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Questions of Begging

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 April 2010

Extract

It has always seemed to me that one of my father's great contributions to monarchical practice was the manner in which, without apparent design, he managed to resolve the internal contradictions of monarchy in the twentieth century that requires it to be remote from, yet at the same time to personify the aspirations of the people. It must appear aloof and distant in order to sustain the illusion of a Monarch who, shunning faction, stands above politics and the more mundane allegiances. At the same time it must appear to share intimately the ideals of the multitude, whose affection and loyalty provide the broad base of constitutional Monarchy. My father, with the instinctive genius of the simple man, found the means of squaring the apparent circle within the resources of his own character. By the force of his own authentic example – the king himself in the role of the bearded paterfamilias … he transformed the Crown as personified by the Royal Family into a model of the traditional family virtues, a model that was all the more genuine for its suspected but inconspicuous flaws. The King, as the dutiful father, became the living symbol not only of the nation, but also of the Empire, the last link holding these diversified and scattered communities.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy and the contributors 2000

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References

1 A King's Story, Memoirs of Duke of Windsor (London: Cassell, 1951).Google Scholar

2 ibid., endnote pp.155–9.

3 Bentham, Jeremy, ‘Pauper Management’, in Boweing, P. M. (ed.), Collected Works, vol. VIII (New York: Russell & Russell, 1962), p. 401.Google Scholar

4 Ryan, Alan, John Dewey (New York, London: Norton, 1995).Google Scholar

5 ibid., Vol. 8, P. 402.

6 Orwell, G., Down and Out in Paris and London (Harmondsoworth: Penguin Books, 1974) p. 174.Google Scholar

7 ibid., p. 208.

8 See Luther's Works, vol. 44, Atkinson, James (ed.) (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1966).Google Scholar

9 My thinking on begging has been helped by Hewitt's, Roger ‘The Beggar's Blanket’ in Meinhof, U. and Richardson, K. (eds) Representations of Poverty in Britain (Singapore: Longman, 1994), pp. 122146Google Scholar; and by Bronislaw Geremek's Poverty, A History (Cornwall: Blackwell, 1994).Google Scholar