Monday 29 July 2013

Je ne veux pas travailler



Well I don't have to I am retired. Love this song, it is ironic and funny. It came out 20 years ago but it has kept its freshness.





I have also finished reading two other books and started on two others.

I finished the book by Prof. Donald Savoie, Whatever happened to the Music Teacher which tells the tale of how our democracy in Canada has been transformed since 1970 and is now a one man rule with the veneer of Democracy and free elections. Savoie is a well know University Professor and he has written extensively on government operations, Cabinet, the machinery of government and its transformation from the era of Policy driven and Cabinet consensus to a one man show and the continuous measurement of processes. The problem for me is that I saw this happening during my career and know well how things have gone off the rails. Unfortunately the public is so apathetic and so not interested in what is going on that it is quite possible to rule without opposition as our current Prime Minister is doing. Savoie advocates a return to policy initiatives and abandoning the Private Sector approach as ineffective for government operations and also stopping the continues process measurement which is useless and wasteful. It is difficult to do this many politician including the Harper government believe in the miraculous solutions of the private sector in all things governmental.


The other book is a bit of a piece of fluff, not so much a book as a conversation with an elderly aunt.
In this case its Margaret Rhodes, cousin to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. The book The Final Curtsey tells in very general lines, the story of her life, but it is very general and not much details are offered. She speaks mostly of her aunt Queen Elizabeth, The Queen Mother who was the sister of her mother. She spent her life going from one great house to another, the war years shuffling from Buckingham Palace to Windsor Castle and being a lady in waiting or a lady of the bedchamber to her aunt. There are few passages which are interesting if only as a curiosity, per example she tells us about the day the Queen Mother died and what happened. She died in the late afternoon and Margaret Rhodes was asked by her cousin Queen Elizabeth to come to dinner that night, en famille, at Windsor Castle. The next morning she returned to the house of the Queen Mother and found that the body had been left overnight in her death bed, so a full 12 hours passed before she was taken away by the undertakers. She was also the one to go to Windsor Registry Office to register the death of the Queen Mother. Though you would think the Royals are above such things, not in Britain apparently. The registrar asked Rhodes what was the occupation of the Queen Mother's husband, the question is on the form to be filled out. Taken aback by the question, she hesitated and finally said he was the King.

Her husband Dennys did not appear to work much and it is not clear from what income they lived on. But since they were always with the Royals, they were sort of taken care of. The book of Mary Lady Soames, who is the daughter of Winston Churchill was far more interesting and more in depth, though it also had its moments of vapidity.

It seems that her life was that of an observer not that of an actor, always witnessing never doing much.
She is now 88 years old and lives in a ''grace and favour'' house on the grounds of Windsor Castle.
You come away thinking that Rhodes is not going to say anything nasty or revealing about her cousin the Queen or the Royal Family which is her family and her bread and butter.

I am now reading slowly the book on Prokofiev by David Nice and the book on Machiavelli by Niccolo  Capponi, a descendant of the author of The Prince.
I also want to start reading the book of Gore Vidal, The City and the Pillar, sort of summer reading type of book.



8 comments:

  1. David just finished The City and the Pillar.

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  2. Title and pic immediately reminded me of Apollinaire's 'Hotel', so exquisitely set by Poulenc with a lazy sensuousness: the last line is 'Je ne veux pas travailler je veux fumer' (sans punctuation of course). Maybe divine Felicity Lott's performance is up on YouTube? Or maybe Poulenc's muse Denise Duval recorded it. This is fun, tho'.

    Don't get bogged down by that Prokofiev book...

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    1. I need to read Prokofiev slowly because I am not really familiar with him and have to think of the context of his life, though he does not come across as a nice person, maybe a little aloof.

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    2. Read on and I think you'll get a more complex picture, as in the letter I reproduce as epigraph to the young man in America. His letters adopt different tones to different people. When someone asked me what the 'angle' of the book was, I replied that the angle is that there are so many angles. As with most people, I imagine.

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    3. yes this is what I see now in the book, a complex personality, which is great to read and all to your talent as a writer that you were able to sense that and translate it in the book for us readers.

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  3. I need to educate myself on the limits of 'grace and favour' so I won't embarrass myself by, say, asking for a new car, for example, should I one day find myself invited to live with the Windsor's. (And that is my 'moment of vapidity' for today. Actually, there will probably be others...)

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  4. I need to educate myself on the limits of 'grace and favour' so I won't embarrass myself by, say, asking for a new car, for example, should I one day find myself invited to live with the Windsor's. (And that is my 'moment of vapidity' for today. Actually, there will probably be others...)

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    1. Well Grace and Favour says it all you are at their mercy. So you have to behave at all times otherwise you are out.

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