We are in the middle of an historic month. The British public saw a King of England crowned, in real time, for the first time. We got to witness a ceremony that was forged over more than a thousand years, beyond the Glorious Revolution – that explains the Protestant bit – beyond that to the Anglo-Saxon Kings, and further still to the anointing of Solomon himself, by Zadok the Priest.
Last week was also the 1050th anniversary of King Edgar’s coronation. At that time, the antiphon – Zadok the Priest – is documented as having been sung at Anglo-Saxon coronations at that very moment of anointing. Just as we saw with our own eyes, albeit to Handel’s rendition.
Maybe someone here can do a back of the envelope calculation for me – I’m curious to know what percentage of the world’s nations existed at the time when these traditions of ours were forged?
You see, our invaluable historic treasures are not all jewels, artefacts, statues, works of art, buildings, physical things. The crown of our inheritance is our traditions – traditions with ancient roots, nourished by Christianity, bound up with the lives of all those who have since been forgotten, tangled with things that stand in tension, beautiful because they’re real, because they’re ours, woven together by the passage of time. Organic matter.
In tradition, history is made flesh as a living breathing thing, of which we are all a part. It is the artwork of the Burkean contract between the unborn, the living and the dead that we have heard so much about.
Now, over the weekend I made the mistake of watching the coronations of George VI and our late Queen. The decline is frankly devastating. Decline in execution, in style, in reverence. By contrast, Charles’ coronation felt like crumbs. Glorious, for sure, but apologetic.
Watching those images, I’ll be honest, I felt sad. As I am sure many of you do, too. It’s a sadness that dare not speak its name – we’ve all found ways to anaesthetise it. Why is it so hard even for us – as conservatives, or traditionalists – to face it fully? Because it’s raw and painful. It’s painful to stop for a moment and fully recognise the scale of our self-inflicted loss. To recognise that the generations who came before us have thrown away our precious inheritance, and that those around are vandalising what little is left.
So, with dread, we might wonder what might get served up at the next coronation?
Prince William is already being advised to start thinking about redesigning the whole affair to ensure it is sufficiently ‘modern’. A coronation for a post-Christian, post-Anglican Britain.
Catherine Pepinster was quoted in the Telegraph the other day asking, ‘Can the sort of uber-religious ceremony we’ve just seen, with its prayers, hymns, chants, and a monarch dressed up as a priest for the crowning, and its Communion service, be remotely relatable?’
These words – “relatable” “modern”. Everything needs to be modern or relevant, doesn’t it? Nothing from the past has any place in the future. These stifling words - they don’t mean anything! Yet we have given them definitive, normative weight that they don’t deserve. Lazy words – that we have allowed to diminish our agency and judgement by forcing this sense of inevitability on us.
The Prince and Princess of Wales are reaching out to “GenZ”, we are told. To the TikTok generation. The Press have been citing a poll that found 73% of the country felt the royal family needed to ‘modernize’ to survive. What does that mean? As if the Royal Family need to campaign to constituencies like politicians. Something I think demeans the institution, and in turn, demeans us as a people. It’s needy and undignified.
Was the Queen modern? No, she was loved. Is the pomp and pageantry relatable? No, of course not, it is beautiful and out of the ordinary, and it is loved.
My point is, the demands placed on our heritage are unreasonable, and frankly, philistine. It is impossible for the value of our precious inheritance to justify itself in these terms.
By now, we know the Year Zero of the revolutionaries and the activists. From Mao – and the cultural revolution’s destruction of the four olds – ideas, habits, culture and customs. We are familiar with the necessity to raze everything precious to the ground because it’s in the way of building the new society, from scratch, according to the blue print of someone who knows best.
But there is another more subtle Year Zero. The endless present of the zeitgeist – a mindset. We see it in that prescriptive use of the word ‘modernity’. And the Conservative Party are just as guilty of this this as anyone.
‘Modernity’ has become a euphemism for ‘year zero’. The tabula rasa. The endless present. A utopia – an abstract, nowhere place, borderless, immune from the particular.
Michael Oakeshott has been criminally underquoted at this conference so let me overcompensate. By his diagnosis – this is a Rationalist problem.
The Rationalist. He has a deep distrust of time. An impatient hunger for eternity. Quote ‘Each generation, indeed each administration, should see unrolled before it the blank sheet of infinite possibility. And if by chance this tabula rasa has been defaced by the irrational scribblings of tradition-ridden ancestors, then the task of the Rationalist is to scrub it clean.’ The Rationalist’s mind, Oakeshott says, has ‘no atmosphere’.
Oakeshott says, ideology ‘can be taught best to those whose minds are empty; and if it is to be taught to one who already believes something, the first step of the teacher must be to administer a purge.’
Quote ‘The predicament of our time – [and he was writing in the 1960s] – is that the Rationalists have been at work for so long on their project of drawing off the liquid in which our moral ideals were suspended (and pouring it away as worthless) that we are left only with the dry and gritty residue which chokes us as we try to take it down’
Such a society is one that is ‘never mentally at peace with itself because it is never reconciled with its past’ filled with men who are incapable of appreciating ‘the concrete detail of their total inheritance’
The psychiatrist Ian McGilchrist recently said this about music. Music is powerful. It can change your life. But it is just notes. A note is nothing. Yet 30,000 nothings make up Bach’s b minor mass. His point was that relationships are primary. Beauty emerges from those relationships. Things only become what they are because of the relationships they stand in.
I think the same is true of history. Of society, of a people. Every people and culture, is a symphony played over many centuries. It gives cultures their different textures, and treasures.
But now, we have become dissonant. You see, the Year Zero mindset can’t compute these relationships. It lives in the abstract present. It doesn’t speak the same language. It’s antithetical to an honest organic understanding of history and our place in it.
As Danny Kruger said – we are not born free, we are born attached. No Twitter, he wasn’t talking about umbilical cords.
We are bounded, limited, fallible creatures. Or to quote Sir Roger Scruton: “We are needy creatures, and our greatest need is for home – the place we are, where we find protection and love”.
For anyone who might need this translated into Postmodern – I’m saying abstraction is violence.
The Year Zero mindset dissolves all relationships because they’re inconvenient. They’re in the way of the new society. Those relationships – that move us, that motivate us, that make us not-nothing – they are scattered by the endless present.
When I interviewed Jacob Rees Mogg recently for a Spectator piece, he said this about the aesthetics of Parliament. ‘The people who would like a Year Zero and are ashamed of our history would like us to have an office building of the routine kind. Why would they like that? Because you don’t have a sense of continuity and history and tradition, and its much easier to be ashamed of something with which you’re not linked. Whereas we are linked in our daily lives, through the buildings we work in, with the nation’s history’.
Year Zero is reborn every minute of the day. It’s a prison.
Look at what happened in Oldham recently. The Council demolished a beautiful Victorian church because they said that if they didn’t – it would get vandalised. They are the vandals! And our treasures are in the hands of vandals. Those who are supposed to be caretakers of our inheritance can’t be trusted.
Now, you will forgive me for reading out a long quote – because that long quote, again, is from Sir Roger Scruton. And the truth is, and I am sure you will all agree, I wish he were here to advise us:
“The old way of teaching the humanities was in that manner - as objects of love. This is what I have loved, what previous generations have loved too and handed onto me. Here, try it out, and you will love it too. Whereas the postmodern curriculum is a curriculum of hatred. It’s directed against our cultural inheritance. One after another the works are paraded before us, stripped naked and thrashed…”
Conservatism is not an ideology. It is a habit of heart. And it’s foundation is affection.
National Conservatism, contrary to what those silly sods outside think, is about love– and love isn’t a zero sum game, and as Yoram pointed out, appreciating and conserving your what is your own does not prevent you from appreciating others, and what is uniquely there’s.
This inheritance is not ours to sell-out. It belongs to the future, and we have a duty to it.
We need to reject the vandals claims of inevitability. We must not allow the endless present to rob us blind.
We need to understand why Conservative ideology across the Anglo-sphere hasn't conserved anything from 1945.
It got captured by international finance and the NeoCon agenda.
The Right embraced Global Capitalism, Consumerism, hypa Individualism and NeoCon wars. ( NeoCon wars created 37 million refugees ).
Conservative ideology is not revolutionary like Socialism, Liberalism and Islam.
The Right should of embraced Nationalism and Third Position economics. If the nation state doesn't control international finance, international finance will control the nation state.