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#41
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I'll provide the exact passage for you on Thursday. Page number and all. As I have already stated, Sarah Bradford has no reason to lie or embellish. She is not and was not a member of the Diana Set...she is more of an Establishment member since her husband is a peer(Viscount Bangor?) She has no dog in this fight as we say here in the US. But no problem...Thursday I will be happy to quote the passage and the page and even the source if Viscountess Bangor lists them in her book. Last edited by CaliforniaDreamin; 06-10-2008 at 09:18 PM. |
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#42
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The Past is the Past Quis custodiet ipsos custodes - Who will watch the watchers? They started with me, it moved to you, who next?
Everything you wish for me, I send it back to thee times three |
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#43
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The Past is the Past Quis custodiet ipsos custodes - Who will watch the watchers? They started with me, it moved to you, who next?
Everything you wish for me, I send it back to thee times three |
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#44
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I remember seeing that passage. Including the French kissing, and the comment from Andrew Parker Bowles that HRH seemed very fond of his wife or something equally obvious. I don't remember the book, though. I'll try and find it. I do remember that the chapter containing this description was called "Kissing Camilla."
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#45
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I well remember reading in the 70s about the press knowing that Charles often would ask his women friends to escort him publically so he could hide the real woman he was interested with. And this was in the late seventies before his marriage. The press gave the impression that it was not one woman during all this time but that Charles was hiding different romantic interests at different times. I don't know how they'd know that but I suspect if Charles had kept a silent flame for Camilla all that time, the press would have eventually found out as they later did with Diana. I remember thinking at the time that he took the precaution simply because Lady Jane Wellesley had been harassed by the press so much during their 2 year courtship and he did not want a repeat of what happened to Lady Jane.
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"One thing we can do is make the choice to view the world in a healthy way. We can choose to see the world as safe with only moments of danger rather than seeing the world as dangerous with only moments of safety." -- Deepak Chopra
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#46
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Elspeth the book I saw the passage in was from Sarah Bradford's "Diana"...I read it just this past Sunday and it shocked and repulsed me. APB wasn't upset though, of course he had not a leg to stand on considering what he was up to himself. I am reading the paperback version and I will bring the book on Thursday so I can confirm the chapter and pages, etc. Last edited by CaliforniaDreamin; 06-10-2008 at 09:25 PM. |
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#47
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At the great ball that preceded their wedding, Charles opened the ball by dancing with his fiancee Diana only once the entire evening. He then spent the rest of the night dancing attendance on Mrs Parker Bowles, and glued to her side. It was roughly two nights before the wedding, and Diana could not back out then. For all her horrible and ill-advised behavior during her marriage and afterward it's information like this that makes me have more sympathy for Diana in this entire tragic fiasco than I could ever have for Charles and Camilla. The poor girl really never had a chance. |
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#48
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It is page 59 of the Bradford book for purity. "Jane Ward" a former girlfriend recalled, that Charles and Camilla spent the whole evening together, basically dancing and behaving passionately to one another, " French Kissing", etc, etc. Andrew could not have cared less, also a quote. Of course, The lord, himself, cannot authenticate this, thus to some it must be a lie. I asked the Lord's forgiveness. Sarah Bradford is not given to sensation or lies in her very admired career. Charles and Camilla do and did love each other and to that end they did what they wished. They just hoped for more circumspection. As someone else stated, he married the wrong person for that. Camilla and he could have carried on for life for all Andrew cared, as long as it didn't appear in the papers.
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#49
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Well, here's one reference to the French kissing, from Christopher Wilson's "The Windsor Knot," chapter "Kissing Camilla," p. 85-86.
'The Cirencester Polo Club Ball was, as always, a private affair with no members of the press or public allowed. A biannual celebration, it was remarkable that year only because it was exceptionally hot: A marquee was built on the lawns of Cirencester House, a large Cotswold stone edifice, set in fifteen thousand acres, belonging to Earl Bathurst, and around three hundred and fifty black-tied and bejeweled guests were expected. The guest of honor would be the Prince of Wales, a man who adored the turf of the Cirencester ground and played there reguarly. Among the other guests were Andrew and Camilla Parker Bowles. It was a glittering occasion where the wine flowed and the hot summer evening raised the temperatures of all but the dullest reveler. "But what happened was quite astonishing," recalled one guest that night, Charles's former girlfriend Jane Ward. "Charles and the Parker Bowleses shared the same table, and Charles spent the whole evening dancing with Camilla. They were kissing passionately as they danced - on and on they went, kissing each other, French kissing, dance after dance. "Andrew wasn't quite sure how to react - he sat there smiling and saying to people: 'HRH is very fond of my wife. And she appears to be very fond of him.' He seemed not uncomfortable with what was going on, but other people were, especially the older ones. Some were embarrassed and shocked and upset because the whole thing was so blatant," went on Ms. Ward. "It's bad enough, in such company, to monopolize one woman all evening. It's worse if it's someone else's wife. But the way they were behaving was completely beyond the pale." '
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#50
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I had a look at the Bradford book, and she cites the above passage from the Wilson book as her source. Since she seememd to be trying to write a careful and accurate biography, and since the source of this information was named, I assume she did some checking and satisfied herself as far as possible that there was some truth to it before including it in her book.
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#51
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![]() As for me, I believe that Camilla was head over heels in love with the dashing and romantic APB. I also believe that Camilla and Charles shared an abiding friendship. Further I believe it is possible that Charles may have been head-over-heels in love with Camilla, but suffered from the "boy next door" syndrome. The friend in which Camilla confided. Oh well, such is life. ![]()
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MARG "Words ought to be a little wild, for they are assualts of thoughts on the unthinking." - JM Keynes |
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#52
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This standard holds across the forums; it's just that the Charles-Diana business is a little unusual in how much was said at second or third hand, and how much of this second- and third-hand stuff is reported as though it was stated verbatim by the person concerned. Then of course we have the tabloid media with their "a source close to" and "a friend of the prince/princess" and "we can now reveal based on a confidential tipoff" and all that good stuff. It isn't always easy to distinguish primary sources from secondary sources from outright fiction, but it makes for more productive conversations if people can at least make a good-faith attempt. Quote:
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Last edited by Elspeth; 06-11-2008 at 10:05 AM. |
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#53
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" Certainly the pair looked the pictures of happiness yesterday as, dressed almost identically in tartan, they visited the village of Ballater, Royal Deeside, close to Birkhall, their Scottish home. The couple are spending a fortnight on the estate where they honeymooned three years ago, broken by visit to Lincolnshire tomorrow to see Prince William before he receives his RAF wings on Friday." Now give me these problems any day... noone whose marriage has real problems spends a fortnight together in a secluded corner of Scotland when in London two little baby grand-daughters are waiting for their gran to come visiting....
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'To dare is to lose one step for but a moment, not to dare is to lose oneself forever' - Crown Prince Frederick of Denmark in a letter to Miss Mary Donaldson as stated by them on their official engagement interview. |
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#54
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Diana had the same chance as Amanda Knatchbull and Jane Wellesley.
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'To dare is to lose one step for but a moment, not to dare is to lose oneself forever' - Crown Prince Frederick of Denmark in a letter to Miss Mary Donaldson as stated by them on their official engagement interview. |
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#55
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