Famed royal-watcher Tina
Brown said this of Queen Elizabeth:
… she was the last well-behaved person in our coarsening,
transactional world. Amid the clamor of ubiquitous narcissism, her cool refusal
to impose her views or justify her choices was ineffably soothing.
One will refrain from quoting those Americans who took the
opportunity to spew their bile about the queen. Perhaps they were seeking
attention. Perhaps they felt it to be therapeutic to show how much they hated
her. Perhaps they simply needed some toilet training.
Whatever the reason, those who took the occasion to talk
trash about the late queen should have known better than to show off their
singular lack of character. Anyone who defended or supported them showed the
same. Fortunately, such people marginalize themselves. Surely, they will be out
there complaining about not being invited to dinner.
When you lack the most basic decency and decorum, when you
take the occasion of the death of the British monarch, to draw attention to
your own miserable existence, you do not deserve to be accepted into polite
company. By making a public spectacle of their disrespect they merely damaged
their own reputations, such as they were.
Among those who have spoken sanely and intelligently, and
with respect, we have Andrew
Sullivan, from his Substack. In the midst of our narcissistic age, where
everything is about Me, and where everyone is encouraged to show off how deeply
he feels about issues, Queen Elizabeth rose above the din and consistently
maintained her grace and dignity. In her person she showed the virtue of
self-restraint, something we have long since abandoned.
Sullivan wrote:
Part of the hard-to-explain grief I feel today is related
to how staggeringly rare that level of self-restraint is today. Narcissism is
everywhere. Every feeling we have is bound to be expressed. Self-revelation,
transparency, authenticity — these are our values. The idea that we are firstly
humans with duties to others that will require and demand the suppression of
our own needs and feelings seems archaic. Elizabeth kept it alive simply by
example.
What was that example? Sullivan continues:
With her death, it’s hard not to fear that so much she
exemplified — restraint, duty, grace, reticence, persistence — are disappearing
from the world. As long as she was there, they were at the center of an idea of
Britishness that helped define the culture at its best. Perhaps the most famous
woman in the world, she remained a sphinx, hard to decipher, impossible to
label. She was not particularly beautiful or dashing or inspiring. She said
nothing surprising. She was simply the Queen. She showed up. She got on with
it. She was there. She was always there.
It is not what she said. It is not about the power that she
flexed; it is about the example she set. Did you notice that among all of the
encomia that have filled the airways, no one seems to have remarked on the fact
that the Queen of England has no real political power. She cannot rule by
decree. She has no power to veto legislation. She has no legislative agenda.
She greets members of both political parties with the same formality.
At a time when everyone thinks that politics is all about
power, and that it is all about flexing your muscles and forcing people to do
your bidding, the example of Elizabeth suggests that people are yearning for
character in their leaders, even more than they glom on to the rough and tough
persona that many of them like to adopt.
In our age of informality, Elizabeth never really yielded to
the clamoring masses. She went through the motions on occasion, but her
leadership was about manifesting good character, not in making herself a public
spectacle. As opposed to certain members of the royal family, past and present,
she never turned her life into a tawdry soap opera.
As one watches the ceremonial events from London, one cannot
help but notice the triumph of Camilla, queen consort, and wife of the current
monarchy. For all of her messy personal history, Camilla became the antidote to
Diana. She was reserved, serene, formal and decorous. One understands that
Elizabeth allowed Camilla to become queen consort because Camilla had never
become tabloid fodder. At a time when the British nation was agog over the
wildly indecorous Diana, Camilla helped right the moral ship of state.
More especially, Elizabeth did not seek the status of
celebrity. She did not try to be Diana and she did not respect the Hollywood
glamor of Meghan Markle.
She was an icon, but not an idol. An idol requires the
vivid expression of virtues, personality, style. Diana was an idol — fusing a
compelling and vulnerable temperament with Hollywood glamor. And Diana, of
course, was in her time loved far more intensely than her mother-in-law;
connected emotionally with ordinary people like a rockstar; only eventually to
face the longterm consequences of that exposure and crumble under the murderous
spotlight of it all.
Elizabeth never rode those tides of acclaim or celebrity.
She never pressed the easy buttons of conventional popularity. She didn’t even
become known for her caustic wit like the Queen Mother, or her compulsively
social sorties like Margaret. The gays of Britain could turn both of these
queens into camp divas. But not her. In private as in public, she had the kind
of integrity no one can mock successfully.
Idols elicit worshipful adulation. Icons symbolize unity and
strength of character.
The British monarchy, denuded of power, sidelined from
political machinations, symbolizes the nation. It symbolizes a nation that is
not divided against itself, but that can unify itself beyond a human symbol:
The Crown represents something from the ancient past, a
logically indefensible but emotionally salient symbol of something called a
nation, something that gives its members meaning and happiness. However shitty
the economy, or awful the prime minister, or ugly the discourse, the monarch is
able to represent the nation all the time. In a living, breathing, mortal
person.
The importance of this in a deeply polarized and
ideological world, where fellow citizens have come to despise their opponents
as enemies, is hard to measure. But it matters that divisive figures such as
Boris Johnson or Margaret Thatcher were never required or expected to represent
the entire nation. It matters that in times of profound acrimony, something
unites. It matters that in a pandemic when the country was shut down, the Queen
too followed the rules, even at her husband’s funeral, and was able to refer to
a phrase — “we’ll meet again” — that instantly reconjured the days of the Blitz,
when she and the royal family stayed in London even as Hitler’s bombs fell from
the sky.
And the British monarchy also represents the value of
patriotism.
No American will ever experience that kind of comfort,
that very human form of patriotism across the decades in one’s own life and
then the centuries before. When I grew up studying the Normans and the
Plantagenets and the Tudors, they were not just artifacts of the distant past,
but deeply linked to the present by the monarchy’s persistence and the nation’s
thousand-year survival as a sovereign state — something no other European
country can claim.
To unify the nation, to set an example of decorum and
propriety, to retain a stiff upper lip, no matter what-- these values have been
lost in America. Those who regret their loss over here are not unhappy to see
that they persist on Great Britain.
3 comments:
It was reported that not only did the Queen have a good sense of humor but that she was known for telling bawdy jokes.
Great post, Stuart. I hope it's not the end of an era, but fear it could be. Still, you correctly mention Camilla's quiet and steady demeanor in spite of it all and that gives me hope. Kate and William are also wonderful image bearers of the Crown.
And I should add, image bearers for all of Western Civilization, now under attack from dark agents of depravity.
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