Long live the Corgis!
A list of 80 "facts about the Queen" has been posted on the Royal website:
http://www.royal.gov.uk/output/Page4823.asp It is obviously now our duty, as Fodor's UK Board Bards, to come up with our own list! |
Why is it I have this funny feeling there is about to be an explosion of rhetoric from the Cotswolds?????
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Corgis? Well, I kept one for weeks and learned the meaning of stubborn and tenacious.
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Just after the Corgi item, there was an even more interesting fact, the Queen devloped the "Dorgi" (A corgi crossed with a Daschsund" and now has four "Dorgis"!
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I like corgis, they are smart and funny, even if a bit stubborn and bossy. They're not a breed I would like to own, but I like seeing them. Frankly, though, a Dorgi sounds like a dubious mix--high risk of back problems and aggressive temperament. You'd have to breed very carefully.
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There are several Corgis waddling around my NYC neighborhood...and I find them intelligent and adorable. After we lost the last of our two Scotties(talk about stubborn!!!) I wanted a Corgi. But then.... my husband and I discovered we liked sleeping in the a.m. instead of springing out of bed to walk the dog-:)
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I didn't know Queen Elizabeth spoke fluent French.
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Fact #81: the Queen is quite jealous of that woman who can carve cows and other large sculptures out of butter.
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I wonder whether Her Majesty has read Rita Mae Brown/Sneaky Pie Brown's mystery series that feature 3 cats and a Corgi? All speak, of course.
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The queen has been overseas 256 times. Boy do I wish I had her budget. But then again, her job ........ and I could never wave like that.
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Yes, but will somebody tell me what the hell she keeps in that purse? bus fare? spare toilet paper? her cell phone? breath mints?
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Pup likes Corgis but they get very aggressive when they see him :(
Neo-Purell. |
In the website , they talk about Her Majesty dressmakers and milliners..but what about hairdressers ??? She has no one ? She has a longlife one ? She does it herself ? :)
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My friend's dad used to work at Buck Palace as the maintenance manager so I know a few stories:
Fact 82) there are hidden doors and corridors all over Buck Palace so the Queen can take a short cut and just pop out of the wall when she has guests! I went with her on one of the open days and she pointed out one of the hidden doors. Fact 83) They have an annual staff ball. The staff are allowed to bring a guest and there are positively feudal regulations as to who. He was allowed to bring his wife or unmarried daughters under the age of 25 only. Honestly! Must go back to the days when the aristocracy would pick up a low-class 'filly' to fool around with! They had to work out a rota so that she, her mum, and her two sisters were each able to go at least once. Sons are not allowed, married daughters not allowed, daughters over 25 not allowed. |
Quite interesting Nona!! Now, as Neo wondered about, what does she keep in her purse? A linen hankerchief perhaps.
Does Her Majesty still have Ladies In Waiting Nona? I ask because my paternal grandmother's mother was a Lady In Waiting until she married a commoner. That purse has always kept me puzzled since I was a little girl. I would not think that the Queen needs any money, creditcards or an ATM card, LOL. I always thought that the Lady In Waiting would supply the Queen with whatever she needed. One of lifes little mysteries. |
excerpt from Truman Capote's "A Beautiful Child" (from Music for Chameleons)
TC: Now do you think we can get the hell out of here? You promised me shampagne, remember? Marilyn (Monroe): I remember. But I don't have any money. TC: You're always late and you never have any money. By any chance are you under the delusion that you're Queen Elizabeth? MM: Who? TC: Queen Elizabeth. The Queen of England. MM (frowning): What's that c--t got to do with it? TC:Queen Elizabeth never carries money either. She's not allowed to. Filthy lucre must not stain the royal palm. It's a law or something. MM: I wish they'd pass a law like that for me. TC: Keep going the way you are and maybe they will. MM: Well, gosh. How does she pay for anything? Like when she goes shopping. TC: Her lady-in-waiting trots along with a bag full of farthings. MM: You know what? I'll bet she gets everything free. In return for endorsements. TC: Very possible. I wouldn't be a bit surprised. By Appointment to Her Majesty. Corgi dogs. All those Fortnum & Mason goodies. Pot. Condoms. |
I think the handbag contains at least her specs for those occasions when she has a speech to read.
I doubt if she takes chewing gum around, but possibly (depending on the occasion) a small "treat" or two for the horses or the dogs. Or the Prime Minister. She has an I-pod now, of course (sometimes known as the We-pod), so maybe that's in there. I like the idea of a mobile phone - I can just see it ringing halfway through the annual Queen's Speech to Parliament ("I can't talk now - I'm on the Throne"). |
"We-pod" :-d
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Oh, LoveItaly. That's it. I never thought about her ATM card. "Could you pull over up here at Barclay's, Jeeves. I need to get some spare change for the loo out of the cash machine."
We-pod -- too funny. |
Blimey, we haven't yet reached the point where you need paper money for the loo.
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We had a Corgi mix (with fox terrier - so she was bigger than either one) when I grew up and she was loving, intelligent and the stubbornist thing on the face of the earth. Also - you couldn't convince her to be afraid of ANY other dog - even a Doberman - she KNEW she was the boss.
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Patrick, I wasn't referring to the paper money to PAY for the loo. . .
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I saw a rather nice mobile phone story about HM.
A journalist was standing in a group around the Queen and to her intense embarrasment her phone rang (the journo's phone, not the Queen's). Scarlet-faced, she hurried to switch it off and the Queen said, "hadn't you better answer it, it might be someone important", |
I feel sorry for the poor woman on two counts, all that standing around and having to watch the Royal Variety Show.
I wouldn't wish that on my worst enemy. |
And being nice to an endless array of international politicians and diplomats, not to mention lots of ordinary people who don't know what to say. That must take it out of you a bit.
One "behind the scenes" documentary showed her in some sort of diplomatic party where a famously pompous and grumpy former Prime Minister was going on at some length about how he was the only person to make a private diplomatic initiative to talk to a dangerous foreign leader - at which HM jokingly said "Oh, but you were dispensible". It was a joy to see the expression on his face. |
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