I’m not quite sure why Rosemary Sutcliff floated into my periphery, recently - I saw her name somewhere, obviously - but as soon as it happened, I immediately went out and found her Arthurian historical, Sword at Sunset, which had fallen off my radar in the interval of fifty years, and read it again. If you’re not familiar with the book, it reimagines the legend of Arthur much the way Mary Renault does with the mythological Theseus in The King Must Die, as an actual historical person, not a demigod.
Arthur
is, of course, the “Matter of Britain,” a story every English schoolchild once
knew by heart. The basic lineaments were
around long before Sir Thomas Malory and Le
Morte d’Arthur, in the 15th century, going back to Geoffrey of
Monmouth, in the 12th. I’m
more concerned with the modern iterations.
Leaving aside Prince Valiant,
no disrespect, Hal Foster’s draftsmanship is astonishing, but he positions the
Round Table in some sort of fairytale medieval period; excuse me, but no. That puts Arthur some time after the Norman
Conquest, which just doesn’t fly. The better
guess lines up with Rosemary Sutcliff and Bernard Cornwell, who place the
historical Arthur after the fall of Roman Britain, the withdrawal of the legions
to
The
version most of us know is T.H. White’s Once
and Future King, which is the source material for Camelot. I saw the
Broadway-bound tryout. (Back in the day,
the big shows would work the kinks out on the road. They’d open in
Camelot is somewhere in that Neverland along with Prince Valiant. It’s a backlot fantasy, it doesn’t have the smell of smoky hearths and scorched meat, unwashed bodies in thick fur cloaks, blood and bowels and rape, but there’s a counter-narrative to both: Marion Zimmer Bradley and Mary Stewart, The Mists of Avalon and The Crystal Cave, which feminize the story, in the one case, and foreground the otherworldly or magical, in the second, but these are mirror narratives, the female principle (in myth, at least) a correlative of sorcery.
Robert Warshow wrote a famous essay about the Western, in which he said there were only X archetypes, of plot, and character. And we could haul in Joseph Campbell, or Robert Graves, or Jung, but the arc of the hero bends in similar ways. A friend of mine was leaving Excalibur, and he overheard a young person say to their date, “It’s just like Star Wars.”
We
draw the sword from the stone, and our fate is foretold. There’s no escaping it.