written and posted by members of Lancashire Dead Good Poets' Society

Saturday, 13 August 2022

Walls

Ever since we scrambled down from the trees or stumbled out of our caves, humankind has constructed walls, originally to keep the outside out (weather, marauders), but also to keep the inside in (warmth, valuables, perishables, livestock). The earliest walls were surely as basic as piles of loose rock or stone, heaps of soil, stripped branches slathered with mud or covered with animal skins. As ingenuity and tools proliferated, so did the sophistication of wall-making: hewn stone, wooden frames with planking, bricks of sun-baked mud and later fired clay, mortared and cemented constructions. The remains of the most durable, dating back thousands of years, can still be seen across the world today.

We grew to be pretty good at it, ingenious too. The Great Wall of China, at over 13,000 miles long, is probably the most famous and certainly the most impressive example. Did you know that the blocks (stone at the base, brick higher up) are all held together by a paste made from sticky rice soup mixed with slaked lime? Yummy. Some sections are 2,500 years old, and wearing well.

The walls of Jericho are also famous but didn't wear so well. Built in around 8,000 BC on the west bank of the river Jordan, they were breached (as narrated in the Bible) by the Israelites who marched round outside the city for six days and whose trumpets on the seventh day caused the walls to tumble. That marked the entry of the Israelites into Canaan, their so-called 'promised land'.

Further north in what is modern day Turkiye you can still see partial remains of the walls of one version of the fabled city of Troy; and then westwards from there lies dusty Crete with some of the Minoan palace of Knossos visible on the outskirts of modern day Irakleion, and the lovely ochre-flecked walls in the port city of Chania (below) dating from Venetian times (originally 13th century).

Chania, Crete (2012, SGR)
Across western Europe, city states surrounded themselves with such stout walls, and conquerors built magnificent castles and miles of defensive walls to protect their empires from invasion, ultimately a futile task, for the combined cost of upkeep and the tenacity of invading armies with firepower and scaling machines rendered most defences only temporary stays against keeping the outside out. Also, as populations increased, so cities naturally outgrew their walls. The ramparts were often dismantled so the materials could be used for new houses and municipal buildings in the expanded conurbations.

Coming rapidly up the years, one of the most notorious walls of the 20th century was that erected in Berlin by the GDR (German Democratic Republic, aka East Germany) to keep the inside in. Its construction actually commenced on this day 13th August in 1961 because the communist-controlled part of the city wanted to stop the constant wave of East German citizens trying to escape soviet rule for the freedom of the west. It literally divided Berlin for nearly 30 years until 1989 and German reunification, after which it was dismantled and pieces were sold as souvenirs of the cold war era. 

Writing that prompted me to reflect that walls can be metaphorical as well as literal and I'm thinking walls of fear, walls of prejudice and walls of silence (and sound) in particular, some of them at least suitable candidates for undermining and dismantling wherever they may be found.

Blackpool, England (2013, SGR)
It's a satisfying undertaking, building a physical wall. With no previous experience, I built a very passable front-garden wall one hot bank-holiday while my two-year-old daughter watched the whole time from inside, standing on a chair, nose pressed against the living-room window. That wall stands to this day.

It was neither as tall nor as elaborate as the cobble wall pictured above in my adopted home. Blackpool has a number of such walls built of, or faced with, layers of cobblestones alternating sometimes with brick. A cobble (or cobblestone) is defined on the Udden-Wentworth scale as being between 2.5 and 10 inches in size (bigger than a pebble but smaller than a boulder). Many seaside towns have such walls, on account of cobblestones being plentiful at one time on beaches, beautifully sand and wave smoothed. They are rather attractive features to look at, though being somewhat irregular are no good for kicking a ball against. 

That pastime, in my childhood, required a good flat wall, such as the one depicted below, preferably with chalked-in goalposts so that the boys from built-up neighbourhoods without access to green spaces could play their games of football and dream of cup-final glory. There were no 'No ball games' signs around in those days.

Backstreet, Anytown (1958, unknown)
Here to finish is my latest poem, admittedly another work-in-progress, inspired by the recent UEFA Women's Euro 2022 tournament and a metaphorical take on tearing down walls.

Kicking On
Every time the ball strikes the wall, soot falls,
the neighbour curses, and one scuffed lad will
peel away hearing that terrace ovation rolling
down the backstreet, an affirming tide. Lasses

have their dolls and ballet classes, wouldn't get
the offside trap, the tactic of a marauding back,
the thrill of a save, the joy of a goal; so why do
they watch on intently from bedroom windows

while contemptuously pretending not to notice
how to tackle, nutmeg, feint, spin, shoot when
the lads go out to play? One day lasses, surely,
for every time a ball strikes the wall, soot falls.

Thanks for reading, S ;-)

35 comments:

Ben Templeton said...

Nice one Steve.

Jeanie Buckingham said...

Wonderful poem, Steve. ❤️

Tom Shaw said...

I nominate Trump's Mexican barricade in the most notorious category!

Stu Hodges said...

Mortar made from sticky rice, that's fascinating. A very readable blog and I liked the poem.

Sherrylee said...

I read that Graeme Souness told viewers the other day that football is a man's game and has refused to apologise. 😂

Anonymous said...

Don't forget the wall Israel has built to protect its illegal settlements on the West Bank :(

F O'Jay said...

Is that Blackpool wall actually in St Annes? It looks familiar. Well done with the poem. 👍

Jilly Boyd-Hennessey said...

Chania is one of my favourite places, esp. the harbour.💙

Billy Banter said...

The lasses had to wait until pink boots and sports bras were invented. 😂

Peter Fountain said...

I used to kick a ball against a wall when I had no one else to play football with. (I never thought to ask my sister!) Used to get told off too, about the constant thudding.

Beth Randle said...

I love cobblestone walls, always associated with seaside holidays (and B&Bs and budgies in cages). Great photos too and I enjoyed your poem.

Alistair Bradfield said...

My grandfather built and repaired drystone walls (free-standing, no mortar used). Quite a skill I believe. This was an interesting read, a bit of a continuing architectural series what with concrete, chimneys and cliff-hanging houses! Much as I enjoyed watching the Lionesses win a trophy, I'm not sure the women's game will ever rival the men's for pace and skill - just my opinion.

Roger Wakeley said...

That's an evocative picture of lads playing football, could so easily have been me, growing up in Sheffield in the 50s. Well done with the poem too.

Lizzie Fentiman said...

A clever poem. Didn't that wall finally fall when your Lionesses won the European cup?

Paul Jones said...

Another excellent read about something else we take for granted.

Steve Rowland said...

FOJ: The cobblestone wall is actually on Newton Drive on the corner opposite the No.4 pub in Blackpool.

Writer21 said...

Brilliant, a satisfying read! It is really fantastic the wall that has been breached re: women and football!

Debbie Laing said...

Well done with the poem. I loved it. I wish I'd played football.

Amber Molloy said...

Loved your wall blog and loved that poem. ❤️⚽️❤️

Fiona Mackenzie said...

The Romans built two walls across parts of the wild north of Britain :)

Caroline Asher said...

What I like about walls in summer is that they radiate heat into the evening, lovely to sit against as the sun dips down. I know next to nothing about football but I enjoyed your poem.

Tony Morrell said...

Brilliant poetry!

Kenny Garcia said...

Great post. Who hasn't kicked or thrown a ball against a wall as a kid? I wondered about the word's derivation. It seems old English 'wal' and/or Latin 'vallum' are the likely roots. I agree with others, a powerful poem.

Millie Baxter said...

I really enjoy your blogs, always a stylish and informative read. I love football wall poem too.👍

Jenny Carstairs said...

That poem, nicely conspiratorial.

Matt West said...

I was trying to read the writing on the football wall. Does it say Blackpool?

Nick Ball said...

Very good Steve. And well done to the Lionesses on winning the Euros and now qualifying for the next World Cup Finals.

Ross Madden said...

Turkiye? Is that the new official spelling? I've noticed it on holiday adverts recently. I loved the portentous poem.👏

terry quinn said...

Really enjoyed this review of walls.

Very impressed that you built your own.

Do boys wear short trousers now?

Congrats on the poem.

Mitch Carragher said...

A great read Steve. I enjoyed the evocative footy photo and your Kicking On poem in particular. Nicely done.

Boz said...

Sound poetry & well done the lasses.

Bella Jane Barclay said...

I don't know much about football but we did watch the Lionesses win the cup and I'm right with the sentiment of your poem.

Emily Blythe said...

A thoroughly good read. Well done for building a wall (that was such a sweet story) - and for helping to knock one down.

Tim Collins said...

I saw your FB posts praising Beth Mead. Did you see that Arsenal U-15 boys beat their WSL team the other day? The gulf between the men's and women's game is huge. I know you'll say that's not the point but I know what I prefer to watch.

Steve Rowland said...

Tim: I'm not advocating women competing against men, the latter are almost always going to be stronger. It's about women having the opportunity to play the game against each other to the best of their abilities with as much investment and encouragement as the men's game gets. To that end, I was pleased that Beth Mead was voted BBC Sports Personality of the Year last night. Another wall falling.