Monday, January 30, 2006

Support Denmark

Irene Adler is following in the steps of Eleanor of Aquitaine and leading a cartoon crusade. Presumably we're not limited to edible products - so may I suggest trawling Amazon for music by the Danish National Chamber Choir. I thoroughly recommend their Leaving Rivendell settings of Tolkien poems.

Saturday, January 14, 2006

If anyone calls, say I'm not funding St Paul's

St Paul's Cathedral, one of the most visited buildings in Britain, has so far missed out on lottery funding because it does not appeal to a "wide enough range of people".
An application for almost £9 million to the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF) was withdrawn after fundraisers were advised that the restoration of England's most popular building "did not fulfil the criteria".
Reading the whole article I suspect this is actually as much about the maddening tendency of grant-giving bodies to think running costs (in this case general wear-and-tear type repairs) are a boring waste of time as it is about PC.

I also suspect it's time we accepted that English/British culture can, and should, get by on private enterprise (think Tolkien, think J.K. Rowling, Wallace and Grommet).

The cathedral has an online shop with, among other things, some very lovely CDs of its music.
(Though it would take a very long time to raise £9 million that way!)

Englishness: the Ultimate Answer

Montesquieu is on our side:
The complaints of foreigners in London, especially the French, are appalling. They say that they can't make friends; that, the longer they stay, the fewer friends they have; and that their compliments are received as insults. Kinski, the Broglies, La Vilette, who in Paris used to call Lord Essex her son, distribute little remedies to everybody and ask every woman for news about her health: these people want the English to be the same as themselves. How could the English like foreigners when they don't even like each other? How could one invite them to dinner when they don't even invite each other? 'But one visits a country in order to be liked and respected there.' That doesn't necessarily happen: in that case, one has to do as they do; live for oneself, as they do; and not care about anybody, like anybody or count on anybody. In the end, one has to take each country as it is: when I am in France, I am friendly with everybody; in England, I am not friendly with anybody; in Italy, I flatter everybody; in Germany, I drink with everybody.

They say: In England, no-one ever gives me a friendly word. But is it necessary to give you a friendly word?