When asked if
I buy "The Sun" newspaper my
usual response is that it is the sort of paper picked up on trains to see what
the plebian orders are reading these days.
As my dress code is close to that of many of the vagrant classes the remark
is intended to cause confusion.
But this blog is often about connections and
in this case it is that the undressed ladies of "The Sun" have been
such a feature of their time, now abandoned, whereas in the past the author GK
Chesterton was a staff writer for the old "Daily
Herald".
Perhaps this
is more of a disconnection but "The
Sun" for me will always be the "Daily Herald", 1912-1964, that
went wrong in the 1950's. It failed to follow
the rapidly changing economy and social structure and tried to stick with a
traditional readership that was disappearing one way or another.
Chesterton was
a High Anglican who converted to the Roman Catholic Church, although many
clergy were uneasy with him. As an
intellectual he was prone to asking questions to which they did not have a
ready answer.
But he would
have been very familiar with the works of Cardinal John Henry Newman and
followers at the Oratory. One was
another convert from High Anglicanism, Fr. Edward Caswall who had a huge output
of liturgical works and poems, widely published.
A cousin of
his, Kate Sneyd, was a poster girl of her time, pictured above. In 1852 she featured in a hot selling book of
engravings by J. Hayter, "The Court Album of the Female
Aristocracy". Celebrity culture is
nothing new, but perhaps lacking class these days.
The Full Work is here if you have a few hours to spare wading through
the turgid and fawning prose. However,
what is does not say that on the return of her family from India, Kate was
living on the same patch in Hampshire as her Caswall cousins, adjacent and on
terms with the Duke of Wellington nearby.
She married George
Glynn Petre in the
British Embassy in Paris and one of her younger children, Walter Reginald Petre
became a Rear Admiral who had a lot to do with the Australian navy and forces,
notably during the First World War at Gallipoli.
At this time
it is highly likely he came across an Australian journalist called Keith
Murdoch, who had a son called Rupert.
It's a small
world.
"my dress code is close to that of many of the vagrant classes"
ReplyDeleteCasual comfy I call it. Clothes are like fine wines, they improve with age.
speaking of papers that changed their name, I am sorry that the Paris Herald Tribune is now called the International New York Times - my first "letter to the editor" was published there when I was a schoolboy in the early 1960's - that paper had no Page 3 girls, but did have Art Buchwald
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