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The Joyous Wheel, James Arnold (1940)
Hamish Hamilton Octo 133pp
A cycle-tourist's pen portraits of his excursions about rural
Britain in the last glimmers of the pre-world war two sun

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This is Arnold's account of his joyful forays around the south of England
and Wales during the 1930s. Each section describes a day on his bike,
traversing the Downs, climbing about North Wales, and most of all, exploring
the Chilterns and the Cotswolds.
Were he writing today, these might be posts in a blog - save that his
prose has a light, joyful, beguiling simple, quality that is rare in any
medium. Of incidents there are few, and upsets none. Instead, Arnold envelopes
you with his manifest love for the countryside and the physical pleasure
of making its contours his own. He is particularly good at marrying his
own journeys into an overall idea of the topography of a place. Indeed,
rivers are very often his points of reference.
He dates many of his jaunts precisely, and often reflects on earlier
passages through the same parts. Clearly, given the decade about which
he is writing, it is impossible not to reflect upon how different the
world was then, with most of the roads all but free from cars and much
economic activity genuinely local. There is nothing in this book, however,
that feels at all dated - save for the journey's-end pipe upon which the
author frequently reports.
Nor is there anything of catastrophes of that era - before and after
the years in question. Like several other authors of that decade, particularly
the little-remembered John Moore, or John Buchan, he conjures up a seductive,
bucolic idyll into which it is hard not to be drawn.
Here he is at the start of something big.
"After breakfast, and having seen Bilbury before the mob, I took
the Cirencester road. Now Cirencester, to my mind, is a grand gown. I
like the curves of its Market Place. There are some nice Georgian houses
here. The church has a good Perpendicular tower, but the south porch is
just a little flamboyant to suit my taste. The vast Cirencester Park is
not for you and me. Cirencester, of course, was a Roman habitation. Soon
after, I passed a marshy field, was impelled to stop and meditate, for
this was the source of the Thames. While my physical eye took in this
tree-lined field, my mental eye visualised great ships coming up the estuary
to discharge their infinite variety of cargoes; the little pleasure boats
upon their sunlit waters between Teddington and Oxford, above which no
steamers ply; and the placid river at Lochlade where there are more anglers
than boats. So I came back to this field from which is derived one of
the world's rivers."
As a written distillation of the pleasures of solo cycle touring, Arnold
it is as good as it gets. It is also a beautifully produced book, the
typography is exquisite, and the author also serves up a nice line in
lino-cut illustrations.
PS Mar 10
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