Cowards become-or, historically, may be made-kings. But they don't tend to last long in the position.
It is hard to remove a king by external force; but still harder to remain a king if the times and tides of circumstance and the will of subjects, enemies and allegiances go against you.
The major mark of deserved authority is that one continues to wield it. Without increasingly desperate ploys to maintain it. Captains only remain so while people follow them. Following is as much a choice and as vital as leading.
But to what less-than-stately issue are you really referring, if I may presume?
I wondered if you'd come to know that story. I hope you don't mind my avoidance of introducing you to it myself, slips notwithstanding. It seemed… at least, irrelevant. At most… distracting.
[ Verity's voice reciting it Mist-feverishly comes abruptly back to him, with the accompaniment of a phantom pain in his shoulder, the smell of that trash heap and smoke and Mist and blood. And the fear, that he hates so much. ]
[Tilts his head to one side. Knows better than to let his tone get too gentle with Arthur; for some, a level of firmness is the ground, and softening equals falling. But there are too many entryways to this conversation and only Arthur can guide him to which is most important at a time, and in what order. If it's even only one conversation. Which…
So Lupin must settle himself at first to prod unhelpfully:]
I remember too vividly. Completely unrelated things send me back to that place. I still dream of it.
[ His tone is hollow with these revelations. But there's bitterness there, because he can't fight monsters that only exist in his head, could barely fight them when they came back huge and real to Anatole. ]
[Lupin can't help his voice going gentle, now. He hopes it doesn't make Arthur feel undermined, but there are only so many ways he can deliver statements like this.]
In my world- [not even: the muggle world, but that's an unnecessary and uninteresting distinction right now] -we call it Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. Or, when war-related, shell-shock. When someone's been through a truly terrible event, it's not uncommon for them to experience too-vivid memories of it, even flashbacks, both waking and asleep. Full-sensory flashbacks, sometimes: sights, smells, physical sensations; it can be fully enveloping.
With awareness, and willingness to confront and work through the memories, it can be a temporary condition. It will fade with time. And I believe it is not the same as madness, nor even a form of it. Even when, sometimes, we can't understand why it's connected to one particular event rather than another, or we believe it's a situation we've already dealt with to its… explicable limit.
[ It is so relieving to be told that this isn't madness, isn't inexplicable, and isn't forever: three of Arthur's fears run through at once. And he's angry and grateful and embarrassed all at once. He starts to shake, and the tremors find their way into his otherwise calm voice. ]
Well, you mustn't take that too seriously. It was written by a Frenchman in a jail cell and is pure poetic license. And surely our Merlin is even less like his literary counterpart; and we like him quite well for it.
[If anyone's like Merlin in that story to Arthur, mightn't it more be…? Living backward in time and all that. …Or was that T.H. White's version. You'd think they'd cover these in more depth at Hogwarts, but in fact these versions were thought of more as fanfiction than foundational texts.]
At least you'll understand next time I forget myself and use his name as an expletive. It's nothing personal.
After what he went through, and what he preached, personally I can't imagine him actually caring about use of his name. …In idle remark. As justification, he might care.
[ Arthur sounds hoarse, and tired: the lack of video is telling. ]
A riddle for you: how can a coward be a king?
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It is hard to remove a king by external force; but still harder to remain a king if the times and tides of circumstance and the will of subjects, enemies and allegiances go against you.
The major mark of deserved authority is that one continues to wield it. Without increasingly desperate ploys to maintain it. Captains only remain so while people follow them. Following is as much a choice and as vital as leading.
But to what less-than-stately issue are you really referring, if I may presume?
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[ Verity's voice reciting it Mist-feverishly comes abruptly back to him, with the accompaniment of a phantom pain in his shoulder, the smell of that trash heap and smoke and Mist and blood. And the fear, that he hates so much. ]
Christ. I think I'm going mad.
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So Lupin must settle himself at first to prod unhelpfully:]
Howso?
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[ His tone is hollow with these revelations. But there's bitterness there, because he can't fight monsters that only exist in his head, could barely fight them when they came back huge and real to Anatole. ]
It runs in my family, you know.
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In my world- [not even: the muggle world, but that's an unnecessary and uninteresting distinction right now] -we call it Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. Or, when war-related, shell-shock. When someone's been through a truly terrible event, it's not uncommon for them to experience too-vivid memories of it, even flashbacks, both waking and asleep. Full-sensory flashbacks, sometimes: sights, smells, physical sensations; it can be fully enveloping.
With awareness, and willingness to confront and work through the memories, it can be a temporary condition. It will fade with time. And I believe it is not the same as madness, nor even a form of it. Even when, sometimes, we can't understand why it's connected to one particular event rather than another, or we believe it's a situation we've already dealt with to its… explicable limit.
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I see. Thank you.
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So he changes the subject.]
Which story did you read?
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[ He'd been feeling morbid, after all. ]
Shakespeare's better.
[ If they're going to change the subject, he'd rather it be to one which doesn't make him feel painfully self-deprecating and at odds with himself. ]
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[If anyone's like Merlin in that story to Arthur, mightn't it more be…? Living backward in time and all that. …Or was that T.H. White's version. You'd think they'd cover these in more depth at Hogwarts, but in fact these versions were thought of more as fanfiction than foundational texts.]
At least you'll understand next time I forget myself and use his name as an expletive. It's nothing personal.
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