Royal Gossip
Ailz tells me the Queen has rewritten the rules on royal precedence so that Princess Anne isn't required to curtsey to her older brother's wife- something she refuses to do. She refused to curtsey to her older brother's first wife too. It's not that she finds curtseying offensive in itself, only curtseying to a "commoner". Apparently the Windsors are at it all the time, bobbing up and down to one another. You'd think, in private, they might drop the charade, but they don't.
There was a sale of the Duchess of Windsors jewels at Sotheby's yesterday. They realised nearly £8 million. The duchess liked her bling. And she liked it blingy. If you saw these items in a pawn shop window you'd go, "My God, who on earth would want to wear that?" But they're good fun- especially the diamond and onyx panther.
My cultural inheritance includes a propensity to bristle at the word "Prussian" but last night's TV biography of Frederick the Great suggested I might want to adjust my programming. Frederick was a great general, an enlightened and liberal statesman, a philosopher and patron of philosophers, a composer of some stature and a musician of genuine accomplishment. Ruling houses are often founded by persons of genius but its enormously rare for a genius to spring from an established bloodline. In fact I can think of only two examples in the history of Western Europe. The other is Alexander the Great.
There was a sale of the Duchess of Windsors jewels at Sotheby's yesterday. They realised nearly £8 million. The duchess liked her bling. And she liked it blingy. If you saw these items in a pawn shop window you'd go, "My God, who on earth would want to wear that?" But they're good fun- especially the diamond and onyx panther.
My cultural inheritance includes a propensity to bristle at the word "Prussian" but last night's TV biography of Frederick the Great suggested I might want to adjust my programming. Frederick was a great general, an enlightened and liberal statesman, a philosopher and patron of philosophers, a composer of some stature and a musician of genuine accomplishment. Ruling houses are often founded by persons of genius but its enormously rare for a genius to spring from an established bloodline. In fact I can think of only two examples in the history of Western Europe. The other is Alexander the Great.
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It's rather sad.
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We don't know about the Queen (we know so little about her) but Princess Margaret went though life demanding to be treated as "special"- and I don't believe it made her happy.
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It would appear the Queen and her sister had a happier relationship with their parents than is common for royal children.
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When people like me object, we're told it brings in the tourists.
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Driving in London is horrendous at the best of times.
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Flag burning is legal, ergo....
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It's getting so none of the peoples of the UK identify with the Union Jack any longer.
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In the beginning it was all about the Scots- and to a lesser extent the Welsh- wanting their independence- but now the English (who were lazily and offensively in the habit of thinking of the whole of the UK as England) have got the bug as well.
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This is a very well litigated area.
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It's exactly the same when the school district brings in preachers, on high holy days, and forces the students and faculty to sit there and listen to them drone. You and I know it is illegal, but the savages here have a very differnet opinion on the matter.
I used to be infuriated, but it was lonely and tiring and, eventually, I just gave up.
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http://www.amazon.com/gp/search?index=books&linkCode=qs&keywords=0007156588
I read it a couple of years ago and found it fascinating. And it's clearly not one of those books aimed at musicians with a lot of technical knowledge.
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(My mother greatly appreciated the "we".)
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But I wouldn't put it past them...
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