Category / Essay
Shepherd’s Watch by Melanie Viets
I slip my hand deep inside the ewe. Reach in turn for one front hoof then bent leg. My fingers meet the inner wall of the ewe’s womb, her muscles ribbed in symmetry with the ridges of the ram’s horns.
April 2, 2018The Signless Signpost by Peter Reason
As the water poured over the sills we could see it in several different forms: hanging just above the top sill, oily blue, darkly mirroring the sky; falling in a smooth sheet down the face of the weir, sparkling with light; breaking into cataracts that fell like braids; tumbling chaotically over the next sill; and so on down.
March 26, 2018Dear Vodafone by Martin Maudsley
I’m writing to you about a tree. A pine tree, perhaps a hundred years old, maybe a little older, that until yesterday stood on a hill at the edge Bridport in Dorset. It’s a tree that you felled yesterday to make way for a new mobile phone mast. I’ll tell you the story as it happened, and at the end I’ll ask you to tell me a story in return.
March 23, 2018To the pantheon of charismatic animals, can we add another? By Hilary Macmillan
If you are lucky enough to witness roosting horseshoe bats, you may see them gently swinging to and fro, rather like a gymnast about to start a routine on the high bars. They have switched on their directional sonar and are detecting your whereabouts. They know you are there.
March 19, 2018Oak Grove by Seán Lysaght
Trees have character, just like animals and people. Some have grown tall and rangy in a rush for elevation; others have a more rounded crown and are already strongly branched. When I am alone among the trees, I often stand under my favourite, a fourteen-footer that spreads its tent of foliage over a young tree’s muscular limbs, and casts a cosy, yellowish gloom of light around me. Seán Lysaght on watching trees grow.
March 5, 2018A Sense of Wonder by Philip Hoare
‘We no longer camp as for a night’, the American philosopher, Henry David Thoreau wrote, ‘but have settled down on earth and forgotten heaven’. Philip Hoare on reconnecting to the earth, the sea and the tangible universe.
February 5, 2018To Cradle a Moth by Abi Andrews
“In its light I know where the world is.” A powerful piece by Abi Andrews on our ‘small communions’ with the natural world.
January 29, 2018‘Bearing Witness’: Reflections on the Launch of the UK’s Favourite Nature Books Poll by Pippa Marland
Some of the most popular and respected nature writers in the UK have been helping us to launch the Land Lines public poll to find the UK’s favourite books about nature: Mark…
November 27, 2017‘Land Lines: Modern British Nature Writing, 1789-2014’
Professor Graham Huggan and members of the Land Lines research team introduce the project. Recent years have seen a boom in nature writing, with the publication of hugely popular books by authors…
November 21, 2017An Owl for Winter by Richard Mabey
The view from my study during these polar days [2010] has been like an illustration from a Victorian book of moral parables. The magnificence of the frost suggests the beauty inherent in…
November 21, 2017What I Saw by Steven Williams
When she was here everything seemed full of charm and inner life. Now that I am alone the world is again a chaos of meaningless objects, and signs that point nowhere. A…
November 16, 2017Natural connections: memory and nature by Stephen Moss
It’s only a photograph, but it’s one of my most treasured possessions. It shows a toddler – me, when I was maybe eighteen months old dressed in what can only be described as…
October 30, 2017
About
THE CLEARING is an online journal published by Little Toller Books that offers writers and artists a dedicated space in which to explore and celebrate the landscapes we live in. Our contributors are encouraged to go forth and find distinctive visions that startle us, rural or urban, modern or prehistoric, industrial, post-industrial, fantastical, natural, political, however they come. But each must be meaningful, surprising, felt.
Submissions
The editors welcome original submissions in written, audio and visual genres. Submission should reflect The Clearing/Little Toller’s concern with the natural environment, but within this broad subject-matter we encourage a diversity of interpretation and approach.
If you’d like to submit work to The Clearing, please email theclearing@littletoller.co.uk. Please refer to the submission guidelines. While we receive many submissions we will get back to you as soon as we are able.
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Podcast
From the Archive
- A rewilding diary by Emily Warner: introductionGlen Affric, where I have been based for my research, …
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