A Gentleman's London, Episode Six: Huntsman
12 hours ago
THE NAKED APE GETS DRESSED. For those who strive for better things and who understand, as did Ben Jonson, that: "the pipe marks the point at which the orang-utan ends and man begins". - And those who understand S T Coleridge's: "While Fate tramples on things of beauty, the indignant human heart shall utter them."
According to the novel, narrated by the new ambassador’s wife, her predecessor refuses to relinquish her residence upon the end of her husband’s mission (I have been inside the British Ambassador’s residence in Paris, once Pauline Bonaparte’s grand townhouse, and only a few steps from the Palais de l’Élysée and it is easy to share her despair at being cast out…) and secretly removes to one of the corner pavilions in the front courtyard (there is a large garden or smallish park in the back) where she continues to receive the luminaries of Parisian society in her salon, as if she were still ambassadrice en titre. This naturally causes much comedy and diplomatic embarrassment.
ReplyDeleteI asked a staff member on the one occasion I was there; she confirmed the story, at least in its essentials, and identified Diana Cooper as the model for that immovable character.
Frog in Suit
Yes. We don't have ambassadors like them anymore. However efficient they were in the discharge of their other duties, they must have been hugely successful in the main purpose of bringing people together; their quality to do this shines through the pictures, even now.
ReplyDeleteCooper was, according to his biographer, quite successful indeed at bringing himself together with Patten.
ReplyDeleteYes, the picture says as much, doesn't it? Susan Mary Patten was what Duff's wife called one of his 'flowers'.
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