Tim Daw
The England I believe in is a Taurean, placid, tolerant place - bucolic and green; but when tweaked capable of violence and rage.
It is the England of the countryside, especially of the soft Wiltshire Downs where I live. Gently scarred by our ancestors as they worked and worshiped the soil. Each acre tells its history and its continuity of centuries of use. As the land nurtures us we also give back and make the
landscape.
The strange tarmac and concrete of our cities seem alien but around corners suddenly a small slice of our heritage reveals itself and suddenly I am transported back to the England of our past. I knew our Island Story before I ever knew our cities and so they will always be seen through the lens of history. The new and vibrant are discordant with a sense of belonging. But the wonder of our culture is that what is good and lasting is absorbed and becomes part of it.
We are not a nation founded on race but on a common culture, respects and language. I have been in “England” on the Pacific shore, under the African sky and in the snows of the Rockies. We are not constrained by geography, creed, breeding or birth - open to all who wish to belong.
Our history means we are feared and despised by many but were a benefactor to most. Maligned both abroad and also at home, lied about so much the truth is hard to find. But good people everywhere still like us. We have been put upon and yoked by foreign rulers, but remain strong enough to make it through such times to regain its freedoms.
My England is different to Your England but Our England is a grand place; worth fighting for.
Tim Daw is a farmer, and also the blogger behind An Englishman’s Castle, he lives in Wiltshire.
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No, Tim Daw your England is certainly not different from mine. I too knew its history before I knew its Cities and towns, and I too love it. Now I am afraid for it and for its future under the uncaring hand of this present Government. Unwise and unworkable affliations with this new European Union development will scar us English.
BUT as William Gruff so encouragingly puts it, ‘we will defend what our forefathers defended so that we may hand onto our children and their children what was handed on to us.’ Lets be about our business.
John Taylor
17 Dec 07 at 8:11 am
Mr J. Taylor - your two recent posts suggest you blame the EU for many of England’s ills?
Perhaps there is some truth in that the existence of the EU truly enables the Scots and the Welsh to pursue a separatist agenda without fear of financial ruin.
But I guarantee that if Britain opted out of the EU (thanks most likely to an anti-EU media-fed hesteria) Scottish and Welsh separatism would actually occur faster than if we remained. Then the only non EU country would be England - little England … is that something we really want?
Perhaps if we acknowledged our European lineage - and the benefits of unionism (upon which the Empire and Commonwealth were founded) - maybe we’d all be a bit less emotive on the subject of Europe?
Don’t blame the EU for our ills - we are in charge of our own destiny!
Bart Hulley
23 Dec 07 at 8:19 am