Bare ruined choirs
Bare ruined choirs, where late the sweet birds sang
Shakespeare Sonnet 73
Castle Acre Priory, Norfolk
English monastic ruins are almost more impressive than a living monastery; they are doubly dramatic. They pose formidable questions about God and the soul, to which the light and shadows of their ruined architecture offer the merest hint of answers. So much blighted beauty is awe-inspiring. They are as unexplained as Stonehenge, and the grass preaches as powerfully as the stones. One wants to share in their massive darkness.
The Frontiers of Paradise by Peter Levi
Wymondham Abbey, Norfolk
History, which tells of the slow rise of civilized peoples, and of many fortunate epochs in which things of beauty were created in profusion, has also many a melancholy record of the whoelsale destruction of the beautiful works of man, all too rare in any age. In the long list of those who have destroyed things fair and lovely - a list that has seen a lamentable increase in length even while these volumes have been in writing - Henry VIII and Thomas Cromwell, who rid themselves laso of many just men, must find a place of note.Bare Ruined Choirs by David Knowles, first published 1976
Binham Priory, Norfolk
Comments
Thank you for posting a message On An Overgrown Path accusing me of being an 'image thief.'
This is the first time in years that there has been an objection to linking (not copying) an image. And it is interesting that you appear to have obtained the image from English Heritage, a publicly funded body, in the first place.
A polite email would have resulted in the image being withdrawn.
'Politeness is to human nature what warmth is to wax.'
Arthur Schopenhauer
A copy of this correspondence has been put on the relevant page.