Tuning in…
Tuning in…
Desert Island Discs
Presented by Lauren Laverne
Judge who announced the Supreme Court ruling that prorogation of Parliament was unlawful; first woman law lord and Supreme Court president.
Eight records
O thou that tellest good tidings to Zion
Kathleen Ferrier, London Philharmonic Orchestra
It's a recording by Kathleen Ferrier, who was one of my parents' favourite performers, with a beautiful, beautiful contralto voice. And she came from the north of England, which of course we did too. So they had a lot of her recordings. And I've chosen, O thou that tellest good tidings to Zion, from Handel's Messiah.
After school, of course, I went to Cambridge. And this was in nineteen sixty three. The Beatles had just brought out their first album. And the first tracks I listened to with school friends, and of course spent most of my Cambridge career dancing to the Beatles and sometimes the Rolling Stones. So it's Love Me Do.
Peter Pears, Galina Vishnevskaya, London Symphony Orchestra
I was lucky enough to go to two live performances which stuck particularly in my mind. One was Jacqueline Dupré playing Elgar's Cello Concerto. But the other was one of the first three performances of Benjamin Britten's War Requiem. I already liked Benjamin Britten's music because we had sung it and studied it at school. But the War Requiem blew my mind away.
Gloria in excelsis Deo (from Mass in B minor)Favourite
Monteverdi Choir, English Baroque Soloists, Sir John Eliot Gardiner
Well, this is getting on to my adult life in Manchester, where my first husband introduced me to Bach's Mass in B minor. The piece that I particularly love from it is the Gloria, because it is such an uplifting piece of music I can imagine marching round the desert island. Conducting the choir and the orchestra as they bring out these magnificent sounds.
Sull'aria... che soave zeffiretto (from The Marriage of Figaro)
Charlotte Margiono, Barbara Bonney, Concertgebouw Orchestra
The Duet from the Marriage of Figaro between Susanna and the Countess when they are plotting against the Count. It's a very feminist opera, which must be one of the reasons why I like it so much.
GLORIA – Dublin's Lesbian and Gay Choir
Well, this is to remind me of my daughter. My daughter is gay and she is in a civil partnership with the mother of her children, and her partner is a member of Dublin's Lesbian and Gay Choir. … It's very uplifting and it will remind me of my daughter and her family.
Choir of Westminster Abbey, Simon Preston, William McKie
This is the magnificent anthem 'I Was Glad'. I chose this because it was played at the memorial service in Westminster Abbey for Lord Bingham. Tom Bingham, who to my mind was the greatest judge of the twenty first century, at least so far.
Dies irae (from Messa da Requiem)
Swedish Radio Choir, Erik Eriksen Chamber Choir, Berlin Philharmonic
This is the Dies Irae from Verdi's Requiem. Because we played it at Julian's funeral. It is the day of wrath, of course. The day of God's wrath, but it also represented, for us, the very real anger that we felt at having him taken from us so suddenly.
The keepsakes
The luxury
Puzzles for me to do, and also can provide me with a program which will enable me to write.
In conversation
Presenter asks
If you had to pitch the idea of pursuing a life in law to a young person listening, what would your opening arguments be?
They would be that the law affects us all in everything that we do. It's got everything in terms of stories, arguments, justice, injustice, what's not to like.
Presenter asks
How did you weigh up what was worth sticking your neck out for during your career?
Most of the things that I have stuck my neck out for are issues to do with the less advantaged people in society, and for a lot of my lifetime that has included women … and people with disabilities, people with mental health problems, and of course, people … without enough to live on. So, in various ways, I have felt it necessary to speak up for them.
The recording
Timestamps play the recording from that turn
Speaker 4
BBC Sounds, Music, Radio, Podcasts.
Presenter
Hello, I'm Lauren Laverne and this is the Desert Island Discs Podcast. Every week I ask my guests to choose the eight tracks, book and luxury they'd want to take with them if they were castaway to a desert island. And, for rights reasons, the music is shorter than the original broadcast. I hope you enjoy listening.
Presenter
My castaway this week is Brenda Hale, Baroness Hale of Richmond. She recently retired after three decades as a judge, leaving behind a legal career distinguished by a long list of firsts. She was the first woman and the youngest person to be appointed to the Law Commission and in 2004 became the UK's first woman lawlord. She also made history as the first woman to serve on the Supreme Court, the highest court in the land, later becoming its deputy president and then in 2017, its president. Despite leaving a skyscraper's worth of glass ceilings in her wake, it was in September 2019 that she was thrust into the spotlight when she announced the Supreme Court's judgment that the prorogation of Parliament had been unlawful. It was a landmark moment and a cultural flashpoint. That announcement and her chosen accessory that day, a twinkling spider brooch, captured the public imagination. She was called the Beyoncé of the Legal World and had a double page spread in Vogue, a far cry from the Yorkshire village where she grew up. Another famous spider person observed, with great power comes great responsibility. Her own motto below her coat of arms is, Women are equal to everything. As for how she got there, she says, I just set out to be the best I could be at whatever I was doing at the time. And remember, I've been around a long time.
Presenter
Lady Hale, welcome to Desert Island Discs. Thank you so much for having me.
Presenter
So you're very keen for others to follow in your footsteps then. If you had to pitch the idea of pursuing a life in law to a young person listening to this, I wonder what your opening arguments would be. They would be that the law affects us all in everything that we do. It's got everything in terms of stories, arguments, justice, injustice, what's not to like.
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You once said, Lady Hale, I don't set out to stir anything up, but you do have a reputation for speaking up about the issues that matter to you. How did you weigh up what was worth sticking your neck out for during your career?
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Most of the things that I have stuck my neck out for are issues to do with the less advantaged people in society, and for a lot of my lifetime that has included women.
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And children?
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And people with disabilities, people with mental health problems, and of course, people.
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Without enough to live on.
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So, in various ways, I have felt it necessary to speak up for them. Music and singing I know are particularly important to you. You were a member of the Gilbert and Sullivan Society when you were a student, and I believe On Il Climour Batat is one of your party pieces. Well, when I am called upon to sing a party piece at various social gatherings, often connected with students and Gray's Inn, yes indeed, my party piece is On Il Climour-Batat, because it's a great thing to get other people to join in with.
Presenter
On Ilklemorba Tat, on Ilkimo Ba Tat, on Ilkley Mo Ba Tat, On Ilkley Morba Tat Perfect I feel like I could join in at this moment, but we do have to move on. Tell us about your first disc to day.
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It's a recording by Kathleen Ferrier, who was one of my parents' favourite performers, with a beautiful, beautiful contralto voice.
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And she came from the north of England, which of course we did too.
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So they had a lot of her recordings.
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And I've chosen, O thou that tellest good tidings to Zion, from Handel's Messiah.
Baroness Hale of Richmond
Good tidings to a siren.
Baroness Hale of Richmond
Everybody
Baroness Hale of Richmond
Ahio
Baroness Hale of Richmond
Oh Lord and tell us good tidings to find
Baroness Hale of Richmond
Let me
Baroness Hale of Richmond
Yeah.
Baroness Hale of Richmond
Let me all
Baroness Hale of Richmond
Yeah.
Presenter
O thou that tellest good tidings to Zion, from Handel's Messiah, performed by Kathleen Ferrier with the London Philharmonic, conducted by Sir Adrian Bolt.
Presenter
Lady Hale, in 2019 when you announced the Supreme Court's judgment that the Prime Minister's prorogation of Parliament was unlawful, void and of no effect, it was of course a seismic moment in British constitutional history, but I know that you've described it as a source of satisfaction rather than pride. Tell me a little bit about that distinction.
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Well, the satisfaction is that we managed to reach a reasoned conclusion with which all the justices agreed.
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It doesn't give us any satisfaction at all.
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to tell the Prime Minister
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or a public authority.
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That what they have done is unlawful.
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But it is satisfying to reach a judgment.
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And Lady Hale, in the years following the referendum, some commentators portrayed you and your fellow judges as unelected officials trying to derail a democratic process. Can you understand why some voters might feel that way too?
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It's difficult for me to understand that.
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Because we were not debating.
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whether or not Brexit should happen.
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That had been decided in the referendum, and we are a democracy.
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What we were deciding
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was what the Government could and could not lawfully do against the context of the Brexit process.
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As judges, of course, we do not want to do things that are out of step with public opinion.
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But we are not governed by public opinion.
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We are governed by the law.
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And that's what we have to stick to.
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Of course, Lady Hale, I have to ask you about the spider brooch that you wore that day. It caused such a stir.
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It was a vicious camel spider, I believe, and there were so many conspiracies associated with your decision to wear it at that moment that I feel duty bound to invite you to set the record straight. How did you choose it that day?
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I have a large collection of brooches.
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It was begun by my husband when I was in the family division of the High Court and had to wear dark suits. He thought they needed a little bit of livening up.
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And the dress which I chose to wear that day has always had a spider on it. In fact, when I got the dress out of the wardrobe, the spider which usually sits on it was nowhere to be seen.
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So I went quickly to my jewellery drawer,
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and took out another spider. It never crossed my mind that anybody would draw any conclusions from the fact that I was wearing a spider, rather than a dragonfly or a frog or anything else that I might have been wearing.
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I was rather thrilled to hear that it had been a bit of a bargain, that particular spider. That particular spider, my husband told me, had cost twelve pounds.
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I mean, who would have thought that a spider that would go down in history would have such humble origins? It's an inspiring story. I think it's an inspiring story, too. But there were no hidden messages in it whatever.
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Well, it's good to lay that one to rest.
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Time for your second piece of music today. What's it going to be and why have you chosen it?
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After school, of course, I went to Cambridge.
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And this was in nineteen sixty three.
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The Beatles had just brought out their first album.
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and the first tracks I listened to with school friends, and of course spent most of my Cambridge career dancing to the Beatles and sometimes the Rolling Stones. So it's Love Me Do.
Baroness Hale of Richmond
Love we do
Baroness Hale of Richmond
You know I love you.
Baroness Hale of Richmond
I've always been true.
Baroness Hale of Richmond
Go
Baroness Hale of Richmond
No me do.
Baroness Hale of Richmond
Whoa, it's funny.
Baroness Hale of Richmond
Love, love me do
Baroness Hale of Richmond
You know I love you.
Baroness Hale of Richmond
I'll always be true.
Presenter
The Beatles and Love Me Do. Lady Hale, you were born the second of three daughters in Leeds in nineteen forty five, and your parents, Cecil and Margery, were both teachers. How would you describe their approach to life together?
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Oh, well, they were very, very deeply in love, which is one of the things that we were always clear about as children. We were loved, but theirs was the greatest love affair of all time.
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What about their partnership, the dynamic between them? When they got married in nineteen thirty six, of course my mother had to give up her job as a teacher.
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because there was then a marriage bar in the teaching profession.
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But my father insisted that she had some money of her own to spend, not just the housekeeping.
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They were very much a partnership of equals. When you were three, your father became the headmaster at a boarding school for boys in the village of Scorton, near Richmond, in North Yorkshire. As newcomers to village life, did you feel a little bit different from the locals?
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I think we especially felt different when we went to the local village school.
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because in those days everything depended upon
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Passing the eleven plus, and most of the pupils in the school were not expected to pass the eleven plus.
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But we were. Yeah, you took it a year early as well, to boot.
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To boot.
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I did hear that when you'd set your mind on something, you were very hard to dissuade from the notion of acquiring it. There was a particular childhood story about a lemon that I know that your sister your sister told once.
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Do you know what I'm talking about? Well, it was apparently when I was about fifteen, eighteen months old.
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and at the table there were some slices of lemon there.
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and Brenda decided that she wanted a slice of lemon.
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And she was told very firmly, No, you wouldn't like that. It's bitter, it's sour. You wouldn't like it at all.
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But I insisted.
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and I screwed up my little face because it was so sour and awful.
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But I insisted Brenda likes lemon.
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It's time for your third disc. What have you chosen and why are you taking it with you today? I was lucky enough to go to two live performances which stuck particularly in my mind.
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one of which was Jacqueline Dupre.
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Playing Elgar's Cello Concerto.
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But the other was one of the first three performances of Benjamin Britton's War Requiem.
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I already liked Benjamin Britton's music because we had sung it and studied it at school. But the war requiem blew my mind away.
Baroness Hale of Richmond
Was it for this, for this, the toll?
Baroness Hale of Richmond
What made fatuous?
Baroness Hale of Richmond
Pat your sunbeams toy.
Presenter
Part of Benjamin Britton's War Requiem, performed by Peter Pears and Galena Wishnevskaya, with the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by the composer.
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Lady Hale, as we've heard, you passed the eleven plus and then you went to the high school, where you were pretty much top of the class in everything. If we'd met you back then, what would we have seen?
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Well, you would have seen a short girl.
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With hair in pigtails, with round National Health Service spectacles to begin with, I was definitely a swat.
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Rather overweight to begin with, but I did lose a bit of that as time went on.
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A dumpy little thing.
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Tragically, you lost your father when you were just thirteen. He had a heart attack and he was only forty-nine at the time.
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Must have been so shocking and and difficult to lose him.
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My younger sister and I were devastated at the loss, but also it was the loss of our sense of security.
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and we did wonder what was going to become of us.
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Yeah, I know that your your mother had to work very hard to make sure that you got that stability back. Well, she did because she picked herself up.
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remarkably quickly.
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dusted off her teaching qualifications, and became the head teacher of the local village primary school.
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I know that years later you found something after your mother's death, something that she'd written not long after your father died. What what was it, and and what did it say?
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Well, I did. I found uh a piece which she had written in an exercise book which was labelled Commonplace Book.
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and it purported to be a story.
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A story about a woman who was dozing in the afternoon and thinking about her life and the fact that she had to put on a show for the children, but the emptiness of having lost the one person in her life that she wanted to be with, the other half of her who was no longer there.
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It's a very moving piece.
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And what about yourself? I wonder how losing your father at such a young age has shaped your own outlook on life.
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In hindsight, I do wonder whether that was one of the reasons why.
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I have always been determined to go to university, determined to have a career of my own.
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Because if our mother had not had a career of her own and the ability to become independent once more, our lives would have been very different.
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Time for your fourth disc today. Tell us about the music that we're going to hear next. Why have you chosen it?
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Well, this is getting on to my adult life in.
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Manchester, where my first husband introduced me to Bach's Mass in B minor.
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The piece that I particularly love from it is the Gloria, because it is such an uplifting piece of music I can imagine marching round the desert island.
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Conducting the choir and the orchestra.
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as they bring out these magnificent sounds.
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Gloria Inex Cheltis Deo from Bach's Mass in B minor, performed by the Monteverdi Choir and the English Baroque Soloists, conducted by Sir John Elliott Gardiner. Lady Hale, as you mentioned, you studied at Cambridge. You'd won a scholarship to go to Girton College and began your course in 1963. You'd originally planned to study history, but then decided to read law. Why did you change your mind?
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My headmistress had read history at Oxford.
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and she didn't think I was a natural historian.
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Her idea was economics, but my thoughts about economics were that I had had to study some economic theory for my A level history paper, and I hadn't liked it one little bit.
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But I had also had to study the constitutional history of the seventeenth century, and I thought that was fascinating.
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So I said brightly, Well, what about law? Rather to my surprise, she did not say, Nonsense, girls don't do law. She encouraged me. At Cambridge you were one of only six women studying law in a year group of more than a hundred students, and you said that you experienced imposter syndrome there. We hear that phrase a lot today, but it wasn't used back then. How would you describe what you were feeling at that time? I remember feeling as I walked along King's Parade in Cambridge, surrounded by the beautiful buildings that are there.
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And here I am in Cambridge. It was a dream, it was a wonderful thing.
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But am I up to it? Can I do it? Can I succeed?
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Well, you graduated top year class with a stard first, so it worked out quite well, and you started work as an assistant law lecturer at the University of Manchester. Why did you opt to go for an academic post instead of going straight to the bar?
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Well, in those days we were told how very difficult it was to make a career at the bar.
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Especially if you had no connections.
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And no money.
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And were a woman. Then the idea of becoming a university lecturer.
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was suggested to me.
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And Manchester said
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We would like you to qualify as a barrister.
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and do some part-time practice as well as doing your teaching.
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And so that was a huge attraction.
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You started your pupillage in Manchester. What was your relationship with your pupilmaster like? Oh, it was very good.
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But I had been told that he didn't approve of women at the bar. Why is that? I said. Your wife's a doctor. And he said, Ah Medicine is a caring profession.
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And women can and should care. But the bar is a fighting profession.
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And women can't and shouldn't fight.
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Well, I took the view.
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that he was right about the bar. It is a fighting profession.
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But he was, of course, wrong about women.
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Did you voice that opinion at the time? I can't remember.
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I think what I did was to try and prove him wrong, and to his credit he was sufficiently complimentary about my performance when I appeared in front of him after he'd become a judge, for me to think that possibly I had just about dented the view.
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It's time for some more music, Lady Hale, your fifth choice to day. What is it, and why?
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The Duet from the Marriage of Figaro.
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Between Susannah and the Countess when they are plotting against the Count.
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It's a very feminist opera, which must be one of the reasons why I like it so much.
Baroness Hale of Richmond
Jesus let us speak one.
Baroness Hale of Richmond
God we breathe in the street.
Baroness Hale of Richmond
Sometimes
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Solaria quesuave Zefforetto from Mozart's The Marriage of Figaro, performed by sopranos Charlotte Margiono and Barbara Bonny, with the concert gabau orchestra conducted by Nikolaus Hahnenko.
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Lady Hale, in 1984 you were appointed to the Law Commission, the first woman to be appointed and the youngest commissioner at 39. You were responsible for family law at the Commission and you led the work on what became the 1989 Children Act. How do you look back on that piece of legislation today? Well, it's appropriate to be proud of it because...
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The law before was in a complete mess.
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There were many different routes by which children could be removed from their families, and they all had different processes, different criteria, different outcomes.
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And what we managed to do was to
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Boil things down to their essentials, one route, one set of criteria.
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And all the courts having the same powers to decide the future of children, which had not been the case before.
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People have remarked on your empathy as a judge, Lady Hill, and credited that to your background in family law. But I know that you've also talked about the necessity of hardening your heart on occasion. How and when did you learn to do that?
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When I was a family judge,
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I had from time to time
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To take children away from their families. And that is a really difficult thing to do.
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But nevertheless, you have to do your best, you have to try and protect them from significant harm. There was one case where the question was
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Who was responsible for the injuries suffered, the several injuries suffered?
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by a young child, and I decided that it was the mother's boyfriend who was responsible.
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The decision was taken to let the child go back to the couple, and the child was injured again.
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which was a pretty clear indication that I had been right. The mother was obviously devoted to her children.
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But the
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Only solution had to be to take them away from her, and that was very distressing, of course for her.
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But also for the other people involved.
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And for you?
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Well, I was one of the other people involved, wasn't I?
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It's time for some more music. Your sixth choice today. What is it and why have you chosen it?
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Well, this is to remind me of my daughter.
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My daughter is gay and she is in a civil partnership with the mother of her children, and her partner is a member of
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Dublin's Lesbian and Gay Choir.
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They had a lovely ceremony in Cambridge to celebrate their relationship.
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And at that ceremony there were, of course, quite a lot of their friends, quite a lot of whom were members of Gay Choirs from many different places.
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and at the reception they decided they would sing a song.
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called Hand in Hand. It's very uplifting and it will remind me of my daughter and her family.
Baroness Hale of Richmond
With shoulder press to shoulder
Baroness Hale of Richmond
You'll build a mindset.
Baroness Hale of Richmond
And nothing in the world can make us whole if we stand.
Baroness Hale of Richmond
We can learn to lift our voices in a song. We'll see it's our differences that really make us strong.
Baroness Hale of Richmond
Happen high, we'll be the strongest queen can be.
Baroness Hale of Richmond
If we learn to stand by those in need
Baroness Hale of Richmond
With shoulder breast to shoulder.
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Hand in Hand, performed by Gloria, Dublin's lesbian and gay choir.
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Throughout your career, Lady Hale, you've been very upfront about your feminism, but that hasn't always made you popular. Did it ever get you into trouble?
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I expect so.
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No, I have made no secret of my belief that women are the equals of men in dignity and in rights, and that their experience of life is just as valid and important in shaping the law as is the experience of men.
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I do not think that was always popular.
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amongst certain sections of the media,
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and possibly not always popular amongst some of my colleagues.
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I think it was nicknamed the Brender Agenda by some of them. Well, one of my colleagues, I subsequently learnt.
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Because he published diaries.
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That I was seen as having an agenda. Well, I probably do have an agenda.
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which is an agenda to promote equality and diversity.
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It's an agenda which lots of people have, but it is sometimes stigmatised as being an agenda, whereas the agenda which other people have, which is to preserve the status quo,
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is never seen as an agenda, although of course it equally is.
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How did you deal with those kinds of comments, that sort of vitriol, and the negative press? Well, the negative press you just have to say.
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Oh dear
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They got it wrong. But not to let it bother you too much. And of course, with most things in the media, the circus moves on.
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Obviously, if there is justified criticism, one wants to know about it.
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But if it's unjustified, I think you have to carry on, regardless.
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You had initially gone for the job of President of the Supreme Court in twenty twelve, and at the time you were one of the two longest serving lawlords and seemed like the obvious choice, but you didn't get it. Some people said that your feminism had counted against you. Were they right, do you think?
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Oh, they may have been.
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Or just the fact that I was a woman, or the fact that I was me.
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I'm sure there will be things about me that not everybody likes. Like what?
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Possibly my propensity for speaking my mind when I want to. Sometimes my
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Tactlessness. I'm sure I am tactless from time to time. Did you have to be slightly more tactful when you were a taster on MasterChef?
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They didn't broadcast a lot of my comments.
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And I think that was probably because I wasn't sufficiently enthusiastic about the food.
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Honest to the last. I'm afraid so. Oh, well, they knew what they signed up for. It's time for your penultimate disc, Lady Hale. Number seven. What's it going to be?
Speaker 1
It's too
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This is the magnificent anthem I Was Glad.
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I chose this because it was played at the memorial service in Westminster Abbey for Lord Bingham.
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Tom Bingham, who to my mind was the greatest judge of the twenty first century, at least so far.
Baroness Hale of Richmond
Uh
Baroness Hale of Richmond
Friend is sailing on the wee.
Baroness Hale of Richmond
It's just a thing like
Baroness Hale of Richmond
We trust them.
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I was Glad composed by Sir Hubert Parry performed by the Choir of Westminster Abbey with the organist Simon Preston, conducted by William McKinney.
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Lady Hale, you married your second husband, Julian, in 1992. How did the two of you meet?
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Well, we first met in nineteen sixty eight.
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We were colleagues in Manchester for sixteen years.
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I think we got on pretty well.
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But we certainly were not in the slightest bit.
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romantically entangled. And then we were both
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appointed to the Law Commission at the same time.
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And I suppose after
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Seven years.
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Together at the Law Commission.
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We did fall in love at first sight.
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You called him your frog prince. Why was that? Partly because he had started to give me frogs.
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Originally because his driving style was not unlike that of Toad of Toad Hall.
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And the first frog he gave me, which was a plant holder,
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He thought was a toad but it wasn't it was a frog.
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We eventually decided.
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that it had taken us so long to recognize our feelings for one another that clearly he had to be my frog prince too.
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Last year you stepped down as President of the Supreme Court because you'd reached the compulsory age of retirement at seventy five, and the lockdown put paid to the plans that you and Julian had made for the next phase of your lives. What did you decide to do instead? We retreated to our home in Richmond, where we had a very happy few months.
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And we were actually enjoying.
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Relaxing.
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More than we had expected to do.
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And then very suddenly
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He died.
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of a pulmonary embolism, leaving a huge hole, not only in my life, but in the life of all the other members of the family to whom he was so dear.
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We will never forget him.
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There will always be that huge hole in our lives, but he would not have wanted us to be miserable.
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So we do our best to live without him, but with his memory and with some fun as well.
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I'm about to cast you away. Are you looking forward to living on the island?
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I think there are a huge number of practical challenges about being cast away on a desert island.
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and I'm not sure that I'd be particularly good at uh rising to them, but of course I would have to do my best.
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Alright, well we'll let you choose one more disc before we send you to your desert island. What's it going to be and why?
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This is the Dies Ire from Verdi's Requiem.
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Because we played it at Julian's funeral.
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It is the day of wrath, of course.
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The day of God's wrath, but it also represented, for us, the very real anger that we felt at having Him taken from us so suddenly.
Presenter
Diaziri from Verdi's Requiem performed by the Swedish Radio Choir and the Erik Eriksen Chamber Choir with the Berlin Philharmonic conducted by Claudio Abardo.
Presenter
So, Lady Hale, I'm going to send you away to the island now. I'm giving you the Bible and the complete works of Shakespeare. You can also take one other book with you. What will that be?
Presenter
The best possible practical handbook on how to survive on a desert island.
Presenter
It's yours. You can also have a luxury item. What would you like?
Presenter
A solar-powered computer programmed with an inexhaustible supply of Suducco.
Presenter
Puzzles for me to do, and also can provide me with a program which will enable me to write.
Baroness Hale of Richmond
Puzzles for me to do.
Presenter
And finally, which one track of the eight that you've shared with us today would you save from the waves if you needed to?
Presenter
I would have to have, I think, the Gloria from Bach's Mass in B minor, because that always makes my spirits lift, and I can walk round the island conducting to it.
Presenter
and even singing to it.
Presenter
Brenda Hale, Baroness Hale of Richmond, thank you very much for letting us hear your Desert Island discs.
Presenter
Thank you very much indeed for having me. It's been a lifelong ambition, realized at last.
Presenter
I hope you enjoyed my conversation with the Lady Hale. I like to think of her walking around the island, conducting to the Gloria. We've cast many lawyers and judges away, including Heather Hallett, Albie Sachs, Helena Kennedy, and Michael Mansfield. You can find their episodes in our Desert Island Discs programme archive and through BBC Sounds. And next time, my guest will be the actor and comedian Tracy Ullman. I do hope you'll join us.
Speaker 1
Lifelines, a new series of the multi-award-winning Radio 4 drama, now available as a podcast.
Baroness Hale of Richmond
S O S.
Speaker 1
Sometimes heart stopping, sometimes heart starting.
Baroness Hale of Richmond
No, it had
Speaker 1
Always matters of life and death.
Speaker 4
Ambulance service is the patient breathing unconscious.
Speaker 1
Subscribe to Lifelines BBC Sounds.
Presenter asks
You've described the [prorogation] judgment as a source of satisfaction rather than pride. Tell me a little bit about that distinction.
Well, the satisfaction is that we managed to reach a reasoned conclusion with which all the justices agreed. … It doesn't give us any satisfaction at all to tell the Prime Minister or a public authority that what they have done is unlawful. But it is satisfying to reach a judgment.
Presenter asks
How did you come to wear the spider brooch that day [of the prorogation judgment]?
I have a large collection of brooches. It was begun by my husband when I was in the family division of the High Court and had to wear dark suits. He thought they needed a little bit of livening up. And the dress which I chose to wear that day has always had a spider on it. In fact, when I got the dress out of the wardrobe, the spider which usually sits on it was nowhere to be seen. So I went quickly to my jewellery drawer, and took out another spider. It never crossed my mind that anybody would draw any conclusions from the fact that I was wearing a spider, rather than a dragonfly or a frog or anything else that I might have been wearing.
Presenter asks
How would you describe your parents' approach to life together?
Oh, well, they were very, very deeply in love, which is one of the things that we were always clear about as children. We were loved, but theirs was the greatest love affair of all time.
Presenter asks
After your mother's death, you found something she had written not long after your father died. What was it, and what did it say?
Well, I did. I found a piece which she had written in an exercise book which was labelled Commonplace Book, and it purported to be a story. A story about a woman who was dozing in the afternoon and thinking about her life and the fact that she had to put on a show for the children, but the emptiness of having lost the one person in her life that she wanted to be with, the other half of her who was no longer there.
“We were not debating whether or not Brexit should happen. That had been decided in the referendum, and we are a democracy. What we were deciding was what the Government could and could not lawfully do against the context of the Brexit process. As judges, of course, we do not want to do things that are out of step with public opinion. But we are not governed by public opinion. We are governed by the law. And that's what we have to stick to.”
“My younger sister and I were devastated at the loss, but also it was the loss of our sense of security, and we did wonder what was going to become of us.”
“In hindsight, I do wonder whether that [losing my father] was one of the reasons why I have always been determined to go to university, determined to have a career of my own. Because if our mother had not had a career of her own and the ability to become independent once more, our lives would have been very different.”
“I have made no secret of my belief that women are the equals of men in dignity and in rights, and that their experience of life is just as valid and important in shaping the law as is the experience of men. I do not think that was always popular amongst certain sections of the media, and possibly not always popular amongst some of my colleagues.”
“Well, one of my colleagues, I subsequently learnt, because he published diaries, that I was seen as having an agenda. Well, I probably do have an agenda, which is an agenda to promote equality and diversity. It's an agenda which lots of people have, but it is sometimes stigmatised as being an agenda, whereas the agenda which other people have, which is to preserve the status quo, is never seen as an agenda, although of course it equally is.”