all his life â but adventure was not the word he used, it was the word we children repeated until we saw that it made him uncomfortable. He had mined: had indeed owned his own mine. Had farmed, but had not done well. Had done all kinds of work, but âI like to be my own master.â He had owned a store, but âI get restless, and I must be on the move.â
Now there was nothing in this we hadnât heard before -every time, indeed, that such a wanderer came to our door. There was nothing out of the ordinary in his extraordinariness, except, perhaps, as we remembered later, sucking allthe stimulation we could out of the visit, discussing it for days, he did not have a prospectorâs pan, nor had he asked my father for permission to prospect on this farm. We could not remember a prospector who had failed to become excited by the farm, for it was full of chipped rocks and reefs, trenches and shafts, which some people said went back to the Phoenicians. You couldnât walk a hundred yards without seeing signs ancient and modern of the search for gold. The district was called âBanketâ because it had running through it reefs of the same formation as reefs on the Rand called Banket. The name alone was like a signpost.
But Johnny said he liked to be on his way by the time the sun was up. I saw him leave, down the track that was sun-flushed, the trees all rosy on one side. He shambled away out of sight, a tall, much too thin, rather stooping man in washed-out khaki and soft hide shoes.
Some months later, another man, out of work and occupying himself with prospecting, was asked if he had ever met up with Johnny Blakeworthy, and he said yes, he had indeed! He went on with indignation to say that âhe had gone nativeâ in the Valley. The indignation was false, and we assumed that this man too might have âgone nativeâ, or that he wished he had, or could. But Johnnyâs lack of a prospecting pan, his maize meal, his look at the supper table of being out of place and unfamiliar â all was explained. âGoing nativeâ implied that a man would have a âbush wifeâ, but it seemed Johnny did not.
âHe said heâs had enough of the womenfolk, heâs gone to get out of their way,â said this visitor.
I did not describe, in its place, the thing about Johnnyâs visit that struck us most, because at the time it did not strike us as more than agreeably quaint. It was only much later that the letter he wrote us matched up with others, and made a pattern.
Three days after Johnnyâs visit to us, a letter arrived from him. I remember my father expected to find that it would ask after all, for permission to prospect. But any sort of letter wasodd. Letter-writing equipment did not form part of a trampâs gear. The letter was on blue Croxley writing paper, and in a blue Croxley envelope, and the writing was as neat as a childâs. It was a âbread and butterâ letter. He said that he had very much enjoyed our kind hospitality, and the fine cooking of the lady of the house. He was grateful for the opportunity of making our acquaintance. âWith my best wishes, yours very truly, Johnny Blakeworthy.â
Once he had been a well-brought-up little boy from a small English country town. âYou must always write and say thank you after enjoying hospitality, Johnny.â
We talked about the letter for a long time. He must have dropped in at the nearest store after leaving our farm. It was twenty miles away. He probably bought a single sheet of paper and a lone envelope. This meant that he had got them from the African part of the store, where such small retailing went on â at vast profit, of course, to the storekeeper. He must have bought one stamp, and walked across to the post office to hand the letter over the counter. Then, due having been paid to his upbringing, he moved back to the African tribe where he lived beyond post offices,
Elmore - Carl Webster 03 Leonard