When I read
that the Victoria and Albert Museum, where I have spent many a happy hour, has
politely rejected a collection of the personal belongings, clothing etc. of the
late Margaret Thatcher, this comes under the category of interesting questions.
Where I
wondered have Stanley Baldwin's carpet slippers got to? It is rumoured that he wore them when making
radio broadcasts to relax him and make him
sound friendlier. Disraeli, it is
said, liked to gargle, given the air pollution in London at the time, very
sensible, but where is the glass?
In short just
how much of a leading figure's possessions should be kept for posterity and
which? What we may think of as proper
now may not be the items that the future would like to see. With Mrs. Thatcher, it might be keep the hats
but not the chewed pencils. A later
generation might not agree with our decision.
Also, the
decisions about what to keep and not keep will often depend on our own
prejudices. The one thing I am
absolutely certain about with Mrs. Thatcher is that she and I would never have
liked each other at a personal level.
My memory is
scarred with dealing with bossy female shop assistants during the time of
rationing and severe shortages. She
always reminded me of the old bat at the grocers who had her favourites and did
not like awkward questions. I suspect my
sense of humour would not have amused her.
This has nothing to do about whether she was a good, bad, indifferent,
useful or what Prime Minister.
So I would
throw away the handbags and the hats.
The question, however, it is how much heritage we want to keep and
related to whom? As a Life Member of the
National Trust, this is a question I know is causing a bitter debate about what
buildings, artefacts, culture and arts and memorabilia should be kept; because
we cannot keep, archive or maintain it all, a great deal has to go.
The Trust does
have a real problem. Decades ago and not long after its foundation the
attrition of the landed classes meant many fine houses etc. were being lost and
both the belongings and the memory of the relevant families lost as well to
history.
So it found
itself being involved and later identified with this rather than with the wider
perspective of history which some intended.
In recent decades when our masters have decided that the tourist trade
should be a major part of the economy this was an excuse, but in reality there
are only going to be a limited number of major attractions to deal with that
trade.
Add to that
what one generation likes to do and see and what following ones want can be
very different, a lot of the Trust's places could begin to rarely see many
visitors at all. To add to this in terms
of what might chosen to keep from the recent past and present be of little
interest in the future.
For the moment
our recent prosperity has allowed us to avoid many of these decisions but this
is not going to last. There are too many
stresses now in our system and too many demands made and obligations buildings
up for resources of all kinds to keep compromising and making promises that
will not be kept.
Which is why
the V&A cannot take on this latest offer.
Once it may have been one they could not refuse. Is it now one they ought to or have to?
Surprised that Maggie's M&S knickers haven't found a buyer yet...
ReplyDeleteOr have they?