On 2 March, Sotheby’s auction house will sell a few
hundred items from the collection of the late Deborah, Duchess of Devonshire, who died in 2014 aged 94.
I became acquainted with Debo, the youngest of the
spectacular Mitford sisters, through a friend of my friend Dick. You may recall
that for a couple of years I’ve acted as Dick’s Pony Express as he and his wife
sojourned through many adventures in middle Europe (in 2014) and Italy (last
year). It was through this function that I “met” Florence, who in turn
introduced me to the traveler, war hero, writer and bon vivant Patrick Leigh Fermor.
Fermor deserves one or more posts all to himself, as does
Debo. Surrounded by a family full of what might charitably be referred to as
“eccentrics”, she had no inclination for politics like her sisters (Diana
married Oswald Mosley, leader of the British Union of Fascists; Unity was a
fervent acolyte of Hitler; and Jessica carried far more than a card as a
Communist) and claimed to have no intellect at all. This is belied by both her
correspondence (holding her own against the likes of Evelyn Waugh and Fermor)
and the many books she wrote. But what she most loved was country
pursuits—being surrounded by animals—which is reflected in a number of the
items up for auction.
She adored chickens, and restored or stabilized several
breeds of cattle or sheep on her various estates. Possibly both; I disremember
at the moment. She was also a remarkably astute entrepreneur and is largely
credited with saving Chatsworth, the ducal seat, from being sent to the
metaphoric knackers’ yard and ultimately turned into weekend houses, or worse.
Under her management Chatsworth became a self-sustaining Stately Home and
working farm. She oversaw all the operations, inside and out.
But today’s post isn’t really about Debo, or even her
things, directly. It’s about Sotheby’s. Because when I heard about the auction,
I went online to see what the collection might comprise. Sure enough—plenty of
chicken tschatschkes, but also some furniture (well worn, from the looks of
it), jewelry and other things. (Including at least some of her Elvis Presley
ephemera. Yes, she was a fan.) And while I can’t afford to bid on any of it, I
conceived a desire for having the catalog—it’s as close as I’m getting to any
of her things unless I can make a trip to Chatsworth, which is not on the cards
in the foreseeable future.
Well, I went through their process of registering, hit
Submit, and then got an error message. Like most web error messages, it didn’t
really give me any useful information, just said that something had gone
terribly wrong, and if I cared at all about correcting it, I might call a
number in New York.
Well, I did, so I did. And a very smooth woman
(presumably in the web tech support department) with a posh English accent
walked me through the process of getting a Sotheby’s account (not specific to
any particular auction), and then said that if I wanted a catalog, she could
connect me with someone in that department, who could take my order over the
phone.
Well, hurrah—that’s what she did, and I spoke to another
woman with what Nancy Mitford would have described as a “U accent” (for upper
class), who happily took my details and told me I should have my catalog in a
couple of business days.
But here’s what I wonder: what’s with the posh-sounding
birds at Sotheby’s? Does the 212 phone number run VoIP to a call centre in Surrey?
Do they only hire U-speakers? Or are they all somewhere in the Bronx but
they’ve undergone mandatory training in the proper language and accent for an
establishment such as this?
I dunno, although I will say that the Sotheby’s website
is one of the least intuitive I’ve come across in a while, and it throws way
too many error messages in what should be seemless navigation. (What’s with not
recognizing either “Devonshire” or “Duchess of Devonshire” in your search
engine and making me go out to Google to get back in to the right page? Plus: I
keep getting emails congratulating me on my successful registration. One would
have been sufficient.)
But speculating on the auction house’s hiring practices
is almost as amusing as pretending I’ll be bidding in the three or four figures
(GBP) on one of Debo’s Elvis memorabilia, broaches shaped like insects or
various pottery chickens.
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