THE ROOKERY: MAGIC IN A FORMAL GARDEN
by contemplativeinquiry

Streatham’s Rookery (1) is a formal garden within Streatham Common, one of south London’s many remarkable green spaces. I made a connection with it in 1992 when living close by.
About a year before I discovered OBOD Druidry, I was working with R. J. Stewart’s The Way of Merlin (2). This taught me, first of all, about sacred space. “Sacred space is space enlivened by consciousness. Let us be in no doubt that all space is sacred, all being. Yet if humans dedicate a zone, a location, something remarkable happens within that defined sphere of consciousness and energy. The space talks back”.
I was an urban seeker and used what the city gave me. From an early age I had been fed by imagery of secret and magical gardens. The Rookery, built in the then Spa village of Streatham (1) became my sacred space. Towards its centre, a wishing well testified to the power of healing waters. It was a good place to begin my journey. The space became more alive, and I, included within the gestalt, became more alive with it.

After establishing a sacred space, I was asked to begin a relationship with a spring and a tree. Stewart said: “we need to relate to such locations. This is a physical relationship first and foremost … we are one with the land, and trees, springs and caves are power points that tap into the energies of the land, and then reach into other dimensions altogether”. I found my spring quite easily (above). But there were almost too many trees to choose from, and I recall hesitating about my choice, to the point even of changing trees on my second or third visit. On my recent re-visit – woven into a rare family weekend in London – I found it easy to find the spring again but harder to remember my tree. I settled on the mature birch below, a good choice for a new, Goddess related undertaking (2). But I cannot vouch for it as my choice in 1992.
Sacred space (“the land talks back”), and befriending a spring and a tree: for me, these were the most powerful lessons from R. J. Stewart’s work. They were a helpful preparation for my later Druid training. I was very pleased to revisit this space in July 2023 and share it with family members.

(1) Streatham was in Surrey before becoming part of the County of London in 1889, and then Greater London in 1965. It began as a settlement around the old Roman road (Street Ham) from London to the south coast at Portslade, Brighton, the site a Roman port long lost to erosion. It appears in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Estreham. The village remained largely unchanged until the 18th century, when its natural springs, known as Streatham Wells, were first celebrated for their health-giving properties. The reputation of the spa, and improved turnpike roads, attracted wealthy city of London merchants to build their country residences in Streatham.
The Rookery began as a large private house with its own landscaped gardens. Much later, when the house and gardens were threatened with disposal and redevelopment, it was bought by public subscription and laid out as a formal open space, first opening to the general public in 1913. The Rookery is now one of the London Borough of Lambeth’s Green Flag Award-winning parks, directly managed by Streatham Common Cooperative (SCCoop), a local community-led enterprise.
(2) R. J. Stewart The Way of Merlin: The Prophet, The Goddess and the Land London: The Aquarian Press, 1991

Thank you for this lovely post. It inspired me to purchase ‘The way of Merlin’. /|\
Thanks for this comment. I hope you find the book enjoyable and illuminating.
Friend, your experience is very reflective of my own. I too discovered The Way of Merlin and RJ’s work around the same time. Found a spring (my mothers family farm) and adopted a Tree in my own backyard…..Thank you for evoking this memory
Thank you for sharing parallel experience in another setting.
Our garden is a wild wood and I’m no gardener but I have always appreciated gardens that speak to more than just plants – essentially spiritual in their nature. Tenuously connected to this I have the perfect book recommendation for you I think: A Mountain to the North, a Lake to the South, Paths to the West, a River to the East by László Krasznahorkai – it’s a very short but challenging read. I’m not sure I fully understood it but the exploration of time and space centred on a monastery and garden in Kyoto was striking.
Thanks for the recommendation and your observation about ‘gardens that speak to more than just plants’.
What a coincidence! The Rookery was a huge part of my first 30 years. I grew up nearby, and we’d visit every week. And funnily enough, it was when I was visiting in my 20s that I was connecting with R J Stewart’s ‘Power within the Land’ and ‘Earth-light’ books, and would meditate there. It is a powerful and very special oasis.
Many thanks for sharing this Marie, both your relationship with the space and R. J. Stewart’s role as an early influence. I found the Rookery a ‘powerful and very special oasis’ again after some 30 years. I enjoyed walking there with my daughter, son and two grandsons last Sunday morning, having already made a solo pilgrimage much earlier when no-one else was awake. We were staying in an airbnb close to the Common.
Powerful to see the pictures and get a sense of it as a space. Like you, I have a hard time picking one tree.
Thanks Nimue. I’m reassured about my hesitation over the tree. Enjoyed catching up with you and yours last week
It was so very good to see you.
[…] by James Nichol, reposted from his Blog Contemplative Inquiry […]