The reign of Donald the 1st has me thinking how he will be regarded by future writers and even those in our midst, when normalcy is restored.
This led me back to Richard the 3rd, and how he
was maligned by Shakespeare, writing in the service of Elizabeth, the reigning
Tudor of the day. Dick was deposed by Hank, the 7th, father of
the next Henry whose depravity we can’t seem to get enough of.
This is the way it goes with a monarch. Fawning sycophants
blowing sweet nothings into his ear until they stumble and lose their heads. It
then takes someone like the Bard to set in stone the deviltry of his patron’s
predecessor.
While Hank-8 is buried at Windsor Castle, Dick-3 rotted in
Potter’s Field for five centuries and then got paved over as a parking lot. His
skeletal remains were exhumed a few years ago and revealed a counter narrative
to the one Will Shakespeare spun.
No twisted, withered arm, his back less hunched or humped into a
mountain as Shakespeare had it, and no unequal, limping legs. More
importantly, Richard III allowed for petitions of the poor and set up legal aid for
them in a Court of Requests, later abolished by his successor, Henry VII. He protected
merchants by prohibiting the importation of goods from abroad, exempting books
which he encouraged for the people. Laws, henceforth, would be written in the
common tongue.
Conversely, one wonders how the mountain of retrogressive acts by Donald
will be remembered. Will Trump, the man-child, become a dynasty like the Tudors? Yahweh forbid.
16th and 17th century media in the hands of great pens could move minds just as Fox News and social media does today. Even in the 19th century Charles Dickens' Tale of Two Cities became the accepted version of the French revolution.
I probably won't be around to have my question answered. My guess is it will take a generation or more to repair the damage done to the fabric of this once great nation. Even worse, Donald's push for fossil fuels and callous indifference toward the degradation of our environment may doom the planet irreparably.
I expect there will be dozens of poets, essayists, playwrights and novelists eager to unravel Donald's gibberish and translate his jejune vocabulary to adult language. The challenge is to grasp the full extent of his appeal, where it came from, what sustains it and how a country embraced spectacle over substance, nescience over research, and how indecency, malice and incoherence became a virtue.
I seem to have written myself to despair. I allow this to happen on Tuesdays and Thursday. On Monday, Wednesday and Friday I convince myself that sane voices will prevail and on weekends I let the miracle of life wash over me and plan my afterlife. As Jimmy Durante used to say, Let me hear dat trumpet. Dat's no trumpet. Dat's no trumpet. Dat's a trumpet.
Last year I found myself in the company of Ricardians, some of whom flew to England to be present at Ricky's reinterment, and met Philippa Langley. Have you encountered the movie "The Lost King"? It's a heartwarming bit of revenge on both those who dismissed her about his whereabouts, and those who later stole credit for finding him. Starring Sally Hawkins, who is, as always, delightful to watch.
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