During my Autumn holiday in Cornwall in 2013 I visited St
Hilary near St Michael’s Mount. In 1932 this tiny village became the focus of
national attention after a group of Protestant activists gained access to the
church, acting, they averred, under the authority of a court order, to lever,
break, and remove a number of disputed fittings which had been introduced into
the building by its vicar, Fr Bernard Walke. It was the last great cause célèbre of the Anglo-Catholic
movement, occurring at a time when nobody apart from the hardline protestors
really cared, when it was clear that the Anglo-Catholics were not engaged in a
sulphurous conspiracy to drag freeborn Englishmen bodily into the thrall of
Rome, but were (mainly) hardworking priests trying their best to bring the
light and colour of Catholic Christianity to what were often among the most
difficult parts of the land for the Anglican Church.
Walke had arrived at St Hilary in 1913, upper-class but
erratically-educated, firmly Anglo-Catholic but socialistic and pacifistic in
his politics and married in his personal life. He and his wife Annie never had
children, though they were very fond of them and adopted a collection of
Austrian refugees as well as taking village children under their wing from time
to time, including Joan Manning-Sanders, whose artistic ability (the Walkes
were friends with lots of artists) led Bernard to encourage her to paint part
of the Life of St Endelienta on the screen in the church; as Michael Yelton
writes in Anglican Papalism, probably
no other Anglican priest at that time, Anglo-Catholic or otherwise, would have
thought of allowing a twelve-year-old to decorate his church.
All these enthusiasms led me to enrol Fr Walke as one of my
Minor Patrons, but it was only recently that I read his autobiographical Twenty Years at St Hilary, written when
he was recovering from TB in a sanatorium at Trehidy. This once well-known book
confirms everything I thought about him. Walke’s humility, endless generosity
of heart, and love of the people and land he cared for all those years shines
from every page. There is not a trace of waspishness or sarcasm, even when he
describes so prickly and difficult a character as the perpetually maddening Fr
Sandys Wason, ex-vicar of Cury, depicting him, rather than an idiot, as a
wanderer from another sort of world. He always puts the most gentle and generous
interpretation possible on the actions and character of other people, from the
tramps who call at the vicarage door and spin a yarn to gain his charity to a
City magistrate dealing with children from slum homes. He has a chapter about
‘Donkeys’ (he kept a number and rode several around the parish over the years), and quotes William
Blake.
How Fr Walke managed to fit in all his many activities and
projects, from writing Nativity plays to trying to establish a children’s home
in the village to an ambitious venture to run the Cornish mining industry on
Christian-Socialist lines (called, in strangely Tolkeinesque fashion, the
Communion of the Ring), when he seems to have spent much of his time in and
around the vicarage garden, quietly observing, I can’t imagine. My years spin
by and I have less and less idea where they have gone and how they have been
spent.
It’s a little while since I read Twenty Years now, and though I remember getting awfully weepy at
various points I’m not sure I can now find them. Perhaps there aren’t any
passages which, on their own, are especially moving: it’s more the effect of a
gradual rising tide of faith and faithfulness revealed in the pages which
overtops the vessel of the reader’s awareness every now and again. Bernard
Walke saw heaven in his parish, the clouds of human weakness and muddiness
parting surprisingly often to let the glory of God shine through, and
everything which was less than glorious he managed to offer to God for him to deal
with. The human beings he met were of the same company as the saints of old
Cornwall, or the global Church, depicted in the paintings and statues of St
Hilary’s, even if very few of his parishioners quite shared his vision of
Catholic Christianity. He knew that
the sacrament of Christ’s Body and Blood bound them all together, made possible
this fiery gentleness that saw fallen human beings as Jesus sees them, and it
didn’t matter that not many others knew it.
One day I must go to see Bernard Walke’s grave at St Erth.
For the time being, I ask for his prayers that some of the qualities of his
ministry might be present in mine, and, as a truly and not falsely humble
person who from his heavenly vantage point now knows his true qualities, he will not refuse.
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