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Sorry for top posting, but I want this to be easily found. (Feel free to move it to a better location on this page, even into its own section.)
I was going through some of my grandfather's things and found a "program?" for a meeting of the "Merrie England Club". It seems legitimate to me as it had some notable attendees, and it took place at the HOUSE OF COMMONS, St George's Day, Thursday April 23rd, 1931.
Is this relevant to this page, and if so would you like images of the program (and of the signatures on the back)?— Precedingunsigned comment added byDonMcL123 (talk •contribs)17:15, 3 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Merry England (or 'Olde England') is also used as a racial slur by many Americans, as seen in things like theOlde English District or similarly named Americantheme pubs. Should we address this?Matthew Platts 23:10, 10 Apr 2005 (UTC)
And snowy Christmas sards depicting Merry Old England also lead to the common American misconception that snow is common in England, when it is in reality about as rare as in the far southeast US. Americans have similar misconceptions regarding the Netherlands. Or, may this imagery be a relic of the Maunder minimum/Little Ice Age era?—Precedingunsigned comment added by199.115.9.254 (talk)20:48, 18 February 2009 (UTC)[reply]
There is a view that the comments on John Major is not required in this article.
My view is that he is an example of a prominent believer in Merry England, and therefore it is not inappropriate.--jrleighton 10:09, 17 August 2005 (UTC)
Matthew Platts 09:55, 17 August 2005
Stanley Baldwin was much better at expressing the escapist theme of village England than Major was.Johnbull00:29, 28 September 2005 (UTC)[reply]
Unfortunately, there isn't a complete copy of the relevant speech on the internet. But Major insists in his memoirs that the relevant passage (which quoted from Orwell) was misinterpreted, and I'm inclined to believe that this is the case. I'm not sure if the issue is worth a paragraph of its own.Ancus16:52, 8 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]
The reference to the Gothic revival is bizarre. Gothic architecture was of course a pan-European 'movement,' but English Gothic (at least after c. 1200) really _was_ fairly distinct from (though not uninfluenced by) Continental Gothic. Terms such as Early English, Decorated and Perpendicular refer to real, and distinclty English, architectural and artistic styles.
Text removed from article in chief, preserved here. Not sure I follow the complete tenor of the argument anyways, which seems to be an anti-Protestant rant. (Anon.)
Is this really the right phrase?
TheLateDentarthurdent10:16, 16 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
Are deep and little different than merry? Or are they perjorative terms for merry? The article didn't make it clear (at least not clear enough for me).
I came upon this article by combo-Googling certain names in Patrick's Wright's piece in theLondon Review of Books, 7 Sept. 2006. It's a handy synopsis as far as it goes, but hardly authoritative. The following comments amount to a plea by a non-expert for a bit more focus and rigour. From the top:
MERRY ENGLAND
1. "It is a utopian and not completely consistent vision: a revisited England, [quotation]." (a) The term "revisited England" is obscure as it stands: is it short for "revisited England of the mind" or something of the sort? (b) Is the quotation real? If so, who said it?
2. The 1st para. of "Merry England" is quite strong. I wonder: can Robin Hood and His Merry Men be tied in?
3. 2nd para. "At various times since the Middle Ages" is distressingly vague. The list that follows is unacceptably random. (a) "authors" would seem to comprise poets and propagandists. (b) What are "romanticists"? (c) What are "others"?
4. 3rd para. (a) The jump to Gothic Revival is disconcerting: it needs a segue. (b) Evidently the term Jacobethan was coined by Betjeman: the term should be attributed and linked. (c) The sentence beginning "They were peopled ..." contains too many ideas in confusing juxtaposition: e.g., "not Catholic ... yet full of lively detail." The parenthesis needs elaboration.
5. 4th to 6th paras. (a) Useful as far as they go, but they need to be synthesized in a discussion of conservative and radical reactions against industrial modernity. One of the most fascinating aspects of "Merry England" is its appeal to both reactionary and revolutionary critics of the new industrial order and the synthesis of those responses in the thought of William Morris, which in turn appealed to thinkers as diverse as Tolkien and E.P. Thompson. (b) I don't understand the meaning of "interested" in the 1st sentence of para. 4, or that of the first clause of the 2nd sentence. (c) In 6th para., presumably "version" should be "vision".
6. 7th para. The allusion to Storm Jameson needs clarifying.
DEEP ENGLAND
No doubt more could be said, but what is said is logical. But in the 3rd para., the allusions to "a particular political purpose" and "some political organisations" are disappointingly vague. And does "retrospective" mean "reactionary"? Why not say so? If not, what?'
"The concept of Deep England may imply an explicit opposition...." How does one imply an explicit opposition? Something is either explicit or implicit, and cannot be both.
LITTLE ENGLAND AND PROPAGANDA
Also rather sketchy. The allusion toJourney Through England needs explaining.
LITERATURE AND THE ARTS
(a) I don't understand the first sentence. (b) What does "Reference points might be taken as" (2nd para.) mean? (c) What is the "shift" that the quotation from Moorcock supposedly illustrates? Is the quotation accurate? I have my suspicions about the 2nd sentence (must check).
pmr13:03, 11 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]
There ought to be a reference to Belloc and Chesterton here I think as well. And then there's C S Lewis and Charles Williams...Deipnosophista (talk)17:54, 27 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]
And Hobsbawn's concept, the Invention of History.Profhum (talk)10:07, 20 December 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Nobody believes more fully in Merry England than we Americans, particularly the vast majority, who have never been to England. As I write, here in San Francisco, there is the annual Dickens Christmas Fair going on by the Bay-- actors dressed up as Dickens characters in a charming recreation of Victorian London that the audience strolls around in. American children are watching the latest Harry Potter movie at the Cineplex, and reading the book (even if they read no other books.) Oprah has made Dickens her new author in the Oprah reading club. (Too complicated to explain.) Nobody has ever been more Anglophile or Merry England than the 1930s Hollywood Jewish movie moguls. Look at the quaint representation of England in the movies they made-- Goodbye, Mr Chips, Mrs. Miniver... And speaking of Miniver, if America had not believed in Merry England, it would have followed Charles Lindbergh and the America Firsters and let the Germans do what they wanted to England. The Special Relationship's power rests on the Merry England myth in the United States. Americans on their first visit to the England, encountering the country Theodore Dalrymple writes about instead of Merry England, are shocked. It's depressing to sit in a lovely pub in the green countryside and be given an amateur anti American lecture full of schoolboy Marx. The upcoming Royal Wedding will revive the whole Merry England trope. One of my students, a stocky working class lady, has gone into hock but will be there in the crowd. Merry England, then, has been an important political, military and financial asset for England.Profhum (talk)10:07, 20 December 2010 (UTC)[reply]
The reference to Hazlitt mentions his lecture/essay on Merry England as being appended to an 1819 book. The Wikipedia article on Hazlitt says that this lecture/essay was first published in 1825.
The phrase was surely popularised by Sir Walter Scott - it is in the opening sentence of Ivanhoe (1820): "In that pleasant district of merry England which is watered by the river Don...."—Precedingunsigned comment added by85.189.97.52 (talk)14:14, 19 January 2011 (UTC)[reply]
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DoesMidsomer Murders deserve a mention on this page? After all, the series became famous for using quaint, picturesque villages as its setting in every episode.Steinbach (talk)18:34, 18 August 2018 (UTC)[reply]
"If there was a period after the Black Death when labour shortages meant that agricultural workers were in stronger positions, and serfdom was consequently eroded, the growing commercialisation of agriculture – with enclosures, rising rents, and pasture displacing arable, sheep men" - not a native English speaker but I still think something else was intended here...?93.136.19.110 (talk)00:59, 26 November 2018 (UTC)[reply]