Скачать книгу

Pebbleton

      

       A Warning from Bunty

      

       Public Servants

      

       A Table for Three

      

       The Sports and Social

      

       In the Master’s House

      

       Family Life

      

       Barker

      

       Health and Efficiency

      

       Cleanliness

      

       How to Cure a Columnist

      

       Bathtime Talk

      

       Immorality

      

       Whitehall Life

      

       The Education of David Petrie

      

       A Moving Speech

      

       The Joy of Routine

      

       In the Country

      

       A Sermon in Barker

      

       What Happened to the Idea?

      

       How to Bring Down a Prime Minister

      

       The Choice

      

       A Flying Pot

      

       Building a Better World

      

       To Glaikit – and Back

      

       Back in Barker

      

       In the Hotel

      

       The Happy Accident

      

       A Frank Talk

      

       In the Gallery

      

       A Clever Plan

      

       Showtime

      

       A Stranger in Barker

      

       The Triumph of the Fourth Estate

      

       A Minor Failure of Empathy

      

       Making Good

      

       Final Reckonings

      

       Postscript

      

       Also by Andrew Marr

      

       About the Publisher

       Prologue

       Photographs

       A good politician seizes the moment; and if the moment resists, she knocks the bugger against a hard surface until it gives up.

      The Master

      There are special days. Not so many. Far more often come the amiable days when we dress, shower, eat and work, when we laugh at one another and we pass on secrets, and we eat moist chicken and drink cold beer … and none of it really touches our inner selves. Most days we slip through, the snow creaking, barely touching the sides. As in a symphony, not every moment – not every day – can be intense. And there are also the days whose smells, music and colours burn themselves into us so that we are changed for good. On such days, speckles of dirt on a kettle lid can be beautiful, and a song whistled in the street can sit inside our skulls forevermore.

      Caro Phillips, who was a good person, believed that today would be a special day. She pulled open the curtains and a cold, pre-dawn light filled her bedroom.

      She had acted ruthlessly. Because she had acted, everything had changed. She saw the orange and green rug under her bare feet properly, for the first time. She’d bought it years before. Beautiful, just beautiful. She saw her dressing gown flopping from its hook on the door, a dollop of shadow beside it, and felt love for its soft familiarity. She saw her own shadow, quivering, and reached

Скачать книгу