Jake Morris-Campbell
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What kingdom without common feasting?
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From Tunstall Hills in Sunderland to Durham Cathedral, this chapter follows a pilgrimage route instigated by the poet William Martin in the 1980s and reinstated by the author in 2016. Beginning in the garden of the late Bill Martin, the chapter melds pasts, recounting of this journey with the present account of its traversal. Following gravity railway lines and old wagon ways out of built-up Sunderland, the terrain gives way to the rural lands of north-east Durham. The author riffs on the Cuthbert legend and on the coal-mining communities of the area. The chapter considers Martin’s poetry in relation to the wider folk culture of the area and muses on his notion of ‘Marradharma’, a portmanteau which fused socialism with eastern spiritual traditions.

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Between the salt and the ash

A journey into the soul of Northumbria

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