trying to hold back the rising tide of support for
Women's suffrage in the United States. Proverbial reference to the legend in modern journalism or politics usually casts the story in terms of "Cnut's arrogance" of "attempting to stop the tide". As to usage, however,
The Economist's Style Guide writes: It was cited, for example, by
Stacy Head as typifying the
New Orleans city council's response to
Hurricane Katrina (2005), or by
Mark Stephens in reference to
Ryan Giggs as "the King Cnut of football" for his attempts of stopping "the unstoppable tide of information" on the internet in the
2011 British privacy injunctions controversy. This, and many other popular representations, are a misrepresentation of Huntingdon's account, in which Cnut uses the tide to demonstrate precisely his inability to control the elements and his deference to the greater authority of God.
Theodore Dalrymple refers to the story, without misattributing motives of arrogance to Cnut, in the context of British reactions to the
annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation in 2014, saying
Warren Burger, the
Chief Justice of the United States, mentions Cnut in the 1980 decision
Diamond v. Chakrabarty (447 U.S. 303), stating the denial of a patent for a micro-organism "is not likely to put an end to genetic research". Burger likens doing so to Cnut commanding the tides. Author
C.S. Forester has his character, Horatio Hornblower, compare the limits of the powers of "His Majesty" (implicitly referring to King George III) to his "illustrious predecessor", King Cnut, by contemplating His Majesty's inability to control the tides in
Hornblower and the Atropos, the fifth book (by story date) of the Hornblower Saga. The monarch's inability to control the tides is ironically juxtaposed to the fact he otherwise "ruled the waves" through naval might, as recently (in the story) demonstrated by the British victory at the Battle of Trafalgar. ==Historicity and possible location==