Several times in the past week, as the River Thames extended into Chertsey, the Somerset Levels became a new Lakeland and the beach at Dawlish incorporated the former railway the Prime Minister has stood and declared that he/the Government will do . . .
WHATEVER IT TAKES
I admit that in first hearing this I felt a little stirred and comforted (though not directly of course, living a few hundred feet above a river). That may have been its intended effect.
But then he's kept on saying it and now I'm becoming more analytical. Because it's nonsense, isn't it?
But then he's kept on saying it and now I'm becoming more analytical. Because it's nonsense, isn't it?
King Canute, despite his supposed error of sitting enthroned on a beach as the tide came in as if he could prevent it, wisely actually said "Let all the world know that the power of kings is empty and worthless and there
is no King worthy of the name save Him by whose will heaven and earth and sea
obey eternal laws," (Historia Anglorum, ed D E Greenway). It seems likely he deliberately set out to show he could NOT do 'whatever it takes'.
The problem, of course, is that in the face of powers too vast for politicians to control the simple, obvious thing for human beings to do is to turn to God in repentence and prayer.
But when Mr Cameron says the Government will do whatever it takes he does not in fact mean what he says if, as I suspect, what it takes is repenting or prayer . . .
The problem, of course, is that in the face of powers too vast for politicians to control the simple, obvious thing for human beings to do is to turn to God in repentence and prayer.
But when Mr Cameron says the Government will do whatever it takes he does not in fact mean what he says if, as I suspect, what it takes is repenting or prayer . . .
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