After
a week and a half of not much more than lovely walks, a long string of rainy
days, and devoted novel writing time, I rally myself together and—with some
local help from my host—figure out the bus schedule to the nearby town of
Jedburgh (pronounced Jedbouroh).
I
select my adventure day using my somewhat-trusty weather app and know that
it’ll be overcast, chilly, but (most likely) not raining. And, with all that in
mind, I get up Wednesday morning, do my morning rituals; exercise, meditation,
coffee, get in my writing time, have my breakfast, put on my scarf and jacket, and
make it outside in plenty of time to catch the 11:53 bus.
The
village I’m in has no official bus stop. But, having gotten an idea of the
general spot people use, I wait near it and hope that when I flag the driver
down, he’ll realize what I’m up to and be kind of enough to take me along for
the ride.
He
does and is. And, like many times in my life before, I’m on a bus going in the
right direction to a place I’ve never been before.
In
no time at all, I arrive.
Jedburgh
is lovely. Although it’s a small town, traveling in from the country as I’ve
done (all six miles of it), I feel like I’ve come to the big city. Shops,
sites, people.
I’ve
come specifically to see the Abbey, but there are other places to visit as
well. I’ve got all the intentions of making a full outing of my afternoon and
getting back to the bus stop before the 4:40 bus—which, as far as I can tell from
all the combined information I’ve gotten, seems to be the last bus home for the
day.
Jedburgh
Abbey is one of the four Borders Abbeys. And, stirring myself out of
countryside lethargy, I’ve made it my new quest to visit them all. Surely, I must do more in Scotland than simply wander
up and down muddy hills.
In
the Abbey gift shop and reception, I step up to the counter to pay for my entry
ticket and the man asks me if I have any passes or membership cards. I tell him
no.
“Do
you plan to visit more sites?”
I
tell him my intention to visit the other abbeys and he proposes I buy a pass
that will include the other abbeys, Smailholm Tower, and one other place I
can’t now remember. I try to calculate if there will actually be a savings for
me if I buy all now or if I should wait and make sure that I actually can find
my way to each location or fit the visits into my indolent schedule. As I’m
thinking, the man suggests I go tour the abbey and that will give me the time I
need to decide.
“And
pay when I’m done?” I ask, suddenly, feeling trusted and kindly treated. He
nods and smiles and sends me on my way.
What
a nice plan.
Happily,
I go up the stairs and scan the placards that tell me the history of the town
and the Abbey. I look over some carved stone fragments, see the replica image
of one of the canons (who looks both downcast and dejected), and gaze upon the
carved face of a Merelles board which was a popular game at one time in the
distant past.
But
enough of that, I think, I want to see the Abbey. So, pondering what I’ve just
learned—that canons were priests rather than monks. Which means that although
they lived a cloistered life in the abbey, they, as priests, still served the
spiritual needs of the nearby community. And tucking away facts about the abbey
such as it was built in the 12th century and housed an order of
Augustinian Canons, I wander through the ruins.
It’s
a grand structure. A feat of architectural skill and beauty, mixing Romanesque
and Gothic styles (more because it took nearly 120 years to complete the
project than because an architect went rogue and mishmashed the styles). Though
I’m not really architecturally well-versed enough to differentiate the one from
the other, I can admire the rose window, the long nave, and the splendid arches
that run the length of the building.
And,
I do.
In
between the wars and disorder that afflicted the area because of the site’s
unfortunate placement at the Scottish and English border, the Abbey must have
been peaceful. Even now there’s a calm that seems to rise up from the garden grass
like evaporating dew, to drift down, smoke like, over the stone pillars to
settle like moss, like the soft green of age.
Even
so, from what I’ve only just read, the peaceful years seem as if they were few
and far between. Over the centuries, the Abbey suffered attacks, major raids,
and fires. A dying down of religious fervor brought fewer and fewer new canons
in, a decreasing interest from the locals for religion, and the conflict
between the Church of England and the Catholic Church created a growing divide
between priest and layperson, canon and king. Meanwhile, as kings and queens
battled for the land, tensions rose high between the Scots and the English. Time
marched militantly on, the Protestant Reformation gained its capital letters,
and the Abbey with its diminished order was tolerated only long enough to allow
the remaining few canons to live to the ends of their days within the
distressed walls. Then, sometime after the 1560s, the Abbey fell out of use
altogether.
I
stand and take in the majesty of the three-tiered arches, the soft colors of
stone and pillar, the empty bell tower, the open spaces. I can’t sense the
blood, the burning, the tears of the past, it’s as if the place has forgiven
all that. As if the place itself can forgive and forget. Forgive and remember. Forgive
and be as it is.
The
Abbey must have been grand in its fullest days. With the garden in abundant
bloom. With the bells hanging in the bell tower. The glass in the windows –
would it have been stained glass? What light would have streamed in to dance
across the stone floors?
But
here, after all this time, purpose has been lost. Stones crumble. Civilizations
rise and fall.
There’s
a verse somewhere in the Gospel of Mark in which Jesus tells his disciples, “Do
you see all these great buildings? Not one stone here will be left on another,
everyone will be thrown down.” And I always think of that when I see majesty
diminished to ruins. Or even sometimes when I see lofty buildings with their
proud lines and haughty heights, their stains of money and their glittering self-importance.
When I see that we’re all just wanting to leave our mark in some way, somewhere.
Do
you see all these great buildings?
I
look around again. For still, even ruins are beautiful. Not every stone here
has yet been thrown down.
I
smile and take some pictures. I smile and wonder how I’d feel if there was a
roof closing in this space, closing me up within it. Different, I’m sure. But I’ll
never know the contrast. I only have this moment, I only have these walls
around me.
I’m
not the only one here. There are other visitors and we move around each other
as if we are pegs on a Merelles board. Though who even knows the rules of the
game?
With
my thoughts to think, I’d like to sit against a pillar and gaze up through the
open bell tower, but I haven’t got the time. Today is for moving not
contemplation; in the past week and a half, haven’t I had my fill of thinking,
thinking, always thinking (as a friend of my grandmother’s once said of her
little baby. “Just look at her. Thinking, thinking, always thinking.”)? Well
maybe, but I would also like to sit here and reflect.
When
I’ve lingered and admired as long as I can, I bid the Abbey farewell and go,
with my mind made up, to pay for the multi-abbey pass.
As
I’m pulling out my wallet, I ask the friendly man if the pass doesn’t include
all four abbeys (he’d only mentioned three) and he tells me that the Kelso
Abbey has no entry fee.
“Can Smailholm Tower and … the mysterious place I’ve forgotten… be reached by bus?”
He shakes his head. “No.” With a pause for thought, ever helpful, he calculates the walking distance from where we are to the places and says, “It’d be quite a long walk.” More than fourteen miles when all was said and done.
Together
we conclude that it’d be wisest simply for me to pay as I go. We can’t figure
out how I’d save money by purchasing the pass, if at all. And, truth be told,
who knows if I’ll even ever figure out another Borders Bus’s time schedule. In a
continuing fit of kindness, the man gives me a discounted price and we part
practically the best of friends.
Leaving
the enclosure of the Abbey, I go up the road and up the hill to the Jedburgh
Castle Jail and Museum.
From
the peaceful cloister to imprisonment. There’s
an interesting topic to compare and contrast, but like contemplation this too is
better left for another day—still, it’s on my mind as I wander down dimly lit
halls and gaze into tiny, cold, friendless cells.
What
prisons we make of our worlds. What worlds we make of our prisons.
The
Castle Jail was built in the 1820s on the site of an old old castle, thus its
name.
Children
were jailed within its wall for stealing turnips, potatoes, candles, and money.
Women were jailed, several for exposing their children (which I think means
exposing them to the elements, but I’m not really quite sure). And men, for
their own varied social infractions, some which included debt.
I’ve
never understood the idea of a debtor’s prison. How can a person repay another
if they can’t work? But, I suppose, the making or having of money, the
liquifying of assets was different in the 1800s. And, if, going back in time, I
had to choose what kind of prisoner to be, a debtor wouldn’t be the worst
choice to make. Apparently here, the indebted prisoners had an easier life
inside than the other prisoners. They could chew tobacco, have food brought in,
and get extra fuel. For the other law breakers, life was pretty drear.
The
conditions which started out well enough for the Reverend John Purves to say in
1834, “There is not indeed a more comfortable place of confinement in
Scotland,” deteriorated so rapidly that the gaol was closed in 1868. Prison
reform—another topic for another day—did
its work, I suppose, in some form or the other. At least children weren’t
locked up anymore for taking turnips (which one assumes they did because they
were hungry and not just because they were trouble-making imps). That’s
something at least.
Touring
a prison, even one with parts made cheerily into museum rooms geared for
children and with a temporary exhibition on the 75 years of Jedburgh’s Pipers,
is depressing. Too blatantly is visible the dark side of humanity—and the
darkness can as easily be found in those who have broken the law as in those
who uphold it. It’s an ugly and complicated coin. Right and wrong aside, law
and lawlessness put away, surely, prison is awful. Someone did once say, “I
think that’s the point.” But we’ve made it often too long of a point. We’ve continued
on locking up the turnip stealers and the potato takers. We’ve forgotten how to
forgive (like the Jedburgh Abbey) in our preference to mete out justice,
however harsh, however impersonal. Ah, the terrible things we do to each other.
I
enter another cell block and shiver in the actual chill of the building while imprisonment
joins the growing list of conversations for other times. Eventually, I find my
way out.
Happy
enough to leave prison, and all it means, behind me, I walk the charming
streets of Jedburgh and meander on over to Mary Queen of Scot’s House.
While
it’s easy to romanticize the life of a royal, Mary Queen of Scot’s life seemed
pretty fraught. She herself spent a good portion of her time imprisoned and not
for stealing turnips.
A
bit of history. Mary became queen when only six days old at the death of her
father.
Jumping
at the chance to connect his English kingdom to the Scots’, Henry VIII wanted
to marry her off to his son Prince Edward. But the Scots said, “No way, man.”
Which made Henry mad enough to attack Scotland. Once started on that angry
path, he never could leave off with the war.
The
Scots, to protect Mary, sent their queen away to France where she grew up quite
happily betrothed instead to the heir to the French throne.
She
married him at fifteen and all seemed well for a while.
But
then her young king husband died.
At
age nineteen, no longer the Queen of France, the Queen of Scotland returned to
rule her own people in person. Wanting love and needing an heir, Mary married
again. But her relational luck was bad. Her second husband was murdered and her
third husband was suspected of being a part of the murderous plot. At some
point, though, with one of her husbands, she did have a son.
I
follow the signs and partly follow the subsequent intrigue and political jumble
that complicated Mary Queen of Scots’ life. Religion, Rights to the throne, and
Relatives did nothing to help her live blissfully and in peace.
For
reasons that I skim over and apparently don’t absorb, Mary was imprisoned in
Scotland (though not in the Jedburgh Jail) while her brother served as regent
for her son for whom she abdicated her throne—apparently under threat of death.
But the Scots had not given up on their queen. In a stunning escape, hatched by
her devotees, Mary broke out of jail and rallied her people in a wild and
heartfelt attempt to regain her place on the Scottish throne. But the battle of
Langside, a short but bitter fight against her brother the regent, ended with
Mary’s defeat.
Fleeing
to England to seek the help of her cousin Queen Elizabeth. Instead of giving
her help, Elizabeth gave Mary imprisonment. After eighteen years of confinement,
and because of her alleged involvement in an assassination attempt against
Elizabeth, the Queen signed Mary’s death warrant.
Of
course, Elizabeth’s part in the matter was no straightforward or even malicious
deal against her cousin, it was more complicated and the result of plots and
counterplots by advisers and meddlers, but, in the end, the result was the
same, no matter whose fault it really was—Mary Queen of Scots was beheaded.
With
two strokes of an axe, a plaque informs a rather horrified me.
For
a moment, I look into a case at Mary’s death mask and think what a strange
world it is, what strange and sad things people do to each other. And for what?
For
what.
Grateful
not to be royalty, I walk back into the open air. While the history was grim
and my thoughts laced through with dark intrigue, I’m surprisingly happy. It’s
nice to be out and about. It’s nice to be free. Striding along, I check my
clock. I still have some time before the last bus home, so I wander into a
teashop and order a pot of tea and a vegetarian haggis complete with neeps and
tatties. It seems a fitting Scottish thing to do.
When
the hour comes, I make my way to the bus stop, buy my ticket from the driver,
and settle into a seat. A handful of miles later, when I ring the bell advising
him that I’d like to be let off at the next stop, I go stand up near the front.
“Where
do you want me to drop you?” the driver asks.
I smile,
for it is a small village and there is no assigned stop. I imagine he’d turn
down the street I’m staying on and drop me off at the doorstep, if I asked. But
I tell him it’s fine right in front of the village hall. That’s practically at
my door as it is.
Then thinking of the future and the Kelso Abbey, I ask him,
“If I want to take this bus from here going along this way, where would I stand
to catch the bus?”
“Oh
anywhere,” he says. “Just stand where we can see you and put out your hand.
We’ll stop for you.”
What
a lovely and casual stop, I think. What a lovely and casual bus this is. I
thank the driver as I get off. He gives me a cheery farewell.
Contented,
I let myself into my rooms, turning the locks I have control over. What a
privilege that is, I think, and what a day. Abbeys, prisons, and queens, what a
history. What a lot of history for this land. Through the windows, there before
me are those Scottish hills, that fought for earth, and a moody sky, perfect
for writing and contemplation. I sit in my chair, put my chin in my hand, and
do just that.
Her death mask is intense.
ReplyDeleteThe explanatory sign said:
DeleteMary’s Death Mask
Mary’s death on the execution block, at the hand of Queen Elizabeth, was characterised by her dignity, bearing and composure. It was common to strike a mask from the severed head as soon as possible after death. The original appearance of the mask would be white and unembellished. This example, which was found by the late Dr Charles Hepburn of Glasgow, in Peterborough where Mary was first buried, has been hand painted.
Only one of my wonderings about this practice is who had the idea first?
What a charming (if that's the right word) little town! The history of royalty in Europe has always fascinated me. People think being royal means living the easy life, but from what I gather it was an intense, paranoia-inducing existence.
ReplyDeleteYou bring up fascinating topics in your post this week. Someday when (I hate the idea of "if") we see each other again, I'm sure there will be endless such topics for us to talk about.
Loving your posts!
I look forward to the day we get to visit face to face!
DeleteI so want to have a "Huff Party"!!!!!! Amanda.....have I told you how much I adore you? I so miss having you close but being able to experience you through your writing gives me so much joy!!!!
ReplyDelete