My Blog Search

All parcels are

forakin at gmail dot com

Comment notice:

You are free to leave comments on my blogs as long as they are polite, reasoned and within the context of what I have written.

I will NOT entertain insults, abuse or expletives; your strength of emotion should be expressed without resorting to uncouth expression.

Since, it is my blog, I reserve the right to accept, review, edit without losing the context or delete the comment - if it does not meet standards of decent and polite discourse.

Finally, your comments cannot be anonymous, please give a name when leaving a comment.

Thanks for reading my blog and leaving a comment.

My Popular Tags

                                                           

My Mini Search

 

My Moon Days

««Nov 2009»»
SMTWTFS
1
23
4
5
6
7
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930

My Flickr Badge

www.flickr.com
This is a Flickr badge showing public photos from akinnld. Make your own badge here.

Does your inside leg have class?

posted Wednesday, 18 April 2007

Between I and me

Nothing excites the English more than to realise that the dormant class war has been jolted into an active volcano with pyroclastic flows of hints for the middle classes to burnish their airs of snobbery in ways that would make Hyacinth Bucket look common.

This was brought about by the break-up of Prince William and Kate Middleton whose greatest sin was to have a mother who responded with a "Pleased to meet you" than the proper, "How do you do?" and asked for the toilet when one does ask for the lavatory.

One remembers remodelling one's manner of speech to say "pardon" rather than bark out "What" considering that too rude for everyday conversation for which one could be accused of dumbing down.

The class frenzy in the papers

So, the Daily Telegraph which one finally persuaded the local newsagents to obtain for one's reading each morning went into overdrive on snippets of being proper enough to have truck loads of toffee on one's nose though not guaranteeing the dosh for readers to travel posh.

Things like laying down your cutlery whilst chewing; having guests wear morning dress to weddings and so on would have those striving to keep up with the Joneses in a tizzy.

However, the greatest putdown in the class war in contemporary times was delivered by Alan Clark when he said of Lord Heseltine who then was a mere Micheal Heseltine - a successful politician and multi-millionaire - a man who bought his own furniture.

The irony is not lost on anyone that many of those in aristocratic circles once had ancestors who bought their own furniture as would eventually never be said of Lord Heseltine's descendants.

The class of your suit

So imagine how I chuckled when I found an advertisement in the Telegraph about a tailor from Hong Kong elbowing his way into the turf of the Savile Row purveyors of formal menswear peddling the best of British cloth and cuts of class under-cutting Savile Row prices tremendously.

He is making the rounds of well-appointed hotels around England measuring up gentlemen for bespoke tailoring all the way from Hong Kong, it reads like a symphonic orchestra calling at theatres all around the country as opposed to pop concerts calling at rowdy stadiums.

Obviously, it is not proper to ask the price of anything indicating you cannot afford it, nor is it of the best manners to blatantly seek out bargains, seeing that is an affectation of the middle classes - this is suffocating as I swoon with a backhand to my tilted forehead - do these people live in this world?

One is not being served

The clincher in the advertisement can only be delivered verbatim - under the title - Even the price suits you, Sir (how common) one paragraph reads -

"In other words, customers can now buy two bespoke, custom and hand-stitched suits, made from fine, British or Italian cloth and measured by a master tailor for the price of one off-the-peg, chain store suit cut by a computer out of cheap fabric and sold to you by a gentleman with spiky gelled hair and who wouldn't know a side vent or a notch lapel from a PlayStation." Ouch! Ouch! Meow!

Now, if he were not making more affordable (read cheap-er) suits, he might have been a prospect for a Royal Warrant - But who says the middle classes are not smarter on the money?

If you must, Raja Fashions can have a tape measure on your inside leg sooner than you had time to smirk at the offer as you ask for gold buttons on ermine.

 

tags:                        

links: digg this    del.icio.us    technorati    reddit

AddThis Social Bookmark Button




1. bleh left...
Wednesday, 12 September 2007 11:03 pm

You're a twat.


Tag Related Posts

Nigeria: Boko Haram - The lessons lost

Friday, 31 July 2009
There are lessons to be learnt from the insurgency of Boko Haram but I doubt the government, community and society has the resolve to tackle the issues resolutely.

Akin Konsult gets registered in less than 35

Monday, 6 July 2009
My experience of registering my comapny in the Netherlands with the residual Nigerian in the background keeping me from getting it done properly and on time.

Thought Picnic: Justifying MPs Expenses

Wednesday, 13 May 2009
My view on the MPs expenses tittle-tattle and gossip appearing in The Daily Telegraph

A Parship looking like a parsnip

Thursday, 11 December 2008
Do dating sites have much to offer or are they just money spinners for those who pretend to offer the possibility of love?

Rough Spelling Though Thought Tough Enough

Friday, 12 September 2008
It is just plain heresy for a Professor of Phonetics to suggest that the way we spell words in UK English makes students under-achievers.

The Yesterday Telegraph for breakfast

Wednesday, 14 May 2008
I have a gotten a reply from the Daily Telegraph, they would not be ensuring the paper arrives early in Gran Canaria

Spotting the English from afar

Friday, 2 May 2008
What reputations the English have, in public, at dinner and in sport.

I need a early-bird paperboy

Tuesday, 29 April 2008
I need my newspaper and it does not arrive early enough for breakfast.

Microsoft: Give me English in the Netherlands

Friday, 15 February 2008
When Microsoft sends me email that acknowledges my professional use of trheir services, I want to be addressed in English regardless of the fact that live in the Dutch.

I want the option to choose as request, it is surely not a complaint.

My maƮtre d'hotel is a car salesman

Tuesday, 25 December 2007
Of hotels, service, buffets, balloons and society.

Local situations in global straits

Tuesday, 16 October 2007
How global issues show up in my local environment.

A class struggle disguised as news

Monday, 4 June 2007
Class still counts for much in England even though it is not made too obvious to notice. The Daily Telegraph dabbles in these murky waters for an ulterior motive and one is not impressed.

Slamming the closet doors

Monday, 7 May 2007
Coming out of closets in pink lists as the age of discretion becomes a distant memory.

Newspapers - Is it still my country?

Thursday, 3 May 2007
Subscriptions, newspapers and ideological leanings - have things changed in the UK in the last 20 years?

Does your inside leg have class?

Wednesday, 18 April 2007
The class struggle is alive and well in British society and the chattering classes are caught adrift of the aristocrats.

Ban Ki-moon ducks for dear life

Friday, 23 March 2007
It would appear diplomats no more attend finishing school and hence do not exude airs and graces but common instincts of involuntary self-preservation. The UN Secretary General showed in Baghdad yesterday how low the bar now is.

Are You Being Served?

Thursday, 8 March 2007
John Inman died this morning, it marks the passing of an age of good laughter and discretion.

Of food, class, greasy kebabs and Eton

Thursday, 6 April 2006
Having watched an episode of Eating With... on the BBC, it is nice to see people take cooking seriously, especially the POSH types.

First female ... having my first period

Monday, 3 April 2006
This is a review of a book flying off the shelves in the Netherlands documenting a variant of spoken English called Denglish where Dutch words and sentences are literally translated to English. I laughed, whenever happened to the witnesses.