Death and Illusion in the British Monarchy

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The great civil procession around Isabel II’s coffin is sealed with calm and historic satisfaction

The movement of a piece of paper can cause a national uproar. This dissertation, inspired by the butterfly effect studied in chaos theory, describes the events that have occurred in the United Kingdom over the past ten days. It all started shortly before noon on September 8, when Nadhim Zahawi walked into the House of Commons of Parliament in Westminster and handed Liz Truss a piece of paper.

Zahawi is Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, one of the ancient titles that confuses locals and strangers in parliament, royal house, judiciary, military or universities. His functions are similar to those of a minister of the presidency. Liz Truss is Prime Minister (and first Lord of the Treasury, plus other titles). Elizabeth II had entrusted him with the head of government two days before her death.

The newspaper informed Truss of the Queen’s impending death. He was transferred from government to opposition seats to deputy Labor Party leader Angela Rayner. The officers understood that something serious was going on. The debate over the measures announced by the government to mitigate the effects of an extraordinary rise in energy prices has subsided.

As a result, in Westminster Hall, some fifty yards from the lower chamber where that paper ran, tens of thousands of Britons walk in two silent rows around the catafalque that contains the late Queen’s coffin. Some bow their heads or say a short prayer, others wear short-sleeved sports shirts. They stood in line for over 12 hours.

Children’s drawings deposited in the gardens of Holyroodhouse, awaiting the arrival of the Queen’s casket in Edinburgh, conclude with their walk. Or the audience standing still listening to the anthem of the London Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Sir Simon Rattle, as a prelude to a concert of French music. They share politeness in this crowd without noise.

The line stretching along the banks of the Thames is the culmination of court-designed rituals, the great civil procession in a week of funeral processions and military parades. Group behavior researchers at the University of Sussex surveyed hundreds of people in the Long Tail and found that feelings of “calmness and contentment” are more common than sadness.

The death of a 96-year-old woman could not have caused tears like those caused by the sudden death of Princess Diana, a mother of two, at the age of 36. The length and style of her reign made Elizabeth II the universal image of a queen. And while “the monarchy is anachronistic,” according to The Economist, “Elizabeth II prospered.” His death in a historic event that draws audiences.

“I don’t wish this on anyone,” according to The Times, King Charles III told a woman who felt sorry for his circumstances as he greeted people who had greeted him at Hillsborough Castle. There, in Northern Ireland, political condolences and mutual recognition of the new monarch and local institutions were organized.

This spontaneous confession by the king discredits the sycophants, who are perhaps the greatest danger to the monarchy in such a transparent society. Faced with the avalanche of saccharine or childish anecdotes to affirm the humanity of the Queen and her son, the King acknowledged the burden of combining mourning for his mother’s death with an incessant series of acts to underline the continuity of the Crown. .

The morgue rites will conclude this Monday with a funeral at Westminster Abbey, attended by dignitaries from all continents, and the subsequent burial at Windsor Castle. Areas near the abbey were overcrowded on Saturday, suggesting the 750,000 spectators in central London suggested by organizers could be reached.

The King has portrayed a lamenting man during his long time as heir, but at the outset of his reign he acted effectively, recognizing on his way through Hillsborough that imitating his mother requires a demanding role of mere representation. . The last days are said to have increased the popularity of Carlos, who was ruled out as the future king in 1994 after confessing his adultery with Camila.

But according to a series of polls by the National Center for Social Research, the monarchy is less popular than it was then. The sum of Britons who think it is very important and quite important has risen from 66% in 1994 to 55% in 2021. Those who think it is not very important and that it is not important, and should be abolished are passed in the last three decades from 33% to 43%.

The national commotion has plunged Liz Truss into anonymity, a woman in a hurry to implement her ideas and radically change her government from the conservative governments that preceded her. A former cabinet colleague says of her that “she believes the state is evil, that it blocks things and is generally a burden, that it needs to get smaller and gone.”

A country divided by ‘Brexit’ finally has an Executive of radical ‘Brexiters’ to guide the kingdom through the energy crisis and war in Europe, in a context of debt, poor growth and inequality. The death of Isabel II and the accession of Carlos III enabled the deployment of martial symmetries and evoked the Imperial pose. The family mourning can now begin. The country will also return to its harsh reality.

Source: La Verdad

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