Jump to content

This Thing of Darkness

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by LilHelpa (talk | contribs) at 17:34, 10 December 2015 (typo; mos). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

This Thing of Darkness
AuthorHarry Thompson
LanguageEnglish
SubjectRobert FitzRoy
GenreHistorical novel
Set in1828–1865
Publisher Headline Review
Publication date
6 June 2005
Pages640
ISBN978-0755302802


This Thing of Darkness was the debut novel of Harry Thompson, published in 2005 only months before his death in November of that year at the age of 45.[1] Set in the period from 1828 to 1865, it is a historical novel telling the fictionalised biography of Robert FitzRoy, who was given command of HMS Beagle halfway through her first voyage. He subsequently captained her during the vessel’s famous second voyage, on which Charles Darwin travelled as his companion. The novel was longlisted for the Man Booker Prize.[2] Its title comes from Prospero's line "This thing of darkness I acknowledge mine" in Act V, Scene 1 of William Shakespeare’s The Tempest.

Historical background

Born to an aristocratic family, Robert FitzRoy joined the Royal Naval College, Portsmouth aged 12 and entered the Royal Navy the following year, rising rapidly through the ranks. The novel begins in 1828 with the suicide of the commander of HMS Beagle, Pringle Stokes, and FitzRoy’s subsequent appointment as the vessel’s (temporary) captain at the age of twenty-three.

Whilst conducting Beagle’s mission of surveying Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego, during which he proved to be a meticulous surveyor, he captured four native Fuegians and brought them back to England when Beagle returned in October 1830. FitzRoy’s intention was that they should be educated and Christianised before being returned to their homelands, where they would be able to act as interpreters – with the aim of establishing friendly relations between their fellow countrymen and the British – and also use their new knowledge to improve the lives of their compatriots. The captives became celebrities and were presented to King William IV; one later died from smallpox.

FitzRoy undertook the second voyage of Beagle to return the surviving three Fuegians, at considerable personal expense. He was accompanied by Charles Darwin, who by the end of the voyage had become famous in scientific circles as a result of the discoveries he made during it, and who also collected much of the material that was to underpin his evolutionary theories during these travels. Decades later, following the publication of The Origin of Species, FitzRoy – a committed Christian – regretted that he had facilitated Darwin’s research.

On Beagle’s return to England, FitzRoy was elected as the Tory Member of Parliament for Durham. He was appointed to several official posts, amongst them becoming the second Governor of New Zealand. His attempts to treat the indigenous Māori population equitably made him unpopular with the settlers and the New Zealand Company and he was recalled to England.

FitzRoy was a pioneer of developing charts to allow weather predictions to be made; weather forecasting is named after his attempts at what he called "forecasting the weather". He published the world’s first daily weather forecasts in The Times in 1860 and also provided personal forecasts to Queen Victoria.[3]

He committed suicide in April 1865 as a result of depression and a combination of problems at the Meteorological Office, which he headed, and financial and health difficulties.

Characters

This Thing of Darkness includes a large cast of fictionalised historical persons. In addition to FitzRoy and Darwin, the characters include:


Bartholomew Sulivan, British naval officer and hydrographer

Boat Memory (original name unknown), a native Fuegian brought to England

Syms Covington, cabin boy on HMS Beagle and later a servant of Charles Darwin

Reverend George Packenham Despard, a missionary in the Falklands Islands

Fuegia Basket (original name yok'cushly), a native Fuegian girl brought to England

Jemmy Button (original name o'run-del'lico), a native Fuegian brought to England

Maria Isabella Smyth, second wife of Robert Fitzroy

Mary Henrietta O'Brien, first wife of Robert FitzRoy

Philip Parker King, British naval officer and explorer

Reverend Richard Matthews, a missionary in New Zealand

Robert McCormick British Royal Navy Ship's Surgeon, explorer and naturalist

Thomas Moore, governor of the Falklands Islands

William Sheppard, prospective parliamentary candidate

York Minster (original name el'leparu), a native Fuegian brought to England

Critical reaction

In The Independent on Sunday, Stephen Knight wrote: “A hybrid of novel-of-ideas and ripping yarn, This Thing of Darkness is more convincingly the latter. The crew's skirmishes with South American natives and a storm off the coast of Uruguay, presaged by wind-blown clouds of butterflies and moths, are beautifully managed set-pieces, pacy, gripping, and vividly chaotic”. He found the characterisation less effective, saying: “If Thompson's tendency to spell out his characters' thoughts saves us from imagining a subtext, it does not make his creations more rounded. For all their musings, many only register as stereotypes, and, as a consequence, few deaths properly haunt the reader.”[4]

In The Independent, Roz Kaveney found Thompson to be “writing as much about relationships as ideas. His account of the prickly friendship of the Tory prig Fitzroy and the cold-hearted Radical Darwin owes much to other novels of naval life and their forced intimacies; the spirit of Patrick O'Brian is often not far away”. Kaveney was unconvinced by aspects of the novel, saying: “Part of the trouble here is that Thompson is adapting the historical record for the purposes of fiction and is free to load the evidence. He can make Fitzroy's belief in biblical inerrancy a refusal to ditch religion in the face of inconclusive evidence from geology and zoology, while omitting the concurrent debates about the nature of the biblical text. The historical Fitzroy chose to ignore several sorts of evidence. Thompson also portrays Darwin as more racist in the modern sense than Fitzroy, again by shuffling his deck of facts.” She concluded that “This Thing of Darkness is two sorts of book: a superior adventure story and a polemic. One can enjoy the former considerably while noting that the manners of the latter are wanting.”[5]

Robert Colvile, writing in The Observer was more impressed, finding: “The bare facts of Charles Darwin's voyage to the Galapagos, and his formulation of the theory of natural selection, are well known. It takes an expert author to make a new pattern from such familiar cloth, yet this is precisely what Harry Thompson has done. […] While rarely lyrical, Thompson's prose drives the reader through the 750 pages with the unstoppable force of an ocean current, fusing brisk action, challenging ideas and gut-wrenching emotion into an astonishingly assured debut - and memorial”.[6]

References

  1. ^ "Have I Got News For You man dies". BBC News. 8 November 2005. Retrieved 17 March 2015.
  2. ^ "McEwan fights Barnes for Booker". BBC News. 10 August 2005. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
  3. ^ Moore, Peter (30 April 2015). "The birth of the weather forecast". http://www.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 30 April 2015. {{cite web}}: External link in |website= (help)
  4. ^ Knight, Stephen (9 October 2005). "This Thing of Darkness by Harry Thompson". The Independent on Sunday. London. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
  5. ^ Kaveney, Roz (12 August 2005). "This Thing Of Darkness, by Harry Thompson: Weighting the evidence". The Independent. London. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
  6. ^ Colvile, Robert (5 February 2006). "Location, location, location". The Observer. London. Retrieved 18 March 2015.