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Charles and Camilla are proof that if you stick at it, second marriages can work

Charles and Camilla are proof that if you stick at it, second marriages can work

Yahoo08-04-2025
It's hard to think of a British family that hasn't been affected by infidelity and divorce in some way.
Three of my good friends' marriages have collapsed in messy circumstances in recent years. And I'm only too aware that the success of my parents' 24-year marriage – until death did them part – was founded on the fact that my father had left at least one marriage, more likely two, behind him (the less documented one was in Greece during the 1940s) and at least two other children, probably more.
Was my dad a good or bad husband? The answer is surely both. My four siblings and I wouldn't have existed without his errant ways.
Which takes us to the highest-profile second marriage in the land. This Wednesday marks 20 years since Prince Charles married Camilla Parker Bowles at Windsor Guildhall, followed by a blessing ceremony at St George's Chapel with an act of penitence, where the couple acknowledged their 'sins and wickedness'. There were some who would have liked to see them crawl on broken glass to Canterbury for having restarted their youthful love affair once wed to other people – but two decades is an awfully long time to maintain that level of hyperventilating self-righteousness.
You would hope, by now, that pretty much everyone agrees that this septuagenarian couple have earned their marital happiness and have demonstrated that second-attempt marriages can be models of steadfastness, despite the waywardness that may have preceded them.
If you're a dyed-in-the-wool romantic, as I am, it's inspiring to see that heartbreak and errors of judgment need not be repeated. Samuel Johnson famously said of second marriages that they were the 'triumph of hope over experience', but fascinatingly the stats in the UK show the very reverse. According to the last census, 42 per cent of first marriages in the UK end in divorce, but only 31 per cent of second ones. Relationship counsellors speculate that this has much to do with the age, wisdom and tolerance of the participants.
Equally interesting is the fact that this appears to be a very British phenomenon. In the US, about 60 per cent of second-time-round couples find themselves divorced yet again. Which left me wondering whether the Yanks treat marriage like they do businesses, attaching far less stigma to bankruptcy and the concept of rising phoenix-like from the flames, again and yet again.
As Hillary Clinton said of Donald Trump in 2016: 'You've taken business bankruptcies six times.' Maybe that formula works for ruthless entrepreneurs, but when you attach it to wedlock, it's a different business. Just look at Trump's third wife (and, Lord knows, what number consort), Melania. Does she look as contented with her spouse as twinkly eyed Queen Camilla does? I think not.
I was intrigued to learn when talking last week to the American psychiatrist Scott Haltzman, the author of The Secrets of Surviving Infidelity, that one key piece of advice to couples who seek counselling over the issue is to ask their therapist how many times they themselves have been married.
He says if it's more than twice, strike them off your list because their insights may be greater on things that fall apart, rather than stick. And one thing you can say about Charles and Camilla is that the glue of mutual attraction has stuck fast, despite breaks and hiatuses, since first meeting at that fateful polo match in 1970.
Having reached an age where divorced friends and members of my family are introducing new partners to their children and intimate circles, it's uplifting to have our King and Queen as beacons of hope for redemption. Who would begrudge this happy ending?
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Two pubs claim to be London's oldest riverside pub. Which one is right?
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This year an estimated 378 venues are set to shutter across England, Wales, and Scotland, according to the British Beer and Pub Association. 'When a pub closes, it puts people out of a job, deprives communities of their heart and soul and hurts the local economy,' said Emma McClarkin, head of the BBPA. Pubs across the country have been forced to find new ways to attract customers. History is a big draw for pubgoers, with a trip to a traditional British pub coming in high on tourists' London bucket lists, raising the stakes of the Prospect and the Mayflower's competition. A 'loving rivalry' The Prospect claims it was established in 1520, with its original flagstone surviving an arson attack in 1666 — the same year as the Great Fire of London. The pub was outside of the city limits at that time and was not affected by the conflagration that gutted the medieval city. Justin Billington, assistant manager at the Prospect, said some people date the pub to its full reconstruction in 1774 after the 1666 fire. But he doesn't see it that way, noting that it operated continuously. The day after the fire, the workers rolled out a barrel of beer that had survived the flames and locals showed up with their tankards, drinking vessels, and enjoyed a drink on the spot. There were several reconstructions in the pub's subsequent history, but none withstood the salt water and shifting foundations of the Thames, Billington explained. Not, that is, until 1774 when the retired captain of a merchant ship called 'The Prospect' rebuilt it using the ship. 'This rebuild held and continues to hold on for dear life,' he said. If the pub was actually established in 1774, that would make the Mayflower — established in the 16th century — older. But there are no hard feelings between the pubs as Billington described their competition as a 'loving rivalry.' 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