Friday, January 11, 2008
God Toppler Edmund
Of course, to all right thinking people, the 'conquest' of Everest was the most appalling impiety. A mountain that is impossible to climb is much more edifying than one that is merely difficult. I could worship an impossible mountain. Sir Edmund Hillary demoted Everest to difficult. 'Well, George, we've knocked the bastard off,' he said when he returned to base camp. Exactly. But, I suppose, he was a hero of a time when the 'conquest' of the planet seemed like a good thing and when the old colonial idea of toppling 'false' gods was still alive and well. Mountains made good gods. William Empson wrote a great poem about the emptiness left after the toppling of the gods - 'Let us stand here and admit that we have no road.' Hillary was an alpha male, but it's betas like Empson who have the last word.
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A blog about, among other things, imaginary ideas - What ifs? and Imagine thats. What if photographs looked nothing like what we see with our eyes? Imagine that the Berlin Wall had never come down. What if we were the punchline of an interminable joke? All contributions welcome.
How far down the Greek alphabet can a man get?
ReplyDeleteomega. see shaun ellis, the devonshire wolf-man.
ReplyDeleteI was amazed - and pleasantly so - by the generous coverage given to his death by the BBC. Big item at the head of every bulletin. Never mind the mountain stuff, this guy really was a hero - especially to the people of Nepal, to whom he devoted most of his post-Everest life. And modest with it, in a way quite unknown to today's mini-celebs. And a beekeeper...
ReplyDeleteAnd modest with it, in a way quite unknown to today's mini-celebs. Yes, how refreshing. May he RIP.
ReplyDelete