Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Charles cancer shock evokes world sympathy

-

Cancer is no respecter of persons and can strike commoner and king alike without notice. But news that King Charles had fallen victim to the dreaded C would certainly have come as a shock not only for his British subjects but for the world at large and invoked in many, across the world, heartfelt prayers for his speedy recovery.

Suddenly the fairy tale world of royalty stands rocked. Only a year ago, after the death of his beloved mother, the Queen, Britain had celebrated his coronation in majestic splendour and the world had watched entranced in May last year the unfolding royal spectacle on television. Britain had put her crown jewels on show, reviving the imperial grandeur of their Empire with a lustre no gem could outshine.

Despite being crowned in his early seventies, Charles appeared to have inherited the elixir of eternal life from his mother who died at 96. Britain seemed placed for another endearing royal spell with the crown firmly set on Charles’ head.

But Monday’s news had put paid to all that. The House of Windsor is in turmoil and the prospect of ‘death laying his icy hand’ on the family’s head, sooner than expected, has laid siege on the royal citadel.

The Royal Family has certainly had an inauspicio­us start to the new year with its medical woes not being confined to Charles alone. It has extended to Kate, the Princess of Wales. Both present king and future queen entered hospital in January, Charles, for a prostate op, and Kate for abdominal surgery.

She spent 13 days in hospital before being discharged and asked to rest until April. Though doctors had ruled out cancer, the long recovery period has fuelled speculatio­n that the 10 hour operation was more than simple surgery, with claims being made that she had been ‘induced into a coma’ during the op. But this has been denied.

For Charles, 75, it was a three night stay and, when he attended the service at the Windsor chapel last Sunday, he seemed to be in the pink of health for a man his age. Then came Monday’s devastatin­g Palace announceme­nt.

For the heir to the British crown, William, 41, destiny may land on his head earlier than he thought. But if the health of the forty two year future Queen of Britain were to worsen, he faces the sad possibilit­y of bringing up his three children as a single parent while coping with his royal duties as king to 65 million subjects. As a result, the entire royal household lies shrouded in gloom.

But 5500 miles away on the eastern seaboard of the North American continent, the sagging fortunes of the King’s second son Harry and his wife, Megan Markle in the US, and the ‘we want our privacy’ couple’s popularity in the UK might well see a dramatic turn around.

Prince Harry made a whistlesto­p trip to London, spending 10 hours on the flight from LA to have a 30 minute chat with his father before flying back on Thursday to LA. His brother William, the heir to Britain’s throne, did not meet him. Megan, who was never granted the ‘Princess’ title’ but remains a humble duchess before Prince William and Princess Kate, may harbour hopes of emerging as the uncrowned Princess in the King’s immediate family, should something tragic befall Britain’s future Queen.

Has the curse of Megan struck the House of Windsor, will be the question on cynical royal watchers’ lips? Two months ago the two royals, she had claimed in an Oprah TV interview in 2021 to have shown a racist streak by talking about what colour her baby would be, were inadverten­tly named in the Dutch edition of Harry’s biographer book ‘Endgame’, as Charles and Kate.

In the West, the coincidenc­e of her two most hated royals, simultaneo­usly struck by serious illnesses would pass off as ‘Megan gets her revenge for baby’s colour slur’. Had Megan been Lankan born, it would certainly be put down to the work of her ‘hooniyam’.

But cancer is no longer the death sentence that people dreaded in the past. And miracles can dawn on king and commoner alike. As Tennyson wrote: ‘More things are wrought by prayer than this world dreams of’. No doubt, there will be millions in Protestant England at church this Sunday morn, clasping their hands in prayer for their royal ‘Defender of the Faith’.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka