With the
nation’s attention tuned in to the eating habits and arrangements of our Prime
Minister, his Lady and friends the mind turns to other grub ups here and
there. From the look of the lists they
seem a grim bunch but perhaps they are able to lift their eyes above the bottom
line to higher things, although quite what can be only a wild guess.
One dinner
party that comes to mind is the one hosted by Richard Brinsley Sheridan when he
was living in Hertford Street . Sheridan
was going through one of his periods of being financially challenged and his
creditors had sent in the bailiffs to take what they could get. This included all the decent silver cutlery
and tableware.
Unluckily, Sheridan was due to give
an informal dinner party for the great and good of the land. So a deal was struck. Sheridan
could borrow his own property back on condition that the bailiffs acted as the
waiters to ensure their return to the creditors at the end of it all.
This
reflects the financial condition of the nation at the time as well as the
standing of many of the politicians.
Things are much the same today, a more or less bankrupt couple of
parties contesting to govern a more or less bankrupt nation.
Later
flicking around the channels we settled for a while on the back end of The
Books Show on Sky Arts, where at the end the three authors were invited to pick
out a dinner party from fiction which they may have preferred to avoid.
One
selected from Proust’s “The Guermantes Way” Volume Three of his major work the
“Remembrance of Time Past” the 140 pages given to describing a dinner party
hosted by the Duchess of Guermantes. It
was not a good party and the conversation was worse, apparently.
However,
perhaps the nearest example to service at Chez Cameron could be the Tea Party
given by the Mad Hatter as performed by the Royal Ballet in their production of
“Alice ’s
Adventures In Wonderland”, picture above.
We saw this on Saturday and it is certainly very good.
Philosophers
may criticise the lack of reference or attempt to convey mathematical logic or
the deductive method in the handling of the original book, but you can’t have
everything. It’s a ballet, you just have
to dance.
The Tea
Party is done exceptionally well, with the Mad Hatter doing manic tap routines
in the general mayhem. One could see
George Osborne as a fine Dormouse and Ed Balls as a March Hare, if a little
large for the role. Teresa May would be
fine as Queen of Hearts but I think that Yvette Cooper would struggle as The
Duchess.
In a
European context, Sarkozy is a gift for the Mad Hatter, Rompey as the Dormouse,
Berlusconi for the March Hare, Merkel for the Queen of Hearts and Ashton as the
Duchess. Take your pick the casting
potential is unlimited.
We should
not criticise poor Cameron too much for his choice of dinner table companions,
after all beggars cannot be choosers and our Prime Ministers these days have to
do a lot of begging. In any case, if you
went down the dining lists of HM The Queen in her sixty years you would find a rare
collection of the world’s worst rulers.
Then there
was the Edward Heath government of 1970-1974.
Anthony Barber, the Chancellor of the Exchequer lived just across the
fields from John Poulson, the architect involved in the famous corruption
scandal.
Reginald
Maudling also got too close to him because Poulson became involved in bank
rolling Maudling’s wife’s ambition to make East Grinstead
the capital of world ballet. It was
alleged at one time that Heath dined with Poulson amongst others.
As for
Harold Wilson’s dining companions, oh dear, oh dear. As Cameron looks around
the table he might wonder which of companions is going to cause him the most
embarrassment in the near future.
Perhaps the
ballet “Alice ”
makes more sense than any of it.
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