The conversation alighted on the House of Lords. We were a mixed bag with allegiances across the political spectrum but with a Conservative bias. There was unanimity on the Lib Dem proposal for an elected upper house – it was dismissed out of hand as opening up a constitutional battleground with the Commons and making it another place restricted solely to career politicians. Appointment of the great and the good was seen as the Lord’s key strength allowing into the process of government recondite skills on wide range of subjects. The hereditary principle didn’t get a look in despite everyone there knowing some hard working and able hereditary peers.
What became interesting was the almost unanimous resentment of nobility and what that implied. Why should a second rate politician be called Lord Flatulence and his wife Lady Flatulence; and their children be called ‘the Hon’? For life? It appeared to be all in the name. What if they were called Senator? The word has a noble ring but somehow doesn’t raise hackles. It has dignity and sense of something earned rather than entitled and a lineage that goes back to ancient times with no connotations of feudalism. Try it for size. Replace Lord and Lady Flatulence with Senator and Mrs Flatulence. It works doesn’t it? You think about the whole issue differently.
21:26
21:50
Prep School
I have just finished a collection of essays by George Orwell called Books vs Cigarettes. If you read it, I would do so backwards as, while e...
07:05
Winter
I decided to walk from Notting Hill Gate to Knightsbridge last night. The direct route is across Kensington Gardens which is closed and lock...
05:28
A trillion
The US national debt is now $16 trillion and rising by a $1 trillion a year. We can get our heads around millions and billions...but trillio...
05:07
Still lost in translation
This is a piece about Japan by my friend James Alexendroff, an investor and philanthropist who thinks originally about the world. "I am...
17:42
Optimism and pessimism
Stephen Pinker, the so-called psychohistorian, Noel Malcolm and Matthew Parris were discussing the life of Thomas Hobbes, the 17 th century...
08:28
Bit on the drill
I was watching a wildlife documentary on polar bears last week. With a modern skidoos, icebreaking ships, bear-proof cages and the latest in...
06:15
On nothing
The author of this piece in the online magazine Aeon spent a season in the middle of nowhere, the Antarctic plateau, doing nothing. It's...
07:43
Glad to be gay
Neil Tennant of the Pet Shop Boys is eloquent and intelligent. He was interviewed about his life and a question was put to him along the lin...
16:43
Lord Rees-Mogg
William Rees-Mogg died in December. He was one of the great and the good and wrote majestically on the great issues of the day - and was, as...
16:11
Insults
Jonathan Miller is the master of the raking broadside insult. On the opera crowd at Covent Garden: "Harrod's Food Halls, yield up y...
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Charles Ellingworth | All rights reserved.