Become a Member
Opinion

I’m sad about the Queen but others are sadder

Maybe it’s because I’m a rootless ‘citizen of the world’ that I cannot participate entirely

September 15, 2022 08:19
gettyimages-1663163076
3 min read

In the early days of courtship, an ex-boyfriend of mine, years ago, had seemed perfect. The only problem was that he was a republican. So over BBQs in his garden on warm Cambridge nights, I did battle with him on the virtues of the British monarchy, expounding on its stabilising effects, its emotionally unifying capacity, its layered, anchoring tradition, its encapsulation of the strange and exceptional qualities of Britain. I reeled out the classic argument: compared to a political appointment, the monarch was a transcendently superior head of state.

In the context of the reign of Elizabeth II, his republicanism was even harder to understand. I, like most people, not only admired but greatly liked the Queen. Her qualities were so clearly excellent, her demeanour so winning. Who, I asked, could he think of who would improve on her total commitment to service on a grand scale, bolstered by a fine form of godliness, and an apparent disinterest in power, image or the trappings of wealth? It was one of the few arguments I ever won: in the end, he came round.

But for all my monarchism, for all my rational appreciation of the Queen and now of the momentousness of her death, throughout the last week or so I have never felt more cut off from the nation. It seems to me that at 96, the monarch’s passing was hardly a surprise, nor a tragedy. A life more purposefully lived, or more peacefully ended, seems hard to imagine. I simply cannot throw myself into a ceremonially morbid state of mind.

Don’t get me wrong. I have watched the key ceremonies with great interest, feeling chills up my spine at the ancient and intricate majesty of the British throne, the intimacy of its connections to church and state. But as events great and small got cancelled for mourning, I felt myself getting irritated. Perhaps it is the enormity of disruption wrought by Covid that has made me tired of public cataclysms interfering in the carefully-planned details of daily life. At any rate, I found myself wondering why a friend’s son can’t watch the football, or a colleague can’t go to the opera, or my neighbour to the Last Night of the Proms, or a much-looked forward to philosophy festival laboriously planned months in advance at great disruption to my schedule (as a speaker, not an organiser, thankfully), can’t go ahead.

Topics:

Monarchy