A Clip of Steel
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A Clip of Steel - Thomas Blackburn
fictitious
Chapter One
This thing of darkness I acknowledge mine.
Shakespeare, The Tempest
In 1810 when Mauritius was annexed from France by Britain its population comprised at least five races. But in addition to the dominant French, the Dutch, Chinese, Indians and Africans were those of mixed blood.
Because of the smallness of the island and its remoteness from Europe this dusky fringe tended to increase, and those of a comparatively white skin feared the encroachment. Consequently that tendency to paranoid obsession shared by most human beings found a convenient quarry in the Creole and Eurasian. Social status was determined not so much by wealth, wit or achievement as by a pigment of the skin; whether one was black, white, yellow or khaki.
My great-grandfather, Captain Blackburn, was an officer in the English force which invaded the island. He married Jeanette de l’Ecluse, the daughter of a French officer whose family had been on the island for many years. Of their four sons my grandfather, Charles, was the second. He experienced a religious vocation and after a period in London, where he qualified as an Anglican priest, returned to his native island. There he spent the greater part of his life, though his adventurous pastoral duties also entailed visits to the neighbouring lands of Seychelles and Réunion. A photograph of him as a young man is reminiscent of some character of Dostoevsky. Fanatical eyes smoulder under a high forehead, the nose is aquiline, the mouth petulant, sensitive and sensual.
Grandfather married on the island, but in the case of Grandmother Elise, a Scottish strain was added to the Mauritian blend. Perhaps it endowed her with that common sense which was her especial virtue. She must have needed every scrap of it to cope with the vagaries of her husband and the climate. The stories my father told me of his childhood in Ravineside were of hairbreadth escapes. Wild nature, black magic and disease could only be circumvented by prayer, watchfulness and chastity.
The latter was preserved by a large tin bath which was kept on the veranda outside Grandfather’s bedroom and filled each evening with cold water by the servants. Into this he would leap when assailed at night by the shafts of Eros. The God’s daytime assaults were circumvented by digging. The large hole which he made every week or so in the rear compound had a purely therapeutic value, since it was filled in on each occasion. However the unpredictability of the Mauritian fauna and climate was less easy to cope with. Children died of malaria, poisonous snakes would unroll with the Venetian blinds and (‘Quick, my boy, the large cleaver!’) be held writhing on the kitchen table until dispatched with a neat downstroke. There were rabid dogs and Uncle Mark only escaped the consequence of a bite from an infected animal by cauterizing his wound with a red-hot poker. My father could still remember the reek of singeing flesh. On another occasion, clinging to a kitchen door, Grandfather was borne aloft by a hurricane.
As Protestant pastor he was the especial target of ‘Petit Albert’, a virulent cult of black magic. Sorcerers with oiled bodies and sharp knives attempted his life, and insinuated powdered glass into the family soup tureen. Not only were their attempts unsuccessful but while escaping from Ravineside in the form of a pig, one unfortunate magician was shot by Grandfather in his front left trotter. On the next day this unenlightened native carried his arm in a sling. My father was convinced that sexual congress took place between the disciples of Petit Albert and the domestic sow. While visiting some remote settlement, Charles heard a strange noise coming from a shed separated from the other buildings by a fence of unusual height and stoutness. Although a grunt, it had human undertones, and on entering the building his suspicions were justified. The creature which crawled naked among offal, straw and excrement, though for the most part human, was snouted like a pig.
I am grateful to my father for these stories he told to me when I was a child. He believed them and so do I – with a grain of salt and allowing for the jaundiced eye with which he and Grandfather Charles regarded an ‘unchristian’ and fallen world. His tales confirmed my belief in the unfathomable strangeness of the human being and his environment. They also convinced me of the illogic of human convictions. For it is remarkable that my father who believed, at least until later life, in the absolute validity of the Thirty-Nine Articles, who was depressed if he saw a single magpie, or broke a mirror, and who rebuked his children if, having spilt salt, they failed to throw a pinch over their left shoulder, would nevertheless indulge in derisive laughter at the mention of psychic research, telepathy, or ghosts whose haunt was in Europe.
This was characteristic of the man; he had a singular unwillingness to become conscious of his fears and fantasies, to yield them the lucidity of understanding. He was also anxious to believe that the powers of darkness were not related to himself, his thoroughly ‘English’ wife, or a Northumbrian vicarage, but confined to a few small islands of the Indian Ocean. However it is not possible to localize our ghosts.
Grandfather Charles was also an adept at wishing away the darker side of himself, his ghost, on to other people. His particular scapegoats were Roman Catholics and Eurasians. I am uncertain what caused his hatred of Rome, but the hatred was of extreme virulence. Indeed, when a grand-daughter who had come under his care after the death of her parents became engaged to a French lawyer of impeccable colour but the wrong faith, he subjected her to such a barrage of prayer and imprecation that she lost two stone and her fiancé. It was a dubious victory. Two months later, immunized against her Grandfather’s denunciations, she married an Indian parson. Grandfather died before this union achieved its mixed blessings. However, my father carried on the tradition and steadily refused to meet his second cousin when she settled in England, or her seven admirable children. It is true that after the death of her Indian husband and of my mother he suggested that cousin Louise might become his housekeeper. But by then he was crippled with arthritis, and, as he remarked, when I suggested the rapprochement was a trifle belated, ‘My boy, necessity knows no law!’
Two of my great-uncles refused to worship that racialism which was a religion of Mauritius. By marrying women whose skin was of a slightly darker shade than their own, these men were cut off from the European community as by an insuperable and contagious disease. The planter’s widow married by Uncle Junius was both handsome, educated and wealthy, indeed she had loaned money to Charles, and on easy terms, for the purchase of Ravineside. However, good looks, intelligence and generosity did not mitigate the evil of her mixed blood. Junius had married a Creole. Consequently his relationship with grandfather’s family and the bulk of the European community suffered a change which though caused by psychic obsession and not the microbe of leprosy was no less drastic. On that island intimacy with one’s own race was destroyed by miscegenation; what remained was, at best, a formal politeness chilling and sterile.
In his later years my father told me with deep feeling of his shock and disgust when grandfather Charles announced to the assembled family that another uncle, my namesake, Thomas, had married a coloured woman, and henceforth must be dead to his relations. This beloved and respected man – he was I believe an Inspector of Schools – was neither to be asked to the house, saluted in the streets nor mentioned in conversation. His name was solemnly expunged from the family Bible, a form of exorcism not uncommon on the island. However, Thomas was restored to his family after some eighteen months. The malaria parasite which permanently removed his wife from Mauritius was considered a blessing in disguise by all but the unfortunate bridegroom.
If marriage with an Indian, Eurasian, Chinese, or Creole could isolate one from friends and family as effectively as a pestilence, it was a catastrophe to be dreaded. In the case of my father the shared obsession of the white community was made particularly painful by a chance of heredity. Of all his family he alone had been touched by the Evil One; I mean possessed certain physical characteristics that could be associated in those witch-hunting islands with the Eurasians. If I feel sympathy for myself as a small boy under his curious ministration, then I must also pity my father’s childhood. Grandfather, though of a romantic, somewhat Russian appearance, had that hallmark of Mauritian respectability, a pair of blue eyes. Grandmother was a very decent shade – so were the girls. As for the younger son, Edward, nature had blessed him with such Teutonic blondness and squareness of jaw that he was employed as a secret agent during the 1914-18 War and received a Military Cross for bravery. Only my father suggested the possibility of some Indian or Creole ancestor by a somewhat dusky skin and a certain indefinable quality of mouth and nostril.
Perhaps the climax of his childhood suffering was reached when he overheard a conversation between his twin sisters.
‘Let’s have a tea-party on Thursday,’ one of them remarked, ‘then Eliel will be at his Latin class and won’t be able to come. He’s so dark!’
No doubt that was but one detail from a whole climate of overheard conversations and quizzical expressions which gave to my father a sense of being haunted and isolated from his fellows. Twist and turn as he would the shadow followed. The evil could not be exorcized, only forestalled by masks of rectitude, innumerable gestures of reassurance, and ceremonies resembling those magic techniques which ward off the evil eye.
If the relationship between father and son had been less intimate then Eliel might have defied that racial Moloch of whom Grandfather Charles was, in some sense, the High Priest. Edward, who regarded his father with cool distaste, seems to have done so, though he was packed off to England before his marriage to an Indian student could take place. For Eliel no such revolt was possible since the ‘love’ between him and his father was both obsessive and tenacious. As a boy he would rise repeatedly from his bed and crouch on the mat outside Charles’s bedroom door to catch the sound of breath and be reassured that his beloved was still living. Doubtless such a preoccupation with the man’s death suggests a wish for it to happen. But ‘love’ can be strengthened, or rather changed into servitude, if no admission is made of the hatred with which it is so often allied. Because he would not admit its strand of fury, the rope which bound Eliel to Charles was unbreakable. Consequently my father could not deny the racial obsessions of Charles. I do not think my grandfather ever overtly criticized the appearance of his son. On the other hand, quite apart from the hints of his sisters and school acquaintances, any pocket mirror could confirm Eliel’s worst suspicions. He himself might be contaminated by the very evil condemned with bell, book and candle by his beloved father.
I believe he escaped from this dilemma by an operation upon his personality considerably more drastic than the amputation of a limb. Since he loved Charles, he could not deny the man’s obsessions, sound currency anyway in the island. So he denied both his rejection of Charles and the conviction – no less real for being irrational – of his own evil. Doing this, and with a surgical thoroughness, he cut himself off from the source of his inward life, from the possibility of self knowledge and the exorcism of his ghosts. Those ghosts still existed, but outside him now, in the external world. The operation brought about a partial blindness or rather a fault of vision. Now he could see plainly outside in others, above all in myself, his first son, just those emanations of darkness which as a quality of himself he could not bear.
It was necessary for him to be the white child whom Charles loved, so I must be the black one and carry his somewhat tar-stained cross. I was his son though and he would do what he could to redeem me. The start of his process of redemption is one of my first memories.
There is a silver tray. Some slices of lemon are on it, a bottle of hydrogen peroxide and a few tufts of cotton wool. It is about seven o’clock in the bedroom of a north country vicarage, and I am six years old. Tray in hand and with an air of uneasy devotion, my father is seated beside me on the bed. What he wants, with only six years to my credit, is quite beyond me. I can sense his unease though and that when he says, ‘Well, my boy, and what have you been doing today?’ he is quite uninterested in the fact that I climbed a small elm and made a lavatory with a piece of old drain pipe and a flower pot. But he’s looking at me now and with a very strange expression.
‘Tommy, you’ve been out in the sun and it’s been a hot day,