26/10/2025
Cambridge: Arriving in a new place I always allow for a little disorientation, a little vulnerability. If it all lands too four-square and predictable-like I’m keeping the fresh at bay somehow. You have to allow yourself to be on its terms for a while, not the other way around. It’s not auditioning for you.
I’ll take myself for a loping walk, no burbling AI phone guidance, just odd little human-intuited drifts through cobbled lanes and the edges of fields till a shape starts to emerge. Over time that shape may become a pattern or even a routine, but not at first. At first I just wait for the strange relations to come out and make themselves known. There’s some uncertainty and maybe a little melancholy in this approach, but for me it’s the realest thing to do.
How do you arrive in a place? What’s your manner of approach?
I’m not looking to cling to brightly lit libraries, rather stalk the perimeters, looking for the scuffs and the eccentricities. I walk till my feet hurt and I feel a little lost and lonely. When I walk up to high table I want it to feel like a high table. Like Gawain emerging out of the forest into the warming hall of Bertilak’s merrie castle. To be fundamentally gathered in. I know plenty about being the fluttering sparrow at the door of the feasting hall.
The Voyage of St. Brendan with friends
As I wrote last week, I’m on the strolling ground of C.S. Lewis in his final almost-decade in Cambridge. I’ve been reading all sorts of extraordinary things from him – we could make a rope to the moon of his words – but I was very touched to see a copy of a letter written just a few months before his death, in the late spring of 1963, to a young girl named Adele Stoessel, of Port Washington, New York. She seems to have asked him for an autograph and to tell her something about himself. On Magdalene College notepaper he wrote back:
17 May 63
Dear Adele Stoessel
The autograph comes below the letter. I am 64 – a year older than this century – and bald – and fat – with a Boxer dog and a Siamese cat – and I talk too much and I speak too loud – and I don’t like oysters or gin or a crowd – and the smell of the sea is my favourite smell. That’s about all I can think of to tell.
Yours,
C.S. Lewis
It’s fair to say the fella would have had things on his mind so late in his life, but it moves me to feel his playfulness and frankly courtesy to reply to this little one even in his widowed and compromised state. I’ll slip in little details on Lewis now and then as he seems to be moving into this shepherds hut, or at least on the porch. Look, out there, sitting under the lamp, there he is. The pipe is lit and his Three Nuns to***co smoke is drifting irresistibly towards us. A stiffner at the Green Dragon you say? Don’t mind if I do.
Cambridge has a river loping through it, and fields and cattle showing up in the most unexpected places. I like it because sometimes it will suddenly feel like a market town again. It’s resolutely not a city. I like watching all the students zooming around on bikes – mostly young enough to be my children – and their minds filled with lively, unexpected thoughts. This extraordinary cluster of imagination that then, if you pull the camera out a little, empties out into the mystery of fen, forest, huge skies and gasping Siberian winds. There’s great imagination out there also, out in that flat, dark country...
A Cambridge Arrival