16 April 2026

Who Knew?

 Who knew there's a poem for all of us who have birthdays this month?


APRIL BIRTHDAY

When your birthday brings the world under your window
And the song-thrush sings wet-throated in the dew
And aconite and primrose are unsticking the wrappers
Of the package that has come today for you
Lambs bounce out and stand astonished
Puss willow pushes among the bare branches
Sooty hawthorns shiver into emerald

And a new air
Nuzzles the sugary
Buds of the chestnut. A groundswell and a stir
Billows the silvered 
Violet silks
Of the south  - a tenderness
Lifting through all the
Gently-breasted
Counties of England

When the swallow snips the string that holds the world in
And the ring-dove claps and nearly loops the loop
You just can't count everything that follows in the tumble
Like a whole circus tumbling through a hoop

Grass in a mesh of all flowers floundering
Sizzling leaves and blossoms bombing
Nestling hissing and groggy-legged insects

And the trees
Stagger, they stronger
Brace their boles and biceps under
The load of gift. And the hills float
Light as a bubble glass
On the smoke blue evening
And rabbits are bobbing everywhere, and a thrush
Rings coolly in a far corner. A shiver of green
Strokes the darkening slope as the land
Begins her labour.

TED HUGHES (1930 - 1998)







15 April 2026

Just One Book

 A couple of times recently I've come home from a car-boot sale with nothing, (last weekend it was just a huge cauliflower), but I picked up this book from Needham Market on Easter Saturday for £1.

'Wyken, The Life of a Small Suffolk Estate' by Sir Kenneth Carlisle. Wyken is 7 acres and includes vineyard, restaurant, Country store and Farmers Market.


I wrote about Wyken Hall way back in July 2023 HERE after I'd re-read the book by his wife. After my visit there then for the Farmers Market I looked on the library website for this book but the only library copy is in The Hold (Archives  & Record Office etc ) in Ipswich and not borrowable. 

So it's taken nearly 3 years - but now I can read it -  perhaps everything turns up eventually.



14 April 2026

All Saints, Drinkstone

 All Saints Church Drinkstone has a brick tower, dating from the C17 and is one of the first towers ever built to make space for bell ringing. Of course the main part of the church is older but as usual was restored by the Victorians.


The typical Churchyard Yew Tree is Huge!



 The nave is as wide as it is long with north and south side aisles .


The font seems to have been altered over the years and is very rough


The clerestory windows are quatrefoil shape and quite unusual


The rood screen is still complete and finely carved




On the centre aisle commemorating a husband and wife and 12 children



The East window




The porch windows are stained glass too



I love it when there are infomation boards, telling more about the history of the church










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