'Oh to be in England
now that April's there (well nearly).
And whoever wakes in England
sees some morning, unaware,
that the lowest boughs of the brushwood sheaf
round the elm tree bole are in tiny leaf;
while the chaffinch sings from the orchard bough
in England, now.
Browning's poem - maybe not exactly verbatim, I type it from memory - just jogs my mind on two fronts:
Firstly the elm has mostly gone through Dutch Elm Disease. They really were the most magnificent, stately trees weren't they? When I lived on the farm my farmer would point out elm saplings in the hedge as we walked the fields with the dogs. And a glimmer of hope for their return would rise - only to sink again in the sure and certain knowledge that in a few weeks the leaves would wither and die.
Secondly the silver birch which stands in the hedge about 150 yards from my bungalow has been threatening to burst into leaf all week. The very early morning sun catches it and as my carer draws back the blind in the sitting room I have thought I could almost detect green here and there on the branches. This morning there was absolutely no doubt at all. The silver birch is in leaf.
And the dwarf tulips are all out - and the aubretia. Trouble is that nobody has told the wind, which is still very cold. I opened the garage door ten minutes ago with a view to walking round the garden and back across the front path. I quickly closed it again - the wind is still icy.
Walkers going past to take the footpath across the fields are still in Winter anoraks and most dogs still have their jackets on. Are they really necessary? I have never had a dog I felt needed one. Certainly my Pointer, Oscar, would have been off at breakneck speed if I had attempted to try one on him. (He could be round the hedge bottom of a field and back with us before we had got half way down one sid). And Tess, my last and much-missed Border Terrier, had a good thick coat of her own and as she spent a large part of her 12 or so years with her front half down a rabbit hole I am pretty sure she never felt the need for one.
Maybe elderly dogs, small short-coated dogs and dogs who have been ill - but I do question how they have sprung up - almost as a fashion-accessory.
No more to write - feeling a bit frail at present - but I do wish you all a very happy Easter weekend and I hope to be back soon.