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Out, forward, beyond the edge of the cliffs, eternal sky sweeps down to crash into the sea at the horizon...brilliant, endless blue beyond the reach of either mind or eye. The light, the gulls and the waves move in circular repetition, the ritual of time:half the mechanical turning of a clock's hands, half the freedom of summer dance. The cliff, the vantage point, is a dividing knife-edge between that global time-scale, out there, and our own linear one. There are those who are marked down
for the sea. When they stare out like this, the rhythm of the waves
traps them into a trance, and the water nourishes the seeds of oblivion
in their minds. The
Suicide is not for many of us, though, as individuals, even if a day like today, a place such as this is so bright, so distortingly crystalline, so intensely vital that it turns the mind towards the shade.... And the sea is not for all of us: it knows its own, and with its furious assault on the base hurls me back to where I stand at the top of the cliff. Down there, where the elements meet in a maelstrom of rock, foam, spray and thunder there are no half measures: the ocean attacks, erodes, withdraws and attacks again; the land, for now, will not succumb. The balance, the tension of opposites, locked in the endless cycles, lost without each other...this is Nature. And here is the evidence of Man. Twenty yards back from the cliff edge, parallel to, but a world away from, the public footpath, is a barbed wire fence. Signs on the concrete stanchions which support it deny both entry and information. We may run from the mysterious order of the sea and Nature: we may run from the city,which also makes its erosions, claims its ground; we may run as far as we can, but always we are confronted with the signs of ourselves. We find that we go, that we have been, before ourselves everywhere. We have been here, and one of our
possible futures lives here, in the squat, solid buildings a mile away,
low against the hill. Set back from the cliffs, where Nature's forces
meet in such constant violence,
There is a triple balance here,
between the sea, the land and the World and Words of Man. There is
a balance, but, especially on this anvil of a day on which I have chosen
to take this walk, it unbalances
I have been standing on this spot, looking around, for too long, and hurry on before I become rooted by the symbology. The area of public land which the path crosses, bounded on one side by the barbed wire, on the other by the cliff edge, becomes wider. Some way on, I come across more of Man's landscape; though this is evidently disused, passive. Emulating the plateau of the clifftop,
sat upon it like a slab, is an expanse of concrete. It is pitted,
rough, old: the uniformity is broken randomly by rusted hooks and rings,
by clumps of hardy weeds and
The shaft seems to drop down the
full length of the cliff, if not even lower; a pebble dropped down it takes
several seconds to send back a sound denoting arrival and rest. My
mind jumps to mystery.
But I know that it is nothing: the
wood is charred not by flame but its antithesis, rising moisture from the
sea below. The shaft has been destroyed in a slower, more leisurely
fashion, suited to Nature's patience. The mine must have been abandoned
long ago, when whatever its contents were proved no longer precious or
useful enough to justify the working. Man on his linear path again;
progress,
Fifty yards away, there stands a chimney, perches precariously among the elements. It could almost be a tower from which first warning could be given of approaching danger from the sea. There is a certain mystery here: there is no building at the base of the chimney from which smoke would be extracted. Instead, on its seaward side, there extends from the base a brick tunnel. It is four feet high, and reaches almost to the cliff edge. This gives the edifice the appearance of a snake poised to strike, the chimney rearing into the air and the tunnel--the tail--supporting it. I walk along the side of the tunnel. Halfway down, time and vandalism have taken their toll and there is a hole--gaping wound in the reptile hide--where the bricks have been prised apart. It holds the simultaneous invitation and threat of a fractionally opened door to a darkened room; and if I crouch, it is just large enough for me to enter. It is necessary to move almost on all fours to make the length of the tunnel and, after the initial splay of light at the opening, the passage is in darkness. Interior bricks have fallen to the floor, and the way is rugged and uncomfortable, but a shaft of light falling down the chimney at the far end beckons me on. I arrive there; there is room to stand, to move a few paces at the base of the stack. There are no bones or trinkets on the floor, of course...but this still seems a magic place. Vertically above me, a brilliant
circle of blue sky; the light rains down from this and sparkles on the
walls, shining and glinting as on cut glass. But I see that the inside
of the chimney is made of the same
The walk, the crawl were worth it:
the crystals, the womb-like towering of the chimney, its ceiling of tactile
blue. How solid the sky seems when, like this, only a few square
feet of it are visible! How
The hand reaches out to touch them. A few flake away easily from the wall and cling to the fingertips, which carry them towards the tongue.... What was mined here? And what is the taste of experience? It was an arsenic mine, and the
taste is that of the flowers of that element. They have been left
unclaimed from the smelter flue where is was sublimated from the mined
pyrites. This is all that remains
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