It sounds horrible to ‘keep history fresh’, as if it were a
loaf of stale bread. To me it's particularly repulsive since learning that ‘50
years’ is the magic age for the Historical Novel Society - which means that I too
fall under the definition of ‘history’ and need to start checking myself for
incipient mould.
But memories fade, all things decay, and there are times history
needs a bit of help.
Archaeologists can rescue whole towns from the past, while restorers work wonders with paintings, sculptures, or a
handful of pottery shards to teach us how our ancestors lived. From this one
vessel we can learn about the Greeks’ art of painting and pottery, the way they
stored wine, the gods they worshipped, the clothes they wore, and the equipment
they used in battle.
Yet there’s a shameful part of me that isn’t as excited
about this as I should be. Perhaps it’s because I already know these things,
perhaps because Ancient Greece isn’t ‘my period’, or perhaps it’s just a
failure of my imagination. To me, history being ‘fresh’ isn’t so much about facts
I can learn, but about what it can make me feel.
I was reminded of that this weekend as we began a grubby
little archaeological dig of our own – the Herculean task of clearing out our
ceiling-cracking loft. Working inward from the ladder was like progressing
through layers of history preserved in glacier ice. Back in time
they went – old EastEnders scripts, my first television pass, teaching notes
and old ‘Comprehension Tests’, love letters, signed programmes of school plays,
and finally at the bottom just this:
Our loft is dry with insulation, and my sellotaped labels curled and floated with the limpness of
cellophane, but the glue that fixed these crushed tissue flowers stayed firm.
The paper insert was in place and intact, and although the pencilled words had faded with age I could still make
out the words ‘To Louise – From Class 5 and Mrs Terry.’
I was in hospital with TB in my first term at infant school,
and would have been just four years old. Too long ago to remember, but the
sight of that card brought it back in an astonishing rush. The cartoons on
the walls of the Children’s Ward at Addenbrooke’s, the taste of synthetic orange
juice, the wonder of the first encounter with a ‘bendy straw’. The card was
dusty, but I closed my eyes and felt my nose tingle with a familiar smell of
disinfectant.
An artefact can do that if it’s kept ‘fresh’. Had the glue
failed and the box yielded only a green card and a scattering of faded tissue,
I might still have remembered what it was, but I would never have relived the
story behind it.
But the experience was my own, and history is only ‘fresh’
when it can speak to people who weren’t there, couldn’t know, and probably
weren’t even born. To find those things I had to wade further into the jetsam
of time and investigate the boxes of memorabilia from my parents’ house. Here
were cracked photograph albums with white writing on thick black paper,
wartime culinary implements for bashing recalcitrant vegetables into submission,
and a filthy assortment of ornaments clearly retained for sentimental rather
than financial value. One revolting black object revealed itself to be a plain
wooden tankard of my grandfather’s, and considering it unusual enough to
deserve exposure I brought it
down into the daylight to ‘freshen it up’.
And hesitated. A year after my father died I showed my
sister how I’d polished the ashtray that always sat by his desk, and still
remember her disappointment when she saw how it had changed.
My sister isn't alone in thinking that way. Age
has its own cachet, and cabinet-makers deliberately ‘antique’ their furniture while clothes manufacturers ‘distress’ their jeans, but when it comes
to history then antiquity is even more crucial. We need to know that what we’re looking
at is old – which means we want it to look like it.
Re-enactors are familiar with this dilemma. If we use a shining
clean vessel visitors will mutter that it doesn’t look authentic – but if we
use a dirty one we’re doing an injustice to history. Our ancestors may not have
had our attitudes to personal hygiene, but they washed their clothes, they washed
their pots and pans, and even the English word ‘clean’ derives from Anglo
Saxon. People in previous centuries arguably took better care of their possessions
than we do, because they were much less easy to replace - and we must be true to the
historical mind as well as the historical props.
Olivier Hofer of 'Hortus Bellicus' - a re-enactor who's got it RIGHT. |
But my tankard isn’t going on public display, it’s probably
less than a hundred years old, and I had no sentimental memory of it, so without
more ado I set to work with beeswax and Brasso. And before antiquarians faint at the idea of modern and potentially damaging chemicals, I should
mention that Brasso has been with us since 1905…
If I’d known I was going to blog about it I’d have taken a
photo before I started, but I didn’t and I didn’t, and can only say that after
an hour’s work the tankard finally looked like this:
It’s a lovely thing, but it was more than aesthetic pleasure
that gave me the sudden little tingle of history. As long as I’d known it the
tankard had been a dull object with a band of dark brown metal round the rim,
but now I was seeing it just as my grandfather had done. Obviously he
wouldn’t have deliberately purchased something ugly, but now I was seeing it through his eyes, and to do that I had in some way
travelled through time. That - to me - is what freshness is all about.
Not my picture, but I think it's the same tree and tower |
It can
often be hard to achieve. No-one could fail to be moved by a visit to
Auschwitz, for instance, and I remember the sick, clammy horror of it to this
day, but it took over an hour before I was really able to ‘let it in’. We were
in a first floor dormitory with a crowd of tourists and a rather ghoulish
guide, and I let my gaze slide away from the bunks and out of the window.
There
was beautiful blue sky out there, leaves of trees big enough to have existed in
1945, then off to the right I saw the chilling structure of a guard tower and
felt it like a jolt in the stomach. I’d seen them before, we’d already walked
past two of them, but now they were terrifying and I understood why. I wasn’t
looking ‘at’ Auschwitz any more, I was looking out from the inside – and seeing
through the inmates’ eyes.
But the real walls exist in our minds. There are lots of
ways we can gain virtual first-hand knowledge of the past, but they won’t bring
us any closer unless we can respond from inside the same age. This video, for
instance, shows hair and headgear fashions of Edwardian girls, but we’re not
thinking ‘How wonderful, how cutting-edge’, we’re giggling at
the ridiculousness of the outmoded styles. We’re looking at, not looking with,
and so remain firmly outside.
Which is (at last) where writers come in. When our imaginations
take us inside our own characters, then we too are doing our bit to ‘restore’
the past – and it’s a frightening responsibility. It’s much harder to portray
an accurate mindset than it is to show accurate clothes, but a writer who gets
it wrong can do as spectacular damage as the well-meaning pensioner of Borja
who famously turned a painting of Christ into something resembling a deformed
monkey.
It’s still worth trying. I’m currently struggling with it in
my latest Crimean novel, where a private soldier’s letter home leaves
directions about the ‘china shepherdess from Brighton’. We all
know the things, ghastly, simpering, mass-produced fairings,
but this is
1855. The whole idea of owning something purely for the sake of ornament was new
to the ‘working classes’ where every possession needed to have a purpose. The
first cheap ornaments strived to do both – the china cow that was actually a ‘creamer’,
the pig that was actually a money box, the coachman that was
actually a jug – but to own something for no other reason than to stick it on a
mantelpiece and admire it was to be like the gentry, the aristocracy, the
Queen. To write this properly I had to see the naff shepherdess as somehow
desirable and precious – as it would have been through my soldier’s eyes.
But I still have to communicate that to the reader. I can
just tell him, of course, but emphasizing the differences between 1855 and 2013
doesn’t bring him closer to the age, it shoves him further away. There’s only
one way to bring him ‘inside’, and it’s the simplest, most important tool in any
writer’s box. I can make my characters as historically different as I like, as
long as I also make them recognizable as people, and appeal to the universal
humanity that binds us all.
It really is that simple, and it applies to every form of
restoration in the world. The greatest impact of those reconstructions of Richard
III’s face isn’t that we suddenly know what the king looked like – it’s that he
has a face at all. He’s a bloke, someone we could know or speak to, someone
just like ourselves.
Or again, among the many miraculous restorations at Pompeii, is there anything to touch the power of the resin casts of human remains?
Or again, among the many miraculous restorations at Pompeii, is there anything to touch the power of the resin casts of human remains?
They’re people. People who lived and loved and felt pain
just as we do, who lay down to hide their heads from the mass of burning lava
that has given them this extraordinary immortality.
But it is immortality, and that’s
at the heart of any attempt to keep history alive and fresh. We’re immortal too, part of
the same human story that connects us to these long dead Pompeians, and will
one day connect us to those yet to come. Tap into that stream, and we can see
history as part of Wordsworth’s own ‘Intimations of Immortality’ – with all ‘the
glory and the freshness of a dream.’
Good stuff, Louise. For personal things I think it's always difficult to strike a balance between what John Piper called 'pleasing decay' and trying to ensure the next generation don't throw the stuff away as rubbish. We're restoring a clock at the moment, the maker's name all but gone from the rubbing of fingers setting the hands. The dial has been restored but only enough to look loved; the clock's history is still there.
ReplyDeleteMarvellous! That tankard repaid your attentions wonderfully and I, for one, would not have preferred the blackened object, however much history it carried.
ReplyDeleteWe live in a listed building and have had much contact with local Conservation Officers. There is an interesting discussion to be had about what should remain untouched as part of the house's history, even when rusting and falling apart, and what sympathetically replaced.
50 years and it's considered history? Blimey.
ReplyDeleteA very thoughtful post. It reminded me of something i found of my father's it was an old packet of Park Drive cigarettes, which had fallen behind a radiator in our house - there were still a couple in it. They reminded me so much of him, and I put them on the shelf inside our fireplace (an old one, in a recess). And do you know what happened? my husband smoked them! And he doesn't even smoke!! Words were spoken, I can tell you...
ReplyDeleteGreat stuff, AL. As ever. Since you're the only active one of this group I know, I want to take the opportunity to ask a question which others in your group may chance upon. I teach a university module on History and the Historical Novel, and I would like to find some historical fiction - preferably by female authors - which features the quotidian life of women in the 1776-1815 period. It could go wider. I can find no end of texts from the time, but a more contemporary (to us) take on ordinary women's lives in the age of revolutions escapes me. I'm sure Im missing something, but responses gratefully received @ shipaground@gmail.com
ReplyDeleteYours
John Milne/Tom Bowling