Thursday, January 19, 2023

LITERARY REFLECTIONS

 

Even for a sedentary and inactive old cove like me, it has not been possible to escape the furore surrounding Spare, the memoir of Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, whose romantic wooing of Meghan Markle, the US TV actress, initially entranced the nation. Sadly, the public love affair with the couple sprung a leak when news emerged of trouble upstairs between the Sussexes and the rest of the family but notably with The Queen, Prince Charles (now the King), Queen Consort Camilla, Prince William (now Prince of Wales) and his wife Catherine (popularly known as Kate). This was blamed by some on the petulant nature of Harry and the imperious ways of Meghan. Spare presents Harry’s version of events and his gingery visage has frequented front pages or TV interview studios for perhaps rather too long a time.



                                       All-too-familiar dim Harry with “victim” Meghan

Spare is a strong defence of Harry, notably well-written by his ghost-writer, J R Moehringer, who had already won a Pulitzer Prize. A seductive picture is painted of young sensitive Harry, naturally traumatized by the sudden death of his beloved mother, Diana, struggling to maintain his equilibrium but hounded by a feral mob of paparazzi. He is unacademic and under-schooled but father Charles (“Pa”) and brother William (“Willy”) are generally kind and supportive. He goes through a Hooray Henry phase as a wayward youth until at last taking to the Army and actually seeing active service in Afghanistan. His self-confidence rockets and he starts his royal representative duties, not all of which he enjoys. He meets and falls head over heels for Meghan Markle, the attractive US mixed race actress, and after some family doubts are expressed, they marry at Windsor in princely pomp on 20 May 2018.

I have no doubt that being a member of the royal family comes with many problems and confusions. There are special etiquettes surrounding most events, a certain tradition in carrying them through properly and some awkward and edgy characters with whom to deal. Harry was immersed from childhood in this world and ought to have made sure Meghan was brought up to speed. Both clashed with family members and Court officials and Spare wearily chronicles many an argument, supposed insult and tiff. Like most readers, I am only reminded of how privileged, how luxurious and how extravagant their lives are, compared to that of ordinary citizens. Their whining tone of complaint and childish resentment are tone-deaf and jarring. They decide to flee to Montecito, California, to abandon their UK duties and disloyally to damage the monarchy as much as they can in the process of their money-making. Harry deigns to consider attending his father’s Coronation, provided Meghan is given a complete set of apologies from the family. Don’t hold your breath for that, Sussexes!

Of course, Meghan herself has been largely silent. Harry says he has material for at least another memoir and Meghan has plenty fluency, so we will have to live with the Sussexes for some time, rather like we live with Covid microbes, until they fade into the empty world of forgotten café-celebrities, once pathetically inhabited by their forebears, the Duke of Windsor and Wallis Simpson.

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Friday 13 January was a red-letter day for me, as I finally finished reading Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall Trilogy by turning page 875 of the final third part, The Mirror & The Light, following the decline in the fortunes of Thomas Cromwell, loyal henchman of Henry VIII, particularly over the Dissolution of the Monasteries, culminating in his execution in 1540. Mantel describes the Tudor Court in all its vibrancy, brutality and colour, at this turning-point in its relations with Continental Europe.


                                                            Hilary Mantel (1952-2022)

  
 

                                                      Thomas Cromwell (1485-1540)

 

Plus ca change, they may say, but Cromwell struggled with great issues (not bridesmaid’s dresses) yet even the Windsors were more civilized than the Tudors as they produced no figure as monstrous as Henry VIII, despite our Harry’s best efforts!

While the Wolf Hall Trilogy was long, lengthy novels are not really my thing. Over 50 years ago, I tried to read Marcel Proust’s epic novel Remembrance of Things Past in the Scott-Moncrieff translation. It ran to 11 paper-back volumes and I admitted defeat after volume 9. I am a painfully slow reader these days and will survive on the short and pithy from now on. Suggestions welcome!

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The final literary landmark this month was the passing of Paul Johnson, erstwhile editor of the New Statesman and popular historian, at the age of 94. In my Leftie youth I avidly read his magazine, supporting Wilson’s ministries in the 1960’s. Johnson was an observant Catholic all his life and his radicalism began to turn in the 1970s as he became a freelance writer. The trades unions’ ruthlessness during the Grunwick closed-shop dispute of 1977 was the final straw for Johnson and he moved steadily to the Right, to be honoured by Mrs. Thatcher and President G W Bush. His well-researched popular histories were notable and I particularly enjoyed his History of Christianity.   

 

               Polemicist Paul Johnson

The contribution of Catholic writers to English letters is quite striking. The roll of honour would include Charles Moore of The Daily Telegraph, Evelyn Waugh, Graham Greene, G K Chesterton, Hilaire Belloc, John Newman and even demonised journalist Piers Morgan. All write in a distinctive and entertaining fashion.

 

SMD

18.01.23

Text Copyright © Sidney Donald 2023

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