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Friday, 17 March 2017

St Thomas Becket Fairfield Church

 
EARLY EASTER MORNING 
Today i visited the 
Church of St Thomas Becket, Fairfield, in Kent. This is a tiny church in a beautiful but slightly strange setting: down an unsignposted country lane, in the middle of a field in Romney Marsh, surrounded by sheep, and miles from anywhere. To gain access, I had to park on the lane, find the key hanging by the back door of a nearby farmhouse, and then cross the marsh by a footpath, past grazing sheep 


At the back of the church is a poem by Joan Warburg, published in Country Life in 1966. This captures the spirit of the place perfectly (and also refers to the floods in November 1960, when the church was, like Piglet, “Completely Surrounded by Water



St Thomas Becket, Fairfield
My parish is the lonely marsh,
My service at the water’s edge;
Wailing of sea-birds, sweet and harsh,
St Thomas Becket, Fairfield
The susurration of the sedge.
Bleating of a hundred sheep,
Where pilgrims and crusaders sleep.
I was too small a church to preach
The gospel to such mighty men;
I’d little Latin and could teach
But simple shepherds; now as then
I loved the frailest and the least,
Scattering words for bird and beast.
The humble hands that built me
Of solid wood and stone
To last throughout Eternity,
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Eight hundred years are gone:
Buried beneath the Kentish sod,
And I must intercede with God.
One winter as I watched alone
The whole marsh lay in flood,
Salt waters lapped against my stone
Leaving great waves of mud.
Strange creatures swam for sanctuary,
As ark-like I withstood that sea.
So still I guard the coast and look
Beyond the sea, across the Downs.
I that was writ in Domesday book,
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Have watched tall ships and towns
Spring up as flowers, and pass away
Within the fading of a day.
No-one comes to worship, yet
The feathery fronds of water weeds
Wave ghostly hands through grey sea fret:
The sedges and the singing reeds
Seem, as they supplicate and sway,
Murmorous spirits come to pray.

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I am nothing but Thy house,
Empty stands the sacred porch;
Yet I can shelter shrew and mouse,
Light a glow-worm for Thy torch.
From a spider’s tapestry
Weave a splendour fit for Three

THANKS FOR LOOKING 
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