Vexing as a checker of fact, but a primal, and vital,
fountainhead in the history of English bullshit.
Tribal Legend isn't bullshit because the people telling
it generally believe that it's true. Fiction isn't bullshit because the people
telling it really believe that it's false. Even a naked lie isn't really full
bullshit if the person using the lie has a clear and attainable goal.
Fairytales come close.
True bullshit is a special thing. An exotic matter, like
a rare element existing only for a moment, composed of parts of history,
legend, and yes, lies. But never direct head-on deliberate lies, more like the
scenes in movies where we 'enhance the image'. Geoffery is enhancing the image.
He is not corrupting history, he is arranging it. Then all of this is spun
together in a sophisticated matrix of claptrap, kept in active suspension so
those fragments of rare element never have to come into contact with real and
full reality, and then die.
I feel a deep mingling of emotions on reading this.
Amusement; he is a very good, and hilariously egotistical, storyteller.
"I have been content with my own expressions and my
own homely style and I have gathered no gaudy flowers of speech in other men's
gardens."
Then later a character says; "Your speech, adorned
as it was by Ciceronian eloquence."
Yeah, Ciceronian eloquence written by Geoffery of
Monmouth and then pointed out by another character also written by Geoffery of
fucking Monmouth.
Engagement also. And he can write. Armies gather on
hilltops, sneaky saxons sneak through crowds disguised as beggars, kings make
speeches, we generally know where everyone is and what is going on. Unless
you've actually tried crawling through other medieval histories you have no
idea how rare it is for it to be easy, or even pleasurable. It's rare today.
Then tiredness, and some anger. Just stop lying you
fucking fool. Stop making shit up. Bede didn't need to.
Are we better off that you lied? What if you had just
related what you saw written down, and what your friend told you, and whatever
your other sources were and had just given us that, straight. Would we know
more? We would have had the history of a story and instead we got the story of
our history.
It makes me sad because I want it to be true. Or at least
to have some truth in it. The same tension seems to exist with all the scholars
who read Monmouth. Some are resigned, amused, others pissed off. We are all
thinking, "could that bit be true? How about partially true? Could this
bit be s reflection of some distant actual event? Could a weird Welsh book
really have a list of pre-Roman rulers and could it be at all accurate? Could
there have ever actually have been a Lier with three daughters? Or is it all
fantasy and dreams?"
A few points;
The prophecies of Merlin are a particularly good example
of despairingly-stupid Medieval bullshit. I try to avoid Dawkinsesque contempt
for the past but my god this is some stupid fucking shit. It makes my head hang
to think that men wasted lives thinking about it. At the same time, a lot of it
is quite brilliantly creative;
"An Ass shall call to itself a long-bearded Goat and
then will change shapes with it. As a result the Mountain Bull will lose it's
temper: it will summon the Wolf and then transfix the Ass and the goat with its
horn. Once it has indulged its savage rage upon them, it will eat up their
flesh and their bones, but the Ox itself will be burned up on the summit of
Urianus. The ashes of its funeral pyre shall be transmuted into swans, which
will swim away upon dry land as though in water. These Swans will eat up fish
inside fish and they will swallow men inside men. When they become old they
will take the shape of Sea-wolves and continue their treacherous behaviour
beneath the sea. They will sink ships and so gather together quite a
treasure-house of silver."
I mean, I hope whoever came up with that crap got paid,
or at least a meal out of it. Stuff like that isn't easy.
Arthur is described as wearing fine leather armour, you
know society must be fucked up becasue that's some level-one shit.
He has the Virgin Mary painted on the inside of his shield
so she can watch him as he fights. Gawain is described as doing the same thing
in the Green Knight.
His spear is called 'Ron', which Wikipedia tells me is
short for 'Rhongomyniad'.
At one point advancing soldiers are described as wearing
their round shields hanging round their necks in front of them. I have never
heard of this before.
"You foolish people, weighed down by the sheer
burden of your own monstrous crimes, never happy but when you are fighting one
another, why have you so far weakened yourselves in domestic upsets that you,
who need to submit far-distant kingdoms to your own authority, are now like
some faithful vineyard which has gone sour and you cannot protect your own
country, wives and children from your enemies? Keep on with your civil
squabbling and forget what the Gospel says; 'Every kingdom divided against
itself shall be brought to desolation, and a house divided against itself shall
fall.' Because your kingdom was divided against itself, because the lunacy of
civil war and the smoke-cloud of jealousy obscured your mind, because your
pride did not permit you to obey a single king, that is why you see your
fatherland ravaged by the most impious heathens and your homesteads overturned
one upon the other, all of which things those who come after you will lament in
the future. They will see the cubs of the wild lioness occupy their castles,
cities and other possessions. In their misery they will be driven forth from
all of these, and only with the greatest difficulty will they ever recover the
glory of their former estate, that is if they recover it at all!"
That is almost pure Mallory, who wrote his screed against
the faithless English, I think about 400-500 years after this was written. Not
much change there then.
Our host seems to have been found by the one OSR-related-nexus that is not on his map yet: YDIS. Oh boy. I base this speculation vaguely on the name Kent that seems to be some code-word over at YDIS (Your Dungeon is Suck, a place of unbounded OSR-criticism, NSFW) and the weird posting behaviour recently.
ReplyDeleteJust as a counterpoint, I'd like to say I appreciate the views on Monmouth, because I did not even know he existed until I read this entry. What a curious case for English historiography.