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By Kia Abdullah
I was lucky, I suppose, to grow up in London, scarcely four miles from the Charing Cross plaque that marks its very centre. There was always a sense of momentum: the drone of distant traffic, the snatch of a stranger’s conflict, the pixels of light from Canary Wharf filling the screen of my bedroom window.
In this city, I could be someone, or anyone, or everyone, I wanted to be — but there was a cost. What I gained in glass and concrete, those totems of opportunity, I lost in natural spaces. I did not even know to want them until I read Anne of Green Gables, my favourite book in childhood.

In L M Montgomery’s classic novel, Anne Shirley, a garrulous red-headed orphan girl, is sent to Green Gables, a remote farmstead on Prince Edward Island off the eastern coast of Canada. On arrival, Anne is dismayed to learn of a mix-up. Her would-be guardians – stern spinster Marilla Cuthbert and her tender-hearted brother, Matthew – had actually requested a boy from the orphanage. They plan to send Anne back but, after a day of deliberation, decide they would like to keep her.
After being allowed to stay Anne falls swiftly in love with the Cuthberts and their “big, rambling, orchard-embowered houseâ€. She is charmed by the briskly snapping wood fire in the cheerful kitchen, the old Waterloo stove with its “soft mingling of fireshine and shadowâ€, and the scent of lilies that “entered in on viewless winds at every door and window.â€
Like Anne, I am enchanted by the east-facing view from her gable room: the cherry tree outside “so close that its boughs tapped against the houseâ€, the brook in the hollow below, the low-sloping fields filled with “ferns and mosses and woodsy things†and, beyond that, the “haunting, unceasing murmur†of the sea.

Deprived of space and nature in childhood, I imagine lounging on the porch in the evenings, the door propped open with a conch shell behind me. I would revel in the smell of mint and listen to the rustle of poplar leaves, hoping, perhaps, to correct a lifelong deficit. Can a long drink of nature compensate for years without it?
Though inspired by a real house (main picture, above), Green Gables is sadly fictional. In lieu, I could content myself with this six-bedroom island retreat, listed at C$2.9m ($2.3m). Located in Ontario’s Thousand Islands archipelago, the charming gabled cottage offers peace and solitude. I would place my desk by the balcony and gaze and write and think. Evenings would be spent on the porch with a pitcher of something cool.

I would be equally happy in this four-bedroom home on the west coast, on the market for C$3.95m ($3.14m). With naturalised gardens, heirloom orchards and wonderful sea views, it would be an ideal place in which to reset, preferably with a glass or two of Marilla’s raspberry cordial.
After a year of lockdowns, I, like everyone, am aching for normality, but I also know that London in its natural state is likely to exhaust me. I imagine the fraying tempers of commuters packed on to the Underground — the dense, artificial air and pulse of sulphur-like lights — and I am sure that I will need more space and time. I will long to retreat to my own “quiet, unmysterious Green Gables†across the Atlantic.
Photographs: Alamy; © Maisna/Dreamstime.com; © Adwo/Dreamstime.com; Canada Sotheby’s International Realty
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