Thursday, December 31, 2009

The Battle of Quebec

. Thursday, December 31, 2009
0 comments

Remembering the defeat of the rebels on this day in 1775.

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Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Kipling's Game

. Wednesday, December 30, 2009
5 comments

Kipling and George VAs has become an annual rite, we mark the birthdate of Rudyard Kipling, born December 30th, 1865. He was born in Bombay, which Hindu nationalists renamed Mumbai. We continue to call it Bombay. Because that is what my ancestors called it - Bom Baia, Good Bay - when they handled it over to the British, as dowry for Catherine of Braganza. It is the name the world knows it as, and as Kipling knew it. A century ago Rudyard Kipling was the most famous writer in the world. His poetry mattered, at that last moment in English speaking history when poetry itself still matter, before it lost rhyme and meter and became the purview of obscure minded academics.


Kipling wrote of merchants, mystics, engineers, statesmen and common foot soldiers. His identity was Anglo-Indian, as his parents and their generation of British derived residents described themselves. A century before Kipling's birth the adventurer Robert Clive, a youthful Shropshire hoodlum, achieved the conquest of much of the northeast of the continent. A large foothold that over the next half century was consolidated until either the British Crown, or the East India Company, controlled virtually the whole of the subcontinent.


Clive was the sort of fellow that could easily have fallen out of the pages of a Kipling story. By sheer will and guile he conquered a high civilization much older than his own. India a far larger place than Britain. Perhaps a hundred thousand 'Anglo-Indians' ruled over some three hundred million Indians in Kipling's time. The world they created was a bizarre, and fascinating, synthesis of the European and native cultures. The languages mixed and created a network of slang. An architecture both grand and obscene. Kipling was a foreigner, an Englishman, thoroughly immersed in this alien and brilliant culture. His most famous novel, Kim, the story of an Irish soldier's orphan wandering through India with his Lama mentor, had as its backdrop the Great Game.


The soldiers, statesmen and merchants that Kipling wrote about could look at a map of the neat and elongated triangle that is the Indian subcontinent. To its east and north lay the impenetrable Himalayas. To the North West lay the plains that stretch from modern Pakistan, up into the Hindu Kush, and finally reached Afghanistan. This strategically placed bit of nowhere lay to the south of the rapidly expanding Russian Empire. British colonial officials, with that bit of paranoid imagining which was their special gift, could see the Russian Bear storming down into the subcontinent, with only a few thousand redcoats and sepoys to stop them. They must be kept out. Afghanistan was the logical place. Three attempts were made to subdue the Afghan tribes to British rule. Two abysmal failures and one qualified success. The jostling of Russian and British agents for influence in Afghanistan acquired a moniker, the Great Game. It was the stuff of both Victorian Ian Fleming and Edwardian John le Carre. Its madness and seeming futility affected even Kipling, that keen though intelligent advocate of Empire.


In 1894 Her Majesty's Servants was published by Harper's Weekly. A short story it tells of Indian Army pack animals discussing the nature of war and life. It was a piece of Kiplingesque whimsy with a deeper point. The story revolves around a military review, marked for visit of an Afghan emir with the Viceroy of India. Though the Viceroy is never named, it is probably Lord Dufferin, who had earlier served as Governor-General in Canada. After the review is finished, one of the Amir's men questions an Indian Army officer:

Then I heard an old grizzled, long-haired Central Asian chief, who had come down with the Amir, asking questions of a native officer.

‘Now,’ said he, ‘in what manner was this wonderful thing done?’

And the officer answered, ‘There was an order, and they obeyed.’

‘But are the beasts as wise as the men?’ said the chief.

‘They obey, as the men do. Mule, horse, elephant, or bullock, he obeys his driver, and the driver his sergeant, and the sergeant his lieutenant, and the lieutenant his captain, and the captain his major, and the major his colonel, and the colonel his brigadier commanding three regiments, and the brigadier his general, who obeys the Viceroy, who is the servant of the Empress. Thus it is done.’

‘Would it were so in Afghanistan!’ said the chief; ‘for there we obey only our own wills.’

‘And for that reason,’ said the native officer, twirling his moustache, ‘your Amir whom you do not obey must come here and take orders from our Viceroy.’

So now do modern Viceroys, and modern Amirs, try to rule Afghanistan. The problem is still the same: "we obey only our own wills." This would seem to be an individualist cry. So it is, albeit very primitive. An individualist who is unwilling to submit, or can grasp, the principle of contract, either social or personal. An "individualist" who functions at short-range, by whim and will. The British colonial army of Kipling's day was all volunteer. Men who had willing bound themselves to its harsh discipline.


The war Canadians are fighting in Helmand is not against the primitive religious fanatics who once ruled there, and would rule again should the NATO forces fail in their task. They are fighting a mindset within the Afghan people, who have not yet been able to grasp the concept of "nation." A nation, in part, is a society of obedience without force. Whatever government may rule over a nation, that group of people wish to live together. One of the decisive advantages the Europeans had when they past the Cape of Good Hope was nationalism. Their ships were of better design, but not so much better. The Indians and Chinese had used gunpowder in war long before the Europeans. As Albuquerque and Clive made their made through the Byzantine world of Indian power politics, they could count on the loyalty and unity of the few men they had. It's a loyalty that Hamid Karzai has been unable to buy with all the wealth funnelled to him. It's a loyalty he sorely needs for today's Great Game.

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Tuesday, December 29, 2009

"so utterly right"

. Tuesday, December 29, 2009
0 comments

Marking the birth of a giant:

What has always struck me most about Gladstone is that he was so utterly right. He applied his massive brain to the problems that faced our country at a turbulent, and near-revolutionary, juncture in its history and almost always found the right answers. So complete was his self-confidence, and his determination to put his country before himself or his party, that he would propound and pursue policies even if they contradicted what he had hitherto believed: any loss of face was nothing to him compared with the damage he feared would be done to the national interest if the country continued to take the wrong course.

Millais_gladstone2

[...]

Three things seem to underpin his genius. The first is the economic policy. He understood that Peel was right to repeal the Corn Laws, and that by applying the principle of free trade more generally, Britain – then the workshop of the world – would become richer. This cast of mind found loud echoes in the north of England, notably in the Manchester liberalism of Cobden and Bright, from whom Gladstone borrowed much. What we now regard as the monuments of Victorian ambition – Manchester, Bradford or Leeds town halls, Joe Chamberlain's Birmingham, the Gothic revival buildings still to be seen all over London and other major cities – are monuments to Gladstone's vision. It was not just his belief in free trade: it was his recognition that a complicated structure of taxation could only impede prosperity. He understood what it would take monetarists another century to demonstrate again: that if you cut taxes, you raise more revenue, because of the provision of the incentive to work and take risks.

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There Will Always Be That England...

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3 comments

..and that England shall be charming:

To be more specific, in my case, it is old British films. I like old American films too, but a little of them goes a long way; and old French films are even better, but they represent an exoticism that goes beyond mere comfort. However, put me in front of a television with a black-and-white British film made at any point between about 1935 and 1960, and I am in heaven.

The England I love is not the England I live in; the England I love is in old films. I am sure it was an era of bad food, lower life expectancy, the reek of tobacco and what we would now call illiberalism, but I love it. I feel instinctively at home there. I understand the tones of voice. I understand the understatement. I understand the double-breasted suits, the pints of mild and bitter, the half-crowns and 10-bob notes, the trilbies, the cars with running boards and double declutching; and I can even suspend disbelief when the actors playing policemen all sound like Old Etonians of the period.

As indeed all policemen should sound.



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Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Messiah

. Wednesday, December 23, 2009
2 comments

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In the Bleak Midwinter

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1 comments

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Saturday, December 19, 2009

Going Home For Christmas

. Saturday, December 19, 2009
11 comments


So you're travelling home for the holidays. Going from King's Cross up to King's Lynn. You look over and who do you see? Why, the Queen.

‘The Queen on a First Capital Connect – unbelievable!’ exclaimed Andrew Smith, who was making the same journey for a business meeting.

‘My wife will never believe me.’ Relatively speaking there was minimal fuss, although some travellers reacted angrily when police shut off the area without warning five minutes before the train was due to leave.

The monarch, with a few attendants, sat at the rear of the train in an eight-seat section of a carriage which was separated from the rest of the seats by a sliding glass door.


The Mail duly notes:
The Queen does, of course, also have use of the Royal Train – but that costs taxpayers £57,142 each time it is taken out of its sidings.


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Monday, December 14, 2009

The Ministry of Silly Walks

. Monday, December 14, 2009
0 comments

So much of what the government does can be reduced to Monty Python's Ministry of Silly Walks, but nothing quite rises to the apex of absurdity as the goings-on in Copenhagen where 200 governments are requisitioning limosines from other parts of Europe to attend a global conference on climate change. In an age of video conferencing technology, Copenhagen has become the flying joke of grotesque global summitry.

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Saturday, December 12, 2009

An Announcement

. Saturday, December 12, 2009
21 comments

Gentlemen, I have an announcement to make.

Today, Friday, the 11th of December, the year of our Lord 2009, I signed and submitted my forms. In a few weeks, I shall be a member of Her Majesty's Canadian Forces. If all goes well, in a few months I shall enter the Royal Military College, holding the Queen's commission as an officer-cadet. A few years after that, if all goes well again, I shall exit with two university degrees, as an infantry officer. An officer of the line, as I might've been called in the days of lace-ruffles, perukes and brocade.

However, those days are long passed, and I shall fight not against an honourable enemy a few dozen yards away, but against a ruthless foe that fights with ambushes and roadside bombs and the cruelty of rusty knives. For Afghanistan is where I will go, if it isn't sorted out in four years (and I suspect that it won't be). Off to the Big Show, as my great-grandfather would've said back in the golden summer of 1914. Now, as then, the motivation for the men of my family to join the Army and fight for God, Queen and Country is noblesse oblige. I have lived all my life in comfort and privilege, and it is time that I earned it.

Gentlemen, sharing my thoughts and musings with you in this place has been a true honour. I will still try to write here, as often as I can, relating my progress in the Forces when I can. I raise my glass in toast to all you fine gentlemen, and as a soon-to-be officer and gentleman, I salute you all.

God save the Queen and Heaven bless the Maple Leaf Forever!
Gladstone

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Thursday, December 10, 2009

Jeunesse Dorée

. Thursday, December 10, 2009
9 comments

0005_su_1916
Boys all smartly turned out in their Eton collars


My Lord Gladstone, justifying his name, has contributed thoughts on The Youth, which I am just now reading.

Oh dear. How gloomy my generation is, by his account.

There are so MANY things wrong with today's youth, that I barely know where to begin.

Even to my socially liberal eyes, that dance floor appeared as a modern day Sodom or Gommorah to me.

Sex, Drugs and Alcohol are the Holy Trinity for these teenagers, Apathy is their Messiah, Kanye West and Lady Gaga are their Prophets. They have no reverence for anything, not their parents, nor their elders, nor their teachers, nor their country. They are interested only in themselves, and their hedonistic pleasures.

Well, yes, quite.

But however justified Mr. Gladstone's complaints, let us try and go a bit further.

Is it that my generation "has no reverence" and is interested "only in ourselves?"

Or is it that we have formless hopeful and compassionate impulses, which have failed yet to find an expression?

Church attendance is declining. As a confirmed, Mass-attending High Anglican, the twenty-something Dr. Swift blames not a decline in spirituality among his peers (crackpot religion has never been more popular). Rather, he fairly and squarely blames anaemic clergy, and spineless spiritual leaders.

God is attractive. Even His Church has moments of good press.

It's baby boomer clergy of the generation above me that make me feel like sleeping in on Sundays. As the wonderfully acid Alice Thomas Ellis put it, "the liberal clergy, confronted with the Cities of the Plain (Sodom and Gommorrah), perambulate about wringing their hands and intoning "We are all guilty..." The sermon at Evensong last week was ostensibly about Advent--Incarnate God, the Wrath To Come, the Great Deliverer.

What did we get?

Multiculturalism, and a few nice thoughts on Depression.

Could do better, one feels.

Likewise, there is a deep desire to serve others in my generation--they don't join the Scouts, or the Christian World Service, instead they shop at Trade Aid, they're deeply worried about African poverty--in fact, volunteerism is rising among the young--we're deeply worried about our fracturing society, just not sure what to do about it.

It's our parents who ran off to Woodstock.

Yes, of course we have too many people blown about by our feelings, and forgetful of our duty. But, for a generation raised on bromides about following our hearts, we aren't doing too badly. It's the Baby Boomers who knew what the Right Thing was and thought getting stoned was more fun.

Yes, there is too much promiscuity--but on the other hand, a deep desire for love, for sacrifice, for hope. Having been raised on Free Love, my generation now looks for the ties that bind.

Marriage is still an aspiration.

Period Dramas like Pride and Prejudice have never been more popular.

Even trashy novels like Twilight speak to the misdirected hope that there might be someone to love you forever.

ANZAC and Rememberance Day Services here have never been more popular, or more youthful.

There is a lot to criticise about The Youth Of Today, to be sure--and Mr. Gladstone is right about most of it. But given the culture we had to start with, the aspirations we have are good ones and noble ones, however incomplete.

Pope Benedict encouraged the young people of Genoa in these terms--his prescription is for youth and goodness to be joined together, for strength and energy to lie down with service:

To be young means to have discovered the things that do not pass away with the passing of the years. If a young person discovers the great and true values, then he will never grow old, even if the body follows its own laws.Stay young in your heart and you will radiate youth, which is to say, goodness. Yes, because goodness escapes the grip of time. That is why we can say that only he who is good and generous is truly young.

I wish you all to remain young, but not as fashion goes. Fashions fizzle out in a heartbeat, they burn out in frenetic pointless succession. But youth - the youth born of goodness - will remain. Indeed, it will be perfect and resplendent in Heaven, with God.It is beautiful to be young. Today, everyone wants to be young, to remain young, and many masquerade as young people, even if their youth has gone - visibly gone. But why is it beautiful to be young? Why this dream of perennial youth?

I think there are two decisive elements. One is that youth still has all of the future ahead. Everything is the future - the time of hope. And the future is full of promise, although today, it is also full of threats, especially the threat of great emptiness.

That is why many want to stop time, out of fear for a future of emptiness. They would want to consume all at once everything that is ‘beautiful’ in life - and so they burn out the candle at both ends even if their life has just begun.It is important to choose the true promises, those that will open up the future, even if it means renouncing certain things. Whoever chooses God will have, even in old age, a future without an end, and will fear no threats ahead.So choose well - do not destroy your future.

And the first choice should be God, who revealed himself in Jesus Christ. In the light of this choice which offers us a reliable companion on our journey, one can find the criteria for the other choices that one must make.To be young, as I said, means being good and generous. But once again: the true goodness is Jesus, the Jesus you know or that your heart is searching for. He alone is the friend who will never betray. He was faithful up to giving his life on the Cross.

Surrender to his love!

By the way, the open-air Mass for Young People at which he said this was full.

Golden Youth indeed.

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Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Tony Abbott: Why I Am a Monarchist

. Wednesday, December 9, 2009
2 comments

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Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Abbott for Australia

. Tuesday, December 8, 2009
4 comments

Hey, did you hear the news? They actually picked a monarchist to lead Her Majesty's Loyal Opposition in Australia. A true believer. Good stuff.

r206155_785496

I've always wanted to say this, so here goes: To Down Under I say, a tip of the hat, a slap on the back and a pint on the house. Cheers, Big Ears!

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The Changing of the Guard

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1 comments

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Thoughts on the Youth

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7 comments

It has often been said that our youth is the future. If that is true, it would explain why the future seems so depressing these days. Now, every single generation has moaned and groaned and complained about the next generation's problems. How they 'just don't know anything', and all that. However, it would seem that this generation is dealing with that more than any before it. Though they had their fair share of problems and idiosyncracies, the youth of the 40s, 50s, 60s, 70s and 80s could generally be depended upon to become upstanding members of society. Today though...

There are so MANY things wrong with today's youth, that I barely know where to begin. So, let me begin at the place where my thoughts on this matter began: A school dance. Not my school, no, I passed beyond there some time ago. The parents of a young relation of mine were out of town or otherwise engaged, so I was called upon to chaperone for a school dance. Being that this was a Grade 8 dance, a sockhop as it would've once been called, I expected generally reserved, quiet behavior, as the young boys and girls would still be somewhat shy of each other. At least, that was the way it was when I was their age. The evening was divided into shifts of an hour or two for the parents, and I took one of the middle shifts, thus I arrived sometime after the dance had gotten into the swing of things.

Swing of things indeed! What a horror I saw there. Even to my socially liberal eyes, that dance floor appeared as a modern day Sodom or Gommorah to me. Boys and girls, on 12 or 13 years old, grinding together as frantically as the 20-somethings in any nightclub. Grabbing and groping and caressing each other like people twice or even three times their age. I stepped out into the hallway for some air, only to find a few sallow youths drinking vodka that I assume they had stolen from their parents. And the things that were coming out of their mouths! Cussing and language such as to make the saltiest sergeant-major blush. One of the sallow youths and a young girl, painted like a harlot akin to Paris Hilton, walked hand-in-hand into the men's washroom. Being the chaperone, I followed them in (after confiscating the vodka from the others, and sternly told them to stay put), and found them with their tongues down each other's throats, apparently intending to fornicate like rabbits. I quickly put an end to that and called the parents of all the children involved, to get them taken home. I then returned to the gymnasium, to watch the boys and girls continue to grind to the thumping beats of "I Gotta Feeling", a piece by a band named after some kind of pea if I recall correctly.

Even today, days after that unfortunate dance, I'm still disgusted by the conduct of today's youth. What has happened to us? I went to church when I was young (still do). Sex, Drugs and Alcohol are the Holy Trinity for these teenagers, Apathy is their Messiah, Kanye West and Lady Gaga are their Prophets. They have no reverence for anything, not their parents, nor their elders, nor their teachers, nor their country. They are interested only in themselves, and their hedonistic pleasures. These teenagers have been presented everything on a silver platter, and so they have no work ethic, they devote themselves only to fun. Who's dating whom? Who's fornicating with whom on the side? Who has gotten pregnant? What party was the best this weekend? These are the things they concern themselves with. Previous generations fought economic depression, and great wars, and social revolutions. What does this have? They have parties, that is all.

To paraphrase Cromwell: Is there a single virtue now remaining amongst them? Is there one vice they do not possess?

These are the times when I think of simply ignoring the world and its troubles. For if these youth are our futures, then the future is bleak indeed.

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Sunday, December 6, 2009

The Lord's Day (Feast of St Nicholas, Second Sunday in Advent)

. Sunday, December 6, 2009
1 comments

Remembering our host and all those blighted by seasonal maladies and inconveniences (the writer of this post possessing a throat rather below par)...

HEAR us, Almighty and most merciful God and Saviour; extend thy accustomed goodness to this thy servant who is grieved with sickness: Sanctify, we beseech thee, this thy fatherly correction to him, that the sense of his weakness may add strength to his faith, and seriousness to his repentance: that, if it shall be thy good pleasure to restore him to his former health, he may lead the residue of his life in thy fear, and to thy glory: [...] through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen."

—from The Order for The Visitation of the Sick, the Book of Common Prayer (1662)

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Monarchist Labels

Monarchist Articles

2010 ARTICLES

Tony Abbott: Australia's 'mad monk' close to election victory
Dear Guardian: Get out of Oz or shuffle off the coil
Kid Genius: "All monarchists are either stupid or evil"
Republican Vultures: Australia should go republic after Queen dies?
Princess Royal: Hardest working Royal, Princess Anne, Turns 60
Much-Abused Imperial Poet: Rudyard Kipling unburdened
Admiral Cod: Wilfred Thesiger, Archeo-Traditionalist
Diamond Jubilee: Bring Back the Royal Yacht Britannia
On Flickr: The British Monarchy's Photostream
Buck House: No Garden Party tea for BNP leader, Nick Griffin
In Quebec: The Queen is still Wolfe in sheep’s clothing
Queen's PM: Australia will not vote on ties to British monarchy
Camelot: Historians locate King Arthur's Round Table?
Royal Neglect: Is Britain becoming a republic by default?
Monarchy or Anarchy? No third option explains David Warren
Charles vs Modernists: God Bless the Prince of Wales!
After Her Majesty: Who will wear the crown in Canada?
Bargain for Britain: And for the Commonwealth Realms
Queen's Prime Minister: Harper advised by "ardent monarchists"
Muddled Monarchist: A troubled and confused loyalist
Loyal Subject: God Bless Her Majesty!
Queen's Prime Minister: Harper really loves the Queen
Crown & Pants: She wears the crown and he wears the pants
The Maple Kingdom: The ‘iron cage’ of the colonial past dissipates…
The Crown Knows Best: It all Begins and Ends with Monarchy
White Rose Day: Burke's Corner on "Sorrowing Loyalty"
Happy B'day Grand Old Duke: It's a pity they don't make his kind anymore
Saved by the Crown: What monarchs offer modern democracy
Queen's Speech: Black Marks, Brownie Points at the State Opening
The Navy's 100th! Restore the honour 'Royal' Canadian Navy
Happy Birthday! Her Majesty The Queen turns 84.
Abolish the Commons: Suicidal tendencies of the modern political class
Labour Vandalism: Plans to abolish the House of Lords
Lord Black: "The ultimate degradation of the 'white man's burden'"
Old Etonian: Guppy the Ex-Bullingdonian speaks of his loyalty
Duchess of Devonshire: bemoans the demise of the Stiff Upper Lip
Queen Victoria: A film remarkable for its lack of anti-British prejudice
Climate Imperialism: Rich nations guilty of 'climate colonialism'
Bye Bye Britain: The UK officially not a sovereign state
Monarchy Haters: A Strange Form of Bitterness
Royal Intrigue: The secret plot to deny the Queen the throne
Never mind the Queen? Summing up Daniel Hannan in four words
Queen & Country: David Warren on a Big Lie finally corrected
Defending the Royals: Repatriate the Monarchy argues Andrew Coyne

2009 ARTICLES



Classic Warner: The other November the 11th
Brave Loyalist! Lone woman takes on anti-Royal mob in Montréal
Loyal Subject: Evaluating the monarchy against their own little worlds
Death so Noble: An 'almost divine act of self-sacrifice'
Crux Australis: Howard revisits his victory over the republic
Lord Ballantrae: The Would-Be King of New Zealand
Lord Iggy: Anti-Monarchist Leader of Her Majesty's Loyal Opposition
Old Etonian: A modern-day Lawrence of Arabia?
Sir Keith Park: The Commonwealth's Finest Hour
Buckingham Masjid: Buckingham Palace under the Shariah
The Maple Crown: Our ties to monarchy are bigger than the royals
His Tonyness: Holy Roman Emperor, Leader of Progressive Humanity
Young Fogey: Rafal Heydel-Mankoo on Chretien's Order of Merit
He's not a snob, Bob: Why does Canada cling to British colonial roots?
Fount of Justice: Crown sidelined from new Supreme Court
The Clown Prince: The world’s third longest-serving head of state
Hell, Britannia, you’re just nasty: Licence to make crass sexual jokes on the BBC about the Queen is depravity, not liberty
Loyal Subject: The Governor General can't take the Queen out of Canada
Save Our Dukes: Return peerage appointments to the Queen
Lord Black of Crossharbour: Why I became a Catholic
Not Amused: Her Majesty "appalled" at the direction of her Church
A Sad Day in Pretoria: When South Africa Lost its Star
The Queen Mother: Noblesse Oblige vs the Me Generation
Aristocrats: A review of Lawrence James's new book in the FT
Crown and Shamrock: Irish went underground to view coronation
Bye bye Camelot: Obituaries on Ted Kennedy here, here and here.
Scotch Whisky Do not boycott for ye Scots had precious little to do with it
Loyal Subject: God (and Young Liberals) saving the Queen
Aussie Monarchist: A good bloke calls it a day
Blog of the Order: This man can redesign our blog any time he wants
Lord Black: Much ado about the Republic of China
Stalwart Jacobite: But has no problem with Elizabeth II of Canada
Royal Commonwealth Society: Join the Conversation
H.M.A.S. Sydney: Inquiry blames captain for worst naval disaster
Imperial Constitution: Was the American Revolution avoidable?
Hero Harry Patch: Saying Goodbye to All That
King and Country: The 250th Anniversary of the Battle of Minden
King's College: Crosses Return to the Columbia Crown
Lord Salisbury: An interview with the 7th Marquess of Salisbury
Queen's Commonwealth: Quaint historical relic or meaningful bloc?
Queen's Prime Minister: Chrétien's perplexing gong
Why Ma'am Must Stay: The New Statesman is foaming at the mouth
Happy We-Should-Restore-The-Monarchy-And-Rejoin-Britain Day!
CinC: The Queen's Broadcast to Her Armed Forces around the World
Elizabeth Cross follows a tradition that started with Crimean War
Dominion Day: Canada was an act of divine loyalty
LOYAL SUBJECT: A GOOD DAY IN CAPE TOWN
The "Whaddever Monarchy": A Prince and his indulgent public
English Constitution: A written constitution is not the answer
Rest in Peace: Roméo LeBlanc, former governor general, dies at 81
Prince of Wales: Who, apart from the Prince, speaks up for beauty?
Queen's Prime Minister: New Zealand restores Queen's Counsel
Why I accepted my OBE:Radical feminist Marxist accepts "cruel imperial order"
On Lord Loser: Modernist architects carry on where the Luftwaffe left off
The Puissant Prince: Thanks to Prince Charles for meddling
"It's our republic"? It's our monarchy, not a dance with republican elites
Grand Old Duke: Happy 88th Birthday to Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh
Warner: It is time for the Queen to dissolve Parliament.
Royal Fix: Prince Charles resolves diplomatic impasse.
Not Amused: France admits snubbing the Queen.
Useless Monarchy? Prince Charles is taking on the starchitects...and winning.
Vice-Regal Salute: Governor General of Canada least boring vice-regal ever
Loyal Subject: For genuine patriots pride in the monarchy is fundamental
Cranmer: The Mother of Parliaments has become a whorehouse of ill-repute
Poet Laureate: Will ignore royal events if they don't inspire her
Grand Old Duke: The longest-serving royal consort in British history.
Keep our Feudal Failsafes: Monarchy is not a game of 'fair'
Farewell to Helen Clark: "I deeply detest social distinction and snobbery"
Eco-Monarchy: A not completely irreverant look at the future King
Voyage Through the Commonwealth: World cruise around the faded bits of pink.
The Equality Bill: A real nasty piece of work by the Lord Privy Seal
Laughter from the Gallery: Canada's a Republic, claim Australian politicians.
Peter Hitchens on America: Canada and America, two ideas of how to be free.
Let's Not: If the disappearance of newspapers is inevitable, let's get on with it.
Strange Bedfellows: No friend of monarchy, but...we admired the good bits
King Harper: A Parliament of Potted Palms.
Keep our Feudal Failsafes: Monarchy is not a game of 'fair'
Gentleman Royalist: Theodore Harvey is baptised an Anglican
Farewell to Helen Clark: "I deeply detest social distinction and snobbery"
Republican humour: Keeping monarchy means we don't have confidence
Eco-Monarchy: A not completely irreverant look at the future King
Catholic Tory: Amend the Act of Settlement - but not yet
Why you should still read The Guardian: Let's hear it for mad monarchy
Reform the Monarchy? Let's wait another century, says Lord Rees-Mogg
Not Amused: Mr. Rudd, and his totalitarian certainty
Irish Blues: Ireland out in the cold over British Monarchy debate
Act of Settlement: Here's a Tory view, and here's a Whig view
Lord Black: The magnificent absurdity of George Galloway
Vice-Regal Saint: Remembering Paul Comtois (1895–1966), Lt.-Gov Québec
Britannic Inheritance: Britain's legacy. What legacy will America leave?
Oxford Concision: Daniel Hannan makes mince meat of Gordon Brown
Commonwealth Voyage: World cruise around the faded bits of pink.
"Sir Edward Kennedy": The Queen has awarded the senator an honorary Knighthood.
President Obama: Hates Britain, but is keen to meet the Queen?
The Princess Royal: Princess Anne "outstanding" in Australia.
H.M.S. Victory: In 1744, 1000 sailors went down with a cargo of gold.
Queen's Commonwealth: Britain is letting the Commonwealth die.
Justice Kirby: His support for monarchy almost lost him appointment to High Court
Royal Military Academy: Sandhurst abolishes the Apostles' Creed.
Air Marshal Alec Maisner, R.I.P. Half Polish, half German and 100% British.
Cherie Blair: Not a vain, self regarding, shallow thinking viper after all.
Harry Potter: Celebrated rich kid thinks the Royals should not be celebrated
The Royal Jelly: A new king has been coronated, and his subjects are in a merry mood
Victoria Cross: Australian TROOPER MARK DONALDSON awarded the VC
Godless Buses: Royal Navy veteran, Ron Heather, refuses to drive his bus
Labour's Class War: To expunge those with the slightest pretensions to gentility
100 Top English Novels of All Time: The Essential Fictional Library
Royal Racism? Our intellectually febrile self appointed arbiters of modern manners
The Story of Bill Stone, RN: "Contented mind. Clean living. Trust in God"
Bill Stone: Last British veteran of both world wars dies
Reverse Snobbery: "Prince William and Harry are not very bright"
Poet Laureate: The English-Speaking Peoples need a poet laureate
Prince Harry: Much Ado about Nothing
H.M.A.S. Sydney: Australia seeks answers to its worst naval disaster
BIG BEN: Celebrating 150 Years of the Clock Tower
Winnie-the-Pooh: Canada's famous bear, Winnie (Winnipeg), to be published in a sequel
Not Amused: Traditional fairytales are not politically correct enough for our children
The British Empire: "If you were going to be colonized, you wanted to be colonized by the British"
Gross Constitutional Impropriety: Without mandate for change, plebiscites work to undermine the system


2008 ARTICLES


Count Iggy: Michael Ignatieff takes the reigns of the LPC
Lord Black of Crossharbour: Harper and Ignatieff promise a rivalry for the ages
Strange Bedfellows: The monarchy is safe from this republican
Fount of Dishonour: The growing distinction of remaining an unadorned Mister
Republican Poet: Colby Cosh on that mute inglorious Milton
Church of England: The Conservative case for the Established Church of England
Liberal Secular Scrooges: A Blight on the Festive Landscape
Fount of Honour: The Queen's New Year Honours List
Act of Settlement: the last brick in a crumbling wall, by Philip Lardner
What next, Mr. Hannan, the conservative case for disestablishing the monarchy?
Hair to the Throne: Prince William's beard is fit for a King.
Canada's House of Lords: Why reforming the Senate is profoundly unwelcome.
Someone who gets it: The proper relationship between liberty and democracy.
More Pseudo Democracy: Keep on voting until you get it right.
Royal Christmas: Queen's Christmas Message still trumps seasonal schedule.
Archbishop Williams: A 'certain integrity' to a disestablished Church of England.
Loyal Subject: Debunking the antimonarchist claims of The Economist.
Royal Prerogative: Grand Duke says no to legalised murder assisted suicide.
Lord Iggy: The Nobleman versus the Doberman
It's Over: the day, the decision, the crisis, the coalition, and Dion’s leadership
Loyal Subject: Speak out Charles, our teenage politicians never will
Prince Charles at 60: 60 Facts About HRH, Prince Charles of Wales
Remembrance Day Hymns: O Valiant Hearts; Abide With Me
For Liberty and Livelihood! Duke of Norfolk leads hunt protest ban
Keating Remembers: "I have never been to Gallipoli, and I never will"
John Cleese a Republican? An anti-monarchist rant worthy of Monty Python
Balfour Declaration: The precursor to the Statute of Westminster
Beaverbrook's Grandson: SAS Major Sebastian Morley resigns in disgust
"His Mightiness": Yanks and the royals; the Eagle and the Crown
England Expects: The Hero of Trafalgar at 250
Harper and Howard: An embarrassing example of Anglosphere Unity
Crowning Insult: Labour's legacy will be its destruction of the monarchy
Her Excellency: An Interview with Governor-General Quentin Bryce
Age of Oversensitivity: Churchill wouldn't stand a chance in Canadian election
William of Wales: Prince chooses RAF career over that of a 'working Royal'
Australia's Loyal Opposition: Republican Turnbull now on Queen's side
Loyal Subject: The Age of Elizabeth II, by A.N. Wilson
Tory Icon? Daniel Hannan says British Tories should follow Stephen Harper
Chasing Churchill: Around the world with Winston
Her Majesty The Queen - A Life in Film
The Crown in Oz: Australia swears in first female governor-general
Lèse majesté? The Royal Australian Institute of Architects drops the 'royal'
Rest In Peace: David Lumsden of Cushnie (1933-2008), President of the 1745 Assn.
Monarchies Rule: Prominent Australian republican says monarchies are the best
Sir Don Bradman: Oz remembers The Don, the greatest cricketer batsman of all time
Padre Benton: The Living Tradition in Piddingworth
"Stodgy anachronism" More moist, vapid effusions from the Diana cult
Drool Britannia: London Summer Olympics 2012
Taki the Aristocrat: Unrepentedly wealthy and well mannered
Wanted: Uncorker Message in a bottle faster than Royal Mail
The Other St. George: Will Georgia restore its monarchy?
Gentlemen's Clubs: The Great Club Revolution of New York
The Laughing Cavalier: What an utterly absurd article
Health unto His Future Majesty: "Royalty dares to challenge the New Order"
"Grace, Your Grouse!" Better to kill a fellow gun than wing a beater
Boys will be adventurous: To Ulaanbaatar by London cab
A King's Breakfast: A trenchant defence of the full English breakfast
Republican beer: Forget Coopers, support Fosters
Trafalgar Square: Sanity prevails on the fourth plinth
The Empire Builder: How James Hill built a railroad without subsidies
"Harvard was not amused": Alexander Solzhenitsyn, 1918–2008
Greatest Briton: Wellington is "greater than Churchill"
Death of the Necktie? A well-tied tie is the first serious step in life
Not Amused: The next Chief Justice of Australia to be a republican
Royal New Zealand Air Force: God Save N.Z. from the Cannibals
Why English Pubs are Dying: The totalitarian smoking ban.
Swooning over Princess Obama: A Coronation or the Second Coming?
Dreams of an Academic: Gough Whitlam to have the last laugh?
Joshua Slocum meet President Kruger: Yet another reason to love the Boers
Changing of the Guard: Annual Inspection at Rideau Hall
H.M.S. Iron Duke: A Foe for William and Sea Room
Fountain of Honour: Australian pop star gets Order of the British Empire
DOMINION DAY: Read David Warren's Lament for a Nation
Kiwi Tribalism: Sealords, Treelords, what are New Zealanders coming to?
Of Queen and Country: John Elder disects the current state of monarchy in Oz
Not Amused: The Olympic Games trump Buckingham Palace
CMR Returns: The Royal Military College of St. John
Hereditary peers overwhelmingly rejected the Lisbon Treaty
Archbishop Cranmer: Royal Assent given to the Treaty of Lisbon
Crown Commonwealth: Referendum confirms Her Majesty as Queen of Tuvalu
Duke of York: Prince Andrew Visits Troops in Afghanistan
Treaty of Lisbon: A Litmus Test for the British Monarchy
The Queen and I: The man who caused royal kerfuffle gives view of the monarchy
HMS Ontario sunk in 1780, found intact! at bottom of Lake Ontario
Hold the Lime, Bartender: Only lemon properly complements a gin and tonic
Elizabethans Down Under: Are most Australian monarchists merely "Elizabethans"?
Edwardian Gentleman: What To Do When You Find a Hohenzollern in Your Study
Hooray for Kid's Day!! Melbourne newspaper won't come of Age
Unhappy Kingdom: Why Liberal Democracy is Failing Us
Knightless Realm: The world yawns as John Howard is made an AC
Scots Tory: Bring Back the Stiff Upper Lip, says Gerald Warner
HMY Britannia: Let's lay the keel for a new royal yacht
For Queen, Country and Low Pay: PM pledges to do better
Maple Leaf republic? Roger Kimball's sleight of hand (since corrected!)
Queen's Birthday: New Zealand unveils new Vice-Regal Standard
Prince Charming: Quebec author calls Canadian G-G a "negro queen"
The Senior Service: Sub-Lieutenant Wales to take on Pirates of the Caribbean
Crown of Disenchantment: What does it require to withhold royal assent?
Colonial Mentality: Key republican thinks Victoria Cross is a colonial relic
The Red Baron: Billy Bishop, not Mannock, was the British Empire's top ace
Which Scots conservatism: Unionist or Nationalist?
Loyal Subject: After all she has done, we owe the Queen our oath
Victoria Day – Fête de la Reine: Official B'day of the Queen of Canada
Renaming the Victoria Day Weekend: Let's get rid of Heritage Day Bob
Pro Valore: Canada mints its own Victoria Cross in time for Victoria Day
State Visit to Turkey: Mustafa Akyol says God Save the Queen, Indeed
Norn Iron Unites: What issue is uniting all parties of Northern Ireland?
Extreme Loyalist: Michael Stone attempted to slit the throats of Adams and McGuinness because he just "can't handle" republicans being in government.
Canada's Vice-Regal dubbed an elegant mix between Lady Di and Nelson Mandela
Queen of Australia: Support for Australian republic hits new low
A Heroes Welcome: The Windsor Castle Royal Tattoo, 8-10 May 2008
Fat, Vile and Impudent: Alan Fotheringham is back on the bottle
The Devine Right of Bling: Our Royals have become hereditary celebrities
Battle of the Atlantic: Canadians remember the longest battle of WW2
Old Etonian Toff: Boris Johnson installed as Tory Mayor of London
Britain needs a Patron Saint: Cry God for Harry, Britain and St. Aiden?
Anglos in Mont-Royal: Rooting for the Montreal Canadiens
Daniel Hannan: Borders of the Anglosphere and the British Empire was a mistake
Australia 2020: One Big Fat Republican Con Job
Bye bye Tommy: O it's Tommy this, an' Tommy that, an' "Tommy go away"
For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?
Carpetbaggers Down Under: Kevin 'Mugabe' Rudd wins 98.5% support for republic
Kipling: The Jeremiah of Empire and the Poet Laureate of Civilisation
Duke of Edinburgh: Behind the gaffes is a man of real sincerity
Lord Rutherford: The Father of the Atom lives on in great great grandson
Queen of Australia: Royalty Protects us from Tyranny, David Barnett
Long Live the Broadsheet! Norumbega, more traditionalist than the Pope.
A Tale of Two Countries: Soldiers of Britain and Canada serve the same Queen but...
Loyal Subject: Polishing the Royal Crown, Matt Bondy & Brendon Bedford
Devoted to the End: Obituary of Sir Phillip Bridges
The Monarchist does not recognize the Republic of Kosova
Loyal Subject: MPs Ruse Defeated; God Save the Queen!
St. Paddy's Day: Edmund Burke, the greatest Irishman who ever lived
Not Amused: The Bunkum of Timothy Garton Ash
Hero Harry: Rave Reviews across the Commonwealth
Patriot Prince: Prince Harry fought for us all, Charles Moore
William F. Buckley, RIP: He had a Tory gratitude for the pleasures of life
Their Lordships' Duty: The House of Lords can influence the Lisbon Treaty debate
Knights of Oz: Revive Sirs or I'll have your guts for garters
Peter Hitchens: People love the Queen...and the BBC hates us for it
Our Greatest Monarch: Paul Johnson says Henry V was our greatest monarch
Princess Diana Inquest: A Dirty Raincoat Show for the World
Malcom Turnbull: 'Queen's death will spark republican vote'
Duke of York: The Royals are not "stuffed dummies". They should have their say
Peers of the Realm: The decline and fall of the House of Lords - Charles A. Coulombe
Peter Hitchens: Get rid of the monarchy and you will get rid of a guardian of liberty
THE FALL OF CHURCHILL
Honouring Sir Edmund Hillary
The Queen versus an E.U. President
Going Solo: Prince William earns his Wings
James C. Bennett: The Third Anglosphere Century
Knights of Oz: Revive Sirs or I'll have your guts for garters
Princess Diana Inquest: A Dirty Raincoat Show for the World
Malcom Turnbull: 'Queen's death will spark republican vote'
Future Peer: The life and times of Lady Victoria Beckham
Peers of the Realm: The decline and fall of the House of Lords - Charles A. Coulombe
Peter Hitchens: Get rid of the monarchy and you will get rid of a guardian of liberty


2007 ARTICLES


New York Times: Ever Backwards into the Royal Future
Peter Hitchens: People love the Queen...and the BBC hates us for it
Christopher Hitchens: An Anglosphere Future
Andrew Cusack: Republicanism is a traitor's game
DIAMOND WEDDING ANNIVERSARY
Courageous Patrician: Rt Hon Ian Douglas Smith (1919-2007)
The Last Rhodesian: What began with Rhodes and ended with Ian?
Gentleman Journalist: The Lord Baron W.F. Deedes, 1913-2007
Not Amused: Blair's sinister campaign to undermine the Queen
Loyal Subject: Queen Elizabeth: A stranger in her own country
Reverence Deference: Bowing and Scraping Back in Tradition
Rex Murphy: Kennedy, Churchill, Lincoln - The rousing bon mot is no more
Gerald Warner: Don't shed a tear for Diana cult in its death throes
The End of Grandeur: Rich, chincy Canada puts Strathmore on the blocks
Confessions of a Republican Leftie: "The Queen charmed the pants off me"
The King's Own Calgary Regiment: Cpl. Nathan Hornburg is laid to rest
The Royal Gurkha Rifles: Prince William grieves the death of Major Roberts
Queensland Mounted Rifles: Trooper David Pearce, 41, killed in Afghanistan
The Order of Canada: 100 investitures later, Canada's highest honour turns 40
Prince Edward on Prince Edward Island: Troop's link to monarchy important
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN: Unveils the UK Armed Forces Memorial
Great Britain: "A rotten borough with a banana monarchy" - by Europhile
FADE BRITANNIA: THE UNION OF ENGLAND AND SCOTLAND IS OVER - Simon Heffer
Peers of the Realm: The decline and fall of the House of Lords - Charles A. Coulombe
Remembering 'Smithy': An obituary tour de force by Andrew Cusack here, here and here.
NOT AMUSED: Her Majesty The Queen in Right of Quebec not invited to Quebec's tercentenary