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Authors: Jilly Cooper

Tags: #Humor, #General

Class (43 page)

BOOK: Class
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Nigel Dempster, in a recent piece on ‘In and Out’ trends, said that mongrels from Battersea were very ‘In’. But on the whole the upper classes don’t approve of mongrels. I always pretend mine are lurchers when I go anywhere smart. Caroline Stow-Crat would swallow, then cover up her disapproval by saying, ‘But they’re supposed to be awfully intelligent and loyal.’

It is pretty unsmart to show your dogs—rather like going in for a beauty contest—and also to enter your guard dog for what is called ‘O-bedience tests’. Field trials, however, are all right.

Jen Teale talks about ‘veterinary surgeons’ instead of ‘vets’, and ‘lady dogs’ instead of ‘bitches’. Mrs Nouveau-Richards talks about ‘doggies’ and ‘pups’.

Mr Nouveau-Richards recently paid £100 for what he thought was a pedigree labrador puppy for Tracey-Diane. It turned out to be a hamster.

Upper-class dogs have simple names like Badger, Ranger and Bertie. The middle class, however, are madly into the Victorian names which the upper-middles were calling their children ten years ago: Emma, Jessica, Fanny, Cassandra, Sophie, Jason, and funny-ha-ha names like Wellington, Melchester, or Ugly for a pug.

The working classes either name their dogs according to their appearance—Spot, Blackie, Patch, Snowy—or try and upgrade them with names like Lady and Duchess. On Eel Brook Common at night it sounds like a mediaeval roll-call, with cries of’Rex’, ‘Prince’, ‘Duke’ echoing plaintively through the darkening mist.

The upper classes don’t like cats as much as dogs, and tend only to keep them in the stables to keep the rats down. The more well-bred a cat, usually the commoner the owner.

Mrs D-D refers to her cat as ‘Pussy’: ‘A neighbour took Pussy when I went on holiday.’

20   CLUBS

If the Englishman’s home is his castle, the English gentleman’s bolthole is his club. I don’t mean the kind of club like Esher R.F.C. or Hurlingham (which is not a club, but a place where foreigners go when Harrods is closed) or the M.C.C. which people join to meet people and play games with their ‘own sort’, but the sort of club that a man joins to avoid meeting people—not least members of his own club. A club is a useful place for a gentleman to remain incommunicado, particularly from his wife. The porter will always put up a smokescreen.

Although a lot of London clubs now allow women in as guests, this has been done grudgingly. At the Army and Navy there’s a separate dining room for them. At the Naval and Military there’s a special entrance. At the Garrick they are not allowed to use the main staircase before 7 p.m. and are bundled into a side room at lunchtime, where they are forgotten for long periods by the staff. In the rule book it says that no lady visitor be introduced more than ten times within the same year, except members of the family of the member—which presumably keeps mistresses at bay.

There used to be a famous ladies’ club called the Cowdray, of which my mother-in-law was a member and which described itself, rather wildly, as a club ‘for professional women’. One of the oldest members was a Miss Eardley Wilmot, who wrote the words for ‘My Little Grey Home in the West’. Miss Wilmot once met my father-in-law on the landing (men were allowed to stay with their wives towards the end of the Cowdray’s existence).

‘Oh dear,’ she said, ‘a man,’ and fainted away.

I always like the story about the Athenaeum, the august haunt of bishops and dons. It is said that a notice appeared in one of the papers saying: ‘The Athenaeum re-opened today after the annual cleaning, and members were replaced in their original positions.’

Harry Stow-Crat would probably belong to White’s. If not White’s, Boodle’s, Brooks’s, Buck’s or the Turf. He would never be seen in the RAC (The Chauffeurs’ Arms) or the Junior Carlton. He would have been lunched at the Garrick probably by his lawyer, but never wants to be asked back there because he saw Robin Day in the dining room.

Colonel Upward is a member of the Army and Navy, which he calls the Rag; his brother, Commander Upward, goes to the Naval and Military, known as the In and Out, but both of them know little places somewhere else called ‘Clubs’ where you can drink in faintly louche surroundings for longer hours.

All but the very smart London clubs have allowed the spiralists to become members in order to boost membership; uneasy-looking goosenecks with brushed-forward hair in High Street suitings can be seen looking bewildered by the unfamiliar surroundings, wondering which fork to use and desperately trying to stop their gooseneck guests pulling out sheafs of papers and talking shop in whining, nasal voices. Clubs may
not
be used for business purposes or used as a business address.

Clubs Harry would never be seen in include the Savage, the National Liberal, the East India and Sports and the Gresham Club in the city. The Reform is also way down the list now. It is interesting that when Mr Thorpe took Norman Scott there for a drink he used to pretend that Mr Scott was a constituent he was helping with some family problem. He felt Mr Scott was too ‘suburban’ (his very words) to be introduced as a friend.

Bryan Teale joins the Rotary Club, prompted by Jen who thinks it might advance his career, and belongs to a social club at work. Mr and Mrs Definitely-Disgusting go to the working men’s clubs on Fridays and have a whale of a time watching high-class variety acts and filling themselves with beer. The working men’s club, in fact, is the lynch-pin of working-class culture. Ironically, they were started as temperance clubs by a vicar in 1862 to add a bit of colour to the dismal life of the working man. Later Lord Rosebery introduced drinking and smoking. Some of the clubs are colossal. The one at Batley in Yorkshire is now closed but could hold 15,000 people, big enough to attract such names as Frank Sinatra, who might by-pass London on his way. Even Mr Definitely-Disgusting laughs at Charlie Williams, the famous black comedian who made his name in working men’s clubs. Evidently part of his turn is to mop his face and say,

‘My God, it won’t come off. If thee don’t laugh, I’ll come and live next door to thee.’

 

‘Yes, but why White’s for goodness sake?’

 

He deals with problems familiar to the working classes: rents, unemployment, mothers-in-law, class (‘our lodger’s such a naice young man’).

One of his favourite jokes is Enoch Powell going up to the pearly gates and a voice says, ‘Who Dat out Dere?’

‘No,’ said Enoch. ‘Forget it.’

There was once a very rich financier who wanted to join a smart London club. Anxious to find out how his election had gone, he despatched a sycophantic minion to find out the result. The minion returned sometime later, looking uneasy.

‘How did it go?’ said the financier.

‘Pure caviare, I fear,’ said the minion.

21   THE SERVICES

The origins of most of the oldest families in England are military and feudal. When William the Conqueror was establishing himself in this country he offered his henchmen pieces of land if they would provide him with a certain number of soldiers for a specified number of days a year. The henchmen who produced the most men got the most land. By Henry V’s reign things had got a bit out of hand, with everyone calling himself ‘knight’ or ‘esquire’, regardless of right. Henry therefore ordered that coats of arms would only be granted to people who had fought at Agincourt or who could show ancestral right. Even so several hundred people were granted arms in the fifteenth century, and in the sixteenth century many more, an increase that has no parallel in any continental country. It has also always been the practice of monarchs to reward their great soldiers with titles, hence the Dukes of Marlborough and Wellington, or, more recently Earl Alexander, Viscount Montgomery and Lord Portal.

Once upon a time the army was very smart. ‘An officer’, wrote Lord Stanley in the nineteenth century, ‘shall still be the son of a gentleman. A gentleman is understood to mean a man who has plenty of money, and does not exercise any retail trade or any mechanical profession. If you find a horse dealer or a shopkeeper’s son, you may be certain that the rule has been relaxed because his father has contrived to ingratiate himself with the class above his own, and not on account of the personal merit of the candidate.’

Because of the last two wars and National Service there is hardly a family in the land which has not at one time had some military experience. There are those who would argue that this did more to break down social barriers than any other single influence during the last century. Certainly the First World War taught young gentlemen from country houses that little men from Durham were not just hairy, illiterate dwarfs who lived and worked underground, but sensitive, loyal, and often fantastically brave human beings. Equally the Durham miners and the Somerset yokels discovered that, far from being aloof, etoliated drips, their officers loved and cared for them, and died for them in what they believed to be the cause of right. This and succeeding wars formed a mutual bond which began to alter the whole social scene, but the Trade Unions and the Labour party in the last few years have done their best to recreate the social divisions that existed in the early 1900s.

Today, sadly, the army has lost caste, as their numbers are cut, their regiments merged, and the cost of living outstrips their pay.

‘Colonels used to impress’, Heather Jenner told me, ‘but today there is a completely different attitude to them. It’s a devil of a job to get them married’.

But although it may no longer be a repository for chinless wonders or second sons of noble houses with nothing better to do, the army has, regardless, a rigid social structure.

There are still smart regiments and not so smart regiments. At the top are the Cavalry, still so called, and the Foot Guards (part of the Household Brigade.) There are the Greenjackets, light infantry, line regiments, Scottish regiments and, last and certainly least, the Corps who tend to have even fiercer snobbery and larger chips than their superiors and betters. All Gunners, according to my husband, are boring and most of them are stone deaf.

Of the Cavalry regiments, the Blues and Royals, the Greys, the 17/21st Lancers and, until recently, the 11th Hussars, could claim to be the élite; but when the 11th joined the 10th, they claimed to have been dragged down, just as the Blues have been by the Royals. It used to be smarter to be in armoured cars than tanks, which gave an edge to the 13th/18th, KDGs, Royals, 15th/19th, 11th Hussars and 12th Lancers. Nowadays they chop and charge.

The Scots, Welsh and Irish Guards are looked down on by the Coldstream and the Grenadiers, but all except the latter unite in regarding the Grenadiers as the stupidest.

The Green Jackets (formerly the Rifle Brigade and the King’s Royal Rifle Corps, and now including the Oxford and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry) are the soundest socially. They look down on Regiments of the Line. You can’t get much lower than The Royal Corps of Transport and The Royal Army Ordnance Corps, unless you are part of an Amalgamated Regiment like the Royal Anglians. The Army Catering Corps is not even Royal yet. The WRAC is staffed almost wholly by lesbians, incipient traffic wardens and lady brigadiers who become dames.

 

‘It’s quite simple really: the tenth were shiny; the eleventh wore red trousers; the fifth skins wore green trousers; the seventh turn-ups and crossbelts; and all tank men have dirty finger nails’.

 

Harry Stow-Crat probably served in the Coldstream during the war, as had many of his family in earlier wars. He would say ‘hurt’ rather than ‘wounded’; he would never talk about ‘the C.O.’ or ‘mufti’, and he would never say, ‘When I was an officer in the Cold-stream’, because he would assume everyone would know he was.

BOOK: Class
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