What happens in an old farmhouse when the farmers have left? Perhaps only a poet-historian-storyteller can say. These traditional work centres were established centuries ago sometimes in the village street often far away in their own fields. But the pattern of the toil was the same. This quietly vanished a few years ago. Ronald Blythe describes the going of it in his celebrated Akenfield. Some years before this his friend John Nash had rescued an already abandoned farmhouse in the Stour Valley from total dereliction. It was called Bottengoms. Nobody knows why. John Nash called himself an Artist-Plantsman. Behind both artist & writer there existed many generations of farmers & shepherds. Old houses will always have their say. For Ronald Blythe at Bottengoms Farm it was in the form of a meditation on past & present. He found that the ancient place asked more questions than it gave answers & was challenging & was energetic rather than spent. It must have been part of a prehistoric settlement in a stony valley & also a farm seen by the young John Constable whose uncles ground its corn. For they were Bottengoms neighbours & were known to the artist as the Wormingford folk. Ronald Blythe himself knows what the old farm is talking about. Its great days & routine days its seasonal labour & play its faith & despair. Its land was both poor & rich in snatches flint fields & mossy pastures vast trees & weeds & high skies. Once Queen Elizabeth arrived to hunt below where the Stone Age people lay in their circular graves. Inside Bottengoms there are telling handprints & footprints everywhere & this is their tale. It is a tale told by a true countryman who has looked & listened all his life. & mostly in his native place.