|
Back to Index
Breadcrumbs
and a Spy-Hole
Edith Bone
From Conscience be my Guide: An anthology of prison writings
Edited by Geoffrey Bould, Published by Zed Books Ltd and Weaver
Press
March 2006
A medical
doctor, Edith Bone (1889 - 1975) was born in Hungary but became
a British subject in the 1930s when she was living in England. She
returned to Hungary after World War II and was arrested by the communist
government in 1949 and falsely accused of being an English spy.
She was sentenced to fifteen years imprisonment, but was released
during the 1956 uprising. For the entire seven of her incarceration,
she was held in solitary confinement and for five months in total
darkness. She was not given her spectacles, books or newspapers
for three years.
I was deprived of books
and writing materials. But I had continued to make up doggerels,
which I repeated carefully three times a day, so as not to forget
them. They were growing so numerous, however, that repeating them
daily began to take up too much time.
It was the bread that
again helped me. By this time, being an accomplished breadcrumb
technologist, I decided to make myself a printing set out of bread.
It must be admitted that, however little I thought of the quality
of my verses, I did feel I should like to see them with my bodily
eyes and not only carry them in my memory.
I began to shape letters
out of long very thin rolls of breadcrumb specially processed for
the purpose. When a letter was formed I gave it a little bang with
my fist so that it was flattened and all the joints pressed together.
The hardest part was
to make letters of the same size. This was difficult because, of
course, I could not make them all at the same time. I had to wait
until no one was about.
In the end I had four
thousand letters and a compositor's case with twenty-six separate
little pigeon-holes, and could lay out on my table not less than
sixteen lines of verse, doggerel or poetry, at a time. This was
great fun.
One of the things the
staff made every effort to enforce was preventing me from knowing
what was going on outside my cell. Why this should have been so
is still a mystery to me, but they were certainly very much concerned
about it. The natural result was that although I was only very mildly
interested in what was going on outside my cell, I made up my mind
to beat them at this game if possible. One of the amusements in
prison is to make fools of the screws.
I decided I would try
to contrive a spy-hole in my door through which I could look out,
just as they could look in through the regulation spy-hole which
is a feature of every prison door. The door was made of two-inch
solid oak, but of course its surface was not flush. It was built
up of several beams and there were points where three of these joined;
obviously these joints were weak spots, which could be attacked.
I had noticed long before
that a nail, or rather the large head of a nail, projected from
the door close to the floor. It stood to reason that it must be
a large nail. I decided that the first thing to do was to pull it
out and see whether it could be made into a bradawl. It only projected
about an eighth of an inch, but that was enough to get a purchase
on it with a cord, and then pull. This is not, of course, the most
efficient way of pulling out nails, but I had no other. From this
a second problem arose. I needed a cord, a strong cord. Where could
I get one? The jailers were sensitive about the smallest piece of
string, presumably because of their inexplicable, unreasonable and
inconsistent fear of suicides among the prisoners.
I decided that
the best possible cord could be made of threads pulled out of the
course linen towels which we were given. These linen threads were
thick and strong. Of course, I could not tear strings from my towel
- that would have been noticed and my cell would have been searched
and my precious cord discovered. But the towel had some length wise
red stripes in it, two on each side, and I decided to draw threads
on each side of these red stripes, since the absence of thread would
be much less noticeable there. This I did, with precautions, and
that it was not at all easy, because the guard looked in every now
and then through the spy-hole, and one never knew when he was peeping
in. One had to be careful not to be caught in the act of pulling
threads out of the towel. These were only changed once a fortnight
and so it took me about two months to get the required thirty-two
threads from which to plait my cord.
Fortunately for myself,
I had always been a fanatical lover of knots, and possessed that
most remarkable publication, The Ashley Book of Knots, which I had
studied assiduously and which, in addition to knots, also contained
a number of sinnets. I plaited a beautiful sinnet - a round one,
the sort known as coach-whipping - out of thirty-two threads in
groups of eight.
This cord was strong
enough to carry even my own weight, so there was no fear of it breaking.
I put a strangler knot (this, too, out of the Ashley book) round
the nail head, and, with my foot against the door, pulled for all
I was worth, but the nail still resisted all my efforts. I realised
that mere pulling was not enough. The nail would have to be loosened
by joggling it up and down and right and left. For a long time I
seemed to be making no headway, but I persevered until I felt a
slight wobble. I loosened and pulled day after day, for many weeks,
whenever I could be sure that none of the guards was loitering near
my door, and in the end I got that nail out. This was triumph.
The nail was about an
eighth of an inch thick and three inches long. I put an edge on
the end of it instead of the existing point by the simple expedient
of rubbing it on the concrete floor, which was exactly like a carborundum
whetstone, especially noticeable in its effects on the soles of
one's shoes or boots. The result was a bradawl. With it I
succeeded in boring a hole in my door at a point where three members
of solid oak met. It was only a pinhole, of course, and it had to
be very carefully concealed. It would not have done, for instance,
for any wood-dust to have fallen outside, so I used my mouth as
a pump and sucked out the little splinters of wood as my bradawl
removed them.
By a dispensation of
providence, the oak had been so blackened by age that it was exactly
the colour of my black convict bread. Thus, the little hole could
be stopped up by a tiny plug which matched the wood so perfectly
that my spy-hole was never discovered. The plug was a necessity,
as otherwise my little pin-point spy-hole would have showed up like
a bright star whenever there was a light in the cell and none outside.
I never took out the plug without taking care to block the light.
Until I was transferred
to another prison I had the constant use of this spy-hole and it
gave me more information on the routine of the prison than my jailers
intended.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|