Friday, April 2, 2010

Failure? The Possibility Does Not Exist

We are saddened to hear of the retirement - if that is the word - of J.K. Baltzersen from The Monarchist, of which I have been a humble scribe for some years now. I am far more sadden by the author's pessimistic reasons for leaving the field of battle:

Along the way, although there of course are exceptions, I have met very little understanding for the worldview which I advocate. I find that I am standing still. I am not moving. Not forward. Not backwards. Not anywhere.

This world consists of people – almost of all ages – proudly exhibiting their underwear in all sorts of public places, successfully asserting their right to political equality, but at least the world is moving forward.

Yes, forward over the cliff. The coarseness of the age is appalling. It is an obvious and trite thing to say, but one which needs to be said. It is the obvious things which need to be repeated, they are so easily forgotten. We accept it too easily. The cheapening of the human soul. Chesterton, Belloc, Ortega y Gasset and Rand all denounced it, each for their own reasons. What linked these minds - who would have disliked each other intensely - was their aversion to the modern. They were born in that last twilight of the liberal era, which ended in the barrel of Gavrilo Princip's pistol, nearly a hundred summers ago. The modern they despised was the levelling tendency, its worship of what Whitman sadly called the "divine average."


Statistics is not conducive to divinity. In its widest sense, divinity is never average. It is an aspiration. The average may possess it, but the desire is transcendent. The ordinary looking up. The Cult of the Modern is the Cult of the Average, it is anti-aspiration. The age before 1914 was distinguished not so much by its small and unintrusive government, its manners or arts. It was the last age in which ordinary people deferred to those in authority. Partly out of ignorance, but also out of respect for what such an authority represented. The university professor was a repository of, and skilled guide to, knowledge. He was not an otherwise unemployable crank. The minister of state was a guardian of the security and freedom of the realm, not a charlatan in a frock coat.


The human clay was no better then than now. No age suffers from a shortage of the wicked, the conniving and the morally lax. Same clay, however, different aspirations. People wanted to believe that those in authority lived to higher standards. They understood that some failed the ideal, yet the dream was all important. Somewhere, men are decent and noble and do the right thing. In her first television Christmas broadcast, made in 1957, Her Majesty warned us not to succumb to the "subtle corruption of the cynics." The rot was pretty well set in even then. The message is still relevant. If we don't try, we'll never be. This process of corruption has always had an especially obnoxious villain to my mind, Lytton Strachey. His Eminent Victorians sought to, and largely succeeded, in placing feet of clay on the giants of 19th century British history. The American critic Edmund Wilson said of Strachey:


Lytton Strachey's chief mission, of course, was to take down once and for all the pretensions of the Victorian age to moral superiority... neither the Americans nor the English have ever, since Eminent Victorians appeared, been able to feel quite the same about the legends that had dominated their pasts. Something had been punctured for good."


Hallelujah! We are all back in the mire! Rejoice! Strachey made generations of intellectuals, and those further down the effluence of thought, feel comfortable in their mediocrity. No one is better than anyone else, which is really saying that no one is better than me. My little vices, my little betrayals, my little failings are acceptable, I have no need to fight them, because the eminent men are just as bad as me. Men are not so much prone to evil as to sloth. Eminent Victorians was a license to moral sloth. What is first done with wit and grace, is soon enough done with vulgarity and obscenity. A typical British High Street is proof enough of that. Without discipline an army is a rabble. Without discipline, of some sort, the soul of man is no better than a rabble, driven by sudden emotion and instinct. Thought, consideration and foresight are the products of a disciplined mind. Of a mind that aspires to better than what it is and, through discipline has the tools to move in that direction.


I hold onto the monarchy for many reasons, one of which I will honestly admit is a perverse streak of the reactionary within me. It is a mad impulse which sometimes becomes irresistible. I am the only person I know who does not own a pair of jeans. This causes some discomfiture to friends and co-workers. I do not explain why. It may well be an irrational impulse. I recall one of my teachers in high school, in a fit of honesty, admitted that his father thought him immature. Exhibit A in the father's case was that said son still wore jeans. The aged veteran of HM's forces thought only teenagers, children and workmen should wear jeans. Men wore pants, you see. The thought was a bracing one. A bit of reactionary rebellion. It is logically nonsense to imagine that an item of clothing confers on one any sort of superiority, yet the concept of a fashion statement is perfectly understandable. Clothing is symbolic. The wearing of jeans was once a militant statement of youthful and proletarian solidarity. The rebels having taken over, it is now a uniform. Jeans are "comfortable" we are told. Not really. The material is more rigid than that which is typically used for trousers. Jeans are comfortable only in the psychological sense. They telegraph to wearer and viewer than the wearer is "off duty" and not in a serious frame of mind. "Please don't take me seriously, I'm not really trying." They are the dress of militant informality.


The monarchy is like the bespoke three piece suit. A piece of militant formality and defiant aspiration. The Queen is the epitome of propriety and dignity. There is an ordinary human being beneath the crown, one that behaves as we all do at our worst. Yet she has dedicated herself to a certain code of being, a sense of duty higher than ordinary. With discipline and application you can be better than you are. That was part of the point of monarchy, as Victoria and Albert re-imagined it, a model for the nation. We are told, with the smug assurance of a wise man explaining the dawn to a simpleton, that monarchy is out of date. The modern age admits no hereditary privilege. Most of those who say that plan on bequeathing to their children as large an inheritance as possible, as well as a first class education (if they can still get it). What irks the republican is not some strict constitutional principle, it is a political as well as spiritual egalitarianism. They are too vain to admit that anything is better than they. Today it is a monarch, but the levelling tendency is fanatical and will seek new victims. The Australians have a saying about cutting down the tall poppies. The Queen is simply the tallest poppy.


We began by mourning the pessimism of some toward the modern world. The jacobins are now very busy indeed. They are headlong into bankrupting the United States. They have, through stealth, rendered Queen and Parliament no longer sovereign in Britain. The popular culture is utterly obscene, so much so that to mention its nature is to invite boredom. Yes, yes, decline and fall and all that. Part of the ether. Protesting is pointless. There is nothing inevitable about today or tomorrow. The world of a century ago was the product of centuries of preceding effort. The Britain of the 18th century looked a lot like the Britain of today. The future is always contestable. You just have to say. A thousand acts of small defiance. A refusal to accept the well accepted. We must be outrageous for the sake of restraint. We must be radical for the sake of propriety. No, madam you do not have a different lifestyle, you are a slut. No, sir, you are not being pragmatic, you are being dishonest. Insist that sophistry is not a sign of sophistication. It is a sign of cowardice, as it was when Aristotle patrolled the agora. We lose only by accepting that what is is right. Our opposition is strong only in numbers. Sloth, when it is revealed plainly as sloth, is a weak rallying cry. Aspiration is a strong call forward. We have only to call their bluff and never, ever, surrender to the "subtle corruption of the cynics."

37 comments:

  1. Oh, you tease!

    But I still stand by my comments.

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  2. But I still stand by my comments.

    Well, sir, your comments are made in response to something that indeed could be real. :-)

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  3. All too real. I've seen a lot of people simply give up. Thus my headlong reaction.

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  4. My my, we have just been spoiled with a very uplifting post and probably your best yet, Kipling. A very impressive summation of what we all know is the problem with "Big Society".

    Ironically, the thing that is slowly killing the monarchy - sloth and apathy - is also the thing that is sustaining it. A careless people can't be bothered to muster the strength to actually kill it, so it lives on. And by the way, I still wear three piece suits to work, without the eccentric company however, of a fob watch.

    April Fool's aside, I have been moving the family to a different city. Last month, I purchased a rather grand looking house that is older than confederation (200 year-old homes are a rare thing here), which is occupying much of my discretionary time.

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  5. Pardon my sudden intrusion, but as a new visitor to this website I would very much like to register my appreciation!

    I found this post particularly inspiring. At points I do fear that my beliefs are 'outdated' or futile, but this entire site gives me hope that there are like-minded souls out there who still support our traditions.

    Some wonderful stuff here.

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  6. Just focus on doing what you can. I am a member of my father's club (and that of both my grandfather's), I wear Ede and Ravenscroft waistcoats with my DJ and morning coat respectively, and I participate in events that help "the cause".

    No one can roll back the tide of change - but we can all shape it in some small way. Personally I am more confident about the future of this institution - our shared Crown - than at any other time in the last 20 years. Constitutional caution reigns supreme, we've seen off the baby boomers, and William will carry the rest.

    Come on guys, for most of you, summer is coming! Why not host a summer Pimm's party at your place? My wife and I did - it was a cracker. Lots of linen, lots of panamas. I don't have to explain the rest, do I?

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  7. The rot can be traced to the paper money bankers. The only way to beat the tyranny is to buy gold sovereigns and other gold and silver coins. I guarantee you will feel stronger. Start with a junk silver dollar of fifty cent piece: in my lifetime the coin of the realm. Listen to its music and feel its heft. Pass the word.

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  8. I am a semi-regular reader of this blog, and, may i say, this latest article is a brilliant summary of our age. i draw encouragement from sites like yours, plus those run by folk of similar persuation, some British, some Australian, some North American. Though it would seem there is a small yet healthy on-line community of men and women committed to tradition, decency, civility, prudence, modesty, and faith, the shape of the RL societies in which we live seems to be growing steadily more unhealthy month by month, year by year. How can this tide of almost a century of distruction, loss, and degridation be halted, or even slowed? we are simply lone individuals in our communities, more often than not sneered at and disregarded by those who now hold the reigns of power, the leftist media, government, academia and artistic community...when will the restoration and healing begin? when will the counter-revolution finally make tangible inroads? I grow weary and my heart grows dispondant. Please, please, all of you engaged in flying the flag, keep standing in the gap!

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  9. Vous êtes une bande de babouins consanguins dégénéré couvert des pustules répugnantes de votre sclérose intellectuelle et de l'arrogance typique de la classe "supérieure" qui épanche sa soif avec le sang du peuple.

    Mourrez. Mourrez. Mourrez tous. Que vos corps boursouflés et corrompus subissent l'outrage de la putréfaction et de la gangrène. Le monde ne s'en portera que mieux.

    Mort aux cons.

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  10. Curious. I was away over Easter (so I missed the joke, somewhat), but I watched part of a documentary on the History Channel about the missing years of Jesus (between 12 and 30). I didn't watch all of it (I was called away to dinner), but one statement did really catch my interest - one of the historians being interviewed said that the many attempts to fill in the missing years were attempts to localise Christ, making him more like us (married, a nasty kid in the Gnostic Gospels), which runs counter to the actual point of Christianity, which is to be like Christ.

    It is precisely the same point you're making here - we want others to be like us, rather than wanting to be like others. And the ultimate example for Christians is Christ Himself. The levelling influence ultimately must see the Divine rendered mortal, to be just like us. And no Christian (Catholic, Orthodox or Protestant) could ever accept such an idea. Divinity itself proposes inequality, for we mortals can never match the Divine. And therein lies the ultimate impossibility of an egalitarian Christian - God is Superior to us, and if He is equal to us, then He is not God, but an idol.

    And hope remains. As the Baby Boomers head off into retirement, the next generation will find itself far more conservative, for being conservative now is an act of rebellion against our liberal society. It is rebellious to have manners and style, but it is also desirably (or so my sisters keep telling me, their dear little brother).

    Human nature cannot be changed by the wave of a wand, and while the Long March continues, the land it has ravaged shall ultimately heal. One can only suppress things for so long.

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  11. Mr. Anonymous wrote:

    [some rant in French]

    The French Revolution isn't dead, I see.

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  12. The frog said something about dying of gangrene or some such thing. Perhaps he meant gout, on account of all the port, beef and offal a true Englishman is supposed to eat. He wouldn't have much knowledge of that, being French and thus most likely emaciated.

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  13. He said we are collection of baboons, typically arrogant of our class. Something about the blood of the people. He then tells us to die several times.

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  14. Froggy vs Rosbif in a fight to the death then? Where have I heard that before.

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  15. A truly uplifting and morale-boosting piece! Many thanks!

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  16. That Frenchy is a disgrace to Frenchies. Probably just a Jacobin-esque extremist, rather than actually representative of the French people. We had a few French students my school only recently on exchange (in Australia), and they were lovely kids. They didn't seem to mind at all that they were in a realm of a monarch...

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  17. Indeed, the boomers are ageing, their prime is passed; yet, judging from the attitude of boomers in my own family, they will not allow the mantle of leadership to be wrested from them easily...clinging on in academia, positions of leadership, the media, and govt/social/community service sector, banging the old, tired, destructive, horrid socialist drum.

    As for those who believe the likes of myself and others are the unintellegent, biggeted remnant of a bygone age without a care or understanding of the trials of the people, I refute this, in my own case, utterly. As a child brought up in a single parent family, living in social housing, I am acutely aware of the hard edge of the socialist egalitarian dream of the 60's and 70's, as the first generation who directly experienced its fruits of pain and upheaval. God bless her, my late mother, regardless of how little money was around, instilled in both myself and my brother decency, manners, civility, and responsibility (though the socialist half of the family who fled did little to build up this area). Out of poverty - yes, poverty that knows the winter cold very well - has been born two conservatives who value family, hearth, home and tradition. It is for my little newborn niece I ernestly pray a new conservative dawn of society will break, illuminating an injured, parched land that has laboured under a century of darkness. Soon, the influence of Greer, DeBovoir, and their fellows will drift into the pages of history, and women like myself, along with men, will be finally truly able to breathe freely the refreshing air once more. I thank both the blogging commenters and author of 'the Monarchist' for standing as beacons of light and hope in a dark world ; I also believe that Prince William, especially will make a brilliant King; beloved even more than Queen Elizabeth II, and additionally,'experts' should listen to Prince Charles, rather than criticizing him for 'interfearing'. . Stand in the gap!!

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  18. Et vous animateurs, auteurs et participants à ce blog êtes, sans exception, des représentants fort exécrables de la race anglo-saxonne.

    Vos diatribes répugnantes ne méritent ni civilité ni politesse de la part du reste de l'humanité qui se contre-chie non seulement de votre pute Elizabeth et aussi de l'amour aussi incestueux que dégoutant que vous semblez lui porter mais aussi que de vos opinions moyenâgeuses, réactionnaires et facistes.

    Allez vous faire foutres, tous autant que vous êtes.

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  19. What an excitable little Frenchman.

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  20. I just can't wait for his next Jacobin rant.

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  21. I offer to our French participant these links of interest;

    http://www.royaute.org/
    plus
    http://www.alliance-royale.com/
    and the site below; whose author supports all monarchies, past and present, across the globe.

    www.madmonarchist.blogspot.com

    There is absolutely nothing wrong with a site dedicated to Angosphere monarchy. hwever, the issues that have been discussed within this article and the comments generated apply equally across the Western world.

    One more site with information and links, not to mention, literature of interest to our French participant;

    www.teaattrianon.blogspot.com

    ,Hence, feelings of exclusion and misunderstanding on behalf of the French participant are suitably addressed. Now, a little French civility would be nice, please...
    Our French

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  22. My thanks to the kind comments made above, excepting the excitable Francophone. All true anglophiles understand that while we tease the French, we have no genuine animosity. Their ways are different, and the execution of Louis XVI one of the genuinely foolish and criminal acts of the last two centuries, but we generally like the French. They're very charming rivals.

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  23. Au risque de me répéter, ce n'est pas la race anglo-saxonne en entier qui me répugne : ce sont spécifiquement les dégénérés adeptes de la masturbation intellectuelle qui animent ce blog.

    Donc, j'espère pouvoir vous enfoncer une couronne "royale" bien profondément dans l'anus pour ensuite la retirer et vous faire lécher les excréments qui y auront inévitablement adhéré.

    Le même traitement sera, soit dit en passant, réservé à toutes les têtes couronnées de la planète, avec l'ajout de la possibilité d'inviter le peuple à uriner copieusement sur lesdites têtes.

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  24. The anonymous Frenchmans rants are becoming increasingly dull, this latest one lacks the obnoxious spark of the previous ones.
    I have a theory that deep down all Frenchman long to be reigned over by a monarch. This stems from the well known fact that all Frenchmen secretly wish to be Englishmen.

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  25. Je vais violer vos mères, vos femmes et vos enfants des deux sexes. Je leurs défoncerai le cul bien comme il faut avec ma belle grosse bitte républicaine.

    Je répandrai ma semence au creux de leurs culs et de leurs ventres et vos femelles n'auront de cesse de crier le plaisir qu'elles ont de se faire prendre par un vrai mâle, contrairement aux séances courtes et désagréables de copulations qu'elles avaient avec la bande d'émasculés que vous êtes.

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  26. He reminds me of another Frenchman with a wonderfully colourful vocabulary:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A8yjNbcKkNY

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  27. I think we must be getting to the poor chap, his latest post was particularly vitriolic. Though some of the flair seems to have returned, so good show.

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  28. I'm a little disappointed in our little Jacobin.

    Seemingly, he is of the school that believes that old is bad and new is good.

    Yet, he comes up with such old stuff.

    Where is his innovation?

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  29. Vulgarity is as old as salt. I don't agree with Dr Johnson's statement that the first Whig was the Devil, but I'm certain the first Jacobin was. I do admire the fellow's conceit. He obviously reads English, yet insists on writing in French. Google provides free translation services. He's like those snobby French waiters who provide worse service at the mere hint of being from the Anglo-Saxon world. Perhaps he thinks he is striking a blow against the forces of reaction or something.

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  30. Ça vous excite quand je parle de ma grosse bitte ? Vous savez, j'essaie seulement de rendre service en vous fournissant au moins un autre sujet de fantasme pour remplacer vos vieux monarques décrépis, puants et flétris.

    Bien sur, vous pouvez continuer à vous imaginer des scènes torrides entre la séduisante Camilla et la ratatinée Elizabeth. Du sexe chaud de lesbiennes couronnées, ça doit être dans vos cordes, non ? À moins que vous préfériez vos astiquer la bitte en pensant à Charles en train d'enculer ses deux fils. Évidement, il font tout celà vêtus en Nazi.

    Je vous laisse quelques instants pour aller quérir des papiers mouchoirs pour essuyer la dèche qui a immanquablement coulé dans vos sous-vêtements après la lecture de ces paragraphes lubriques...

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  31. Ça vous excite quand je parle de ma grosse bitte ? Vous savez, j'essaie seulement de rendre service en vous fournissant au moins un autre sujet de fantasme pour remplacer vos vieux monarques décrépis, puants et flétris.

    Bien sur, vous pouvez continuer à vous imaginer des scènes torrides entre la séduisante Camilla et la ratatinée Elizabeth. Du sexe chaud de lesbiennes couronnées, ça doit être dans vos cordes, non ? À moins que vous préfériez vos astiquer la bitte en pensant à Charles en train d'enculer ses deux fils. Évidement, il font tout celà vêtus en Nazi.

    Je vous laisse quelques instants pour aller quérir des papiers mouchoirs pour essuyer la dèche qui a immanquablement coulé dans vos sous-vêtements après la lecture de ces paragraphes lubriques...

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  32. Anonymous, vous êtes mal elevée.

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  33. One cannot give up. The pendulum will swing back towards a better age, I am sure of it. We WILL triumph over this humanist, liberal claptrap...

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  34. It is important, gentlemen, to remember the old adage "this too shall pass," which I believe Russell Kirk used when speaking of modernist concepts.

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