Notebook

Lesley Sharpe Lesley Sharpe

Lives and Letters

Hiding wisdom in plain sight

I don’t know when I first encountered the work of David Jones (1895 –1974), but his distinctive calligraphy has been a backdrop in my life for a long time. With Edward Johnston, and the more problematic artist and calligrapher Eric Gill, with whom he worked, Jones pioneered a new kind of calligraphic script in the early 20th century, which found its roots deep in the past…

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Lesley Sharpe Lesley Sharpe

birdsong

I recently came across this drawing which records birdsong as a kind of cardiogram. I made it some time ago on a writing course deep in Sussex woodland with Tiffany Brett, and it got me thinking about the ways in which birdsong shapes our day…

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Lesley Sharpe Lesley Sharpe

advent

Advent considers, amongst other things, how significant encounters begin - how they arrive, and arise, in the first place, and what we can, and can’t yet see, but might intuit, in those early formative moments.

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Lesley Sharpe Lesley Sharpe

fruit and seed

Following on from musings about vegetables I’ve been thinking about fruit, and seeds, and also Macbeth….

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Lesley Sharpe Lesley Sharpe

a poem AND a squash

There is something about squash that defies time. They keep extraordinarily well without any refrigeration, and, cooked slowly, yield up the sweet, full flavour of autumn as well as anything. Perhaps that’s why Padraig Regan in his poem Notes on Various Squashes says, Yes, I realise there’s more to life than perfectly describing the perfect squash, but I can’t imagine what that might be…

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Lesley Sharpe Lesley Sharpe

Musing On Muses

Now that the museums are opening again, I’ve been teaching young writers at Tate Britain, and it’s good, if somewhat strange, to be back. In the gallery we’ve been counting wildflowers, and thinking about, amongst other things, how many shades of green there are in John Everett Millais’ painting of Ophelia,

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