The Choir of Gravediggers
By Mel Hall
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When Miss Truelove discovers hatboxes full of papers after her mother’s death, mysteries of her past begin to resolve. She is compelled to tell the story of her eccentric father, Charles Truelove, and the scandals surrounding his name. The Choir of Gravediggers takes us back to late nineteenth century Melbourne; a cemetery and a c
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The Choir of Gravediggers - Mel Hall
1
It wasn’t exactly a fact you’d advertise, that you were born and raised in a cemetery. Life and death are meant to be separate, clearly opposed. But we were cemetery children, muddy-kneed, playing amongst graves.
The sky changed so quickly then – frosty pink to the ink-blot grey of a storm. Pillows of clouds you could sleep beneath, dark ones which sent you running for cover.
I recall the sound of hail on the roof, splitting on the pointed tower of our stone house, the cemetery lodge. My sister and I weren’t allowed outside. We watched through rain-blurred windows as black umbrellas moved in slow procession, fine ice banking against mounds of graves.
Petals and whole flowers dropped from the sky when we weren’t looking. If they landed on a grave, they turned to stone. And that’s why the carved decorations of rose and ivy leaf looked so real.
The rain sang on the tin roof every few days – sun showers, storms at night. And water rose up from below, in underground streams. Our playground was often like a swamp, full of sunken stone crosses.
The dead sleep in their little damp abodes beneath the world of the living, waiting to rise again on Judgement day. It wasn’t our business to be living there, skipping over burial plots, bouncing balls against crypts, playing hopscotch on paths between resting places. That’s what people would say.
It wasn’t our business to be muddying knees with the soil that separated the living and the dead.
The secrets of the cemetery were tucked under an old spring bed, in a small cottage at Lillydale. 1944; Germans had been interned, some preferring to gas themselves in kitchens rather than lose their dignity. There were rumours of Japanese helmets washing up on the shore at Darwin. But this room was unchanged, old and dusty as it had ever been.
After my mother died, I scraped open the louvre windows of her home, sunlight revealing a cosmos of floating dust. A dressmaker’s model stood half-clad in a corner. Dutch milkmaids and porcelain clogs filled the sideboard of curios. I found strips of chiffon, lace, lemon satin, fabrics stuffed in strange places: crammed between tea and sugar canisters, in the bathroom cupboard, stacked beneath the laundry trough.
But it was under the single spring bed that I found it – what I’ve always searched for. The answers.
Why we ever lived there. Why my father, Charles Truelove, disappeared and later died. Why we left our graveyard home so suddenly, packed off to the middle of nowhere. Lillydale. And why we were told to never speak of St Kilda General Cemetery again.
A portrait of my father once hung proudly on the wall: his large round face, gentlemanly moustache, rosiness doctored into his cheeks. Now it lay flat under this bed, as though in a coffin. Under the bed were his framed certificates, engraved walking sticks, ribboned stacks of letters and hatboxes full of newspaper clippings. There were advertisements for Truelove’s concerts, songs ‘patriotic, sacred and nautical’, his tours of Tasmania with the All Saints Boy Choristers, performances of his choir of gravediggers, Esprit de Corpse, notices of his music direction for the Masonic Lodges of Sorrow and moonlit performances for the Railway Musical Society.
But a greater number of the clippings were about the cemetery. The embezzlement, trafficking of graves, charges of bashing through coffins to make way for second burials. There were clippings