A man on a green hill in Italy looking at the view

Saints & Sinners: a pilgrimage in Lippiano

Author: | 17 Nov 2025

Our recent graduate in creative writing WS Pendray marked completing his licence by attending the prestigious ‘Haven for Stories’ writers’ retreat in Umbria thanks to one of our travelling scholarships. It was a liberation in more than one sense.

I didn’t expect to be shaken by airport security, but as soon as I stood waiting for my luggage to reappear on the x-ray belt, it hit me. Just three days earlier, I’d completed my licence. After years of restrictions, knock-backs, and losses; I was finally a free man.

As the plane lifted from the grey and dropped us into the patchwork of green and terracotta, Italy greeted me with softness. A farmer ploughed his field on a battered tractor in the evening light. Italy felt calm and timeless.

They say Saint Francis of Assisi was captured in battle, spent a year in a Perugian dungeon, and came out changed. A soldier turned poet; a prisoner turned pilgrim. I wonder if captivity itself made him a saint of nature, if being severed from the world made him love it more fiercely.

‘The system made me a number; poetry gave me a name’

I recognised that feeling. Stripped from nature, I found my way back through language, through memory, through metaphor, through the small light that words let in. We both learned to listen again: to the wind through the trees, and the birds calling across the hills. The system made me a number; poetry gave me a name.

We arrived in Lippiano, a medieval village in the Umbrian hills, crowned by a twelfth-century castle and watched over by the church of San Michele Arcangelo, where the stones are as old as prayer.

Before the Romans arrived, the Etruscans believed the gods spoke through signs in the sky. I suppose I do too. When I checked my phone, it read 18:18, on the 18th. 18 has followed me all my life; a quiet reassurance I am where I’m meant to be.

In my pocket, I found a piece of lavender, placed there by my daughter during one of our seaside walks. Its scent rose when I reached for change. A small mercy from home. Proof that love travels further than guilt ever could.

‘He couldn’t bail me out with money, so he did it with stories’

Saint Francis’s father ransomed him with gold. Mine ransomed me with imagination. In my bag, I carried something sacred of my own: my father’s letters. Twenty-two pages he sent me while I was in prison, a year before he died. They documented his journey overland from Romford to India in the early 70s. He couldn’t bail me out with money, so he did it with stories, and each page was a door.

There is a kind of faith in the air of this region, and you can almost feel the presence of the Via di Francesco, the pilgrimage route that winds near Lippiano, threading through the same green heart of Italy where Saint Francis once walked barefoot. I didn’t walk the official path, but somehow, I ended up on a pilgrimage of my own: wandering past olive trees and vineyards, stone walls, and the rolling hills of Umbria. Something felt holy in the rhythm of it all.

Through the tutorials, I found my own way forward; each tutor a kind of compass, their guidance part of this quiet movement toward understanding, art, and belonging.

Saint Francis gave up a life of wealth to embrace poverty. I, on the other hand, am trying my best to give up a life of poverty, and I can confirm it’s proving much harder than expected.

‘They asked what I do, not what I’d done’

Still, standing in that small Umbrian village, surrounded by people whose kindness asked for nothing in return, I understood something I’d been circling for years: compassion is the currency of the soul, and at Villa Pia I felt unexpectedly rich.

I feared stigma might’ve followed me here, that people would see the worst of my story before they’d heard the rest. But they didn’t. The other writers were warm, and curious, unbothered by my past. They asked what I do, not what I’d done.

The turning point came on the Friday, the day of the gala. I went to my tutorial with Tobias Jones, thinking I had a piece ready to read that evening: one of the many incidents from my father’s wild journey into India. Instead, I ended up telling him about another journey, one that I’d been too scared to touch.

My father’s funeral.

How I was taken there handcuffed to an officer. How I stood in that Sussex meadow carrying the weight of two kinds of loss on my wrist.

Toby listened, then said gently but firmly, ‘that’s your opening chapter. Why don’t you read that tonight.’

Those few words, I’ll always be grateful for.

‘I was no longer running from the past. I was writing towards it.’

I thought I wasn’t ready, but I was. So, I went to the hillside where the roads unravel through the distance like pasta al burro, and I sat with the moment I’d kept locked away. I put on The Ecstasy of Gold, my father’s chosen funeral song, and something in me broke open.

The tears came.

Then the ink.

It felt like a quiet divinity, the holy trinity of memory, grief and the page. For the first time, I was no longer running from the past. I was writing towards it.

The Etruscans once read omens in the flight of birds. That afternoon, I watched a kite glide over the hills and thought about freedom, how it isn’t the absence of bars, but the presence of possibility. Like Francis, I had been imprisoned after a battle (a rap battle, in my case) and we had both come out hungry for light.

Maybe we’re all saints and sinners in equal measure, forever falling, forever forgiven by the earth beneath us.

In Lippiano, I learned that holiness isn’t always reserved for churches or marble saints. Sometimes it arrives in its simplest forms: in the sound of birds overhead, in lavender between your fingers, in the warmth of strangers, and in the moment you finally write what once broke you.

Will received a Longford Trust travelling scholarship. If you would like to find out about supporting this initiative, contact Chris Walters. Our thanks to Villa Pia, where the writers retreat takes place, and its owner, Morag Cleland.  And to Tobias Jones, Elise Valmorbida and Alice Vincent, the three tutors on the course.  WS Pendray’s first poetry collection, Overgrown, is now available.

A pumpkin pie with a face decorated in sugar

‘The week I learned to cry’

Author: | 4 Nov 2025

Our recent graduate Douglas Edgar has just returned from a prestigious writers’ retreat at Villa Pia in Umbria, made possible by one of our travelling scholarships. In reflecting on the lessons learnt, he hopes the next step will be to realise his ambition for a creative arts career.

‘Forza Nonna’ was the cheer as Sondra, from Rochester, New York, poured custard into the famous ‘Torta della Nonna’ base. Translated as ‘grandmother cake’, there are two layers of short-crust pastry filled with vanilla custard, hints of lemon zest, all covered in powdered sugar. I met a Nonna once – Brooklyn-based and South Italian-born. Fierce, vain, and shameless with set blonde hair, long red nails and tattooed eyebrows, well into her 90s. An Italian Mary Berry.

Enrolling in the cookery class at the writers’ retreat, I saw the opportunity to move away from my go-to meal of chicken breast, rice and broccoli. Umbria is a place where vegetables have real flavour. However, I saw three pots on the stove at one time and thought ‘cooking’s not for me’. Alas, five fellow retreaters and Gessy, the in-house chef, combined to make the following from scratch:

  1. Lasagna with ragu sauce.
  2. Spinach and ricotta ravioli with sage and butter sauce.
  3. Semola (not semolina) gnocchi with truffled béchamel.
  4. Vanilla panna cotta with forest fruits.
  5. Torta della Nonna.

Being the second group to cook, I felt pressured to beat the previous day’s class, so I spent 30 minutes drawing a pumpkin stencil to level up our Nonna cake. Consulting with my artist-cum-culinary neighbour, Tania, I cut the stencil and rubbed the pencil marks off the steel worktops. The lasagna came out of the oven and victory was in sight. We’d made one more pasta dish than yesterday’s group and had a pumpkin on top of a cake.

I know people will want my top Italian-cooking tip, so here it is: ‘cut out the eyes, nose and mouth for the perfect stencil’. I’m joking, but I have tried to remember when I have learned, and in summary, I prefer eating food a lot more than preparing it.

Beyond cooking

Cooking was an escape from writing. I cried more this week than I had in the past 10 years combined. On a foggy day, I built the fire in the dining room whilst a peer explained how she became her mum’s primary carer in the final stages of cancer treatment. The damage from radiotherapy would cause skin to erode into her mouth, making her choke at night.

Up to five years after her passing, she emptied the washing basket and would see her mother’s nightie on the floor, choosing not to wash it to keep a part of her there. Not for the smell but for presence. I’ve never been so affected by words, and I began to cry uncontrollably – a soul captured in a nightdress.

We discussed the logistics – the inflatable mattress beside the hospital bed – but it would never be written about. Instead, she chose to re-write a dystopian novel. Feeling that thousands would benefit from her experience, sci-fi seemed like a distraction, but hearing her story reminded me to dig-deep and face the subjects I’m avoiding.

Souls collide

Inevitably, some people would work out that my fellow Longford scholar and I were ex-prisoners. It would be exciting for them, like Shawshank Redemption in real life, or Le ali della libertà as the Italians would say. Was he a Hatton Garden robber? Maybe a mass murderer?

I overheard someone worry that they were becoming institutionalised by Villa Pia’s ritual of cake at 4pm, which made me reflect on my somewhat different experience. Conversation helped to diffuse the tension, and some of us would sit for hours into the night, talking through the fluff, and their payment would be gruesome tales of prison.

Friday night’s gala rounded off with karaoke, facilitated by yours truly. More importantly, everyone shared a few minutes of writing to the group. Another peer’s story was based around an AI imposter’s attempt to infiltrate the retreat, analysing human interactions whilst fighting off the occasional system glitch. The story’s finale is quoted below:

“I meet novelty for the first time this week. We embrace each other in a hug and thank you for the trust. On the bed I stare at the ceiling and review every word he’s said to me since we’ve met two days ago. Not artificial. So that’s a soul.”

The character being referenced, Jeremy, was based on me, and for the third time that week I thought ‘bloody hell I’m crying again’.

Reform happens through genuine interactions.

A fond farewell

The Haven is knowing that you’re protected – no matter who you are, no matter what you share, no matter how much you cry. In that respect, Villa Pia was my Nonna.

So, it’s back to Tesco’s veg and imported wine, only now I understand the richness of my own soil. From tutors-to-teammates, thank you for your understanding, trust and camaraderie.

Forza Stories!

Douglas joined the annual ‘Haven for Stories Retreat’, thanks to one of our Longford travelling scholarships. Our gratitude goes to Tobias Jones, Alice Vincent and Elise Valmorbida, the three acclaimed writers who teach each year at the retreat, and to Villa Pia’s owner, Morag Cleland, a former Longford Trust mentor, for making these bursary places available to our scholars.

 

 

Getting my creative buzz back

Author: | 5 Nov 2024

Each year the Longford Trust offers its award-holders a travelling scholarship to widen their horizons and polish their skills alongside university so as to improve their career prospects.  This year two scholars got a chance to spend a week at a prestigious writers’ retreat in Umbria. Darren describes how time spent there inspired him to push forward as a screenwriter.

This year has been fortunate for me. After completing a Master’s  in screenwriting at the National Film and Television School with the aid of a Longford Trust scholarship, I have gone on to be selected as part of a writers’ initiative with a renowned production company, as well as other things that have me feel that I may finally have a career.

But, since graduating, I have returned home to dreary Wolverhampton, not the most inspiring of cities the country has to offer. On top of that, I really miss the writers’ room. The film school is a buzzing hive of creatives – communicating with each other on a daily basis, keeping the ideas flowing, with experienced professionals inputting gems of knowledge at every step of the way. I would spend hours in the school’s writers’ room, comforted by the tapping of keys from the numerous laptops, all bringing forth a vision from the mind onto the page.

A haven for stories

I got another chance to experience that sort of environment again last month, this time in the Umbrian hilltop village of Lippiano, at the week-long Villa Pia ‘Haven for Stories’ retreat, courtesy of a travelling scholarship from the Longford Trust. I almost did not made the flight. I realised I had forgotten my passport, the most important piece of luggage, when only thirty minutes away from Stansted Airport. Thank God for my brother-in-law!

When we landed at Perugia, I realised that I had no idea what to expect of the week. Of course, I expected to be writing, but what I’d be writing and who I’d be with, I hadn’t given any thought.

I decided on reacclimatizing my brain and getting some projects I had been putting off out of the way with the help of the three tutors Alice, Toby and Elise, all professional writers. But being as it’s been a long time since I had a real holiday, I hoped there’d be some fun in the sun along the way. There was fun, maybe, but the week was mostly devoid of sun. An astounding amount of rain poured from beginning to end. But hey, perfect weather to stay in and write!

After being picked up from the airport we arrived at the picturesque Villa Pia and were welcomed by lovely owner, Morag, and the (I think) local chihuahua cross Jack Russell called Lampo who frequents there at mealtimes. We retreaters immediately got to know one another.

A group with no barriers

Being a working-class roughneck from the Midlands, I often worry about my presence in the circles I’ve found myself in since embarking on this writing journey. But I can honestly say I felt welcomed and encouraged by the mixture of interesting people in the group. From important members of Olympic committees to ex-dealers trying to save the turtles, to heads of film companies, and current blogging sensations, I met many people on this trip who inspired me one way and another. And we were all there to write. The creative buzz was back.

Led by our established and experienced teachers we started on the Monday with talks and writing exercises to get our creative juices flowing, with an aim that on the Friday night we would all read a piece of our work at the gala. It was easy to see how intelligent and savvy our tutors were when it came to advising on our writing. Over the week I rewrote a treatment for a TV project, numerous drafts of a proof of concept script for another TV project, and the first pages of the pilot episode of a project. That was what I read out to the group at the Friday night gala.

With it being my first time in Italy, I was excited to try some authentic Italian meals and was not disappointed. Throughout the week the wonderful Villa Pia staff provided us with a lunch buffet and four-course dinner daily.  There were moments when I felt guilty, having already completed a Master’s and acquired an agent, because many of the intelligent and accomplished retreaters, much older than myself, were at the beginnings of their writing journey. At least at the beginning of taking it seriously, and had paid from their own pocket and travelled long distances to join in, whilst I was there thanks to the Longford Trust and the generous donor who sponsors the travelling scholarships.

What was really revealed

When people asked how I heard about the retreat, the conversation usually led to the revelation of me being an ex-con. I was worried about judgment from them, but felt none at all. They were intrigued about my story, and respectful of it. I felt reassured that writing was what mattered here.

The same opportunity is going to be offered to two scholars next year, too. For the lucky pair selected, I hope you get the best out of it. God willing that I can afford it. I’ll definitely be making the trip again in 2025.

 

Our thanks to the Henry Oldfield Trust and to Morag Cleland at Villa Pia, and to the writing tutors Tobias Jones, Elise Valmorbida and Alice Vincent for making it possible for our scholars to attend A Haven For Stories under our Travelling Scholarships scheme