"A Countryman Remembers - Where Once I Walked"

Bates describes a typical five-mile walk from his home in Kent forty years previous, "unmolested by traffic" and following a variety of "footpaths, carriage tracks, green lanes and little roads utterly deserted." In contrast, he now finds that hedgerows have given way to wire and concrete, footpaths are gone, as are thousands of trees, and that "the frenzy of certain motorists careering down narrow lanes as if they were tracks at Silverstone is truly frightening. Thus is walking now dead; or you are dead walking." One in the series "A Countryman Remembers" in Living (London, November 1973, iii, 11, p. 132).

ID: 
c189
Title: 
"A Countryman Remembers - Where Once I Walked"
Genre: 
Essay
Page Count: 
1
Word Count: 
ca. 800
Publisher: 
Living
Year of Publication: 
1973
Topic: 
Kent
Rural Living
Document Type: 
Autobiographical
Full-text Online
Nature Writing
Social Commentary
AttachmentSize
c189.pdf400.86 KB