Brean where dreams were first ingrained. In sea sodden sand, mud at low tide and a hill of sorts chasing down dragons amongst Brythonic dunes. At Men Ebeli, once the stone of colts we cleared Cornubian outcrops like foals footprints fading faster than the rolling tongue could murmur: Menabilly. But the pools stayed, almost still, broad kelp shielding shrimp and jelly blob abominations. And up in the grass at Grybyn Head lolling topsy-turvy as gulls, arms akimbo till a wasp sting felled me to earth. Ancient Britons found a stronghold by the alder grove taken in turns by Celt and Jute - Romans called it Cantiacorum, Kent's cathedral city in England's Eden. Knee-capped in snow or petal blossom hedge stretched with nests and pine tree pinnacles to almost grasp the feathered flypasts. Mid-August orchards ripened with plums, goblet-shaped for gobblers, and early apples pitted by worm, tooth marked too, trialling sweetness. One skip and hop from this Pilgrim orb, salty bays splayed out north and east. From shingled Hyrne to Sondwic with ample sand to grit crab teas on the softest buttered bread. Marble-mouthed and staccato sharp the Anglo-Saxon tongue and stepping after Nor'folk we wended there to Esnuterle, to mudflat solitude and colonies of seal. Honeymooned at Hitchham where wild duck hunters greased their guns and grapeshot from the ripening gorse was fired in hot Septembers. Heart leapt to the blast of horn in Suttun Hoh. settling my soul on the Deben's southern bank at Wudubrycg, like a pre-loved houseboat. Sinking with dignified decay and contentment in the creek; there long-legged waders pipe to the wind, that's always heading west.
Somerset:
Brean – modern Welsh for a hill
Cornwall:
Men Ebeli = Menabilly. Cornish/Celtic for stone of colts
Grybyn Head = Gribbin Head – derived from Cornish/Celtic for little ridge
Kent:
Cantiacorum = Canterbury
Hyrne= Herne bay – old English for’ a corner’
Sondwic=Sandwich – Anglo-Saxon for ‘market town on sandy soil’
Norfolk:
Esnuterle – renamed Blakeney when John de Blakeney was gifted the manor there in 13th century
Hitcham=Heacham – from the river Hitch +ham/home
Suffolk:
Suttun Hoh = Sutton Hoo -from Old English: “Sut” + “tun” means “settlement,” and “hoh” translates to “shaped like a heel spur.”
Wudubrycg – old English for Woodbridge ?Woden (Odin) and Burgh, Bury, or Brigg (town).
Joining Open Link Night where unprompted, anything goes. Reworking this poem of ancient English place names mapped with memories which is dedicated to fellow poet and dVerser Glenn Buttkus (d. 17.2.23)- his first name is of Celtic origin, meaning from the valley. I pray he has found peace there.