"It's hard to put into
words how the news of
Tony's death has
saddened me so. I
unfortunately never had
the pleasure of meeting
him in person, which
almost makes me feel
I've no right to feel
any sadness at all. I've
thought of his family
and those close to him,
and how they might feel
about strangers talking
about him after his
passing. It feels
intrusive somehow, that
we dare to think we have
anything to feel sad
for, anything to grieve
for - even the right to.
But, no matter the
reservations, we do feel
it. We feel the loss of
an incredible mind, a
formidable being who had
such a talent; to write
factually AND
creatively. Christ,
that's hard. Creative
writers aren't usually
fans of following rules
- they are artists you
know! - yet he managed
to pull off both,
strategically wiping out
the opposition, fact by
fact, with poetic
licence to boot.
Whatever you thought of
Blacksmith, he suffered
no fools and told no
lies. He had no
alliance, no care for
popularity. His blunt
honesty often irked
those who demanded he
plant both feet one side
of that fence, but for
him, that fence was so
irrelevant it didn't
deserve recognition.
"I don't do theories" he
said. He definitely
didn't - a fact-smith,
was Blacksmith.
Speculation wasn't his
game. Even when his lack
of such saw him labelled
with very desperate,
projecting insults,
nothing - and no one -
could fold him. Can you
imagine a poker game
with this guy?!
He brought some of the
most incredible insight
to this case we could
ever hope to see. He was
criticised for implying
he had inside knowledge
which he regularly
insisted was a
misconception. He had
criticism for knowing he
was right and being
'smug' about it.
Well...he did know he
was right, because he
only dealt in facts. Yes
he had hopes, opinion,
some of which he'll
sadly never see
confirmed or denied.
Thankfully, his legacy
as Mr John Blacksmith
will live on. His
humour, intelligence,
determination and
meticulous research will
live on forever.
I imagine the character
we knew as Blacksmith
was only a tiny
percentage of the
incredible man he was,
so I for one am forever
thankful to have
conversed with such a
remarkable,
unforgettable man.
"Do give me up old boy,
it'll do you the world
of good." John
Blacksmith, 2018
They never could 'JB',
you were too good.
Rest in the knowledge
you were always true."
–
Sade Anslow, 19.03.2019 -- |