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The Covenant by James
A. Michener
The main setting of this extraordinary novel is the stunning
landscape of South Africa, but vivid episodes also take place in Indonesia, France,
Holland and England. The dramatic presentation of actual and fictional characters
in a background of historical events is a narrative technique of which Mr. Michener
has long been the acknowledged master - and never more powerfully than here.
The story begins 15,000 years ago with a clan of small brown people - the
San, later called "Bushmen" - who are facing a crisis. A beautiful lake,
long the center of their lives, is drying up, and they must move across a hostile
African desert to seek better conditions. The hardships overcome by this interpid
band - hunters, wanderers, artists - are minor compared with what will eventually
confront those who come after them. Some of these are next shown in the 15th century
toiling in the gold mines that enrich the black empire of Zimbabwe. They are overseen
by Nxumalo, who has achieved power and fortune in that great city and who is an
ancestor of one of the three principal familes in this book. The first
European settlement in South Africa is a Dutch outpost established in 1652 at
the Cape of Good Hope - a dangerous headland usually by-passed by ships sailing
to and from the Far East. What begins there, several decades after the first English
colonies in North America, parallels in many ways the growth of the United States,
but with significant differences. An original settler at the Cape is
Willem van Doorn. Born in Java to a prominent Dutch family, he is a member of
the first of the ten generations of Van Doorns who dominate this novel and an
early contributor to the racial mixture that will later be despised and repressed
as the Coloureds. He is a pioneer in the eastward movement which spreads his family
and their countrymen across the southern tip of the continent to the Indian Ocean,
confident in the belief that God has elected them to take this land by any means
and hold it against any opposition. For a century and a half there is
little to deter them; the San and the Khoikhoi ("Hottentots") are destroyed
or pushed aside, and other European immigrants quickly assimilated. But the end
of the 18th century brings more formidable obstacles: the Boers' expansion to
the east is encroaching on the territories of potent black tribes like the Xhosa
and the Zulu; and in 1795 the English occupy the Cape, soon thereafter ceded permanently
to Great Britain by Holland. In the early 19th century English settlers
arrive in increasing numbers including the Saltwoods of Salisbury, who now share
the stage. It is a century of violent conflict: white against black, black against
black, Dutch against English; the death and destruction on all sides are hideous.
The growing hostility to English rule finally erupts in the devastating Boer War
(1899-1902). The military victory of the British is converted by the
Boers into a political triumph. As the 20th century approaches its end, they have
become a rich, powerful, independent nation, heedless of their European origins
- Afrikaners, with their own language. They have passed elaborate laws for completely
controlling the vast majority population of blacks, Coloureds and Asians through
the system called apartheid, which with difficulty is being opposed. Mr. Michener
fully explores and clarifies apartheid by showing, through characters and action,
how and why it came about and how it functions. The Covenant is a major
novel about people, real and imaginary, caught up in the march of world history
- a story of adventure and heroism, love and loyalty, cruelty and betrayal. Though
not without comic elements, it portrays the tragic results of wrong decisions
made by fundamentally decent people in the serene belief that they are right.
Two-volume hardbound set in good condition. The dust covers show wear and
there is some yellowing from age.
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