The infants school have removed the last of their pandemic
measures and that means they’ve returned to activities that mix year groups. Yesterday
I did my first whole-school assembly since March 2020, though the school have
been having them for a while. The new time, ten past nine, is a bit of a challenge
as for me it means either saying Morning Prayer earlier than its customary
start time of 9am or later (earlier makes more sense). Was that set in stone? I
asked the head teacher. ‘Not in granite, but I’d say in sandstone’, she
replied.
Neither the Church calendar nor school life lent me a clear
topic to talk about. Some of the children were at the Spring Fair on Saturday
to do country dancing, but, as I told them, there are no stories about fairs in
the Bible, and while some people do dance you can’t describe those incidents as stories
(actually you could make a story out of David dancing before the Ark of the
Covenant and being despised by Michal his wife, or indeed of Salome doing her
turn, but neither would make for a very edifying narrative). Instead I thought
of Woodbury Hill in Dorset where the great Fair – one of the biggest in southern
England, in its day – probably began after a hermit came to live in the old
hillfort in the 12th century, and an annual gathering was set up by the landowner,
Tarrant Abbey, to support them, whoever they were. There was even a holy well
there whose waters were drunk by visitors to the Fair. So I made up a bit of a
story about a holy man (‘We don’t know his name, let’s call him John’) and how
the Fair might have started. I even had a couple of photos to show, one of the
Fair in full swing in about 1910, and one I took of the hilltop in 2017, now
bare apart from a farmhouse and cows, as you can see here.
It struck me that this is a bit like the stories in saints’ lives, woven out of a few things people did know and a lot of supposition about what must have happened. Possibly some of what is in the Bible isn’t too far from that either. Talking of things half-remembered and half made-up, I’d thought my grandparents had met at Woodbury Hill Fair, but checking back I discovered it was the Ilchester Flower Fair at the Lamb & Lark in Limington, which must have been a much humbler occasion. Nan remembered that Grandad and his brother Alec were there, Alec with his arm in plaster having broken it in the gate-jumping contest. Grandad asked Nan to stay to the dance and so she did. I don’t think we’ll have a gate-jumping contest at the Spring Fair next year.
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