Still there will be books by Jan Needle
Being the world’s slowest reader, I finally
got to grips with Wolf Hall because of the television version, and because
having already read Beyond Black I knew the lady is a writer of genius. It’s a
measure of how wonderful I find it that after only ten days I‘m on page 313,
which is nearly half way through. I thought the TV version was fantastic, too.
Almost every scene, up to and including the execution, was mind-blowing. (I
didn’t bother with a spoiler alert there, because if anyone doesn’t know who
got the chop it might make them read the book. Sorry. I’m being silly.)
Sitting in me lonely writer’s bed this
morning, though – reluctant to give up and get up halfway through a chapter – I
fell to wondering what was the motor for this exhaustive, off-centre, and truly
rather frightening revivification of English history. Coupled with an interview
or two I’d heard earlier (thank you, World Service), I realized it might be an
investigation of what the West is going to ‘do’ about the ‘problem’ of Islam.
Our government’s latest proposals had an awful echo of the way religion operated
five hundred years ago. Who needs a prescription when you've got proscription.
The face of Western thought? |
Henry
goes to it with the mother, good luck to him. He goes to it with the sister,
what’s a king for?...[Anne] goes to it with her brother; …and that’s how she
trusts herself she don’t give in to Henry, because if she lets him do it and
she gets a boy he’s now clear off, girl – so she’s oh, Your Highness, I never
could allow – because she knows that every night her brother’s inside her… [Inside her without fear of conception, however, as the waterman
reveals in detail. Sex is as inevitable as it is as appalling in the eyes of
God’s interpreters – but He did give us variations.]
Although the ‘rules’ of ancient Islam seem
to be in the ascendant nowadays (and I don’t blame the Taliban, or ISIS, so
much as the West’s never-ending crusade and its most recent insane resurgence
set on by Bush and Bushbaby), Mantel in Wolf Hall sets up the forces of change
besetting ‘our’ religion. Tyndale, although in exile where I am in the book, is
putting his head on the block to modernize, and Henry, of course, is prepared
to go to almost any lengths to get into bed with the slippery Ms Bullen. Here’s
Tyndale, according to our Tom:
Saints
are not your friends and they will not protect you. They cannot help you to
salvation. You cannot engage them to your service with prayers and candles, as
you might hire a man for the harvest. Christ’s sacrifice was done on Calvary;
it is not done in the Mass. Priests cannot help you to Heaven; you need no
priest to stand between you and your God. No merits or yours can save you: only
the merits of the living Christ.
And there is More, of course. Sir Thomas
More, another ineffably holy man, another man convinced his views reflect God’s
in entirety, another man prepared to maim and murder in the name of Divine Love. Still
an’all, there are still books to succour us.
‘He
cannot lock us all up.’
‘He
has prisons enough.’
‘For
bodies, yes. But what are bodies? He can takes our goods, but God will prosper
us. He can close the booksellers, but still there will be books. They have
their old bones, their glass saints in windows, their candles and shrines, but
God has given us the printing press.’ Her cheeks glow.
I could go on all day, but I’ve got work to
do. If I ever get to meet Ms Mantel (next time I’m drinking in Glossop, maybe?)
perhaps I’ll ask her if any one religion was in her mind, or just the lot of
them. Or maybe it’s the rise of modern politics, a new government that thinks
people should be banned from promulgating ‘extremist views.’ Try telling that
to Nigel, eh. And IDS…
Comments
And I loved Wolf Hall, though missed the TV version as I was away. I agree with Dennis - Bring up the Bodies is even better.
The West is not, and has not been for centuries, in a crusade against Islam. And for all the West's faults, and they are legion, I would take fifty years under Bush rather than two weeks under the Taliban, or two days under ISIS. As I suspect would any sensible person.
One can criticise one's own governments without reflexively going to the ridiculous extreme of preferring psychopathic misogynist lunatics. Surely.
Yes, extremism has its causes, and it can happen anywhere. And the moral high ground is so much easier to take when you are well fed and personally safe. Constant physical jeopardy can drive anyone fighting mad. But that still doesn't justify the implication that ISIS etc are 'okay really, just misunderstood good guys'. It's not the individuals I blame, as such, but the insane system in which they are caught up. They are trapped in a culture that actively wants to bring about the end of the world, which is anti-life in all its forms. This isn't my claim, it's theirs. I feel desperately sorry for them. But ISIS, en masse, is a demon and needs to be fought.