by Douglas Messerli
Wendy Walker Blue Fire (Brooklyn: Proteotypes [Proteus Gowanus], 2009)
Sometimes
the revenant is discovered because his grave is visible, usually by either a
blue fire of blue glow.... The blue glow, in European tradition, is frequently
interpreted as the soul, and it is seen as an indicator of buried treasure
through much of Europe, apparently because its shows where a body is buried,
and bodies were frequently buried with valuable grave goods.
—Paul Barber, Vampires,
Burial, and Death: Folklore and Reality as quoted in Blue Fire
The inquest,
which also focused on the possible guilt of Savill's sister, Constance Kent,
ended, because of lack of evidence in an investigation that was badly bungled,
in the conclusion that Savill had been "murdered by persons unknown."
After the trial,
Constance was sent away to France to the Convent de la Sagesse. In 1863 she
returned to England to enter St. Mary's Convent in Brighton as a nurse trainee.
There she met and came under the influence of Rev. Arthur D. Wagner, a member
of the Oxford Movement, who wanted to return the practices of Anglicanism
closer to the Roman Church, and was a particular enthusiast of confession.
What occurred
between the young woman and her confessor is unknown, but two years later
Constance traveled to London in his company to confess to the Road Murder. Her
detailed description of how she had committed this crime was, as Walker
describes it, "A tissue of fiction, contradicting forensic evidence and
important testimony." Yet Constance was tried by a judge who sentenced her
to death. For the next twenty years Constance Kent was remanded to penal
service in five national prisons: Millbank Prison in London, Parkhurst on the
Isle of Wight, Brixton, Woking, and Fulham. Her sentence of death having been
commuted, in 1885 she was released, moving to Australia under the name Ruth
Emilie Kay to live with her brother William. At the age of 46 Constance began
nursing studies with a woman who had trained under Florence Nightingale, and
over the rest of her life she served in several Hospitals, becoming matron of
the Paramatta Industrial School for Girls before serving at a tuberculosis
sanatorium in Mittagong and, at the age of 66, opening an old age home for
nurses. Constance Kent lived to 100 years of age.
As anyone who
has read the circumstances around this murder has wondered, why did Constance
Kent admit to a crime—refusing to deny her testimony for the rest of her
life—that she most
The problem here,
as Walker recognizes it, is how to "tell" this story without making
further assumptions about the young woman's life or simply throwing a web of
one's own imaginative desires across the almost obliterated truth of the
circumstances.
To
"trick" herself into reading the biased Stapleton book, Walker
employed a method used by John Cage, the mesostic, in which she selected
"one word from each line of Stapleton's book, proceeding line by line but
never choosing two words that followed consecutively." This she poses as a
"poetic" revelation of the now-liberated text on the left-hand side
of each page, while on the right she selected extant passages from texts about
the murder, including Constance's own "Sydney Document," written in
response to Stapleton's book, and selections from other works in the Kent
library. Walker also traveled to the houses and graveyards of the Kent family
and to churches known to contain mosaic works done by Constance during her
imprisonment, representing those visits with photographs.
The result is an
amazing work of erudition that not only asks important questions about
Constance and her family, but reveals the cultural context surrounding a young,
somewhat bored and occasionally rebellious girl, haunted, perhaps, by the
familial relationships between her own mother, who lived in one part of the
house, and her father, who lived with the nanny, Mary Pratt (who later became
the second Mrs. Kent) in the other. Constance's mother, perhaps always a frail
woman—several of her children died in childbirth—was also rumored, mostly by
the father, to be mentally unstable.
As Walker
demonstrates, the role of a young English girl of this period was to live out
life of such overwhelming sacrifice that it might lead even to invisibility.
What women represented was more important than their reality: they were emblems
of perfection, even saintliness.
Constance was
none of these. She was an intelligent and highly curious child who was
punished, time and again, for the smallest of infractions or inability to learn
her school lessons by Pratt. She had seen her mother, moreover, ousted from her
own life in a manner not unlike the wife of Edward Rochester in Jane Eyre. So unhappy was she that, at
one point, she convinced her younger brother to escape with her to sea, with
the hope of joining their elder brother, Edward, who had joined the Merchant
Marines. She cut her hair, dressing as a young boy, and the two escaped to Bath
where they were uncovered by a hotelier and returned to their father.
By quoting from
various reports of the murder (including newspaper clippings of the time,
Rhode's and Stapleton's books, and Constance's own writing) and Victorian
writings as varied as Dickens, Collins, Elizabeth Gaskell, Charles Kingsley,
John Ruskin, Florence Nightingale, Sir Walter Scott, Charles Darwin, and
numerous others, the author recreates the tenor of the period with the reader beginning to comprehend the
psychological aura of this young, rather plain-faced, slightly obstinate child.
Walker does not "explain" or answer anything, but through her choices
of texts conjectures, convincingly it seems to me, that if Constance did not
commit the crime, she felt, in her sense of failure and out of her confused
emotional responses to family life, that she was nonetheless guilty—guilty of something. Her own
disposition was to give of herself, to sacrifice, and the only way she knew how
to accomplish that for her own family, whether or not she realized the truth of
the situation, was to take on what was perhaps her father's guilt, to become
the scapegoat that might salvage the others' beings. Given her outsider role
within family life, perhaps she had no other possibility.
My only quibble
with Walker's work—and even that word is perhaps too strong since it is
apparent that Walker is purposely bringing up these issues—is the book's
subtitle. Blue Fire is indeed
"poetic," but not simply because of Walker's application of the
mesostic method. As Walker and I have discussed previously, all great fiction
writers are also excellent poets. Walker herself has proven that in all of her
fictions, and major fiction writer-poets such as Herman Melville, James Joyce, Djuna Barnes, and William
Faulkner have often done their best poetry writing in their fiction rather than
in their books described as poetry. Walker's word choices in the mesostic
construction, lines such as "strides of blood among questions / those
consequences of narrative," "insinuation of screen in truth / to
conduct criticism," "any English simplicity of negligence can say /
reading this after usual murder son feelings / will question truthfulness of
women," (I could quote from almost any page) is more emphatically prose-oriented,
in that it reveals possible "truths," rather than attending primarily
to language. I am not suggesting that these passages are not poetically
compelling or linguistically challenging, but positing the idea that, perhaps
because of the source material, the mesostic work syntactically suggests a
prose coherency.
Her
"non-fiction" passages, on the other hand, although all representing
material from extant works, are more fictional in their careful arrangement
than some so-called novels. Prose, it seems to me, pretends, at
But that is just
the problem. It is our presumption that there can be an objective reality that
falsely separates prose writing from fiction, that misleads us time and again,
the reason, in fact, that Walker had such difficulty reading Stapleton's prose.
All prose is equally imbued with the writer's desires, imagination,
miscomprehensions, and personal views, immediately transforming what is
presented as "truth" into a kind of fiction. Perhaps only in a
purposeful fiction can we really speak the truth.
In Blue Fire Walker is less interested in
discerning any one "truth," than in questioning the multiple
possibilities; and in that sense, it is not directed in the same way as
"nonfiction," but represents an extremely artful construction of
texts not at all unlike original fiction.
I read the book,
accordingly, by using the mesostic passages as poetically-charged prose that
stood alongside and against the reportage and writings of the period, the one
overlaying the other ricocheting into new realities. (Indeed, I attempted to do
something similar in one of my own works, Along
Without, in which I used short passages of other writers' fictions to
create the "story" for a film, in which the characters spoke in a
highly poeticized diction.)
Blue Fire uses poetry and prose, but in
a manner that is closer to fiction, I would argue, than most works describing
themselves as such. For the soul beating
at the heart of Walker's work, is, like blue fire, a hotter evidence of warmth
and desire, a buried treasure hidden in the actions of a young girl who gave up
her soul in order to enrich others' existences—a truth that was not to be
comprehended in Constance's real life.
Los Angeles,
December 14, 2009
Reprinted from Or
(No. 4, April 2010) and EXPLORINGfictions
(December 2009).
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