Jake Morris-Campbell
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The compass takes its weigh
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The chapter is an exploration of Lindisfarne, Holy Island, point ‘A’ in the bigger A–B narrative. It explores the ongoing appeal of Lindisfarne, a tidal island in the North Sea which was home to Saint Cuthbert, whose incorrupt body and relics were carried off the island in the ninth century. Lindisfarne is here framed as a ‘thin place’, tapping into Celtic Christianity. The idea of the ‘sea cure’ is also explored in relation to the author’s anxiety, contextualised within the history of the island as a spiritual enclave. Emmanuel Head, a daymark, acts as a touch stone for contemplating the littoral, while memorials at Lindisfarne Priory and in the extant church allow for a rumination on memory and the persistence of religious and industrial iconographies. Poetry as a presiding theme of the book is introduced, with the idea of poems as talismans in themselves contrasting to the totemic Davy lamp the author carries.

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Between the salt and the ash

A journey into the soul of Northumbria

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