How our betters bob up and down by Bill Kirton
I usually
prefer my monthly blogs to be fresh but, very occasionally, there’s so little
‘freshness’ discernible in the daily antics of the appalling people who govern
our destinies and nothing in everyday life that’s not thoroughly depressing
that I resort to revisiting some ancient topic I covered in my own blog. Quite
frequently, it’s the seemingly inescapable evidence of absurdity that
provokes the piece. This month, however, rather than the bleak absurdity of the
cynically mendacious and immoral Johnston, Trump et al’s words and deeds,
which confirm the fundamental, philosophical inescapability of the absurd, it’s
the version embraced by Jarry, Ionesco The Goons and others who step back from
reality and recreate their own version of it for comic effect. Theirs is a sort
of harmless absurdity, an expression of amused but extreme disbelief at the
charades we all live.
So many
of the ways we behave must make God sorry he didn’t choose a different species,
such as slugs or mackerel, to be the Lords of creation. I’ve no doubt every
nationality has its little foibles and proofs that humans are unworthy to have
dominion over Chihuahuas, wildebeests, aphids and the rest but I’d make a claim
that the UK must be contenders for the gold medal in unworthiness.
The blog
on this topic which I’m raiding for this month’s offering was provoked by a
small item in the Guardian newspaper way back when Prince William was
first married. Also, for those who don’t live in the UK I should explain that,
to the majority of our citizens, being a Guardian reader signifies
that you must be a pretentious, gay, communist, ex-hippie, muesli-eating, sandals-wearing
coward.
So, on
that no doubt sunny morning back then, over my bowl of muesli, I learned all
about a document entitled the Order of Precedence of the Royal Family To
Be Observed At Court. I googled it to make sure it wasn’t a belated April 1st contribution
and found that, apart from the revelations in my paper, there were all sorts of
other arcane aspects to who’s who and who can do what at court. (“At court” – a
phrase straight out of the Theatre of the Absurd.)
Anyway,
this particular piece, and I acknowledge my debt to the Guardian in
reproducing its main points here, noted how the OPRFTBOAC had been
updated to take into account that someone simply called Kate Middleton had
appeared in the Buck House team photos. Now some people think that, because the
Queen signs edicts and laws and things ‘Elizabeth R’, she’s Mrs R.
Wrong.
She is,
of course, Mrs Mountbatten-Windsor (we’ll leave out all the Saxe-Coburg-Gotha
stuff). So when a commoner arrives, she has to know where she
stands. And the gist of it all is that, despite Father Xmas having given Ms
Middleton the title of Duchess of Cambridge, she still has to
curtsey to Eugenie and Beatrice, the daughters of the Duke and Duchess of York,
one of whom was famous for a while for wearing a fascinator shaped like a
pretzel. To be fair, Ms Middleton only has to curtsey if William's not there,
but still… And she has to do it whether it’s at a grand public affair or in
private. This is because they’re real ‘blood princesses’ rather than arrivistes
like her. She also has to curtsey to Charles Mountbatten-Windsor’s wife Camilla
too, because she’s the wife of the Queen's son and therefore ‘better’?
‘higher’? ‘more noble’? than the wife of her grandson.
Now, when
one considers this is how the people at the pinnacle of British society behave,
a society whose lower reaches are rarely free of the grip of one sort of
austerity or another imposed by billionaires who have no idea of how they live,
we can surely claim the gold medal for absurdity. I’d be very interested to
hear about the antics of anyone challenging us.
Comments
I think God should own up to the drastic mistake She made in creating us at all, let alone setting us over creation. Let slugs rule the earth! (They already rule in my garden.)
However (truth alert) I only worked on it for one night, because I passed a note to a female sub-editor (name redacted) containing the sort of suggestion considered beyond the pale by the muesli munchers even in those far off days. It's not only the Royal Family who have standards, apparently. How many people know, for instance, that when Peter Sellers used to get down and dirty with Princess Margaret he still had to call her Ma'am? Makes you think, dunnit?
We all need standards, Bill and Sue, and I'd thank you not to forget it. Alexander Boris de Pepperpot Whotsit went to Harrow, doncherknow. And Mrs R herself apparently thinks he's pretty lowlife.
Oh, and many thanks, Jan, for the inside track on how to bring a little class into any future dalliances.
Re- the possible superiority of slugs: I blush to admit I am a sluggist, unable to envisage the invisible Deity in that image. Would be happy to promote/elevate dolphins, though, as they seem to be both intelligent and compassionate. Some of the primates, too, but not the ecclesiastical ones.