http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-12576699
Er - Churchill was born in Victoria's reign and burst into tears at the drop of a hat and, as for his speeches, there was nothing cool about them. However, the general thrust of the article is, undoubtedly, true, although an American might fail to notice distinctions between the Anglo-Saxon-Nordic-Norman bastard race of the English and that race of the British Isles on the Celtic fringe: there is nothing very 'cool' about Rab C Nesbitt or Billy Connolly - or Maud Gonne come to that.
Last edited by NJS (2011-02-26 05:53:28)
http://sedulia.blogs.com/sedulias_quotations/2008/03/heinrich-heine.html
Formby - interesting pieces. However, to compare Winnie with Paris Hilton reduces the impact of the real point. I like the reference to the fact that WSC steeled the Briitish to die with honour. I am sure, from converstaions with my grandparents (and, to a lesser extent, with my parents), that they really did think that it might come to invasion and hand-to-hand combat and at least one grandfather really did sleep with a revolver by the bed!
But no books, reviews or insights are going to shift my overall gratitude for WSC, big flaws and all.
It was interesting reading, Formby. My main point was that he was not a cold fish. Indeed I think that the descriptions of the stiff-upper lip phenomenon are often something of an exaggeration and it is not an exclusively English characteristic - the Germans have it to some extent too.
Last edited by NJS (2011-02-26 07:11:28)
Last edited by formby (2011-02-26 08:59:14)
Do you mean that Big T was being sarcastic?
Last edited by Maximilien de Robespierre (2011-02-26 10:49:50)
I just get bored with all the silly talk sometimes. The late Queen Mother was a right cow too. And don't get me started on The People's Princess... The general view was that she was a cock happy slut just before she died, then all of a sudden the mawkish proles started crying...
Churchill's schtick... You know the story that he got new false teeth that made him talk properly & so they had to send them back and make them looser sho he could shtill talk in that shilly way of hish?
Not sure if it's true, but I like it.
Last edited by Russell_Street (2011-02-26 10:58:38)
Everyone in public life has a persona to which they play. But Churchill was the man who ensured that England fought and stood up to Nazism. One shouldn't confuse the one with the other. Similarly, the Queen steadied a man who didn't want to play a public role and allowed him to play the right one. She may well have been snobbish and acquisitive but so what? Those issues affected only those who wanted to meet her, whereas her public role affected an entire nation. Diana wouldn't be the first member of the British aristocracy to find sex attractive but she differs very little from most of us in that respect. On the other hand, holding the hands of kids with AIDS can only make an impact if you're already famous and are prepared to do it.
These people are people and are bound to have their faults. We don't have to worship them to acknowledge that their public lives can justify the respect and admiration they generate. Nor should their private lives be the basis for judging them: very few of us would survive that particular test.
Last edited by Maximilien de Robespierre (2011-02-26 17:41:21)
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