| Cardinal
Basil Hume Statue and Memorial Garden
The
memorial garden creates a place of peace and contemplation with levels
of spiritual symbolism in tune with the theme of Cardinal Basil Hume’s
life and work. It is designed to express Hume’s involvement
and affection for the Holy Landscape of Northumbria and the northern
Saints synonymous with it. The design incorporates all the crucial
elements the Memorial Committee asked for.

Sculptor's
competition architectural model for the Memorial
The Northumbrian
landscape is reflected in the memorial garden by the islands, Holy
Island (Lindisfarne) and Inner Farne as raised carved sandstone shapes
(by copyright permission of Ordnance Survey). Holy Island with its
western lobe on the main steps becomes an unconventional plinth for
the statue of Basil Hume; running under statue’s left hand is
the position of the causeway from the mainland to Holy Island. Inscribed
on the top surface of Inner Farne closest to the Cathedral, are the
names of St Cuthbert (c.634-87), monk and bishop of Lindisfarne and
St Aidan (d.651), first bishop and abbot of Lindisfarne, who were
both hermits on the island. The National Trust gave permission to
remove a small boulder from the beach below St Cuthbert’s Chapel
on Inner Farne. This is fixed on top of the island shape, constructed
of four stone sections forming a cross. The sculptor had to make three
trips to Seahouses before the weather would allow a crossing to Inner
Farne to choose the boulder.
On the
shape of Lindisfarne in the garden is a three-ton boulder surrounded
by smaller boulders all taken from a beach on Holy Island (by permission
of English Nature). Combined with the boulder from Inner Farne it
makes actual parts of the sacred Northumbrian landscape beloved by
Hume integral with the memorial garden. Inscribed on one side of the
large boulder, almost looking like it has been there for centuries
is the 7th century Caedmon’s Hymn. It’s a facsimile of
the text from the Moore Manuscript in the Cambridge University Library.
Caedmon (d.680) was the first English Christian poet to write verse
in vernacular (old English) and the 8th century script is in the Northumbrian
dialect. Bede’s history tells how Caedmon, the illiterate herdsman,
came to have a dream vision commanding him to sing of “the beginning
of things”. The next day he was taken to the monastery at Whitby
and was recognised by the Abbess St Hilda (614-680) as someone divinely
inspired and at her request became an inmate of the monastery.
Caedmon’s
Hymn is a delightful poem, especially when translated literally from
the early English. The alliterative translation by Charles W. Kennedy
(Early English Christian Poetry, OUP 1952) is carved on an inset slab
on the reverse of the boulder. Caedmon talks of the ‘Holy Shaper’
and ‘Eternal Monarch, making for men/land to live on’.
This is essentially the idea for the memorial garden and this translation
provided the inspirational key for the design: The holy shapes of
the land on which the northern saints lived and walked, the land that
Basil Hume came from and admired. Caedmon’s Hymn from the same
era poetically links the elements most admired by Hume: The Holy Islands
of Northumbria and the Northern Saints, including St Hilda who encouraged
Caedmon and St Bede who wrote about him.
As well
as using the actual shapes of the holy islands there is a spiritual
allegory that incorporates the heights of the island shapes as symbolic
levels to represent three stages of spiritual life: First Level: The
whole garden level represents religious life in the world; Second
Level: Holy Island in the garden, life in the church as a priest or
monk; Third level: Inner Farne, life in solitude as a hermit.
Each
level becomes higher physically (and spiritually) and smaller in area
representing the proportion of man in these spiritual states. Hume
admired the hermits but didn’t have this tendency. His appropriate
place is on Lindisfarne as a man of the church acting like a spiritual
beacon, inviting/indicating the path to the land God made for man.
The statue of Hume facing Central Station welcomes people into the
garden with his left hand gesturing towards Holy Island that he stands
on. More generally Hume is also indicating the ground of Newcastle
itself, his hometown and with a slightly oblique suggestion, the ground
of St James’s Park upon which his favourite football team plays
not so far away.

Memorial
Garden with shapes of Lindisfarne and Inner Farne
The Memorial
Committee wanted interaction with the statue and it was created with
the idea that people would probably hold the statue’s left hand
to have a photograph a taken. The 850 Kg bronze statue of Basil Hume
portrays him dressed in Benedictine habit, the oldest ecclesiastical
dress, with a Cardinal’s zucchetto (the red skull cap): a combination
Hume regularly wore to express his role as a monk/cardinal. The sculptor
was loaned a habit for the duration of the making of the statue which
is three metres high and was modelled with two tons of clay on a constructed
steel and wood armature. Hume’s right hand is characteristically
placed on his breast and he wears the Cross of St Cuthbert.
The seating
arrangement uses recycled stone from the old containing wall to create
a cloister effect that reflects Hume’s monastic life and creates
areas for people sheltered from noise. The plants in the garden are
species from the shores of Northumbria and the explanatory plaque
is mounted an old building stone obtained from Ampleforth Monastery,
discovered when the sculptor was researching for the memorial. The
stone was removed during refurbishment of the old monks’ quarters
and would have been in place when Hume lived there: so the garden
also includes a part of Basil Hume’s spiritual and monastic
home.
CREDITS:
English Nature and The National Trust : boulders from Holy Island
and Inner Farne
Oxford
University Press, New York: copyright permission for Charles W. Kennedy's
translation of Caedmon’s Hymn
Cambridge
University Library: copyright permission - facsimile of Caedmon from
the Moore Manuscript
Ordnance
Survey: copyright permission to use the shapes of Holy Island and
Inner Farne from their maps.
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