This morning Radio 3 noted the 65th anniversary of the first performance of Francis Poulenc's Gloria, in Boston, by the Boston Symphony Orchestra. The ever chirpy Tom McKinney marked the occasion by playing the first two movements of the great work (the second of which, 'Laudamus Te', was inspired, according to Poulenc, by the sight of monks playing football). Poulenc was happy with the Boston premiere – 'very good, very fine, a success' – but had found the final rehearsal even better, indeed 'sublime'. That is certainly the word for the final movement, 'Qui sedes ad dexteram Patris', surely one of the most beautiful pieces of 20th-century sacred music. Here's a link, to a performance by the same orchestra, with Kathleen Battle the soprano soloist...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=41VpR9QqHyM&list=RD41VpR9QqHyM&start_radio=1
Wednesday, 21 January 2026
Gloria
Monday, 19 January 2026
Whiskers Then and Now
One of the minor regrettable features of modern life (and there are plenty of major ones, heaven knows, but I'm not going there) is the prevalence of whiskers on men's faces: from the full-on righteous hipster beard to carefully curated (or not) permanent stubble, by way of every possible form of facial hair display – though Piccadilly Weepers seem to be out of favour. When did this inexorable spread of face fungus begin? When did it become acceptable for pillars of the establishment such as BBC director generals and UK attorney generals to appear in public with stubble all over their faces? (Never, in my book.) What are they trying to tell the world? That they can't be bothered to shave? More likely, alas, that beneath that formal suit lurks a rebel soul, a pretty hip kind of guy. Where did this madness come from, and when? There's probably material for a semiological thesis there...
With the Victorians, it seems, there's a simple answer (at least according to Richard Holmes – yes, I'm still reading The Boundless Deep, but I am reading other stuff, and I've very nearly finished). We tend to think of nearly all Victorian men as bearded, or at least extravagantly whiskered – but it was not always so: before the 1850s Tennyson, Darwin, Dickens, Charles Lyell, Edward Lear and Thomas Carlyle, to name but a few leading lights, were all clean-shaven. In 1847 there was only one bearded member of the House of Commons, and the majority of male visitors to the Great Exhibition of 1851 were not bearded. There were signs of a coming change of fashion in the early 1850s, and one of the factors driving it was that in 1850 the army had officially permitted beards and moustaches. By the mid-1850s, beards had become virtually obligatory in the fighting regiments, and the photographs that came back from the Crimean War – the first of their kind – showed our soldiers bearded to a man. It was the impact of these photographs, Holmes argues, that led the hitherto clean-shaven English to grow beards. As for Tennyson's beard, this began with an experimental prototype in 1851 (to the alarm of his long-suffering wife), then reappeared in more luxuriant form in 1853, and finally became the wondrous and fearful thing on display in Julia Margaret Cameron's literally iconic photograph, the one the poet himself described as 'the Dirty Monk'. As with so many beards, one rather wishes he hadn't...
Friday, 16 January 2026
The Corvine Ascendancy
Every morning these days, when I stare blearily out of my bedroom window – which commands a wide view of the trees all around – I see dozens of crows, lined up ominously on every branch, as if auditioning for Hitchcock's The Birds. There is no mistaking the fact that, at least around here, crows are very much in the ascendant, along with their pied brethren the magpies, their spivvy cousins the starlings, and the less obtrusive (so far) jackdaws. Like Kay Ryan, I have a soft spot for crows, but they do seem to be having a depressing effect on the local population of smaller, sweeter-voiced birds. So far this winter in the garden – despite some proper cold snaps – I have seen none of the visitors to the feeders that I've had in previous years here: no greenfinches, chaffinches or even goldfinches, no blackcaps, no siskins. The sparrows and robins are thriving as ever, the tits are at least getting a look in – and of course wood pigeons are still waddling proprietorially around the lawn – but really it does seem to be the case that the more there are of crows, the less there is of anything else. Goldfinches – our 'proud tailors' – used to be everywhere, but I see far fewer these days, and I miss them.
Talking of which, there is a lovely little goldfinch poem by the great Russian poet Osip Mandelstam –
won't look now, he's flown out of sight.
Wednesday, 14 January 2026
Life
Life, in twelve short lines, by the wonderful (and still with us) Dick Davis –
A Mystery Novel
Alone and diffident
You enter what is there:
The world that does not care
For your predicament,
For mysteries of who
You must become, or what
Your place is in the plot
To which you have no clue.
Turn pages; suffer time:
And, look, you are the thread
Unravelling from the dead;
The clue; the plot; the crime.
Tuesday, 13 January 2026
Tennyson's Oestrus
Edward FitzGerald (who's appeared on this blog before) was a staunch friend and supporter of Tennyson, but he was not initially much impressed by In Memoriam. Writing to Tennyson's brother Frederick, he declared that 'it seems to be with him now, at least to me, the Impetus, the Lyrical oestrus is gone...' Richard Holmes (yes, I'm still reading, and enjoying, The Boundless Deep) thinks this is 'a curiously biological term for Fitzgerald to use, as the oestrus (from the Latin) means the period of sexual receptivity in specifically female creatures. It is the time when they are capable of being made pregnant. For FitzGerald, Tennyson's real lyrical gift was in some profound sense feminine. It was a brilliant imaginative fertility.' Well, maybe, but surely it is more likely that FitzGerald was using the word in its non-biological sense. The root is the Greek oistros, a gadfly (a word Socrates used to describe himself), from which something that stings or goads one on, a stimulus, a strong impulse, and hence on to its biological meaning. Vivaldi was using the word (in its Italian form) to describe a creative impulse when he called his great collection of concerti L'Estro Armonico – and surely FitzGerald was thinking along those lines when he used it of Tennyson. In the entry for 'oestrus' in the OED, the second citation is 'The Impetus, the Lyrical oestrus, is gone – E. FitzGerald'. In our more relaxed times, he might have said he thought Tennyson had lost his mojo. He hadn't, of course.
Monday, 12 January 2026
Guess the Author
So, who wrote this?
'O that we might, for one brief hour,
Forget that we are bound apart,
And lie within each other's arms,
Mouth pressed on mouth, and heart on heart.
For just one hour, from all our life,
To sink unchained through passion's deep
And, cast upon the farther shore,
To lie entwined in tender sleep!'
It has a nineteenth-century sound, this lament of a yearning lover separated by social convention ('bound apart') from the object of his/her love. But it was written well into the twentieth century, by the same hand as this, modelled on the popular Victorian song, 'After the Ball' –
After the Bomb
After the Bomb had fallen,
After the last sad cry,
When the Earth was a burnt-out cinder
Drifting across the sky,
Came Lucifer, Son of the Morning,
With his fallen-angel band,
Silent and swift as a vulture
On a mountain-top to stand.
And he looked, as he stood on the mountain
With his scarlet wings unfurled,
At the charnel-house of London
And the cities of the world.
And he laughed..........
And as that mocking laughter
Across the heavens ran,
He cried 'Look!' to the fallen angels –
'This is the work of Man
Who was made in the image of God!'
Both this apocalyptic protest poem and the love lyric above were in fact written by one of the unlikeliest poets of the 20th century – Mary Wilson, Baroness Wilson of Rievaulx (born on this day in 1916), who survived 55 years of marriage to the pipe-smoking, Gannex-wearing prime minister Harold Wilson, and lived on to the ripe old age of 102, which made her the longest-lived of all PMs' spouses, and the only centenarian. The Wilsons' was not a straightforward marriage, and Mary might well have sought consolation – or at least yearned for it – without its bounds. Who could blame her?
Her Selected Poems (1970) was the fastest-selling book in Britain on its release, and ended up selling an astonishing 75,000 copies. In 1976 she was one of the three judges for the Booker Prize, flanked by Walter Allen and Francis King. The winner was Saville by David Storey.
Sunday, 11 January 2026
RIP
Sad to hear that Bob Weir, co-founder, with Jerry Garcia, of the Grateful Dead, has gone to join the great celestial jam session. There is now only one member of the original line-up alive – drummer Bill Kreutzmann, who will be 80 this year. Among other things, Weir co-wrote with lyricist Robert Hunter the jaunty love song 'Sugar Magnolia', which – fact fans – became the second most-played song of the Dead's live career (596 performances), behind only 'Me and My Uncle'...
