Jane held the charm out at arm's length, and Cyril solemnly pronounced the word of power.As he spoke it the charm grew tall and broad, and he saw that Jane was just holding on to the edge of a great arch of very curious shape. The opening of the arch was small, but Cyril saw that he could go through it. All around and beyond the arch were the faded trees and trampled grass of the Regent's Park...But through the opening of it shone a blaze of blue and yellow and red. Cyril drew a long breath and stiffened his legs so that the others should not see that his knees were trembling and almost knocking together. “Here goes!” he said, and, stepping up through the arch, disappeared.
E. Nesbit, The Story of the Amulet.
Cyril's
knees were knocking because he was about to leave Edwardian London
for Egypt 6000 BC, through a magic amulet. I went weak at the
knees in the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery, standing before the very chair in which Lady Jane Franklin was carried (when the going wasn't too rough) on
her overland trip to Macquarie Harbour. History is stranger than
fiction, but both need strong characters. The feisty Jane and her
husband John (midshipman at Trafalgar, governor of Van Diemen's Land
and polar explorer) have inspired many works of art and literature.
So it's a shock to be reminded that Jane Franklin was more than a
fictional character - that she was once a living, breathing, sitting human
being.
That
shock of collapsing time, those moments of hesitation before Reason
returns with the usual distinctions between past, present and future,
are a form of time travel, according to Chris Wild of retronaut.co.
His website is a collection of thousands of 'time capsules', images
that could transport you back years, even centuries.
In this video Chris Wild starts off slowly, as if he has all the time in the world, but stick around for a handy tip on increasing your blog hits, a Victorian mechanical arm and, for those who remember the 80s, Nancy Reagan on Mr T’s knee.
Now you can call
me nostalgic, but retronauts ain’t what they used to be. Thanks to
the Internet Archive's WaybackMachine, you can still find the earlier website
howtobearetronaut.com, and trace Chris's increasingly frantic
attempts to classify his expanding collection. The category labels
were colourful: 'Anachronisms/Future in the past/Aliens in vintage
postcards', 'Duration/Exceptional survival/5000-year-old chewing
gum', 'Time distortion/Method of wrapping carrier pigeons'. The
repackaged website http://www.retronaut.co
is way more sedate, ordered by date, place and format. My favourite
'ghosts of...' series, images merging old and recent photos of the
same street, is buried deep. But my main gripe with the site is its
scanty referencing - you have to take so much on trust.
So here's my own amply referenced time
capsule: the only known photograph of Jane Franklin, visiting Yosemite, California, c.1861. Without her traveling chair: not being the nostalgic type, she'd left it behind in VDL.
References
Archive.Org (1996). Internet
Archive: Wayback Machine. [online] Retrieved from:
http://archive.org/web/web.php [Accessed: 21 Nov 2012].
The Lost Lectures (2012). Chris
Wild: When is Now?. [video online] Available at:
http://www.thelostlectures.com/864/chris-wild-when-is-now [Accessed:
21 Nov 2012].
Nesbit, E. (1979). Five children and
it: The phoenix and the carpet; the story of the amulet. London:
Octopus Books.
Potter, R. (2012). Only known photo
of Lady Jane Franklin. [image online] Available at:
http://visionsnorth.blogspot.com.au/2012/04/only-known-photo-of-lady-jane-franklin.html
[Accessed: 21 Nov 2012].
Retronaut.Co (2012). Retronaut -
Explore any time you like.. [online] Retrieved from:
http://www.retronaut.co [Accessed: 21 Nov 2012].