A few months ago one of the first readers of Britannia’s Wolf sent me the question
below:
“Today’s readers do not have the same sensibility as
Victorians. Is there a compromise in Britannia’s
Wolf between the way Dawlish and his contemporaries saw, and to some extent
accepted, violence, and the way we respond to it today?”
It’s worth repeating the answer I gave then on my website
and which I’ve updated with reference to my second novel, Britannia’s Reach:
The issue of making characters true to their period – in my
case the Victorians, is critical. We shouldn’t graft 21st Century sensibilities
on to 19th Century people, even sensitive and decent ones. The Victorians had a
much more robust attitude to life and death than we do in the West today. Most
families would have lost children and death in childbirth was still as common
as it is today in Africa. Anesthetics were only in their infancy and people
died regularly of complaints that are managed almost routinely today. There was
somewhat of a cult of mourning and remembrance in that era (led by Queen Victoria herself - the "Widow of Windsor") whereas today many
in the West have never seen a corpse until a parent dies. With us death is
hidden – and is perhaps the last undiscussible.
The cult of ostentatious mourning supported a small industry - 1888 advertisement |
Public executions continued in Britain until 1868 and were
well attended. When they ventured overseas, as Victorians increasingly did as
the Empire expanded, they encountered cruelty on a scale and intensity that
shocked even them, as happened in China and India and Zululand and elsewhere – they responded very robustly indeed.
There’s a taste of this in Britannia’s
Wolf, when Dawlish is confronted with a massacre of innocents and takes a
rather tough reprisal against the perpetrators. There was a lot of similarly
unofficial rough-justice against concentration-camp guards and other SS thugs
in the immediate aftermath of WW2. Britannia’s
Wolf is set in the brutal Russo-Turkish War of 1877-78, which was provoked by
widespread massacres of Christian villagers in Bulgaria by their Ottoman
Turkish overlords and the course of which was marked by horrific atrocities and
reprisals in both sides. The situations Dawlish encounters in the novel are,
unfortunately, closely modelled on real events.
Bulgarian massacre victims 1877 - eyewitness sketch |
And yes – people do get marked, indeed hardened, by such
experiences. My own exposure to cruelty and callousness by the powerful in
Africa and South America has left me with an abiding contempt for the
self-styled elites in such countries and makes me understand, even if I cannot
condone, violent retribution when the tables are finally turned. History has
taught us that overthrow of one corrupt and tyrannical regime is usually
followed by one equally bad, no matter how noble the ideals proclaimed initially
might have been. I addressed this theme
in the second Dawlish Chronicles novel, Britannia’s
Reach. For a decent person to be caught in such a maelstrom, and to be
forced to confront moral ambiguities on every side at a time when “doing
nothing” is not an option, is a terrible one. A Mephistophelean bargain of the type
portrayed in Britannia’s Reach (which
I wrote a blog about on March 18th) is one which we should pray we
are never tempted to make.
Western observers view heaps of burned Bulgarian villagers - eyewitness sketch |
In writing about violence and atrocity I've tried not to shy
away from the horrors inflicted on civilian populations - but one has to be
careful. On the one hand there’s writing that blandly draws a veil over such
pain and on the other there’s a danger of indulging in an orgy of violence.
Finding the mean between these extremes is critical and I hope I do that.
Retribution: Turkish refugees flee before the Russians Winter 1877/78 |
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