Just as I expected (letâs face itâIâm always right, and it sucks) we had snow on the ground this morning. I canât describe it as a blanket of snow. More of a sheet, with a low thread count. But it was white, and itâs not what we want to see in April (though we do, we always do). Most of it melted in the sun today, though the temperatures stayed below freezing. Tomorrow will be a little warmer, but it will be slow warming up. Easter, I think, will be about fifty.
Dave Alpern sent me Bernard Cornwellâs three Arthur books to read. Iâd been thinking about reading the books, since I really like Cornwell as a writer (I especially enjoyed his seafaring thrillers, which heâs given up on because they didnât sell). But I hesitated with these because Iâve become leery of all contemporary treatments of the Matter of Britain (reasons to follow).
Everybody, it seems, wants to write about Arthur, and some very good stuff has been done. Iâve thought about doing it myself, though it would mean trying to master a whole new cultural idiom. Stephen Lawhead did a series that pretty much accomplished what I meant to try (probably better than Iâd have done it), so I figure, why bother?
Not that Lawhead entirely succeeded. I donât think anyone has succeeded in writing a great Arthur novel since T. H. White. Since White everybody tries to set Arthur in his proper historical period. Thatâs fertile ground, and yet⊠no novel ever seems to achieve the promise.
When I read Thomas Malloryâs Le Morte DâArthur, or any of the earlier Arthurian material, I feel as if, from time to time, I get to peek through a spy hole in a theater curtain, looking at a great drama being performed. I can only see bits of the action and hear scattered words of dialogue, but it looks like a great play. Modern attempts to retell the Arthur story always look to me like attempts to reconstruct that hidden play, but they never live up to my hopes.
That said, Cornwellâs The Winter King (first of a trilogy) is pretty good.
Cornwellâs Arthur is not a king, but a âwarlord,â regent for a king whoâs still a small boy. This agrees well with the (meager) historical record, by the way, since our earliest reports of Arthur never call him a king. Also authentically, his primary concern is defending Celtic Britain from the inroads of the Anglo-Saxons. His primary challenge is the disunity of his own people, a situation he himself makes worse when he breaks an oath to a neighboring king. Real tragedy is at work here, in the classic sense where a man means to do good but is frustrated by his own passions.
The narrator is Derfel, a Saxon by birth and a former slave, who rises to become one of Arthurâs lieutenants. Derfel is a sympathetic voice, a deeply feeling and compassionate man, yet a great warrior, who writes the story in a monastery in his old age.
It was the religious element that made me wary of these books. The second volume is called The Enemy of God, after all, and that accords with some of the earliest accounts of Arthur in books of saintsâ lives. Arthur seems to have had a bad reputation with the church. It’s been speculated that he appropriated church treasures to pay for his campaigns. Thereâs much opportunity here for an author with an anti-Christian axe to grind.
I wasnât entirely happy with Cornwellâs treatment, but it could have been much worse, and I canât pretend it lacks historical probability. Cornwellâs Arthur is a man of no particular religion in a Britain divided between Christians and heathens. The wars are not religious ones, and any given kingdom or army is mixed. One Christian priest is pictured pretty negatively, but other Christians look good (though it seems to me they are treated more sympathetically in reverse proportion to their orthodoxy).
On the other hand, Cornwell does not, as so many do today, gloss over the ugliness of heathenism. His Druids, even the friendly ones, are dangerous and half crazy, and their rites and ceremonies are bloody and ugly.
Merlin is presented as a Druid. Heâs amusing, and reminds one of Gandalf, if Gandalf were utterly amoral and ruthless. Heâs on Arthurâs side here, but everyone knows that thatâs only because he finds Arthur useful. If Arthur becomes inconvenient to him heâll throw him away like a small animal whose guts heâs divining from.
Cornwell doesnât stick strictly to historicity. Later accretions like Lancelot and Camelot are included without apology.
As in any Cornwell novel, the battles are well thought out and vividly described. The end is extremely satisfying, but you know thereâs more coming. Fortunately there are two more volumes.
I liked it a lot. It was as good as any Arthur book Iâve read, since White. It may even be the best since White.
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