Monday, 20 October 2025

Brinsop and the literary connections

 


I found something relaxing to make last night.  I had intended to work on the Peter Rabbit x-stitch, but all the threads were in my big box upstairs, so I reached for this instead and had fun cutting out and starting to sew Mrs Cat's dress.  I am sure Rosie will love her.

The instructions say to do a chain stitch across the pocket, to make it look woven.  In the afternoon I did a 3 more blocks for the new quilt for my bed.


It requires 40 blocks, and then will make up quickly as these in rows with plain long rows in between.  I think I have enough navy Strawberry Thief for the plain rows.

Now, back to St George's church at Brinsop . . .



There was a nice piscina just inside the door, which was used for booklets about the Wordsworth Connection.


A beautifully sculpted memorial to William Dansey of Brinsop Court.


The wall paintings were indeed rather ghostly.  This is Christ on the cross.

Something else in a window aperture . . .



Amazingly, photos of the people that Kilvert wrote about . . .



I think this bottom photograph was of an illustration of Dorothy Wordsworth.


There were quite a few photographs by way of illustration of the page from Kilvert's Diary.  I just took snaps of a few.













 

St Faith, with the grid on which she was put to death.  There's a cheerful thought . . .



The Virgin Mary.


St Dorothea with her basket of flowers.




Apologies for the lack of clarity in some pages - my phone camera is not the best.  That poor boy, seeing his beloved dog hanging lifeless from the tree . . .  You think they might have shot him instead, and hastened his death.  (The dog that is, not the child!)

In my teens, once I started work, I bought a little paperback diary of Dorothy Wordsworth.  Sadly, it was in the downsizing cull before we moved here.



However, having perused THIS book, on display in the church, I came home and found the cheapest copy online and treated myself . . .

Have a good week all.




7 comments:

  1. Mrs Cat is gorgeous, I am very sure she will be treasured for years to come. xx

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  2. That was indeed a sad tale about the dog, the dove less so but dramatic nevertheless. The Wordsworth did indeed get around on their walking tours but I suppose that if you didn't take to horseback, walking was one other option.

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  3. Hello,
    Many years ago now, Friends of ours owned the Kilvert Gallery at Clyro and so these many references to Francis Kilvert brought back many happy memories of fun times spent with them. Kilvert was indeed a remarkable chronicler of life in the Welsh March and one can glean so much information about Nature, architecture and people of the times.
    The stained glass windows look particularly fine in the church. Like you, we love to try and spot the attributes of saints to identify them. St. Catherine and her wheel is a particular favourite but all rather gruesome.

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  4. I love the way they found photos to illustrate the diary page but the story of the hung dog is a bit gruesome.
    I do like it when churches have information boards inside with more about the history , helps to understand the past.

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  5. The little felted cat is so sweet and I always think your quilting is beautiful.
    What a wealth of information about that church, lovely to read, creepy paintings on the wall though!
    Alison in Devon x

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  6. Thank you for a very interesting post. I’m a Kilvert fan and really appreciated those photos relating to the text. Charmaine

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  7. I have to wonder how many more churches are there that Kilvert visited that are not listed on the Clerics trail that I completed on. I’m not even sure if the Kilverty society listed them

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