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'He was a prince twice over but a homeless one'

By the standards of the royal family, frozen in a weird historical tableau, he was a very modern man

April 15, 2021 16:46
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EDINBURGH, UNITED KINGDOM - JULY 04: Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh smiles during a visit to the headquarters of the Royal Auxiliary Air Force's (RAuxAF) 603 Squadron on July 4, 2015 in Edinburgh, Scotland. (Photo by Danny Lawson - WPA Pool/Getty Images)
3 min read

In 1953, I was eight years old. On the morning of Saturday, 2 May, like every other Saturday, I would have been in shul. One of the highlights of the service for me, along with the Shema, Ein Keloheinu and so on was the prayer for the royal family: “He who gives salvation to kings and dominion to princes, may He bless Our Sovereign Lady Queen Elizabeth, Elizabeth the Queen Mother, Philip Duke of Edinburgh...” 

That afternoon I watched the FA Cup Final on television — Blackpool v Bolton Wanderers, the Stanley Matthews final. Before kick-off the Duke of Edinburgh shook hands with the teams. Matthews, wizard of the dribble, was 38; five weeks later, Gordon Richards, the nation’s favourite jockey, won his first Derby, age 46; and that summer Len Hutton, 37, led England’s cricket team to a rare Ashes win. The Coronation on 2 June came 16 months after the Queen’s accession, delayed by Winston Churchill, 78 and ailing, so that he could stay prime minister as long as possible. All of them were old men enjoying their last hurrah.

Philip was only 32. No last hurrah for him. His chosen career, as a sailor, had been ended very prematurely by his new wife’s father’s failing health. The young man who had it in him to one day perhaps become head of the Royal Navy committed the rest of his life to being the Queen’s first mate. “It was not my ambition to be president of the Mint Committee or the World Wildlife Fund,” he said later, “I was asked to do it. I’d much rather have stayed in the Navy, frankly.” 

By the standards of the royal family, frozen in a weird historical tableau, he was a very modern man and his story had its own gender-bending dimension. His birth and childhood were as tormented and fragmented as the girl victim in a Grimm’s fairytale. He was a prince twice over, but a homeless one. When he was asked what language they had spoken at home, he answered a question with a question “what is home?” Not a wandering Jew but a wandering Danish Greek. It was a princess who wafted him from hovel to palace. To live happily ever after? Maybe not entirely, but then which of us does?

It is poignant that the naval uniform he wore at his wedding in 1947 fitted him for the rest of his life. He was a hero from central casting – handsome, athletic, decisive, dominant, frank, outspoken, constructive, reasonably witty, a little bit outrageous and blessed with genes that never left him doddery or pitiful in old age. Nobody ever knows what the Queen’s thinking but we often knew what he was thinking.