2 July 2017

William Dyce, Pegwell Bay updated.


The Dyce family is fully clothed.  The women shawled and heavy skirted, gather souvenirs and shells from the beach at low tide.  Beyond them, the lowish chalk cliffs stand over the receded tide, and above the whole scene, the distant tail of  Donati's comet.  William Dyce's painting of Pegwell Bay[i] depicts an activity unchanged, and the bay itself, with its cliffs and strata, sweeps to the west towards Sandwich and the Stour Estuary.  Little moved over time, a site of ancient and recent disembarkation.  Hoverlloyd (later Hoverspeed) operated cross channel services from Ramsgate to Calais up until 1982; the modern archaeologist or dog walker can explore the remains of the hoverport.  White markings are still visible where the ramps enter the bay, and in the delineated parking zones partially covered in scrub.  The SR.N4 hovercraft, cossetted in a great heavy skirt like the ladies in Dyce's painting, was powered by four Bristol Proteus engines, one of which is preserved at Bristol M Shed museum.  These powerful but thirsty engines propelled the craft forward and also inflated the large black skirt that acts as a cushion between hull and water and land.

I slipped into the sea below the West Cliff beside the harbour, some children were playing on the sand, occasionally running and paddling up to their wastes.   The water takes on a milkiness, chalk leaching a fine sediment that drifts with the current until a point some twenty yards out where it meets deeper bluer water, the whole mixing in swirls of khaki, white and cyan.  May sea temperatures are around ten or eleven degrees Celsius.

In his account of his father, Life,[ii]  Edmund Gosse writes.  At the head of the procession, like Apollo conducting the Muses, my father strides ahead in an immense wide-awake, loose black coat and trousers, and fisherman's boots, with a collecting basket in one hand, a staff or prod in the other.  Then follow gentlemen of every age, all seeming spectacled and old to me, and many ladies in the balloon costume of 1855, with shawls falling to a point from between their shoulders to the edge of their flounced petticoats, each wearing a mushroom hat with streamers.



[i]  William Dyce (1858-60) Pegwell Bay, Kent - a Recollection of October 5th 1858.  Oil on canvas.  Tate Britain
[ii] The Life of Philip Henry Gosse (1890).  Philip Henry Gosse was a pioneer of marine science and a populariser of natural history.