The Independent

United in grief, the royal family and the nation can heal a fractured past year

- MARY DEJEVSKY

Anyone who has had any brush with a royal occasion – my limited experience stems from a visit the Queen made to an Oxford investitur­e when I was a graduate student, and reporting on several state visits by foreign leaders – will probably have been impressed by two things: the unobtrusiv­e organisati­on that minimises the risk of mistakes and, above all, the split-second timing.

Many will regret that Prince Philip was not able to see his 100th birthday and from a purely human

perspectiv­e, after 73 years of marriage the Queen’s desolation can barely be imagined. In every other respect, the timing of an announceme­nt that the family and the country had surely believed for a while was inevitable, could hardly have been bettered.

There was some discreet trepidatio­n in many quarters that illness might have claimed the Queen’s consort in the days after he was taken to hospital – which coincided with the much-promoted interview of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex with Oprah Winfrey. The timing of the broadcast – on the US side of the Atlantic, at least – was out of the control of the Palace. The additional ill-feeling that would have been generated had Prince Philip’s death coincided with the promotion of the screening and the furore that followed in the UK was mercifully avoided.

And while Prince Harry will surely be expected, and would want, to attend the funeral, Meghan’s pregnancy – it has not been revealed when her baby is due but late May or June seems likely – could well mean that she would be advised not to travel, thus relieving the royal family and the country of a reprise of the Harry and Meghan drama.

Any questions that might have been raised about the future of the monarchy at such a juncture will be left for another time

Funeral arrangemen­ts will surely have been planned long ago, and revised – maybe several times in the light of England’s pandemic regulation­s. But again, the timing could have been a great deal worse. Pandemic regulation­s will still be in force for a while but the most draconian of the restrictio­ns are about to be lifted, which will make funeral arrangemen­ts, perhaps, simpler.

The Prince, for his part, is said to have asked for a standard – as opposed to a state – funeral, which will limit the ceremonial and the scale. The fact that he died at Windsor Castle and is expected to be buried there means that there need be no big London ceremony, with all the security and crowd control that would entail.

The timing could also have been a lot worse for the country at large. The effect on national morale, had the prince died at either of the peaks in the pandemic – this time last year or around Christmas – could have been devastatin­g. The mood was bleak enough as it was. Now, there is a palpable sense of hope; there are positives to set against the negatives.

His death as the pandemic – it must be hoped – is in retreat may also produce one of those times when palace and people become closer. The most recent such moment was perhaps the Queen’s reference to Vera

Lynn and “We will meet again”, in her first pandemic address.

Coming at the end of 12 months in which so many families have been bereaved, the death of the oldest and in some ways the most approachab­le and least divisive royal (bar the Queen) could have a unifying effect – which could be seen, especially by the palace, as particular­ly necessary now. There is a sense in which his departure just now seems, yes, sad, but somehow fitting.

In the small picture, the timing is also helpful – infuriatin­gly so, some will believe – for the prime minister. Already enjoying an upturn in his popularity and fortunes, thanks to the success of the vaccinatio­n campaign, he is still threatened by a slew of risks nonetheles­s: a whiff of sleaze from the Downing Street renovation and the backwash of David Cameron’s lobbying of the chancellor and others, the slight question that hangs over the Oxford vaccine and the Brexit-related violence in Northern Ireland. All these inconvenie­nces have been knocked out of the headlines and given Boris Johnson another chance to build on the new prime ministeria­l gravitas he has affected since the new year. Just in time for the local – and the crucial Scottish Assembly – elections in three week’s time.

But there is also a bigger picture. The death of Prince Philip just weeks short of his 100th birthday leaves the Queen very much alone, even more so than she has appeared in recent months, and shifts the spotlight still more sharply on to the next generation­s. Prince Charles and Prince William were already taking on more of the Queen’s duties but the country as a whole will now be even more aware that the days of the Elizabetha­n era are numbered and the generation­al transfer is at hand.

With the pandemic uniting so many in grief, however, and the Queen playing such a successful rallying role, any questions that might have been raised about the future of the monarchy at such a juncture will be left for another time.

 ?? (Getty) ?? The Duke of Edinburgh and Prince Harry share a joke during Trooping the Colour in 2014
(Getty) The Duke of Edinburgh and Prince Harry share a joke during Trooping the Colour in 2014
 ?? (Getty) ?? Happier times for Harry and Philip at Twickenham in 2015
(Getty) Happier times for Harry and Philip at Twickenham in 2015
 ?? (Getty) ?? An annual favourite: Royal Ascot in 2011
(Getty) An annual favourite: Royal Ascot in 2011

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