Writing on the Feast of the Epiphany 2026, as an icy dusk falls over a snowy landscape.

How many people, I wonder, if challenged would know that the sixth day of January is the Epiphany. And if they had heard of it, what would it mean today other than the end of the Twelve Days of Christmas, when decorations, lights and baubles should be taken down? That diminishing section of society who keep the feast salute the radiant brightness of a star, the dawning light of a new creation, a redeemed world. Hard to keep hold of that sometimes.

A friend of mine and I recently debated the increasing secularisation of society, a world in which the “True meaning of Easter” (I quote from one advertisement) “is Creme Eggs”. This loss of Christian practice, and consequently of religious literacy started with the rational thinking of the Enlightenment and also with the coming of industrialisation which meant an exodus from country to urban living. And with that movement of population came a separation from the effects of the changing seasons, of living out of doors; a divorce from a life that knew the calendar of the saints, whom to ask for rain or dry; no longer a life that gave thanks for the harvest. Rural, farming communities kept hold of the traditional annual practices, marked by the feasts and fasts of the Church, for longer. What tenant farmer did not know the Quarter Days when rent was due: Lady Day (the Annunciation, 25 March), Midsummer Day (St John the Baptist on 24 June), Michaelmas (29 September), and – of course – Christmas?
One of the reasons, back in the summer of 2017, that I started what then became a monthly chronicle of life in this profoundly rural and agricultural part of Suffolk, was precisely to record an almost-lost link with the land, the country, its traditions, and the passing seasons. The practices I witnessed as a child in rural Hertfordshire in the Forties and Fifties were on their way out, to be taken over by the industrialisation and wholesale mechanisation of farming in the Sixties. They were just visible on some farms when I came to Suffolk in the Seventies. Now they are seen only in consciously museum-type recreations.
I stopped writing three or four years back as I had nothing new to say; each season, each month had been examined, recorded, the effects of changing climate noted, and some features of life here – and in the wider, geopolitical world – described. There was feedback that I was becoming progressively gloomy. One commentator begged me to write “only on sunny days, please.”
The world, nationally and internationally, has not since in any way provided more reason for optimism or cheerfulness. Indeed many observers, including the head of MI6, are saying (largely to deaf ears) that we find ourselves in a liminal and perilous space between peace and war.
I am taking up my ‘pen’ once more, partly because I pay for this digital space, for the web hosting that keeps the chronicle visible. Maybe it is hubris – who cares, after all, for the ramblings of an elderly widow in Suffolk? But there may be one day some value still to be perceived in an account of the passing months, the nuances of each season’s advent and decline, and maybe – who knows – of peace while it still lasts.
Snow came a few days ago, provoking such childish excitement – despite the challenges in an area served by tiny lanes which are flanked by deep ditches and afford passage to only one car at a time. I love it: we had skies of deep cerulean, crystals coruscating and scintillating, crunching and creaking under my boots, the shadows deep and blue. It somehow compensates for the onset of January, a dreary and sober month which lasts for approximately nine weeks. Snow prolonged the holiday mood of that time between Christmas and New Year, a time when no demands are made upon me, a time of unwonted laziness and indulgence, but also of a close and holy darkness as the world sleeps.
It purifies and beautifies the dullest of landscapes. And it is peaceful:
The only other sound’s the sweep
Of easy wind and downy flake
(Robert Frost)
The traditional holly and ivy, the decorations, the baubles, the tinsel have been taken down, revealing a deep layer of dust. The exterior lights will have to wait till we are free of snow and ice. I will miss this annual festival of light, which each year seems to introduce more and better light displays: the flashing Santas, the blue icicles, the luminous reindeer racing over the roofs, the sparkling life size deer and fawns grazing on lawns, the multi-coloured fairylights, the illuminated ‘Santa please stop here’, and everywhere twinkling and pulsating. I find no difficulty in celebrating this midwinter feast at the same time as welcoming the nativity of Our Lord.
Click here for a full display from a neighbouring village
I started this chronicle in July 2017 with a Suffolk funeral, a humble event by all meanings of the word. The deceased, and the husband she followed to the grave, and those who came to mourn were ‘of the soil’, people whose lives were rooted in the earth of Suffolk, whose living had never taken them far from their villages of origin.
I was prompted into a comparison of that original posting with another funeral late last year in 2025. Although it, too, took place in a little country church – this time just over the border in Norfolk – it was an entirely different affair. The deceased was what may properly be called a dowager. The family are ‘gentry’ and own the estate which makes up most of the land round the small village, and her son had long since taken over its management, and that of the farm. His son too farms there, and he in turn has two sons who will doubtless carry it on (pace our Government’s plans on inheritance tax).
I had been asked to take the names at her husband’s funeral a few years back, and was asked again. This was no small task as approximately 250 mourners were counted by me at one churchyard gate, and by my opposite number at the other. I filled four A4 sheets on my clipboard. Le tout Norfolk came. The names, often double- or even triple-barrelled, were rarely spelled as they were pronounced, and their bearers were often representing many others. My pen stalled; queues formed…Most were kind and courteous, with the manners I associate with real gentry (gentilshommes), but a few appeared somewhat shocked, and baulked at being questioned by a woman with a clipboard and cropped and purple hair…”My dear, did you see? She had purple hair!” Noses were looked down.
Yes, dear reader, you read that correctly: I dye some strands of my hair purple. I rather like it. But, you ask, why do it? Well, because I can…and no doubt because there is a soupçon of attention-seeking in there somewhere. However, I prefer the kinder assessment of a daughter – it is a spirit of youth and defiance. Youth – ha! I am 15 months away from eighty.
Since I last wrote this blog life has been…interesting. I had intended to start writing again in 2024, but almost the whole of that year was spent coming to terms with an assault (not sexual) on Christmas Eve of 2023 and its aftermath. It’s not something to dwell on now, but the perpetrator was my parish priest, a man who had anger issues and was clearly having some sort of breakdown. I wasn’t injured, but the shock of it perdured. The consequences were worse: those who did not know of the man’s problems blamed me. A lurid and largely inaccurate account appeared in both local and national tabloids, for which I too was wrongly held responsible. Our little chapel was closed for lack of a priest (he had been suspended), and many blamed me for the break-up of our church community. I ceased to sleep.
And yet in all this mental mayhem tectonic plates shifted, and a relationship whose potential existence had remained underground for some years erupted. Our media occasionally report with some wonderment that Elsie and Bert in their 90s have wed, and we look on with an amused but non-comprehending eye and maybe a slight distaste. But even as we sigh an indulgent “Aaahh” we ask “Why? What’s the point at their age?” The young find it impossible to countenance geriatric passion. But here I must fall silent.
I said above that readers of this chronicle have complained of my gloom and pessimism.

Now, despite despair and fear engendered by still unending war in Ukraine, Putin’s designs on eastern Europe, Trump’s disquieting imperial activities, the rise and rise of the far Right here and elsewhere, despite the continuing self-inflicted wound of Brexist, despite the increasingly destructive extremes of weather, now – despite all of that and more – my days are full of light.
And and not a little joy – in the form of my lovely dog, the companion of my days – no longer the “young dog” of earlier posts – who grows in wisdom and grace and finds favour in my sight.
There are reasons to be cheerful…




























































































































































