Returning from one of our regular pilgrimages to the Great Metropolis, we took a different route home from Norwich Station. Just for the hell of it. Rather than hurry along the Prince of Wales Road and its grubby hotspots of ill repute, we headed for the Riverside development (all commuter flats and chain restaurants) and wandered across one of the fancy new foot bridges that span the River Wensum. The semi-industrial district on the other side is ripe for redevelopment. What the Luftwaffe hadn’t flattened was finished off by Fifties and Sixties planners. Thankfully, the breeze block and concrete grimness is moderated by a sprinkling of treasures, including the Dragon Hall, a stunning medieval trading hall on Kings Street and one of The ‘Norwich Twelve’ erections of distinction.
As we pushed up St Julian’s Alley (pun intended) we stumbled across St Julian’s Church, a tiny shrine now dedicated to Julian of Norwich. No, this Julian wasn’t a fella, but a lady named after the eponymous saint. She was a religious recluse who lived in a cell propped up against the wall of the building, a kind of hermit’s lean-to. It’s no surprise that prayful seclusion was the lifestyle of choice for many folk during the poxy ages.
The Lady Julian has quite a claim to fame. She penned the first ever book known to have been written in English by a woman. Fancy. She wrote her tome, ‘Revelations of Divine Love’, in 1395 after experiencing intense visions of Christ during an illness that nearly saw her knocking at the Pearly Gates. Unlike many of her contemporaries (and ours), Julian talked of love, hope and forgiveness rather than duty, sin and punishment. Regular readers will know that I’m not remotely religious, but I reckon we could do with a bit more of Julian’s kind of divine message. So much better than the my-God’s-bigger-than-your-God world in which we still live.
We could definitely do with a lot more love.
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Certainly could.
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I agree, Jack. I like how you worked towards your point. Subtle but efficient. ❤
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Thank you.
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You are welcome. ❤
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Hi Jack – Does the ‘cell’ propped against the building, in which she lived, still exist? The picture of the church doesn’t show anything like that, unless it’s on the other side of the building.
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Destroyed by bombing during World War II, the church has been extensively restored and reopened in 1953 mainly to act as a shrine. Julian’s reconstructed cell is round the back. If you want to know more about Julian and the shrine, here’s a link to Britain Express
http://www.britainexpress.com/counties/norfolk/norwich/st-julian.htm
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. . more ‘milk of human kindness’? I’ll drink to that!
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Me too. Fat chance!
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