In the 'The Rings of Saturn' the author WG Sebald walks south along the Suffolk coast from Lowestoft to Dunwich, where he gets lost in the criss-crossing, maze-like sandy paths on Dunwich heath (p174 in Chapter VII), falling into a dazed and confused state, whereupon he recalls a dream he had months later when he is lost on Dunwich heath once more, the cliffs are eroding, houses and people lay broken on the beach below, there is destruction everywhere, and he has a vision of the Sizewell power station, which sits a few hundred metres from the sea, a mile or so south of Dunwich heath.
Share this post
Sizewell – a glowering presence
Share this post
In the 'The Rings of Saturn' the author WG Sebald walks south along the Suffolk coast from Lowestoft to Dunwich, where he gets lost in the criss-crossing, maze-like sandy paths on Dunwich heath (p174 in Chapter VII), falling into a dazed and confused state, whereupon he recalls a dream he had months later when he is lost on Dunwich heath once more, the cliffs are eroding, houses and people lay broken on the beach below, there is destruction everywhere, and he has a vision of the Sizewell power station, which sits a few hundred metres from the sea, a mile or so south of Dunwich heath.