My Heart Was a Tree

You are currently viewing My Heart Was a Tree

Keep our reporting free for everyone to read  Upgrade to paid

 

 

ON OUR RADAR

An evening of poetry and music with Michael Murpurgo to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Farms for City Children.

Leigh Curtis

 

Exeter Cathedral is hosting My Heart Was a Tree on Tuesday 27 January, an evening of poetry and music celebrating the natural world to mark the 50th anniversary of Farms for City Children.

Michael Morpurgo and his wife Clare Morpurgo will be joined by Carol Hughes, widow of Ted Hughes, the late Poet Laureate.

They will read from Michael Morpurgo’s poetry and story collection My Heart Was a Tree as well as My Own True Family, the poem by Ted Hughes which inspired the collection’s title.

The readings will be accompanied by music composed by Vivaldi, Ralph Vaughan Williams, Haydn and Max Richter, performed by the Iddlesleigh String Quartet.

Michael Morpurgo is an English author, poet and playwright. He has written over 100 books including Private Peaceful, The Butterfly Lion and Kensuke’s Kingdom.

Morpurgo, who has lived in Devon for many years, was the third Children’s Laureate from 2003 to 2005 and is the president of BookTrust, the UK’s largest children’s reading charity.

He and his wife Clare established Farms for City Children in 1976, a charity which enables children from disadvantaged communities to experience a stay at one of three farms, including founding farm Nethercott House, which is near Exeter.

My Heart Was a Tree takes place at 7pm on Tuesday 27 January 2026 at Exeter Cathedral.

Tickets cost from £15 for adults and £5 for under-18s, plus booking fees, and can be bought via the TicketSource website.

For more information about the event visit the Exeter Cathedral website.

 

 

Keep our reporting free for everyone to read

Exeter Observer’s public interest publishing is paid for by a growing community of readers who each contribute to its running costs.

They enable us to keep our journalism free for thousands of people who might otherwise never know about the things we report.

But it’s not enough. We need more paying subscribers to keep our readers informed about what’s really going on in our city.

151 of the 300 paying subscribers we need have taken the next step and signed up to support the independent journalism our city needs.

Help keep our reporting free for everyone to read by joining them today, from less than £2/week. We can’t do it without you.

Upgrade to paid

 

 

Spotlight

Dawlish Warren and Exe Estuary mouth sandbanks

Exeter City Council is about to seize the helm of Exe estuary maritime life: will it steer it onto the rocks?

Charges for waterways access are set to be imposed from the quay and canal basin to the coast under proposed Harbour Revision Order powers after six years of rising costs propelled by pursuit of Port Marine Safety Code compliance. They risk driving away craft of all sizes, from kayaks to yachts, while redevelopment threatens canalside land – but it’s not too late to change course.

, updated

 

More stories

Exeter Library in Rougemont Gardens

Devon County Council funding cuts set to reduce core library opening hours by 30%

Public consultation on changes explores possibility of closing some branches altogether despite claims to the contrary while Libraries Unlimited contract extension decision scheduled for six weeks before consultation ends.

 

Illustrative view of Heavitree Road blocks above Higher Summerlands

Exeter City Council adds 813 more student and “co-living” beds to city “housing” supply with Heavitree Road approval

Complex of seven blocks up to six storeys tall on site of police station and magistrates court to bring purpose-built temporary accommodation tally to 3,250 beds in Newtown alone – while failing to meet local plan minimum building separation policy.

 

Exeter College and Petroc campuses map

Exeter College and Petroc merger to go ahead in January

Further and higher education colleges with Barnstaple, Tiverton and several Exeter sites will become Exeter and North Devon Colleges Group after year-long process including public consultation showing two-thirds in support.

 

Former Topsham golf academy driving range

Exeter City Council approves 54 more dwellings in Topsham gap on former golf driving range

Greenfield development follows council approval of plans enabling driving range relocation to privately-owned land in Ludwell Valley Park.

 

Rough sleeper shelter beside Paris Street shop window

St Petrock’s launches fundraising appeal as number of people sleeping rough in Exeter continues to rise

Campaign film underscores dedicated homelessness charity mission as demand for its support services grows.

 

Former Bramdean School playing field

McCarthy Stone amends Heavitree school playing field retirement complex plans to trigger second public consultation

Developer makes minor adjustments to proposals for 36 retirement flats which have prompted concerns about loss of green space and adverse impact on historic character of conservation area.

 

 

Spotlight

 

Source link