Remembrance through rose-tinted glass
THERE’S the familiar clunk as the latch on a sturdy village church door is sprung. Inside, my footsteps echo in a centuries-old silence. This morning, the location is the intimate space of St Nicholas Church at Ickford, Buckinghamshire, but what’s about to happen holds true for country churches across Britain. Another search for examples of First World War memorial windows ends in a shattering of that silence.
The ferocious battle into which my imagination is plunged this time around was fought at Épehy (on the Somme) on September 18, 1918. The inscription below the neo-Gothic, stained-glass Virgin and Child relates as much in remembering a local victim of the action: 2nd Lt Edward Vernon Staley of the Royal Field Artillery. Son of the rector of Ickford, Staley died at the
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