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Private view - Rex Mottram at home
252 the hanging
i.e. of the pictures in the gallery, always a
fraught period
253 Lord Copper
Daily Beast
This newspaper makes a
number of appearances in EWs novels, as does its hands-on proprietor Lord
Copper. Perhaps the most famous of EW quotations occurs in Scoop in
relation to him : his minions dare not tell Copper that he is wrong and instead
use the phrase Up to a point, Lord Copper. So Yokohama is up to a
point the capital of Japan.
253 Brideshead set
a nest of party mutiny
The
middle to late 30s was a period of some frustration for many
Conservatives. Quite apart from those few who clustered around Winston
Churchill in fear of the growing might of Nazi Germany, there were three other
disaffected groups : those who did not approve of the national government
though it was dominated by the Conservative party; a few liberal Conservatives
who regretted the lack of a generous social policy; and rather more who had
some admiration for the apparent successes of Nazism and Fascism in Europe.
The mention of the Brideshead set recalls the tendency of
disaffected politicians in the 1930s, a time when one party had a firm
grip on power, to form cabals which took their name from a place where they
met, e.g. the Cliveden set.
253 Teresa Marchmain
i.e. Lady Marchmain, who has been dead about
ten years
253 The Clarences
In the 20th century there was no royal family
called Clarence. (The last Duke of Clarence, who would have become king in 1910
if he had survived, died in 1892.) There has been some speculation as to which
royal duke EW means this to be. It is of no importance : the point is that we
witness the pleasant inconsequentialities attendant on royal position in the
20th century.
253 human story
Even then a concern which newspaper
reporters placed above truth, as can be seen in the paragraph that appears the
following morning : the reporter writes that Charles went to equatorial
Africa.
254 Margot
almost certainly a reference to Margot Metroland
(previously Margot Beste-Chetwynde, pronounced Beast
Cheatin), another character who appears in several of EWs
novels from Decline and Fall onwards. She is an ornament of high society
despite deriving her fortune from dubious activities including the white slave
trade.
255 Mrs Simpson
i.e. Wallis Warfield Simpson, the inamorata of
the King, Edward VIII. This is the summer of 1936 when the affair was building
up to a great constitutional crisis. Mrs Simpson was an American who was in the
process of being divorced from her second husband in order, it was suspected,
to marry the King as her third. The King was adamant about marrying her, the
establishment determined he should not do so as king. Quite apart from the
appalling prospect of admitting an American divorcée to the throne,
there was the fact that the King was head of the Church of England, a body
which does not easily countenance remarriage of divorced people. The
Kings supporters floated the idea of a morganatic marriage, but the
Cabinet was unwilling to accept this compromise since there was no provision
for it in the constitution : the Kings wife must be Queen. On 11th
December 1936 the king abdicated in favour of his brother, the Duke of York,
who became George VI. Edward received the title Duke of Windsor, married Mrs
Simpson in June 1937, and lived abroad.
The recent waves caused by the
marriage of Mrs Camilla Parker-Bowles to the Prince of Wales (2005) show that
the British constitution is a robust and malleable organism. A little
willingness is all that is necessary to get things changed. To mollify a
section of British people perceived to be devoted to the memory of the late
Princess of Wales, Mrs Parker-Bowles stated her preference for the title
Duchess of Cornwall (the Prince's second title is Duke of Cornwall). She also
wishes to have the title Princess Consort when and if her husband becomes king.
Such arrangements could have been created for Mrs Simpson too, though in her
time the political and religious opposition was very strong indeed. Of course
constitutional experts are arguing now about whether the Duchess of Cornwall is
in fact the Princess of Wales, whatever she calls herself, and so will be Queen
de jure and de facto.
255 Tate Gallery and the National Art Collections Fund
important
purchasers in the arts world in Britain who had access to large amounts of
money
257 T-t-trent or T-t-tring
Trent Park was the name of the large
estate of the extremely rich Member of Parliament Sir Philip Sassoon
(1888-1939), cousin of the poet Siegfried. It lay on the edge of North London.
Sir Philip liked to keep exotic wildlife like muntjak, penguins and flamingoes,
and he certainly had extensive conservatories and hothouses where tropical
greenery was abundant. Today Trent Park is a campus of the University of
Middlesex.
Tring is a dormitory town in Hertfordshire, a bastion of the
middle class. It possessed a fashionable health farm which many of EWs
friends patronised, in fact the first one established in Britain, in 1925. It
appears that the owners attempted to make up for exiguous cuisine by excessive
decor.
257 louche
i.e. shady, disreputable
257 Blue Grotto Club
As Anthony Blanche explains, there were many
such clubs opening and closing in London all the time. Parliament had imposed
strict licensing laws, and the Home Office and the police had periodic fits of
puritanism which resulted in clubs being forcefully closed down. The answer for
the owners was simply to open them again under a new name.
257 Boeuf sur le Toit
a nightclub in Paris. In 1920 Darius
Milhaud (1892-1974) had written a ballet called Le boeuf sur le toit
(The Ox on the Roof), a title which he had taken from a Brazilian popular song.
The music was full of exotic rhythms and orchestration, though the
success of the venture was ensured by Jean Cocteaus organisational skills
and his scenario, which sets the scene in New York among varied low-life
characters. A club opening up soon afterwards cashed in on the acclaim by using
the title for its name; it soon became a centre of literary and artistic
activity, and especially of jazz-playing. Jazz musicians who played in other
Parisian venues often went to Le Boeuf sur le Toit to have a jam session
after they had finished their gigs. To this day, to have a jam session in
France is called faire le Boeuf or taper le Boeuf.
258 cobalt
a deep blue
258 Ruskin-Gothic
The kind of Venetian Gothic favoured by John
Ruskin. Charles is remembering looking out over Christ Church Meadow from
Sebastians rooms in Meadow Buildings, which were designed in that style.
Christ Church Meadow is a justly celebrated expanse of parkland.
259 not Jane Austen
perhaps the writer considered to be the most
English in her writings and attitudes. Modern criticism and films have,
however, discovered previously unsuspected depths of perverse and revolutionary
longings and obscenity.
259 not M-m-miss M-m-mitford
i.e. Mary Russell Mitford
(1787-1855), the author of Our Village (1824), a series of
sketches of English rural life which preserve a long-departed mode of living.
Certainly Blanche would bracket her with Jane Austen as being ornaments of prim
English propriety, however undeserved that categorisation might be.
259 d-d-dago
an insulting term for a person of Hispanic descent
(it is an English rendering of the common Spanish name Diego) which
Blanche turns to comic use to express a contrast between himself and
Charles
259 Gauguin
Paul Gauguin (1848-1903), French artist famous for
his paintings with flat perspectives and striking colours. In 1891 he went to
live in the simpler societies of the Pacific where he perfected his
art.
259 Rimbaud
Arthur Rimbaud (1854-1891), French symbolist poet of
immense significance (even though he did not write any poetry after the age of
19) who also escaped from France. He resided in several countries but mainly in
Africa.
260 pansy bar
i.e. a bar that caters for homosexuals considered
effeminate. In Britain such men have been nicknamed pansies since at
least the 1920s.
The conversational titbits from Rexs friends which follow illustrate the concerns of the day. They more or less demonstrate how far the company is divorced from reality.
262 Of course, he can marry her
the King and
Mrs Simpson
262 We had our chance in October
Mare Nostrum
Spezia
Pantelleria
This is a reference to the Anglo-Italian
crisis of 1935 which accompanied Italys invasion of Ethiopia, then called
Abyssinia. The League of Nations, urged on by Britain, imposed sanctions on
Italy; but these sanctions were so ineptly applied that they did nothing to
stop the invasion. The inevitable victory of Italy followed; the Emperor of
Abyssinia, Haile Selassie, was forced into exile for five years until the
British captured the country during World War II.
EW blamed the policy of
the British government for ensuring maximum suffering, firstly by giving false
hope to Abyssinia, and secondly by fostering a sense of betrayal in Italy, a
country which up to that point had considered itself a friend of
Britains.
Mare Nostrum means Our Sea and was a
favourite phrase both of ancient Romans and modern Italians for the
Mediterranean Sea. La Spezia is the city housing the chief Italian naval base.
It consists of an immense natural harbour and lies midway between Genoa and
Leghorn. Pantelleria is an Italian island in the Mediterranean Sea north-west
of Malta.
262 Francos simply a German agent
That bluff has
been called, anyway.
a reference to the Spanish Civil War. Francisco
Franco (1892-1975) was the general in charge of the Nationalist (Fascist)
forces, and soon to become the ruler of all Spain. He had built up his forces
in Morocco and then invaded Spain. Franco had not-so-clandestine German (and
Italian) support. Quite how the Germans bluff had been called is not
clear. They certainly continued helping Franco until the end of the civil
war.
262 It would make the monarchy stronger
This
delusion refers to the marriage of Edward VIII and Mrs Simpson.
262 show-down with the old gang
The old gang here
refers to the leaders who took a more conventional moral view of the
Kings case than did the King and his supporters. Rexs friends are
over-estimating the power and support that the King had in the country. His
self-serving, idle and slovenly ways had not recommended him to the
establishment, and the country as a whole, as things turned out, did not
appreciate a man who would neglect and then cast aside his duty for a
woman.
262 Why didnt we close the canal?
i.e. the Suez Canal, in
order to make difficult the passage of Italian troops to Abyssinia.
262 Fort Belvedere
King Edwards own home near Windsor. He
preferred it to Buckingham Palace, Windsor Castle and Sandringham even when he
was king.
262 Palazzo Venezia
Originally a Renaissance palace, it was built
in 1445 on the Via del Corso in Rome by the Venetian pope Paul II when he was a
cardinal (Pietro Barbo, 1417-1471, pope from 1464). Thereafter its joint
residents were always a Venetian cardinal and the Venetian ambassador.
Mussolini, the Italian Fascist dictator, took the palace over as his
headquarters and liked to address the crowds from the balcony. The palace is
now an art museum.
262 Baldwin
the Prime Minister at the time, Stanley Baldwin
(1867-1947), who, as his last great service for the country before he resigned
in 1937, was busy trying to get the king either to reject Mrs Simpson or to
abdicate.
262 Clive and Nelson
two great British heroes. Robert, Baron
Clive of Plassey (1725-1774) was a soldier and colonial administrator who
helped to establish British rule in India. Horatio, Viscount Nelson (1758-1805)
was the admiral who defeated the Spanish and French fleets at the Battle of
Trafalgar though he himself was killed during the battle.
262 Hawkins and Drake
two English pirates honoured for their
successes in wars, legal or otherwise, against Spain, especially in the
struggle against the Armada (1588). Sir John Hawkins (1532-1595) was initially
a slave-trader but as a member of the government later helped to reform
Englands navy. Sir Francis Drake (1540?-1596) was the first English
commander (and only the second of any nationality after Ferdinand Magellan
[recte Fernão de Magalhães] and Juan Sebastian Del Cano in
1519-1522) to circumnavigate the globe. Both Englishmen served in the fleet
which followed the Armada (Hawkins was second-in-command and Drake third) and
both died on a plundering expedition to Spanish America.
263 Palmerston
This odd choice of hero attests to the
speakers wish for bold and independent foreign policy. Henry John Temple,
Viscount Palmerston (1784-1865), nicknamed Pam, was for fifteen
years Foreign Secretary and for nine years Prime Minister (1855-1858;
1859-1865). He was noted for his robust defence of British interests.
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