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    Political Advice from the Past

    I'm at a rare books library this week, with politics happily tuned down to a lower volume. That's true even though the library is around the corner from the Capitol Building, and almost across the street from the Supreme Court. So I was in town for Mitch McConnell's continued resistance to the eminent Merrick Garland, but I am busy doing other things.

    What do I have to say about Obama's strategy, and the Republicans' obstruction? Not much today; maybe next week. But I did get a piece of odd political advice in one of the 17th-century books I was reading yesterday. The book wasn't as useful as I had hoped it would be, and would be even less entertaining to you, but at one point the author (Thomas Scot, about whom you heard so much in grade school), throws out two couplets about the importance of guile and strategy in high office. First, he writes:

    Not simple truth alone can make us fit
    To beare great place in State, without great wit.

    Honesty is not enough for high office; maybe necessary but not sufficient. Good-hearted simplicity is not a qualification. How that might apply to Obama and his antagonists, I leave for you to think through on your own. But Scot finishes his little epigram with these lines:

    For when the Serpent comes to circumvent us,
    We must be Serpents too, or else repent us.

    And there, in honor of St. Patrick the expeller of serpents, is where I will leave it for today.

    Comments

    Before someone beats me to it - Hillary/Bernie/Hillary/Bernie/Hillary/Bernie. Whew, got that out of my system. 

    A certain amount of artifice is required. I 've expected my politicians to be part bastard, part weasel, part idealist, part pragmatic worker bee. That's my N-S-E-W mandala.


    Perfect candidate to be drawn and quartered.


    Did I say that? I suppose I did, except I draw horribly.


    Quartered? Sometimes you have to settle on a candidate that's not half bad.


    How that might apply to Obama and his antagonists, I leave for you to think through on your own. 

    The thinking about your subject cannot, in this day and time, stay as narrow as you suggest. Thinking about our current President cannot help but bring up who comes next. You did get me to thinking, mostly about guile.

    For when the Serpent comes to circumvent us,
    We must be Serpents too, or else repent us.

     One thing I thought was how realistically pragmatic a statement that is and I wondered if that is our fate, that it must always be this way. I also thought, as I wondered to myself, if that final line is true enough to be a campaign slogan, which candidates would it fit and are they the ones with a chance to win? And is that change, and if so, is it the sort of change that we want to believe in? Or is it just the easy answer? And then I thought:  “Everything is a source of fun. Nobody's safe, for we care for none! Life is a joke that's just begun!”  W.S. Gilbert. 

    Each life is born into its own context. It lives as it will, or as it must, or as the only way it can. Let the philosophers decide how the possible scope is defined but, regardless how our life comes to be as it is, we each live with the results. And, we influence other lives and we cause results, maybe. I will probably pick the philosophical stance which lets me believe I have nothing to do with so much of what happens.

     When continuing to consider guile I got  to thinking about the Jokerman. [The ancient Hebrew name for John the Baptist is said to be "Jokanaan". Is that true? Does it mean anything significant in Dylan’s context? How would I know? But, it is Dylan so maybe]  Is childhood just the school where we learn to live happily with guile or else live on the edge? In general, I tend to believe it true that if you aren’t on the edge you are taking up too much room. Could the memoir of a successful, or at least comfortable life be titled, “How I learned to Love the Guile”? Or maybe as a song, “Livin’ and Lovin” in Double Guile Time”?

      And so, here, in honor of St. Patrick the expeller of serpents, and wishing that it wasn’t just a story, is where I will leave it for today

    "Man Of Peace"

    Look out your window, baby, there's a scene you'd like to catch

    The band is playing "Dixie", a man got his hand outstretched

    Could be the Fuehrer

    Could be the local priest

    You know sometimes Satan, you know he comes as a man of peace.

     

    He got a sweet gift of gab, he got a harmonious tongue

    He knows every song of love that ever has been sung

    Good intentions can be evil

    Both hands can be full of grease

    You know that sometimes Satan comes as a man of peace.

     

    Well, first he's in the background, and then he's in the front

    Both eyes are looking like they're on a rabbit hunt

    Nobody can see through him

    No, not even the Chief of Police

    You know that sometimes Satan comes as a man of peace.

     

    Well, he catch you when you're hoping for a glimpse of the sun

    Catch you when your troubles feel like they weigh a ton

    He could be standing next to you

    The person that you'd notice least

    I hear that sometimes Satan comes as a man of peace.

     

    Well, he can be fascinating, he can be dull

    He can ride down Niagara Falls in the barrels of your skull

    I can smell something cooking

    I can tell there's going to be a feast

    You know that sometimes Satan comes as a man of peace.

     

    He's a great humanitarian, he's great philanthropist

    He knows just where to touch you honey, and how you like to be kissed

    He'll put both his arms around you

    You can feel the tender touch of the beast

    You know that sometimes Satan comes as a man of peace.

     

    Well, the howling wolf will howl tonight, the king snake will crawl

    Trees that've stood for a thousand years suddenly will fall

    Wanna get married ? Do it now

    Tomorrow all activity will cease

    You know that sometimes Satan comes as a man of peace.

    Somewhere Mama's weeping for her blue-eyed boy

    She's holding them little white shoes and that little broken toy

    And he's following a star

    The same one them three men followed from the East

    I hear that sometimes Satan comes as a man of peace.



     

      


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