A
CORONATION
What a spectacle it was! Millions watched the crowning of
King Charles III and the question arises; why were they drawn to an event that
belongs to a bygone age? What has such a ceremony to do with a Britain
struggling with a faltering economy? Everyone has a different answer to the
question; ‘What did you like about it?’ One said, ‘the moment the prince kissed
his father on the cheek.’ Another said, ‘Bryn Terfil’s singing of the Kyrie
in Welsh’ and yet a third said ‘the precision of the marching soldiers, sailors
and airmen’.
It was theatre on a grand scale and we could appreciate the
variety of acts; there was history, tradition, religion, music, singing,
fashion, politics and, yes, ‘precision’ in every detail of timing. There was
also, and here I have to be extra careful, something of mystery. It appealed to
a latent sense of the transcendent. Scattered among the many details was a
desire of the organisers to do everything to bring out references to things
that should have no interest to modern minds. But they actually do.
Take the spoon, for instance. We were told that Oliver
Cromwell, in the mid-seventeenth century, melted down the crown jewels as there
would be no further need for them now that what was the United Kingdom had
become a republic. But he missed out the spoon. This article of cutlery dates
from Norman times (eleventh century) and was used to stir the vessel holding
the oil with which the monarch is anointed.
Anointed? Who is anointed these days? Certainly not
presidents and prime ministers. So, for its origin, we are pushed back to
remember Samuel anointing Saul and David in the Hebrew Scriptures. These
leaders and their successors did not receive their appointment from the people
or even the likes of Samuel. The anointing, or ‘christening’ to use the Greek
form of the word, was a sign that they were chosen by God.
Some modern leaders like to claim they are chosen by God but
that is usually because they are a bit shaky about their position and look for
any prop that may bolster their claim. Few are convinced. But in bygone days,
it was taken seriously. ‘Not all the water in the rough rude sea can wash the
balm off from an anointed king’ (Shakespeare, Richard II). No one would
make such a claim for a modern ruler. They have to earn their position,
otherwise they will be fired by the voters – or should be. (Oliver Cromwell’s republic did not last long.
A few years after his death, Charles II returned from exile (1660)).
So now the show is over, but lingering in the air is a
feeling we touched, for a moment, something beyond ourselves. Not a bad thing
to do occasionally.
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