I first visited this sweet old church when I was a student at Oxford. I was drunk on the glories of English church architecture and made it my hobby to know the difference between pointed arches, Norman arches. I tracked all the details from Saxon to Norman to Gothic, Transitional and Perpendicular styles. When I was taken to this Saxon church it made a big impression. Years later we went to live in Chippenham, Wiltshire–just ten minutes up the road from Bradford on Avon. On my regular treks to Downside Abbey I would stop in Bradford for a drink and a visit to St Laurence Church.
Here’s a poem I wrote after my firt visit many moons ago:
These Saxon walls, rough and
hand hewn stoically stand;
Their opaque repose
is their being and purpose
and across the stone floor,
darkened by windowless walls,
there falls a light from the door
The cold, bare chancel, stark
as a tomb, is as dark
and still as the centuries
but high in the wall there lies
a clear and small window
where, to admit light ages ago,
a stone was removed.
The round arch rises,
solid and graceless
as its maker.
This church does not take or
demand a formal
architect–any normal
eye can see simplicity’s permanence
and the balance of light and stone.
Very good.
I first visited this wonderful little church when I was a student at Salisbury & Wells Theological College in the early 1970’s. Seeing the picture brought back fond memories. Thanks!
I too enjoyed visiting this historic little church when staying with friends in Lacock, not far for Chippenham.