Is the Current Occupant the Columbus of Our Time?
by Garrison Keillor
October 12th, the traditional Columbus Day, is a day to reflect on the nature of celebrity. Columbus was a pirate and tyrant who sailed off and bumped into the Bahamas, had no idea where he was, and to his dying day believed he had reached the Indies. By the time he arrived in the New World, America was old news to the Vikings. They already had that T-shirt.
Five hundred years before, the Vikings had been sailing the Atlantic with confidence, making new friends and influencing people. Thorvald Asvaldsson sailed to Iceland in the 10th century with his son Erik the Red. After they'd been banished from Norway for manslaughter — if you've ever been in an argument with Norwegians, you probably considered manslaughter, too — and from Iceland, Erik explored the icebound continent to the west, which he named Greenland, for promotional purposes.
In 986, Bjarni Herjulfsson and his men sailed along the coast of New England. Around the same time, Leif Eriksson, the son of Erik the Red, sailed over and may have landed on the island of Manhattan. Did he come ashore and try to buy it for $23 worth of junk jewelry? No. And do we celebrate Bjarni Herjulfsson Day? No, we do not. The Vikings weren't into self-promotion, and Reykjavik was not a world media center at the time.
The Vikings were not out to lord it over the Indians or bring democracy here or teach folks about Nordic gods. They were free spirits, sailors, explorers, so they left some carved stones here and there, relished the exhilaration of the voyage and the sight of new lands, and went home and composed sagas for the amusement of their friends and families. That arrogant fool Columbus, who demanded 10 percent of all the gold the Spanish stole in the New World, got the holiday, a town in Ohio and another in Georgia, a major river in the Northwest, a university in New York. But who cares? Scandinavians don't.
Their history after Leif and Eric and Bjarni has been tangled, of course. The Norwegians suffered under the Danes and then the Swedes. The Danes suffered under the delusion that they were French. The Swedes suffered under Strindberg and Ingmar Bergman, neither of whom was the life of the party. All of them suffered from the long gray winters with twilight at noon.
But Lutheranism urged them toward kindness, industriousness and self-effacement, and this is not a bad strategy for contentment.
Look around today and you will find the Viking descendants, a calm and stoical and somewhat formal people, by and large, not given to extremes of fashion or chanting "We're Number One" or writing memoirs that hang out the family underwear. Walter Mondale is pretty much the prototype. He lost the presidency by one of the biggest landslides in history to an aging actor whose grip on reality, never firm to begin with, was becoming hallucinatory. Mr. Reagan was sort of the Columbus of our time, a better PR man than sailor, but so be it.
Mr. Mondale is a buoyant man with a sense of humor who enjoys his life in Minnesota, where people are happy to see him, and when you do, you see that losing is far from the worst thing that can happen to a man.
What's worse is the likely fate of the Current Occupant, who is contending with Pierce, Buchanan and Warren G. Harding for the title of All-Time Worst President. He's got a good shot at the title if only because he's had so much more to be worst with. (Any young persons who have been inspired by Mr. Bush to take up public service should be watched very closely.)
I propose that we change Columbus Day to Bush Day, a cautionary holiday, like Halloween, a day to meditate on the hazards of ambition. We could observe it by going through the basement and garage and throwing out stuff we don't want or need. Also, by not mortgaging the house to pay for a vacation, and not yelling at the neighbors, and not assuming that the law is for other people.
A day to honor kindness, industriousness and modesty.
Garrison Keillor's "A Prairie Home Companion" can be heard at 4 p.m. Saturdays on Classical KUAT (90.5-FM and 89.7-FM) and at 10 a.m. Sundays on KUAZ (89.1-FM and 1550-AM).
Copyright © 2006 Arizona Daily Star
###
THE VIKINGS AND THE CURRENT OCCUPANT (Garrison Keillor)
Creative complaints & humor.
- Zlatko Waterman
- Posts: 1631
- Joined: August 19th, 2004, 8:30 am
- Location: Los Angeles, CA USA
- Contact:
THE VIKINGS AND THE CURRENT OCCUPANT (Garrison Keillor)
Post by Zlatko Waterman » October 13th, 2006, 9:53 am
Return to “Rant, Rage & Laugh”
Jump to
- Community
- ↳ Introductions
- ↳ Announcements, Help, Banners, Books
- ↳ Studio8 Announcements
- ↳ Cenacle's Announcements
- ↳ Help & Feedback
- ↳ Banners
- ↳ S8 Community Books
- ↳ Radio8
- Creative Writing
- ↳ Poetry
- ↳ ~GO!
- ↳ Haiku
- ↳ Stories & Essays
- Visual Arts & Multi-Media
- ↳ Arts Center
- ↳ Paintings & Drawings
- ↳ Digital Art
- ↳ Photography
- ↳ Sculpture, Collage, etc.
- ↳ Artstalk
- ↳ Other Arts Sites
- ↳ Music, Spoken Word & Video
- Discussion
- ↳ General Discussion
- ↳ Culture, Politics, Philosophy
- ↳ Rant, Rage & Laugh
- Member Forums
- ↳ Artlogs & Studios
- ↳ Chat Spot
- ↳ Mingo's Lingo
- ↳ Asylum for the Terminally Vain
- ↳ The Luck of a Dame
- ↳ judih's Inner Jams
- ↳ Arcadia's Place
- ↳ Flying Horse Cafe
- ↳ Infinity Sideways
- ↳ Columnists
- ↳ Sunday Stream
- ↳ Life in the Horse Lane
- Archives
- ↳ Archived Community Word Jams: 2004 - 2019
- ↳ # 55 - Solstice through New Years 2019 Light-the-World Word Jam
- ↳ #54 - Healing Jam!
- ↳ #53 - Showers to Flowers Jam - April & May 2016
- ↳ #52 - 2016 Welcome Word Jam!
- ↳ #51– 2015 Annual Spring Equinox Poetry Jam
- ↳ #50 - Solstice to New Years Word Jam - 2014-2015!
- ↳ #49 - 1-Day Xtreme Jam!
- ↳ #48- The Blues & Good News New Years Jam
- ↳ #47 - The Survival Holiday Jam
- ↳ #46 - March Free Poetry Jam
- ↳ March Free Poetry Jam
- ↳ #45 - Solstice through New Years Light-the-World Word & Image Jam
- ↳ #44 - Block Party - A Spring Poetry & Image Jam
- ↳ #43 - Mid-Winter Word Jam 2011
- ↳ #42 - Spirit of Love Art & Poetry Jam
- ↳ #41 - Summer's End to Autumn Transition Jam
- ↳ #40 - The Annual Spring Equinox Jam
- ↳ #39- The 2009 Solstice thru New Years 2010 Word Jam
- ↳ #37 - Solstice 2008 thru New Years 2009 Light-the-World Jam
- ↳ #38 - The M(Earth) Word Jam
- ↳ #36- The Leaves & Arrivals Autumn Word Jam
- ↳ #35 - Close-ups of Summer Jam
- ↳ #34 - The I Can't Wait Word Jam - Part 1
- ↳ #33 - The I Can't Wait Word Jam - part 2
- ↳ #32 - Solstice to New Years Jam 2008!
- ↳ #31 - The Instant Gratification Gratitude Jam
- ↳ #30 - An April Shower of Words
- ↳ #29 - Portrait of Love Art Jam
- ↳ #28 - The January Ringing in 2007 New Years Party Jam
- ↳ #27 - 2nd Annual Winter Holi-Dazed & EnLightened Word Jam
- ↳ #26 - 8 Images in Search of a Poet
- ↳ #25 - B&W & Read All Over Jam
- ↳ #24 - The Unannounced Summer Solstice Poetry Jam
- ↳ #23 - Spring Poetry & Image Jam
- ↳ #22 - Let Me GO! Image & Word Jam
- ↳ #21 - The 2nd Annual Spring Equinox Word Jam
- ↳ #20 - Connecting Branches – A Treeku Word Jam
- ↳ #19 - 2006 New Year Jam
- ↳ #18 - The Winter Holi-Dazed & EnLightened Word Jam
- ↳ #17 - Image Jams
- ↳ #16 - The I Can't Wait Word Jam!
- ↳ #15 - The Summer Home, Summer Not Travelogue Jam
- ↳ #14 - Online Improv Play Green Room
- ↳ #13 - "Ward Nine - Frontal Lobotomy" - An Improv Play
- ↳ #12 - Major Minor Madcap Mayhem Word Jam
- ↳ #11 - The Low-Key Weekend Jam
- ↳ #10 - The 1st Annual Spring Equinox Word Jam
- ↳ #9 - Big Time Poetry Melt Word Jam
- ↳ #8 - The January Knock Yer Socks Off Jam
- ↳ #7 - 2005 New Years Party
- ↳ #6 - Saved - It's a Miracle!
- ↳ #6 - Now! More than ever - 8 Day Miracle Jam
- ↳ #5 - When the 9 Strikes!
- ↳ #4 - 2004 Election Party
- ↳ #3 - Kick out da Jams, Man!
- ↳ #2 - Jam it out!... Let's GO!
- ↳ #1 - Kick out da word jam
- ↳ Archives
- ↳ Retired Forums
- ↳ Eyewitness Reports
- ↳ Postips & e-sources
- ↳ Interviews & Articles
- ↳ Rejection Slip?
- ↳ Trailerpark
- ↳ Performance Arts
- ↳ Duets
- ↳ Workshop & Prompts
- ↳ Image Jams & Photo Travelogue
- ↳ Literature & Film
- ↳ Variations
- ↳ Retired Columns & Artlogs
- ↳ Cathouse
- ↳ Remnants of Madness
- ↳ For Pete's Sake!
- ↳ Pit of Crazy
- ↳ Pic This
- ↳ Poetry Cut-Ups
- ↳ Ronnie GETS it!
- ↳ Things Nobody Wants to Hear
- ↳ Ask da Biotch! - Advice Column
- ↳ Inspiration Station
- ↳ A New Kind Of Random
- ↳ The Anti-Academy
- ↳ Mouse Droppings
- ↳ Mystic Arts
- ↳ Open Mike Soundoff
- ↳ The Pregnant Pope
- In Memoriam
- ↳ To Honor our Departed Site Members
- ↳ Lightning Rod
- ↳ Photos of Lightning Rod
- ↳ The Poet's Eye by Lightning Rod
- ↳ Norman Mallory
- ↳ ZlatKomix (artwork by Norman Mallory)
- ↳ Constantine
- ↳ Constantinople – (A collection of Constantine's poetry)
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest