Read Farewell the Trumpets: An Imperial Retreat Online
Authors: Jan Morris
No wonder King George V, still the Emperor of India and of the British Dominions beyond the Seas, was often perturbed about his Empire. He had visited all its major territories, the first British monarch to travel widely in his Dominions, and he doubtless looked back nostalgically to the heyday of the imperial meaning—to his Indian visit of 1906, perhaps, when 14,000 people with 600 elephants escorted him on shikari, when a road fifty miles long was built to connect his two hunting camps, and when in a single day he and his party shot 39 tigers, 18 lions and 4 Himalayan bears.
He was concerned to restore some of that old splendour, and to preserve the strength of the Crown Imperial. A proposal that his four princely sons should become Governors-General of Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa came to nothing: but instead the heir to his throne, Edward, Prince of Wales, went on a series of imperial tours. One of these took him to India, where he was boycotted by Gandhi, frequently booed by disloyal demonstrators, and assured by old hands that it was no place for a white man any more, but the most successful visits were to the white Dominions: and the flavour of these tours, their period jollity, their mixture of the buoyant and the defensive, the picture they offered of the handsome but unhappy young prince, freed from the restraints of Windsor and Balmoral, almost becoming a colonial himself—the memory of those royal holidays, preserved in many books and thousands of photographs, piquantly reflects the spirit of the colonial Empire during the years of transience.
This is hardly a king-to-be visiting his future Dominions, this is a young man seeing a new world. Gone is the stately progress of the Viceroys, calm beneath their panoplies, or the grave composure of George V himself, when he sat with his wife as in marble on the Coronation dais at Delhi. The Prince of Wales, heir to all this, wore his shirt without a tie, his trousers short, his cap a’tilt, his heart on
his sleeve. It is true that he sailed in the battlecruisers
Repulse
and
Renown,
at 32,000 tons among the great warships of the world. It is true of course that he was greeted everywhere with pomp and eulogy, from the Official Odes of the Torontonians and the Sydneysiders to the drum-poems of the Ashanti:
Thy
fellows
proclaim
thee
a
man
Triumphant
from
the
struggles
of
war.
To
the
ruler
of
kings
who
comes.
Who
inspires
awe
in
the
greatest,
Hail!
Hail!
Hail!
Edward was fawned on everywhere, naturally, flattered at garden parties, curtsied to by a thousand Lady Eatons, bowed to by innumerable Sir Henrys, blessed by manly bishops in surplices and war ribbons, saluted by old soldiers in crutches and eye-patches. When his battlecruiser passed through the Suez Canal biplanes of the Royal Air Force escorted her to the Red Sea, and Indian troops of the Canal Zone base cheered her on her way. When she put in at Aden a huge banner greeted her beneath massed Union Jacks:
TELL
DADDY WE ARE HAPPY UNDER BRITISH RULE
. The Maharajah of Bharatpur came to meet him in an open landau drawn by eight elephants. The King of Nepal gave him a rhinoceros, a baby elephant, two bears, a leopard, a black panther, an iguana, a python, several partridges and two Tibetan mastiffs.
All visiting royalty met these people, unveiled these monuments, accepted these gifts. The Prince of Wales’s tours were different, though, for he represented in his own person an almost reckless break with tradition. He was glamour, visiting an Empire that was fast losing allure. He was modernity, honouring an ideal that was growing fusty. He seemed to be visiting his future subjects not in a spirit of authority, but almost with fellow-feeling, and so took to life on the Canadian prairies, indeed, that he bought himself a ranch in Alberta. The white colonials loved him, and many of the coloured subjects too, for he seemed a foretaste of emancipation, a young, fresh embodiment of an ancient legend. ‘Never since the heroic days of Greece has the world had such a sweet, just, boyish master….’
Daddy was less impressed. Like the Wembley Exhibition, the royal tours seemed to please people for quite the wrong reasons, and the King was much disturbed by the newspaper cuttings which reached him from his far dominions. Riding bucking broncos indeed! Flirting with colonial girls! Foxtrotting in the small hours! This was not the spirit that made the Empire—or rather, his Majesty perhaps corrected himself, for in point of fact it was exactly that, it was not the spirit that would keep the Empire British!
New realities must be recognized. It had been clear since Chanak that the white Empire was not exactly an Empire any more, but a group of independent Powers of more or less common origin and generally compatible policies. Federal solutions had been abandoned—in the short run the Dominions would always be outvoted by Britain, in the long run Britain would always be outvoted by India.Instead, in 1930, the assembled Prime Ministers formally approved a new device of the pragmatic British political imagination, a Commonwealth of Nations. Though the name was old, the idea was said to have been perfected by Arthur Balfour, and it was full of sophistry. Britain and her white Dominions, it was decreed, were ‘autonomous communities within the British Empire, equal in status, in no way subordinate to each other in any aspect of their domestic or foreign affairs, though united by a common allegiance to the Crown, and freely associated as members of the British Commonwealth of Nations’.
This proposition aroused long and intricate discussion. It was like a debate among the Schoolmen. Was the Crown indivisible, or could one man be King of England and King of Canada? Could the King give his signature to opposing Acts from different countries? Could he indeed be at war with himself? Since nobody was subordinate, could anybody be expelled? Mr Hughes of Australia called it ‘an almost metaphysical document’, and King George was much disturbed by it—‘I cannot look into the future’, he wrote, straining his grammar to the limit, ‘without feeling no little anxiety about the continued unity of the Empire.’ The New Zealanders felt the same,
and did not subscribe to the new statute.
1
Even the Canadians waived the right to alter some aspects of their own constitution, investing it still in the British Parliament at Westminster.
2
Though nobody had ever succeeded in binding together the disparate parts of the Empire, its self-governing Dominions, its Indian Empire, its dependent colonies, its mandated territories, its protectorates and Treaty States and condominiums—though nobody had managed to make a rational structure of it, still the overriding authority of the Crown, exerted through an imperial Parliament at Westminster, had in the past provided a recognizable unity. ‘The British Empire’, is how all the imperial delegates were jointly described, on the roster of the League of Nations. Now even that indeterminate formula was discarded. The King was still the King of all the Dominions, but separately: as the irrepressible Hughes remarked, the King of England was no longer the King of South Africa, but the King of South Africa was also King of England. In future the Governor-Generals, the King’s representatives in each Dominion, would no longer be nominated by the British Government, to represent not only the Crown but the imperial authority itself: in future they would be chosen by the Dominions, and would have no contact with the British Government in London, only with the King.
In many other ways too the Statute disintegrated the imperial whole. Now Dominion Parliaments could pass legislation in direct contradiction to Westminster. Even the grand machinery of the imperial law, all its multifarious courts culminating in the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in London, was now shorn of its certainty: the Dominions were free to withdraw from it when they wished, and so the Empire stepped down from the most truly splendid of its postures. A man could still say
Civis
Britannicus
Sum,
but he could no longer look with certainty to those remote and impartial justices in Westminster:
Civis
Britannicus
my foot, a judge might soon say in Bloemfontein or Montreal, and there would be an end to it.
The British had tried hard, since the death of Queen Victoria, to give substance to a mystery. Now they gave mystery to a substance.
The British Commonwealth of Nations was cloudy from the start. At the time many people claimed to see the Statute of Westminster as a final charter of imperial development, and Balfour himself described it as ‘the most novel and greatest experiment in Empire-building the world has ever seen’. But it was really an admission of failure. The Empire would never be a super-Power now. Its Roman aspirations were abandoned: the only overseas delegates ever to sit in that Tribune of Empire, the House of Commons, were those from Ireland. As the Empire’s diverse parts matured into independent nations, first the Dominions, then India, then inevitably the great African and Asian colonies, so the British Empire would cease to be among the prime movers of the world, and Britishness would hive off once and for all in separate and often conflicting patriotisms.
It soon began to happen. Within a couple of years the Irish Free State took advantage of the Statute of Westminster to abolish the oath of allegiance to the Crown. Within four years Catholic Ireland was proclaimed ‘a sovereign, independent and democratic State’, and before long it was a Republic and not a member of the Commonwealth at all. The British, though dismayed by so bold and contrary an interpretation of their vision, expected no better of the Irish, and had no choice but to acquiesce: but reluctant to admit that even an Irishman could opt out of being British altogether, they decided to classify citizens of the new Republic not as un-British exactly, but as ‘non-foreign’.
1
1
Exasperated
Englishman
:
‘Tell me, is there a word in your language equivalent to the Spanish
“
mañana
”?’
Welshman
:
‘There is, but not with the same degree of urgency.’
2
It has often been phoneticized, from Marcus Clarke’s convict conversation, 1874—‘
Stow
yer
gaff,
and
let’s
have
no
more
chaff.
If
we’re
for
bizness,
let’s
come
to
bizness
’—to C. J. Dennis’s larrikin poet, 1915—
The
world
’as
got
me
snouted jist a treat;/
Crool
For
chin’s
dirty
left
’
as
smote
me
soul—
or Professor Afferbeck Lauder’s Strine nursery rhymes, 1965—Lilma Smarfit, George E. Porchy, Girldie Larks,
Mary
Header
little
lamb
or
Harsh,
barsh
,
Wisperoo
Des.
1
‘If you don’t know yourself in this country’, a Turkish immigrant to Canada told me in 1974, ‘you die of boredom. Mind you, if you
do
know yourself you die of boredom anyway.’ When they had a competition to name Canada’s first space satellite, the poet Leonard Cohen suggested ‘Ralph’. If you introduced yourself to a Canadian as Alice in Wonderland, I was told once, he would say either ‘Oh, I thought you’d passed on’, or ‘Are you published in Canada?’
1
‘This world, the next world, or Australia’: Oscar Wilde,
The
Importance
of
Being
Earnest.
1
He was still in business when I walked down the avenue in 1975, and still had one in his window.
1
The trenches at Batoche, Saskatchewan, where during a three-day battle in 1885 the Canadians suppressed the last rebellion of the Metis half-castes under their tragic leader Louis Riel. For an account of the Metis risings which Jesse Edgar Middleton might not altogether endorse, may I suggest the first volume of this trilogy,
Heaven’s
Command
?
1
Toronto is almost unrecognizable now, having changed during the twenty-five years I have known it from a recognizably imperial city into the most intense of all cosmopolitan melting-pots (page 756 of the 1973 telephone directory began with Mr A. Jentile and ended with Mr Yim Jew). Much of its money is American now, and Casa Loma is a tourist spectacle run by Kiwanis, but the Eaton family is still influential, and the Timothy Eaton Memorial Church is familiarly known as Timothy Eaton and All Saints.
1
But not much further, it seems to me, since the 1930s, except that its whites are richer, its blacks are angrier and its Afrikaners are now much more powerful. Johannesburg had no television until 1975, and its older citizens still call a cinema a ‘bio’—short for bioscope.
2
By Barron Field (1786–1846), a quarrelsome London litterateur who briefly practised law in New South Wales: Disraeli called him ‘a noisy, obtrusive, jargonic judge’, and when he wanted to write a biography of his idol Wordsworth, ‘the poet’, says the
Dictionary
of
National
Biography
,
‘begged him to refrain’.
1
‘Pom’, Australian, allegedly but to my mind unconvincingly derived from the letters
POHM
, ‘Prisoner of Her Majesty’, said to have been stamped on the clothing of transported convicts: ‘Limey’, originally American, from the lime-juice drunk on British ships to prevent scurvy.
1
George V died in 1936, his last words being variously reported as ‘How is the Empire?’ or ‘What’s on at the Empire?’, and these arrangements surprisingly survived the abdication of his successor, Edward VIII, later in the same year: the Dominions passed their own acts of acceptance, one by one, so that the new monarch, George VI, became King of South Africa on December 10, of Great Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand on December 11, and of Ireland on December 12. The abdicated King, reconstituted as the Duke of Windsor, became Governor of the Bahamas during the Second World War, but otherwise had nothing more to do with the Empire which had welcomed him so rapturously a few years before.