Friday 2 January 2015

A MISPLACED SELF BE-LEIF




Hello again, happy new year and welcome to the January edition of The Autolycan. 

Another sequel! This time a happy, or perhaps not so happy, re-appearance for Leif and Mrs Sigurdsson, whom we last met in April 2014.  I do hope you enjoy it, and if so please feel free to pass the link to others.

Well, it saves me having to think up something brand new, invent new characters, all that tricky stuff......... 


                                         A MISPLACED SELF BE-LEIF

Think again about the pillaging Viking warriors - it wasn't just the men who raided Britain. Study of DNA shows significant numbers of Norse women were in the longboats as well.
                                                                                       The Independent


Well, the American trip has certainly aroused some interest, and a number of friends have asked what was the absolute highlight. The Grand Canyon? New Orleans? Washington DC? And yes, it was all of these and a lot more besides, but for sheer schadenfreude nothing could match coming down in a hotel lift – or possibly elevator – early one morning in Nashville, accompanied by a couple of sharp suits and a dress and jacket, each wearing a name badge and a stricken look. They came from various parts of the South, and each reported to a doubtless more expensive suit/dress who had decided that they should go to a Conference. These reluctant Conferees were on their way to breakfast. 7.15 in the morning, and they weren't even to be allowed their coffee and blueberry muffin in peace. A stolen glance at the programme clutched by the dress and jacket – who looked a shoe-in for Most Morose Delegate – revealed that she must shortly divide her attention between the muffin and someone banging on about Leadership in a Target Driven Sales Environment. Similar attractions awaited her throughout what was shaping up to be a very long morning – The 1-2-3 of Overcoming Apathy; Determination, Drive and Success!; Passion + Persistence + Partnership = Performance! Outside the hotel a tight knit gaggle of even unhappier people was looking at watches and wondering if there was time for another fag before going in. Predictably, there wasn't.

Schadenfreude. The enjoyment of other people's misfortunes. Not the most noble of sentiments, it's true, but which of us who doesn't have to Confer any more could resist a smile?

Originally an Old High German word – and it perhaps says something about Old High Germans that they were the first to feel the need for a special word to define the condition – it was imported into Britain and subsequently America by waves of invaders possibly going back as far as the Vikings. But how?

Now, I know your Viking history is probably a bit sketchy, so let me remind you that a few months ago we left one Mrs Sigurdsson – Erik the Red's cultural attaché – journeying towards these shores. Remember her? She was accompanied by Leif – Erik's embarrassing son who you may recall had recently, and awkwardly for a Viking, renounced all forms of violence and liked nothing better than to immerse himself in the slim volume of tortured verse he carried with him at all times. Erik thought that by sending these two on a fool's errand he would be rid of them once and for all. Erik, as we shall see, wasn't quite right.

The East coast of eleventh century England where Leif and Mrs Sigurdsson set up base was a cold, inhospitable place where daily life was hard and, well, uncultured. But Leif had been schooled by his father to see challenges and opportunities where others saw only problems and they set about their task with idealistic enthusiasm. Undaunted by the failure of either the Norse Saga Reading Circle or the Have Fun with Early Runic Inscriptions! group to attract much interest – well, OK, any interest – Leif and Mrs Sigurddson went on to introduce a type of Norwegian folk dancing which many modern scholars see as the antecedent of the Morris Dance. This went down rather better with the locals, relying as it did on the liberal use of sticks, staves and wooden clogs, but eventually the mayhem became such that Mrs Sigurdsson had to plead with the folk dancers to lay down their arms. Shorn of their weaponry the warring dance teams had to find an alternative outlet for their energy, and invented the loose maul which rapidly evolved to feature gouging, biting and stamping, although it wasn't until the invention of the ball some time later that the game of Rugby League truly started to take off.

Perhaps predictably, the six month course 26 Exciting Ways with Reconstituted Dried Fish! failed to make much impact – neither did Dog Sledging the North Trøndelag Way for Beginners! - but things started to look up when Mrs Sigurdsson hit on the idea of inviting their fellow countrymen to come over from Norway to explore British culture and traditions. The first two or three parties were all male, and although she had tried to ensure that each trip had a particular focus so that there was no descent into riot and pillage, it was perhaps naïve of her to suggest that they would provide the perfect context for a stag weekend. Nobody seemed to mind the ensuing drunken bedlam too much though, least of all the folk dancers who - having miraculously found their weapons again - challenged their Viking guests to an interactive handkerchief dance, overwhelming them by eight teeth, six broken limbs and a mild case of post traumatic stress disorder to a simple sprained ankle.

Nobody minded, that is, apart from Leif and Mrs Sigurdsson who were horrified and set up a Stag Weekend Survivors' Group to counsel and support victims, although, as it turned out, they were the only two who signed up to join the group. They had endless difficulty filling all the positions on the Committee, not least because Mrs Sigurdsson – who was a bit of a stickler for these things - was apt to veto any decision they reached on the grounds that the group reaching it was not quorate. There were times when even Leif began to hunger after his father's more direct methods.

They were galvanised into action though – highly unconstitutional action, fretted Mrs Sigurdsson – when the folk dancers proposed issuing invitations to various Scandinavian groups to take part in a knockout maypole dancing tournament - 'if you think you're hard enough' as their draft invitation cheerfully added. The word 'knockout' was double underlined. They needed an alternative attraction for the dancers and it suddenly dawned on them what it might be when a member of Leif's struggling Feminist Whale Flensing Collective mentioned in passing that what they could really do with was a few more women. Leif and Mrs Sigurdsson fell on the idea voraciously. Of course! Get the Norse men to bring their Norse ladies! Why hadn't they thought of that before?

Their imaginations raced. Visits to pretty fishing villages nestling around picturesque harbours and bays, sumptuous exhibitions of English needlework through the ages, practical music making on pipe and tabor, romantic weekends for two at upmarket country retreats, and yes, dancing events – dancing events for both sexes, even dances where the partners hold each other close!

This was the future! England as a destination for mature, genteel – OK, they finally admitted, middle class – couples interested in the arts and crafts, in travel and tourism and curious about English culture and traditions.

They awaited the arrival of the first mixed sex group with a barely suppressed fervour. This would succeed beyond their dreams – they saw themselves reporting in triumph to Erik - fêted as the pioneers who conquered this land, not in the old way but by fostering in both peoples an unquenchable thirst for education, for culture, for understanding, and consequently – they dared hope – for lasting peace and progress.

They set up a reception tent with a banner saying welcome in English and Norwegian. Mrs Sigurdsson had organised canapés, cakes and great pots of Yorkshire tea, together with a glass or two of elderflower wine for everybody. There were to be speeches and a display of garland making by local children organised by the folk dancing team who had thrown themselves into the preparations with a wholly unexpected vigour.

As the first longboat hove into view, Leif and Mrs Sigurdsson strained their eyes to catch a glimpse of the tall sails surmounting the rhythmic beat of the oars. It was Leif who first noticed that the beat of the oars was rather less than rhythmic, but they put that down to fatigue after the long journey. After all, they reasoned, the women wouldn't be rowing so the men would have to work double shifts. The 'Kløb 18-30' motif on the mainsail was a bit of a puzzle to them, and what they took to be the oarsmen's work song, when they heard it, was less disciplined, less tuneful and more raucous than they remembered. 'Things have moved on since we left', they told themselves, 'this will be a learning experience for us as well!'

The first boat demolished the jetty that had stood there for generations, took out a large pile of lobster pots and came to rest with its prow atop the little platform set up for local dignitaries. They scattered as crew and passengers tumbled out.

They were drinking, noted Mrs Sigurdsson. Perhaps they had needed to fortify themselves against the rigours of the journey. Fortify themselves rather liberally, she thought. She was cheered though to see the Norwegian flag much in evidence, and stood respectfully to attention as an unfamiliar version of the National Anthem was sung. But there were women, and plenty of them! Indeed, the presence of women was inescapable given the way fashions had clearly changed since she left home. Skirts were very much shorter than before, tops were a good deal tighter and, well, lower cut. Midriffs were frequently completely bare, despite the temperature. She shivered.

Ignoring the welcoming committee, the visitors made for the reception tent and the elderflower wine, of which there was plenty since Mrs Sigurdsson had been expecting several boatloads. Much the wildest party she had ever witnessed was soon in full swing. There were times she had to avert her eyes, but also times – she had to admit – when she was straining to get a closer look. Meanwhile, the folk dancers bided their time, delaying their challenge until they judged the situation to be at its most inflammatory.......

Nobody noticed the arrival of the second longboat. This made landfall in a far more professional manner and a distinguished and authoritative figure was first to disembark.

When Erik had despatched Leif and Mrs Sigurdsson he thought he had seen the last of them, but as time went by curiosity got the better of him. Had he perhaps been a bit hard on them? What were they doing? Most importantly, had they managed to turn England into somewhere worth conquering? He had to know, and when parties of men and women began sailing for England he decided to follow. The first signs were most encouraging. The pillaging was better than he'd ever seen, the full scale debauchery was really very promising and the pitched battle surrounding the maypole gladdened his heart. As he surveyed the scene approvingly an abject, aghast Leif and a craven, panic-stricken Mrs Sigurdsson knelt before him.

Their grand vision was in ruins. They were mortified, humiliated. They had failed utterly and they knew it. Erik somehow maintained a straight face as he eyed them coldly.

'I have recently received a deputation from Old High Germany' he declared ' and from them I learnt a magnificent new word which perfectly describes how I feel about you two.'

They recoiled.

'Sir?'

'Shall I tell you what it is?'

'Yes, sir. Thank you, sir.'

Erik looked down at them and left them to squirm in silence for fully two minutes while chaos and pandemonium raged all round. Then, slowly, a broad smile spread across his features. He savoured the word as he spoke it.


ANAGRAM CORNER

RUSSELL BRAND – REVOLUTIONARY!


RIBALD, UNLOVELY RANTER - O RUSS!

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