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PAX

St Aelred’s Abbey

Ashton Park

Ashton

Somerset

Great Britain

 

12th June 1962

 

Dear Jean Marc, Son in Christ,

Father Abbot received your letter of 6th May with great pleasure and has passed it on to me as the novice master. He asks me to thank you and hopes that in God’s time he will be able to meet you, and hopes particularly that that will be as a postulant who knocks at the door of the Abbey of St Aelred asking for admittance.

I have noted both your desire to enter the monastic life and the age at which you feel that you have been called by our Blessed Lord. I must point out to you the rigorous nature of our life, which, though it gives great joy to the soul and adds to the power house of prayer in the world for the salvation of souls here and in purgatory, is nevertheless, or rather because of that, a life of abstinence in which you are asked to surrender your will to the will of God through obedience to the abbot as Christ on earth. It is a life lived in common with your brothers. This ‘conversion of manners’ is the way our Holy Father St Benedict describes the life of a monk. The life of poverty and chastity is assumed into that vow which I hope you will eventually make among us.

Our physical life is very hard. Father Abbot and I did think immediately of the warm climate from which you are coming. We notice your urgency to enter after finishing your schooling, but would ourselves urge you not to come in the winter, but more preferably in the spring or summer months. But we do not wish to dampen your enthusiasm and so would leave it to your judgement and that of your parents and directors.

I have written to your parish priest and spiritual director to get the references which are needed. I trust that all will be well, and as I have mentioned before, Father Abbot will have great pleasure to admit you among us.

Please accept my kind regards to your parents.

I leave you in the name of Christ and our Holy Father St Benedict.

 

God bless,

Father Justin Simmonds, OSB,

Novice Master

PAX

The Presbytery

Notre Dame de Grace

San Andres

Les Deux Isles

Antilles

British West Indies

 

20 June 1962

 

My dear Father Justin,

I’m an old man now, but, yes, of course I remember Jean Marc. He was a wonderful child with a marvellous mother from one of the good old families out here, who inculcated in her son from a very early age a special love for our Blessed Lord and his Immaculate Mother, the Blessed Virgin.

I christened the child in their village church. But it was when he first came to our little school next door to the big church, as we always call it, that I was able to notice him. He was always very devout, making daily, sometimes I think twice-daily visits to the Blessed Sacrament, if I recall my ever watchful housekeeper who kept a good eye on all the children. He was always at communion during the school Mass on Thursdays. Regular at confession.

Jean Marc, poor little fellow, was always remembered because he used to faint frequently, a slight physical weakness at the time, maybe not
eating sufficiently at breakfast, having to come from the country into the town to school. Also, at times he was a little nervous, a little highly strung. This is not meant to detract in any way from a fine boy. As you see, the ramblings of an old man, father. But we do remember his faints because it was Mrs Goveia, my housekeeper that is, whom I’ve mentioned, who took especial care of the children, and who cared for him when he had one of these bouts and one of the school masters brought him to the veranda of the presbytery to get some cool breeze and the master in his anxiety for the poor boy filled his own hat with water and doused poor Jean Marc. He soon recovered. It is very hot here. Mrs Goveia always made him a special lemonade with lots of good brown demerara sugar. But less of these tales, good father.

I’ve known of Jean Marc’s desire to give his life to Our Lord in the monastic life. I’m a little sad that he does not want to join our community here, but he is resolute on an enclosed life devoted to manual work and prayer. We are a teaching and parish community out here in the missions. It is inspiring to see such zeal in one so young. I think you will find him a devout young man who is open with his thoughts and feelings and thoughtful of his neighbours. He comes from a good Catholic family with a brother and sisters and a mother who is exemplary in her church work and duties as a mother, and a father who is a pillar of the church, as we say. He is from one of the very best families. Not that I wouldn’t recommend a boy from one of
the poorest of our good Negro people.

I have no hesitation in recommending this young man to you.

 

I leave you in Christ,

Dom Maurus de Boissiere, OSB

Parish Priest

Malgretoute Estate

Nr Felicity

Les Deux Isles

Antilles

British West Indies

 

21 June 1962

 

Dear Father Justin,

Thank you very much for your letter, introducing yourself and conveying Father Abbot’s wishes. Please extend to him our best wishes, those of my husband and myself. It was very kind of you at all to write in this way. It makes us feel very much more in touch with the realisation of our son’s ideals. The whole tone of your letter makes us feel very secure that Jean Marc will get the very best advice in this enterprise of his. I say his enterprise, but maybe I should really say, God’s enterprise for him. I know that that is what he wants to do, the will of God for him. This we pray for each day. He is our eldest boy. We feel honoured and chosen for this great gift our
Blessed Lord has bestowed on our son, to give him a vocation to leave all, father and mother, brother and sisters, home and country even (though of course we are only a colony, sadly to be given so called independence soon), and follow him. To tell you the truth, father, I am quite overcome at the thought of my boy, not quite my Benjamin, my Joseph, let us say, doing this, but of course I am absolutely prepared to support him in his ideals and to give him up as it were to our Blessed Lord, as Abraham was called upon to sacrifice Isaac. But as I said before, my husband and I are secure, after getting your letter that Jean Marc will be well advised. And I am sure if the day comes that he leaves us and finds a home in your community, he will be well looked after by wonderful older men like yourself.

His father, not a man to show his feelings much, is proud of his son and said to me this morning, and I quote, ‘My dear, if that English monk says that Jean Marc will make a good monk you can rest assured that he will, and with good discipline.’ My husband sees things so clearly.

Jean Marc is a good boy, father. Yes, he is devout, but you know, father - and I feel I must be open with you, because I know that you will understand and will know how to help Jean Marc - he’s still very young. He is quite emotional, and quite headstrong too. I think these qualities can be good if well directed, but can cause problems. I would never detract from my son’s character, but I feel I am talking to you, father, who will be his novice master and spiritual director, and who will have the care of
his soul. I feel as if in giving him into your capable hands I am giving him into the hands of God. I know that you will understand me, father, when I write like this. I speak as his mother.

My husband asks to be remembered to you and Father Abbot.

So, father, in God’s time, if it his will, Jean Marc will be a son in your home as he has been here in our home.

 

I remain,

Yours sincerely and most gratefully,

Chantal de la Borde

PAX

St Maur’s Abbey

St Pierre

Les Deux Isles

Antilles

British West Indies

30 June 1962

 

Dear Father Justin,

Thank you for your letter concerning Jean Marc de la Borde.

I have known Jean Marc since he was a young boy of twelve and first came to our college. I have been his English teacher since then and his spiritual director.

I am fully convinced of the sincerity of Jean Marc’s vocation. My only regret is that he has not chosen to enter our abbey here, but I respect his desire for a more primitive interpretation of the Rule of our Holy Father St Benedict.

Jean Marc is young. While I think he can make this decision, and it is a big one, to leave his country and a very close family, he will need a lot of kindness and support. He is an emotional boy, pious, sometimes vaulting too high the hurdles on the course of the spiritual race. While his enthusiasm must not be dampened, he will need guidance to avoid consuming himself. He is fired by the lives of the saints, but can sometimes misinterpret the symbolic significance of these examples of spiritual attainment.

Jean Marc will adapt well to community life and values, and to the support a brotherhood like ours can give. He values friendship and has a generous heart, but should be advised very closely in this. There is a tendency to let his emotions get the better of him.

I fully support his application into your community. If I can be of any other assistance please do not hesitate to write to me.

 

In the fellowship of Our Holy Father St Benedict, I remain,

 

Yours sincerely,

Dom Placid Marcus, OSB

This was the official life. Of course, I’d never seen any of the letters; only that time, looking over his shoulder. I didn’t understand Ted’s anger, Ted’s sadness. One needs to read between the lines. I bottled up what I knew, twelve going on thirteen. Then I couldn’t any longer. They were such an exercise in euphemism, dear old Father Maurus mentioning his fainting. One must read between the lines. Was there a hint here, and a wink there? And Dom Placid’s letter, mentioning enthusiasm and friendship and need for counselling: there was nothing explicit. They all wanted so much for him; all so intimate and knowing at one level, and knowing nothing at the same time. He was himself so bland. And that letter written with Ted looking over his shoulder. No one knows. Well, some do know. Not even I know the truth, still. I know my own truth. I hadn’t always admitted it; tried to hide it away. I should’ve talked about it. He was too odd both times he returned, for the funerals of our mother and father. I think I knew what he was, but I didn’t want to admit it. Certainly, I didn’t want to talk about it. It made everything awkward. My truth, that’s what I have. That’s what I can go on.

There is the silence of directors, confessors, parents, lest they be scandalised.

I can only reconstruct, tell his story, use his words.

It was Joe’s letter which changed everything. It hurt me that it was Chantal that he wanted to write to.

19 St John’s Way

Bristol 8

Avon

England

 

15 March 1984

 

Dear Robert de la Borde

I have been a friend of your brother Jean Marc’s for years. I found your address among his things. I am sorry to be the bearer of sad news. Jean Marc died on 5th March in the early evening here at his flat in Bristol. He had been ill but said that it was not necessary to write to anyone in Les Deux Isles. He said he would if he felt up to it. I didn’t agree with him, but I respected his wishes. But now I think I must tell you of his death. He said that if he wrote he would write to your sister Chantal. I don’t have her address so I am writing to you. I have some things which belong to you. I was very fond of your brother. And please extend my sympathy to your sisters. I know that both your parents are dead. I enclose a phone number, 0179 412567, in case you want to call. Do get in touch one way or another. I will keep his things here for you. Please accept my sympathy and that of my sister Miriam, who also knew Jean Marc.

 

Best wishes,

Sincerely,

Joseph Gore

The Portrait

I am black but lovely…
Song of Songs

Once again, Brother Aelred was at his daily chores of housework between the hours of Prime and Terce. After he finished dusting the banisters on the first floor this morning, he paused to dust the frame of a painting which hung two or three steps down from the first floor to the mezzanine. The library was through the tall heavy doors off this landing. The painting was the portrait of a man dressed as an eighteenth-century gentleman of wealth, and presumably, as it occurred to Aelred, one of the early owners of Ashton Park before the monastery was built, and maybe, even the owner of the original house. There was gold lettering at the bottom. It was a name, but many of the letters had faded. He could decipher the word ‘Duke’.

But it was the small boy who knelt in a decorative manner at the duke’s feet who held Aelred’s attention as he wiped the glass and dusted the goldleaf of the frame. He was a black boy. As Aelred dusted and wiped the frame his mind wandered and his imagination mused as he stared into the wide open face of the black boy. He lost himself. He was Jean Marc again.

‘Jeansie, Jeansie, come boy, come nuh man, come and play cricket in the savannah, nuh man!’ It was Redhead from down in the village near Malgretoute. Ramnarine from the barracks was running behind him, pitching the cork ball into the air. He was bowling it up the gap to the
big estate house. ‘Throw it, Jeansie,’ Redhead called.

After play, he waved goodbye. They hung back to talk at the bottom of the gap. He didn’t invite them up to the house.

‘Ei, Jeansie, let us come and play nuh man?’

He kept on walking up to the house. He waved from the high verandah.

‘I’ve got to go in. My mummy’s calling me.’

‘You mummy calling you?’ Redhead and Ramnarine sneered.

Aelred stared. The portrait drew him into its world. It was a triumphant landscape of fields, lakes and mountains, dark and sombre, unfolding behind the figures, through arches and the rich folds of drapes. There was a town in the distance with towers and spires. This was England. There was a port from which a tall ship was setting sail. As he stared, he saw this little black prince, for so he seemed to Aelred, smiling up to the duke. The little black boy was dressed in red satins and gold silks. His coat and pants were made of blue taffeta. He mirrored and mimicked his master. He was a diminutive, his master’s doll. The boy was offering the duke a purse of jewels, or a purse encrusted with diamonds or pearls. The duke was accepting it nonchalantly. He was not even looking at the boy; he looked out over the world beyond the frame of the painting.

The admiration in the boy’s eyes was the same as that in the face of the master’s dog which knelt at his feet on the other side of the painting. It was looking up plaintively.

Aelred stared and wondered. Then he saw his own face reflected in the glass of the portrait. His face was superimposed upon that of the boy whose face shone
from beneath, so that the black face seemed to be his own. ‘Who all you white boys think you is?’ It was Espinet at Mount Saint Maur. He was sitting in the pavilion alone. They weren’t letting him into the game of cricket. ‘All you think all you superior. You think this make a difference.’ He was jabbing at his face pointing to the colour of his skin. ‘And you, de la Borde, all you French creole!’ It was then that Aelred saw that the boy in the portrait wore a collar. Or was it a trick of the light? It looked like a dog’s collar. Then he thought it was a reflection of the light in the glass. It was tightly fastened like a choker. Now it seemed like a thick iron sphere. It seemed it encircled his neck and glinted above where his satin cloak shimmered and fell in folds like those of the duke above him. ‘Why all you so, eh de la Borde? One minute you nice nice, the next you with the others on your high horse.’

Aelred continued to stare. And as the boy’s face grew in his mind, so did the voice of Toinette, his nurse and his mother’s old servant grow in him, so he spoke to himself in her voice.
‘Dou-dou,
come let me tell you a story.’ And she told a story she had heard from her great-grandmother. ‘This is what my great-granny tell me right up here in these cocoa hills overlooking them same sugarcane fields.’ The breeze whispered through the serrated leaves beneath the cool hills. Aelred looked down from the steps of the Malgretoute house to the village of Felicity. Aelred had heard this story from Toinette many times. ‘Tell it, tell it, Toinette, the one about the little boy.’

‘His name is Mungo and he come from Africa,’ Toinette began.

‘From Africa.’ Aelred heard his own boy’s voice repeat.

‘And they bring him here to Malgretoute.’

‘To Malgretoute.’

And so the story always started.

Aelred was behind in his housework. He saw Brother Patrick climbing the stairs with the hand bell in order to give the signal for the end of manual work. ‘Now, don’t you go and fall, brother,’ Brother Patrick warned as he passed by. Aelred stretched to dust the top of the picture frame and was intent on returning to his duty. He missed those friends: Redhead, Espinet, Ramnarine and Mackensie.

While he was in an awkward position to reach the top of the large portrait he became stuck for a split second. He noticed the intense silence of the abbey and himself there in this early hour of the day with Toinette’s story going in his mind. ‘Mungo was a runaway.’ He turned from stretching up and prepared to place his foot securely on the step to return to the first floor. As he turned, he saw the door off the mezzanine into the library closing. He heard it click shut. It closed softly, clicking in its brass mortise.

In the light which had poured from the partially open door, he noticed the back of Benedict and the door closing behind him. It startled him. It was like an apparition. He immediately thought of a childhood fancy. It was a sudden déjà vu. He thought he had had a vision when he was fourteen. It was Our Lady of Grace, dressed as if she was in the parish church next to his school in the old rusty racatang town of San Andres. She wore her blue veil and a white and gold mantle over her shoulders. Grace, like light, poured from her hands. She appeared to him just as he was waking from sleep and disappeared down the corridor to his mother’s and father’s bedroom
in a flight of light. He remembered crying out, ‘Mummy.’ She came and comforted him and together they said the Hail Mary. ‘There, now, dear, Hail Mary, full of grace.’

He had to finish his chores on the first floor and still had to continue up to the second floor. His mind began to play back what he had seen.

It was as if, now, he wasn’t sure what he had seen, so powerfully did the image of the small black boy stay in his mind with the accusations of Redhead, Ramanrine, Mackenzie and Espinet, with the story of Toinette being told to him again. Mungo carried a scar on his neck. He now wondered what it was that had startled him the most: the image of the black boy or the image of Benedict disappearing behind the library door. It seemed as if he remembered that on turning, in that fraction of a second, taking his eyes off the black boy, he saw Benedict standing in the open door of the library staring at him. It was not as Benedict would do normally, smile and say something. He was lost in his staring. Then he turned and closed the library door behind him.

Aelred went over the scene several times. He was convinced that when he first turned around he saw Benedict staring at him, and what he was staring at were his legs, which were exposed because his light denim smock had ridden up his leg, exposing his naked legs in his effort to dust the top of the picture frame. He had been unaware because of his concentration on the face of the black boy in the portrait.

Aelred became agitated. The black boy’s face, Benedict’s disappearance, and then the distinct sense that Benedict had been staring at his naked legs distracted him.

‘Brother Aelred. The bell has gone for the end of
manual work. You need to get ready for Terce.’ It was Father Justin. He felt that he had been caught doing something wrong.

 

As he stripped off his denim smock in the washroom he saw de Leger. He was a boy whom he had once caught staring at his legs in the chapel at Mount Saint Maur. When he looked back at him he saw the blue of his eyes, which were like the blue of the veins which ran in his legs, the blue in marble, the blue in the veins of Dom Maurus’s arms, blood like Quink ink. Then the bell for the consecration tinkled. ‘
Hoc
est
corpus
meum
.’
They all looked up at the host and then bowed their heads. When he screwed up his eyes he kept seeing the boy with the blue eyes who had stared at his naked legs.

Aelred felt worried but excited by the realisation that Benedict had been staring at his naked legs. But he was also a little embarrassed about how he would be next time he spoke to Benedict. Perhaps Benedict would tell him to check that his smock did not ride up when he was working, because it could be a distraction or embarrassment to others. Maybe he would tell him that he should have worn his overalls. Perhaps he was himself embarrassed.

Aelred washed his hands and face in the washroom of the novitiate. He stared at his wet face. He could not get the face of the black boy out of his mind. He could not get the face of Benedict out of his mind. Benedict had been so absorbed. Later de Leger had waited for him by the woodwork shop behind the college. ‘I want to kiss you as if you were a girl.’ But he never did and he kept himself in a state of anticipation whenever he saw him. Then
once, very quickly with only the dim night light in the dormitory, he came to his bed and kissed him on his mouth, as in the pictures, while the other boys slept in their beds in rows.

Ted and he had never kissed when they were small. They had been small when it started. It seemed as if it was as far back as he could remember that he and Ted used to play games which were to do with touching and other things. They used to undress together.

‘Rub my totee.’ He heard their boyhood word.

‘Suck me now.’

‘Yes.’

‘Put it in.’

‘Where?’

‘In my bottom.’

‘My finger?’

‘No.’

‘Come. Come. Push it in. Push it in.’

He remembered when their first orgasms started. ‘Let’s jock together.’

‘You break yet?’

‘Yes, yes.’ They held each other, hardly breathing. It smelt like the smell of swimming pools.

Then they had to go to confession. It was impure, a mortal sin. They would go to hell. ‘Lick, suck,’ Aelred heard those words from far away. He could not settle down to his Lectio Divina. ‘Break’, another word of childhood, threaded itself through his thoughts.
Le
petit
mort,
someone had once told him it was called when he was grown up. He wanted to tell all this to Benedict.

He was alone in his cell. He would not see Benedict till he looked across at him in choir. He drifted and nodded.
‘His name was Mungo and he come from Africa.’ He heard Toinette’s voice. He was roused by the bell for Terce.

 

After Terce and the Conventual Mass Aelred decided to go to the library to look up any books he could find on the history of Ashton Park. He could not get the face of the black boy out of his mind. Toinette’s story which had lain buried for so long, now came back to him with a peculiar force. He took comfort in her voice.

Dom Gregory, the librarian, directed him to a section of the library on local history. ‘There are one or two books which discuss the history of the house,’ Dom Gregory explained. Aelred promised himself that he would come back to the library after dinner and spend the siesta time there. There were other books on great houses of the West Country.

Maybe Benedict would come through the library and he would stop and talk to him. He could tell him of his interest since seeing the black boy in the portrait on the staircase. How would he explain his own disappearance through the library door?

Aelred went to the library straight from the refectory. He would have until the bell went for None. ‘Take your time, brother.’ It was Father Abbot, whom he met on the staircase as he bounded up three at a time. Aelred smiled, lowered his hood as was customary when you greeted the Abbot, and slowed down his ascent to the library.

 

The house was once called Ash Wood. Aelred remembered Brother Stephen telling him one afternoon when they were working in the wood behind the cemetery that ash was very common on the estate and
that it was a nuisance. There was a house at Ash Wood. There had been the original medieval house, which had had the medieval chapel that still existed in the cemetery. It was built by a printer to the King, a Mr Walter. He had the King’s head carved above the door to the great hall. But that house no longer existed. Another house was built, but that was burnt down at the end of the seventeenth century. The Ash Wood which interested Aelred was the house which first existed in the early part of the eighteenth century. This house was owned by a merchant, a Mr Dewey who had a son named Master Walter Dewey who went out to the West Indies. Mr Dewey had made his original fortune in the ‘South Sea Bubble’. Mr Walter had an estate on the island of Antigua, near to Ashtown, a small coastal town on that island.

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