Colonization
of Time
This is how the man
of Nigeria died: With melancholy and great difficulty in a London
bordello. His name was Mister Johnson, and he had come to London
looking for Mister John White, an Englishman who sold wrist and
pocket watches, chronometers, time-pieces, clocks both bedside and
grandfather; brass clocks, watches with leather straps, and great
oaken cabinets for heavy, swaying, swinging pendulums sold by the
photograph, since they were too large to pack away in his leather
travel satchel. At first, when John White had come to Mister
Johnson's village, he had been ignored and avoided. Sometimes he had
traveled with other white men, who wore white clothes, or sometimes
suits which had once been black but had been bleached by the sun,
stripped of pigment until the cloth was the same gray as the clayey
mud churned by passing carts, veined by soil leached from the fields.
Then John White
came to him at the funeral and professed the open satchel where
watches clung to leather straps or lay like virgins on beds of red
velvet. John White said, “Who wouldn't want a watch?” Mister
Johnson looked away and thought to summon memories of the dead.
The priest, quiet
for a Frenchman, who spoke passable English, stood over the three
small coffins and said, “How shall they believe of which they have
not heard?”
John White then
took out a pocket watch with a hunter case. It was gold and gleamed
in the stolid sunlight. “Have you ever considered how much time
you lose not knowing what time it exactly is? With a piece like this
never again will you have recourse to the sun to divine night from
day. Always will you know when you should sleep, wake, eat and work.
Never an idle moment.”
The priest neared
the end of his benediction. “To everything there is a season,”
he began, and then closed the book and intoned, “What profit hath
he that worketh in that wherein he laboureth? I have seen the
travail, which God hath given to the sons of men to be exercised in
it. He hath made every thing beautiful in his time: also he hath
set the world in their heart, so that no man can find out the work
that God maketh from the beginning to the end. Amen.”
The flock of women
in mourning black fragmented, some following the priest, most
drifting down the cemetery hill, and Mister Johnson turned to go with
them. John White plodded after, taking great sideways steps with his
hands curled round the wooden handles of his bag to hold it open.
“Look here,” John White said. “I realize the gravity of the
occasion, and I would never presume to impinge on your mourning, but
really you must apprehend the boon I represent. A time-piece, man!
Even you have to appreciate something of such fine craftsmanship.”
Mister Johnson
paused to placate one of the mourning women, who'd turned to frown at
John White. “I have no interest in such things,” Mister Johnson
said.
“Of course you
do.” Now that they had stopped, John White set the bag on the
ground and withdrew two watches, one on a long brass fob, the other
thick as an egg. “Hour and minute hands may satisfy most, but I
can see you are a man of fine and discriminating taste, and ordinary
features will not suffice. Indeed, with this watch you'll even save
time.” He held up the watch with the crystal face and brass fob.
“Never again oversleep, or arrive early or linger a moment too long
over an aperitif.”
“Go
away.”
John
White stood while Mister Johnson turned to go, the large watch still
in his hand, the bit of fob dangling out of his palm like the final
breath of a child. “What about a watch that will tell you when you
are to die?”
“Such
things are not so.”
“Why
not? The moments we divide into seconds and minutes, but really can
you tell me that a moment is not something more? I can see as the
hand turns and perceive time between. With a watch that tick-tocked
fast enough, divining morning from afternoon from evening, surely the
genius of man can create a watch fine enough to distinguish life from
death. It is Swiss.”
Mister
Johnson looked at the watch, then at the face of the Englishman. His
features were set like a table for supper; nothing askew. Finally,
Mister Johnson smiled, “I know my sums and my letters, and I know
also when I am being mocked. No.” Unlike Lot's wife, when he
went, he did not look back.
***
In
Lagos, a man told Mister Johnson that he should help protect their
city London from the enemy. He said that the native was being
ungrateful if he did not fight. So Mister Johnson went and put his
name in a book and was festooned with a brass numbered ticket and
given a trench watch.
Trains
came. They began in the distance while the minute hand trembled at
the top or bottom of the station clock and ended as the second hand
stole after and then the train doors opened when the two met like
lovers reunited at the XII or the VI. Mister Johnson went somewhere.
The air was cold. Azure sky. A color unlike the sun-bleached
whiteness over his home. They put him on a ship with other men from
Lagos and with men from Bassa Province, from the Benin and Sapele
Districts; men from Zungero, Lokoja and Kano, as well as Warri,
Calabar and Onitsha. Christian and Musulman. They disembarked
somewhere else, where the air was colder still and often it rained.
The
mud was ocher and ruddy and a kind of rust. In it he saw pebbles,
stones, the coarse grains of sand that glittered whenever the sun
broke through clouds so thick and dark he came to believe that they
captured the great clods of dirt cast heavenward when the bombs
exploded. The shells had a kind of odd precision, a thump
thump thumpthump that was not
unlike the pattering of his heart. The tick of his watch. He stared
at the second hand while his feet sank into the mud, while he leaned
into the muddy walls and felt himself sink deeper into the mud; while
the unseeing eyes stared out at him, bony fingers clutching the mud,
but even they gradually sank into the mud. The war would end when
everyone sank into the mud.
An
Englishman looked at his pocketwatch. Men panted and gasped. Rain
fell. Shells rained down. Silence reigned between the bursts,
before ears stuffed and muffled realized the shelling had stopped and
men tried to rein in their fear. The fob dangled from the
Englishman's palm like a sob half-gasped.
He
wondered: is this my time?
***
In
Paris Mister Johnson saw a man dying in the street. A young woman
crouched beside him in a dress like a silhouette. He was much older
and his hat had come off his head, lying forlorn in the gutter while
the murmur of lookers-on was like a worried bee-hive. It was after
the war and people congregated as though it had never occurred.
When
the ambulance cart finally arrived and a man emerged in white frock,
he knelt over the dying man and grasped the dying man's wrist. The
ambulance orderly removed a pocket watch and looked thoughtful, then
nodded and put it away. Somewhere between the ticks the old man had
died. As ineffable as the span between I and II, life passed into
death.
***
“Is
he here?” Mister Johnson asked Richmond Draper, the man who rented
a downstairs room from the widowed Dame Roger, whose husband had
simply failed to awaken one morning. Her two other tenants were
Susanne and Mary, who shared a room and offered illicit favors to men
for seven shillings three after 6, post meridian, until 10:30 when
Jack Payne and his Dance Orchestra played on BBC radio. Dame Roger
was a kind woman. As he lay dying, she charged him three-quarters
for his board.
“Your
son has been sent for,” Richmond Draper replied. He was an anxious
man, with the sort of drooping, splotched face Mister Johnson had
come to associate with Englishmen who'd never left London.
Mister
Johnson shook his head. “Is it time?”
“I
should think so,” Richmond Draper said, looking at the wrist watch
he set every morning to the tolling of Big Ben. The salesman had
told him, there is no finer time-piece in all of Britain. A
perpetual calendar, and crystal mechanism accurate to the millisecond
assured that Richmond Draper would never miss afternoon tea or forget
leap year. “Any time now.”
“But
you don't know,” Mister Johnson said.
“Really,
how can any man know? That is for the Lord and not for anyone else.”
He looked at his wrist watch again. “But really, I must be going.
Time and tide and all that.”
Mister
Johnson turned his head to face the window, where sunlight played
against filigrees of cloud and he imagined he could hear the soft
rumble of the underground and the bang of workmen pounding out new
lines to Piccadilly and the shuffle of feet along walkways and up and
down stairs like the grumbling of stones beneath the waves; and as he
lay there he heard the tick of the grandfather clock in the foyer,
and the clatter of some bit of piping and underneath all that the
slow turn of the world.
And
he imagined, or liked to believe, that somewhere far away a man woke
with the sun, slept when he was tired and when he was hungry broke
bread.
This
is how the man of Nigeria died.
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