(Drawing by Trevor Stubley in T.H. White's The Book of Merlyn) |
“Thou has done champion,” says the Hedgehog to King Arthur,
towards the end of T.H. White’s The Book of Merlyn.
King Arthur has been whisked away on the eve of his last
battle to spend his final hours in the company of his childhood tutors, Merlyn
the magician and a host of animals. White, more than any other teller of
Arthurian tales I know of, focuses on Arthur as a person, rather than a Legend.
In White’s version, Merlyn trained Arthur to be a king and a leader of men by
magicking him into lots of different animals as a child. Arthur spent time with
these different species to see how they behave, how they commune, how they
organize and how they are in the world. White was anti-war, and a far better than amateur
naturalist, so these animal interludes are both more biologically accurate and politically astute than mere Disney cartoon magic. The point is amply made.
But, here at the end of his life when the beauty and justice
and idealism of Camelot has crashed down around him in the angst and fury of
Mordred’s Fascist rabble, Arthur is miserable. He worries that his fight for
justice, his lifelong attempt for equality, all of his struggles and
sacrifices, all of this has been for nothing because humans, it seems, are
innately violent and ignorantly evil. Because he sees his fight as ending, and
he himself losing, he believes it all a failure.
And then, in the midst of the animals fussing and
complaining about warlike humans—all of which makes Arthur feel increasingly awful and
personally responsible for all the evils of mankind—the little flea-bitten
Hedgehog takes Arthur’s hand and pulls him back outside, into the moonlight and
the landscape, and helps him to see how the world is beautiful, even though
intrinsically flawed. The Hedgehog puts Arthur where he can see what he fought
for, rather than parsing how he fought. And he congratulates and affirms
Arthur, with those four words, which is the most graceful permission to exit I
can fathom.
Since recently re-reading The Book of Merlyn, every time I see or hear or read anything about the
evening of Obama’s presidency, the speculation about his legacy, the looming
unknown specter of Trump’s dawning era, I want to yell and pray “thou hast done
champion.”
Because, folks, it has been a wonderful eight years. Not a
perfect time, by a wide margin, but a Good time in the metric I use for success. What the legacy of it all will
be, I do not know. I hope that it will be an active legacy, that those who felt
the spark of hope and change will remain rooted and engaged, that we will
perpetuate our beliefs with our actions and words, rather than sit down and
mourn the loss.
Along with the Hedgehog and King Arthur, I’ve been taking
comfort in Jack Gilbert’s poem about Icarus, “Failing and Flying.”
The end of the Obama era is not a failure—it is merely “the end of his
triumph.” And, there was flight, there was progress. Hillary Clinton put her
million more cracks in the glass ceiling, Barack Obama made the White House a
little less white and a whole lot more dignified, and Martin Luther King jr.’s
arc of the moral universe bent ever closer towards justice.
How long that arc is, how young this country is, how slowly
evolution happens…all of this has given me pause and ballast
in recent weeks. Change is grindingly slow, and our personal lives are
brilliantly brief, so this makes change seem even slower. In The Book of
Merlyn, as the old man Arthur questions his
life’s work, Merlyn explodes over the disconnect between human history and
evolution: “When will they learn that it takes a million years for a bird to
modify a single one of its primary feathers?...Quite regardless of the fact that evolution happens in million-year cycles, he thinks he has evolved since the Middle Ages. Perhaps the combustion engine has evolved, but not he.”
Racial and gender equality, economic justice and
environmental salvation—these are challenges that present-day Americans and the
world need to address on a faster than a million-years-a-feather speed. And
yet, if we can remember that we are, after all, only human and only one more
species on this beautiful world, trying to govern ourselves, it lends some
perspective to see how glacial evolution is. This is not a free pass; we must continue the work of hastening our evolution, of bending the arc towards justice, but we must have perspective in the scope of how we measure our progress.
This is not to say that I believe that everything and
everyone will be fine throughout Trump’s presidency. This will be a hard and
ugly time. For the sake of those who threw the Hail Mary pass, held their noses
at the brassy violence of Trump’s character, and voted for him purely on
personal economic needs—I hope jobs are saved and created. However, I do worry
intensely how the founding ideals of our country will go—I hear that the White
House Press Corps is possibly being invited to move out of the Trump White
House, and that more alternative bloggers and other media hosts are being invited in. The
White Supremacist who advises the future President Trump announced this media
change.
I do not doubt that there will be a violent lack of dignity
within this administration, and that many shadowy corrupt dealings will take
place in the background while the spotlight is on the histrionics of a
Commander in Chief who doesn’t seem to understand he is playing with nuclear
fire. People are going to get hurt—whether by armed conflict or loss of health
insurance or recalibrated racism or climate change fueled floods and famines or
all of this, I cannot speculate, but believe all are on the table. I ache with
recognition that what I do, where I live, the color of my skin, I am unlikely
to be one of the injured. And I know these protections are thinner than the
dime all things can change on.
I imagine the Arc of Moral History to be something like a
huge, timeless barrel hoop. Our jobs are to catch it, hold it, and hone it
towards justice. We had it in our hands, but something slipped, and these next
few years are the ricochet. For every action, there is an equal and opposite
reaction. This is how things move forward, this is how we evolve our primary
feathers, how we fly. And in that, we will fail, sometimes. But the important
thing is that we tried, that we bent the arc, that we flew, that we did.
As Merlyn lists off all the poets and writers and
storytellers who will carry Arthur’s legend forward, all the places where his
story emerges, all the ways in which he is not forgotten, I thought of all the
acts of kindness and resistance that I know are happening as we go from Arthur
to Mordred, Obama to Trump. King Arthur and Camelot—these are not
remembered and retold because Mordred’s petulant rage broke the Round Table.
The bitter end does not erase the sweetness of the being. The attempt is the
triumph.
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