insideKENT Magazine Issue 28 - July 2014 | Page 130

OUTDOORLIVING © Mick Dudley Shakespeare in the Garden BY WILLIAM DYSON, CURATOR AT GREAT COMP GARDEN, SEVENOAKS If you want to celebrate Shakespeare’s 450th birthday this year, where better to do it than a Kentish garden? An inspiration for many projects, numerous garden writers have keenly documented the flowers mentioned in Shakespeare’s plays over the centuries, including the planting of a small arboretum of trees (mentioned in his works) at Anne Hathaway’s Cottage and grand schemes such as the revived Shakespeare Garden in Central Park, originally built in New York in 1880. While our own garden at the 17th-century manor house of Great Comp in Platt is not an ode to the literary great, visitors can find many of the plants mentioned in Shakespeare's plays and sonnets dotted around, such as violas, columbines and lilies. However, we are big fans of Shakespeare here in our tiny corner of Sevenoaks, and do invite his dramatic work into our garden every summer. Last year, Great Comp hosted an outdoor production of Richard III, complete with menacing clouds, while this year we will celebrate the Bard’s birthday by welcoming The Changeling Theatre Group back to perform Romeo and Juliet on the lawn. The scent of phlox from the long borders and primroses opening will provide the perfect ambience to Shakespeare’s tragic romance. Shakespeare’s depiction of the botanical is inherently romantic and lives on with us today; for example, Oberon’s description of Titania’s bower (where she sleeps) in A Midsummer Night's Dream is wonderfully romantic: “I know a bank where the wild thyme blows, Where oxlips and the nodding violet grows, Quite over-canopied with luscious woodbine, With sweet musk-roses and with eglantine.” The Winter’s Tale is also speckled with botanical references and mentions of carnations, primroses and daffodils: "Hot lavender, mints, savoury, marjoram." Yet, possibly the most recognised botanical quote from Shakespeare comes from the play of the moment, Romeo and Juliet: “What’s in a name? That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet.” Roses have long been regarde B7