The Queen Should Never Have Been Asked to Attend Prince Philip’s Funeral Alone and in a Mask
It is regrettable, but the last significant image I have of the Queen is of her sitting alone in St George’s chapel at Windsor Castle during the Duke of Edinburgh’s funeral. Not only sitting alone, but sitting alone masked.
I have avoided most of the reporting of the death of the Queen. I put on the BBC once or twice, but was sent away by the pompous and pious tones and also the intermixed anodyne and conversational tones. Broadcast news, especially at such a time, is unsure at any point of whether it should adopt a tone which identifies with the stories it reports or a tone which indicates critical distance and abandons the official manner. It was good to see the Accession Ceremony without any commentary, where one could feel the power of the ritual (especially a ritual in which the tone was wholly appropriate at every point). We usually forget that we exist in a civilisation which has behind it the inherited rituals of state – so distracted are we by the ‘media’, the mediators, the in-betweeners, those who interpose themselves and attempt to ‘control the narrative’, as we now say. It is good for an honest man or woman, a subject, to see such rituals: an honour, even. So on this occasion we saw the Privy Council, some of our representatives, acknowledge the King, our representative par excellence.
I have read a few things which have made memorable suggestions about the significance of the monarchy in our time. The first was by Ben Okri in the Guardian. He said that the Queen has entered our psyche. He meant something a bit confused, I thought: partly that her image has been imposed on us by what sociologists would call ‘symbolic violence’ for 70 years (on coins, stamps, etc.), and partly that she is loved for her particular and personal consideration of others – two very different points. But I was prompted by Okri’s mention of psyche to reflect on things which seemed to be no part of his concern.
The first is that we are in the territory of Jungian archetypes, as explored by Christopher Booker in his remarkable book Seven Basic Plots and by Jordan Peterson in his many online lectures. Peterson is putting Jung to good use: using the archetypes to defend concepts like ‘man’, ‘woman’, ‘marriage’, ‘faith’, ‘responsibility’. Booker put them to a related but far more specific use: he used them to claim that every story of any value that has ever been told has had the same point, which is to indicate a course by which order, responsibility, truth and love are established, or re-established after a season of disorder, irresponsibility, falsity or hatred. Here we have the Queen as the archetypal Good Mother or Wise Woman: the symbol, especially, of faith and love.
The second is more specific and political and even more mysterious. It is that we are also in the territory of the mysteries of state – which are just as mysterious as the mysteries of religion, and sometimes more obscure: obscured by the insistence, often found in politics, that things not be mysterious. This is where we have the paradox of ultimate sovereign power: the paradox which the Queen embodied and which the King now embodies. This is the paradox surrounding the question of whether power is above the law or law is above power.
In England, and consequently, in the United Kingdom and then the Empire, the particular achievement of our political tradition – which I was reminded of when Charles III was asked to confirm the rights of the Church of Scotland – was to establish what we call a ‘constitutional monarchy’. We usually date this to 1688, but the idea is older. Thomas Smith during the reign of Elizabeth spoke of the English ‘republic’, and even earlier John Fortescue spoke of dominium politicum et regale, a form of rule which was neither purely ‘political’ in the sense of our ruling ourselves, nor ‘regal’ in the sense of only being ruled, but somehow partaking of both. This was later established in the harmonising of King, Lord and Commons (‘King-in-Parliament’), and theorised by Burke – against the French revolutionaries – as being a state in which our representatives were not only found in Westminster but also in the Courts, the Church, and the Universities. This was a world-historical compromise, the great achievement of our politics, and it is probably one reason why everyone is coming to the funeral. We will celebrate not only a woman but a reasonably successful political order: a political order which appears to solve the question of law and power by holding it in dramatic and ritualised suspense.
And this compromise only being possible because, just as a politician is willing to bow down before the monarch, the monarch is willing to kneel before God.
But of course, despite this compromise, the Queen was sovereign. And in England, at least, we have never strayed far from the view that monarchy is not only the dignified part of the compromise (as Walter Bagehot thought) but, even when undignified, mysterious. Ernst Kantorowicz wrote an ageless book, The King’s Two Bodies, which pointed out that European politics was, by and large, formed by the Christian church on the one hand – using church concepts like ‘mystical body’, corpus mysticism, and a whole array of legal fictions which only the church was literate enough to invent – and by Gothic kings on the other hand. The king at some point was said to have two bodies, a body natural – the actual body which breathed, slept, lived and died – and a body politic. The first body could die; the second could not, since it was the people. Hence the immediacy of that great phrase: “The King is dead; Long Live the King.” The idea was that, unlike in other countries, in which every death involved a constitutional crisis, in England it would not: because the ‘body politic’ survived. In acclaiming a king we were acclaiming ourselves in the form of a fiction. Though the fiction was not fiction in the sense of a noble lie, but actually the marvellous truth that in relation to the Crown we were one people, one community, one communion.
This is a mystery. Our age is not equipped to understand it. Hence all the talk about Elizabeth II’s particular personality, which is important, now, at the time of her funeral, but irrelevant to the office or even to the achievement. She stood for everyone. This is what ‘service’ means: it does not mean ‘serving’. It certainly did not mean being a slave or a servant. But it meant standing for us, acting for us, in some manner being us: standing for us over the ministers, standing for us before God. One continued merit of this survival of medieval kingship is that no mere Prime Minister can ever consider him or herself to be England, Britain, the Commonwealth, the State, Us. This is a danger in republics, of course, and this is why republics are the means by which despotism perpetuates itself in the modern world. In general, monarchies are more honest. If they are despotic, they have to admit it frankly.
All of this brings me to the second thoughtful piece I read. Helen Thompson in UnHerd wrote that “the Queen possessed a seemingly innate capacity to practise self-discipline and humility”. “Could anyone have doubted,” she asked, “that the Queen unhesitatingly would have thought that the Covid rules about funerals applied to the Duke of Edinburgh’s funeral?” Thompson explains this willingness to obey the law as a reason why even republicans could respect the Queen, and puts this in a highly contemporary context in which a secular public is taken not to understand ‘pomp and pageantry’. It struck me that this might have mattered to some people. Perhaps it was symbolically important to many that the Queen followed the rules. But I disagreed then and disagree now.
On that day I wanted the Queen to draw on prerogative, to remind the Government, as James I had reminded Coke, that although the King was ruled by law, the King was also the bearer of prerogative and as such above the law, though still ruled by God. We sometimes forget this, or are affronted by it. We imagine that the world can be, as David Hume put it, a “government of laws and not of men”. Well, the thing is impossible. There is no such thing as an abstract government of laws. Aristotle saw this as long ago as the fourth century before Christ. It would be pleasant, he reflected, if law was sovereign, but, alas, law cannot act, it is never alive: so someone must rule, or be seen to rule. And in a monarchy we are, I would say, committed to not forgetting this: to not forgetting that though law is above king, king is also above law. If the king were not above the law, then we would have a law which could be used, as Her Majesty’s Government has recently used the law (including, as Lord Sumption showed us, not very good law, or dubiously applied law), to do things that are unjustified and certainly undiscussed – and came into conflict with the Queen’s own concept of ‘service’, including her coronation oath declaring that she would defend the faith. I think not only was Her Majesty’s Government misled, and then misled everyone else, but Her Majesty was misled: and it was her very sense of service, ‘humility’ even, which turned her, during the funeral, into a serf, a slave, a masked individual, a strange sort of leper queen.
None of it should have happened. And the reason was not necessarily only the personal indignity to the ‘body natural’ of Elizabeth II, but the affront to everyone whose sovereign she was, whose representative she was. Nothing should have made it possible that we would ever see such a disgraceful sight as the Queen in a mask. For the Queen was the ‘body politic’ in its ideal and perfect form, and it is of the first importance that the ‘body politic’ of this England, this Britain, this Kingdom, this Commonwealth never be masked.
The Queen was both above and below the law – a contradiction if considered logically, and magnificent when properly understood as the suspension of a contradiction – and I think on that occasion it would have been good for us if she had been above the law.
Dr. James Alexander is a Professor in the Department of Political Science at Bilkent University in Turkey.
Stop Press: Ed West has done a good round-up for his Substack newsletter of the best pieces he’s read about the Queen.
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I think it fair to say that of all the small outrages that were committed, this was close to the top. To her eternal credit, she followed the guidelines and never complained. The fact that she was asked to, and many other funeral goers, was a disgrace.
And at the same time No 10 downing Street were partying.
I can never forgive the people who did this.
And had I gone along with it, worn a mask just the once, I wouldn’t have been able to forgive myself.
Still, bigger things in the melting pot now: wtf have the stabs done?
Not a philosophical point but a practical one. Prince Philip’s funeral was on 17th April 2021. This date was also the date of the lowest number of covid infections recorded since records began.
On April 17th 2022 there were 14 x more positive tests recorded.
April 17th 2021 had 1/10th of the number of deaths recorded on April 17th 2022.
April 17th 2021 had 1/10th of the number of hospitalisations recorded on April 17th 2022.
The Queen was the victim of coercive control, as was everyone, while the farce of NPI’s went on.
Just to emphasise this point: the 7 day average number of covid deaths on 17th April 2021 was 16. The latest at the end of August 2022 is 66, over 4x as many.
And remember, the NPIs were held in place for another 3 months.
Of course, the Queen could do no other than comply, if she’d claimed Royal Perogative there would have been both a constitutional crisis which could well have brought down the Monarchy. Unless the Queen was a reader of the Daily Sceptic she, like so many others, would have had no idea that there was another truth.
But also remember, compliance is collaboration.
It was a shame that she ever went along with it – but then, there were many other ‘victims’ at other funerals recently. Looking on the bright side, it appears that almost no-one, if any, appear to believe in the daft policies now. Especially not while taking part in the current rituals in London and elsewhere.
Remember that, in effect, everyone was above many of the so-called emergency “laws” imposed by government agencies, by virtues of declaring themselves exempt. Not well advertised, but ISTR that there were virtually no real prosecutions on anyone who refused to pay “fines” issued for non-compliance with NPIs at the time. They were gambling that people would shell out, but the CPS didn’t want the risk of going to Court if they didn’t pay or refused to accept the paperwork.
Wow. I am just a plain unsophisticated boy from Huddersfield, but after reading this I flatter myself into thinking that I may have more common sense and am more grounded than this eminent but highfalutin prof. The sight of the poor queen in her useless mask was highly symbolic that the Queen-in-Parliament is now just a symbol, attached to the past, maybe, but powerless. She was a pathetic victim, just like so many of us, of the lying propaganda and one-track thinking of those in power. These people may or may not have long-term globalist motives, but if they do then please consider the implications of what sovereignty means. It excludes not just her late, much-admired, HM the Queen, but all of us.
That was my idea of it as well: A poor old woman whose husband had just died essentially wheeled out in public as puppet-like symbol of the policies of the government and – as we meanwhile now – a government which had exempted itself from all of these rules. No sovereign and no queen, just another SAGE propaganda tool to employ as seen fit.
It was an indignity that she bore in solidarity with the rest of us; pointless, cruel, ludicrous as it was.
I hope the haunting image of her sitting alone and gagged caused a moment’s pause in those not completely wedded to The Cause. It still took too long to declare these rags ‘optional’; even the most assertive of us could not bring ourselves to risk a scene at such an emotional occasion – making ourselves the focus of conflict when bidding farewell to a loved one.
The picture was emblematic – we were ALL lied to, and the fiction was pursued in order to save embarrassment (in her ‘we WILL meet again’ broadcast, HMQ proclaimed the distancing and lockdowns as ‘the right thing the do’.
I will never, ever forgive those who ushered in this charade. As you say, it laid bare who really has the power.
Seeing the Queen wearing a mask, siting alone at her husbands funeral and advocating masks mad me realise much to my disappointment that the monarchy is just another tool of an establishment that works for a fee against the many.
I’m afraid the monarchy at this stage are little more than useful idiots.
It does appear that in recent times she was cajoled into political issues that would not have been tolerated in the past. While it’s not unusual for a devoted wife or husband to deteriorate quite quickly after the other partner died, especially if they were both quite elderly, it looked a bit strange that she passed away just a day or so after the leadership difficulties in the Party were resolved. Maybe staying on until just after that was her last contribution, notwithstanding her condition.
However, when well managed, monarchy can be a lot more stable than presidential systems, as long they steer well clear of dictatorship.
By the way, did we ever find out what she died of? If it wasn’t “Sudden Adult Death Syndrome”, it certainly seemed to happen quite quickly.
Well according to the Coveidiots in the mail it was due to long covid, we all should have been locked up longer so that nobody could catch it. My guessing at 96 it was old age, that’s if you’re aloud to die of old age any more.
And don’t forget as I commented yesterday she also told us we were not doing our duty if we didn’t get jabbed. That’s hardly defending our sovereignty. Disgraceful. Yes useful idiots indeed.
We, the men, women & children are Sovereign & all are equal under the law. Just because one is the Monarch does not place one above the Common Law, as Charles I found to his cost & the Monarch & government of the day are only in office with the consent of the people. If the consent is withdrawn by the people, where the true sovereignty resides, then neither the Monarch nor the government have any legitimacy.
Not to worry, they have many ways to extract our consent from us.
Indeed. Those who rely on the MSM for instructions &c are being supplied with full on Royal distraction, while other financial issues are being manipulated in the background for a week or so!
https://youtu.be/uHqgvWivkyY
Oh look. Chucky hasn’t been in the job two minutes and he’s already having a baby tantrum!
Yeeesssss. This comment from Dr Robert Malone yesterday:
As the UN is scheduled to meet this Sept in New York, I think it is safe to assume that the U.K.’s new king will take central stage. Let’s not forget who King Charles is and who he represents. King Charles was the first to announce the “Great Reset” on his official page, as well as a Great Reset promotional video on the WEF page and on Twitter in June 2020.
King Charles is now one of the wealthiest and powerful men in the world, with inherited assets estimated around 14 billion and a United Kingdom that spans the globe. https://rwmalonemd.substack.com/p/sunday-strip-just-obey?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email
By sitting alone our wise old Queen was making her comment. Illustrating the iniquity of her position, highlighting the fact and unifying with thousands of others who had been made to mourn alone.
When they attempt to cover up Lockdown in years to come, those images will endure to haunt the powers that be. The queen was no victim, but eloquent in her quiet dignity.
An interesting take on the situation, thank you.
Agree with DevonBlueBoy, an interesting take and thank you for making it. Mine was different: I saw it as reinforcing compliance for the masses – see, even the Queen is wearing her mask and social distancing. I could be wrong and forgive the error but I’m not aware that there was ever footage published of people helping her into her seat or vacating it, just that strong, sad, appalling picture. If nothing else, I hope it brought a grain of comfort to some of those who had to do the same at their loved ones passing.
Who takes a photograph of their Queen sitting alone and masked at the funeral of her husband? I have to ask this question because it begs an answer. It doesn’t feel right, someone privately grieving but following advice even though she is sitting alone in a large chamber. Was it something the mask zealots arranged to show that even the Queen wore a mask? I would like to know the circumstances and who allowed it because I can’t imagine it being ‘allowed’ in any other normal situation.
This brazen act alone was enough to oust Johnson and Princess Nut nuts. Gormless leader.
Or as a head mason and father to the new king who welcomed in agenda 2030 with old klaus she was happy to wear her symbolic costume.
This was what I thought when I saw Her Majesty, masked and alone, at her beloved consorts’s funeral: An outrage. What an excellent article.
Apart from images of Vietnamese boys about to be shot in the head or office workers jumping from burning skyscrapers, this will be one of the most pointlessly cruel, cynical and disgusting images I will ever see. I was vainly hoping that on her death bed she might have dug out an ancient monarchical convention that allowed her to order the summary execution of those responsible.