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Episode 2

A victim of boarding school bullying, Adam Thorpe was grateful for the soothing mysteries of the land. Read by Philip Franks.

Silbury Hill in Wiltshire - together with Stonehenge, Avebury and the remains of numerous barrows - forms part of a Neolithic landscape about which very little is known or understood.

Adam Thorpe describes his book as '"a marble cake of different soils. Memoir, data, theory, streaks of poetry, swirls of fiction" - but he is not alone in having been drawn to explore the meaning of the largest prehistoric mound in Europe. Artists and archaeologists as well as various cults and neo-pagan traditions have focussed on the blank canvas that the hill presents as a way of exploring our complicated relationship with the past and the people who lived there.

"An estimated million hours spent on construction rather than herding or cooking or stitching must have had a point, but we don't get it. Is conjecture a species of fiction? To muddy the difference further, Silbury insisted on being called 'she'. I obeyed, not out of New Age winsomeness but from the influence of country dialect, in which neuter pronouns are as alien as robot leaf blowers."

This chalkland memoir told in fragments and snapshots, takes a circular route around the hill, a monument which we can no longer climb, and celebrates the urge to stand and wonder.

Episode 2:
The author's boarding school was three miles up the road from Silbury Hill. The target of vicious bullying, he was grateful for the soothing mysteries of the landscape.

Abridged, directed and produced by Jill Waters
A Waters Company production for Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4

15 minutes

Last on

Wed 3 Jul 2019 02:45

Credits

Role Contributor
Director Jill Waters
Producer Jill Waters
Abridger Jill Waters
Author Adam Thorpe

Broadcasts

  • Tue 19 Aug 2014 09:45
  • Wed 20 Aug 2014 00:30
  • Tue 2 Jul 2019 14:45
  • Wed 3 Jul 2019 02:45

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