Monday, September 01, 2008

"Tumbrel Remarks"

I count myself as something of an expert on what writer Joyce Cary once called "tumbrel remarks." A tumbrel remark is an unguarded comment by an uncontrollably rich person, of such crass insensitivity that it makes the workers and peasants think of lampposts and guillotines. I can give you a few for flavor. The late queen mother, being driven in a Rolls-Royce through a stricken district of Manchester, England, said as she winced at the view, "I see no point at all in being poor." The Duke of St. Albans once told an interviewer that an ancestor of his had lost about 50 million pounds in a foolish speculation in South African goldfields, adding after a pause, "That was a lot of money in those days." The Duke of Devonshire, having been criticized in the London Times, announced in an annoyed and plaintive tone that he would no longer have the newspaper "in any of my houses."


Read the rest of Christopher Hitchens on "tumbrel remarks."

2 comments:

Brennan said...

When questioned by authorities as to why he had $600 in cash in an area known for selling coke Matthew MacIsaac replied, "I'm a hedge fund manager."

Bold

http://ago.mobile.globeandmail.com/generated/archive/RTGAM/html/20080331/wrrabbit31.html

Michael Wade said...

Brennan,

Thanks! Being a hedge fund manager does explain a lot!