Название: Bang in the Middle
Автор: Robert Shore
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Историческая литература
isbn: 9780007524433
isbn:
In addition to Mum, I’ve brought along another sceptical travelling companion, the Rough Guide. Now I know that quality is more important than quantity, but you can tell something about this particular publication’s general perspective on England’s cultural highlights by the fact that it devotes 368 pages to the South, 231 pages to the North and just 108 to the whole of the Midlands. Leicestershire it dismisses as an ‘apparently haphazard mix of the industrial and rural’, which I find rather puzzling. After all, what part of the developed world isn’t a bit haphazard in appearance? And why ‘apparently’? Do the authors think there’s some secret power at work in the Leicestershire hierarchy conspiring to make it look haphazard, while the effect is actually quite deliberate? If so, we need to be told.
Fortunately Leicestershire itself betrays no such doubts about its purpose or make-up. As you drive out of Nottinghamshire along the A606, the landscape begins to roll sumptuously and a sign at the county border confidently announces that you are entering ‘The Heart of Rural England’. Seeing this puts me in mind of my friend Jerry, who grew up in nearby West Bridgford (which is on the Notts side of the border) and who’s always talked enthusiastically about the natural beauty of this part of the Midlands, which he calls ‘the Shires’, a term you rarely hear these days. A glance is enough to confirm that the local landscape has little in common with the ‘Industrial, built-up, heavily populated, busy, no countryside’ East Midland stereotype reported in that tourist-board survey.
I ask my parents about ‘the Shires’, but they laugh so hard at the mere mention of Jerry and West Bridgford, whose affluent inhabitants were apparently a source of much mirth (and envy) when they were growing up, that they forget to answer.
‘Bread-and-Lard Island, we used to call West Bridgford,’ my dad says. ‘A place of unimaginable, mythic luxury to a simple Sutton lad like me.’
‘The houses there all had net curtains and a phone in the window,’ says my mother, ever the suspicious Blidworth girl. ‘The phones weren’t actually connected, mind. It was all for show.’
Our route skirts the Vale of Belvoir, which fully merits its name (Belvoir means ‘beautiful view’), before finally leading us into Melton Mowbray, the self-styled ‘Rural Capital of Food’, home to both the classic English pork pie and Stilton cheese. The latter may take its name from a village in Cambridgeshire, eighty miles north of London, where it was marketed as a local speciality to travellers on the Great North Road, but it has never actually been produced there: Stilton is a strictly Midland phenomenon, and there’s a Certification Trade Mark to prove it, so don’t you try making your own at home and passing it off as authentic Stilton. It’s just a shame that the name doesn’t underline its geographical rootedness: Yorkshire pudding says so much about the values of the North; a rebranded Stilton could do the same for the Midlands. As for pork pie, the distinctive Melton Mowbray variety was accorded Protected Geographical Indication status by the European Union in 2008. It turns out the EU is good for something after all.
* * *
I don’t know which is more terrifying: my mother in her default nothing-impresses-me mode, or (much less common) in her making-an-effort, now-isn’t-that-fascinating? guise. After we park up in Melton, she suddenly switches to the latter (is it the sight of a startlingly large portrait of grinning, perma-tanned Tory MP Alan Duncan in the window of the Rutland and Melton Conservative Association that’s effected this change of mood?) and stops short as we round a corner into the pedestrianised market area.
‘What’s this?’ she asks, looking up and preparing to be dazzled.
‘It’s a Lloyds TSB, Mum.’
‘Well, it looks really nice, I must say.’
‘Put your specs on, Kath, for god’s sake,’ my father says, before adding darkly: ‘Remember what happened last time.’
You don’t have to pretend to be impressed by Melton Mowbray – it is impressive. In the first place, it’s handsome. There’s a lovely 1930s polychrome Art Deco cinema, the Regal, and a magnificent parish church, St Mary’s, whose scrubbed limestone tower dominates the surrounding landscape. And though the streets are largely peopled by senior citizens on the day I visit – I’ve brought two of my own along just in case more are needed to make up the numbers – this is a town with a strong pulse. Melton appears to be defying the high-street meltdown that’s affecting the rest of the country. Its markets are legion: beyond the gleefully spreading street market that dominates the town centre, there are cattle, farmers’, antique, and fur and feather markets too. And that’s just Tuesdays.
‘Ye Olde Pork Pie Shoppe’ is obviously a major attraction – signposts insistently direct you towards it – but there’s a lot more to the culinary charms of Melton than a bit of pig wrapped in crust and jelly. Why, there’s such an abundance of butchers, cheese shops and fishmongers, all seemingly thriving in the deep shadow of the huge Morrisons that lurks at the bottom of Sherrard Street, this could almost be France. Though the tempo of life is unhurried and there’s a definite accent on the more traditional aspects of life, there are signs of contemporaneity too: a speciality Polish food store suggests that immigration is making its mark, while boutiques offering beauty treatments and spray tans (much frequented by Alan Duncan, judging by his skin tone in that huge portrait) point to a more youthful town presence.
We wander out towards the edge of town, past the British Legion and Conservative Club to the Melton Carnegie Museum. This contains tidy, informative displays about various aspects of local life, not least Melton’s status as the ‘Rural Capital of Food’: heritage and food and ‘country living’ events draw over a million tourists to the area annually. But the most revealing display relates to the long history of fox hunting in the region. It turns out it’s no coincidence that those ‘Heart of Rural England’ signs that greet you at the county border bear images of foxes. The earliest known fox hunt using hounds may have taken place in Norfolk, and Wikipedia might tell you that the oldest formal hunt is probably the Bilsdale – which is in Yorkshire, naturally – but fox hunting in the form we know it today really developed in fashionable Leicestershire in the eighteenth century. Hugo Meynell, the father of the modern sport, lived locally. As master of the Quorn, he developed the idea of ‘hunting to a system’ and helped to breed a new species of hound, which could chase harder and smell more keenly, encouraging the use of thoroughbred stallions that could charge faster and jump the hedges of the newly enclosed fields more reliably. As a result of these revolutionary innovations, hunts began to gather later in the day – previously they had been obliged to go out early, when foxes would still be digesting their food, to have half a chance of actually catching one – and so started to develop much greater social allure.
Melton was the new leisure activity’s most fashionable centre. As John Otho Paget wrote in his Memories of the Shires at the beginning of the last century: ‘Melton is the fox-hunter’s Mecca, and he should make his pilgrimage there before he dies. Other parts of England have their bits of good country, СКАЧАТЬ