Monday, July 28, 2025

Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came (1855).

I've been following a breadcrumb trail for a while now.  I guess you could say that's what I've been trying to do, anyway.  For the past month of two I've been not so much obsessed, as curious about something to do with Stephen King's 
Dark Tower series of books.  I'm not sure if it's correct to say I'm interested in figuring them all out.  This seems less of a question about "What does it all mean"?  Nor is it a matter of making the usual judgment call on the overall quality of the books as a whole.  Besides which, I've already done the latter in a myriad number of ways, and all of it amounts to the same thing.  There might have been some kind of Inspiration going on in the basement level of the writer's mind when he got the idea of taking Sergio Leone's Man with No Name and placing him in a Gonzo Western version of J.R.R. Tolkien's landscape.  However, even if that's the case, then the final results speak less of Inspired revery, and more of the quiet desperation of an otherwise talented mind grasping at whatever secondhand glimpses of the original Creative Idea he can rescue from the murk of his inner workshop.  Because of this, the final result remains one long slog of invention as opposed to anything approaching Inspiration.  When a writer like King is Inspired, you'll know it when you read it.  It's what allows imaginary small towns like Salem's Lot or Derry, Maine to feel like real, lived in places.  He's able to bring these pictures in his head to such vibrant life that it's now reached a point where Derry has become a character in it's own right.  Why else do you suppose Hollywood of all places would be trying to make a TV series out of it, otherwise?

That's a good example of King at his Inspired best.  With the Tower books, you're seeing the author caught in a desperate struggle to work the story fossil out the ground, and it's difficult to tell if the darn thing is too deep in the ground excavate, or there's even anything there at all, and the author has spent all this time doing no more than mining for the mental equivalent of Fool's Gold.  In other words, the story of the Last Gunslinger in a World that has Moved On never manages to be one of Kings best.  The funny thing is how they're also kind of fascinating to think about.  I don't mean they're interesting in terms of overall plot, but rather of the scattered hints of themes, ideas, and other Inspirations that went into the composition of the Gunslinger's patchwork secondary world.  If I had to point to where this interest came from, then a lot of the credit their probably has to go to a scholar named Robin Furth, and the contents of essay she wrote once upon a by for The Complete Dark Tower Concordance.  That essay, Roland, the Quest, and the Tower, seems to have contained just enough thematic richness to it to act as a lure for any online nobody with an interest in hunting down bits and pieces of forgotten and obscure literary esoterica.  A lot of Furth's thoughts on the Tower seemed interesting to me.  I thought I recognized some of her words as being reflections of statements King himself had made elsewhere.

Specifically, it was phrases like "As Above, So Below" that recalled to memory several smatterings of commentary that King had made in Danse Macabre about how "Modem horror stories are not much different from the morality plays of the fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth centuries, when we get right down to it (422)".  It's the kind of statement that has no choice except to come off as obtuse to most folks in the audience, unless you happen to be a self-made fan of Renaissance era literature.  In which case statements such as those will tend to activate some kind of internal literary allusion detecting antenna.  It's the same reaction that knowledgeable fans used to get from any halfway decent episode of The Simpsons, back in the day.  The only difference is a mind attuned to references and words drawn from the Age of Shakespeare.  I can't say that I ever made a deliberate choice to end up like this.  It's just the way that King and other writers like him were able to mold me.  Who knew?  In any case, it was statements like the one above from non-fiction books like Macabre, coupled with the author's use of antiquarian terms like Microcosm and Macrocosm, and the ability to realize that these two words helped the ending of the novel version of It to make a greater deal of sense that got me interested in learning more about the internal storehouse that King draws upon for his own artistry.

So I decided to see if it was possible to discern any pattern to the bric-a-brac in the King's workshop, and down the rabbit hole I more or less went.  If of all of that backstory proves anything, then I guess the lesson is...it pays to grow up as a fan of the Horror genre?  I don't know, you're guess is as good as mine.  Anyway, I went source hunting for, not the key or heart of King's Imagination, let's be clear about that.  I think his general essence as a writer is basically that of the Romantics at its core.  He's one of the lucky few who was just born with a natural talent for tapping into Jung's Collective Unconscious and (nine times out of ten) bringing one of them up to the surface, and getting a pretty good read out of it, more often than not.  Everything else is just so much bells and whistles, really.  His maxim has always been "The Book is the Boss", and it's something he appears to have spent his entire life living up to.  It's just that the writer's notion of Horror as a form of Renaissance literature for the modern age is yet another idea that he keeps returning to, though he never makes any big deal out it.  It's just another part of the general ingredients that are always "on the table", in a manner of speaking.  If the narrative he's working on has a use for such notions, into the Cauldron of Story they go.  If not, neither harm nor foul.  It really does all seem to be just part of another day at the office so far as Steve King is concerned.

What makes the Tower books fascinating to think about (as opposed to reading) is that the entire series has a way of acting as an accidental manifestation of the contents of King's inner storehouse, both in terms of his Inspirations, and his thoughts about the nature of writing.  So, I guess that might explain why I'm sometimes drawn back to examining these particular sets of books.  The Dark Tower books (along with their sister novel The Stand) are able to do double duty as the closest thing to a palimpsest or mappa mundi of King's creativity and thinking.  It's like stumbling upon a treasure chest full of hidden of sources that, when taken together, create an outline of King's artistry.  What I'm interested in for the purposes of this article is to go back to the major literary source that author has cited as his main Inspiration for starting the whole peculiar mess.  He says he got it from a poem.  "The idea of writing this dark fantasy series came from...Robert Browning’s “Child [sic] Roland to the Dark Tower Came.” King quickly warms to his story: “Browning never says what that tower is, but it’s based on an even older tradition about Childe Roland that’s lost in antiquity. Nobody knows who wrote it, and nobody knows what the Dark Tower is.  “So I started off wondering: What is this tower? What does it mean? And I decided that everybody keeps a Dark Tower in their heart that they want to find.  “They know it’s destructive and it will probably mean the end of them, but there’s that urge to make it your own or to destroy it, one or the other. So I thought: Maybe it’s different things to different people, and as I write along I’ll find out what it is to Roland. And I found that out, but I’m not going to tell you (web)".

It's King's mentioning of what he terms "The Tradition of Roland" lost to antiquity that jumps out a me the most.  I suppose the reason why is because it telegraphs that it wasn't just the experience of reading Robert Browning's poetical obscurus, but also the knowledge that the poem in itself was a pointer to some long forgotten volumes of quaint and curious lore that seems to have acted as the extra bit of creative enticement to see what he could do with the whole thing.  When it comes to the Tradition that King mentions in passing, I think of all the critics I've read, it is Michele Baum who has done the most to provide us the closest summary of what that Tradition is, and how it has been use in an artistic sense down through the years.  "...Stephen King describes how Robert Browning’s poem “Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came” was  his inspiration for Roland the Gunslinger. But Browning’s knight also had his predecessors, such as Orlando in the sixteenth century Orlando Furioso by Ludovico Ariosto, or Charlemagne’s knight in the eleventh century Song of Roland. The genre and heroic conventions change across these four texts but despite the different contexts, we can see similarities in the construction of the hero (66-67)".

I've devoted an article a piece on this site to at least one of the texts that Braun talks about in the pages of Patrick McAleer's Stephen King's Modern Macabre, and one other that seems to have escaped everyone else's radar.  In doing so, I've done no more than to satisfy my own curiosity about where this lifelong oddity in King's career might have come from.  At last, I think, I've reached the clearing at the end of this particular path.  I'm going to devote this review to studying where it all started for some then unknown student at the University of Maine in Orono.  It's time to take a look at Robert Browning's Child Roland to the Dark Tower Came, and see what it can tells us as King's main Inspiration.

Sunday, July 13, 2025

Sergio Leone and the Orlando Furioso.

According to Bev Vincent, "When Stephen King started working on the first story of the first book that would become the Dark Tower series, his intentions were nothing grander than to write the longest popular novel in history. Now a grandfather in his late fifties, King looks back with sympathy and understanding at the youthful hubris that gave rise to such an aspiration. “At nineteen, it seems to me, one has a right to be arrogant. . . . Nineteen is the age where you say Look out world, I’m smokin’ TNT and I’m drinkin’ dynamite, so if you know what’s good for ya, get out of my way—here comes Stevie.”  The Lord of the Rings inspired King, though he had no intention of replicating Tolkien’s creations, for his inspirations went beyond that epic quest fantasy to embrace romantic poetry and the spaghetti westerns of the 1960s and 1970s. After graduating from college, he decided it was time to stop playing around and tackle something serious. He began a novel “that contained Tolkien’s sense of quest and magic but set against [director Sergio] Leone’s almost absurdly majestic Western backdrop (275)".  Earlier on in the same book, Vincent elaborates a bit more on what has to remain the quirkiest idea that ever occurred to the still reigning King of Horror.  "The story that would become" The Dark Tower series "had its genesis almost a decade before the first" installment "appeared in F&SF, when King and his wife-to-be, Tabitha Spruce, each inherited reams of brightly colored paper nearly as thick as cardboard and in an “eccentric size.”  

"To the endless possibilities of five hundred blank sheets of 7" x 10" bright green paper, King added “Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came” by Robert Browning, a poem he’d studied two years previously in a course covering the earlier romantic poets. “I had played with the idea of trying a long romantic novel, embodying the feel, if not the exact sense, of the Browning poem.”   In an unpublished essay called “The Dark Tower: A Cautionary Tale,” King says, “I had recently seen a bigger-than-life Sergio Leone Western, and it had me wondering what would happen if you brought two very distinct genres together: heroic fantasy and the Western.”   After graduating from the University of Maine at Orono in 1970, King moved into a “skuzzy riverside cabin” and began what he then conceived of as a “very long fantasy novel,” perhaps even the longest popular novel in history.   He wrote the first section of The Gunslinger in a ghostly, unbroken silence—he was living alone—that influenced the eerie isolation of Roland and his solitary quest.  The story did not come easily. Sections were written during a dry spell in the middle of ’Salem’s Lot, and another part was written after he finished The Shining. Even when he wasn’t actively working on the Dark Tower, his mind often turned to the story—except, he says, when he was battling Randall Flagg in The Stand, which is ironic since both Flagg and a superflu decimated world became part of the Dark Tower mythos many years later (7-8)".  That's the closest I think anyone's ever come to granting a basic outline of how King contrived his most erratic narrative.

It's a story that both Vincent and the author himself have related time and again over the years.  There's nothing very new to be said about it, as of this writing, except perhaps for one overlooked element.  It has to do with, of all things, not any famous literary text (or at least, maybe not directly) but rather a filmmaker.  I'm talkin specifically now about an Italian filmmaker named Sergio Leone.  However strange this may sound. it kinda-sorta turns out he's one of the key components that King used in constructing his grandiose, yet somehow forever incomplete secondary world.  He's yet another part of of the tale Vincent and King have to tell about how the Tower had its genesis.  Ever since catching a fateful viewing of The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly at a local movie theater in about the year 1967-8 (web), King has made no secret of the impact that the artistry of Leone has had on his own work as a writer.  This appears to be one of those deep influences for the author.  Something that has been allowed to become at least part of the artist's personal storehouse of potential Inspirations.  In his 1981 non-fiction book Danse Macabre, King even devotes a few pages to Leone and his filmic creativity.  As is typical of the author, he brings Leone up in the course of discussing the art of the Horror genre.  To be specific, he's contemplating how a work like Frankenstein can become its own modern form of myth?

"The most obvious answer to this question is, the movies. The movies did it. And this is a true answer, as far as it goes. As has been pointed out in film books ad infinitum (and possibly ad nauseam), the movies have been very good at providing that cultural echo chamber... perhaps because, in terms of ideas as well as acoustics, the best place to create an echo is in a large empty space. In place of the ideas that books and novels give us, the movies often substitute large helpings of gut emotion. To this American movies have added a fierce sense of image, and the two together create a dazzling show. Take Clint Eastwood in Don Siegel’s Dirty Harry, for instance. In terms of ideas, the film is an idiotic mishmash. In terms of image and emotion—the young kidnap victim being pulled from the cistern at dawn, the bad guy terrorizing the busload of children, the granite face of Dirty Harry Callahan himself— the film is brilliant. Even the best of liberals walk out of a film like Dirty Harry or Peckinpah’s Straw Dogs looking as if they have been clopped over the head... or run over by a train.  

"There are films of ideas, of course, ranging all the way from Birth of a Nation to Annie Hall. But until a few years ago these were largely the province of foreign filmmakers (the cinema “new wave” that broke in Europe from 1946 until about 1965), and these movies have always been chancy in America, playing at your neighborhood “art house” with subtitles, if they play at all. I think it’s easy to misread the success of Woody Allen’s later films in this regard. In America’s urban areas, his films—and films such as Cousin, Cousine—generate long lines at the box office, and they certainly get what George (Night of the Living Dead, Dawn of the Dead) Romero calls “good ink,” but in the sticks—the quad cinema in Davenport, Iowa, or the twin in Portsmouth, New Hampshire—these pictures play a fast week or two and then disappear.  It is Burt Reynolds in Smokey and the Bandit that Americans really seem to take to; when Americans go to the films, they seem to want billboards rather than ideas; they want to check their brains at the box office and watch car crashes, custard pies, and monsters on the prowl.

"Ironically, it took a foreign director, the Italian Sergio Leone, to somehow frame the archetypal American movie; to define and typify what most American filmgoers seem to want. What Leone did in A Fistful of Dollars, For a Few Dollars More, and most grandiosely in Once Upon a Time In The West cannot even properly be called satire. O.U.A.T.I.T.W. in particular is a huge and wonderfully vulgar overstatement of the already overstated archetypes of American film westerns. In this movie gunshots seem as loud as atomic blasts; close-ups seem to go  on for minutes at a stretch, gunfights for hours; and the streets of Leone’s peculiar little Western towns all seem as wide as freeways (57-58)".  A page or two later, while still discussing Frankenstein as an example of a new modern Myth, King once more brings up the significance of Leone's achievement.  The funny thing is that he does so by pairing up the Man With No Name alongside King Kong, of all characters, saying, "Like Eastwood in Leone’s spaghetti westerns, Kong is the archetype of the archetype (61)".  It might not seem like much to go on, yet perhaps King has left his readers with some interesting food for thought when it comes to a good starting place for unpacking Leone's particular brand of artistry.  To start with, King makes a distinction between films of Ideas, and what I'm going to call a reliance on modern Emblems.  It's a phrase I'm borrowing from scholar Michael R. Collings, and his 2001 book Towards Other Worlds.

In the course of a chapter with the stimulating title of Stephen King, Richard Bachman, and Seventeenth-Century Devotional Poetry, Collings theorizes that the author of books like Carrie and The Regulators has taken the Renaissance concept of the Emblem, and "transferred it into an appearance that renders appropriate and acceptable to modern audiences (150)".  While the imagery of a book like The Regulators "belongs largely to the world of prose", it is the writer's ability to take the "Cultural icons of suburban Middle America" and treat them as a form of Modern Emblemology, that makes King able to bridge the gap between Idea and Image mentioned above in Danse Macabre.  What's interesting to note about Collings take is that the cinema of Sergio Leone is able to fit into King's rubric of modern Emblems (149-50)".  I think Collings efforts need to be highlighted here, because unless that happens, the full significance of his words will get all too easily overlooked.  What he's saying in this chapter is that not only does Stephen King's artistry owe a great deal to the literary practices of the Age of Shakespeare, he also goes a step further by perhaps leaving room for applying the same consideration to the work of the director of Once Upon a Time in the West.  Collings only mentions Leone just that one time, in passing, while keep his focus solely on King.  The idea that a guy who writes a book like Christine might be a literary heir to the practices of Elizabethan Drama is a hard sell for most of us.

What are we to do with the notion that the same Renaissance dramaturgy applies to a man who makes films in which Dirty Harry runs around filling most of the cast full of lead?  I'll have to admit it's more or less impossible to believe that films like A Fistful of Dollars amounts to anything like a Story of Ideas, as King calls them.  At the very least, this has not been any major part of the reputation that Leone has garnered for himself, whether among critics or audiences.  Very few of us can see any reason to take a film like The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly, seriously.  And so one day I ran across a book about Leone, and somewhere very near the beginning of the text, I made a discovery.  It counts as no more than one of those minor revelations tucked away in an otherwise passing comment.  Yet I'd argue that if we zero in on it, it might be possible to discover an interesting reason for considering the creator of the Man with No Name as having perhaps a greater integral relation to Stephen King's Dark Tower Mythos than has previously been assumed.  Even the most dedicated Tower Junkies assume that films like TGTB&TU amount to little than jumping-off points, something like a simple yet necessary puzzle piece that was required to unlock the door to the artist's Imagination.  However, if the work and scholarship of Sir Christopher Frayling is anything to go by, then there might just be a more vital yet hidden connection between Sergio Leone, and the various tales told about the character of Roland.