Thursday, April 27, 2017

A Dickens of a leader

Harold Skimpole is a character in Charles Dickens’s Bleak House. “He had more the appearance in all respects of a damaged young man, rather than a well-preserved older one,” Dickens writes. “His hair (was) carelessly disposed, and his neckerchief loose and flowing…”
Skimpole has still more in common with our President. “I am a child, you know!” he often exclaims.
Like a child, Skimpole’s wants are simple, among them “…music, mutton, coffee…fruit in the season…and a little claret.” But these simple pleasures are to be had, we see, at others’ expense. And if anyone should object to this state of affairs, Skimpole’s answer is something like: I am what I am. In short, Skimpole is, like a child, a perfect egoist.  
What are the characteristics of a typical child?
A lack of responsibility. You let others bear the burden of your existence, or, if you happen to be Commander-in-Chief, you blame someone else—anyone else—for your failures.
A vengeful temperament. If someone criticizes you, you criticize them back, and make sure and out-criticize them, even if you must resort to ad hominem attacks (e.g., if an actress says your world view is dangerous, you call her “overrated”).
A love of loud noises. The child relishes firecrackers and cherry bombs, while the man-child wants to “bomb the shit out of ISIS.”
Boastfulness. The child puts himself at the center of every experience.
Exaggeration. Every new thing is the “greatest” or the “biggest” to the child.
Love of play. Sports, games and recreation are central to a child’s life, and even when he can no longer run or jump, the “grown-up” man craves play—so there is golf.
Disgusting personal habits.  The child gives noogies, uses boogers as missiles and proudly produces armpit farts; the stunted man no less proudly brags of grabbing women by their privates.    
On the other hand, Harold Skimpole differs from Donald J. Trump in one important way: Skimpole abhors having money. He knows nothing of it, and he wants to keep it that way.
Another rotten orange
So, to complete our character assassination, we’ll turn to another novel by Dickens, David Copperfield. Here we find Uriah Heep, the consummate villain, who is also pure ego, but careful enough to try and conceal it. (“I am the ‘umblest person going,” Heep tells young Copperfield.) Heep’s craven grasping for money and prestige has left him physically deformed, it seems. Despite his constant avowals of his “’umbleness”, Heep has greed written all over him.

Our President, you could say, is half-Skimpole, half-Heep.