Saturday, 18 June 2016

CARVED IN COWLS: A POEM ABOUT THE POPPY-HEADS INSIDE WEYBOURNE PARISH CHURCH, NORFOLK...

Carved In Cowls

Carvings on bench ends:
A bird, but slightly damaged
And a human head, female,
Two-faced, if slightly ravaged;
Cowled, features keen:
Nuns, surely? 
Skilfully turned, smooth edged
By spinster sisters:
Poppy-heads unique,
To witness, quite privileged…   

Pete Ray
Weybourne, 2016



Carved in 1900 by a family of wood turners and carvers, who were sisters.
The six of them: Hannah Beatrice, Mary Esther, Rose Cecily, Martha Grace, Maude Marguerita and Eleanor Bolding, are pictured below.

‘Poppy-heads’ were carved on bench-ends but many were removed during the Reformation. 
The name apparently derives from the Latin word ‘puppis’, meaning a figurehead on the poop deck of a ship.


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