Colleagues:
 
I present some context on this story:
 
It is documented that Churchill dutifully sent signed copies of all his books 
to Edward, Prince of Wales / King Edward VIII / Duke of Windsor who, a 
notorious bibliophobe, almost certainly never read any of them but usually did 
acknowledge receipt with a thank-you note.  Thus, Sarah Churchill's account has 
the ring of authenticity.

David Freeman
 

--- On Sun, 11/13/11, Stan A. Orchard <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Stan A. Orchard <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [ChurchillChat] Re: Author Put-down
To: [email protected]
Date: Sunday, November 13, 2011, 1:11 AM



#yiv1895069821 DIV {
MARGIN:0px;}



It isn't clear to me that the line was meant as a put-down, or interpreted that 
way by the family.  It may be a thoughtless and tactless but otherwise 
legitimate expression of gratitude from someone with little interest in serious 
literature...someone as twittish as Edward VIII.  The family may have been 
laughing at an expression of sincere pompous buffoonery rather than cutting 
wit, and they would have also been intimately familiar with the character and 
position of the person who wrote it which would have made its irony all the 
funnier to them.  I can also imagine Churchill shaking his head and sharing a 
chuckle.
 
Stan     

----- Original Message ----- 
From: [email protected] 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Saturday, November 12, 2011 8:44 AM
Subject: Re: [ChurchillChat] Re: Author Put-down



I could easily be wrong on who it was.  These type of stories have a habit of 
attaching themselves to all sorts of people.  Still, the family may have 
thought it was funny - it is the type of thing which is funny well afterward, 
but I wonder what WSC thought?

Jonathan





From: "Editor, Finest Hour" <[email protected]>
To: ChurchillChat <[email protected]>
Sent: Sat, November 12, 2011 5:41:26 AM
Subject: [ChurchillChat] Re: Author Put-down

Jonathan, Are we sure this was Lord Londonderry? Have always thought
it was Edward VIII, later Duke of Windsor.

Sarah Churchill reports in her THREAD IN THE TAPESTRY (41): “... my
father received a note from a friend of royal lineage which said:
'Dear Winston, Thank you for your book, I have put it on the shelf
with the others.' The family, on being told this by my mother,
collapsed in laughter. It evoked for us the famous story of what
George III, the then Duke of Gloucester, is supposed to have said to
Mr Gibbon: 'Another damned thick square book! Always scribble,
scribble, eh Mr Gibbon?'"

Note her description of “a friend of royal lineage.”

Manchester in his LAST LION vol. II apparently mixed this up when he
said (p18) that the remark was from the Duke of Gloucester.

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