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- <text>
- <title>
- (Churchill) The Prime Backbencher
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--Churchill Portrait
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- April 19, 1955
- The Prime Backbencher
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> The curtain rang up on the final act of Winston Churchill's
- long and dramatic career last week. Even a statesman with his
- great flair for drama could have asked for no more effective
- tableau. There at stage center, its polished brass numerals
- gleaming in the lamplight of London's Downing Street, was the
- famed, ebony-black door marked "10." Choking the narrow street but
- held back to a respectful distance by alert bobbies were crowds
- of Londoners whose suspenseful interest in the drama was drawn
- taut by the lack of printed news caused by a newspaper strike. At
- 8:30 a spatter of rain caught the crowd's attention, for a
- moment, and just then, a bobby stepped up to the closed door. He
- knocked lightly to herald the approach of royalty, just turning
- the corner in a huge red-and-black Rolls. Instantly the historic
- door was flung open, and out of it, just behind his tiaraed wife,
- stepped Sir Winston Churchill, K.G.
- </p>
- <p> Resplendent in silken knee breeches and the broad blue sash
- of the Garter, he bowed low, first to bestow a token kiss on the
- young sovereign's hand, and again before shaking hands with her
- husband, Prince Philip.
- </p>
- <p> Then the scene shifted. The lights went up and the stage
- expanded to reveal the glittering, oak-paneled prime ministerial
- dining room inside. Portraits of Wellington, Nelson, Pitt and Fox
- stared down from the walls as the guests took their seats. Garbed
- in full uniform or official court dress, some 50 of them were
- ranged along the U-shaped table. There were the bemedaled
- Generals Montgomery and Alexander, who had led great armies under
- Winston Churchill's direction during World War II. There was
- quiet, modest Clem Attlee, his longtime colleague and longtime
- opponent. There, gracious and smiling, was the widow of Neville
- Chamberlain, the prewar Prime Minister whose errors Churchill
- redeemed but never condemned. There, still patient and
- distinguished with years and honors in his own right, was the
- Churchillian heir apparent, Sir Anthony Eden, and his 34-year-old
- wife, Churchill's niece Clarissa. There, along with the beautiful
- young Queen to whom he had given counsel almost from infancy,
- were dukes, marquesses, viscounts, friends high and low, each as
- attentive and respectful as Elizabeth herself.
- </p>
- <p> With These Credentials. In raising his glass to the young
- Queen, 80-year-old Sir Winston asked for forgiveness due an old
- man. "Having served in office or in parliament under four
- sovereigns," he said, "I felt, with these credentials, that in
- asking Your Majesty's gracious permission to propose this toast,
- I should not be leading to the creation of a precedent which
- would often cause inconvenience.
- </p>
- <p> "Madam, I should like to express the deep and lively sense
- of gratitude which we and all your peoples feel to you and to His
- Royal Highness the Duke of Edinburgh for all the help and
- inspiration we receive in our daily lives and which spreads with
- ever-growing strength throughout the British realm and the
- Commonwealth and Empire.
- </p>
- <p> "We thank God for the gift He has bestowed upon us and vow
- ourselves anew to the sacred causes of which Your Majesty is the
- young, gleaming champion. The Queen."
- </p>
- <p> Elizabeth, whose very presence at Downing Street was
- something of a shattering of precedent, was not averse to
- shattering another. After Churchill's speech, she herself rose
- and in a clear voice announced that she was about to do what few
- sovereigns had ever done before. "I propose the health of my
- Prime Minister," she said.
- </p>
- <p> Outside in the dim street, the crowd waiting through this
- dazzling dinner at Downing Street speculated whether there would
- be any dramatic announcement that night. Next morning several
- hundred were still waiting and guessing. All morning they waited
- and talked, as the great men of the land went in and out the
- black door. By late afternoon there were more than 2,000 gawpers
- standing in the street. "I wish they'd tell us something,"
- groused a photographer. "I haven't eaten since last night."
- </p>
- <p> Off to the Palace. The door opened and an office worker
- popped out. Everyone laughed from sheer nervousness. At 4:25 the
- door opened once more and out stepped Winston Churchill, in
- striped pants, frock coat and topper. There was a sparse cheer or
- two, then suddenly the street rocked with three huge,
- earsplitting cheers of acclaim. A slight, sad smile crinkled the
- Churchillian features for a moment. Then, clamping firmly on his
- cigar, the Prime Minister climbed into his car and headed for
- Buckingham Palace.
- </p>
- <p> An hour later, after Churchill and Elizabeth talked alone, a
- palace bulletin made it official that "the Right Honorable Sir
- Winston Churchill has tendered his resignation as Prime Minister
- and First Lord of the Treasury, which her Majesty was graciously
- pleased to accept." "Good old Winnie!" shouted the crowd at
- Downing Street once again when Churchill returned. The old man
- smiled through tear-dimmed eyes, raised his fingers in the
- victory sign and went inside. Soon afterward the street was
- nearly empty once again. That evening Churchill came out of the
- house once more, climbed into his car and drove to his doctor's
- for a checkup.
- </p>
- <p> No Time for Obits. From far and wide next day the tributes
- poured in. Great contemporaries, heads of state, ancient enemies,
- old colleagues, distant admirers, journalists, historians,
- soldiers, statesmen and plain men in the street took to their
- typewriters, their telegraph pads, their microphones, their
- notepaper or simply the local pub to heap praise on a career that
- has seldom been matched.
- </p>
- <p> Germany's 79-year-old Konrad Adenauer at first refused to
- believe the news that Churchill had quit. "All of us in the free
- world need his advice and will always seek it," he said.
- </p>
- <p> "We shall never accept the thought that we are to be denied
- your counsel," said President Eisenhower.
- </p>
- <p> In the spate of encomium, Churchill was compared with
- everything, from an endless cavalry charge to Leonardo da Vinci.
- As everyone tried his best to rise to the occasion--tempted, no
- doubt, by a wish to be as eloquent as Winston Churchill himself
- would have been--the London Economist was at last moved to
- remark that "Sir Winston Churchill is not dead. He has merely
- retired from the office of Prime Minister...The time has
- fortunately not yet come to write his obituary."
- </p>
- <p> Back Bench & Goldfish. Sir Winston, reluctant to retire but
- aware that he must, refused to steal any more thunder from
- Anthony Eden by appearing in the House of Commons on the day Eden
- took over. But the back-bench seat (actually on the front bench),
- which he firmly intends to hang onto, was standing ready and
- vacant for him. "The House has today lost one of the greatest
- front-benchers in all its history," said Tory Walter Elliot, "but
- the backbenchers have gained the greatest backbencher of all
- times."
- </p>
- <p> While such tributes were being sounded in a chamber still
- vibrant with his personality, Winston Churchill himself was busy
- entertaining the Downing Street staff at tea, snapping quips at
- parlormaids and secretaries alike, and preparing to go home to
- Kent.
- </p>
- <p> When at last he was bundled, along with his poodle Rufus and
- his parakeet Toby, into one of the two cars headed for Chartwell,
- tears stood once again in the old man's eyes. But by the time he
- reached his Kent home, the old Churchillian spirit was back to
- par. Some 30 villagers were on hand to meet him at the gate, and
- Churchill greeted them warmly. "Come on inside the grounds," he
- urged enthusiastically. "Come on, all of you, and have a look at
- my goldfish." The villagers swarmed in to take advantage of the
- invitation. "Yes," said Churchill, just before entering the
- house, "it's good to be home."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-