A couple of years ago I wrote a series of article on this Blog about my time spent growing up in Corsham, Wiltshire, which proved very popular with the readers at the time. As I now have over ten time the number of readers I thought it might be a good idea to repeat the article below as a teaser, and perhaps you might take a peek at the other articles by clicking on the 'Memory Lane' link.
      'As a boy I knew the lie of the land that made up Park Farm in Corsham, for  I spent so much of my childhood playing there. Even now, though the intervening  years might have dimmed the edges of much that happened way back then, I can  still recall the pleasure that I got simply being part of the land in a  country-life sort of meaning.
      The main thing, I suppose, was that I loved the land because it was always  there, always reliable, always ready to respond in familiar ways and yet at the  same time to constantly evolve like all living things. Being born and bred in  the country is much more than simply having some sort of allegiance to the place  in which you live. It involves a oneness with the land around you that grows out  of an intimate knowledge of all that it is and all that it contains. I well  remember going home, weary but contented, from helping out at Park Farm during  the haymaking season. I've written on previous occasions about time spent at the  farm which was so ably run by Farmer Jack Vowles, so I won't digress too far on  that today.
No, today my thoughts are of the places in the great parkland that afforded  a sense of mystery and pleasure to a growing country boy. I knew the trees that  I passed by on my way to and from the farm and, as dusk gathered after a day  spent haymaking, there was a warmth of friendliness from the familiar. I recall  that as I passed by I would bid a friendly "Good-night" to the trees as if they  could understand me. After all, I was a son of the soil in many ways and those  trees had been with me all of my life, short though it was back then. 
      Walking back from the farm as the sun was setting on another day I had the  woods that bounded Lacock Road on my left whilst across to my right I could see  the lake settling down for another night, the setting sunlight reflecting on the  water, turning it into a cauldron of molten gold for a brief scantling of time.  Moments like these were magic to a child. Years later, when I lived in Africa, I  would remember the sun setting on Corsham lake as I watched the glorious sunsets  that bewitched the African skyline.
      Several times of late, thinking about the park and the lake, I have  recalled Bill Holland who was the game-keeper on the Estate when I was a boy. I  don't recall meeting him so much as avoiding him, for his reputation was that if  he caught you trespassing where you shouldn't be then not only would your father  get to know about it --- and that could have dire consequences --- but  he would give you a clipped ear as well. That threat did not entirely deter  small boys of course, and I often would wander into the woods around the lake  and go down by the boathouse to look for fish in the surrounding water. The lake  would often freeze right over in the winter in those days, for the years of my  childhood enjoyed, or endured, depending on your particular viewpoint, hard  winters. Snow and ice seemed to be with us for week after week back then, unlike  the mild winters of today. We were hardier creatures as well, not only because  we were younger, but because we grew up to expect it and dressed accordingly.  Also, as children, we did not sit glued to a screen, either TV or computer, for  hours on end in centrally-heated luxury, but went out to play in the great  outdoors as often as we could. Winter, to us, meant opportunities for  FUN!
      I remember some winters when there would be skaters on the ice of the lake,  though those memories are few and dim. I think that the thing about the lake  that I most recall is the dire warnings of my parents not to go near the water  for fear of falling in and getting pulled under and trapped by the weeds that  reached upward and lay just below the surface. Certainly, many years later when  I went out on the lake in the boat, I remember the odd shudder that went through  me as I saw the weed so close to the surface. Whilst the adventure of being on  the lake in the boat was great, there was a strong sense of fear that if there  was an accident then it would be inevitable that it would be fatal. Such was the  suggestive power of all the warnings that I'd been given in the past!
      An exciting place to play as a child was in the Dry Arch woods which lay at  the farthest extreme of the park with only a field between them and the Corsham  to Chippenham road. The woods were so-named because there was a slight bridged  area which spanned what was probably a large ditch, although I never recall any  water to speak of. As children the underside of the arch became a great place to  play, forming as it did the necessary backdrop to suit the occasion. It could be  a fort, a jail-cell, a palace, or whatever our childhood imaginations wanted it  to be, and just like so much else in our childhoods it had a touch of magic  about it.
      Not so another place in the park that I recall. Almost hidden in the hedge  of one field was an entrance to an underground passage. You went don about eight  or nine steps and you were in what appeared to be a bit of a tunnel, although it  only stretched for about eight or ten feet at most before it became a drop into  some sort of pit or possibly well shaft. I never found out what it was for, but  the tales that we made up about it being some sort of secret passage that led  either to the vaults of the church or to the cellars of Corsham Court, both  relatively close by, were tales that usually managed to scare us witless and  thereby ensure that we stayed away from the place for a few weeks until  curiosity once more took a hold of us.
      Time to go now, but I hope that you enjoyed this wander down memory lane  with me, dear reader.'
 

 
 
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