IMAGERY OF ELSEWHERE, 1974-2005

From The "Quote –UnQuote" Newsletter, vol.
14. No. 1 January 2005
By Nigel Rees
"FAR AWAY IS CLOSE AT HAND IN IMAGES OF ELSEWHERE"
For a number of years in the seventies, train passengers going
in and out of Paddington Station in London were beguiled or
puzzled by words painted up at the side of the track: "Far
away is close at hand in images of elsewhere". This elegant
graffito because almost famous – not least on 22nd June
1978, when Michael Wharton, the "Peter Smple" humorous
columnist on The Daily Telegraph, diccussed the work of the
unknown artist as if he were an Old Master.
"Dr Anita Maclean-Gropius's monumental catalogue raisonné, "The
Master of Paddintgon" (Viper and Bugloss £65), published last year,
dealt in detail with all the works confidently or tentatively attributed to the
Master and his School. It was, of course, savaged in a long review by Dr. J.S.
Hate, Keeper of Graffiti at the Victoria and Slbert Museum, in the British
Joural of Graffitology...."
I myself also mentioned the piece in my first collection,
Graffiti Lives, OK (1979), and got round to photographing
it in May 1981 just as builders were
demolishing the wall on which it was painted. It was pointed out to me
that the first six words had apparently been taken from
the Robert Graves poem, "Song
of Contrariety" (1923):
Far away is close at hand
Close joined is far away,
Love shall come at your command
Yet will not stay.
I mentioned some of this on a recent edition o the radio
show, and was than intrigued to be contacted by "Helen" who
claimed that the "Master
of Paddington" was, in fact, two people, her husband Dave and
his brother Geoff. They painted it, she said, "one Christmas Eve
(when there were no trains) in probably 1974 or thereabouts".
It was placed to be visible on the Oxford line, as both Dave and Helen
were Oxford graduates.
Helen confirmed the Graves allusion in the first six words but fascinatingly
suggested that the last four were written by the poet Ruth Padel, who,
as it happened, had been at Oxford with Dave and Helen.
What was it? I contacted Ruth Padel and asked
for her assistance. At first she could only think that £"elsewhere was a very
important word for her. The first poet whose work she learned a lot
of when young was Tennyson,
for whom also the words "far, far away" always had, he
said, a strange resonance. Her own very first publication, she
said, was a pamphlet of poems
called Alibi (1985): and alibi, of course, means "elsewhere" in
Latin.
But then light dawned. Ruth remembered something
she had published much earlier as a classics graduate student:
a scholarly article
entitled "Imagery
of the Elsewhere: Two Choral Odes of Euripides", in Classical
Quarterly December 1974.
"Yes," said Dave, "that was it.
I don't think I ever read the article, but it was a great title.
It was lying on our kitchen
table while Geoff and I were discussing what were were going to write on the
wall."
"Mmm," said Ruth. "The CQ gave
me loads of offprints, I can remember the Courier print: my
name, and Euripides's, on this pale
blue cover
- my first publication! I didn't know what to do with them all. So
I gave one to Dave."
Dave read classics at University College while Ruth did the same at
Lady Margaret Hall, in the same year as Helen, reading medicine. Then
Dave went on
to do a B. Phil. in philosophy as Ruth was doing her PhD in Greek.
In February 2005, in Ruth's kitchen this time,
Nigel Rees reunited Helen, Dave and Geoff with Ruth Padel.
It turned out that the
resonance of that graffito,
and the "imagery of elsewhere", had got everywhere.
When Geoff's son went to college he shared rooms with a
girl called Shovel whose father
always wrote on the back of envelopes to the letters he
sent her, these same words: "Far away is close at
hand in images of elsewhere."
"He always puts that," she said. "I
don't know why."
And in 1992, in their song "Godspeed," even Catatonia quoted the
words in a refrain, "Paradise is close at hand
in images of elsewhere...."
Read Valerie Grove's account in the Times of this
story and reunion reunion in the Times, Weekend
section,
April 16th 2005.
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