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It was becoming a saga, a tale of true epic proportions. CJ was
still looking for King Arthur. This was going to be his last
effort. He was heading for Avebury once more on the morning of
the 3 August, 1996. That's close to Lammas, for all you students
of the pagan calendar, the pagan Harvest festival. He picked up
a couple of hitchhikers on the way, on an obscure road in Kent.
They'd slept in a field, having arrived from Germany the night
before. They were on their way to the West Country. One was a
hippie musician called Clive. The other was his German
girlfriend. Her name was Birghit. They were very much in love.
They kept stroking each other and looking into each other's
eyes. But Birghit could make head nor tail of CJ's accent. He
said, 'D'ya fancy a cuppa?' and she looked at him as if he'd
just made an immoral suggestion.
They arrived in Avebury at 1.00pm, about half an hour after the
ceremony was due to start, but Clive wanted a pint and so did
CJ. They had a pint of Fruggles each. They chose it for the
name. It was Clive's first English pint in over a year and you
can't get a much more English sounding pint than 'Fruggles'.
Clive drank his down in with liquid ease, making appreciative
gurgling noises as he did so. CJ said, 'Well, we've not got much
else going for us. The worst licensing laws in the Universe. And
the most corrupt and dishonest government. But we still make the
best beer.' Clive didn't answer. He was too busy making gurgling
noises.
They went over to the stones. There was a hand-fasting ceremony
taking place. A hand-fasting is a pagan marriage. It lasts for a
year and a day. So much more civilised – not to say, realistic –
than a lifetime. You re-confirm it every year. Or not, as the
case may be.
CJ saw Steve Andrews.
CJ said, 'Is Arthur here then?'
Steve pointed him out, and CJ went over to make his greeting.
'We meet at last,' he said.
'You look different without your beard,' Arthur said. Those were
the first words that passed between them. It was a moment of
great significance in the history of Western culture. Pretend
writer meets pretend king. New Age Livingstone and drink-addled
Stanley in the wilds of ancient Wiltshire.
CJ was very much struck by his appearance. He definitely looked
like King Arthur, he thought. It wasn't only the robes and the
cloak and the beard. It wasn't the shield either, nor the stave
wrapped about with copper wire with a crystal on the top. Arthur
has a huge brow, like some prehistoric tribesman, on which was
perched his kingly circlet, made of iron with a dragon at the
forehead. And he had long, dark pointy ears and a strange
darkness about him. There was an indefinable blackness under the
pale skin, as if the flesh itself was soaked in engine oil,
thought CJ. But he couldn't see the sword. 'Where's the sword,'
he asked, and Arthur brought it out.
'It's beautiful,' CJ said. And he meant it. It was beautiful.
After that they had the ceremony. They stood in a circle while a
Druid in a wolf-skin cloak took to centre stage. It was exactly
like that: as if he was performing for everyone on stage. Four
Druids stood at the four quarters and made ritualistic gestures
and intoned ceremonial phrases. There were obeisance's to the
guardians of the salamanders of fire – stuff like that. CJ
wasn't at all sure. Arthur raised his shield and his sword and
intoned to the Guardians of the South. CJ was struck by his
accent. Pure Hampshire. A Celtic King from Hampshire: it's a
contradiction in terms.
After that, a circle of children were blessed by the Priestess.
Steve said that he'd been blessed as a child on one occasion.
Someone wanted to know if they'd allow blessings of ferrets. So
they did, and Frodo the Ferret was blessed too, along with all
the kids. Meanwhile people were singing:
The river is flowing
The river is growing
The river is flowing
Back to the sea.
Mother Earth carry me
A child I will always be
Mother Earth carry me
Back to the sea.
It was a nice song. It went on for about 10 minutes, over and
over.
Steve said: 'I arrived here last night. I had to walk from
Chippenham. I slept by that stone over there and woke up soaked
in dew. But I spotted 14 types of butterfly this morning.' And
he brought out a list. 'That one there, Clouded Yellow, it's
very rare. People would come from all over the country to see
it.'
CJ spotted another name on the list. 'Hmmm, Painted Lady,' he
said, 'that sounds nice. I could do with a Painted Lady.'
'Yes, very attractive,' said Steve, thinking that CJ was
referring to butterflies.
There was a squabble amongst the Druids. The Druid with the fur
stole had apparently forgotten a part of the ceremony. A Druid
with a Panama hat (Rollo, again, but CJ didn't know it yet)
interrupted him. 'You haven't consecrated the flowers,' he said.
'Oh, all right then,' said the other Druid, tetchily, 'go ahead
if you have to.'
So, the Druid with the Panama hat stood over a bunch of flowers
and consecrated them.
After that, they were invited to become initiated as Bards of
Caer Abiri if they wanted to. Tim Sebastian – who CJ had met
before, both at Avebury and Stonehenge – urged him to go. 'Go on
CJ,' he said, 'it won't hurt you.'
'Oh all right then,' CJ said, and he did.
They made a much smaller circle inside the larger circle, but
facing outwards. They made a vow to honour and justice and peace
and love, and to care for the Earth. It was a moving moment. You
see, CJ already believed in honour and justice and peace and
love, and he wanted to care for the Earth. He'd just never made
vows about it before. And then they were sponsored by an
existing initiate. CJ was sponsored by Tim Sebastian. Tim
Sebastian being an Archdruid, that was an honour. He placed his
hand on CJ's shoulder and everyone chanted 'Awen.' It was said
as a drone, the way that Buddhists chant OM:
'A-a-a-a-a-a-a-a-w-w-w-w-w-e-e-e-e-e-e-n-n-n!' The chant drifted
and spiralled, rose and fell, and sparkled like diamonds in the
shimmering air, while above sprays of birds arched across the
sky.
CJ thanked Tim for that. It had felt genuinely sweet in that
circle.
Steve Andrews went into the circle and sang 'Stand By Me.' Only
no one did at first. Eventually Arthur joined him and one or two
others. Then he changed the lyrics. He sang, 'Dance By Me,' and
a few more people did. King Arthur was dancing marionette-like
in his robes. It was a moment of startling illumination. King
Arthur, the Rock'n'Roll King.
Then the five main Druids went into the circle: that is, the
Druids of the four quarters and the one with the fur cloak. They
had to vow not to squabble any longer. You see: the Druid
movement is split between those who will consecrate trees, but
never get up a tree to defend it, and those who will both
consecrate and defend the trees. There's also a class division:
between the one's who organise Spirit Camps and charge for it,
where people gather to increase their spiritual awareness and
learn about the ancient Druidic ways, who never drink or smoke
or chase women; and those – led by Arthur – who do all of these
things and never go to Spirit Camps and whose motivations are
fundamentally political and radical.
One of the Druids read from a book. He said, 'There has never
been a tradition of holding hand-fastings at those particular
stones.'
And Arthur shouted back, 'Then we'll start a tradition.'
CJ turned to Birghit and Clive. 'See, aren't you lucky today? I
picked you up in the far East of England, and brought you all
the way to the West, where you wanted to go. And on top of that
I brought you here to witness a Druid ceremony. There can't be
all that many people who get lifts to Druid ceremonies.'
Steve came over to join the group and CJ introduced them. 'This
is my mate, Steve. And these are my hitch-hiker friends, Clive
and … er … I can't remember your name.'
Birghit,'
she said in her heavy German accent.
'That's right, Beergut,' CJ said.
'No Birghit,' said Clive.
'Beergut.'
'Birghit.'
And that was the last time CJ tried to say her name.
Well, there's only a certain amount of standing in circles and
chanting and ritual observances a man can take before he starts
to get thirsty. The Red Lion was calling. Steve and CJ slipped
off to get a couple of drinks. Arthur followed a little later.
'Buy us a drink,' he said. CJ agreed. But people were lined up
three deep at the bar. CJ said, 'Wait ten minutes, OK? Or,
barring that, here's a tenner, get one yourself.' Arthur looked
at the money as if it was poison. 'I'm a renunciate,' he said.
'I don't handle money. Not unless it's for petrol, that is. Then
it's not money it's petrol.'
'Well this is for beer. So it's not money either, it's beer.'
But he didn't want to touch it. He drank CJ's beer instead, and
smoked several of his cigarettes. He called it tax. They sat in
the pool room and made conspiratorial plans.
Arthur said: 'I want to get arrested, only nobody dares do it.
The last time, at Stonehenge, all the coppers were standing
round wondering what to do. They couldn't arrest me. They had to
call a Superintendent to do it. And then I arrested him, in the
name of the Law. I told him, "I am the LAW." They won't put me
in gaol either. They keep fining me. I tell them, "I'm a
Renunciate, I don't have any money." Then I go to the back of
the Court, and they um and ah and we make our deals, and they
let me go. It's the same every time.'
'I have three personalities,' he added, 'to go with my three
names. As a King I have to be concerned with the welfare of my
Knights, and as the Pendragon of all Britain I have to be
concerned with the state of the country: but as Arthur I can get
pissed and smoke and chase women and do what I like. But,
obviously, Arthur comes second to the other two.'
'So which are you now.'
'I'm Arthur, of course,' he said, taking another swig on his
cider and pinching another cigarette.
CJ asked Arthur to knight him. He went down on his knees in the
pub yard and Arthur placed his sword on CJ's head and shoulders
in a dramatic fashion, swearing him to truth, honour and
justice. Then CJ stood up and Arthur embraced him.
After that things started to get really strange.
Tim Sebastian came out very agitated. 'I've had it with your
fucking Warband,' he said to Arthur. 'Orc has just gone off with
my tobacco.' He was so angry that he took his staff (which had a
crescent moon on the top), laid it on a step and stamped on it.
It broke with a healthy-sounding crack. The joke here is that
Tim regularly breaks his staff and then bandages it up with a
pink scarf in between. So, he wasn't really breaking his staff.
He was making a dramatic gesture.
Arthur went and got the Orc, a tall man in a long white robe,
with a stud through his lower lip. Arthur made him apologise to
Tim and give back his tobacco.
Then they drove to Bath. There was Steve, CJ, Arthur, Tim and
the young couple in the car, along with all the Druidic
paraphernalia – the shields and swords and robes and staves. It
was a Morris Minor. It was very crowded. CJ was drunk and
shouldn't have been driving. The car was swerving all over the
road. Steve and the young couple were saying, very politely,
'Careful you don't kill us, we don't want to die yet, we're much
too young to die,' while Arthur and Tim were shouting, 'Yes, go
on, go on, kill us. Kill us now. We want to die!'
CJ didn't care one way or the other.
Arthur said, 'One of the reasons people hate me is that they all
think I want to bonk their girlfriends.'
CJ said, 'Well, you can't bonk my girlfriend.'
'Listen to that,' Arthur said. 'Did you hear that everyone? He's
questing me. He's offering me a challenge. You know I can't turn
down a challenge. I'm really gonna bonk her now.'
CJ omitted to add that the reason that Arthur couldn't have his
girlfriend was that he hadn't got one.
They all ended up in a pub drinking scrumpy cider. The young
couple were very sweet. CJ kept telling the girl how sexy she
was and then telling the man that he was very, very lucky. 'I
know,' he said. Later, he found out that the girl was only 16.
CJ doesn't remember much more. They got back to Tim's house
somehow, which seemed like a vast stately home. There was a huge
hallway and antique furniture on the landing. CJ lay down in
someone's bed until Tim came and got him. Then he lay down in
the living room and went to sleep overhearing the young couple
saying, 'And you know what CJ was saying to us in the pub? …' He
was far too gone to listen to any more.
The following day he woke up and his hair was all standing on
end. He looked very strange. He was still drunk. He drove Steve
down to the bus station and they had some breakfast. After that
CJ was going to go back and pick up Arthur so he could drive him
to Newbury. Only they got lost in Bath. They were going round
and round on the one-way system and CJ's petrol tank was nearly
empty. He decided to give up trying to find Arthur again and
they went back to wait for Steve's bus.
'What's Arthur's real name?' asked CJ.
'John,' said Steve and laughed. 'My friends are always changing
their names. So Arthur was called John, and then he was Mad Dog
and Bacardi, and now he's King Arthur. And my friend Pixi is
really called Neil, but then he called himself Mordred and then
Less Dread. He won't let anyone call him Pixi any more. It's
very confusing. And Orc is Steve, and Llewch is Neil. It's such
an ordinary name: Neil. Not as interesting as Llewch Lleawg.'
CJ said, 'Arthur is very vain isn't he? I suppose you'd have to
be vain to want to call yourself King Arthur.'
'It's his true Aryan nature,' said Steve.
'Pardon?' said CJ, suddenly worried. 'But he's got black hair. I
thought Aryans were supposed to be blonde.' He didn't like how
this conversation seemed to be going. He'd never thought of
Steve as a fascist.
'No: I mean Arian. He's an Aries.'
'Thank God for that,' CJ said, 'I thought you were going to
start feeding me Nazi propaganda for a minute there.'
Steve lent CJ some money so he could get home. He'd spent most
of his money in the pub the previous night. That's the trouble
with wanting to write a book about people: they all expect you
to buy them drinks. Then Steve caught his bus. CJ drove back
along the M4. It was a very boring drive and he was hungover,
irritable and with a tongue that tasted like he'd been licking
the inside of a dog's bottom all night. He had no money left
once he'd bought the petrol, so he couldn't stop anywhere. And
then, about 20 miles of his home, he ran out of petrol again. He
just managed to make it into a service station. He was going up
to people and saying, in his most polite voice: 'Excuse me, I
don't normally do this sort of thing, but you see, I'm nearly
home. You couldn't let me have a couple of quid to buy petrol to
get me the rest of the way, could you?' And it happened every
time. They'd look him up and down, their eyes resting on his
legs for a moment. He was wearing shorts. It was a glorious
summer's day. But it was as if they were measuring his
worthiness by the quality of his legs. And then a slight smile
would play about their lips. 'Sorry,' they'd say, 'got no
money.' It was humiliating.
Eventually he lost his patience. A camper van drew in. CJ
marched up to the man and said, 'Give us a quid will you?'
'What for?'
'For petrol.'
'That's a new one,' the man said, laughing, and he reached in
his pocket and brought out a pound, which was just about enough
to get CJ home.
Well he couldn't help reflecting on this. He couldn't help
remembering all those times he'd leant people money without ever
expecting it back. In CJ's world, people help each other. Some
people blag. Some people beg. Some people would talk the hind
legs off an orang-utan for a pint or two. But people always help
each other. But now he was beginning to see that in the real
world, this world of motorway service stations and soulless
Little Chef cafés, the opposite was true. No one blags, no one
begs, no one talks and no one helps each other either.
Later, when he got home, he was watching The Blob on the TV. He
was lying on the settee, exhausted, watching this little,
flickering, black-and-white thing in the corner. The film is
about a strange amorphous mass which is growing and swallowing
everything in sight. A young man (played by Steve McQueen) is
trying to warn people about a nameless horror which is about to
consume their town. Nobody believes him: until they get eaten by
the Blob, that is, by which time it is too late. The young man's
name is Steve Andrews. Another little coincidence. CJ thought
about his own friend Steve Andrews then. He thought about the
Druids, and Arthur, at that point closely involved in the
Newbury bypass road protest: how they were all warning us of a
strange amorphous mass growing in our midst, threatening to
consume our world. But it wasn't only a physical mass. It wasn't
just a physical blob. It was a mental thing, a state of mind. An
attitude. Something, even now, threatening to destroy our world.
What was it?
Money.
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