Posts

To strike him dead, I hold it not a sin

These words, spoken in anger by Tybalt Montague in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet , came to mind when reading more about the recent killing of conservative commentator, Charlie Kirk, on Utah University campus. A rather obscure reference admittedly but it occurred to me that this assassination, like the Elizabethan drama, was a tragedy involving passionate young men acting on tribal impulse. The Montagues and Capulets would have been teenagers, of course, but Kirk's alleged killer, Tyler Robinson, is only twenty-two years of age, so not much older than Tybalt and Romeo. Kirk himself was thirty-one and his ideological opposite number, Hasan Piker, a left-wing online streamer and influencer, thirty-four. These three young men are among the dramatis personae of an unfolding modern American tragedy.  Both Kirk and Piker, I should make clear, champion non-violence but Kirk's widow, Erika, has now spoken publicly of the forces her husband's murder will unleash in American soci...

Oh, Mandy - political sketch

Yesterday's a dream, I face the morning, Crying on a breeze, the pain is calling. Barry Manilow - Mandy Well , the man who, less than twenty-four hours previously at Prime Minister's Questions at 12pm in the House of Commons, had Sir Keir Starmer's full support and endorsement, is gone. That had been high noon for the PM and, at 10.45 this morning in the same Chamber, in answer to an Urgent Question granted by the Speaker, the Foreign Office Minister, Stephen Doughty, dropped the bombshell that Lord Peter Mandelson had been sacked as the UK's Ambassador to the USA. Cue gasps and cheers in equal measure from Members who had bothered to turn up. Doughty by name and by nature, the Minister doggedly responded to questions by quoting the same line, that the sacking followed the emergence of further details which had not been revealed when Mandelson was originally vetted for the post. Asked whether the PM had been aware of these details when he gave his answers at PMQs the da...

Moor or less - film preview

The trailer for Emerald Fennell's film version of " Wuthering Heights"  (quotation marks hers - or her publicist's) has just appeared, to a storm of social media speculation and criticism. Clearly, this was the intention, a phenomenon known as 'rage bait', and it seems to have worked a treat. Now the movie has to live up - or down - to expectations when it goes on general release on Valentine's Day. Can it sustain this level of feverish speculation for another six months? You bet it can. Though teasing, the trailer reveals enough about Fennell's vision of the melodrama to give some indication of what we can expect from her adaptation. The poster, featuring Catherine (Margot Robbie) and Heathcliff (Jacob Elordi) in a steamy clinch, sets the tone, as does its invite to audiences to 'come undone'. Based on Fennell's previous outing with Elordi in Saltburn I   think it's fair to expect something smoulderingly erotic. How much relation that ...

Left, right and centre - party political sketch

Today has been one of those days when, after a period of relative calm in UK politics during the Parliamentary Summer Recess, all the pieces are thrown up in the air. On Monday, Sir Keir Starmer was launching 'Phase 2' of his government after a difficult first year. Today, with the resignation of his Deputy Prime Minister, Deputy Leader of the Labour Party and Housing Secretary (a three-in-one trinity in the person of Angela Rayner) he has had a full-scale Cabinet reshuffle - of which more anon. Today also saw the opening of Reform UK's party conference in Birmingham, with a bullish Nigel Farage sounding faintly miffed that Angela Rayner's shock (some people are easily shocked) resignation was somehow timed to steal his thunder. With Farage it's always all about him. He's predicting a 2027 general election - in other words two years early - and calling on his members to gird up their loins. (Perhaps I should rephrase that? Actually, I can't be arsed.) He may...

Solastalgia - poem

The last time I wrote a poem I was nineteen, Beset, no doubt, by teenage angst and introspection. Age brings wisdom, so they say, and with it recollection. But now, as civilisation collapses about our ears, Where’s the Olympian perspective, the mature reflection? One phrase alone I still recall, one only: ‘woven wall’, a wry perception, Prompted by drystone inclosure of moorland reshaped for wool - and wealth. Now, in a far-off land, similar walls surround me, stirring poignant memories. Ancient, immemorial, impassive they testify to generations of endless toil, Built for patrimony, repaired for posterity, abandoned prematurely. Woven wall is more than mere alliteration, I believe. It speaks of rugged resilience, resistance interweaved with every stone. And walls, much more than territorial boundaries – the warp and weft of hope; Hope for security, for peace and for prosperity, rooted in the earth. All this and more I read into these constructions, elo...

Spoiler alert: William conquers - TV review

BBC1 opened its autumn season (in August - go figure) with an historical drama about events leading up to the Battle of Hastings, featuring as much embroidery as the Bayeux Tapestry. It's always frustrated me, as a bit of a history buff, when such dramatisations depart radically from the truth - or as near the truth as one is ever likely to come with history, axiomatically, being written by the victors. With historical events as exciting and improbable as these, why gild the lily? Truth is usually stranger than fiction so if it isn't already dramatic enough for your tastes, make Game of Thrones instead. Admittedly,  King & Conqueror, the BBC television offering in question, has a lot of ground to cover and a lot of characters to work with - or gloss over, if not excise entirely. The storyline is also pretty convoluted so elision and omission is the order of the day if the plot is not to become bogged down in tedious explication. Some artistic licence must be granted the scr...

Half-baked Alaska - geopolitical sketch

Putin and Trump - or Tart and Fart as I refer to this shameless pair of scoundrels - have had their summit or, as we say in Yorkshire, summat and nowt.   Former KGB agent meets former estate agent - who would you sooner trust? Yes, the respective Presidents of the Russian Federation and the United States of America have met - this time in Anchorage, Alaska, on a flying visit (two shits that pass in the night one might say) - and once again Putin has played Trump like a fiddle. Initially, Trump seemed to be of the opinion that Alaska was in Russia, when even a cursory glance at a map shows it to be a US state. (Given how keen he seems to claim Canada, Greenland, Panama etc you'd think he'd know the fifty he's already got.) True, Alaska was once Russian but that was before 1867, when it was bought from Tsar Alexander II by President Andrew Jackson. This was hardly an auspicious start. Imagine Trump's withering scorn had that rudimentary mistake (or misspeak) been made by ...