|
Chinook
by George Hosier II - December 7, 2007
Chivalry
When I was a kid, I read a lot. My Dad was a pastor, and often
during the week he would take me along as he went calling on
members of his flock. I guess most kids would go crazy waiting for
their father to be finished holding the hand of a bedfast
octogenarian who was reciting her list of medications, as well as
the names of her fifty-two great grandchildren. Not me! As long as
the octogenarian owned a reasonably well-stocked bookshelf, I was
content. When it came time to go I would have to be coaxed out of
the corner where I had retreated into the imaginary world I had
discovered within the pages of my book.
In a pinch, I could read just about anything: vintage issues of
the Ladies Home Journal, Shakespeare, poetry, comic books,
history, crock pot manuals, biographies, The Wall Street Journal,
ghost stories, Chilton’s, the TV Guide... Once, while my Father
was preoccupied with a marital counseling session, I rummaged
around for reading material until I was lucky enough to discover a
fascinating heart-shaped box tied with faded ribbon and full of
yellowed letters.
Boy, did that box ever shed light on the dating habits of the
counselees! It was nearly more than I could take. It did puzzle
me, however; why two people who had called each other all those
embarrassingly mushy names during their courtship would now
require my Father’s intervention to save their marriage. I finally
concluded that their change of heart had occurred simultaneously
with the purchase of corrective lenses. Clearly, the physical
attributes by which they had described each other in the letters
in no way matched the balding plump couple my father was
counseling. Once they had discovered their error, the shock must
have been devastating.
At any rate, although, I could read anything to kill time, my
favorite genre was romantic, swashbuckling adventure fiction. Show
me a shelf full of The Hardy Boys, or Sir Walter Scott, or Mark
Twain and I was like an alcoholic in a Budweiser warehouse. When
he finally found me, Dad would have to detox me by forcing me
outside to ride my bike for an hour.
Of course, as strung out as my imagination was from all that
reading, I never even realized I was on a bicycle. It was a
Sopwith Camel, and I was Major William “Snoopy” Barker, hammering
away with my Vickers machine gun at the Red Baron as we dogfought
to the death, high above Britain. Or else the bike was a galloping
destrier that I, the gallant Ivanhoe, rode with fixed lance down
the list toward Sir Brian de Bois-Guilbert as I strove to win the
favor of fair Lady Rowena.
I experienced a phase during which I was obsessed with medieval
adventures. Pirates were cool, and cowboys were neat, but there
was just something about the middle ages that sent shivers up and
down my spine. I guess it was the chivalry of it all—King Arthur
and the Round Table, Sir George and the dragon, damsels in
distress, knights in shining armor, looming stone castles with
ivy-choked turrets where beautiful princesses were held captive...
Whenever I got an afternoon free to play with other kids, somehow
we eventually wound up playing knights. The variety of ordinary
household items that can serve as an improvised sword or shield is
amazing. As the last beleaguered combatants would call a truce at
the end of a backyard battle, the field of honor was frequently
strewn with trash can lids, pointy sticks, hubcaps fitted with
drawer-pull handles, yardsticks, pool cues, pipes, roaster lids,
tire irons, sofa cushions, fireplace pokers, and an eyeball or
two.
Unfortunately, mothers never appreciate the glory of such things.
They always feel compelled to meddle in a boy’s good clean fun.
One day the mother of Sir Rory of Boogerhead happened upon our
battlefield before we had a chance to clean it up, sort out the
eyeballs and return them to their owners. She took one look and
fled shrieking back across the drawbridge into the castle where
she re-emerged shortly with reinforcements. We rallied our troops
and bravely defended our position that day, but, alas, we faced a
superior force. The bleak terms of our surrender dictated that for
the rest of our lives we were forbidden to participate in any form
of play that involved sword fighting, on pain of flogging and
banishment to the dungeon without any supper.
As you can imagine, our ability to slay dragons, rescue fair
damsels, and fend off the barbarian hordes that threatened our
kingdom became significantly curtailed for a while. For a week or
so, we desultorily attempted to find something to do, but all
efforts proved hollow and meaningless. Our mothers mocked us with
sneering suggestions that we play softball, or fly a kite, or play
with Legos, or build a model or throw a Frisbee or something, but
we steadfastly resisted their efforts to enslave us with such
mundane and loathsome tasks.
At length, noble Duke Josh DeDork struck upon a solution to our
problem. “Did we not,” quoth he, “but swear to curtail our feats
of armes with edged weapons?” That was true. “How now do we then
sulk about like whipped curs, sith we be skilled, one and all, in
sundry types of weaponrie?” The guy was a genius! Why hadn’t we
thought of it before?
Immediately there was a mad rush as knight and footman, squire and
knave dove for anything that would not technically qualify as a
sword. Moments later, the delicious sound of battle rose once
again above the towers of Camelot. The pipe that had been a
falchion became a mace. The pool cue that had previously served as
a claymore, now smote mightily as a quarterstaff. The poker
broadsword was a war hammer. The tire-iron which in days of yore
had cloven helm and shield as a barbarian scramasax, now struck
fear into the hearts of its enemies when wielded as a spiked
cudgel.
Some poet should write an epic about that battle. More blood was
spilled, “time-out-no-faired”, and spilled again, than soaked the
fields of Agincourt, Crecy, Tours, Towton, Hastings, and
Bannockburn combined. Then disaster struck. Above the shouts of
battle lust and the pitiful moans of the wounded came a horrible
roar from our flank. Both armies turned as one man to see the
massed Mother infantry nearly upon us at full charge. Overcome
with terror at the spectacle, I am ashamed to admit that we cast
down our weapons and fled the onslaught.
Ruthlessly, the Mother horde hunted us down and drug us from our
hiding places, callously ignoring our plaintive wails. Our pleas
for mercy were to no avail. The retribution they meted upon us was
an awful thing to see, but more awful yet to experience. For what
seemed like years afterwards, I remained a forgotten, nameless
prisoner, wasting away in the Bastille of my room.
When finally liberated, I crept out of my cell, a broken and
emaciated husk of a kid. I eventually tracked down a few other
survivors of the massacre. They, like I, were but shades of their
former selves. The spirit had gone out of them, and I could not
persuade them to reconstruct our former exploits.
There was a short-lived period, however, when I thought we might
be getting back on track. You see, although we could no longer
participate in any sort of melee combat, I was able to create a
mild interest among my former comrades in the development of siege
weaponry. I was even able to negotiate a truce from the Mother
Alliance allowing us to explore the concept purely for “research
purposes” for an alleged science project, after swearing that we
would not even think of using them on each other.
The catapult proved interesting. When we used it to hurl the
neighbor’s cat into the pond, for a moment, I thought I saw the
old spark return to my friends’ eyes. However, we could never
catch the cat again, and we only had so many rotten pumpkins in
our garden. Once they were used up the novelty faded.
Then there was the trebuchet. It turned out to be a lot more work
then we had anticipated, and the first time we tried to use it, we
forgot to move Sir Jimmy the Freckles’ Dad’s new toolbox out of
the way before the counterweight slammed down and crunched it.
That was the end of Sir Jimmy’s participation, and nobody else’s
dad would let them use their tools.
In a last desperate gambit, I attempted to build a replica of
Archimedes’ Claw. It took a great deal of persuading to convince
my friends to help me. Enthusiastically, I regaled them with a
riveting historical description of the giant crane swiveling over
the walls of Syracuse to let down a grappling hook which snagged
the ships of the attacking Roman fleet, capsizing them, legions
and all. Their imagination stirred at last, they assisted me. It
might have been the beginning of the long trip back to glory and
honor if Sir Rory hadn’t blown it.
As I became distracted with some calculations, he let down the
grappling hook behind the Marquis de Jerry’s little brother Petey.
Then it was that Sir Rory of Boogerhead had the wisdom and
foresight to raise it suddenly. The grappling hook caught on the
back of Petey’s britches, and hoisted him in the air. It was at
just that moment that the Marquis’ mother emerged from the castle
to see her baby squalling like a butchered hog as he dangled eight
feet in the air by a massive wedgie.
I’m fortunate that I enjoyed reading. It was the only thing that
kept me sane in the Bastille for the next twenty-odd years or so.
I tried to build a battering ram to break out, but I couldn’t find
anything with which to disassemble my bed frame. By the time I
emerged, my quests of knight errantry had receded to become vague
memories shrouded in the merciful mist of history. I didn’t mind,
though. I had developed a new interest in improvised explosives
and Viet Cong man traps.
|
|
Deltads |
|
|
Alaska Highway Travel Guide --
The
Alaska Milepost is your best and most complete guide for Alaska travel.
Buy it online and and be ready for your next trip. |
|
|
Silverfox Fox Roadhouse
-- Cabins for summer visitors and fall hunters.
Visit our website. |
|
|
Inexpensive and Effective Ads -- Advertise in this space for as
little as $30. Call 895-4919 for details, or
click for info. |
|
|
Products
and services from Delta area and Alaska advertisers |
|