There are lots of things in life I dislike. Cucumber.
Walking barefoot on sand. Hoovering. Quite a few things I hate too, and I’m not
going to start listing those because you have homes to go, careers to chart,
and children to raise. I’ll just tell you one, the one that makes my heart
plunge lower, faster, and more lurchingly than any other. Fenland. I can’t say it without sneering. Typing it makes my
fingers itch. And of all the many unlovely towns and villages that make up the
land that is Fen, the worst of them all is Wisbech. Fucking Wisbech.
This presents us with a bit of a problem. Because Alistair
is from Wisbech. And his family still live there. I love them. I love their
house (oh my days, it is amazing and old and
beautiful and you would not believe the amount of work they’ve done to
restore it which has been totally worth it, and it is a fascinating building in
every respect) but still. It’s Wisbech.
The town itself has been dying on it’s arse for as long as I
can remember. First the small family run shops closed. The chains moved in… and
moved out. Now it’s a fairly grim market place/car park surrounded by 99p tat
shops, charity shops, beer cans and brittle, dying Busy Lizzies in hanging
baskets, which only serve to throw into sharper relief the dirt and decay. And
through the centre of the once thriving Georgian town, the thick, muddy river
oozes sluggishly, as though even normal water doesn’t want to be there.
Not a place to linger. Not a place to explore. But a while
ago, it was my father-out-laws birthday, Alistair’s brother was back from
Thailand for a week, and Alistair had offered to help clear some old trees and
bushes at the bottom of their garden. So we were Fenbound. And for some reason,
it occurred to me that I’d never visited the church in Wisbech, despite spending too much of my life
in the Fens, and maybe I ought to put that right, have a bit of a nose, see
what I might find.
There were a few small inscriptions around the outside of
the porch, some quite simple,
some worn away,
one that looked rather
professional. I smiled as I admired the neatness of it, and then tried the
door. It was locked. Of course it was bloody locked. This was Wisbech. Then,
seemingly to sum up the bleakness of this dirty old town, I glanced at the
floor, and saw this.
Erk.
Sighing inwardly, I turned and retraced my steps, back past
The Out-Laws house, and further out of Wisbech, to a little place that had been
mentioned to me as possibly being of interest, just off Leverington Road.
It’s got an interesting history. Just three acres of land
that was for a time, the Wisbech General Cemetery, and mostly used for
non-conformist burials. Laid out in a formal garden pattern, with gravel paths,
lawns and shrubs, as was the fashion of the day. Between 1848 and the start of
the 19th Century, 6,571 were buried in this place, many of them with
no memorial, and the majority in multiple graves. It hardly seems possible when
you wander through it now.
The cemetery went into decline after the new Borough
Cemetery opened, and finally officially closed in 1972. Nature reclaimed the
site, and trees sprang up, bushes became overgrown, there was almost no way of
crossing from one side to the other, the previously neatly laid out paths
obliterated. Headstones were damaged, broken; the chapel used for funerals fell
into disrepair. The dead were left to rest in peace, the living finding it
impossible to access the site.
But in 1992, the Friends of Wisbech Cemetery were formed.
And slowly, gradually, they have effected a transformation. The site is still
wild and overgrown, there are few pathways to navigate, and viewing some graves
requires nettle stamping and bramble straddling. Managing the site as both a
cemetery and an important wildlife habitat requires a huge amount of skill and
balancing.
But I liked it. I liked it very much. By sympathetically
clearing a little of the undergrowth, they’re allowing light to shine again on
the people buried here, so they are no long forgotten. But at the same time,
this little corner retains a sense of wilderness, of nature, of the variations
in seasons, but also renewal. In the midst of death, there is life. Just a
small little corner of Wisbech that has an aura of peace, tranquillity and
thoughtfulness. I felt it restored a little peace of mind. And that’s not
something I ever thought I’d say about Fenland.
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