Scottish Daily Mail

Six-page letter Queen sent on the death of a beloved corgi

AND Her Majesty’s secret diary AND How Palace knew Blunt was a Soviet spy for decades AND Euroscepti­c truth about the Queen Mother ...yet more waspish revelation­s from society diarist KENNETH ROSE

- by KENNETH ROSE

veteran newspaper diarist Kenneth rose kept many of his most sensationa­l stories for his private journals — now published following his death in 2014. On Saturday we told how he witnessed Diana Spencer’s troubled relationsh­ip with Prince Charles. Here, he reveals more of the royal Family’s intriguing secrets . . . December 2, 1984

BriGADier Geoffrey Hardy-roberts, Master of the royal Household from 1967 to 1973, used to worry at the difficulty of keeping food hot when served on gold plate. But the Queen told him: ‘People come here not to eat hot food, but to eat off gold plate.’

May 4, 1986

eDWArD ForD [extra equerry to the Queen, and her former assistant private secretary] tells me that he used to suggest to the Queen that she might publicly heal the breach with the Windsors [edward and Wallis] by inviting them for a day or two of Ascot races, where they would be swallowed up among the other guests. But the Queen said no.

May 27, 1986

i HeAr that the Queen found she had an unexpected­ly free evening recently and that Philip was away.

So, on the spur of the moment, she decided to give a little dinner party.

‘And wasn’t i lucky?’ she said. ‘i asked about a dozen people at 24 hours’ notice, and by great good fortune they were all free to come!’

November 21, 1988

[HiSToriAN] Steven runciman tells me that when it was decided that Prince Charles should go to Gordonstou­n, Princess Marina (later the Duchess of Kent) said to Prince Philip: ‘How like you to send him to the only German school in Britain.’

The Queen Mother, overhearin­g this, said to Princess Marina: ‘i have always wanted to say that, but didn’t dare.’

Steven adds that it was Princess Marina, not Mountbatte­n, who was the marriage broker between the Queen and Prince Philip.

September 18, 1990

[ForMer Conservati­ve Prime Minister] Ted Heath tells me that when [composer] William Walton’s arrangemen­t of the National Anthem was played before the first production of Britten’s Gloriana at Covent Garden in 1953, the Queen turned to Prince Philip in the royal Box and said: ‘Are they allowed to do this to it?’ Princess Margaret passed this on to Walton, who was dejected.

September 21, 1991

DuNCAN DAviDSoN [founder of housebuild­ers Persimmon] tells me that he is still sometimes teased for having been a page at the Coronation in 1953. ‘Did you not faint at a rehearsal?’ someone asked him recently.

He says: ‘Yes — one of the bishops made an indecent suggestion to me.’

February 25, 1992

PriNCe eddie [the Duke of Kent] tells me that when Philip Hay was about to become Private Secretary to Princess Marina in 1948, he was asked to see Tommy Lascelles [private secretary to George vi and to elizabeth ii] at the Palace.

Walking down a passage, they passed Anthony Blunt [Surveyor of the King’s Pictures]. When Blunt was out of earshot, Tommy said to Philip: ‘That man is a Soviet spy, you know.’ [Blunt — knighted in 1956 — wasn’t unmasked as a spy by Mi5 until 1963. The Queen was informed the following year. Granted immunity in return for a full confession, he continued as Surveyor of the Queen’s Pictures until 1973. When Mrs Thatcher exposed his treachery six years later to the House of Commons, he was stripped of his knighthood.]

July 27, 1992

ForMer Prime Ministers and their spouses give a dinner for the Queen and the Duke of edinburgh at Spencer House. There is a large reception beforehand for others, to which i am invited. i speak to both the Queen and the Duke, who talk freely. The Queen tells me she was much amused by the attempt of Winston Churchill during the war to call a dreadnough­t HMS oliver Cromwell. [Former Labour Prime Minister] Jim Callaghan says: ‘i must confess i should have done the same.’ i ask the Queen whether she still has to approve the names of all the new warships. ‘oh yes,’ she tells me, ‘and New Zealand ships, too. That is not so easy, as they often have Aboriginal names.’ Most fascinatin­gly of all, the Queen tells me of her diary, which she keeps without fail. ‘And

how much do you write, Ma’am?’ I ask, not adding, ‘We diarists!’ She replies: ‘About so much,’ spreading out her hand, from thumb to little finger, i.e. about six inches. ‘But I have no time to record conversati­ons, only events.’ Nor, she says, does she dictate, finding it inhibiting.

May 15, 1993

I hAve a talk with Peter WilmotSitw­ell [chairman of SG Warburg] about the Royal Family. We are agreed that the Queen is good with ministers, ambassador­s and representa­tives of the Commonweal­th, but not with her children or indeed many other people.

June 3, 1995

I StAy for the weekend with [interior decorator] David and Pamela hicks. Pammy says that she sometimes writes to the Queen to tell her things of supposed interest.

‘the only time she has ever replied was when I sent my sympathy after one of her dogs had been killed by a Clarence house corgi. She then wrote six pages.’

March 21, 1997

PRINCe Charles tells me that the head of Wimbledon asked whether he thought the Queen would come to open a new court.

‘I doubt it,’ Prince Philip replied, ‘unless there are dogs and horses.’

June 12, 1998

LoNG talk with edward Ford [extra equerry to the Queen, and her former assistant private secretary] at dinner. he says Anthony Blunt should undoubtedl­y have been sacked from the Royal household when his treason was first known.

June 23, 1999

to RhoDeS house in oxford for the vice-Chancellor’s lunch. I have the good fortune to sit next to Reg Carr, Librarian of the Bodleian.

When Reg showed the Queen round a Bodleian exhibition in Univ., the quad was full of cheering undergradu­ates. ‘I suppose they are cheering you,’ she remarked.

May 15, 2000

LUNCh with edward Ford. We discuss whether the Queen was informed of Anthony Blunt’s treason when he confessed to MI5 in 1964 (though it was not made public till 1979). I am certain that she was, on the instructio­ns of the home Secretary, henry Brooke. Roy Jenkins confirms this in his memoirs.

October 5, 2000

PRUe PeNN [the Queen Mother’s lady-in-waiting] tells me that the Queen’s choice as Master of the Queen’s Music in 1975 was Benjamin Britten, but he was too ill and turned it down.

She then thought of William Walton, but realised this would make Britten jealous.

So the Queen appointed the obviously inferior [Australian composer] Malcolm Williamson. At least it pleased the Australian­s.

February 12, 2001

I ASk oliver Millar [Surveyor of the Queen’s Pictures 1972–88] whether he has ever heard the story about tommy Lascelles catching sight of Anthony Blunt in the passage at Buckingham Palace and saying to Philip hay: ‘that’s our Russian spy.’

oliver says that [Master of the Royal household] Mark Milbank made exactly the same remark to him when oliver arrived at the Palace as Deputy Surveyor of the king’s Pictures.

June 19, 2001

DINe at eton. I hear an amusing story about Martin Charteris as Provost. When Prince Philip was coming on a visit, Martin would give boys lessons on how to answer back his rudeness.

September 25, 2006

I See the film the Queen, with helen Mirren utterly brilliant in the title role. It is the Queen one is watching, in every nuance.

December 7, 2007

PRINCe eddie, [the Duke of kent] describes how the Queen plans the annual family Christmas lunch down to the last detail. the

grown-ups are in one big room, the children in another. Towards the end of lunch, the doors are flung open and in rushes the horde.

January 29, 2009

I remember martin Gilliat [the Queen mother’s private secretary] telling me that the Queen mother did not like to hear Anthony blunt disparaged even after he had been exposed by mrs Thatcher as a Soviet spy.

ExtractEd from Who Loses, Who Wins: the Journals Of Kenneth rose, Vol. II 1979-2014, edited by d.r. thorpe and published by Weidenfeld on November 14 at £30. © the Estate of Kenneth rose and d.r. thorpe 2019. to order a copy for £24 (offer valid until November 16, 2019; P&P free), visit mailshop.co.uk or call 01603 648155.

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 ??  ?? Dog lover: The Queen with some of her beloved pets
Dog lover: The Queen with some of her beloved pets

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