Part of my affection for Polly Jean Harvey is of course the
fact that we both come from the same place, from beautiful Dorset, and
therefore share reference points in that landscape – sometimes quite obscure
ones, like the little lookout shelter on The Knoll at West Bexington where she
took Seamus Murphy on their pre-Let
England Shake photoshoot in 2010. I’m still trying to work out which church
it was that they went to next, whose gravestones she’s standing beside in one
of the other photos.
But to many other people Dorset is just one element in an
undifferentiated West Country. There used to be postcards tourists could buy in
newsagents around the county depicting some antediluvian yokel with gigantic
wiry grey whiskers and a shapeless hat, gazing vacantly into the doubtless cowpat-spattered
distance over a jug of lethal-looking ale. ‘’ave ‘ee bin on Darzet
clifftops/Looked on lovely coves below?’, the legend ran, a jangling cacophony
of William Barnes-esque doggerel. In fact it was worse than that, because, once
you strayed over the westward border into Devon, you could find the self-same
postcard, but now reading ‘’ave ‘ee bin on Deb’un
clifftops’ as though it didn’t really matter which bit of the West Country
you were in, provided you could still get a cream tea. And we don’t talk like
that, either. Pirates come from bloody Cornwall.
That’s a vision of Dorset derived from what people outside
it think Thomas Hardy’s world was
like. The other side of Hardy, as everyone knows, is rain, mud and death, and
that edges into a dark, atavistic impression of what goes on west of the River
Stour, a kind of English version of the USA’s Deep South, hung with
superstition and blighted by social backwardness, where a Londoner walks into a
village pub and the place falls silent. In the summer of 1998 the NME sent some wretched journalist to
cover PJ’s gig at the Bridport Arts Centre, an excursion which resulted in the
following emission:
Perched on a rocky coast in deepest Dorset, sleepy Bridport
is Polly Harvey's home turf. Approaching this outpost of rural Britain on humid
summer nights, you half expect to encounter the voodoo sprites and feral
banshees who haunt her fevered lyrics.
That’s not, I think it’s fair to say, what I have ever anticipated
driving towards Bridport from the east, whether along the swooping B3157
coastal road that leads past Burton Bradstock, or the quotidian A35 where I
usually spend most of my time waiting for the next bit of dual-carriageway to
come up so I can overtake a lorry. I advise readers not to waste too much time
listening out for voodoo sprites and feral banshees in the Harveyan oeuvre, either, because there aren’t
any, nor can I think of a single one from Dorset’s folklore. And Bridport isn’t
perched on a rocky coast, it’s two miles inland in a flat river valley. Perhaps
you went to Lyme Regis by mistake?
When Polly first started out, the NME managed to describe her as Cornish when they must surely have known that her then nearest
main town, Yeovil, is actually in Somerset. I very recently saw her referred to
as Welsh: this is fair enough if you think that everywhere vaguely west of Reading
is Wales, though this error hasn’t really been forgivable since the withdrawal
of the Roman legions. But perhaps the most offensive instance of this phenomenon
comes right at the start of James Blandford’s mid-2000s biography of the singer, Siren Rising. This book is generally respectful
if a bit pointless as predictably neither she nor anyone close to her
co-operated with its production in any way (I didn’t buy it new, I promise, I
found a copy in the Oxfam shop). The chapter about Polly’s childhood is headed,
jaw-droppingly, with the line ‘This is a local place, for local people. There’s
nothing for you here’. Alert readers will recognise this (adapted) tag as
coming from the grotesque TV black comedy The
League of Gentlemen. I can only presume that Mr Blandford, and his editors
for that matter, were blind to the possible objections that might be raised to a
journalist drawing parallels between West Dorset in the 1970s, and fictional Yorkshiremen
who shag their sisters and feed unwary travellers to their misbegotten and
cannibal offspring upstairs.
The submergence of a complex, varied part of the world which
is as modern as any other part of it beneath a range of atrocious stereotypes
is, I suppose, not unexpected when geographically-ignorant metropolitan writers
reach for something to say that their readers will instantly grasp, but it
doesn’t half poke you in the wrong place when you’re at the receiving end of
it. Mind you, I was brought up in Bournemouth which you can argue isn’t really
Dorset at all so perhaps I have no right to say anything. Sling me another cow
pat, you, and take note of this dreadful warning from Dorset pub band Who’s
Afear’d (which is, of course, the county’s motto). And when I say, dreadful, I mean it.
What an interesting post this was! Dorset does hold a particular fascination for me, the reasons of which probably have a bit to do with Polly Harvey and Thomas Hardy, but I don't think I idealise it, or at least I hope I don't.
ReplyDeleteComing from the northern part of my country and studying in the capital, I have had quite a few chances to encounter a few atrocious stereotypes. I've been told, in two consecutive days that
a) I have no noticeable accent
b) You can tell from my accent where I come from.
So it makes you think about what is the meaning of all that anyway.
I've also been asked how can I live in the north when it's so gloomy. I wouldn't have noticed it myself!
Well, I always say I was *born* in Dorset, which is technically true (the maternity unit at Poole General Hospital), though as my home town, Bournemouth, wasn't in Dorset until 1974 my status as a true Dorsetman is a bit shaky. Of course PJ comes from the deep west of the county and there's no doubt about her at all.
DeleteI think often people hear what they expect to hear, in terms of accents. My sister was very surprised to be told she has a Dorset accent by a young man from London who works in a shop in Wimborne, where she and her family live. He says he's still undergoing culture shock, which is amazing when London is barely a hundred miles away.
The accents of the various southwestern counties of England are subtly different from one another, but you can forgive an outsider for not being able to tell the difference. Cornwall, the bit that pokes out at the bottom left of the British Isles, is a separate place again - after all, they spoke a different *language* until the 1600s. I remember one holiday about twenty years ago when my family went to Cornwall and we called in at a farm shop, and literally couldn't understand what the owners were saying.
My accent is hardly there at all (I think) - it only comes across in certain vowels. Polly's is clear, but quite mild. My Goth friend Archangel Janet, who's a couple of years older than me and comes from a tiny, tiny village in the north of Dorset, sounds like a milkmaid from *Tess of the d'Urbervilles*.
I do love the place: once upon a time I thought I'd never leave. I have a dream of going back one day, but that depends on what happens with me and Ms Formerly Aldgate and what she ends up doing with her life!
Glad you liked the post, by the way, I'd had it prepared for ages and was waiting for a chance to use it.
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