Witness
Witness
Witness
Witness
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Witness
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Witness

© the artist. Image credit: M Longhurst / Art UK

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Notes

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A wooden sculpture consisting of massive upright carved logs in a circle around benches. It is inscribed with lines from poems relating to conflict and memorial, including: 'Matthew Copse' by John William Streets, 'The Road Not Taken' by Robert Lee Frost, 'Lights Out' by Edward Thomas, 'Afterwards' by Margaret Postgate Cole, 'A Dead Boche' by Robert Graves, 'May, 1915' by Charlotte Mew, 'The Gift of India' by Sarojini Naidu, 'Futility' by Wilfred Owen, and 'Grodec' by Georg Trakl.
Title

Witness

Date

2020

Medium

oak

Accession number

KT18_ML_S224

Acquisition method

commissioned by the Woodland Trust

Work type

War memorial

Owner

Woodland Trust

Custodian

Woodland Trust

Work status

extant

Unveiling date

2021

Access

at all times

Access note

car park with paths is due to be built off Headley Road (as of 2022); otherwise on foot from Langly Vale Road, or across Woodland Trust paths

Inscription description

inscribed with excerpts from poems relating to the First World War: verse 1: Now 'mid thy splinter'd trees the great shells crash; verse 2: Two roads diverged in a yellow wood, And sorry I could not travel both; verse 3: The unfathomable deep Forest where all must lose Their way, however straight, Or winding, soon or late; They cannot choose.; verse 4: And peace came. And lying in Sheer I look round at the corpses of the larches Whom they slew to make pit-props; verse 5: Today I found in Mametz Wood A certain cure for lust of blood; verse 6: Let us remember Spring will come again To the scorched, blackened woods, where all the wounded trees; verse 7: They are strewn like blossoms mown down by chance On the blood-brown meadows of Flanders and France.; verse 8: Think how it wakes the seeds; verse 9: A sister's shadow sways through the still grove To greet the heroes' spirits, the bloodied heads.

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Located at

Centenary Wood, Langley Vale

KT18 6AP

Located beside the 'Regiment of Trees' soldiers in a field planted with avenues of saplings, close to the eastern path on hill above Langley Vale.