Contents
Preface: (North) Circular thoughts
Part One: Formations
‘A nostalgist with a purpose’: Early life in North London and Nympsfield
‘You never quite leave your first university’: Cambridge, 1966–9
Establishment and meritocracy (Queen Mary valedictory lecture, 7 October 2014)
‘Do I detect a note of flattery in your voice?’: Becoming a journalist, Boston and London, 1971–3
Growing up on The Times, 1974–84
‘A bloody nuisance but in the end he’s on the side of the Queen’: Working the Whitehall beat, 1975–92
The fraction of the curve: Journalism and contemporary history
Part Two: Crown and Constitution
The Queen as a Heineken-lager monarch: The parts of the constitution that only she can reach ( Jubilee Lecture series, Dulwich Picture Gallery, 3 January 2012)
The National Royal Service
A UK state of mind
Britain and Europe: The emotional deficit (Lecture given to the University of Iceland/British Embassy, Reykjavik, 18 May 2007)
Keeping calm and carrying on: British crises since 1945 and the special case of Brexit (Vice-Chancellor’s Lecture, University of Birmingham, 12 June 2017)
On the Shelf: On Walter Bagehot’s The English Constitution (The Sunday Times, 3 December 1995)
Speech on the Rwanda Bill (House of Lords, 29 January 2024)
Part Three: Prime Ministers, Parliament, and Politicians
Never did so many talk such drivel: On the quality of political language today (The Independent, 25 September 1989)
What are prime ministers for? (Lecture at the Cheltenham Literature Festival, 6 October 2017)
How to build a prime minister
The incomparable Clem (Lecture to mark the unveiling of the statue of Clement Attlee, Queen Mary, 2011)
Harold Macmillan: Healer of the nation’s scars (The Listener, 8 January 1987)
Whitehall brief: Shades of a Home Counties Boudicca (The Times, 17 May 1983)
Exit the Tigress (The Tablet, 13 April 2013)
The rise of Napoleon Blair (The Times, 25 September 2000)
Tony’s signature: The Blair style of government since 1997 (The Alistair Berkley Lecture, Robinson College, Cambridge, 2006)
The undoing of prime ministers
Parliament and the state (The Speaker’s Lecture, Houses of Parliament, 18 November 2014)
Part Four: On Crown Service
Why the best job in the Civil Service involves carrying the prime minister’s bag (The Times, 10 November 1976)
The Cabinet Office: A magnificent piece of powerful bureaucratic machinery (The Times, 8 March 1976)
Whitehall brief: How public servants keep it private (The Times, 22 September 1981)
No 10 in the Jay-Lynn eye: The megaphone theory of ‘Yes Minister’ (The Listener, 19 and 26 December 1985)
The Treasury: Bank manager and probation officer rolled into one (The Times, 28 March 1977)
The Good and the Great: The most elevated and distinguished casualties of the Thatcher years (The Listener, 7 February 1985)
Lord Franks: The lord who sits in judgement (The Times, 17 January 1983)
Royal commissions: New social foundations lack crucial commissions (The Independent, 25 April 1988)
Afterthoughts
Acknowledgements
Also by Peter Hennessy