I’d forgotten I hadn’t finished Surfacing by Kathleen Jamie until I was looking for something else and found it on John’s side of the bed. Sometimes when I read at night, I fall asleep and when he comes up to bed, he puts whatever book I’ve left on top of the covers on his bedside table rather than walk around the bed to mine. This must have happened. So I opened the book, realized I’d read about half, including the incredible “In Quinhagak” in which Jamie joins a group of archaeologists in the remote Yup’ik community situated where the Kanektok River empties into the Bering Sea. It’s a place of light and wetlands where the thawing permafrost is reshaping the land and eroding a 500 year old settlement site. I remember reading that essay and thinking how beautifully Jamie wrote about it but also how she somehow let the place and the artefacts and the Yup’ik people and their culture take their place in her words, her descriptions. She wasn’t pushing herself to the fore, wasn’t asking the reader (me) to recognize her sensitivity or courage or intelligence. It’s a quality, inherent in her work, I’ve noted before: her essay collections Findings and Sightlines are treasures of quiet beauty. I remember her extraordinary collaboration with visual artist Brigid Collins, Frissure, in which she examined the scar left on her body after a mastectomy:
Whatever it was, it was a line, drawn on my body. A line, in poetry, opens up possibilities within the language, and brings forth voice out of silence.
What is the first thing an artist does, beginning a new work? He or she draws a line. And now I had a line – quite a line! – inscribed on my body. It looked like a landscape. Because it was changing colour as it healed, it seemed to me as if it had its own weather.
So over the past few nights, it’s been my unexpected pleasure to read what remained of Surfacing. And to recognize again, because I certainly felt this when I read Jamie’s earlier essays, how skillful a writer she is, how elegant, and how so much of what she writes about and notices echo my own interests. On Westray, one of the Orkney Islands in Scotland, she (again) joins an archaeology crew as they excavate a Neolithic and Bronze Age settlement. Detail after detail, meditations on time and continuity, on what changes and doesn’t: I read farther into the night than I meant to just to follow her mind and her account of the work of the crew working against time (again), weather, funding sources drying up. She marvels at the little Westray Wife, or Orkney Venus (you can read about this tiny carved sandstone piece here), and I marvelled too because I am fascinated (as so many are) by the early representations of women found in various sites in Europe. (Mostly recently I’ve been looking at a Gravettian engraved Venus found in Předmostí in the Czech Republic, unusual for the geometrical elements used in the carving. The Westray Wife has interesting incisions in the decorative patterning too.)
On Westray, Jamie is intrigued by the spirals carved into rock, found on pottery fragments. After she meets a young couple who’ve come to the island to raise dairy cattle and to make artisanal cheese they call Westray Wife, she stands with them on their land for a few minutes:
Amid the cows, we were looking inland at the island’s shallow valley. Their view was of a gloomy castle, and, beyond it, the small loch, then farms on the hills, sheep on the peaty summits, the climbing road, the chambered cairn, two or three small whirring turbines under the huge island sky.
I said, ‘When the Neolithic people brought their cows ashore here, the first ones, all this land would have been wild. Can you imagine? I wonder what grew here then?’
‘I love this valley,’ said Nina. ‘Its different colours. Brown in the spring, then green. The cattle. Quiet, then noisy with tractors.’
‘I see it differently through your eyes.’
‘They were like us,’ Jason insisted. ‘Caring about their animals.’
Some folk say time is a spiral, that what goes around comes around, that events remote to one another can wheel back into proximity. Leaving Nina and Jason I walked down to the shore, feeling like a child again, glad of heart to know there is still room in the world for a summer’s day and a cow called Daisy.
When I was putting aside the book the other night, the night I returned to it after an absence of perhaps 3 months, I found the card inside that had come with it when it arrived from the Netherlands as a gift from my friend Anik. I’d made her a quilt, mostly as a thank you for a kindness on her part, and also as a housewarming gift for the house she had recently moved to with her husband and son. The quilt was log cabins, 4 of them, arranged around green pathways quilted with spirals. I wanted her to be reminded of the log cabin she was living in when we met and how we have stayed friends, our green paths perhaps metaphorical rather than actual, though on a quilt they can be both. In the centre of each cabin block, a red square for the hearth. Everything is connected, isn’t it? The hearths uncovered on Orkney, their spiral pots broken. While helping with the excavation at Quinhagak, there’s a wonderful moment when Jamie is screening some soil with a Yup’ik man:
A smell was rising from the earth in the screen. It was familiar, domestic, not unpleasant. I worked on, wondering if I was imagining it, because it was the smell of cooking. Specifically, the smell of mince and tatties, staple dish of my childhood
‘Mike–I’m hallucinating. Can you smell that?’
‘The meaty smell? It’s because we’re down at the floor level now, where they did the processing. Seals, walrus meat, skinning, all that.’
The air is so clean and sharp, you can smell seal-meat from five hundred years ago.
On a cool morning, I’ll make a fire and sit by it stitching spirals. And in those inscriptions, time curls in on itself, holding stories and history and love. Sometimes they spool out across the ocean and sometimes they are the blanket that keeps me warm at night, keeps others in my care.
i
Ah, Theresa, I turned to this page to write to you about your home and its lived-in-ness from the previous post, then discovered this. Sometimes your world and mine align, whether it’s the imperfect kitchen floor, the wavy-glassed windows or here with a book which I too have recently savoured. I asked for Kathleen Jamie’s books for Christmas last year and made them last as long as I could, finishing with the collection you reflect on here. I suspect you love the writing as I do but there’s an extra layer to your appreciation since you understand how she does what she does. I hadn’t realized that the descriptions are set out in front of her, and aren’t they vivid? I felt I’d been to the Bering Sea and the far reaches of the British Isles, and I kept having to leave off reading to find images and more information about the digs. Wonderful! Now if only you writers could keep up with my voracious reading! Thank you for your insights as always.
She is a truly wonderful writer, isn’t she, Susan? We have her poetry collections too but somehow it’s the essays I’m drawn to these days. Thanks for reading and for sharing your thoughts.
I have come to know Kathleen in the last couple of years through her editing of the volume, “Antlers of water”. She is now the makar (poet laureate) of Scotland, don’t you know. This is an important writer/author/woman, if you get the chance to see her do sessions at the Edinburgh film festival, do give yourself a treat. Ill be looking for this book you mention, thanks for the tip! Pxx
Paulette, I knew about her appointment as Makar — a perfect pairing. In the long and beautiful essay on the Links of Noltland site on Westray, she recounts looking at the stores of stuff excavated and she looks at a bone pin, intended to keep clothing fastened together, and realizes that it’s been shaped to look like an antler. It’s bone but its maker has referenced something wild and other rather than simply making it purely functional. I love these moments in the book. Love her noticing, for us, and for herself. Noticing quietly, which makes it even more impressive somehow. Thanks for reading. I think you’ll love this collection.
Such a beautiful post!
Thank you for including it in this week’s Gleanings, Kerry. And for those of you who don’t know about the Gleanings, go here for a lovely selection of recent blog posts from thoughtful and beautiful writers:
https://picklemethis.com/2021/09/14/gleanings-110/
[…] other day, I wrote about Kathleen Jamie’s essays, their durable and practical beauty. And there’s Susan […]