Other than my
wracking sobs for fictional characters, the most distressing part of the latest
season of Downton Abbey was that I forgot to keep track of the number of time
that words to the effect of "the world is changing" were said. I
think that sentiment permeated the season as much as lavender and starch
permeate the Dowager Countess's unmentionables.
I know that when you hold a hammer, every problem looks
like a nail, but I couldn’t watch the beautiful, wasteful, opulence of life at
Downton without thinking of the present world. Thoughts on climate change and
income inequality and class, gender, and identity struggles all flitted through
my head while I watched the beautiful people on the little screen try to keep
their lovely home and ancestral heritage stable as the world changes. All that
over-consumption, crumbling as the necessary support networks falter…climate
change may be my hammer, but I don’t think I’m wrong with the analogy. The show
is still a soap opera, I still watch it mostly for the beautiful clothes and
the Dowager’s snarky, silky retorts, but just because it is fluff, doesn’t mean
some truth and beauty and intelligence can’t be there also.
The people who seem to get truly screwed in Downton—as
perhaps, in our current reality—are the parents. They’ve been raised one way,
expect certain truths to remain true, and are hurt when life deviates from
their plan. The grandparent-aged folk have enough experience and perspective to
handle a certain amount of change. And, then the young people are leading the
charge, demanding that, if the world is changing, that we must change with it.
If this sounds familiar to anyone else, I won’t be surprised. Some friends and
I have been talking about how the ramped-up over consumption of the last fifty
years has been in service to the Baby Boomer generation, and, to quell the
literal rising tides, that we need to return to, remember, the harder, more
skilled, smaller lives and greater capabilities of our grandparents’ generations and
farther back.
I think of this every time another friend takes up
canning. Or knitting. Or farming. These things may be trendy and hipster, but
also, they are useful skills for life. I try not to think that some Cormac
McCarthy-esque Apocalypse is nigh with climate change and increasing economic
inequality and joblessness, but I do think there will come a time where to use
less will not be a choice. I’d prefer to learn how to be capable before there
is a need, and there is sweetness in making an active choice. The world is
changing and we must change or go extinct, as they say in Downton.
I am already frightened for this summer’s wildfire season
in the West, for the hurricane season along coastlines that are still raw from
last year, for whatever slings and arrows and emergencies we’ve forced
ourselves to weather this year. It is more than time to change, the world has
already changed, continues to do so, and we must change, and quickly, to live
in the world we’ve created. Or it, and we, will go extinct. For my part, there
is still too much that is wonderful to give up now. Battered and hot and
crowded and problematic as this world is, I think it’s still worth fighting to
hold on to. And little actions, like learning to be more self-sufficient and
kinder, may not be enough of a weapon. But they are a good, well-intentioned,
start towards change.
One of my favorite storylines of Downton has been Lady
Sybil falling in love with the Irish Catholic Revolutionary chauffer, Tom
Branson. I think that any one of those identities would be enough to sink his
battleship amid the Crawleys. They certainly threaten to, a new
mark against the man appears pretty much every time he does. Without saying too much, what
I most loved about this latest season was watching him come into peace with his
old identity and his new as a member of an aristocratic, English, Anglican,
family. Rather than fight for Home Rule in Ireland, rather than firebomb and
terrorize the countryside in service to his (rightful) passions, he turns back
to land and family, and gives himself in service to those ideals.
John Adams, who I like for being persnickety and overly
verbose and for helping Abigail Adams to some prominence, wrote “I must study
politics and war, that my sons may have the liberty to study mathematics and
philosophy, natural history and naval architecture, in order to give their
children a right to study painting, poetry, music, architecture, tapestry, and
porcelain.” I think that this is the source of the somewhat watered down, “I am
a revolutionary so my son can be a farmer and his son can be a poet.” I’ve seen
that line attributed to both Thomas Jefferson and George Washington, but I’m
going to demonstrate a small bit of loyalty to my new state and give it, here,
to Adams.
I don’t see why revolutionaries can’t be farmers and poets.
In truth, I don’t see a better way.
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