYUÄLSK 07817 629935 Deputy Editor Kate Green 4171 Deputy Art Editor Heather Clark Managing & Features Editor Paula Lester 6426 Senior Designer Ben Harris Architectural Editor John Goodall Picture Editor 3\J`-VYK 4072 Gardens Editor ;PɈHU`+HULɈ6115 Acting Deputy Picture Editor ,TTH+H]PZ ,_LJ\[P]L,KP[VYHUK0U[LYPVYZ Giles Kime 6047 Chief Sub-Editor 6J[H]PH7VSSVJR 6605 Deputy Features Editor Victoria Marston 6446 Senior Sub-Editor Stuart Martel (K]LY[PZPUNHUK *SHZZPÄLK7YVK\J[PVU Stephen Turner 6613 Assistant Features Editor Agnes Stamp Digital Editor ;VI`2LLS Senior Ad Production Manager 1V*YVZI` 6204 Art and Antiques Editor Carla Passino (carla.passinobargioni@ futurenet.com) Deputy Digital Editor 1HTLZ-PZOLY 4058 Property Correspondent 7LUU`*O\YJOPSS 0UZLY[Z*HUVW`4LKPH 020–4517 1430; paloma.walder@canopymedia.co.uk Back issues www.magazinesdirect.com ;VÄUKV\[TVYLJVU[HJ[\Z at licensing@futurenet.com or view our available content at www.futurecontenthub.com Commercial director (K]LY[PZPUN7YVWLY[` 3\J`2OVZSH 07583 106990 0U[LYUH[PVUHS7YVWLY[` Scarlett Glendenning 07938 735212 3\_\Y` Katie Ruocco 07929 364909 0U[LYPVYZ;YH]LS ,TTH/PSL`07581 009998 Art & Antiques Head of Print Licensing Rachel Shaw Circulation Manager 4H[[OL^+L3PTH Production Group Production Manager 5PNLS+H]PLZ Management Senior Vice President Women’s HUK3\_\Y` /PSSHY`2LYY Managing Director Malcolm Young Julia Laurence 07971 923054 7YPU[LKI` Walstead UK Subscription enquiries 0330 333 1120 www.magazinesdirect.com July 17, 2024 | Country Life | 25
Town & Country Annunciata Elwes Nature’s siege of Corfe HE National Trust has launched a £2 million conservation project at Corfe Castle, Dorset. Over the next three years, specialists will remove vegetation and restore the walls of the castle, which dates back to the 11th century, including its nine towers, keep and 26ft-high curtain wall. Most work will be carried out by specialists hanging from ropes high above the ground, particularly precarious as the castle is perched on a steep-sided hill rising 180ft above the valley. Corfe Castle is considered structurally stable, but extreme weather has caused stones to loosen and fall. Heat and drought have dried out the stone and killed vegetation, causing roots to shrink, creating gaps. Subsequently, warm, wet winters have encouraged plant growth, often deep within the walls. It is hoped that the removal of vegetation will also reveal parts of the castle not seen for more than a century. Some 30 years ago, part of an arch was glimpsed through ivy and T 26 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 rubble at the base of the east turret—project manager Christina Newnham believes this could be the famous sallyport, the gateway through which parliamentary troops were let in during the 1645 siege, which led to the castle’s capture and ruin. ‘It is a really significant part of the castle’s history and we would like to find it if we can,’ she says. As the castle was built in different phases, various types of mortar have been used. Conservationists have thus developed ‘recipe books’ for mortar mixes that mimic the originals, ‘sourcing aggregates from across Purbeck as the original castle builders did,’ The romantic ruins of Corfe Castle, Dorset, will be restored over the next three years says Ms Newnham, and will use traditional techniques to re-pin loose stones and repoint with fresh lime mortar as it would have been done hundreds of years ago. Amid this painstaking work, important lichens will be protected, as will the habitats of adders and lizards, and the homes of ravens and peregrine falcons, which nest in the highest parts of the ruins. A further £100,000 is needed to complete the work; visit www.nationaltrust. org.uk/Corfe-Castle to donate. AEW This week on the COUNTRY LIFE podcast, James Fisher is joined by Architectural Editor Dr John Goodall, who talks about the opening up of Royal Palaces, the past, present and future of architectural journalism, how to build 1.5 million new homes and what it’s like to have Taylor Swift singing on your doorstep. A new episode is out every Monday; listen at www.countrylife. co.uk/podcast or wherever you get your podcasts.
For all the latest news, visit countrylife.co.uk Good week for A little seasoning Two Kunekune pigs, Salt and Pepper, have been introduced to Gunnersbury Park, west London, to help maintain the land; they will live in moveable pens, feeding on brambles and scrub Park life A 28-acre country park, partly built on the former Shoreham landfill site in West Sussex, has opened after ‘extensive refurbishment’, with waterways, grasslands and 340 new trees The National Gallery The Trafalgar Square institution has reached its bicentenary fundraising campaign target of £95 million, the largest in the gallery’s history The slipway of Penlee Lifeboat House on Penlee Point, Mousehole, Cornwall, built in 1911–13 Lifesaving landmarks N this 200th anniversary year of the RNLI (‘Heroes of the high seas’, Town & Country, March 20), Historic England has launched an interactive map of landmarks associated with the charity, called the Missing Pieces Project. It features rare archive images from the RNLI and members of the public are invited to add their own photos and stories (www.historicengland.org.uk/listing/missingpieces). Two new listings also mark the occasion—the Church of St Mary in Cadgwith, Cornwall, the first vicar of which, Revd Henry Vyvyan, was a medal-winning RNLI member, and the grave monument to James Gall in Cumbria, last survivor of SS Forfarshire, rescued by Grace Darling. I We’ve goat it going on HE ancient, wild and ‘fiesty’ Cheviot goat, the ancestors of which once sustained Neolithic farmers, has been added to the Rare Breeds Survival Trust’s (RBST) Watchlist, with an estimated population of 450 and only 86 dams producing pedigree offspring in 2023. Being part of the RBST Watchlist means the Cheviot goat, with its curled horns (sometimes 1½ft long), shaggy coat and hard hoofs, can benefit from breeding programmes, monitoring of inbreeding risks, mitigation of dangers caused by weather and disease and prevention of intermixing with non-Cheviot bloodlines. This feral herd of primitive goats arrived in the From escapee to the Watchlist: the Cheviot Cheviot Hills, so the story goes, in 875AD, the year the monks fled Lindisfarne with St Cuthbert’s bones. From the Northumberland coast, they herded their livestock inland, but didn’t get far with them as, no longer constrained by a tidal causeway and the North Sea, the goats scampered off. Since the middle of the 20th century, Cheviot goats have not been found in domesticated settings, but isolated feral herds in College Valley, Newton Tors and Yeavering Bell in Northumberland remain, requiring little if any intervention. ‘Cheviot Goats are important both culturally and genetically and are excellent for conservation grazing,’ explains RBST chief executive Christopher Price. ‘They are a crucial link to the UK’s original primitive goats that were so relied upon by generation after generation... Without the isolated feral College Valley Cheviot herd, these genetics would have been lost irretrievably. We are pleased to recognise the Cheviot Goat on the RBST Watchlist and look forward to working with the British Primitive Goat Research Group and others to support the survival of this population long into the future.’ T Dinosaurs still surprising us A new species of dinosaur has been found on the Isle of Wight, the most complete specimen discovered in the UK in a century, with 149 bones; Comptonatus chasei roamed Britain 125 million years ago Unusual shopping experiences Nine-year-old Cooper Wallace’s ‘uncanny’ seagull impersonation —he became European Gullscreeching Champion in April— can be heard at Fortnum & Mason, by a display of the store’s Blackpool rockinspired ice-cream flavour Bad week for Irish farmers DAERA figures show the total income from farming in Northern Ireland fell by 44% between 2022 and 2023. Farm business income is expected to decrease by 46% per farm from 2022–23 to 2023–24 Disappearing acts More than 30 seabirds, including puffins, razorbills and fulmars, have gone missing from Jersey’s north coast. Predators such as rats and ferrets are being blamed 99 problems An ice-cream van was swept out to sea and ‘tossed around in the waves’ at Harlyn Beach, Cornwall, before a farmer and his tractor towed it to safety AEW July 17, 2024 | Country Life | 27
Town & Country Dog’s dinner White magic Bon appetite: A Maltese at the dinner table (below) by Charles van den Eycken (estimate £4,000– £6,000) is among 261 lots in Bonhams’s The Dog Sale on July 24. Other highlights include a portrait of Rufford Ormonde, the sheepdog (owned by American financier John Pierpont Morgan) who rescued a woman from drowning in 1897 (£2,000– £3,000), and top lot Col Newport Charlett’s Favourite Greyhounds at Hanley Court, Worcestershire, oil on canvas, by William Henry Davis (£50,000–80,000) Well groomed: the Uffington White Horse in Oxfordshire has been returned to its original size YEAR-LONG restoration project to Britain’s oldest chalk figure, the Bronze Age Uffington White Horse in Oxfordshire, is now complete. Aerial studies showed that some parts of the 3,000-year-old horse had narrowed by as much as half their original width over time, especially around the head and neck area, which left archaeologists from Oxford Archaeology and the National Trust with the slow task of removing encroaching topsoil A and grass and redistributing some of the top layer of chalk. At the same time, soil samples from the figure’s lowest levels were taken in the hopes of accurately dating it, something that has not been done since the 1990s when techniques were not so advanced. Through Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) dating, crystalline materials such as quartz or feldspar will be analysed to determine when they were last exposed to sunlight. The results can be expected later this year. The Uffington White Horse is such an ‘intriguing figure as we don’t know for certain its original purpose,’ says Trust archaeologist Adrian Cox. ‘It could have been a way of marking territory or a tribal symbol. What we do know is, through the efforts of generations of local people, the horse has been cared for, allowing it to survive for thousands of years to become an iconic feature of the landscape.’ Rebel with a cause I DIDN’T have time to be anyone’s muse… I was too busy rebelling against my family and learning to be an artist.’ Hot on the heels of the auction result that made Lancashire-born Leonora Carrington (1917–2011) the highest-selling British female artist— her Surrealist painting Les Distractions de Dagobert (1945) made $28.5 million (£22.5m) at Sotheby’s in May (Art market, June 12)—an exhibition has opened in Petworth, West Sussex. ‘Leonora Carrington: Rebel Visionary’, which runs at Newlands House Gallery until October 26—and, incidentally, marks the 50th anniversary of Carrington’s Surrealist novel The Hearing Trumpet—may surprise the uninitiated, as it displays her skill over an eight-decade career in a number 28 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 of different disciplines, including lithographs, sculpture (Woman with Fox, right), tapestries and jewellery, as well as paintings. The works show her uncontainable subversive nature, her feminism, spirituality and ecological awareness. ‘She… never relinquished her love of experimentation; the results being that she [was] able to diversify and explore a hundred or more techniques for the expression of her creative powers,’ explained her friend and patron the late Edward James. The exhibition features many loans from Mexico, where Carrington lived for the latter part of her life with her husband and two sons—post the Max Ernst romance and sojourn in a Spanish asylum—that have never been seen in the UK, including a wall of masks made for a Mexican production of The Tempest in the 1950s. ‘Leonora’s work, long neglected in the UK and across the art world, is at last being properly recognised,’ comments Joanna Moorhead, Carrington’s cousin, author and exhibition curator. ‘It’s sad she didn’t live to see this moment, but it’s wonderful for us to have her art still here, because, more than a century on from her birth, she has so much to say that’s relevant in today’s world. The themes that were important to her, as long ago as the 1940s, are themes that are important to all of us today—especially the natural world, our place in it and the interconnectedness of everyone and everything.’ Visit https:// newlandshouse.gallery for details.
Country Mouse Museum’s young dream HE YOUNG V&A, London E2, has been named the Art Fund Museum of the Year, winning £120,000—the largest museum prize in the world. Previously the Museum of Childhood, it was once described as ‘a place where childhood went to die… inhabited by rows of Victorian doll’s houses that were designed for older visitors to take a trip down memory lane’. However, explains Art Fund director Jenny Waldman, ‘the Young V&A has done something completely rare’ in reimagining itself. Judges praised the Bethnal Green institution’s three-year makeover that cost £13 million; it is now ‘the world’s most joyful museum,’ adds Ms Waldman. Others on the shortlist include the National Portrait Gallery, after its £41.3 million refurbishment, and the Manchester Museum, which opened its doors following a £15 million glow-up in 2022. Dundee Contemporary Arts and She shoots, she scores C T National Trust Images/Jon Bish; The Historic England Archive, Historic England; Dave Hunt; Alamy; NTI James Dobson; Courtesy of the Leonora Carrington Council and rossogranada; David Parry/V&A LAY shooting is always enormously good and satisfying fun, especially if you start hitting a few. However, last week, I was lucky to experience the sport at an exhilaratingly elevated level on a Really Wild Clay Day with Purdey at the 14,000-acre Englefield estate, near Reading in Berkshire, the home of Richard, the Rt Hon Lord Benyon and his wife, Zoe. An hour from London and standing proud within a deer park, it’s easy to see why the house and its environs have long drawn discerning guns and filmmakers (The King’s Speech was filmed here and the late-Elizabethan home, remodelled in the 18th and 19th centuries, doubled as Sandringham in The Crown). After breakfast in the library and a sneak peek of the royal gunmaker’s stylish autumn/winter 2024 clothing range, we headed to the first of four simulated drives. Overseen by a crack team from the Purdey At The Royal Berkshire Shooting School at Pangbourne, we each took up to 100 shots at 700 expertly presented biodegradable clays that made best use of the topography to look exactly like the real thing. In the final battue, Ed Wills—deputy editor of our sister title, The Field—kindly lent me the Purdey 20bore side-by-side he’d been shooting and, dear reader, I’m proud to say I smashed plenty of the targets. PL A ‘joyful’ winner: the Young V&A the Craven Museum in Skipton, North Yorkshire, were also in contention. ‘This win is a clarion call for the vital role of creativity, culture and play in children’s lives when so many opportunities have been taken away through the cost-of-living crisis and ongoing under-investment in creative education nationally,’ adds Young V&A director Dr Helen Charman. Visit www.vam.ac.uk/young JF 10,000 oaks are not enough NEW book, Countryside History: The Life and Legacy of Oliver Rackham, reflects on the botanist and historical ecologist’s ongoing influence via essays by leading landscape and countryside historians. Rackham (1939–2015) stressed the individuality of trees and woods and his writing cut through academic circles to reach countryside managers and campaigners battling developers. The declaration in his seminal The History of the Countryside (1986) that ‘Ten thousand oaks of 100 years old are not a substitute for one 500year-old oak’ has an ongoing salience. After the Great Storm of 1987 caused 15 million trees to be blown down, amid the rush to plant replacements, Rackham pointed out in a letter to the Daily Telegraph that ‘trees grow again and are self-renewing’. His Woodlands (2006) warned against the use of heavy modern machinery in ancient woodland management, advice that continues to be unheeded. Rackham’s impact beyond Britain is revealed in the diversity of the book’s contributors, including Frans Vera, A the leading Dutch conservationist on the role of wild herbivores in the creation of wood pasture; Jennifer A. Moody on the endangered ancient trees of Crete; and New England-based Henry W. Art on humans as an integral part of Nature (£50, Pelagic). Jack Watkins Oliver Rackham perches in a great pollard chestnut on Crete in 1988 Town Mouse Finding a table HIS week witnessed an unexpected inversion of weather patterns. In the often-unpredictable Northern Ireland, Town Mouse attended a memorable 90th-birthday party. There, the sun shone and the happy occasion concluded with an outdoor distribution of ice cream. Returning to London late that evening, the contrast would be hard to exaggerate. Rain poured from the darkened sky and tired passengers waited for trains amid a confusion of cancellations and delays huddled under the shelter of the platform eaves. On the journey into town, the capital—usually parched and hot by mid July—looked drowned; it might have been February. At Victoria, I rashly decided to cycle home and arrived drenched to the skin. Not being very interested in football has had its consolations over recent days. Besides being spared the emotional strain of worrying about England’s performance, match evenings leave restaurants and screen-less bars in central London comfortably quiet and empty. It feels slightly unpatriotic to take advantage of the lull in business, but it is pleasant to order a drink without queuing or to find a table in a good restaurant without having made a booking weeks before. All this in confident knowledge that the results of the game you are missing, whether good or ill, will be inescapable on the news the next morning. JG T July 17, 2024 | Country Life | 29
Town & Country Notebook Edited by Victoria Marston Quiz of the week Cabinet of curiosities by David Profumo 1) What type of butterfly can be grizzled, large or dingy? 2) Which part of the body would a phrenologist study? 3) What tool would be found in a ship’s binnacle? 4) Located between Oxford Street and Regent’s Park, what is the name of the BBC’s London headquarters? 5) Which is the first month of the year to have 30 days? Sweetcorn stool Riddle me this One falls, but never breaks; the other breaks, but never falls. What are they? 100 years ago in July 19, 1924 Large white butterfly caterpillars ATERPILLARS are regarded by most as pests, and it is not easy to create interest in things which are usually referred to as grubs or maggots, and are regarded with dislike, which is not surprising when a man looks no farther than his roses or cabbages. A little enquiry shows caterpillars are interesting little beasties. They do not eat anything which comes their way, but will rather starve than eat any but their proper food. A caterpillar has a very important duty to perform for his species. He will in due course produce something of a much more perfected nature. His sole business is to grow and in order to do this he must eat. C 1) Skipper 2) The skull (or head) 3) Compass 4) Broadcasting House 5) April. Riddle me this: Night and day 30 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 IGANTISM was a marked feature of the earliest Wunderkammern and this delightful modern example is a lusciously decorated, sculptural, lightweight polyresin corn-on-thecob footstool, complete with huge bite mark. Made for the eye-catching and eccentric Rotary Hero Inc of Yokohama, Japan, it is in the ludic art tradition of Duchamp and Oldenburg’s giant Floor Burger (1962). I adore seasonally fresh sweetcorn, whether foil-wrapped in campfire coals or plain boiled and drenched with melted Lurpak, seasoned Cajun-style with trusty Tubby Tom’s Steak Haus powder. A key crop for centuries before the ‘discovery’ of America, the wild relative of maize —teosinte—was domesticated in Mexico some G Time to buy 9,000 years ago (the Mayas worshipped a young corn-cob deity) and modern cultivars include white and red. It is an American icon: June 11 is National Corn on the Cob Day, there’s a Corn Palace in Mitchell, South Dakota (‘full of a-maizeing facts’), plus a Maize Museum in Schaghticoke, New York. Rotary Hero also offers a giant cheeseburger, moai-head tissue dispenser and an ice-cream stool; on the pretext that our grandchildren want one, that’s this summer’s purchase—only don’t tell Mrs Cabinet, who detests all such artefacts. Follow David on Instagram @david_profumo Cotton Canvas Beach Bag in Indigo Blue Sailing Boats, £65, Molly Mahon (01342 825700; https:// mollymahon.com) Super Nutrient Haircare Set: 100% natural ingredients, including seaweed, frankincense and mint leaf, £57.90, The Cornish Seaweed Bath Co (www.cornish seaweedbath.co.uk) On this day… July 17, 1918 Nicholas II (left) with George V Former Russian Tsar Nicholas II and his family were executed by the Bolsheviks. Initially keen to help his beloved cousin, George V had instructed his private secretary to write that ‘His Majesty cannot help doubting… whether it is advisable that the Imperial Family should take up their residence in this country’. A novel note ‘You can tell a lot from a person’s nails. When a life starts to unravel, they’re among the first to go’ Saturday, Ian McEwan Poet’s corner ‘Her lips did smell lyke unto gillyflowers, Her ruddy cheeks lyke unto roses red; Her snowy browes lyke budded bellamoures, Her lovely eyes lyke pincks but newly spred’ Amoretti 64, Edmund Spenser
Glyn Satterley/Country Life Picture Library; Getty; Alamy; Stephen Farthing, Doing One’s Best To Look Relaxed: A ‘Dollar Princess’ (Daisy after Sargent), 2021 Courtesy the artist, Picture credit Moira Jamrisko; Annabelle King/Future Plc In the spotlight Common blue damselfly (Enallagma cyathigerum) Wine o’clock Lime and nectarine Kumeu River, Village Chardonnay, Auckland, New Zealand, 2023. £12.95–£18.95, Averys, Haynes Hanson & Clark, Philglas & Swiggot, Swig, Tanners, The Wine Society, alc 12.5% Those who know, know Kumeu River’s pedigree—its single-vineyard Chardonnays are collector favourites. This cuvée is a few rungs down, but you’d pay twice the price if it were village Burgundy. In this vintage, it’s delicate in its lime and crunchy nectarine flavours. Visit www.decanter.com OWN at the brook, there are loads of damselflies now, particularly common blues, showing off their aerial prowess and focused on the business of, literally, hooking up. The pair finds a reed to balance on and he, in front, hooks over his long abdomen to snag her at the neck. It sounds a rough clinch, but the two form a characteristic and rather endearing heart shape. All stages of life are perilous for damsels and her journey into the water to lay eggs especially D so. Her folded wings help to hold a sheath of air for her to breathe underwater. Having deposited the eggs into a plant stem, she can then float back to the water’s surface and attempt to fly off—easy pickings for any passing fish. Most of a damselfly’s life is spent in the water as a predatory nymph. After a year or so, it’s time to haul itself out and up a twig, break out of the old body and luxuriate, albeit briefly, in a newfound ability to breathe air, fly and mate. Unmissable events Until September 30 ‘David Harber at Helmingham’, Helmingham Hall Gardens, Stowmarket, Suffolk. Largescale garden sculpture in copper, bronze, stone and steel (01473 890799; www.helmingham.com) August 8–11 Gone Wild Festival with Bear Grylls, Holkham Hall, Wells-next-theSea, Norfolk. The outdoor family adventure will also be at Powderham Castle, Devon, from August 22–25 (www.gonewildfestival.com) Until November 3 ‘Strike a Pose: Stephen Farthing and the Swagger Portrait’ (pictured), Kenwood, Hampstead, Greater London, NW3. Reworkings of historic portraiture by the likes of William Larkin and John Singer Sargent (www. english-heritage.org.uk) Book now October 10 Gallery Supper: In Conversation with Cath Kidston Padgham MBE & Calandre Orton, Meadow, Stockbridge, Hampshire. Includes welcome drink and three-course supper (01264 586991; www.meadow stockbridge.com) July 26–August 31 Summer at Snape, Snape Maltings, Suffolk. Immerse yourself in music with a programme of more than 50 events (01728 687100; www.brittenpearsarts.org) July 21 Findon Place, Worthing, West Sussex This ensemble of enclosed gardens surrounded by walls of brick and Sussex flint and sweeps of lawn commands majestic views to the South Downs. Magnificent trees give a sense of establishment and extensive rejuvenation of the planting makes for an afternoon of rich exploration (www.ngs.org.uk). Time for tea Gorreana Cha Gorreana hails from the Azores archipelago in Portugal— one of the few places in Europe where it is grown commercially, thanks to the climate and volcanic soil conditions. It’s a flavourful tea with a rich history dating back to the 19th century, the oldest in the western hemisphere. Azores tea is produced from the Camellia sinensis plant and its varietals are grown on the islands, where they seed quite freely. Green tea from the Azores is known for its fresh and grassy notes, whereas black offers a bold flavour profile. I was surprised the tea was tinged by salt on seaward-facing flanks of the extinct volcano. Hopefully, future generations of bushes will find a home sheltered inside the crater. How to serve For black tea, boil the water and JVVS[V á*:[LLW[OLSLH]LZMVY 3–5 minutes and serve hot or iced. Where to buy Buy direct at £7.50 for 100g, including UK delivery (00 351 29 644 2349; www.gorreana.pt) Jonathon Jones discovers teas from around the world, finds new flavours and cultivation techniques, and takes English tea to Asia July 17, 2024 | Country Life | 31
Letters to the Editor Letter of the week An unexpected encounter VER the past year, I have caught the photography bug—it began when I received an iPhone as a birthday present and I recently started an IT course in York. Before each class, I like to wander through the York Museum Gardens to see if anything catches my eye. In a quiet corner, I discovered a beautiful patch of knotted cranesbill flowers, so I stopped to take some photographs. As I was happily snapping away, up popped the head of a little wood mouse. I’m not sure which one of us was more surprised. I was so delighted afterwards when I realised that I had captured the image of this precious moment quite beautifully (above). Jacqueline Ayres, North Yorkshire O The writer of the letter of the week will win a bottle of Pol Roger Brut Réserve Champagne More haste, less speed N my horticultural work and play, I have proved time and again the speed of manual over mechanical (‘You reap what you sow’, June 26). A few hand tools and the power of a natural breeze takes 15 minutes over a mechanical hour to clear away most plant debris. The blissful peace of the broom over jamming strimmers and shouting operatives cannot be emphasised enough. Carole Alderman, East Sussex I Mark Hedges Beautiful, but beware READ your article about jellyfish with real interest (‘If I only had a brain’, July 3). Here, around the Isle of Arran, the annual jellyfish season is upon us, despite cooler seas than usual. My wife and I lead snorkelling safaris (right) and equip our clients in full wetsuits, hoods, boots and gloves, because it is very easy to blunder into the tentacles of lion’s mane jellyfish. You are safe if you spot one pulsing towards you as the tentacles are trailing behind, but, if it is swimming away from you, then beware, the tentacles are very difficult to see, especially in I limited visibility. It is interesting to note that the record for lion’s mane tentacles is 121ft. Your remedy for stings—hot water—does work. Brian Grindall, Isle of Arran Butterfly safari Taste sensation UTTERFLY numbers may be in decline, but you wouldn’t have thought so in North Berwick. I spotted both a six-spot burnet and a fritillary on a single stem of viper’s-bugloss (below). Nigel Souter, East Lothian ENJOYED Tom Parker Bowles’s piece on strawberries (‘Strawberry dreams’, July 3). Strawberries retain their superb taste throughout the summer season, unlike Jersey royals. I’ve noticed the diminishing taste for a couple of years now. Perhaps it is my age or perhaps I’m purchasing potatoes in the wrong place. Mark Wilson, Nottinghamshire B I Cash for culture WHOLEHEARTEDLY agree that we should charge tourists for access to our galleries and museums, as does almost every other European country (Athena, July 3). We have all become quite used to paying for access ourselves when abroad. Far from being an attraction for tourists, I should think most are simply pleasantly astonished when they encounter our free British museums. On a recent trip to India, almost everything was advertised with prices for locals and prices for tourists—and they even charged extra for cameras. John Stewart, Buckinghamshire I Contact us (photographs welcome) Email: countrylife.letters@ futurenet.com Post: COUNTRY LIFE, 121–141, Westbourne Terrace, Paddington, London, W2 6JR We regret that we are unable to respond to letters submitted by post Future Publishing reserves the right to edit and to reuse in any format or medium submissions to the letters page of COUNTRY LIFE N.B. If you wish to contact us about your subscription, including regarding changes of address, please telephone Magazines Direct on 0330 333 1120 Editorial Complaints: We work hard to achieve the highest standards of editorial content and we are committed to complying with the Editors’ Code of Practice (https://www.ipso.co.uk/IPSO/cop.html) as enforced by IPSO. If you have a complaint about our editorial content, you can email us at complaints@futurenet.com or write to Complaints Manager, Future Publishing Limited Legal Department, 121-141 Westbourne Terrace, W2 6JR. Please provide details of the material you are complaining about and explain your complaint by reference to the Editors’ Code. We will try to acknowledge your complaint within five working days and we aim to correct substantial errors as soon as possible. 32 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 Alamy COUNTRY LIFE, ISSN 0045-8856, is published weekly by Future Publishing Limited, Quay House, The Ambury, Bath, BA1 1UA, UK. COUNTRY LIFE Subscriptions: For enquiries and orders, email: help@ magazinesdirect.com, alternatively from the UK call: 0330 333 1120, overseas call: + 44 330 333 1120 (Lines are open Monday–Saturday, 8am- 6pm GMT excluding Bank Holidays). One-year full subscription rates: 1 Year (51) issues. UK £259; Europe/Eire €513 (delivery 3–5 days); USA $580 (delivery 5–12 days); Rest of World £446 (delivery 5–7 days). Periodicals postage paid at Brooklyn NY 11256. US Postmaster: Send address changes to COUNTRY LIFE, Airfreight and mailing in the USA by agent WN Shipping USA, 165–15, 146th Avenue, 2nd Floor, Jamaica, NY 11434, USA. Subscription records are maintained at Future Publishing Ltd, Rockwood House, 9–16, Perrymount Road, Haywards Heath, RH16 3DH. Air Business Ltd is acting as our mailing agent. If you are an active subscriber, you have access to back issues through your iOS or Android devices. 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Puck’s valley AN MORTON’S article on Puck reminded me of a story that intrigued me as a child (‘The oldest Old Thing in England’, June 19). Local lore in the Llanelly area of Monmouthshire has it that Shakespeare visited the Clydach Gorge (below), now a wellknown tourist attraction. The beautiful wooded area has a section known as Cwm Pwca [Puck’s valley]. It is said that, when staying with friends in Breconshire, Shakespeare conceived A Midsummer Night’s Dream as he strolled along the wooded banks of the Clydach. Thankfully, the area’s beauty was not destroyed when the Clydach Ironworks opened in the 1790s. Now that the A465 roadworks from Merthyr to Gilwern have been completed, something of the gorge’s earlier tranquillity has returned. Puck now rules his tiny kingdom undisturbed. Stephen Parry-Jones, Cardiff I So far, so good HE new Government certainly delivered its first week with aplomb. Immediately seizing the opportunities of power, ministers were seen reassuring the embattled Ukrainians, speaking to our neighbours in the EU and redefining relationships within the UK. The party’s historic majority may have been achieved with a very small increase in their vote and little marked enthusiasm from the electorate, but they moved rapidly to establish a sense of purposeful government. Rishi Sunak’s graceful and dignified exit restored much of his reputation, but, despite the wise warnings of James Cleverly, the Tory defeat was further scarred by futile recriminations from Suella Braverman and Kemi Badenoch that undermined any claim either had to leadership and reminded us that, unless it learns to re-establish cohesion and public purpose, the Conservative Party faces a long sojourn in the wilderness. For country people, the scene is much altered. From arable farmers on the light land in east Suffolk to dairy men in Somerset, from sheep farmers on the South Downs to cattle men on the Scottish Borders, they will be represented by a Labour MP for the first time for generations. It provides us all with a real opportunity to win back the interest of a party that was, up until the late 1950s, still represented in the rural areas. In 1951, 1955 and 1959, the results from a handful of rural seats were eagerly watched, as they might determine the overall result. Labour ministers such as Tom Williamson and Fred Peart won plaudits from the farming community and faced down those Labour MPs who, like Stanley ‘Featherbed’ Evans, a short-lived Agriculture Minister, questioned farming support. Now that food security has moved centre stage and food prices for the least well off are so concerning, we country people, whatever our political T views, have a real chance to ensure that what had become an exclusively urban party regains an understanding of rural issues. Sir Keir Starmer’s appointments bode well for this enterprise. Steve Reed, the Defra Secretary, has already outlined his priorities, which give a direction to the department that has recently been conspicuously lacking. Dealing with pollution was a powerful election issue and has already meant an immediate meeting with the water industry and putting Thames Water under special measures. A roadmap for reaching a zero-waste economy is long overdue, so it’s not surprising that it’s priority number two. Priority number three is to boost food security, which will be a real fillip for farmers, as is the appointment of Daniel Zeichner as the Agriculture Minister. He is a thoughtful and wellinformed man who has already impressed with his willingness to listen and ready grasp of essentials. The need to produce food will properly go hand in hand with a commitment to ensure Nature’s recovery and also with priority number five, which is to protect communities from flooding. If the Prime Minister sticks to his avowed determination to bring stability back to ministerial appointments, this is a team that will be with us for some years and with which we country people can build an understanding during this period of radical change. Whatever happens politically in the future and whatever our party preferences, this is not an opportunity to be missed. Many of these new members may not be schooled in country matters, but that does offer us the opportunity to build again a real understanding of rural concerns in the Labour Party. At the same time as keeping newly minted Liberal Democrats up to the mark, we should be encouraging a new generation of prospective Tory candidates to work to recover their party’s historic role as the country party. In the countryside, it is genuinely all to play for. We have a real chance to ensure that an urban party regains an understanding of rural issues JULY 24 One man and his dog: meet our top sheepdog handlers. Plus oak-frame buildings, the oldest art foundry, lapwings and lammas Make your week, every week, with a COUNTRY LIFE subscription 0330 333 1120 July 17, 2024 | Country Life | 33
Athena Cultural Crusader The new hands at the tiller N the flurry of appointments and policy announcements that followed the General Election, the new government has begun to assume substance. Whereas many of the Labour front bench passed with their briefs from Opposition to Government, the Shadow Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS), Thangam Debbonaire, was one of the prominent casualties of the General Election. Who knows how she might have performed, but in personal terms she seemed unusually well suited to the role. Her experience as a classical musician would have been particularly valuable, given the damage that has cumulatively been done to musical life in the country by the combined effects of the pandemic, cuts and Brexit. Hopefully, these difficulties are I something that the person who has taken her place, Lisa Nandy, will bear in mind. The new Secretary of State for DCMS is an unknown quantity as regards the Arts. She lists her recreations in Who’s Who as ‘theatre’ and ‘Rugby League’, but, to date, it is her personal concern with social justice that seems most striking. Her string of shadow briefs, which stretches back to 2012, have been for International Development, Children and Families; Energy and Climate Change; Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs; and Levelling up, Housing Communities and Local Government. In the Labour manifesto, the words “theatre” and “gallery” appeared not at all Her supporting Minister of State in the department—and also jointly in the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology—Sir Chris Bryant, is less of a surprise. He has been an MP for more than two decades and has previous experience both of government and, in opposition, of the DCMS. Meanwhile, the Shadow Minister before the election, Stephanie Peacock, has become Parliamentary UnderSecretary of State in the DCMS. Important as some degree of experience may be, however, Athena is more exercised by the question of how long these individuals will stay in post. Only with the return of stable leadership in DCMS—don’t forget that we have had eight Secretaries of State since 2017, about one every 10 months— will it be possible for them to get to know their jobs. That, in turn, will allow them to formulate a proper Government strategy to shape the Arts in a positive way. There is a formidable list of challenges to address. Some are practical, funding being the outstanding issue in this regard, others to do with the conduct of cultural life; working to draw the poison from the ‘culture wars’ (which, sadly, show no signs of going away), for example, and the management of arms-length bodies. Not that Athena is holding her breath for any dramatic changes; there is so little money to spare. Added to which, the Labour manifesto didn’t suggest enthusiasm for culture: the word ‘museum’ appeared only once, ‘theatre’ and ‘gallery’ not at all and the ‘Arts’ and ‘music’ only with relation to education. There is no question that the hands at the tiller of the DCMS matter. The way we were Photographs from the COUNTRY LIFE archive 1910s Unpublished Every week for the past 125 years, COUNTRY LIFE has documented and photographed many walks of life in Britain. More than 80,000 of the images are available for syndication or purchase in digital format. To view the archives, visit www. countrylifeimages.co.uk and email enquiries to licensing@ futurenet.com 34 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 Country Life Picture Library The archive contains a set of photographs that is simply labelled ‘Miss Wilmot’. Most of the images are of English subjects, but this was one in a small number seemingly taken in Spain. A farmer with a rake on his shoulder smiles at the camera as his wife pauses in her labour, pitchfork in hand.

My favourite painting Lyndon Farnham The Death of Major Peirson by John Singleton Copley The Death of Major Peirson, oil on canvas, 1782–84, 99in by 144in, by John Singleton Copley (1738–1815), Tate Britain The Death of Major Peirson is as much a representation of the Jersey spirit today as it was at the time of its painting. Although it captures the Battle of Jersey of 1781, considered the last battle fought in the British islands, it reaches beyond Copley’s focus (the tragic loss of Maj Francis Peirson, who paid the ultimate sacrifice) and strikes a deeper chord. It is a painting that encapsulates a firmness of spirit that rings true today and it serves as a constant reminder to take up the mantle with great determination, as Peirson did, and fight for Jersey. Copley’s painting will endure as an important symbol of national pride and source of strength, as the memory of Peirson has for almost 250 years 36 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 HIS painting is all action. In 1781, French troops invaded Jersey, taking the capital St Helier. The British garrison fought back, led by the fearless, 24-year-old Maj Francis Peirson. The British were victorious, but Peirson was shot. We can see his lifeless body being supported by his men as his black valet Pompey shoots the soldier who killed him. This expression of loyalty from all who served Peirson was designed to portray him as a brave and much-loved leader. John Singleton Copley has compressed the battle into this one moment. Smoke billows through the town, letting us know we are in the heat of the moment, as women and children attempt to flee. He has employed diagonals throughout to emphasise the dynamism of the T scene. From the wounded man’s outstretched arm in the foreground, along the valet’s right leg and Peirson’s pallid corpse, our eye is drawn up to the swirling flags that bring patriotism to the heart of the work. Benjamin West, the American artist who would become the second president of the new Royal Academy of Arts in London, introduced this new genre of contemporary history painting in 1770 with his Death of General Wolfe. Copley took things further still, including portraits of many of those involved in the scenes he chose to re-create. He was also an American, a Boston portrait painter who travelled to Europe to avoid the War of Independence and who reinvented himself as a history painter upon moving to London in 1775. Look and Learn/Elgar Collection/Bridgeman Images Deputy Lyndon Farnham is the chief minister of Jersey Charlotte Mullins comments on The Death of Major Peirson

‘Most costly and church-wise’ Lincoln College, Oxford, part II The Rector and Fellows of Lincoln College In the second of two articles, John Goodall describes the 17th-century expansion of the college to include an outstanding chapel, amid a bitter personal clash between two strong-willed men, and the institution’s evolution to the present day Photographs by Paul Highnam N September 9, 1603, the lawyer and diarist Sir Roger Wilbraham arrived in Oxford to find it afflicted by plague. It was busy nevertheless. The promised visit of James I to nearby Woodstock had brought the ambassadors of Spain and the Archduke of Austria to the city and they had taken up residence in Christ Church and Magdalen College respectively. On their architectural merits, Sir Roger judged these foundations, with Merton and All Souls’, to be the ‘four great colleges’ of the university. He was less impressed by the others, observing ‘Lincoln College and others I saw on the outside: they seem far inferior to the former’. His reaction was not surprising given that Lincoln College—a relatively modest foundation, as we discovered last week—had hardly changed since its troubled foundation in the 15th century. Indeed, the events of the Reformation had by equal measure diminished and fossilised Oxford architecturally during the later 16th century. Sir Roger visited, however, at the start of a remarkable revival. As evidence of this, he admired the ongoing works to the city’s new library, the Bodleian, which he judged ‘for beauty of building… will equal any in Christendom’. Lincoln College, too, would be touched by this sea change in the university’s affairs. The first college statutes of 1479, issued by Thomas Rotherham, Bishop of Lincoln, constituted a community of 12 fellows governed by a rector. Despite further small bequests into the 1530s, the college was rarely up to strength. During the Reformation, its fellowship was religiously conservative, but the institution survived and, from the 1560s, it began to accept numbers of paying undergraduates. To these were added fellow-commoners in 1606, ‘the sons of lords, knights, and gentlemen’ who ‘shall not go bow to Fellows in college’, but were to enjoy equality with them at ‘table, garden and other public places’. To accommodate the expanding community, a two-storey range was begun in 1607, south of the original quadrangle along Turl Street. O 38 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 Fig 1 above: The chapel screen of ‘cedar’. Fig 3 facing page: Bishop William’s chapel, consecrated in 1631, was enriched in 1686 Fig 2: The brilliantly hued stained-glass figures of the Apostles John and Philip It comprised 12 chambers with attached studies. The new range followed closely in the form of its adjacent medieval predecessor, creating the long, low frontage seen by the modern visitor (although the battlements are a picturesque addition of 1824). Some of its interiors preserve wall paintings of landscape views. They were probably created in imitation of painted cloths, a common and cheap alternative to tapestry. A kinsman of the founder bishop and a former fellow, Sir Thomas Rotheram, shouldered the bulk of the expense for the new accommodation range. The following year, a cellar was also excavated under the hall buttery, presumably to increase the storage space available. The new range was soon incorporated into a second quadrangle by another remarkable bequest, this time by John Williams, a Welshborn churchman of driving ambition, bullish

determination and Calvinist persuasion. According to his admiring chaplain and biographer, John Hacket, a childhood injury leaping from the walls of his native Conwy made him ‘chaste perforce’. He was educated at Cambridge, secured the favour of James I and cumulatively became—in quick succession in 1620–21—Dean of Westminster, Lord Keeper of the Great Seal and Bishop of Lincoln. At the same time, he fell out with the future Charles I, as well as his favourite the Duke of Buckingham and William Laud, from 1633 Archbishop of Canterbury and a reformer of Oxford University. What began as mutual distrust ripened from 1623 into deep animosity. This eventually proceeded to complex legal proceedings in Star Chamber and, in 1637, Williams briefly ended up imprisoned in the Tower of London and a popular hero. Williams delighted in tormenting Laud and was by character completely at odds with him; in his portraits, he appears more statesman than cleric. Underpinning and reinforcing their personal divisions were, inevitably, disagreements over religious practice. Laud famously sought to dignify church services with beautiful fittings and ceremony, as well as to impose universal conformity of practice (with ultimately disastrous results). Williams’s views, by contrast, are much harder to characterise. As Dean of Westminster, he presided over some of the most extravagantly performed liturgy in the contemporary English church and, with Laud, vigorously defended the episcopacy. Yet he wrote a tract defending the alignment of the communion table east-west, as opposed to altar-wise, north-south, as well Fig 4: The John Wesley museum room was created in 1928 with imported furnishings Fig 5: The neo-Georgian Rector’s lodging of 1929–30, in the shadow of All Saints Church 40 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 as—unusually for a Calvinist—apparently approving of railing it in for protection. Therefore, although the decision taken at some point in the 1620s by Bishop Williams to build a splendid new chapel (Fig 3) at Lincoln College looks Laudian in character, it is impossible to read it straightforwardly as such. The same could be said of his wider patronage of learning. This included £2,000 towards the new library of his own college at St John’s, Cambridge (which at least one contemporary compared to Laud’s library at St Johns, Oxford); libraries in Westminster Abbey and his episcopal residences at Buckden, Cambridgeshire, and Lincoln; scholarships in Westminster School and even a bequest to a free school in Conwy. In Hacket’s biography, the new Lincoln College chapel is described as ‘most elegant… costly, reverend and church-wise. The sacred acts and mysteries of our saviour, while he was on earth, neatly coloured in the glass windows. The traverse and lining of the walls was of cedarwood. The copes, the plate, the books, and all sorts of furniture for the holy
table, rich and suitable’. One notable detail of this description is its reference to cedar, in fact only originally used on the screen (Fig 1) (the stalls are oak), but more familiar in opulent late-17th-century interiors. The chancel also has a chequered floor of white and black marble, a striking enrichment for the period. Even so, it is the stained glass that really catches the eye (Fig 2). This is coherently organised with full-length Old Testament prophets in the north-side windows facing Apostles to the south, the latter accompanied by sentences from the Creed. In each side window, the arms of Williams appear four times, combined, respectively, with the see of Lincoln, the College of Westminster and other branches of his family. The east window above the communion table is of six lights— an unusual number—giving equal emphasis to the episodes from the life of Christ and the Old Testament scenes that are understood to prefigure them; for example, the Resurrection with Jonah emerging from the whale. Frustratingly, all the documentation regarding the chapel is lost, almost certainly in the course of Williams’s legal struggle with Laud. All we have to date the building are the inscriptions ‘1629’ and ‘1630’ in the windows. That said, the glass is initialled by the younger of two brothers, Bernard and Abraham van Linge, natives of Emden in East Friesland. The former contracted to create windows for Wadham College, Oxford, in 1621, immediately after his arrival in England, and his workshop was taken over by his brother after he returned home in 1623. That, in turn, probably identifies the mason involved here and the influences at play on the design. Among many other projects, the van Linges worked on the glass of two chapels— that of Lincoln’s Inn, London, of 1618–22 and University College, Oxford, under construction from 1634—in which the architectural detail of the building bears comparison to that at Lincoln College. The former project was overseen by the prominent Oxford mason John Clark and involved his brother-in-law, Hugh Davies; and the latter, after Clark’s death in 1624, Davies alone. Might Davies, therefore, be the figure responsible? Whatever the case, the glazing and architectural schemes seem to have been conceived together and, fasci- natingly, show a particular awareness of the 14th-century architecture and iconography of New College Chapel, the most admired of Oxford’s college buildings. Williams was mysteriously absent from the consecration ceremony of the chapel on September 15, 1631, which in the fractious context of the moment raises the question of who actually had control of it. In the published text, the beauty of the building is described with reference to the preached word. If the pulpit is not ‘sanctified’, it suggests, then the ‘purest things here shall be made unclean. This cedar shall not keep the savour… but shall smell of superstition. The altar shall be called no more than a dresser. The reverence that is done there shall be apish cringing, and all the seemly glazing be thought nothing but a little brittle superfluity…’. Is this Laudian jibing or Calvinist retort? Curiously, three months later, Williams consecrated another private chapel of a friend at Fawley Court, Buckinghamshire. It was destroyed in the 1640s, but might have offered further context for this splendid interior and the interpretation of the ceremony. Fig 6: The Senior Common Room occupies the space of the first college chapel. Disused from 1631, it served as a library from 1662 July 17, 2024 | Country Life | 41
Since the completion of the chapel and its quadrangle, the architectural development of the college has largely involved renovation and also, more recently, the infill of the college landholding first constituted in the 15th century. The Civil War brutally interrupted the life of the university, but when Charles I assumed Oxford as his capital, Lincoln College became the home of his Exchequer (COUNTRY L IFE , September 21, 2022). In the aftermath of the fighting and the upheavals of the Commonwealth, the college was returned to order by Nathaniel Crewe, later the Bishop of Durham and a noted philanthropist in his see. It was incorporated into a second quadrangle by another remarkable bequest Crewe’s father gave £220 for the conversion of the old chapel, which had remained disused since 1631, into a library. The work was undertaken between 1656 and 1662; the room is now the Senior Common Room (Fig 6). Long after he left the college, Crewe also contributed £100 to the renovation of the hall undertaken between 1697–1701. This was fitted with new wainscotting and a screen painted with his arms, as well as a fireplace to replace the original central hearth. In the interim, in 1686, a long-serving Rector, Fitzherbert Adams, paid more than £700 out of his own pocket for the renovation of the college buildings and chapel, creating the present ceiling with heraldic ornament, the front stalls and laying the marble floor in the nave. It was conceivably at this time that the entrance courtyard was first fitted with sash windows. The 18th century did not witness much significant change to the college buildings or the scale of its community. In 1824, the exterior façade was battlemented and this enrichment was extended internally through the college quadrangles in 1854. More important changes followed from 1881, when Sir Thomas Jackson, also architect of the Examination Schools, refurnished the hall with a new Flamboyant Gothic fireplace and revealed the medieval open-timber roof from beneath a plaster ceiling. He added an extension, the Grove Building, to the rear of the hall, demolishing an 18th-century residential block. In 1906, Herbert Read and R. F. MacDonald created an Edwardian Baroque library, now the Berrow Foundation Building, to which Stanton Williams added an award-winning extension in 2017. Read also built the unassuming Rector’s Lodging (Fig 5) in 1929–30, overlooking Turl Street. Shortly before this, 42 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 in 1928, the American Methodist Committee paid for the creation of a museum room (Fig 4) to celebrate the 200th anniversary of John Wesley’s Fellowship at Lincoln College. The room, which was fitted out in an eclectic antique style, was then believed to be the one he had occupied. Further research suggests he actually lived in the chapel quadrangle. Perhaps the most striking recent addition to the complex, however, is an Oxford landmark with a history of its own. All Saints Church (Fig 7) on the High Street was erected in 1706–10 following the collapse of the spire of its medieval predecessor. The authorship of this magnificent 18th-century church is debated, but Dean Aldrich, the arbiter of architectural taste in Augustan Oxford, certainly had a hand in its design. In 1971–75 it was made redundant and thoughtfully converted into a library (Fig 8) by Robert Potter. The conversion lends a happy symmetry to the story told in these articles: the church that was intended to be the spiritual home of Fleming’s college in 1427 now serves as the intellectual seat for its flourishing life in the 21st century. Visit www.lincoln.ox.ac.uk Acknowledgements: Louise Durning and Mark Kirby Fig 7 above: All Saints Church, rebuilt 1706–10, is one of the landmarks of the High Street. The present building anticipates the generation of London churches by Gibbs and Hawksmoor built in the reign of Queen Anne. Fig 8 right: The library was sensitively created in 1971–75 by Robert Potter, within the magnificent interior of the church

Behind the Proms • The name comes from ‘promenade concerts’, originally performances held in parks with listeners walking past, an arrangement that exposed more people to classical music • Co-founder Robert Newman, manager of the Queen’s Hall, where the Proms were held before it was destroyed in the Blitz, stated he wished ‘to train the public in easy stages’, starting with ‘popular’ music and ‘gradually raising the standard until I have created a public for classical and modern music’ • Wood’s famous Fantasia on British Sea Songs was composed in 1905 to celebrate 100 years since the Battle of Trafalgar 44 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 OR the next eight weeks, the Royal Albert Hall will echo to the sound of music during the BBC Proms (July 19–September 14). This unashamed celebration of the chiefly classical repertoire fulfils Henry Wood’s dreams of expanding the British public’s appreciation and combating the German opinion that Britain was Das Land ohne Musik (‘the land without music’). At the first Prom, on August 10, 1895, Wood conducted an overture by Wagner, a composer considered beyond the capabilities of a Briton. Wood, it is true, was exceptional. Born to musical parents in 1869, he could play the organ by the age of 10; at 14, he did so at the ‘Musicians’ Church’, St Sepulchrewithout-Newgate—his ashes F were interred there after his death in 1944—and he joined the Royal Academy of Music at 16. He switched from teaching singing to conducting and wielded the baton on rostrums from London to New York via countless amateur groups and the academy’s student orchestra. He introduced many European composers to British ears, including Sibelius, Debussy and Schoenberg, conducted the premières of hundreds of new pieces and was the first to open his orchestra to women, in 1913. Indefatigable and generous, he had a sense of humour: following criticism of his orchestrations, he presented a transcription of a Bach piece as being by ‘Paul Klenovsky’; it won wide acclaim. The Russian pseudonym resulted from his interest in the country of his first wife, singer Princess Olga Urusova, who died in 1909. Today, his bust watches over the Royal Albert Hall and his books, arrangements and sheer passion still inspire musicians. OP Chris Christodoulou/BBC; Alamy The legacy Henry Wood and the Proms
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Our green and pleasant land The human eye can detect more shades of green than any other colour and they are matched by a bewildering variety of names, discovers Lucien de Guise S the summer holidays approach, schools up and down the country will be singing the praises of England’s green and pleasant land. Jerusalem seems to have been the first time that greenness and pleasantness were equated with this island. More than a century after William Blake wrote the words, it became a hymn. It was taken up by the Suffragettes and, exactly 100 years ago, became the official anthem of the Women’s Institute. It has now acquired the status of unofficial national anthem, endorsed by David Cameron when he was prime minister. Shakespeare is the poet the nation usually turns to for a burnishing of its self-image. The Bard of bucolic Warwickshire was, however, far behind Blake the London urbanite in his green credentials. For the earlier William, England was ‘This precious stone set in the silver sea’. John of Gaunt doesn’t specify the colour of the precious stone in his deathbed tirade against Richard II in the eponymous play. Shakespeare goes on to mention ‘a demi-paradise’, which would no doubt have been different from the present-day ideal. It could possibly have meant a full house paying top price at his Globe Theatre. Before and after Shakespeare’s day, the colour green had few names and many diverse associations. Some were good, such as a 1562 Etymologiae that takes a modern, holistic ecotherapy view of green being ‘much comfortable to the sight of man’. Others tended to be bad. Artists liked to show the Devil wearing green and, in mystery plays, it was the colour of Judas’s clothing. It might represent sickness, as well as love, hope and youth. It was the colour of dragons and wild men, as well as young maidens. Shakespeare wrote of Cleopatra’s ‘Salad days’ when she was ‘green in judgment’. Most of all, the Bard evoked jealousy through this colour. Whether it was the ‘green-eyed monster’ of Othello or ‘greeneyed jealousy’ of the merchant of Venice, A Shakespeare created a beast that lives on. What he could not have foreseen is how green would come to embody Britain—or, at least, the English part of the Union. Nor the profusion of words that have come to describe it. The human eye can apparently detect more shades of green than any other colour, matched by a bewildering variety of names in the English language. There are hundreds of them; far more than the Inuit have for types of snow. The unexpected thing about all the variants of green in English is how few relate to England. Traversing the world, we encounter everything from Amazon to Zomp green. There is Eau de Nil—a romantic view of the River Nile popularised by Flaubert in the 19th century and continued by Alfred Hitchcock for his leading ladies—so why no Goring-bySea green or at least a Thames brown? Green was once considered to be the colour of water, rather than land. Before blue became the typical description, Chaucer gave us ‘sailing… waves green and high’. Shakespeare has Macbeth lamenting: ‘Will great Neptune’s ocean wash this blood/Clean from my hand?… Making the green one red.’ Shades of green that relate to other English locales are as rare as rivers. They abound elsewhere, however. There is Russian, Persian, India and Pakistan green. There is even a Brooklyn green, but the closest I can find to England is Erin. This romantic name for Ireland has geographical proximity to the UK, without quite getting there. Numerous alternatives with an Irish connection exist, from Leprechaun to Kelly. The latter is such an antiquated piece of stereotyping, I’m surprised it exists at all (being an American reference to the large number of immigrants with the name Kelly more than a century ago). Closer to the Sceptred Isle than the Emerald Isle is something called Shire green. There is Russian, Persian, India and Pakistan green, even a Brooklyn green 46 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 The familiar patchwork of England’s fields, rich in sun-nurtured chlorophyll

Although it sounds like a reference to Blake’s vision of England, nurtured by the loving rustic hand of Tolkien, this colour is somewhat ambiguous. Some people associate it with the horses, which are definitely not green. Where an undeniably English name comes up, it’s usually a reference to the people, not the place: Lincoln green after the dyers of that town; Kendal green for the same reason. To be fair, most of the shades that seem to describe places really relate to products. There is Persian green for carpets or ceramics and Paris green for a paint pigment developed in 1814 (see box). Most famous of all is turquoise, which might raise some eyebrows among lovers of blue, but is defined as being ‘between blue and green’. To make it more confusing, the colour of the actual stone can change when in contact with skin and other environmental factors. The name is opaque, too. Known in English as a colour for 400 years, it is more reminiscent of Central Asia and Iran than Turkey. Celadon has taken an equally mysterious route into the English language, referring to an East Asian ceramic colour, but probably derived from a character in French literature of the 17th century. Alcoholic beverages have also inspired hues. A recent innovation at the Pantone Color Institute—which has much influence in the field of colour recognition—is an off-white called English Sparkling, but French alcohol long ago spawned two important shades of green. Against the wholesomeness of Bordeaux and Burgundy is the sickliness of Absinthe and Chartreuse. Both were controversial in the 19th century, one because of the appalling reputation of the drink itself, the other because the colour so divided opinions in its day. The Getty; Alamy; Roy Miles Fine Paintings/Bridgeman Images Above: It isn’t easy being green, spending each day the colour of the trees: myriad shades in an English wood. Below: It’s easier for a frog: Kermit has conquered all with his distinctive garb. Below: The fastest colour of all: British Racing Green
same could be said for Oscar Wilde’s green carnation, together with his whole persona: ‘He had that curious love of green, which in individuals is always the sign of a subtle artistic temperament, and in nations is said to denote a laxity, if not a decadence of morals.’ Nature is where the real dividends of green are found, which certainly doesn’t include the dyed flowers favoured by Wilde and his circle. There is a staggering selection of natural greens. Most refer to plants and minerals, such as Myrtle, Pine, Lime, Jade, Emerald, Fern, Laurel, Mint, Tea, Avocado, Moss, Swamp, Artichoke, Pistachio, Asparagus, Parsley, Sage, Thyme—and, yes, there is a greyish-green shade known as Rosemary. He had that curious love of green... the sign of a subtle artistic temperament Once again, these colours don’t relate exclusively to England. The closest is very distant from Blake’s pastoral vision. It’s British Racing Green to the rescue. In fact, its first use as a racing livery was a tribute to Ireland. In 1903, the Irish Republic was still part of the UK and a handy venue for a pioneering motor race when racing was illegal on British roads. The colour has been maintained by Aston Martin in its recent successful Formula 1 seasons. The company may have a Canadian owner now, but every car is still made in Gaydon, Warwickshire—as green and pleasant a factory environment as exists in modern England. Frederic Leighton’s painting of Desdemona, who brought out the green-eyed monster Green and not so pleasant The green that was really noticed before the modern era was less about Nature and more about paints and dyes. Getting green pigments right has always been difficult. Wall tapestries might make the viewer wonder if the vegetation of Olde England was really as blue as that, but most green dyes were a combination of blue and yellow and, as the latter tends to fade faster, the eventual result is too much blue. A breakthrough happened in 1775, when Carl Scheele used arsenic to create a lively, albeit deadly shade of green. Soon after came a new and equally vibrant version known by many names, including Paris green and Emerald green. Much loved by 19th-century artists, it was no less poisonous than Scheele’s colour. Both are well suited to J. E. Millais’s painting of Shakespeare’s drowned Ophelia, which glows with spectral light on the walls of Tate Britain. There were real-life victims, too. Both shades of green were used in everything from children’s toys to haute couture and wallpaper produced by William Morris (left). The most notable victim of all may have been England’s arch enemy. The furnishings in Napoleon’s St Helena prison home had enough Paris and Scheele’s green to make anyone sick. The greens did come back to English fields—as insecticides that were later banned. July 17, 2024 | Country Life | 49
It’s a bullseye With the brawn of a bulldog and the brains of a terrier, this much-maligned breed has the ability to rouse adulation or antipathy. Yet beneath the muscular frame of the bull terrier lies a stoic and kindly character, says Katy Birchall Y all accounts, the dog in the 1968 hit musical film Oliver! belonged to the wrong character. Say ‘bull terrier’ and many will immediately think of Bull’s-eye, the famously unfortunate companion to Oliver Reed’s sinister criminal Bill Sikes, a fierce, brutish dog as feared as his cruel, unforgiving master—but anyone who owns a bull terrier will tell you that this dog is no villainous sidekick. This is a breed with a big heart, a comical nature and an eye that holds a mischievous twinkle. Bull’s-eye would surely have been more at home with the film’s gentler interpretation of Fagin, charming his way around town and slyly picking a pocket or two—and nothing illustrates this better than Butch, the dog that played Bull’s-eye in the cinematic classic. ‘Butch was an old boy when he started filming Oliver!,’ recalls Cindy Sharville of her beloved family pet. ‘He was loving, clever and obedient, so long as treats were involved— during breaks, he would carry his bowl up to anyone eating, scrounging for food. Reed loved him and would sit on the floor with Butch on his lap.’ With its unique downfaced egg-shaped head, keen, bright eyes and muscular physique, this striking breed naturally catches the eye. David Mason’s first bull terrier Purdey made a splash in 2005, when she was photographed for The Sunday Times in a bespoke coat by Nutters of Savile Row, a brand then owned by Mr Mason. ‘Purdey was such a lovely dog and when we lost her, it really was like losing a member of the family,’ admits Mr Mason, founder of Mason & Sons, which champions and restores established British brands, such as Anthony Sinclair and Mr Fish. ‘It didn’t take us long to get our next one, Lulu. You’ll find that with bull terriers—once you’ve had one, you won’t want anything else.’ Currently the owner of two-year-old Vesper, who cheerfully greets customers at the company’s headquarters in John Lennon’s former B Marylebone home, Mr Mason concurs that the breed has become somewhat synonymous with Mason & Sons, thanks to his dogs taking a starring role in several campaigns. ‘They’re an important part of our life story— everything at Mason & Sons is British, including the dog,’ he laughs. ‘Bull terriers are an acquired taste. I think they’re beautiful, of course, but it’s their character that really has the appeal. They are notoriously stubborn and somehow always getting in trouble. They know right from wrong, but they can’t seem to help themselves. It can be maddening, but ultimately you love them for it.’ The breed owes its origins to James Hinks, an animal dealer in Birmingham who developed a new strain of all-white ‘bull-andterriers’ during the 1850s. Having kept and bred fighting dogs, Mr Hinks is believed to have crossed the bulldog, the now-extinct white English terrier and the dalmatian to produce his white ‘bull terrier’. Despite its ancestry, this dog was not bred with the fighting ring in mind—Hinks had set his sights on the show world, determined to establish a companion dog with a striking purewhite coat and a more refined appearance. As his son James Hinks Jnr later wrote, the bull terrier was to be ‘the old fighting dog civilised, with all of his rough edges smoothed down without being softened; alert, active, plucky, muscular and a real gentleman’. The conformation of the bull terrier has evolved through the years. Most notably, the head took on its distinctive long, domed ‘egg’ shape and the white coat gave way to colour as brindle, red and fawn were accepted in the breed standard. It has, however, retained its original characteristics: the strength and courage of its bulldog ancestry and the terrier’s wit and mischief. Perhaps most of all, it has stayed true to Hinks’s vision that it It was to be the old fighting dog civilised; alert, plucky and a real gentleman 50 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 Owners are united in the belief that ‘life is merrier when you live with a bull terrier’

would become a companion dog—enthusiasts will tell you that the bull terrier’s purpose in life is to be right at your side. ‘After her morning walk, Olive will sit under my car and wait for me there, so I have to take her with me wherever I’m going,’ reveals Fleur Worsley of her five-year-old bull terrier. ‘On the occasions I have to go to work without her, she hates it.’ If you don’t have a sense of humour, the bull terrier isn’t for you Star quality: Purdey steals the limelight from David Mason in a Sunday Times photoshoot Small wonder: the miniature bull terrier is on the Kennel Club’s vulnerable native breed list of The Princess Royal. ‘Many years ago at Crufts, Princess Anne walked into the bullterrier ring holding a bouquet of flowers,’ she recalls. ‘She stopped to talk to the judge, who was standing with a handler and their bull terrier. The next thing we knew, the dog had jumped up and snatched Princess Anne’s flowers, scoffing the lot. Luckily, she burst out laughing (The Princess Royal has kept bull terriers for decades, which may explain her not minding the loss of the blooms). If you don’t have a sense of humour, the bull terrier is not the dog for you.’ Smitten with the breed since she got her first puppy 40 years ago, Mrs Clark owns six miniature bull terriers, a breed almost identical to its larger counterpart in everything but size—although, sadly, the miniature is currently on the Kennel Club (KC)’s vulnerable native breed list, with only 264 Getty; Neil Wilder; Shutterstock A keen horsewoman, Mrs Worsley works for Oxford Polo, where, she admits, a bull terrier tends to stand out. ‘My colleagues have spaniels, labradors, lurchers and whippets. I park up, open the boot and out jumps my bull terrier—people can be horrified,’ she admits. ‘But give Olive 10 minutes or so and they’ll be fussing over her. Bull terriers have an unfair reputation. Our postman was scared of Olive at first, but they’re now best friends. My husband never wanted one, but he adores Olive—he takes her shooting with him. She happily sits next to him on the peg.’ It is the natural comedian in the bull terrier that has hooked Mrs Worsley for life: ‘I’ll never be without one. They are hilarious— every morning, we’re woken up by Olive dramatically yawning in the kitchen. My sister got me a fridge magnet that says “Life is much merrier when you live with a bull terrier” and, for me, that sums it up.’ Breeder and judge Elaine Clark concurs that the bull terrier has a knack for comic timing, as she once witnessed in the presence
Loyal to the last • Sir Walter Scott once wrote ‘the wisest dog I ever owned was what is called a bulldog terrier’, of his beloved dog Camp. A portrait of Scott and Camp, painted by James Saxon in 1805, is on display at the Scottish National Portrait Gallery • In 1899, Rudyard Kipling wrote the short story Garm: A Hostage, about an officer and a fiercely devoted bull terrier in India during the days of the British Raj • Gen George S. Patton Jnr purchased bull terrier Willie from the widow of an RAF officer in March 1944—Willie had accompanied the officer on six missions across Europe, but missed the seventh flight, from which his owner did not return. Willie became famous as the general’s constant companion: a 12ft statue of Patton and Willie stands today at the General Patton Memorial Museum in California, US • The bull terrier counts numerous public figures past and present among its fans, including The Princess Royal, Eric Clapton, John Bishop, Marc Jacobs and Jane Birkin Left: The Princess Royal shares her love of the breed with granddaughter Mia Tindall. Right: Lap dog: Jane Birkin was a devotee registrations in 2023. ‘Bull terriers and miniatures are great family dogs. They adore children and know when to be gentle with them,’ enthuses Mrs Clark. ‘They’re happy to go on long walks, but don’t necessarily need loads of exercise. What they do like is a lot of attention and they can’t be left at home for a long time.’ Bill Lambert, the KC’s health, welfare and breeder services executive, grew up with bull terriers and, when it came to buying his own dog, there was no other breed. ‘My wife didn’t like the look of them at first, but that’s the wonderful thing about pedigree dogs—you need to go deeper than looks and the bull terrier is a great example,’ he says. ‘They don’t have universal appeal, but beauty is in the eye of the beholder. It’s their temperament—fun, stoic and They adore children and know when to be gentle with them Strong willed: the bull terrier’s stubbornness can make them difficult to train kind—that makes them so special.’ The breed has its faults, Mr Lambert notes. The white bull terriers in particular can be prone to deafness—although this issue has lessened thanks to the Brainstem Auditory Evoked Response (BAER) test, which many breeders now use—and the bull terrier’s stubborn nature can also make them difficult to train: ‘They are strong willed and haven’t got great recall, so you need to be on the lookout and prepared to put them on lead around other dogs—they are strong and muscular, so you have to be responsible.’ Working at the KC, Mr Lambert would be forgiven for being tempted by one of the many other dog breeds out there. ‘I love all dogs,’ he concludes. ‘The thing is, if I got another breed, that would only mean I’d have one less bull terrier—and, honestly, nothing else quite matches up.’ July 17, 2024 | Country Life | 53
All The King’s whales and all The Queen’s dolphins T was a quiet afternoon in the summer of 2004 when Swansea Bay fisherman Robert Davies hauled in the catch of his life. ‘To be honest, I didn’t know what it was,’ he confessed to reporters at the time —and his puzzlement was understandable. He had inadvertently netted a 9ft-long sturgeon, a giant fish seldom spotted in British waters. It weighed just shy of 19 stone (120kg) and looked like something from Jurassic Park. But Mr Davies’s first legal duty? He was obliged to offer the sturgeon to the Queen. Her Majesty duly declined—by way of a fax from the Royal Household that informed Mr Davies he could ‘dispose of it as he saw fit’—and the rare fish ultimately found itself in the care of the Natural History Museum, where it remains, preserved in alcohol, to this day. The whole piscatorial palaver, however, shone light onto one of Britain’s more eccentric ancient laws. Due to the ‘superior excellence’ of whales, sturgeons, dolphins and porpoises, any of these species caught or washed up on our shores technically belongs to the Monarch. The rule dates back to the 14th-century reign of Edward II, when whales and sturgeons were declared ‘Royal Fish’, seemingly because their size and grace deemed them worthy of a regal prerogative. Dolphins and porpoises, majestic animals both, were later added to the designation. Today, the Crown still has a legal claim on this quartet of sea creatures whenever they’re caught or stranded off England, Wales I and Northern Ireland, although, in Scotland, the law applies only to beached whales too heavy to be drawn by a ‘wain pulled by six large oxen’. Good luck putting that one to the test. Despite still being legally valid—regardless of whether the cetaceans themselves are resident or migratory—these regulations are now essentially a relic of another era, akin to those dusty old bylaws about herding sheep across London Bridge or being drunk in charge of a cow. When a man famed for eating roadkill decided to cook a washed-up Cornish dolphin for his Christmas dinner in 2015, endangering his health in the process, he appears to have received sharp words from conservationists, rather than a royal summons. More pertinent is the fact that the presence of awe-inspiring, supersized cetaceans in our waters is very much an ongoing phenomenon. About 29 species of whale, dolphin and porpoise can still be spotted around the British coastline at different times of year—more than anywhere else in northern Europe—from sleek-bodied orcas and stately minke whales to playful pods of bottlenose dolphins. All are now protected by wildlife legislation, including the Wildlife and Countryside Act of 1981. For Danny Groves, of the UK-founded charity Whale and Dolphin Conservation, this diversity is very much something to celebrate and protect—and he clarifies a few important points. ‘Technically, the Royal Fish law applies to whales or dolphins washed up on shore,’ he The UK seas offer a number of menu choices for whales and dolphins 54 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 explains. ‘As transient and sentient mammals, they don’t belong to us humans when they’re in the ocean. And quirks of British history aside, in reality whale and dolphin strandings are investigated and documented today by the UK Cetacean Strandings Investigation Programme, the Scottish Marine Animal Strandings Scheme and the appropriate local authority, which will deal with disposal of the carcass.’ This also makes it illegal to be in possession of, transport, sell or exchange any part of a whale, dolphin or porpoise—‘please don’t be tempted to take a tooth,’ says Mr Groves—and, unearthly smell aside, their decomposing bodies also pose risks to the health of humans and dogs. In their watery domain, four of these incredible species can be classified as resident or semi-resident to Britain (bottlenose and Risso’s dolphins, harbour porpoises and orca), whereas for many other cetaceans our waters serve as valuable summer feeding grounds as they migrate to and from their breeding territories. The seas around Scotland are particularly Getty More species of whale, dolphin and porpoise can be spotted in the UK than anywhere else in northern Europe and all of them, technically, belong to the Monarch. Ben Lerwill takes a look at one of our more obscure laws and why the animals have such an important role to play in the fight against climate change
rich for sightings, but south-west England and the west coast of Wales have hotspots of their own. Although these animals routinely face manmade threats such as pollution, global warming and accidental capture in fishing nets, there are some reasons for optimism. ‘Historically, direct removal of individuals by hunting had severe effects on populations in our waters as well as globally. Thankfully, the UK no longer allows whale hunting,’ continues Mr Groves, explaining that data remains insufficient to monitor exact numbers. ‘One species, humpback whales, are reportedly being sighted more frequently. This may be a sign of populations recovering from whaling, but could also reflect increased awareness and sighting efforts on the coast.’ He outlines, too, how our temperate waters can hold tangible benefits for hungry species. ‘The UK seas do offer a number of menu choices for whales and dolphins, and our geography provides different habitats. The shelf-edge suits deep-diving species, such Majestic bottlenose dolphins make a splash off Chanonry Point near Inverness, Scotland as sperm whales and pilot whales, for example, whereas shallower sand and mud banks are key areas for harbour porpoises.’ Putting the Royal Fish law to one side, it has become ever more vital to safeguard the future of what are some of the planet’s most spectacular wild animals. Responsibly run whale-watching trips can benefit everyone involved—from guests and operators to local communities and the sea creatures themselves —but human disturbance is otherwise frowned upon. The stakes, after all, are high. ‘Whales and dolphins are awesome and they also play an enormous role in providing a solution to the climate emergency,’ concludes Mr Groves. ‘The ocean absorbs more carbon and releases more oxygen than all of earth’s forests and the great whales help it flourish by stimulating the production of oxygen in our seas.’ Visit https://uk.whales.org How do whales help combat climate change? • ‘The way that whales feed, poo, migrate and dive between the surface and the ocean depths circulates essential nutrients throughout the ocean,’ notes Whale and Dolphin Conservation. The phenomenon is known as the ‘whale pump’ and it, in turn, supports healthy marine ecosystems and the growth of carboncapturing phytoplankton • Whales lock in such huge amounts of carbon that their mass slaughter during the peak of commercial whaling in the 19th and 20th centuries may have contributed to the acceleration of climate change. A single whale can sequester away an average of 33 tons of carbon dioxide over its lifespan; a live oak tree captures roughly 12 tons July 17, 2024 | Country Life | 55
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A stitch in time Designer Erdem Moralioglu’s must-see exhibition in Derbyshire is a loving tribute to Debo Devonshire and her passion for Chatsworth, chickens and couture, says Kim Parker NE of the first extraordinary items you encounter at the ‘Imaginary Conversations’ exhibition at Chatsworth House is a gleaming, tinsel-like twinset, crafted with silver lamé and sequins. Nearby, a fringed purple leather jacket shimmers with rhinestone starbursts —a tribute to Elvis Presley’s elaborate stage costumes—and another ensemble, a tailored tweed suit with a nipped-in silhouette, bears an artfully deconstructed hem ‘as if it’s been pecked by chickens,’ explains its British designer, Erdem Moralioglu. These outfits formed part of Mr Moralioglu’s romantic spring/summer 2024 catwalk show, which was inspired by the late Dowager Duchess O 58 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 of Devonshire, Deborah (‘Debo’) Cavendish, and encapsulates much of her famously eclectic personality. The youngest of the Mitford sisters, Debo married Lord Andrew Cavendish, younger son of the 10th Duke of Devonshire, in 1941, and expected to live quietly as the wife of a country squire. But when Lord Andrew’s older brother was killed in the Second World War and his father unexpectedly died a few years later, at the age of 55, he inherited the dukedom, as well as Chatsworth, and Debo became a duchess. After the war, the 126-room house and its grounds were in disrepair (‘a fabulous mess,’ she once recalled) and the Duchess had to cultivate strong entrepreneurial instincts to save the estate—she set up the farm shop, founded the charitable trust that supports Chatsworth’s considerable upkeep and collaborated with artists on creative projects to encourage visitors, a radical concept at the time, but one that her descendants continue to this day. ‘Debo was, in many ways, quite contradictory. She was this forward-facing duchess who represented the family in formal situations, but she was just as happy tending to her beloved chickens as she was hosting presidents, which I found so interesting,’ notes Mr Moralioglu. ‘She had bags by Hubert de Givenchy and wore beautiful bespoke dresses made by her dressmaker, Mary Feeney, but she also adored Elvis and wore slippers with Harry Borden/Contour by Getty Images; Chatsworth House Trust; Getty; Alamy Always stylish: the late Duchess of Devonshire, known as Debo, was as elegant feeding her chickens as when hosting presidents
his face printed on them. The spirit of that contrast is really wonderful to me.’ So wonderful, in fact, that the designer (a self-confessed history ‘nerd’) not only devoted his entire fashion collection to the duchess, but has displayed it alongside a curated selection of her own belongings (such as letters, objects and accessories) for ‘Imaginary Conversations’, reflecting her character, as well as his own creative processes. ‘Creating the collection became this imaginary conversation between someone I’ve never met as a muse and myself. With this exhibition, what you see is not an exact portrait of her, but something through a lens,’ he says. He is the first to have been granted access to her personal archive ‘The diversity of Debo’s interests has always amused people,’ agrees Laura Cavendish, Countess of Burlington, whose parents-in-law are the current Duke and Duchess. ‘It’s hard to know exactly what captures the imagination, but I’d hazard a guess that glamour, wit and unpredictability have something to do with it.’ Although the late Duchess had previously inspired many other fashion designers, including Alessandro Michele during his tenure at Gucci, Mr Moralioglu is the first to have been granted access to her personal archive since her death in 2014. His friendship with Lady Burlington stretches back almost 20 years, to when she worked as a fashion buyer and purchased his debut collection for The Shop at Bluebird in London. It was thanks to Lady Burlington that he was able to explore more than 1,000 items in the Chatsworth archives in 2017, when researching Adele Astaire (who married Charles Cavendish, son of the 9th Duke of Devonshire) for a fall/winter collection. ‘It was then that I really discovered Far left: The queen of cool: Debo’s Elvis slippers. Left: The tweed suit ‘pecked by chickens’. Above: Erdem’s atelier, re-created in the Queen of Scots’ Dressing Room. Top: Crystal dress decoration inspired by Debo’s bug pins Debo and this idea of doing a collection based on her was planted in my mind,’ he reveals. ‘I always knew I would come back to her. Of the many things that drew him back to her, her attitude of ‘make do and mend’ was one of the most alluring. ‘I loved that she held on to things, whether it was carpets or furniture or doors or fabrics, and tried to use them again wherever possible,’ he says. Indeed, the theme of circularity runs throughout the exhibition, which takes place in Chatsworth’s Regency Guest Bedrooms and showcases Erdem dresses and billowy waxed jackets against swags of the archival fabrics that inspired them, their floral prints echoing each other perfectly. One gown has even been fashioned from a set of chintz curtains that had been ‘retired’ by Lady Burlington from Lismore Castle (the family estate in Ireland). ‘They were light shattered and destined for the July 17, 2024 | Country Life | 59
Above: Gallery of glamour: rhinestones glitter and sequins gleam against delicately decorated walls. Facing page: To celebrate the Duchess’s love of the countryside, Erdem collaborated with Barbour on a waxed-cotton coat with replica Chatsworth fabrics bin, but Erdem persuaded me to send them to him,’ she says. Mr Moralioglu repurposed the fabric into a one-shouldered dress and invited Debo’s great-granddaughter (the daughter of his late friend, Stella Tennant) Cecily Lasnet, who was interning in his workshop, to embroider flowers over the top, in an ‘extraordinarily touching’ gesture. Other pieces are displayed with their design references taken from the late Duchess’s wardrobe. In the Alcove Bedroom, a glass vitrine holds a shimmering array of Victorian and Edwardian insect brooches, anniversary gifts from her husband, around a Cecil Beaton photograph of the Duchess in an off-the-shoulder gown—both of which inspired the dark velvet dress on an adjacent mannequin, with its elegant shoulder ties and sprinkling of crystal bugs. Next door, in the Queen of Scots’ Bedroom (where Mary Queen of Scots slept during 60 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 her house arrest at Chatsworth in the 16th century), a dress with an embellished bodice and sheer, lingerie-like skirt is juxtaposed against the underpinnings of a haute couture dress from the 1950s created for the Duchess by Jean Patou. ‘For me, these two dresses summarise the idea behind the whole collection. I loved the idea of taking an undergarment that had been fitted specifically to Debo’s body and was something that no one was ever supposed to see, and bringing it to the outside,’ says Mr Moralioglu. ‘This pairing epitomises the conversation between the past and the present, between Debo and myself and between Chatsworth and its legacy.’ For Lady Burlington, a notable part of the exhibition is in the Queen of Scots’ Dressing Room. Here, Mr Moralioglu has re-created his own atelier—everything from his mood boards and sketches for the spring/summer collection to the cotton toiles employed by his cutting team, and the model fitting photographs from his spectacular catwalk show, held in September 2023 at the British Museum. ‘My hope is that those who see it learn how a designer works from an archive and the time and effort that goes into research, pattern making and print design. Artists and designers often have new and interesting ways of seeing the world and Chatsworth has always been a place that was experimental. William [Lord Burlington] and I have a responsibility to conserve and protect the historical aspects of Chatsworth, but also to embrace new projects and welcome an increasingly diverse audience,’ she says. Somewhere, one suspects, Debo herself is nodding in agreement. ‘Erdem: Imaginary Conversations’ is at Chatsworth House, Derbyshire, until October 20 (www.chatsworth.org)
Legendary Chatsworth chatelaines Before Debo, wife of the 11th Duke of Devonshire, many other ladies of the Derbyshire manor had been renowned for their wit, style and savvy Bess of Hardwick, Countess of Shrewsbury (1521–1608) Married four times, Bess was a powerful figure in Elizabethan society (The legacy, May 15) and established the current Cavendish line with her second husband, Sir William Cavendish. Widely celebrated for her building projects, she was responsible for bringing Chatsworth House into the family—persuading Sir William to leave Suffolk and buy the manor of Chatsworth for £600 in 1549—constructing nearby Hardwick Hall and creating its inventory, known today as the Hardwick Hall Collection, the largest assembly of important embroidery and tapestries preserved by a single family. Her son William became the 1st Earl of Devonshire. Christian Cavendish, née Bruce (1595–1675) Canny and well connected, Scottishborn Christian took over the running of the (almost bankrupt) Cavendish estates on the death of her husband, William, 2nd Earl of Devonshire, in 1628, when their son, also William, was only 11. After dealing with William’s substantial debts and recovering the family’s finances, she became an influential Royalist and woman of letters, befriending poets and politicians, such as Edmund Waller and William Herbert, 3rd Earl of Pembroke. Georgiana Spencer Cavendish (1757–1806) Portrayed by Keira Knightley in 2008’s The Duchess, Georgiana became mistress of Chatsworth aged only 17, but rose to the challenge of managing the estate, as well as forging a place for herself at the heart of Society as a writer, collector, fashion icon, political campaigner and, sadly, a gambler, accruing large debts. She also made a scientific study of minerals and, unusually, nursed her children herself. Dubbed ‘a phenomenon’ by Horace Walpole and ‘the best-natured and best-bred woman in England’ by the then Prince of Wales, tales of Georgiana’s legendary charm have endured for more than two centuries. July 17, 2024 | Country Life | 61
Interiors The designer’s room Penny Morrison brought a spare room to life with a pair of four-poster beds and graphic pattern HEN the interior designer Penny Morrison was asked to decorate a holiday home, her remit was to make every bedroom feel grown-up and special. ‘I always think it’s nice to make the spare bedroom something of a treat to stay in—almost somewhere nicer than being at home.’ In this case, she decided the solution was to opt for a pair of four-poster beds. ‘A four poster is a key ingredient in a luxurious bedroom. Fortunately, this bedroom had very high ceilings, so there was plenty of space to accommodate these two beds, which are my own design.’ The property had recently been significantly overhauled, a process that involved stripping the house to its bare bones and starting again in order to bring it up to 21st-century standards. ‘The result of the work was a very elegant interior, with cool stone floors and lots of fresh white paint, but it was rather stark in nature,’ says Mrs Morrison. Striped fabrics in horizontal and vertical formats play a significant role in this scheme. She used Cotswolds-based Rapture & Wright’s Tribal Stripe in a pale Delft blue for the bed testers, curtains and valances (01608 652442; www.raptureand wright.co.uk). The testers have a cut fringe from Samuel & Sons in ruby red along the scalloped edge to add definition (020–7351 5153; www.samuelandsons.com). The redand-cream rug on the floor and the X-frame footstools are from her own collection. The mid-century bedside table is from Chelsea Textiles and painted in glossy crimson to tie in with the rest of the room (020–7584 5544; www.chelseatextiles.com). Arabella Youens Penny Morrison (020–7384 2975; www.pennymorrison.com) W Mike Garlick 62 | Country Life | July 17, 2024
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Interiors The inside track Giles Kime Rooms with a view How large-scale wallpapers transport you to another world I T’S hard to imagine how 18th-century guests at houses such as Belton in Lincolnshire and Blickling and Felbrigg in Norfolk, would have responded to the exotic scenes and motifs that characterised the Chinese wallpaper that became such a popular feature of English country houses. Deep in the countryside, they couldn’t be further removed from the exuberant and colourful work of decorative painters of Guangzhou. Country-house interiors that make a bold statement have a tendency to detract from their setting. That, surely, is the job of the townhouse interior, not only in Georgian England, but also in the 21st century, where the light, noise and clutter of city streets is so chaotic that it makes sense for them to look inward rather than outward. In urban spaces, pattern and colour are brilliant decorating devices; for evidence, look no further than the Diplomatic Reception Room in the White House dominated by sweeping Scenes of North America block-printed in the early 19th century by a manufacturer in Rixheim, France, 64 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 that has been making wallpaper since the French Revolution. More recently, it has been demonstrated by projects where hand-painted de Gournay wallpapers (www.degournay. com) have been used to inject glorious, largescale scenes. It’s an approach that the hotelier Kit Kemp employs brillliantly. As have so many things, the production of panoramic wallpaper has been transformed by digital technology, perhaps most successfully by Adam Ellis (www.adamellis.com). The Slade-trained artist employs a vast archive to create a dizzying array of designs that transport you to tropical rainforests, lakes crowded with flamingos, classical gardens and the ocean depths. Unlike conventional wallpapers, each design is bespoke, responding to the architecture of the space for which it is intended. His studio creates a remarkable range of stand-alone prints, too, some with the mood-laden Surrealist feel of Italian artist Piero Fornasetti, who made distinctive furniture and wallpapers (www.fornasetti.com). Mr Ellis also created a design for Suzy Hoodless’s room at this year’s WOW!house at Design Centre, Chelsea Harbour, London SW10. For inspiration, he looked to the garden of the interior designer’s house in Cornwall. It proves how panoramic wallpaper can add depth to space—in this case, one that didn’t exist only five days before the event. Pablo Enriquez; James McDonald Above: An enchanted—and convivial—world: a bar created by Adam Ellis. Below: The Dining Room by Suzy Hoodless at WOW!house

Property market Penny Churchill Country and western Otters, kingfishers, geese, deer, dukes, monks and wild swimmers– all are drawn to these West Country properties, one built by Sir Edwin Lutyens, another on old Cistercian land Madford House offers spectacular views of the Culm valley and Blackdown Hills from its prime position near Hemyock in Devon. £1.5m ONDON buyers seeking sanctuary in the West Country, without severing close links with the capital, need look no further than secluded Madford House, an imposing former vicarage set in 10 acres of gardens, flower meadows and wetlands on the banks of the River Madford, two miles from Hemyock, Devon, 12 miles from Tiverton Parkway and 13 miles from Taunton. From its sheltered and sunny position, the house enjoys glorious westerly views over the Culm valley, the picturesque ruins of Dunkeswell Abbey and the patchwork landscape of the surrounding Blackdown Hills National Landscape. L 66 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 Dunkeswell Abbey was founded in 1201 by Cistercian monks who established their houses in wild and remote areas, where their skills as farmers eventually made the order one of the richest and most influential in England. The abbey was founded by William Brewer, an influential Plantagenet courtier, who granted his lands in Dunkeswell parish to the Cistercian order, which grew increasingly rich from grants of land and churches, mainly in east Devon. It was dissolved in 1539, when a condition of the subsequent sale of the buildings was that they be rendered unfit for monastic use. That same year, John Russell, 1st Earl of Bedford, a close adviser to the King, bought the most valuable parts of the Dunkeswell estate and sold the vast abbey buildings for the salvage of building materials. The abbey site was later returned to the Crown and leased to a succession of landowners. In the late 18th century, the estate was owned by the Simcoe family, who, in 1842, built the present Holy Trinity Church on the site of the abbey church and, in 1878, built Madford House as a permanent home for its vicar. In the 20th century, the house was a country retreat of the Wills family of tobacco fame
Find the best properties at countrylife.co.uk A sea captain’s lookout over Fowey Harbour TRUTT & PARKER (020–7591 2213) quote a guide price of £2.5m for The Old Vicarage at Polruan, a sheltered Cornwall coastal village bounded on three sides by water. For sale for only the third time in its history, the charming, mid-Victorian clifftop villa, which commands sensational water views at the mouth of the Fowey river, was built in 1877 for local sea captain John Lamb. The house, which is unlisted, has gated steps down to the beach and offers two main reception rooms, a kitchen/ dining/living room, utility and shower room, a principal bedroom suite, three further bedrooms and a bathroom. S and the Eley family, founders of the eponymous cartridge makers. Built of mellow brick under a slate roof with a handsome front façade, the classic Victorian former vicarage offers 2,756sq ft of light, well-proportioned living space on two floors, including three reception rooms, a kitchen/breakfast room, principal bedroom with a bathroom en suite, four further bedrooms and a family bathroom. Further accommodation is provided in a first-floor apartment in the former coach house. The gardens, walled in places, are well established with large areas of lawn interspersed with spring flowers, profusely stocked beds and mature trees. The land, comprising two large fields bordered by the Madford River, surrounds the house to the west. To the south-west, a wildlife sanctuary centred on a half-acre lake stocked with roach, perch and carp, is a haven for deer, otters, kingfishers and a thriving family of geese. For sale through Humberts in Honiton (01404 42456) at a guide price of £1.5 million, ‘Madford House, which is unlisted, has been the subject of a considerable programme of refurbishment over the eight years of the current owners’ stewardship and is in beautiful order throughout,’ says selling agent Alex Coates. The estate blends into the rolling landscape of this wonderfully unspoilt part of Devon Some 20-odd miles west of Madford, Oliver Custance Baker of Strutt & Parker (020–7591 2213) and Richard Addington of JacksonStops in Exeter (01392 214222) are handling the sale of the aptly named Coombeland, a secluded, 150-acre farming and sporting estate set in its own private enclave in the hills above the Exe valley, four miles southwest of Tiverton and 12 miles north of Exeter. The agents quote a guide price of £4.5m for the idyllic small estate, which blends into the undulating, rolling landscape of this wonderfully unspoilt part of rural Devon. The land surrounds the house and forms a valley that runs from east to west, with a tributary of the River Dart running along the valley floor. Divided between some 70 acres of pasture and 60 acres of woodland, much of it is designated ancient woodland; its steep contours previously provided the setting for a challenging high-bird shoot, which would be easy to reinstate. In front of the main house, the stream feeds an ornamental lake—a haven for wildlife and wild swimmers. The hunting rights are vested in the Badgworthy Land Company, but haven’t been exercised in recent years. The principal house is Grade II-listed Coombeland House, a traditional Devon farmhouse described by Historic England as being of ‘17th-century origins, remodelled and extended in the mid 19th century’ and ‘charming externally with a very unspoiled July 17, 2024 | Country Life | 67
Property market Privacy and seclusion are guaranteed at idyllic Coombeland, a 150-acre farming and shooting estate near Tiverton in Devon. £4.5m interior’. Renovated throughout in recent years, it offers three main reception rooms, a large kitchen/living room, an orangery, five bedrooms and four bathrooms. Further accommodation is provided in the adjoining six-bedroom guest cottage, beside which a splendid purpose-built stable yard is a core element of the estate. An enchanting former mill building has been converted into a onebedroom cottage, currently let on an assured shorthold tenancy. The ancient west Devon stannary and market town of Tavistock, on the edge of the Dartmoor National Park, can trace its history to at least 961, when Tavistock Abbey was founded. Surrendered following the dissolution of the monasteries, the abbey was later demolished, the ruins of which can still be seen in the centre of town. Much of the land was acquired by the aforementioned Russell family, Earls and later Dukes of Bedford, whose influence came to an end when, in 1911, most of their holdings in the area were sold to pay death duties. One of the last of the fine houses to be built on Bedford-owned land was Littlecourt in Down Road, Tavistock, now also for sale through Jackson-Stops (01392 214222) at a guide price of £1.5m. Designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens and built in 1910, Littlecourt stands proudly at the end of a pollarded lime drive that leads up to the forecourt formed by imposing wings either side of the front entrance. The quality of its construction was recorded in COUNTRY L IFE 68 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 (October 3, 1925) in glowing terms: ‘Built just before the war, the site is high ground above Tavistock, and formed part of the Duke of Bedford’s estate. Being set so high and exposed it was necessary to housecomfort that the construction should be very sturdy; so the walls were built hollow in two skins (the inner of brick, the outer of stone) of a very substantial thickness. The stone is of a delightful greenish-brown tone with a fine texture, and as here built, in random ashlar, it offers an admirable example of modern masonry.’ Although partially rebuilt and remodelled following an upstairs fire in the early 2000s, much of the original design and intricate detail, which are the hallmarks of Lutyens’s work, have been retained or re-created throughout. Today, Littlecourt offers three main reception rooms overlooking the gardens, a conservatory, garden room, kitchen and domestic offices, two principal bedroom suites, four further bedrooms, a shower room and an attached one-bedroom annexe. A gateway from the beautifully maintained gardens leads out onto Whitchurch Common and the open moor beyond. The hand of Sir Edwin Lutyens is in evidence at Littlecourt in Tavistock, Devon. £1.5m

Property comment Annunciata Elwes Thanks be to Jeremy As the changes to permitted development rights for agricultural buildings–known as Clarkson’s Clause–start to kick in, Annunciata Elwes assesses their impact HETHER or not you’ve binge watched Clarkson’s Farm, landowners across the country can thank their lucky stars for the existence of Jeremy Clarkson, something many of them probably wouldn’t have said in his Top Gear days. New planning laws came into effect on May 21 that better enable farmers to convert agricultural buildings for residential or commercial use without planning W 70 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 Recent planning changes make it easier to convert agricultural buildings for residential or commercial use—thanks, in part, to television presenter-cum-farmer Jeremy Clarkson
permission—supposedly inspired by Mr Clarkson’s battles with West Oxfordshire District Council over his farm shop and restaurant at Diddly Squat Farm. It is hoped that farmers will benefit financially in a climate where, as the Amazon Prime show illustrates, there are soaring production costs, few profits and mostly only the love of the farming way of life keeping things going. The amendments will ‘turbocharge rural housing development’ claimed the Conservative government at the time and give farmers across England ‘greater freedom to diversify and grow their business’. Amended Class R rights now allow 1,000sq m (10,764sq ft) of floorspace to be converted to ‘flexible commercial use’ without planning permission (previously 500sq m or 5,382 sq ft; cue more local farm shops, we hope). Under Class Q, disused as well as current agricultural buildings can now be developed and, provided there is suitable access, 10 homes can be created from a single agricultural unit (up from five), with a floorspace of 1,000sq m (previously 450sq m or 4,843sq ft) and with single-storey extensions also allowed. Mr Clarkson’s influence is shown in the addition of former agricultural buildings As well as providing new homes and local employment opportunities, comments Roger Punch of Marchand Petit, the new regulations should tidy up the ‘unused structures that litter our landscapes. I doubt the effect will be instant, but every increment to improve and reutilise these structures will be of benefit to the rural economy’. Savills’s rural agency director Penny Dart warns that ‘conversions of this type often take a considerable time and costs tend to be high’, however, another positive angle is that ‘the widening of the flexibility could help multi-generational farming families needing additional accommodation’. Although Class R reforms apply to relevant buildings within National Landscapes, Conservation Areas, national parks and SSSIs (when not listed or scheduled monuments), Class Q reforms do not—and this has been criticised. However, the semi concession means that the ‘architecture of these refurbished structures must be delivered with care,’ continues Mr Punch. ‘In architectural terms, sympathetic is not good enough as a dictate— the importance of positive architecture and sustainable, durable materials in re-using these structures cannot be over-emphasised… Case in point The phrase ‘various outbuildings’ takes on a whole new meaning in the light of the amended regulations. Within the 265 acres of Grade II-listed Depden Hall, near Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, are assorted former farm buildings, including three large barns. Moated and with eight bedrooms, it’s on the market with John D. Wood at £3 million (020–8819 3604). Stringent conditions should be imposed on these sensitively located buildings and local planning authorities should closely monitor these conversions.’ Local councils are still involved, explains Richard Clews of Strutt & Parker’s Chelmsford office, who advises on planning across Suffolk, Cambridgeshire and Essex, as any proposed scheme needs their consent through prior approval. ‘It’s a slimline planning application where no one has to discuss any policies,’ he jokes. ‘But there are boxes to tick—you’d have to demonstrate that you’re fulfilling all criteria to get a certificate giving permission. ‘These regulations have existed since 2015 and agricultural-tied dwellings since the 1940s,’ he adds, ‘but Mr Clarkson’s influence is shown in the addition of former agricultural buildings and the changes to Class R rights for commercial conversions. I struggle to bring to mind a farmer who has any disused buildings on his or her land. However, when it comes to Class Q residential conversions, the change to include former agricultural buildings will be particularly prevalent where parcels of land have been sold off with old farm buildings on them. Mr Clews continues: ‘The main crux is that the changes are very welcome, particularly regarding floor space. Rural business hubs are an increasingly attractive proposition, allowing room for perhaps one to three businesses to take up residence in an agricultural conversion, particularly where offices in a nearby town are prohibitively expensive— we’ve seen a number of these come to fruition.’ However, he explains, converting buildings into houses becomes a little more complicated as each residential unit is now capped at 150sq m (1,614sq ft)—‘which makes an average four-bedroom house,’ advises Mr Clews. ‘For those wanting a big barn conversion, there’s just under a year left of the transition period in which the 465sq m [5,005sq ft] limit for a single residence applies.’ When it comes to the property market, anecdotally at least, the early signs of a positive shift have been felt, even if the red tape could be more brutally trimmed. ‘A retired farmer we’re currently working with stands to gain an additional £300,000 on the sale of his property, thanks to the ability to convert his previously unusable barn,’ explains Claire Carter, country house manager at John D. Wood & Co. ‘This is only one example of the positive financial impact that many property owners will experience. Beyond individual benefits, this legislation is likely to stimulate broader economic activity in rural areas. It encourages the preservation and repurposing of historic agricultural buildings, blending modern living with heritage conservation. We expect an uptick in demand for rural properties, driven by buyers looking to invest in these now more versatile estates.’ July 17, 2024 | Country Life | 71

International JERSEY SPECIAL Alan Copson/AWL Images Summer 2024 La Corbière lighthouse at 150 Wok on: flavours of the Far East Dream properties for sale PAGE 80 PAGE 82 PAGE 88




Country Life International Don’t miss The Gorey fête The event, on August 16, is a day of live music, beach games, thrilling funfair rides and a fireworks display (www.jersey.com) Genuine Jersey artisan market Browse local wares and fresh, seasonal produce in the pretty harbour village of St Aubin. Every second Saturday, until September (www.genuinejersey.je) Weekender The island’s great summer festival returns to the People’s Park on August 31–September 1, promising a weekend packed with music (www.weekender.je) Sailing to Neverland? The Queen and King inspect a display of floats on their visit in 2012 A T time of writing, The King and Queen Camilla were set to visit the island this week to tour the Jersey Expo Event, a convention that aims to promote local agriculture and aquaculture industries and Jersey’s journey to net zero. The trip would mark the first time a British monarch has visited Jersey since 2005—when Elizabeth II last came—and The King’s first visit since he acceded to the throne in 2022. Their Majesties were due to be welcomed by a 21-gun Royal Salute by the 1781 Militia at the People’s Park, St Helier, firing the Duke of Edinburgh Battery, and were to attend a sitting of Sustainable celebrations HIS year, Longueville Manor (01534 725501; www.longuevillemanor.com), the most highly acclaimed hotel on Jersey, turns 75. Observing its milestone with a rewilding scheme, the hotel (right) will plant 75 trees throughout the year, both to mark the anniversary and to further Longueville’s commitment to the local environment and sustainability. Another popular island residence is St Brelade’s Bay Hotel (01534 746141; www.stbreladesbayhotel.com), which also celebrates a significant anniversary this year, turning 160. T 78 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 La Faîs’sie d’Cidre Located within the heart of rural St Lawrence at Hamptonne, the annual cider festival takes place on October 19–20 (www.jersey.com) Black butter-making Practise the ancient art of making nièr beurre, a traditional farmhouse delicacy of the island, on October 3–5, with supper and live music (www.jersey.com) Sting warning L AST month, two Portuguese man o’ war were spotted on Jersey beaches. One was seen on Greve d’Azette beach on the south-east coast and another on Ouaisné Bay in the south. The marine organisms, which resemble jellyfish, but are, in fact, siphonophores, can deliver a painful sting (‘If I only had a brain’, July 3). The Jersey Coastguard advises islanders to ‘avoid touching’ any of the creatures and for dog walkers to be mindful of where their pets are poking their noses. Further sightings should be reported to Environmental and Consumer Protection (01534 445808; environmental health@gov.je). Getty; Alamy Jersey royals the States Assembly and the Royal Court. Ahead of the royal visit, eight cannons were restored by prisoners of the States of Jersey Prison. The King was to present the new King’s Colour to the Jersey Sea Cadets at the Pomme D’Or Hotel in St Helier and witness the King’s Parade march past, which comprises the Band of the Island of Jersey, Jersey Field Squadron, Veterans, Blue Light services, Cadet units and Scouts and Guides. The visit was planned to conclude with a community tea party at Liberation Square to meet ‘a cross-section of the island community’. The King and Queen, then the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall, last visited the Channel Islands during the Diamond Jubilee year of 2012. The Corn Riots harvest festival This unusual event marks the 1769 riots that led to a change in legislation establishing the States Assembly, on September 30–October 1 (www.jersey.com)

Country Life International ERCHED majestically on a rocky outcrop, La Corbière lighthouse has been a steadfast guardian of the treacherous waters around the south-western tip of Jersey since 1874. Designed by civil engineer Sir John Coode (1816–92), the 62ft-high structure was the first lighthouse in the British Isles to be built from concrete. This innovation in construction materials was groundbreaking at the time and has contributed to the structure’s remarkable durability and longevity. The lighthouse’s name, La Corbière, is derived from the Jèrriais word for ‘a place where crows gather’. Perhaps a reference to the black rocks that surround the area or referencing its sense of foreboding, the name nods to the formidable challenges posed by this part of Jersey’s coastline. A painting in the town hall in St Helier by the Channel Island artist James Finucane Draper (1836–76) titled Corbière Rocks depicts the site as it was before the lighthouse was built: jagged rocks set against the backdrop of a stormy sky. The French writer Victor Hugo, who spent some time on the island before the lighthouse was built, would go on to describe the concrete structure as ‘the herdsman of the waves’. La Corbière’s story began in the mid 19th century, a time when maritime navigation was fraught with peril. The waters around Jersey, known for their strong currents and hidden reefs, claimed numerous ships and lives. The need for reliable navigational aid was desperate and conversations began about building a lighthouse. Before building commenced, the Jersey Government bought the headland to gain access to the foreshore and plans were drawn up by Sir John, who had been knighted in 1872 for his work on Portland Harbour in Dorset. The resident Jersey engineer was Imrie Bell, who had already worked on important civil-engineering projects on the island, including the breakwater at Elizabeth Castle and La Collette Harbour. ‘Drawings from the time show that the lighthouse was built from the sea, with barges coming in from St Helier and men removing the materials in wheelbarrows,’ reveals Jersey Blue Badge Guide Sue Hardy, who used to conduct guided tours of the lighthouse. ‘The concrete was then mixed and poured in situ into moulds as the tower was raised.’ P Ms Hardy explains that Bell wrote a detailed guide to the building of the lighthouse in which he explains the process: ‘It was quite a scientific exercise. All the moulds were carefully crafted by carpenters on site and the interior was coated with a soapy emulsion, so that the concrete didn’t stick.’ Last to be built were the steps up to the lighthouse and the 984ft causeway from the shore (which is covered when the tide is high). ‘Of course, they didn’t need the steps or the causeway until the end,’ says Ms Hardy, ‘as they were building from the sea.’ On April 24, 1874, the lighthouse was lit for the first time. The Illustrated London News reported that ‘the expeditious performance of [its construction] is due in great part to the use of concrete as the material for the tower. It is the first, but assuredly will not be the last, work of this kind executed in this excellent constructive material’. The original lamp was a three-wick paraffin lamp and for more than 100 years lighthouse keepers manned the tower and signalled ship movements: first by flag, then Morse Code, then by radio and finally by telephone. The lighthouse became fully automated in 1976, eliminating the need for a keeper and it now contains radar navigational technology, leading to the retirement of the old booming foghorn. La Corbière’s influence extends beyond its practical functions. It has become an integral part of Jersey’s cultural heritage and its prominence is reflected in the Jèrriais language, where it has given rise to several proverbial expressions. Phrases such as j’avons pâssé La Corbiéthe (the worst is over) and il a pâssé hardi dg’ieau l’tou d’La Corbiéthe (that’s water under the bridge) underpin the lighthouse’s symbolic significance within the local community. It’s a popular destination for both locals and tourists, too, who like to walk the causeway at low tide, following in the footsteps of the keepers who once maintained the light. In honour of the anniversary, the lighthouse has been given a new lick of paint (white paint serves as a daytime beacon to ships) and, for several weeks, it was floodlit, causing traffic to snake for miles as locals came to view the landmark looking grander than ever before. 80 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 Remarkable engineering made ethereal: La Corbière lighthouse as the sun sets AWLImages The lighthouse’s name is derived from the Jèrriais word for “a place where crows gather”
Let there be light A feat of pioneering Victorian engineering, La Corbière lighthouse has guided seafarers to safety for 150 years, finds Antonia Windsor
Country Life International Spice up your life The influence of East Asian culture has brought a fresh vibrancy and excitement to Jersey’s culinary scene, discovers Paul Henderson O the uninitiated, Jersey is something of a cultural curiosity. The largest of the Channel Islands, it is the southernmost outpost of the British Isles, but, officially, it is not part of the UK. It is self-governing, with its own banking and legal systems, but it is a British Crown Dependency. It sits only 14 miles from mainland France and has retained a lot of its Gallic heritage, but it maintains a comforting, almost bygone Englishness. Ask anyone who hasn’t visited the island what it is famous for and they will invariably tick off one of three things: financial services, Jersey Royal potatoes and the finest dairy cattle. Or, as one local expressed with a twinkle in his eye: ‘We only do cash, crops or cows here, don’t we?’ Except they don’t. The island of Jersey might be small, but it punches well above its weight in terms of history, heritage and multicultural diversity. French and British may dominate, but Jersey has its own language (Jèrriais), is home to a significant Portuguese population (with most hailing originally from the island of Madeira) and, most recently, has forged new and expanding links with Asia. The Bailiwick may not be turning Japanese, exactly, but hearts and minds are opening to the Far Eastern way of life. From food and festivals to art and lifestyle, the influence of East Asian culture has brought a fresh vibrancy and excitement to the island. Local illustrator Theo Jenner (www.theojenner.co.uk), whose whimsical work is inspired by traditional Japanese ukiyo-e (translated as ‘pictures of the floating world’) artists Hokusai and Hiroshige, is helping spread the word with his Eastmeets-West creations. ‘I have been obsessed with the iconic Great Wave off Kanagawa since I first saw it [at the age of 12] and I try to bring that same dynamism and bold simplicity to my depictions of Jersey,’ Mr Jenner says of his pop art. Over lunch at the bustling Kyoto Prefecture (www.kyotoprefecture.je), one of the island’s newest sushi restaurants in St Aubin, Mr Jenner admits to being pleasantly surprised at the response to his work: ‘As someone who grew up here, I know Jersey can be quite conservative, but the East Asian aesthetic T 82 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 has become very popular worldwide and I do think the islanders have embraced it.’ The artist’s prints of Jersey landmarks such as Elizabeth Castle, Mont Orgueil and Corbière Lighthouse have appeared in galleries on the island, he was commissioned by the RNLI to create a piece to commemorate the organisation’s 200th anniversary and he is also the lead designer for Jersey’s Lunar New Year Festival. Launched in 2023 to encourage locals to celebrate Chinese New Year with the estimated 2,000-plus Asian residents in Jersey, the two-week festival features dancing, workshops, exhibitions and food tastings. We wanted to create a beginner’s guide to Asian food that you haven’t had before Festival organiser Victoria Li reveals the objective behind the event is to foster lifestyle connections as Jersey strengthens its financial ties with Asia. ‘The festival provides a platform for our islanders to learn about and appreciate the rich cuisines, traditions, customs and arts of Asia,’ Ms Li explains. ‘This not only enhances community cohesion, but also enriches Jersey’s cultural landscape. For many Asian people, Jersey offers a rare blend of tranquillity, safety and economic opportunity. However, personally speaking, as an overseas Chinese person, I have also stayed for the incredible seafood.’ This year, to help promote the event, more than 5,000 traditional red envelopes were handed out on the high street in the Bailiwick’s capital, St Helier. Symbolising good luck and prosperity, they contained exclusive offers from local shops and a few special prizes. After all, nothing encourages cultural appreciation like a little retail incentive. Brother-and-sister duo Stephen and Hayley Yu needed no encouragement to bring a flavour of East Asia to Jersey, having been brought up in the island’s oldest Cantonese restaurant, the Rice Bowl (www.ricebowl.je). ‘Our [parents] met on Jersey in the 1960s and opened the [restaurant] soon after, but Stephen and I found it boring as kids, so we both ended up travelling and doing other things,’ says Miss Yu, who qualified as an architect in Hong Kong before returning to the island with her husband. ‘However, when we got older and came home, we knew we wanted to start a food-related business and bring something different to Jersey. We felt there was something missing from the dining scene and that’s where Awabi came from.’ Modelled on a minimalist late-night drinking den, Awabi (www.awabi.co.uk) is a PanAsian mix of Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese, Thai and Japanese food, created from the best local ingredients, but often using British and French cooking techniques. It is a very cool spot and wouldn’t look out of place in New York, London or Seoul. ‘We wanted to create an experience that would be like a beginner’s guide to Asian food that you haven’t had before,’ Mr Yu explains. ‘We wanted to encourage people to experiment, share dishes with friends and, most importantly, have fun.’ The response to Awabi, they say, has been far beyond their expectations and they have received rave reviews, including an entry in the Michelin Guide. In case you were wondering, the Rice Bowl is still going strong. Serving old-school, ‘proudly inauthentic’ Chinese classics, it will soon be celebrating its 50th anniversary and it is worth a visit, not least for Jairra Poltrias’s incredible cocktails served from the restaurant’s small Hong Kong-style bar. An award-winning bartender from the Philippines, Miss Poltrias has been living on Jersey for a couple of years and offered us some insider recommendations: Bonne Nuit Beach Café (www.bonnenuitbeachcafe. co.uk) and the Thai Dicq Shack (www.thai dicqshack.je). At these two wonderful beach huts, both serving incredible Thai food— Bonne Nuit is on the north side of the island, the Dicq Shack is on the south—diners are encouraged to order their food and enjoy their Pad See Ew or Jungle Curry sitting outside, admiring the view. Playing with Phire: savour south-east Asian cuisine cooked over binchotan coal at Phire

Country Life International The maki and nigiri is so fresh you’d expect a trawlerman to take your order Other notable Far East-inspired eateries on Jersey worthy of mention include Phire (www.phire.je), which specialises in southeast Asian cuisine cooked over Japanese binchotan coal; Soy sushi and seafood bar (www.soyjersey.com); the Japanese-meetsPeruvian fusion of Izakaya (www.izakaya.je); and the must-visit Japanese/Korean counter in the St Helier Fish Market, JeJu (www. food.je/jeju). The maki, nigiri and sashimi is so fresh you’d expect a trawlerman to take your order: a good reason for the queues across the street every lunch time. If you have the time (and the self-control), you could take your sushi and yuzu honey tea over to the Samarès Manor (www. samaresmanor.com) in the parish of St Clement. At this privately owned botanic garden open to the public, one of the star attractions is a charming Japaneseinspired plot dating back to the 1920s. Containing many imported plant species, including azalea and maple, a thatched summer house and water features, it is a little corner of Kyoto with which to contemplate your hosomaki choice. Should you be unable to find your zen at the Japanese Garden, you could seek 84 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 sanctuary at Ayush Wellness Spa. Located inside the Hotel de France (www.defrance.co.uk) and offering 17,000sq ft of Indian Ayurvedicinspired luxury, it has every wellbeing option you could wish for, from infinity pools, saunas and steam rooms, through to treatment rooms offering therapies that start with shirobhyanga [head massage] and end with padabhyanga [foot massage]. Balancing the body, mind and spirit has never felt so indulgent. However, for the ultimate East-Asian experience, set your alarm for the middle of the night (authenticity is all), then make Dishes showcasing fresh, local ingredients such as scallops (left) are making Awabi (above) a hit with diners in Jersey’s capital, St Helier Ollie Jones; www.jersey.com Bonne Nuit Beach Café is renowned for serving superb Thai food (above right) from its home overlooking the picturesque Bonne Nuit Bay (above) on Jersey’s north coast your way into St Helier’s town centre and look for the 24/7 Vend Store. If you’ve travelled in Japan, you will already have experienced the pleasure of purchasing a packet of noodles, a refreshing bottle of matcha green tea or an imported candy bar from a ubiquitous vending machine and this is the Jersey version. ‘It’s like a supermarket with a bit of a twist,’ is how co-founder Miguel Ribeiro describes the hi-tech units. ‘Whether you’re working at midnight, 3am, 7am or whenever, I want to make sure there’s something for everyone at every time of the day.’ Only don’t go expecting a packet of Jersey Royals or a pint of extra creamy milk. By now, you must have realised there is more to the island than that. For more information, contact Visit Jersey (www.jersey.com)

Country Life International Spilling the tea ILDLY exotic plants flower exuberantly on field margins; a hen pheasant leads her chicks across manicured rows; and in the sifting, drifting streams of morning mist, pickers talk quietly amid the birdsong. This is not Darjeeling, nor Ceylon. This bucolic scene is tucked down a harestrewn lane in rural Jersey. Matt Bartlett, proprietor of Jersey Fine Tea, is diversifying. ‘We have plenty of fields full of potatoes in Jersey,’ he explains. ‘I was always keen to look for something new to try and create more interesting habitats and potential crops. As a horticulturist, I’d experimented growing all sorts of things years ago—including tea— and the idea came back to me. Why not Jersey?’ Why not Jersey, indeed, for the largest of the Channel Islands was once tea caddy to the world. Its propitious tax laws made it the perfect landing point for teas coming from the Far East and for decades it played a vital role in the world’s obsession with the leaves W 86 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 of the humble Camellia sinensis. The trade eventually ground to a halt in the 1990s, when major tea players re-shuffled their international corporation cards and took their offices elsewhere. When Britons think of tea, they think of the hot, humid countries of the colonial East. However, as Mr Bartlett explains, tea plants can be grown with relative ease in cooler climes—as long as the soil conditions and husbandry are carefully overseen. ‘Tea handles cooler climates perfectly well,’ he confirms, as wrens flit in and out of the shrubs and bees congregate ecstatically en masse to exploit the flamboyant hedgerow Echium, standing 8ft tall and sporting thousands of tiny flowers. ‘Darjeeling, for example, is at altitude, with micro-climate pockets and cold mornings and evenings. The tea plant is a hardy evergreen and is quite capable of withstanding a bit of chilly weather.’ Two tender-stem leaves are picked—or, more correctly, plucked—each morning from the very top of the plants, as they would be if nibbled by a passing Sambar deer in the foothills of the Himalayas. How you harvest, treat and process those leaves determines the type of tea you get; from white, green or black to more exotics such as oolong or pu-erh, a highly prized, fermented tea that is given a vintage and can be aged like fine wine. Three sloping fields—or côtils, in Jersey parlance—have been prepared and planted with Camellia sinensis. Once we’ve picked a couple of fistfuls of lurid green, tender tip leaves and placed them safely in Chinese wicker baskets attached to our belts, it is time to begin working on them to get them into a drinkable form. At its simplest, this is about Andy Le Gresley Photography/Jersey Fine Tea; Alamy Contrary to the association with tropical climes, production of the nation’s favourite drink is flourishing under the oceanic ambiance of Jersey, finds Nick Hammond
careful control of oxidation and the addition of gentle heat, plus a bit of elbow grease. ‘We don’t normally do it this way, you understand,’ says Mr Bartlett, firing up a tabletop gas stove and tipping the leaves into a wok as we sit overlooking tea fields and a pasture spotted with Rhode Island reds. ‘This is to show you the process. Each stage is delicate and largely by hand. Making tea is labour heavy.’ With heat applied and Mr Bartlett gently crushing and moving the leaves around in the pan, they become sticky and ball together. After few more minutes and a period of cooling, they are placed in a muslin cloth, tied tightly and rolled across a washboard in a motion that can only be described as kneading. ‘We have a machine in the workshop that assists with the rolling of some of our teas,’ Mr Bartlett says, working the bun of leaves until dark stains start to appear on the cloth. ‘This helps break down the cellular structure and rolls the leaves into the tight curls you see in whole, loose-leaf tea. It doesn’t rip the leaf.’ After a good 15–20 minutes, the leaves have coalesced into a sticky ball and have to be teased apart before being spread out on trays and placed in an oven on a gentle heat. ‘We have a Chinese oven as used in traditional growing regions, but this will work just as well for our purposes,’ says Mr Bartlett as he pops the tray into his kitchen oven. Each stage is delicate, largely by hand. Making tea is labour heavy We take the chance to nip down narrow lanes to his workshop, where Wallace-andGromit-style contraptions spin and hum under watchful eyes to turn this humble leaf into one of the staples of human existence on the planet. On our return, our leaves have darkened and curled into the crispy, delicately fragrant tea leaves we all know and love. Jersey’s Camellia sinensis leaves make a cold-brew green tea, served like wine ‘This is a green tea,’ Mr Bartlett explains, putting on the kettle. As you can imagine, the intricacies, etiquette, preferences and techniques of teamakers worldwide cover myriad variations. However, tea—and particularly whole-leaf green tea—has been shown to have surprising health benefits, not least as a powerful deliverer of antioxidants known to tackle some more perfidious ailments. The final judgement? ‘My’ morning-picked green tea is surprisingly good, considering our Heath Robinson approach to its production. It’s only a couple of hours since those leaves were plucked from their host bush. With a pleasing lemon-green colour and a delicate nose of biscuit and grass, the resultant brew is refreshing, cleansing and moreish—a packet of which I get to take triumphantly home and later brand Jersey Cockcrow Brew. Jersey Fine Tea (www.jerseyfinetea.com) July 17, 2024 | Country Life | 87
Country Life International Island of plenty From traditional granite houses to harbourside retreats, Holly Kirkwood has the pick of the best properties for sale across Jersey St Brelade, £16.25 million With vistas across the golden sands of Ouaisne and St Brelade’s Bay, Le Val Lodge is a substantial coastal residence offering seven generous reception rooms, a modern openplan kitchen, a study and a wine cellar, seven luxurious bedroom suites and seven bathrooms. The gardens are a private haven offering terrific views out to sea, as well as a tennis court, an infinity pool and expansive southfacing terraces. Living Room (01534 717100; www.livingroomproperty.com); Knight Frank (01534 877977; www.knightfrank.com) 88 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 St Martin, £14 million Standing in 16 acres of magnificent gardens and grounds, Anne Port Bay represents a rare opportunity to purchase a significant coastal estate on Jersey. Accommodation includes a dining room and a drawing room, as well as a library and large kitchen, plus a 30ft extension. An impressive marble staircase leads up to the principal bedroom suite and two guest suites. The entire second floor comprises one vast room, ideal for housing a collection. Outside, the summer house sits adjacent to the terrace and there is a three-bedroom cottage. Mature gardens include woodland leading to a beach with a slipway from which, on clear days, the coastline of France can be seen. Hunt Estates (07797 721881; www.huntestates.com) St Martin, £10,995 million On the market for the first time in 40 years, Rozel Mill is a handsome country property only minutes away from Rozel Harbour. Its ground floor comprises a formal dining room and a 40ft orangery that includes a bespoke kitchen, a breakfast area, a living room and a cosy reading nook. Upstairs, the primary suite and four further bedrooms are spread over the first and second floors. The pretty gardens feature a terrace, jacuzzi and a wonderful dining terrace on the seaward side. A separate two-bedroom cottage offers further accommodation. The historic mill dates back to the 14th century and, in more recent history, it was commandeered as a lookout point by the Germans during the Second World War. Hunt Estates (07797 721881; www.huntestates.com)

Country Life International St Mary, £4.5 million A beautiful period farmhouse that has been fully renovated, Maupertuis Farm now enjoys a formal dining room, a modern kitchen, a sitting room and another handsome living room on the ground floor. Upstairs, a private study benefits from a balcony, which overlooks the pool, and seven bedrooms include a spacious primary suite with his-and-hers bathrooms. Outside, a swimming pool and pool house can be found, complete with gym and sauna. The grounds also feature a tennis court, stables and a charming orchard. Situated next to La Mare Vineyards, the property is well-positioned for northern cliff-path walks and the village of St Mary. Some 15 vergées (about 6½ acres) of fields surround the property and are currently leased to a local farmer. Broadlands (07700 348421; www.broadlandsjersey.com); Savills (01534 722227; www.savills.com) Trinity, £4.65 million An extremely rare opportunity, Les Cateaux is a property available to purchase by nonqualified buyers who wish to move to the island. Enjoying character features throughout, this period house comprises five large bedrooms, formal and informal reception rooms and a spacious breakfast kitchen. A detached studio cottage provides further accommodation in the grounds and the pretty enclosed courtyard is home to a swimming pool and pool house; in addition, a 90ft barn could be usefully converted. Knight Frank (01534 877977; www.knight frank.com); Savills (01534 870074; www. savills.com) St Brelade, £4.65 million The Assembly Rooms is a modernised fourbedroom property in the heart of St Aubin offering state-of-the-art living overlooking the harbour. Open-plan living spaces on the first floor are all designed around the magnificent water views and include a kitchen, sitting room and a pretty inner courtyard. The garage, which has space for six cars, sits on the ground floor with the gym and a fully stocked wine store. Broadlands (01534 880770; www.broadlands jersey.com); Fine & Country Jersey (01534 888855; www.fineandcountry.je); Gaudin & Co (01534 730341; www.gaudin.je); Knight Frank (01534 877977; www.knightfrank.com); Savills (01534 870074; www.savills.com) St Mary, £3.55 million Sycamore Cottage is an idyllic family property that has been elegantly extended. Inside, the house has charming period details, including exposed granite walls, original fireplaces and wood beams. The ground floor includes a pretty breakfast kitchen, two bedrooms and three reception rooms and large bifolding doors that lead out onto an expansive terrace. Upstairs are two further bedrooms. Outside is an adventure playground and a natural freshwater pool. Broadlands (01534 880770; www.broad landsjersey.com); Fine & Country Jersey (01534 888855; www.fineandcountry.je); Gaudin & Co (01534 730341; www.gaudin.je); Hunt Estates (01534 860650; www.huntestates.com) 90 | Country Life | July 17, 2024


Over the hills and far away The garden of the Old Rectory at Preston Capes, Northamptonshire The home of Luke and Victoria Bridgeman Reinstating the view was central to the remaking of this garden on an unusual site that surrounds the local church, writes Tiffany Daneff Photographs by Britt Willoughby Dyer

HE 13th-century church of St Peter and St Paul stands left of the main gates into the gardens of the Old Rectory in Preston Capes, a small village with large views over undulating fields and tree-lined hills, the latter rare in this part of south Northamptonshire. Generally, the county of squires and spires is hunting country, running over flat fields and wide hedges, the skyline pierced with medieval steeples. It was the lovely rural view with still-visible ridgeand-furrow stripes that drew Luke and Victoria Bridgeman here in 2007, when they bought the rectory from its former owner, Norman St John-Stevas, formerly an MP and later Lord St John of Fawsley, who is buried in the churchyard on the other side of the garden wall. As so often happens, much of that view had become obscured and overwhelmed by trees—a mature beech and cedar—and overgrown hedges, although the main culprit was a line of Cupressus leylandii. These had been planted by St John-Stevas as a windbreak, but, by the autumn of 2008, when the Bridgemans finally moved in (‘Norman wanted to enjoy a last summer here’) the evergreens had grown outlandishly high and blocked the view to the right. T Stand-out plants are Calycanthus ‘Venus’ and ‘Aphrodite’ For the first 10 years, the Bridgemans were happy in their garden. The children played on the large lawn that reached almost to the red-brick walls of the Georgian house and was edged with the skimpiest of beds, which, Mrs Bridgeman remembers, ‘crept around the walls with room only for climbers that clung to the brick’. She trebled the depth of the beds to make space for roses and some herbaceous planting beneath the honeysuckle, roses, wisteria and clematis and enjoyed the bulbs that appeared each spring on the bank below the leylandii—snowdrops and narcissus— and were followed by primroses. There was a surprising amount of garden with which to contend. The Bridgemans had a sense that there was much more that could be done to enjoy it more fully, as well as to better link its various parts, which included, at the bottom of the hill, an area that was, if not quite big enough to be described as parkland, was planted with mostly oaks and Preceding pages: A formal rill leads to the seating area overlooking the Old Rectory’s wonderful view, with Hydrangea arborescens ‘Annabelle’. Left: Rosa ‘Mutabilis’ with Calycanthus floridus ‘Aphrodite’ to its right July 17, 2024 | Country Life | 95
Above: Widening the beds, now filled with roses and perennials, has helped to ground the house, which already had a Magnolia grandiflora growing against the wall. Right: The formality of the Irish yews is countered by mounds of Rosa moyesii, with scarlet single flowers on arching stems that are followed by large, flagon-shaped hips limes and grazed by a herd of roe deer inherited from St John-Stevas. Unless you knew the garden well, you might not push open the gate in the garden wall behind the house to discover a path that leads around the upper slopes of the hill embracing the church in its walled churchyard above, with fields full of nettles sloping down and away to the right. The terrace is where one can properly feast on the view ‘Luke suggested that we get in an expert to help us,’ remembers Mrs Bridgeman, who has become a keen gardener and, together with expert help three days a week from Chie Arai, an extremely knowledgeable plantswoman, keeps the garden going. The owners talked to the Oxfordshire-based designer James Alexander-Sinclair, who had done some work for Mrs Bridgeman’s parents. The idea was not to go for a radical change, but to open up the view, bring in more colourful planting and make better use of the garden by creating different areas to sit and enjoy the sun as it moves around the house. The most obvious intervention as one walks around the garden today, four years after the works started, is the removal of the leylandii hedge and the cedar, which had to go after 96 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 dropping a large branch. The beech has also gone, as it was slowly rotting, with a holly growing through its centre. ‘We must have taken out about 50 leylandii,’ says Mrs Bridgeman. ‘We felt a bit exposed at first’, but young plantings of the fine species Sorbus ulleungensis ‘Dodong’, with its vivid orange-cut leaves and large clusters of berries, are taking well on the bulb-filled slopes, where choice acers, liquidambars, hydrangeas, hamamelis, cornus and roses will eventually provide a froth of autumn colour below the lawn. The latter has changed considerably, with three square beds of herbaceous plants cut into the side nearest the house and a huge bed in front of the long garden wall. A small access path at the back allows you to get in to clear or simply walk through the shrubs and perennials, which, by late summer, are towering well above you. Stand-out plants here are two Calycanthus ‘Venus’ and ‘Aphrodite’ and huge inulas, rudbeckias and coreopsis. A handful of low yew domes are spotted about the beds, not quite marking each corner, for that would be too formal, but giving just the necessary markers to ground the airy plantings that, in late summer, feature red spikes of bistorts, yellow rudbeckias and the perpetual flowering Rosa x odorata ‘Mutabilis’. These massed flowerbeds are edged with a cool limestone path that leads past a formal pool to a terrace arranged with benches and tables, where one can at last properly feast on the view. The idea for this came from Mr Bridgeman. ‘The benches were all Norman’s.’ The garden below slopes in a wilder meadowy planting of long grass, through which grow mounds of Rosa moyesii, their hips gleaming in the late-summer sun, with a double row of flat-topped Irish yews (planted in St John-Stevas’s time) leading to a gate through to the deer field below. Many cherries and apples have been put in around the garden and in the orchard. Along the path below the church the steep grassed bank is now filled with gorse, hazel, field maple and sorbus, all of which can be found growing wild in the fields and hedgerows. At the bottom of the hill, a new pond catches the eye and more oaks and limes have been added to those in the deer field. Where the land below the churchyard had sloped steeply away, Mr Alexander-Sinclair
suggested levelling the ground to create space for a productive garden and using the spoil to gently level the field below. Mrs Bridgeman has put in another round pond just outside the entrance to the vegetable garden and planted cherries around it, too. This area below the churchyard is now home to cutting flowers and peonies and is a favourite place to sit. Closer to the house, small terraces and gardens have been created, with tables and benches to sit and read or have coffee. Each has its own personality and moment in the sun. To screen these from the churchyard is a ‘wall’ of pleached ornamental pear, Pyrus calleryana ‘Chanticleer’, which comes into flower early in spring with bright-orange leaves late into autumn. Everything looks so happily settled here that it takes some effort to imagine the garden was ever any different. Mid- to late-summer stars Patrinia scabiosifolia (eastern valerian) Light and airy stems that reach 3ft. Performs much the same function in the border as the more familiar purple Verbena bonariensis, but with yellowygreen flower sprays Rosa x odorata ‘Mutabilis’ Deservedly popular, as it is a perpetual flowering rose that needs little pruning, producing elegant flowers that turn from orangey or buff-yellow to pink and finally pale crimson. Verbena macdougalii ‘Lavender Spires’ Delicate spikes of purplish flowers. Reaches more than 5ft and likes light, well-drained soil. Plant it with grasses, but keep it sheltered from strong wind Calycanthus ‘Aphrodite’ A multi-stemmed shrub with big glossy leaves that turn yellow in autumn and eye-catching flower cups of a deep blood red. Needs space to grow, as it can reach well over 8ft Salvia greggii ‘Royal Bumble’ With startling scarlet flowers on handsome dark stems, this is a strong and shrubby bush with excellent foliage that grows to 2ft in height Persicaria amplexicaulis ‘Blackfield’ A handsome bistort that reaches about 3ft, with black-tipped buds and deep purple-red flowers that keep going into early autumn July 17, 2024 | Country Life | 97
In the garden Alan Titchmarsh Showing the way A Goodwill and good gardening: a delightful range of stands and displays give the annual Royal Windsor Flower Show a rural feel every three years). The reasons behind these decisions are clearly financial. But these are the giants of the show world and I have a personal affection for those flower shows that are of more modest proportions and, as a result, more in touch with their visiting gardeners. Malvern in Worcestershire is a favourite, not only because of its delightful location beneath the daisy chain of the Malvern Hills, but also because it has an abundance of heart and soul. It might not be regarded as an essential part of the social scene, but that means it is peopled by those who want to grow things, rather than simply be seen sipping Champagne. The atmosphere of a flower show is influenced every bit as much by its clientele Horticultural aide-mémoire Sort out raspberries Now that the summer raspberries have fruited, this is the time to remove the current year’s canes and train their successors. The brown and woody ones should be cut out right to the base and set aside. The new green ones, which will bear next year’s crop, should be carefully selected so that they are tied in to the wire at regular intervals. Any surplus, spindly or sickly looking canes are removed with the brown ones. Once that is done, chop out any canes that are inclined to spread away from the neat line or the whole thing will get out of hand. SCD 98 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 as by its setting. Malvern is also a great place to buy plants— there are avenues with terraces of small enclosures to left and right, many of them with tiny gardens displaying the plants that can be bought from the back of the stall. I defy any gardener not to come away with bagfuls of treasures and spend the next few days shoe-horning them into their beds and borders. Sandringham and the Savill Garden go head to head Together with Malvern, the RHS Harlow Carr Flower Show in North Yorkshire was a particular favourite, for the same reasons. Alas, it is no more, but the show that now holds a special place in my heart—and not only because I am its honorary president— is that held in Berkshire in mid June by the Royal Windsor Rose and Horticultural Society. Here is a show that radiates goodwill and good gardening. The part of Windsor Great Park in which it is held—around the cricket pitch of the York Club— has the sort of rural feel that we remember from flower shows of the first half of the 20th century. You will find marquees stuffed full of roses and flower arrangements, sherry trifles and Victoria sponge cakes, vegetables and fruits, together with more than 1,000 entries from children who have made miniature gardens, animals from aubergines and potatoes and giant butterflies from brightly coloured scrap paper. There are flower-filled farm carts in competition—this is when the likes of Sandringham in Norfolk and the Savill Garden at Windsor go head to head in showing off their expertise. There are tiny show gardens—barely 6ft by 12ft—that ask young designers to accept the challenge of making a garden to reflect the ‘Harmony’ in Nature that is so important to The King. Local primary schools compete to grow the heaviest crop of potatoes in a pot and to create a garden in a wheelbarrow. And the verdant turf is dotted with nurserymen selling everything from herbs and herbaceous perennials to copper collars to repel slugs and well-made garden tools. The refreshments, courtesy of nearby Coworth Park, are in the form of a swish picnic. As the saying goes: ‘What’s not to like?’ The Royal Windsor Flower Show lasts for only one day in June, but the 5,000 folk who come to enjoy it have room to breathe in a setting that is as Arcadian as it gets. No wonder The Duchess of Edinburgh is so devoted to it and attends every year, leaving smiles in her wake. Other flower shows could learn much from this small, but beautifully formed treasure. Chatsworth: The gardens and the people who made them by Alan Titchmarsh is out now (Ebury) Next week Summer bulbs Jason Ingram; Alamy NOTHER openin’, another flower show. We seem to have so many of them nowadays, but that should really be a cause for celebration rather than irritation. The king of them all is Chelsea, although, nowadays, the density of the crowds is putting off many visitors. A reduction in daily entry numbers (or an increase in timed tickets) would suit us all—if you are listening, RHS—so that the crowds around the show gardens are not 10 deep, as a friend counted this year, by 11am. She gave up in the end and concentrated on the Great Pavilion, where, ironically, fewer exhibitors than in days of old means there is plenty of space to stand and stare. Steps really do need to be taken to encourage a greater number of nurseries and growers to make the journey to SW3 from the far reaches of the British Isles, not to say the globe. Would a financial incentive help? My 2015 Chelsea catalogue lists 103 exhibitors within the canvas confines. This year, there were only 67. Whatever the reasons (economic and climatic), it is a situation that needs to be addressed. Either that or the Pavilion needs to be reduced in size so that it does not appear to be quite so thinly populated. The other regulars in the show calendar are Hampton Court, west London (soon to be held at its regal venue biannually), and Tatton Park, Cheshire (ditto, but

Kitchen garden cook Florence fennel by Melanie Johnson More ways with Fennel Pan-fried scallops with fennel and apple Thinly slice a fennel bulb and a crisp apple. Gently sauté in butter and olive oil until softened and add seasoning. Remove to a serving plate and cover with foil to keep warm. Add more butter and oil to the pan and, over a medium-to-high heat, add fresh scallops, patted dry and seasoned. Fry for a couple of minutes until gently browned, turn and repeat. Place the scallops onto the serving plate with the fennel and again cover with the foil. Add a couple of dollops of mayonnaise to the same frying pan, together with the juice of a lemon. Heat through for about a minute, then pour the sauce over the scallops and serve. Method 7YLOLH[`V\YV]LU[Vá* MHUá*á-NHZTHYR ,P[OLYHZR`V\YI\[JOLY[V ZWH[JOJVJR[OLJOPJRLUMVY you or do it yourself: use RP[JOLUZJPZZVYZ[VJ\[[OL IHJRIVULKV^ULP[OLYZPKL HUK[OLUYLTV]LP[+PZJHYK [OLIHJRIVULHUK[\YU[OL JOPJRLUZV[OH[P[PZIYLHZ[ZPKL \WHUKNLU[S`MSH[[LU^P[O[OL WHSTZVM`V\YOHUKZ:LHZVU [OLJOPJRLUHSSV]LY^P[OZHS[ HUKWLWWLY 4P_[VNL[OLY[OLNHYSPJI\[[LY OLYIZHUKQ\PJLMYVTVULVM[OL SLTVUZHUK[OLUY\IP[HSSV]LY [OLJOPJRLUPUJS\KPUN\UKLY [OLZRPU ;VHSHYNLYVHZ[PUN[YH`HKK [OL[OPUS`ZSPJLKMLUULSHUK[OL YLTHPUPUNSLTVU^LKNLZ +YPaaSLV]LYVSP]LVPSWV\YPU [OLNSHZZVM^OP[L^PULHUK JOPJRLUZ[VJR7SHJL[OL JOPJRLUVU[VWHUKYVHZ[MVY HIV\[¶TPU\[LZIHZ[PUN OHSM^H`[OYV\NO;OLJOPJRLU ZOV\SKILNVSKLU^P[O JYPZWLKZRPU 9LTV]L[OLYVHZ[PUN[YH`MYVT [OLV]LUHUKHYYHUNL[OL JOPJRLUMLUULSHUKSLTVUVU HZLY]PUNWSH[LHUKJV]LY^P[O MVPS7V\Y[OLJYLHTPU[V[OLWHU Q\PJLZTP_PUNP[[OYV\NOHUK ZLY]LPUHQ\NHZP[PZVYWHZZ [OYV\NOHZPL]LILMVYLZLY]PUN :LY]LOV[KV[[LK^P[OJOP]L MSV^LYZHUKLUQV`^P[OMH[ JOPWZ[VOLSWTVW\W[OL KLSPJPV\ZZH\JL Ingredients ^OVSLJOPJRLU ZWH[JOJVJRLK JSV]LZNHYSPJ NYH[LK NI\[[LY ZWYPNZSLTVU[O`TL ZWYPNYVZLTHY` SLTVUZQ\PJL of one and three J\[PU[V^LKNLZ MLUULSI\SIZ[V\NO V\[LYSLH]LZYLTV]LK [OPUS`ZSPJLK TSVSP]LVPS NSHZZKY`^OP[L ^PUL TSJOPJRLUZ[VJR TSKV\ISLJYLHT *OP]LMSV^LYZ to serve (optional) +LSPJPV\ZZLY]LK^P[O MH[JOPWZ Fennel and potato dauphinoise Thinly slice three fennel bulbs and roughly the same amount of peeled potatoes. Layer them in a buttered oven dish. Mix together 500ml double cream, 100g grated Gruyère cheese, two cloves of garlic, season well and pour it over the fennel and potatoes. Sprinkle a further 100g cheese on top, cover with foil and bake at 180˚C/350˚F for 45 minutes. Remove the foil and bake for a further 25 minutes, by which time you should be able to easily pierce the vegetables with a cutlery knife. Serve hot as a side dish. With its crunchy bulb and feathery fronds, fennel is a summer highlight in both the kitchen and the garden 100 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 Melanie Johnson Creamy fennel and lemon roasted spatchcock chicken

Arts & antiques The piece I’d never part with That’s my boy ARK WEISS had been on a road trip scouring country auctions when he first saw the portrait of a young Flemish boy 46 years ago and stopped in his tracks. Nothing was known of the sitter and little about the painter: ‘There are no clues as to the clearly wealthy and possibly noble family into which [the boy] was born and, even today, I am not entirely sure who painted it,’ Mr Weiss notes. At the time, the portrait was attributed to Frans Pourbus, although it might instead be a late work by Gillis Claeissens (1526– 1605), the scion of a painting dynasty from Bruges, in what is now Belgium. Nonetheless, Mr Weiss couldn’t resist it and bought it. ‘I cannot explain the particular attraction of this portrait, except that, for me, it is a remarkably charming and beautiful image and one that has a certain mystery.’ M I cannot explain the attraction, except that it is a remarkably charming and beautiful image It was one of his first independent purchases —he had only started working as an art dealer six years earlier, joining his parents, Ivor and Joan, who had a gallery in Colchester, Essex—and perhaps a harbinger of fate. At the time, Mr Weiss explains, ‘we were dealing for the most part in late-18th- and 19th-century paintings, primarily Victorian, so this was one of my very first forays into early portraiture and very much a precursor of my future career’. It was also an excellent investment. In March 1977, a few months after securing the painting at auction, Mr Weiss and his parents sold it to a theatrical photographer, the late Angus McBean, ‘who lived in a mènage à trois in Flemings Hall, a beautiful moated Elizabethan manor house in Suffolk. Obviously, I was delighted that, as a very young man at the outset of my career, a portrait that I had 102 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 An air of mystery: an exquisite portrait of an unnamed young boy, believed to be a late painting by Gillis Claeissens bought independently of my parents was successfully sold for very decent profit. If memory serves me well, I think it cost £1,800 and we sold it for £2,900. It certainly helped strengthen my own personal interest in early portraiture’. Indeed, Mr Weiss would soon specialise in 16th- and 17th-century Northern European portraits, opening his own gallery in London in 1986, but many decades would pass before he laid eyes again on the painting that had started it all. In the spring of 2003, he and his wife were invited by the new owner of Flemings Hall —his friend, client and eminent fashion designer Jasper Conran—to stay for a weekend. At dinner, they met two other guests: the two former partners of McBean, who had died in 1990. ‘I asked them whatever happened to the portrait and they said they still owned it,’ says Mr Weiss. On the spur of the moment, he enquired whether he could buy it back—and they agreed. That same weekend, Mr Conran also suggested to Mr and Mrs Weiss that they could spend some time in the summer at Pigouille, his house in France, which he was selling. They liked it so much that they ended up buying it themselves. ‘It seemed perfect destiny that, through Jasper, this ever-so-beautiful portrait that I first fell in love with nearly 50 years ago should now hang in pride of place over the fireplace of our beloved Pigouille.’ A MATCH MADE IN HEAVEN F there was anyone that knew about pairing new lighting to period settings, this was the late antiques dealer and lighting maker Charles Edwards (www.charles edwards.com). As the final touch for the 1830s cow barn he converted into a summer dining room at his Northamptonshire home, he placed one of his Mews gatepost lanterns—a traditional design with ball finial, hooded roof and ball feet inspired by London’s mews houses—on a dualfaceted mathematical sundial carved in stone and dating from 1731. The sundial would have originally been mounted on a wall or pedestal. Similarly, the lantern is designed to sit upon a gatepost and can be made to fit any pillar mount—whether contemporary or antique. I Roger Hooper; Alamy; Royal Collection Trust/© His Majesty King Charles III, 2024/Bridgeman Images A chance encounter with a 17th-century Flemish painting of a child at a country auction 46 years ago kindled art dealer Mark Weiss’s passion for early Northern European portraiture, as he tells Carla Passino
WEIRD & WONDERFUL To paint the lily WHEN Emilie Charlotte Langtry, newly arrived to London with her husband, Edward, received her very first Society invite, for an evening at home at Lady Sebright’s, her life was on the cusp of enormous change. As she glided into the drawing room, the beautiful Mrs Langtry—Lillie to her friends—found to her great surprise that ‘quite half the people in the room seemed bent on making [her] acquaintance,’ according to her memoirs. Among them were the celebrated John Everett Millais and a younger painter, Frank Miles. Millais, who, like Langtry, came from a Jersey family, requested ‘that he should be the first painter to reproduce on canvas what he called, the “classic features” of his countrywoman’. Miles, however, was so smitten with the glamorous newcomer that he started UTOMATA have a long history. They first appeared in antiquity—the earliest examples date from ancient Egypt. In the Middle Ages, the Jacquemarts that struck the hours were a relatively common sight and, in the 18th century, French inventor Jacques de Vaucanson made a life-size duck so realistic that, if fed corn, it generously proffered a dropping from the other end of its body. However, it’s only in the 19th century, with the advent of industrial technology, that automata really boomed. Their Golden Age was from the mid 19th century to the early 20th and at the forefront of it was, from the 1860s, a French firm, Roullet et Decamps. To the complex clockwork mechanisms that governed an automaton’s movements, the company’s craftsmen added bisque or papier-mâché heads, rich costumes and exquisite trimmings. These ‘toys’ were anything but—they were meant to take pride of place in the drawing room or, sometimes, in shop windows. A sketching her on the spot. Although he pipped the more established artist to the post, Millais had his moment later, painting probably the greatest picture of Langtry: he portrayed her modestly dressed in black, with a flower in her hand. His much acclaimed A Jersey Lily (above) was shown at the Royal Academy of Art in 1878 and cemented her position as a Society beauty. Langtry became known as the Jersey lily—a name she later shared with a potato digger commonly used on her native island. Although the Roullet et Decamps catalogue included a huge range of different automata, from Breton peasants to jesters and lute players, animals dominated: bears, monkeys, or bunnies popping out of cabbages. A more dignified rabbit—bespectacled and busy knitting (below)— is being presented by Cheffins as part of its sale of the late Eve Clarke’s collection on July 25 (www.cheffins.co.uk). One of three Roullet et Decamps automata owned by the Fulbourn, Cambridgeshire, antiques dealer, this is estimated at £400– £600. Take five: links between Fabergé and the Royal Family WHEN Maria Feodorovna, Tsarina of Russia, sent a present from Moscow’s celebrated goldsmith Carl Fabergé to her sister, Alexandra, wife of Edward VII, it sparked a lifelong passion, not only in the British Queen but also in the King, their children and their descendants. 1. The British and Russian royal families continued to exchange Fabergé presents over the decades, but the former would also go on shopping sprees to Russia— ‘I got half of Fabergé’s shop,’ the Prince of Wales noted in 1894 2. Eventually, the Russian firm opened a London boutique in 1903. Over time, the Royal Family amassed hundreds of objects, ranging from cigarette cases to pendants 3. In 1907, Fabergé’s London representative suggested to Edward VII that it could capture in stone the menagerie the King and Queen kept at Sandringham in Norfolk. Pigs and stoats, hens and rabbits, horses and dogs, turkeys and even a bear were all rendered in wax by some of the firm’s best sculptors, with the models then sent to Russia to be carved and mounted with gold, silver and precious stones. The commission included the King’s favourite dog, Caesar, although his likeness, made from chalcedony and decorated with gold, enamel and rubies, was only delivered after Edward VII’s death in 1910 4. Interest in Fabergé continued even after George V ascended to the throne—the King and Queen Mary bought three of the imperial Easter Eggs that Tsar Nicholas II had originally commissioned for his wife, Alexandra Feodorovna, such as the Basket of Flowers from 1901 (pictured) 5. Since then, the Royal Family has continued to add to its Fabergé collection, including, in 1944, an exquisite study of cornflowers and oats bought by Queen Elizabeth and Queen Mary to decorate the shelter room for the then Princess Elizabeth July 17, 2024 | Country Life | 103
Artist of the week Above: Snatching a moment of quiet: Officers’ Mess Tent, Codford. Facing page: Rex Whistler’s intensely poignant self-portrait of 1940 First to fall Rex Whistler, determined that the Second World War shouldn’t be left to young boys, worked hard to become an officer and lead troops into battle, but the naivety of early courage cost him his life on his very first day of battle, as Allan Mallinson reveals EX WHISTLER was up a scaffold with his portable radio in the saloon at Mottisfont Abbey in Hampshire when he heard the news. Dipping his brush, he wrote a message on top of the cornice by the bay window, before hurrying to Salisbury to be with his parents on their way to the cathedral: ‘I was painting this Ermine curtain when Britain declared war on the Nazi tyrants. Sunday, September 3rd, R.W.’ Whistler—Reginald John, but always ‘Rex’ —was then 34 and comfortably off. At the Slade School of Fine Art, which he’d entered in 1922, his professor, Henry Tonks, had been in no doubt of his talent: ‘Directly he is launched, he will be an amazing success.’ And he was. In 1925, the Tate Gallery wanted to revamp its gloomy basement refreshment room. Tonks championed his protégé and, over 18 months, R 104 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 Whistler would create a 55ft narrative mural, The Expedition in Pursuit of Rare Meats, depicting a party of eccentric gastronomic adventurers travelling through exotic landscapes searching for unusual delicacies to eat. Tonks declared it ‘the most amusing room in Europe’ when it reopened in November 1927. Although now considered problematic, at the time, the mural, with its ‘frivolously gallant style’, won the artist a series of private commissions and much social cachet. Whistler’s background was relatively humble. He was born in 1905 in the London suburb of Eltham, where his father was a builder and his mother a clergy daughter. They managed to send both sons to public school—Laurence, the younger, to Stowe; Rex to Haileybury. Later, at the Slade, Whistler became close friends with Stephen Tennant, youngest son of the 1st Baron Glenconner and Pamela, née Wyndham, one of the three Wyndham sisters of Sargent’s celebrated portrait. Tennant would become prominent among what the popular papers called the Bright Young Things, with whom Whistler, lean, good looking, charming, witty with both word and brush, would soon be numbered. Tennant was consumptive and, in 1924, when at the Slade, Whistler accompanied him on a curative visit to Switzerland and Italy. Tennant’s mother had taken a house in Sanremo and, in the new year, invited Edith Olivier, a 52-year-old bluestocking spinster and Wiltshire neighbour, to join them. Whistler and Olivier began an intense, platonic and enduring attachment. In 1936, he began what was perhaps his most dramatic mural, a European fantasy landscape with a background of Snowdonia
Rex Whistler (1905–44) July 17, 2024 | Country Life | 105
Artist of the week Whistler’s Edith Olivier has all the firm formality that befits the first lady mayor of Wilton for the dining room of Plas Newydd, seat of the Marquess of Anglesey on the island. For some time, Whistler had been pursuing one of Anglesey’s daughters, Caroline Paget, eight years his junior. The love—obsession—was not requited and certainly not consummated, but they holidayed abroad together. Physical relief for Whistler came only with a succession of married women, including Siegfried Sassoon’s estranged wife, Hester, and with the Hollywood star Tallulah Bankhead. After the Munich agreement in 1938, Whistler tried the Territorials, but they were not looking for officers of his age who lacked military experience. When war did come, in September 1939, he told everyone: ‘This time it can’t be left to the young boys.’ Prospects 106 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 for a commission were not promising, policy being to select men who showed officer potential during recruit training. The Guards, however, were always something of an army within an army and the Welsh Guards took him, although their colonel doubted that he’d be able to give him any active position, for Whistler was well over the usual age for a platoon commander. Nevertheless, he sent him to the regimental tailors to be measured. Whistler gave up his studio in Fitzroy Square and moved to the cathedral close in Salisbury, Wiltshire, where, the year before, at Olivier’s suggestion, he had taken a lease on the Walton Canonry for his mother and ailing father. There, he enjoyed ‘the temporary idleness of the Close: Time for reading and for painting odds and ends,’ including a commercial calendar—12 oil paintings quickly done, but with exquisite draughtsmanship. Not until April was his uniform ready. After collecting it, he returned to the flat off Regent’s Park where Paget’s sister had lent him a room for a studio, put it on and painted a selfportrait. Although marvellously debonair, it has a distinctly ‘Goodbye to All That’ look. However, it was another two months before he received orders to report to the Welsh Guards’ training battalion in Colchester, Essex. ‘I know I shall make an idiotic soldier’, he wrote to Anglesey. For a time, it seemed so. Within days, he was in trouble, having forgotten his tie when rushing, late, to get on parade. He only survived training, he said, by ‘looking at my watch every quarter of an hour and doing what the others [were] doing’. After the battalion moved to the racecourse at Sandown Park in Surrey, when France had fallen and England stood in expectation of invasion, Whistler kept painting, including two memorable portraits—the battalion’s master cook and a fellow officer, ‘Jock’ Lewes, Bren gun on knee—and even paid commissions. Things were shaping up for a long war. Early in 1941, the War Office decided that the Guards would form an armoured division and 2nd Battalion Welsh Guards, to which Whistler was now posted, was one of the units earmarked for conversion to tanks. In September, the Guards Armoured Division assembled near Salisbury Plain: 2nd Welsh Guards occupied ‘an unfinished camp with no hard standings and only indescribable mud’ at Codford, with a handful of tanks, all obsolete. Whistler’s father had by then died, his mother had gone to live with relatives and the army had requisitioned the canonry, but the Angelo Hornak/Rex Whistler Archive/The Salisbury Museum; National Army Museum /Bridgeman Images Dan Brown/Rex Whistler Archive/The Salisbury Museum ‘Jock’ Lewes, painted at Sandown Park, where the Welsh Guards were training
The meat of the matter: Whistler’s mural at Tate Britain D ESCRIBED by Clive Aslet as ‘an ironic Rococo fantasy’, The Expedition in Pursuit of Rare Meats is a panoramic mural following an imagined journey through European art and architectural styles. Led by the fictional Duke of Epicurania, the hunting party sets off from the steps of the gallery, travels as far as China and returns home laden with spoils, rare food and drink, greeted by a cheering crowd. The mural, says the Tate, includes ‘racist imagery that speaks to legacies of the transatlantic slave trade and British colonialism’. During the journey, the hunting party kidnaps a black child as his naked mother watches from a tree. The scene at the Great Wall in China is typical of chinoiserie wallpaper, as Whistler intended, but the Tate’s ethics committee considered that ‘the impact of these racist depictions [was] compounded by the fact they were designed for a decorative mural in a restaurant’. The restaurant is now closed and the basement has been renamed ‘The Rex Whistler Room’, with a video counterpoint, Viva Voce, by black artist, curator and academic Keith Piper (Athena, June 5): it’s an imagined conversation between Whistler and a fictional academic, Prof Shepherd, in which the historical context of the mural is explored. Ulysses’s Farewell to Penelope, a masterpiece long lost and now on display in Salisbury proximity of Olivier and friends (Sassoon only three miles away at Heytesbury) made winter bearable. In February, new tanks began arriving and the divisional commander decided that ‘the all-seeing eye’ that had been the Guards’ divisional sign in the First World War should, with slight modifications, become the same for Guards Armoured, too. Whistler was called on to paint different eyes on a dozen vehicles, which then paraded for the winner to be chosen by a panel of senior officers. With the threat of invasion now receding came the prospect of liberating occupied Europe. The 2nd Welsh Guards became an armoured reconnaissance regiment, equipped with Cromwell tanks—fast, with good armour and a powerful gun. It was time for Guards Armoured to quit the Plain for more intensive training. On March 1, 1943, St David’s Day, Whistler’s battalion held a farewell service in Salisbury Cathedral: 700 (predominantly) Welsh voices—an incomparable choir. The division eventually moved to Norfolk and Whistler, much liked and respected by his troop of 14 guardsmen—especially his sergeant, Lewis Sherlock—was invited with several senior officers to Sandringham. At dinner, he sat next to the 17-year-old Princess Elizabeth, writing to his mother afterwards that he found her ‘gentle from shyness but not too shy, and a delicious way of gazing—very serious and solemn—into your eyes while talking, but all breaking up into enchanting laughter if we came to anything funny’. During these years, there was leave and recreation, but also a growing concern that at his age, Whistler really ought not to be leading a troop. The new divisional commander, Maj-Gen Allan Adair, wanted him for his headquarters. Whistler told his commanding officer: ‘Well, I’m bloody well not going—Sir! I’m going to stay with my troop!’ Adair, a shrewd, much-decorated Grenadier, did not press him. In late summer, they moved to the Yorkshire Wolds, where they finally had space for realistic battle practices. ‘Tragic as the sight of ruined crops and hedgerows must have been to the local landowners and farmers, the value of the lessons provided for us was immeasurable,’ records the divisional history. July 17, 2024 | Country Life | 107
Artist of the week Whistler’s too-short life June 24, 1905 Born in Eltham, London 1919 Enters Haileybury College, Hertfordshire 1922 Begins at the Royal Academy, London, but leaves after one term and moves on to Slade School of Fine Art 1927 Completes The Expedition in Pursuit of Rare Meats at Tate Gallery 1940 Commissioned 2nd Lieutenant, Welsh Guards June 1944 Crosses to Normandy with 2nd (Armoured Reconnaissance) Battalion Welsh Guards July 18, 1944 Killed in action near Caen, during Operation Goodwood Lady Caroline Paget, for whom Whistler bore an unquenchable torch of unrequited love They stayed the winter, Whistler also working on set designs for a West End performance of An Ideal Husband, Sadler’s Wells’s ballet Le Spectre de la Rose and a film with James Mason, A Place of One’s Own—as well as the decorations and invitations for the battalion’s Christmas party for 300 local children. In April 1944, the division moved again— to Sussex, not for the D-Day landings, but ready for the breakout from Normandy. On June 19, days before Whistler’s 39th birthday, they crossed to France, but still had to wait a month before seeing action. Caen stood in the way and Rommel had seven Panzer divisions ready. Gen Montgomery decided to attack on a narrow front east of the city, with three armoured divisions advancing like a wedge, Guards Armoured left-rear: ‘Operation Goodwood.’ On July 16, 2nd Welsh 108 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 Guards learned they would be protecting the flanks. Whistler, as the battalion burial officer, would carry 20 white crosses in the metal box the blacksmith in Codford had made for his paints and brushes, fixed to his tank’s turret. His troop thought it ominous. Near the village of Giberville, Whistler’s troop had to cross a railway cutting into which telegraph wires had fallen. He ordered his other two tanks across first, but his own failed to get up the far side. Dismounting, he saw the offside sprocket was fouled by wire, so told the crew to dismount to help free it —a mistake, leaving the radio unmanned. Minutes later, machine-gun fire struck the tank. More bursts followed. Trying to remount to radio his sergeant, Sherlock, would have been suicidal, so Whistler decided to sprint the 50 yards to his tank to tell him to clear the village. He succeeded, but then made a second mistake, sprinting back rather than crouching on the blind side of Sherlock’s tank. As he jumped down, a mortar bomb fell close, blowing him 10ft into the air. Sherlock knew at once that Whistler was dead. That night, Sherlock asked leave to take a scout car to bring his troop leader back for burial. When he reached the spot, he found a shallow grave with a crude cross marked ‘an unknown officer’. All he could do was substitute Whistler’s name in red wax pencil. Whistler was later reburied in the wargraves cemetery at Banneville-la-Campagne. His death had been the mistake of inexperience, the naivety of first courage. John Gielgud wrote a eulogy in The Times: ‘O that it should have come to this.’ COUNTRY L IFE published a three-page, illustrated tribute by Edith on September 1. Some thought it over the top (she compared him to the Elizabethan Sir Philip Sidney), but it ended with the incontestable esteem of his regiment: ‘He made himself most beloved by us all, officers and men.’ Lewes, the officer he had painted at Sandown, had been killed in North Africa with the Special Air Service in 1941, but, in 2nd Battalion Welsh Guards, Whistler had been first to fall. ‘Rex Whistler: The Artist and His Patrons’ is at the Salisbury Museum, Wiltshire (www. salisburymuseum.org.uk), until September 29

Art market Huon Mallalieu Farewell to the arms A 15th-century cannon, an 18th-century flintlock belt-pistol and two swords excavated near Castillon, the site of the battle that ended Britain’s rule in south-western France, featured prominently in an Olympia Auctions sale last month Fig 1: Sword ‘in excavated condition’ from the wreck of a barge found in a Dordogne tributary. £60,000 F ORGIVE me if I’m wrong, but might Castillon be the most significant battle of English history of which you have never heard? That could be for the usual reason: it was a defeat—and not merely a defeat, but a Hundred Years’ War-ending defeat. The 300 years of Plantagenet rule had been a golden age for Bordeaux and the duchy of Guyenne, so many people were not overjoyed to be liberated by the French in 1451. Indeed, the following year, they demanded that the English return and the redoubtable, but elderly, general John Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury, landed to retake the city and much of western Gascony. The French prepared their counterattack well, crucially giving command to the brothers Jean and 110 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 Gaspard Bureau, who were masters of ordnance. They deployed some 300 up-to-the-minute cannons to besiege Castillon, on the Dordogne, east of Bordeaux. Despite his age, Talbot was rash and overconfident. Rather than await reinforcements, he attempted to raise the siege and, in the ensuing battle, he and a son were killed, with perhaps half his men dead or wounded, against about 100 French. After only a century, the battlefield domination of the longbow had given way to artillery. The consequences were wide ranging and long lasting. Castillon surrendered and Bordeaux followed three months later. English rule in France was reduced to Calais and this exacerbated Henry VI’s mental breakdown, leading to the 30 years of civil conflict known as the Wars of the Roses. The French Crown was at last able to establish actual control over its territory. In the 1970s, a quantity of swords was excavated near the battlefield, reputedly from the wreck of a barge discovered in the River Dordogne, or a tributary midway between the field and the town, now known as Castillonla-Bataille. Still on board were two casks containing 80 swords that the late historian Ewart Oakeshott concluded had been collected from the dead. Some are said to have been sold in a Parisian flea market, others appeared more grandly at Christie’s in Geneva. The Royal Armouries made and sold replicas, as have others. The two ‘in excavated condition’ that featured in Thomas Del Mar’s Olympia Auctions sale at the end of last month had previously been sold in 1978 and 1979 at Christie’s in London, going to Howard M. Curtis, whose collection was re-sold in 1984, again at Christie’s. I do not have the previous prices, but, here, the £60,000 (Fig 1) and £35,000 were both rather more than any might have made in the marché aux puces. Not having the historical resonance given the swords by their find-spot, a 15th-century cannon (Fig 2), which was probably smaller than most of those that accomplished the slaughter at Castillon, sold for much less, £11,875. It may have dated from a decade or so after that battle and was German. Unfortunately, the lessons of Castillon could Olympia Auctions Fig 2 left: German 15th-century breech-loading cannon. £11,875. Fig 3 right: Round 18th-century South Indian translucent hide shield, decorated with a spiralling trellis design. £43,750
Fig 5: Gold-mounted flintlock duck gun, probably made for the Dey of Algiers. £475,000 Fig 4: Scottish flintlock belt-pistol inscribed ‘Taken at the Battle of Colloden’. £14,375 not be fully illustrated by this sale: although it included an archery collection, they were mostly Asian examples and there were no English longbows. Several other items among the varied arms on offer particularly struck me. Weapons by the royal and imperial gunsmith Nicolas Noël Boutet (1761–1833) appear from time to time on the market, but here was an exceptional gold-mounted flintlock duck gun (Fig 5), probably made for presentation to the Dey of Algiers, and it made an equally exceptional £475,000. An 18thcentury Scottish flintlock beltpistol entirely made of steel was inscribed ‘Taken at the Battle of Colloden’ (Fig 4), but this is thought to be a hopeful—misspelt—19th-century addition (£14,375). A round 18th-century South Indian translucent hide shield (Fig 3) decorated with a spiralling trellis design made £43,750 and the ultimate accessory for a nervous picnicker, a combined percussion pistol, knife and fork (Fig 6), made in about 1880, reached £2,750. Earlier last month, an Olympia sale of Indian, Islamic and SouthEast Asian art, together with classical antiquities, was headed by a turquoise-glazed hexagonal tile decorated with the çintamani design (Fig 7), which reached £143,750, against an up-to£15,000 estimate. The çintamani pattern, a cluster of three roundels representing leopard spots flanked by wavy tiger stripes, is a Buddhist and Hindu pattern derived from the Sanskrit term for auspicious jewel. It became an Ottoman motif signifying strength and power. This large tile—the longer diametric almost 11½in—was made in Syria in the second half of the 16th century. The tiles come in two palettes, turquoise and black, or two tones Fig 6: Combined percussion pistol, knife and fork, 1880. £2,750 of blue and apple-green on a white ground. It is not known for which building it was intended, but probably it belonged to a çintamani border surrounding a larger wall composition, as at the Rüstem Pasha Mosque (1561) in Eminönü or the Apartment of the Sacred Mantle and the Library of Ahmed III at the Topkapi Palace in Istanbul. There is a panel of 11 such hexagonal tiles in the V&A Museum and, two years ago, a single similar tile from the collection of the theatre-costume designer Anthony Powell sold for £114,400 at Roseberys. The Olympia example had belonged to the artist Sir Howard Hodgkin (1932–2017), a keen collector of Damascus and Iznik pottery. Other items of his in the sale mostly made prices in the hundreds or low thousands, with one blue-and-white hexagonal tile fragment reaching £21,250. Next week Mixum-gatherum Pick of the week Fig 7: Turquoise-glazed 16th-century tile with çintamani pattern, made in Syria. £143,750 No doubt someone will tell me that they are common enough, but I don’t believe that I have ever seen anything quite like another of the lots in the Olympia antiquities sale. Dating from about the 6th century BC, this was a Corinthian pottery vase in the form of a flexed and sandalled leg. It had painted and low-relief details, and the vase mouth was at the knee. I wonder what it might have been designed to contain. In fact, it was last on the market at Sotheby’s in 1994, but, again, I do not have that price. This time, it reached £3,250. July 17, 2024 | Country Life | 111
Books Edited by Kate Green Falling in love with Florence Florence Has Won My Heart Mark Roberts (Mount Orleans Press, £25) I Counting: Humans, History and the Infinite Lives of Numbers Benjamin Wardhaugh (William Collins, £25) UMANS are the only species with the ability to count, but other species can assess the relative sizes of two quantities. Dogs can only do so when the ratio of the difference is no closer than three to two, but some birds can when it is 4:3 and rhesus monkeys are able to when the ratio is as tight as six to five. Humans are H 112 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 Seat of yearning: Seymour Kirkup tried to lure the ghost of Shelley (above) back to Florence, Italy, by reclining on the poet’s old sofa Horace Mann expected to die on the journey and brought along his own coffin obviously the result of much painstaking research, charts what 100 famous English-speaking writers thought of Florence and its influences, with the help of letters, diary entries, book extracts, poems and other sources. It is packed with fascinating snippets. When the diplomat Horace Mann, the cynosure of 18th-century Grand Tourists, first travelled to Florence, he expected to die on the journey and brought along his own coffin. Although E. M. Forster’s novel A Room with a View defined the city for many English readers, he hardly spent any time there. Yards from our own apartment, Seymour Kirkup, a 19th-century dilettante, lay on Shelley’s sofa (which he had bought at great expense) hoping to be visited by the poet’s ghost. Which brings me to another wonderful aspect: it contains details of places of which I had never heard. How did I miss the Horne Museum, for instance, or the Circolo dell’ Unione, a gentleman’s club to which, it transpires, I have reciprocal membership rights? a ghastly, blackmailing woman who was clearly based on Ross. Outraged by this, Ross attacked Ouida with a whip in via Tornabuoni and placed an unbound copy of the book in her downstairs lavatory for the use of guests. Literary visitors to the Tuscan capital have provided Mark Roberts with a rich vein of material, which he has mined brilliantly well. I am willing to bet this will win your heart, too. Jonathan Self capable of working out the larger amount even when the ratio is 10:9. It is argued that animals have some concept of small numbers, although not by counting, but through something ‘called subitising, because it happens subito, suddenly’. At only a few weeks old, a human ‘can tell apart sets of one, two, three of four items, all equally fast and equally accurately, but their performance drops sharply if the number of objects becomes larger’. Humans have, therefore, devised a multitude of ways of divining numbers beyond four and counting, recording and communicating these through bodily gestures, marks, symbols, tools and language. Yet an Amazonian tribe, Pirahã, has no number words in its vocabulary. Exercises with anthropologists have shown that tribe members still have the human ability to learn to count, but have chosen not to employ it. It is reckoned that their distant forefathers did count, so the need, or desire, simply dropped out of their particular society—even trade with outsiders has not reignited the desire. The author’s widely researched and knowledgeable exploration of counting covers a vast period globally and historically. Such a broad canvas has produced many fascinating nuggets, but also a huge, unwieldy mass of information that may swamp the layman. Pertinently, he asks: ‘Is a digital world one that contains more counting, or less? What does the future hold, as human beings outsource more and more of their everyday counting (and arithmetic) to sophisticated machines? Is it reasonable to imagine that arithmetic, and even counting itself, might eventually vanish from human practice, in the same way that, say, copperplate handwriting has done?’ Roderick Easdale Getty N September 2014, we advised the younger children’s schools that I had been posted to Florence for three months (a black lie), engaged a tutor and rented a flat in via della Condotta. Eventually, we moved there for two whole years, establishing ourselves in a sundrenched apartment overlooking the Chiesa di Santa Felicita. In four cumulative years of living in the city, we left but once (to make a day trip to Siena) because there was still so much we hadn’t seen. We possess dozens of books on everything from Florentine cooking to Florentine history. Actually, I doubt there is a larger collection of Florentinethemed books in all of Munster. Yet, and I don’t make this statement lightly, none has given me as much pleasure or taught me as much about the place as this book. The rather dry subtitle— Literary Visitors to the Tuscan Capital, 1750–1950—only hints at its subject matter. The book, This may be a serious book, but it is full of gossip. To offer a single example: in the 1870s, the novelist Ouida fell in love with the Marchese della Stufa, cavaliere servente to the married non-fiction writer Janet Ross (née Duff-Gordon), who had no intention of giving him up. Frustrated, Ouida wrote a frothy three-volume novel about
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Theatre Michael Billington Time for some merriment John Hodgkinson’s Falstaff is the star turn in a Shakespearean comedy given added zest with topicality and Cole Porter remains the peerless adapter of the Bard HE Royal Shakespeare Company’s new regime at Stratford has got off to a bouncy start. Blanche McIntyre’s production of The Merry Wives of Windsor —in rep with The School for Scandal until September—is both a delight in itself and confirmation that Shakespeare’s comedy offers a timelessly accurate portrait of English middle-class manners. Everything about Miss McIntyre’s production is ruthlessly up to date—one character wears a Harry Kane T-shirt and the Garter Inn advertises ‘Pie-Sports’ —but it is John Hodgkinson’s superb Falstaff that is the focus of the evening. Although the action revolves around Falstaff’s humiliation by the Berkshire bourgeoisie, Mr Hodgkinson disports himself with great dignity. He is nattily clad in a well-cut blue suit, prides himself on his portliness and, even after he has been ditched into the Thames and forced to disguise himself as the fat woman of Brentford, never quite loses his authority. This Falstaff may seek to prey on the wives of Windsor, but he is unassailably a knight of the realm and a lord of language. When finally mocked by a Welsh parson, Mr Hodgkinson asks with great relish: ‘Have I lived to stand as the taunt of one that makes fritters of English?’ This production reminds us that Shakespeare’s perfectly plotted comedy captures the female wiliness, male insecurity and mild xenophobia that characterised Elizabethan middle-class life and that is still with us today. You see all this reflected in the mischievous performances of Samantha Spiro and Siubhan Harrison as the titular wives, in Richard Goulding’s manic jealousy as Frank Ford and in Jason Thorpe’s French dentist 114 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 Making merry: Samantha Spiro, John Hodgkinson, Siubhan Harrison in The Merry Wives of Windsor and Ian Hughes’s Welsh parson, who are regarded as professionally necessary, but socially marginal. The real joy of this production, for all its topical references to the Euros and the cast’s rendering of Sweet Caroline, lies in its acknowledgement of the play’s linguistic vivacity. At one point, Tara Tijani’s Anne Page announces that, sooner than marry Dr Caius, she ‘had rather be set quick i’ th’earth and bowled to death with turnips’. The biggest laugh of the evening comes when Falstaff, after his immersion in the Thames, tells us: ‘You may know by my size that I have a kind of alacrity in sinking.’ This verbal richness almost justifies Karl Marx’s claim that ‘there is more life in Act One of The Merry Wives of Windsor than in the entirety of German literature’. Shakespearean comedy also motors the classic 1948 Cole Porter musical Kiss Me, Kate, currently being given a swish revival by Bartlett Sher at London’s Barbican Theatre. It is basically a backstage saga in which we see how the emotional friction of Fred Graham and Lilli Vanessi echoes the warring relationship of Petruchio and Kate in The Taming of the Shrew, whom they are playing on stage. The show’s strength lies in the ingenuity of the book by Sam and Bella Spewack and in Manuel Harlan; Johan Persson; Steve Gregson 2024. All Rights reserved T
Brush up your Shakespeare: Cole Porter’s Kiss Me, Kate is given a good-time revival by Bartlett Sher at the Barbican Theatre, London a golden seam of hit Porter songs. I am struck by Porter’s ability to lift a phrase from Shakespeare and use it as the starting point for a lyric, as in I’ve Come To Wive It Wealthily in Padua, and his gift for artfully condensing the original subplot so that the rivalry for Kate’s sister, Bianca, is summed up in a single song, Tom, Dick or Harry. The one flaw is that Adrian Dunbar, although a good actor, lacks the voice to do justice to a big number such as So In Love, but there are many compensations. Stephanie J. Block, a Broadway star making her London debut, is terrific as Lilli and gets a round of applause with her declaration I Hate Men; Georgina Onuorah brings a voice of purple richness to Always True To You in My Fashion; and Nigel Lindsay and Hammed Animashaun predictably Shakespeare’s comedy captures the female wiliness, male insecurity and mild xenophobia still with us stop the show as a pair of hoodlums who find themselves sucked into The Shrew and making their exit with Brush Up Your Shakespeare. You come out having had a thoroughly good time and admiring Porter’s ability to musicalise the Bard. Echoing Kiss Me, Kate, John Van Druten’s The Voice of the Turtle, now dashingly revived at London’s Jermyn Street Theatre, takes us back to an era when Wit and grace: Imogen Elliott and Nathan Ives-Moiba in The Voice of the Turtle popular theatre was literate, as well as funny. First staged on Broadway in 1943 and last seen in London in 1947, this is an elegant comedy that shows how love can flourish even in times of war. The simple plot shows a New York actress, Sally, agreeing to look after Bill, a sergeant on weekend leave, who has been deserted by his girlfriend. Although at heart this is no more than a boy-meets-girl story, several things give it resonance. One is its use of a theatrical background with references to everything from the Lunts to fake-Russian acting gurus. The other, reminding us that Mr Van Druten went on to write I Am A Camera, is its literary skill. In the course of their weekend idyll, Sally and Bill quote from the Bible, Milton and Shakespeare: that, as much as anything, gives us hope for their romantic future. Imogen Elliott, in one of the most assured theatrical debuts I have seen, invests Sally with a beguiling wit and charm, Nathan Ives-Moiba is all easy grace as her military beau and Philip Wilson directs this forgotten comedy, faintly reminiscent of Terence Rattigan’s While The Sun Shines, with great style In one of Rattigan’s plays, After The Dance, the characters hum a popular song called Avalon. That is the title of this year’s edition of Giffords Circus which, even in a damp summer, brings some festive cheer to our country gardens. As always, the show is written and directed by Cal McCrystal, but, for the first time in my experience, there is no Tweedy the Clown. Even if I miss his scuttling anarchy, Tyler West has an impish mischief and even makes an unexpected appearance as The Lady of the Lake. As always, there is a prodigious amount of skill on display. Ukrainian acrobats perch on each other’s heads, Italian siblings rollerskate on a revolving disc, a female pair from Argentina and the US, dubbed Damsels of the Ring, spin through the air on hoops. Set in an Arthurian context, it proves once again that popular culture can have its roots in literature and legend. ‘The Merry Wives of Windsor’ until September 7 (01789 331111); ‘Kiss Me Kate’ until September 14 (020–7870 2500); ‘The Voice of the Turtle’ until July 20 (020–7287 2875); Giffords Circus on tour until September 29 (01453 800200) July 17, 2024 | Country Life | 115
IP R C ER BS SU FF O O TI N Dive into summer with a subscription SIX ISSUES FOR £6 * Visit www.countrylifesubs.co.uk/D52W or telephone 0330 333 1120 and quote code D52W Offer closes October 7, 2024. Price is guaranteed for the first 6 months, please allow up to 6 weeks for the delivery of your first subscription issue (up to 8 weeks overseas) the subscription rate includes postage and packaging.*Savings are based on the cover price. Payment is non-refundable after the 14-day cancellation period. **Access to the digital library will end with your subscription. For full terms and conditions, visit www.magazinesdirect.com/terms. For enquiries and overseas rates please call: +44 (0) 330 333 1113. Lines are open Monday-Friday 8:30am–7pm, Saturday 10am–3pm UK Time (excluding Bank Holidays) or email: help@magazinesdirect.com. Calls to 0330 numbers will be charged at no more than a national landline call and may be included in your phone provider’s call bundle.
Crossword Bridge Andrew Robson C OUNTING, counting and counting: the three ways to improve your defence. The first ‘counting’ is counting shapes— try to guess declarer’s shape from the bidding and play to date. The second ‘counting’ is counting high-card points, especially useful if declarer has indicated his pointcount in the auction. The third ‘counting’ is counting declarer’s tricks. If declarer has enough tricks for his contract in three suits, your only hope is to cash out the fourth suit. Adopt the role of East on our first deal from rubber bridge. West leads the two of Spades vs Three Notrumps, declarer winning dummy’s King and, at trick two, leading a Club. And you? Dealer South Neither Vulnerable Dealer North Neither Vulnerable KQ5 107653 AQ5 73 J432 J94 1062 1064 has only one Heart. At trick three, you cash the Ace of Hearts—in case declarer’s singleton is the King. His majesty is felled and, provided your partner remembers to unblock the nine of Hearts, you can now cash out the suit. You next lead the two of Hearts to partner’s Knave, whereupon partner’s retained four of Hearts can be led—with you holding the Queen-eight over dummy’s ten-seven-six. One down. The other key thought process for a defender is to consider how declarer is playing the hand. After all, declarer is a logical player (or one should presume as much—with the caveat that an inexperienced declarer may have gone ‘off piste’). Our second deal comes from a Duplicate Pairs (where restricting overtricks is often as important as defeating the contract) KQJ103 KJ743 73 K 1086 AQ82 97 AJ82 N W %E S A97 K KJ843 KQ95 South West North 1 Pass 1 Pass 2 (1) Pass 3 (2) Pass 3NT End 74 Q10982 K65 A75 East 1) Five Diamonds and four Clubs—at least. 2) Invitational to game with three or four Diamonds. Note, to force to game North would have to go via the Fourth Suit Forcing (Two Spades). Count declarer’s shape. Partner has led the two of Spades, so has four (no more); that means declarer has three Spades. Declarer has advertised five Diamonds and four Clubs. Ergo—declarer has only one Heart. Next, count declarer’s tricks. Very probably declarer has the King of Diamonds and the Ace of Spades (he would hardly bid Three Notrumps without a stopper in the unbid suit). That means declarer has eight tricks between Diamonds and Spades. If you allow declarer to make even one Club trick, he has nine. You must rise with the Ace of Clubs and try to cash four Heart tricks—which you will definitely be able to do, given that declarer A86 65 Q1082 9864 952 N A W %E AJ94 S QJ1032 South 2 West Dbl(1) North A prize of £25 in book tokens will be awarded for the first correct solution opened. Solutions must reach Crossword No 4839, Country Life, 121–141 Westbourne Terrace, Paddington, London, W2 6JR, by Tuesday, July 23. UK entrants only ACROSS 1 Quiet about advert old American finds unthinkable (12) 8 Accuse one politician each (7) 9 Make certain beast of burden died on Yorkshire river (7) 11 One carelessly letting go of globule dispenser (7) 12 Ingenuous son keeping time for citizens (7) 13 Chap primarily interested in European sea eagle (5) 14 Originally living in big room, engineers confused situation (9) 16 Girl drinking sparkling wine with new succulent flavour (9) 19 Fertile spot in Samoa’s islands (5) 21 Mocking leader of children in lacy collection (7) 23 Finished a large ultimately useful garment (7) 24 Seasonal model, abominable in the Himalayas? (7) 25 One with rational view about a catalogue (7) 26 Scatter rot round city as a prelude (12) 4839 DOWN 1 Old copper dips into lewd material and maize (7) 2 Once sufficient illustration? (7) 3 Old Testament woman endowed with sagacity? Not so (9) 4 Mark Two? (5) 5 Italian dish drunkard initially took in port (7) 6 Disentangle a French composer (7) 7 Bows taken by violinists? Nonsense (12) 10 Inconsolable—music blaring out in the small hours (12) 15 See building material mostly outside one store? (9) 17 Twilight party we need at first to support tabloid (7) 18 Earnings right for a new arrival (7) 19 Herb Lear’s daughter found in centre of wood (7) 20 Like certain reptiles crossing Rhode Island in a frightening way (7) 22 Like some clothing originally named in German song (5) TAIT East 1 Pass 4 End 1) Take-out—for the minors. As West, you lead the Queen of Clubs, dummy’s King winning the trick. At trick two, declarer leads a Heart to the Queen and your Ace. Now what? It may appear attractive to switch to Diamonds—before declarer dumps a Diamond from dummy on his Ace of Clubs. Failing to cash the Diamonds (either one or two) could be a complete bottom at Pairs. But here’s the thing. If declarer had the Ace of Spades, he would have crossed to that Ace to cash the Ace of Clubs dropping a Diamond, rather than leading the Heart. This means that, assuming declarer has a modicum of nous, your partner has the Ace of Spades. Switch to a Spade. East wins the Ace of Spades and is not hard-pressed to switch to a Diamond. This secures two defensive Diamond tricks and the game is one down. SOLUTION TO 4838 ACROSS: 5, Comb; 7, Re-encounter; 9, Eyrie; 10, Nanometer; 11, Nickers; 12, Morose; 14, Darlington; 17, Riversides; 20, Atones; 22, Filings; 23, Talkative; 24, Elate; 25, Suppressive; 26, Mess. DOWN: 1, Transmogrifies; 2, In toto; 3, Cowered; 4, Eternal; 5, Crescent; 6, Market town; 8, Personal stereo; 13, Reevaluate; 15, Rod; 16, Princess; 18, Insteps; 19, Sarkier; 21, Obtuse. The winner of 4837 is E. Fletcher, Argyll July 17, 2024 | Country Life | 117




Spectator Joe Gibbs How to earn the sympathy vote OLLING day came at last and with it the promise of deliverance from election limbo. My wife and I had last exercised our democratic rights in the council elections. Our polling station is a convivial spot for catching up on local news and chatting to neighbours. As we were handed our ballot papers, my ingenuous bride asked me: ‘Darling, who do we vote for?’ I noticed the presiding officer’s eyebrows levitate through his hairline. Was he aghast at the absence of the objective ‘whom’, I wondered? Pronouns are such a consideration now and polling officials must require an eye for detail. In H. M. Bateman style, an imaginary monocle pinged from his eye. His shoulder-length locks seemed to stand on end. A clutch of poll clerks covered their mouths, gaping in round-eyed horror. I considered whether we were breaking some polling station rule with our public deliberation —and then I clicked. In this enlightened age, they were simply staggered at the quaint spectacle P of a wife seeking voting instructions from her husband. I obliged, of course, with Stepford-husband alacrity. This time, the same team of officials was on duty. Here comes Alf Garnett, they were probably thinking, keeping a sympathetic eye out for my wife. A clutch of poll clerks covered their mouths, gaping in round-eyed horror I voted tactically to preserve the Union. Our friend the Lovelorn Laird of the West went contrarywise. Following E. M. Forster’s dictum—‘If I had to choose between betraying my country and betraying my friend, I hope I should have the guts to betray my country’—he held his nose and voted ‘Nat’. This, he assured TOTTERING-BY-GENTLY By Annie Tempest We are committed to only using magazine paper which is derived from responsibly managed, JLY[PÄLKMVYLZ[Y`HUKJOSVYPULMYLLTHU\MHJ[\YL;OLWHWLYPU[OPZTHNHaPUL^HZZV\YJLKHUKWYVK\JLK MYVTZ\Z[HPUHISLTHUHNLKMVYLZ[ZJVUMVYTPUN[VZ[YPJ[LU]PYVUTLU[HSHUKZVJPVLJVUVTPJZ[HUKHYKZ (SSJVU[LU[Z-\[\YL7\ISPZOPUN3PTP[LKVYW\ISPZOLK\UKLYSPJLUJL(SSYPNO[ZYLZLY]LK No part of this magazine may be used, stored, transmitted or reproduced in any way without the prior ^YP[[LUWLYTPZZPVUVM[OLW\ISPZOLY-\[\YL7\ISPZOPUN3PTP[LKJVTWHU`U\TILYPZYLNPZ[LYLK PU,UNSHUKHUK>HSLZ9LNPZ[LYLKVɉJL!8\H`/V\ZL;OL(TI\Y`)H[O)(<((SSPUMVYTH[PVU contained in this publication is for information only and is, as far as we are aware, correct at the time VMNVPUN[VWYLZZ-\[\YLJHUUV[HJJLW[HU`YLZWVUZPIPSP[`MVYLYYVYZVYPUHJJ\YHJPLZPUZ\JOPUMVYTH[PVU You are advised to contact manufacturers and retailers directly with regard to the price of products/ 122 | Country Life | July 17, 2024 us, was wholly to support a family friend, a lady who was the local candidate. I have a private theory that he was motivated by guilt. Last Christmas, as part of the Sisyphean struggle of finding himself a mate—every time he rolls a damsel to the top of his mountain fastness she tumbles back down again—he invited a Continentalstyle drop-dead beauty to stay. The beauty was up front in her need for a husband whose salary was five times her own six figures earned in finance. Her aim was to have five children and then become an Anglican priest supported by her terrestrial master of the universe. She had lived her life in cities and was OCD about clean and tidy. Heaven knows what the laird had promised to inveigle her into his remote rural lair, but I felt he was punching above his weight on this one. The closest he has come to a salary is a modest subsidy from the beef-suckler scheme. One look at his kitchen would have told her all she needed to know about ‘waste not, want not’. And her bathroom towel wasn’t extra fluffy; it was full of dog hairs. To impress the beauty, the laird threw a Christmas Eve party. He invited the lady candidate as local colour. His signature dish, venisonbone broth, had been simmering in a cauldron on the Aga for months, awaiting just such an occasion. To add piquancy, he mined the permafrost of his deep freeze to find pigs’ trotters. These lay at woolly-mammoth depth, denoting a lengthy period since the laird had farmed pigs. As she grimaced her way through the broth that yuletide, the candidate tried to compute how many power cuts the trotters might have endured. It was no surprise that everyone’s Christmas Day was spent upended in deep conversation with the great white telephone. The beauty fled south to a metropolitan plant-based life and the candidate collected a hard-won vote in a new form of pork-barrel politics. Next week Jason Goodwin Visit Tottering-By-Gently on our website: www.countrylife.co.uk/tottering ZLY]PJLZYLMLYYLK[VPU[OPZW\ISPJH[PVU(WWZHUK^LIZP[LZTLU[PVULKPU[OPZW\ISPJH[PVUHYLUV[\UKLY V\YJVU[YVS>LHYLUV[YLZWVUZPISLMVY[OLPYJVU[LU[ZVYHU`V[OLYJOHUNLZVY\WKH[LZ[V[OLT;OPZ THNHaPULPZM\SS`PUKLWLUKLU[HUKUV[HɉSPH[LKPUHU`^H`^P[O[OLJVTWHUPLZTLU[PVULKOLYLPU If you submit material to us, you warrant that you own the material and/or have the necessary rights/ permissions to supply the material and you automatically grant Future and its licensees a licence to publish your submission in whole or in part in any/all issues and/or editions of publications, in any format W\ISPZOLK^VYSK^PKLHUKVUHZZVJPH[LK^LIZP[LZZVJPHSTLKPHJOHUULSZHUKHZZVJPH[LKWYVK\J[Z(U` material you submit is sent at your own risk and although every care is taken neither Future nor its employees, HNLU[ZZ\IJVU[YHJ[VYZVYSPJLUZLLZZOHSSILSPHISLMVYSVZZVYKHTHNL>LHZZ\TLHSS\UZVSPJP[LKTH[LYPHS PZMVYW\ISPJH[PVU\USLZZV[OLY^PZLZ[H[LKHUKYLZLY]L[OLYPNO[[VLKP[HTLUKHKHW[HSSZ\ITPZZPVUZ C6<5;9@LIFEPZHTLTILYVM[OL0UKLWLUKLU[7YLZZ:[HUKHYKZ6YNHUPZH[PVU^OPJOYLN\SH[LZ[OL <2»ZTHNHaPULHUKUL^ZWHWLYPUK\Z[Y`>LHIPKLI`[OL,KP[VYZ»*VKLVM7YHJ[PJLHUKHYLJVTTP[[LK [V\WOVSKPUN[OLOPNOLZ[Z[HUKHYKZVMQV\YUHSPZT0M`V\[OPUR[OH[^LOH]LUV[TL[[OVZLZ[HUKHYKZ HUK^HU[[VTHRLHJVTWSHPU[WSLHZLLTHPSJVTWSHPU[Z'M\[\YLUL[JVT0M^LHYL\UHISL[VYLZVS]L `V\YJVTWSHPU[VYPM`V\^V\SKSPRLTVYLPUMVYTH[PVUHIV\[07:6VY[OL,KP[VYZ»*VKLJVU[HJ[07:6 VUVY]PZP[^^^PWZVJV\R Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulation

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