tag:dreamwidth.org,2009-05-01:175088Thou Unnecessary LetterFurther musings from the end of the alphabetzingerella2012-12-31T03:55:49Ztag:dreamwidth.org,2009-05-01:175088:37563In Comes I, Bold St. George2012-12-31T03:35:36Z2012-12-31T03:55:49Zsleepypublic3Reprinted and edited from a <a href="https://bellejarblog.wordpress.com/2012/12/30/winter/#comments">comment I left at The Belle Jar</a>. <br /><br /><em>Every December, G. plays a part in the Mummers' Play, at the Flying Cloud Yuletide Celebration. So far, he's been the Doctor's Horse, the Fiery Dragon* (there never is a fiery dragon in the play, but the fiery dragon who isn't in the play is always the youngest child), Charles Darwin (in cotton-ball beard with a sea-turtle backpack on his back), and, this year, John Barleycorn, who brought in the evil triumvirate of Stephen Harpercorn, Dalton McGuintish, and Rob Barleyford. Every year, after the candle-light chorus sings, and the first story is read, we hear a jingling, and John the Master of Ceremonies announces the arrival of those practitioners of what he calls "socially sanctioned extortion," the Mummers. </em><br /><br />The mummers come once a year, in the dark of winter. They don’t exist any other time. The rest of the year, they’re children and teens. They go to school. They do homework. They practice the piano or guitar. They play soccer and Minecraft. They don’t see each other, much, because their parents all live in different places. <br /><br />Once a year, in the dark of winter, they tell a story. Adorned with the same costumes they wore last winter, they each act a part, familiar to us all from years of watching these same costumes, these same characters, this same story told with different words by children who know the story because they told it last year. Everyone quiets down when the mummers come into the room. We have a role to play, too. We have lines.<br /><br />Here’s Old Bette. Her chin has sprouted whispers since last year; the actor who plays her no longer quite fits into the ancient bridesmaid’s dress. Old Bette threatens to kiss the men, and tells us all the story has begun. A gangly teenaged boy in an old bridesmaid’s dress, she lets us know that this is an upside down time, a time of misrule, a liminal time.<br /><br />And now the story begins. Here’s St. George, brave and bold, her sword held high, bringing light to the darkness and hope to despair. We cheer for her bravery, and for her youth.<br /><br />But you can’t have a hero without a challenge. In comes the fiery dragon!<br /><br />There ain’t no fiery dragon in this play! choruses the audience, and the very young fiery dragon subsides, making room for a more serious threat.<br /><br />In the muddled mythology of our play (which is like, yet unlike, any Mummers’ Play anywhere else in the world), St. George must face the threats of darkness, cynicism, and despair in the guise of a current known evildoer. One year it was Stephen Harpercorn. Another it was Rob Barleyford. The name doesn’t matter, so much. What matters is that this force of cold, darkness, meanness, and death will fight our brave Saint George and will not rest until St. George is vanquished. Also, he cheats. <br /><br />And by treachery, St. George is slain.<br /><br /><i>Terrible horrible, see what you’ve done? You’ve killed our own beloved one!</i><br /><br />All is not lost. A series of characters are summoned to try to revive St. George: Charles Darwin, an old man who wears the bottom of his trousers rolled cannot revive him. A wizard who pulls a rabbit from a hat cannot raise him. A series of singers fail to breath the breath of life into him. Pickled Herring (I don’t know, it’s *Tradition*) cannot entice him back to life. Finally, the Doctor comes, on his horse (the second smallest child plays the Doctor’s Horse.) The Doctor gives St. George some of his magic elixir, and St. George springs back to life, six times as strong as before. He kills the evil knight, and informs the ever-hopeful fiery dragon that there really is no fiery dragon in this play.<p>It’s the same story, every year. It has to be the same story every year: St. George must be brought down, be mourned, and be revived: Youth, warmth, life, and hope must fall before darkness, cold, cruelty, and cynicism, and be revived by the concerted efforts of, well, everyone. It’s John Barleycorn, Jesus of Nazareth, Orpheus, the Hero with a Thousand Faces, and it’s a story that we need to tell and to remember in the darkest days.</p>The mummers have gone to their pot-luck feast now, well compensated both with praise and with treats for their annual effort. The fiery dragon, who is three and a half this year, is asleep under the desserts table. St. George has put down her sword and is enjoying a half-pint of beer under her mom’s supervision. The Doctor and his Horse have gone home, bundled onto the subway by their tired parents. And we know that just as St. George rose again, so to will the sun, and that we need to wait, and hope, and hold and share the memory of warmth against the cold, light against the darkness, hope against fear, and community against the loneliness they can bring.<br /><br />We tell this story every year because it’s a story that must be told, to remind us that spring comes from winter, that life comes from death, and, above all that life isn’t a tidy narrative. Most stories we encounter are: they have a beginning, a middle, and an end, and by the end the lesson is learned, the problem resolved, the loose ends woven in or cut off. The Mummer’s play is not that kind of story. It’s the story of the year: summer and harvest cut off by winter, then born again, and we wind up back where we started, except a year older. The year itself isn’t a unit, separated from previous years by a beginning, a middle, and an end. Well, it is, but that’s just convention: the earth, the weather, and we ourselves don’t observe these arbitrary demarcations. So open the door for the Mummers:<br /><br />A merry Christmas and a happy New Year,<br />A pocket full of money and a cellar full of beer,<br />A penny in our palms won’t do us any harm,<br />May your days be merry and your homes be warm<br />ALL THROUGH THE YEAR.” <br /><br /><em>Our Mummers' Play is written anew every year, always using the same cast of characters and structure, but with political content relevant to the past year. </em><a href="http://www.folkplay.info/Texts.htm"><em>Here's a database of historical mummers' play scripts, for your interest</em></a><em>. <br /></em><br />* <span style="font-size: smaller;">This was the year I learned that we'd lost the Fiery Dragon costume at 9:00 p.m. the night before the play. I won some sort of good parental-adjunct prize, coming up with a tail and a toothy hood out of red scraps. I was not gratified to hear a voice from the audience complain "But the fiery dragon is supposed to be <em>green</em>!" If I'd known before the fabric stores closed, we might have had a green dragon. Folkies can be <em>such</em> traditionalists.</span> <br type="_moz" /><br /><br /><img src="https://www.dreamwidth.org/tools/commentcount?user=zingerella&ditemid=37563" width="30" height="12" alt="comment count unavailable" style="vertical-align: middle;"/> commentstag:dreamwidth.org,2009-05-01:175088:18147Paging Dr. Jung. Put That In Your Pipe and Smoke It. 2010-09-12T17:58:20Z2010-09-12T17:58:20ZThe Corries: Roses of Prince Charlierushedpublic1<span style="color: rgb(51, 51, 153);">I was travelling around on work, meeting with clients. I was in Newfoundland, and then I went to Iceland, and thence to Sweden. My hotel in Sweden was adorable—genuinely boho, a kind of Art Nouveau apartment building, with hanging silks and a proprietress who had a crystal ball. <br /><br />It was there that I became uncomfortably aware that I was being followed. Strange men appeared in the lobby. My clothes had been rifled in my room. The proprietress of my hotel was upset and gracious about it. She seemed to know who the culprits were, and apologised and changed my room to one for which there was no way to duplicate the key and promised me security. But as I was waiting in a hired car for my mom at the airport, they appeared again. I had no choice but to drive away, leaving the driver (who may have been one of Them) waiting at the airport. There ensued a high-speed car-chase, through the highways, overpasses, and back roads of Sweden. This was inconvenient, because I can't actually drive, so in addition to being terrified and annoyed by the people chasing me, moderately lost because I was in Sweden, and confused by how to operate a car, I was worried that the police would notice my erratic driving and pull me over, and then discover that I don't have a license, don't speak Swedish, and <em>don't know how to drive.</em><br /><br />Eventually I ditched the car, and took a bus back to my cute hotel, where the proprietress informed me that she'd put my mother in the room adjoining mine, and the rest of the guests on the third floor. <br /><br /></span><span class="cut-wrapper"><span style="display: none;" id="span-cuttag___1" class="cuttag"></span><b class="cut-open">( </b><b class="cut-text"><a href="https://zingerella.dreamwidth.org/18147.html#cutid1">Further adventures inspired by Pushing Daisies, Steig Larsson, Naomi Klein, Cory Doctorow, Die Hard and others</a></b><b class="cut-close"> )</b></span><div style="display: none;" id="div-cuttag___1" aria-live="assertive"></div><br /><br /><br /><img src="https://www.dreamwidth.org/tools/commentcount?user=zingerella&ditemid=18147" width="30" height="12" alt="comment count unavailable" style="vertical-align: middle;"/> commentstag:dreamwidth.org,2009-05-01:175088:9595For Sabotabby2009-12-02T23:23:17Z2009-12-02T23:25:12ZGroovemongers: David's Bathrobepublic0Do I have to read <em>Twilight</em> in order to have an informed opinion of <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/11/18/AR2009111804145.html?hpid=artslot">Monica Hesse's theory concerning why smart, literate, feminist women find themselves being bitten by Meyer's execrable prose and frightening worldview</a> [warning, link contains some abelist slurs]? <br /> <div style="margin-left: 40px;"></div><p style="margin-left: 40px;">In "Twilight," Edward Cullen waffled between wooing and eating new girl Bella Swan. He chose love. In "New Moon," the darkest installment of the series, Edward becomes convinced that his girlfriend would be safer without him, so he dumps her in order to protect her and then vanishes. Bella, catatonic from the pain, finds solace in Jacob Black, the devoted friend who has just learned he is a werewolf, <a href="http://voices.washingtonpost.com/answer-sheet/health-1/what-kind-of-sex-ed-works.html" target="">and their relationship grows deeper</a>, and this description is utterly, utterly useless because none of it gets at what the "Twilight" series is actually about, which is being 17.</p> <p style="margin-left: 40px;">It's a time capsule to the breathless period when the world could literally end depending on whether your lab partner touched your hand, when every conversation was <i>so</i> agonizing and so thrilling (and the border between the two emotions was so thin), and your heart was bigger and more delicate than it is now, and everything was just so much <i>more.</i></p>I'm not sure I want to be reminded about being 17. I was really dumb then. Yes, things <em>mattered</em> more, but they hurt a lot more too, almost all the time, and I'm pretty sure I was insufferable. <br /><br />So I'm pretty sure I shouldn't read <em>Twilight</em>, which is good, because I've no desire to. But I don't fault those who do. After all, I like <em>Die Hard </em>movies. <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><img src="https://www.dreamwidth.org/tools/commentcount?user=zingerella&ditemid=9595" width="30" height="12" alt="comment count unavailable" style="vertical-align: middle;"/> comments