In a court in western Kenya, on 13 July 1934, Major Geoffrey Selwyn and his wife, Helen, were jointly charged with the murder of a 'native'. Geoffrey Selwyn, my father-in-law, died before the trial began. Proceedings continued in his absence, and my children's grandmother was found guilty of manslaughter and sent to prison. The trial attracted much attention at the time, and when Helen Selwyn was sentenced it made the front page of some British newspapers. But the case was soon forgotten, unlike the more lurid pieces of white mischief which went on in the so-called Happy Valley. Yet the Selwyn affair mattered more, and like George Orwell's Burmese Days (published in the same year), it encapsulated almost all the stresses of British colonialism.
LRB 5 June 2003 | PDF Download
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