Why is the Chancellor quoting Guy Fawkes?

Adam   Wed Nov 26, 2008 7:51 pm GMT
With the once-booming British economy about to experience its first recession since the early 1990s, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Alistair Darling, delivered his emergency Budget to the House of Commons on Monday. Shown live on national TV, he told us in his speech the actios he is going to take to try and help the economy to recover.

The Chancellor likes to use the phrase "exceptional times that required exceptional measures" and used it more than once in his speech to Parliament.

But does the Chancellor know the origins of the phrase?



Why is Alistair Darling quoting Guy Fawkes?



By Denise Winterman
BBC News Magazine


Revealing his plans to head off a long-lasting recession, Chancellor Alastair Darling said these were exceptional times that required exceptional measures. Does he know he's quoting a man who tried to blow up Parliament?

The times we are living in are quite exceptional, don't you know. Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling told us so in Monday's pre-Budget report, using what is rapidly becoming the phrase du jour.

In recent weeks the line "exceptional times that required exceptional measures" has been delivered by his boss Gordon Brown. By Jose Manuel Barroso, the President of the European Commission. And by the governor of the Bank of England, Mervyn King.

It's a well-known phrase and the variations are plentiful. As well as exceptional, times are often desperate, drastic or extreme, and can require action as well as measures. We all get the drift, but where does the phrase come from?

While no original source is credited, the origins of the saying go back centuries and it is very similar to the Latin Extremis malis extrema remedia. This translates as "extreme remedies for extreme ills".

The earliest English records date back to the mid 16th Century, when it was a popular proverb, says Elizabeth Knowles, editor of The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations. And like today, there were lots of variations.

"That's how the proverbial usually works - you get a sense and a balance of the meaning but the words might differ slightly," she says. "In this case it always means an unusual response to an unusual need."

To be or...

The proverb was also used by Shakespeare about the turn of the 17th Century. In Hamlet he wrote: "Diseases desperate grown, by desperate alliances are relieved, or not at all."

It was most famously used about the same time by a man who was not a fan of politicians - Guy Fawkes. He tried to wipe out King James I and his entire government by blowing up the Houses of Parliament.
Shakespeare put the phrase in Hamlet's mouth

When questioned by the King and council immediately after his arrest on 6 November, 1605, he reportedly said: "Desperate diseases require desperate measures."

Use of the word "exceptional" in the saying dates from the end of the 19th Century, says Ms Knowles.

"It can be traced back to a parliamentary debate," she says. "It seems the word 'exceptional' is used mainly in legal or political fields."

The reason such phrases become so ubiquitous is because they add some sort of literary weight to a speech, says the Oxford University lexicographer, Charlotte Brewer.

"Such sayings act as pithy pearls of wisdom, they're basically very early soundbites. By quoting them people are tapping into a cultural tradition. The sayings are seen as respectable and people accept them as a piece of received wisdom."

news.bbc.co.uk
Jerry   Thu Nov 27, 2008 6:55 am GMT
Yes, a most interesting question.
Felganhouer   Thu Nov 27, 2008 7:06 am GMT
It is inevitable, due to redundancies within the English language.
Andy   Thu Nov 27, 2008 1:14 pm GMT
Maybe it's because Alistair Darling doesn't have any imagination.
svealander   Thu Nov 27, 2008 2:31 pm GMT
He doesn't write his own speeches. One of the new graduates who does probably thought it sounded grand.