Tuesday, August 24, 2004

 

Great ... Grandpappy Charlemagne

By The Erudite Redneck

“Angland” – by which I mean uppity Brits and any other Europeans who like to look down their snooty noses at gun-slingin’ “cowboy” Americans such as myself and the president, can “kiss mah ayass,” as Dennis Quaid (playing Jerry Lee Lewis) so memorably put it in the 1989 biographical flick “Great Balls of Fire.” (The Brits had turned on The Killer after learnin’ that he’d married his 14-year-old cousin, Myra Gale, played by a fetching, pre-klepto Winona Ryder).

In the movie, a reporter at the airport had asked Lewis, as he was headin’ home, if he had anything to say to the good people of England after seein’ his wildly cheerin’ fans turn to stone and his successful concert tour turn into a series of duds after the news broke. He put “Angland” in its place, right under his back belt loops. Don’t know whether he said that exact thing in that exact circumstance. The story as a whole is true, though.

Show me in European history where they have room to talk. They don’t, particularly the French, the line that may have spawned my cultural-intellectual great-great-great-etc.-etc. grandpappy: Charlemagne, king in the 700s, more or less founder of the Carolingian Empire – and progenitor of many things erudite and redneck.

“The Franks were an agrarian people who had no cities worth the name.” Sounds like Oklahoma minus Oklahoma City and Tulsa, most of south Alabam, West Texas, east Colorado, most of the rest of the Great Plains and the South – and every other place in this country really fittin’ to live.

“Charlemagne … built brilliantly on the accomplishments of his wily father and grandfather.” There’s the family tradition.

“He wore Frankish trousers but took the title of Roman emperor.” The Wranglers, perhaps, of the day.

“He understood Latin and Greek but could not write himself.” Not unlike my chicken-pickin’ non-music-readin’ approach to playin’ the guitar.

“Although he prayed with devout fervor, he also discarded wives at will and allowed his daughters to consort openly with their lovers.” Ancient Arkansaw, in other words. (I was born there; I can say that).

In Francia in 700, “Extended families were still important; kin still avenged wrongs through feud … marriage was hard to distinguish from concubinage; and the most basic unit of social organization was the familial household.” It would shock the hell out of the modern French, but Francia would’ve been a “red state.”

“Charlemagne towered over his contemporaries both figuratively and literally. He was 6’ 3 ½” tall, thick-necked and potbellied.” This needs no illumination on my part.

His main biographer was Einhard – dang close to “Earnhardt.” Eerie, ain’t it? Einhard wrote of Charlemagne: “He was not able to withstand from food and often complained that fasts injured his health. … So refrained was he in the use of wine and all sorts of drink that he rarely allowed himself more than three cups in the course of a meal.” This requires some explainin’ since it seems to fly in the face of my hypothesis: “Since Carolingian wine cups were closer in measure to modern pints than cups, Charlemagne’s moderation in matters of drink was relative.”

Finally, Charlemagne, Einhard wrote: “thought that his children, both daughters and sons, should begin their education with the liberal arts, which he himself had studied. Then, he saw to it that when the boys reached the right age they were trained to ride in the Frankish fashion, to fight, and to hunt. But he ordered his daughters to learn how to work with wool, how to spin and weave it, so that they would not grow dull from inactivity and instead might learn to value work.”

Great-great-great-etc.-etc.-Grandpappy Charlemagne: the first Erudite Redneck.

[Direct quotes from C. Warren Hollister and Judith M. Bennett, Medieval Europe: a Short History, 9th ed. (Boston: McGraw Hill, 2002).]

END





Comments:
Reminds me of the line in Trainspotting, the 1996 film about heroin addicts in Scotland:
"Some people hate the English, but I don't. They're just wankers. We, on the other hand, are colonized by wankers. We can't even pick a decent culture to be colonized by. We are ruled by effete arseholes. It's a shite state of affairs and all the fresh air in the world will not make any fucking difference."
 
That's a dumb quote that in no way applies to this essay.
 
Well, the Trainspotting quote seems to make sense to me. The Scots don't have much more use for "effete arseholes" --the English -- than I do. Probably don't care much for the Frenchies, either.
 
I kind of like the English, especially those Monty Python guys, and don't even get me started on Alan Rickman. It's the French that really get on my nerves.
 
Ok, this was some tricky reading, only because it was difficult to focus when you're busy all evening readin' of Jason White and the like. I know more about OU football than most Sooners fans, and I can't stand 'em.

Take your pick which.

But this is what I get from our man, The Press. While he's a readin' his litrechur and his histooory, he approaches it like a Methodist pastor taking in Old Testiment information and transforming it into the New York City cabbie.

This here RedNeck takes his there book learnin' and passes his corn-fed wisdom so's the rest of us bumkins can understand it. Hell, if I had him teachin' me Spanish, I might've been able to pass the class without extracurricluar means.

The RedNeck might be a journalist in mind, but he's an educator at heart. Who's joining me in signing up for his next class.

So what if it's "Corn Squeezin's and Learnin' Anatomy from My Cousin Betty."
 
Well, I wouldn't sign up for THAT class, but I'd probably be on the front row if he started teaching history. Yup.
Besides, he's already got the nutty perfesser persona, don'tcha think?
 
Teditor, that is high praise, and I appreciate it. And Trixie, if ever make "nutty perfesser" status, I'll make sure that's a calf fry reference! ;-) (snicker)
 
Pfft. Aging is mandatory. Maturing is optional.
 
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