The pleasures of staying here begin with the sight of the Mediterranean reaching from the end of the garden to infinity. Then there are the comforts of an English middle class house with all its settled, slightly scruffy but well-polished usedness - the occasional small garden tool resting under a chair - it’s a pair of blue-handled shears I can see from here - and the furniture conversing quietly in shuttered sitting rooms, combined with wickedly soft French beds to lie in, while listening to the sea, and passing trains.
The books are everywhere, shelved in alcoves and lining rooms. Not paperbacks (there are those too, in piles and cupboards) but proper books in solid bindings with gold lettering, heavy enough to need one of those tables with patterns let into the top that stand around not looking too useful until Lord Curzon of Keddlestone’s account of life in India is taken down and weighs so much it has to rest on one of them.
Lord C. got into a dreadful bate about the denial of the Black Hole of Calcutta atrocity by later, indigenous historians, writing a century and more afterwards. He gives 20 or so pages of contemporary accounts, travellers’ tales, drawings of the monument erected over the ditch where the bodies were thrown the next morning (with asides on the inborn incapacity of French and other non-English observers to correctly recount anything they saw, never mind these matters).
He locates the exact site of the notorious store room, since over built, outlines the original old fortress in brass lines let into ground and extant buildings; the floor area of the Hole itself he has laid with black marble.
The first monument having been demolished after falling into dereliction, he has a life-size statue of an illustrious former statesman moved from where he has occupied the site, and builds a fine monument in lasting materials (marble shipped from southern Italy) paid for from his own pocket; he even adds to the numbers of the commemorated and finds out their Christian names. After having carved on another face of the monument a harsh condemnation of the Nabob responsible, and a brief account of the even harsher reprisals taken against him, he reckons the whole thing is nailed.
Mentioning this at dinner, someone said, ” Oh, I was reading something recently about the Black Hole of Calcutta and that it was all made up to justify later repressive measures against the local rulers’ resistance."
Did I hear ‘sigh’ from Lord Curzon in the next door room?
Tuesday, 22 May 2007
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10 comments:
I`m slightly confused HG where are you ?
Nice to hear from ,( I `m afraid I have very little time for Blogs)
... Sorry I mean I don`t have much spare time at the moment for Blogs that "came out wrong"
Terrible atrocity, whether the dead prisoners were 46 or 143. But just what was the Company of the Indies doing with Fort William, building up military strength against the Nabob's orders?
N, I had gone to see the gardens on the Mediterranean coast that were planted there when it was usual for the 'comfortably off' to spend much of the winter months around Menton and Nice and Ventimiglia. The grandest gardens and houses are now sort of national monuments, the Hanbury belongs to the University of Genoa for instance, though some of the family descendents are still there; other, smaller gardens are open to the public too, and some are still in private hands.
You must be harried with work if you haven't noticed it's May and a good month for looking at plants and flowers?
The history of India and its relations with the British must be one of the most instrumentalized of all, but I'd never have thought to doubt the Black Hole till Lord Curzon's hammering detail and recasting of all obscurities in accounts of the time and later surprised me enough to mention it.
Is this your area of interest Citizen? What was going on between Bengal and the Company? And why the vehemence more than a century later?
I look at nothing but Insurance Policies HG (Prufcock meets Pooter )Never mind , if I measure out my life with coffeee spoons at least HG will "come and go
Talking of Michelangelo."
I remember the Duchess Of Devonshire occassionally wrote about flowers and country things for the Telegraph and I thought at the time what a good writer.
Well she would be wouldn`t she ( Oh thankyou for you support chez Dale I had gone too far actually ahem...)
Back now N, sigh, and it's like 'His Dark Materials' round the house; someone's making dust on purpose.
I want to read about Bengal, not do the work.
It's the wrong choice for the UK to be in the EU not least because it's so much duller than being joined with all the Commonwealth countries; who wants to know about Poland or Bulgaria, or the Baltics when we could be in with India? The old EU countries we're intertwined with anyway, but I find I'm just not interested in the new ones as I am in the Commonwealth states.
I read the Pullman films look tremendous HG the Compass one is due out soon .
Pullman ...Dune ...do I detect a guilty taste for easily consumed Gothic Fantasy ?
I was reading Lord C of K on Bengal; I claim full status as a grown up, N.
Children's books are a taste acquired young and never lost. I have signed copies of all the Adventure Stories, (Welwyn Stores used to do book signings by Famous Authors).
Catherine Morland is a lovely person, what is more.
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