OPINION
GUEST ESSAY
King Charles Has Done What Monarchs Before Him
Would Not Dare
Feb. 18,
2024, 9:00 a.m. ET
By Miranda
Carter
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/02/18/opinion/king-charles-british-health.html
Ms. Carter
is the author of “George, Nicholas and Wilhelm: Three Royal Cousins and the
Road to World War I.”
The most
surprising thing about the disclosure that King Charles III has been diagnosed
with cancer after less than two years on the throne is the fact that it’s been
disclosed at all.
Cancer is
common; candor about the British royal family’s heath, not so much. Over the
centuries, like many royal families, it has gone to great lengths to hide the
condition of the sovereign’s body. Charles’s honesty, as far as it goes, seems
to be a sign of his desire to be a different kind of monarch.
A ruling
monarch has always been the embodiment of the state, a living metaphor of its
health. Just look at Hans Holbein’s 1537 portrait of the six-foot-plus Henry
VIII, a robust giant bestriding the world at the peak of his powers. Healthy
king, healthy country. It works in reverse, too. Shakespeare — never above a
little Tudor propagandizing — turned Richard III, the king from whom Henry’s
father grabbed the throne in 1485, into someone with a hunchback, a man so ugly
that dogs barked when he passed. Examination of Richard’s body, discovered in
ruins under a car park in the English city of Leicester in 2012, showed he
simply had scoliosis.
When your
body is the state, how do you speak of its inevitable weaknesses and frailties?
Historically, you didn’t. Four hundred years after the Tudors, in 1859, Kaiser
Wilhelm II, the last German emperor, was born with a withered arm (and probably
some brain damage) as a result of a complicated delivery. The idea of a
physically disabled heir was unthinkable, especially in a country where the
aristocracy defined itself by its military prowess. Wilhelm’s grandfather asked
if it was even appropriate to offer congratulations on the birth.
Desperate
and frankly weird attempts were made to make the limb work. Wilhelm’s
functioning arm was bound to his body when he was learning to walk, in an
attempt to force him to use the other one: predictably he fell over a lot.
Electric shocks were passed through it. The arm was placed inside the warm
carcass of a freshly killed hare, the idea being that the heat of the dead
animal would transmute itself into the child’s arm. At the age of 4, as his
mother wept, he was regularly strapped into a machine to try to stretch the
muscles. Nothing worked. Wilhelm grew up to be difficult, anxious and
resentful, though ironically he adapted very well to having only one
functioning arm.
Wilhelm’s
cousin, Nicholas II, the last czar of Russia, went to extreme lengths to hide
the hemophilia of his son and heir, Alexei, and refused to explain the presence
of the notorious faith healer Rasputin, whose exploits became a metaphor for
the Russian state’s corruption.
Such
suppressions almost always came at personal, emotional and political costs. The
source of Alexei’s hemophilia gene is believed to be none other than King
Charles’s great-great-great-grandmother Queen Victoria. Victoria passed the
gene on to her son Leopold, who died at 30 in 1884, after suffering a brain
hemorrhage after a fall, and to two of her daughters. As a result of Victoria’s
energetic royal matchmaking, the gene passed into the royal family of Russia,
through her granddaughter Czarina Alexandra, and some of the royal families of
Germany, through her daughter Alice. After the queen’s death it passed into the
Spanish royal family, through her granddaughter Victoria Eugenie, known as Ena,
who married King Alfonso XIII in 1906. Her husband’s discovery that she was a
carrier helped to destroy their marriage, and her oldest and youngest sons
would both die young of bleeding after minor car accidents.
Victoria
may also have been a carrier of porphyria, the illness to which some historians
have attributed George III’s madness and which produces physical symptoms
including agonizing abdominal pain, skin rashes and purple urine. The queen’s
eldest daughter (also named Victoria, the mother of Kaiser Wilhelm II) may have
had porphyria, too; DNA testing on the exhumed body of her daughter, Charlotte,
found a gene mutation related to the disease.
That both
illnesses may well have run in the British royal family were closely guarded
secrets at the time, and the question has still never been publicly
acknowledged by the monarchy.
One might
have expected that as the British royal family became a ceremonial institution
without power, it would become more open. In fact, the opposite was true. If
appearance is the only power you have, appearance matters very much. Just
before midnight on Jan. 20, 1936, the royal doctor Bertrand Dawson injected
George V’s “distended jugular vein” with a cocktail containing enough morphine
and cocaine to kill him at least twice. Lord Dawson gave the ailing king a
comfortable exit, but just as important, guaranteed his death would be reported
in the reputable morning papers, rather than in the “less appropriate evening
journals.” The story finally came out 50 years later in 1986, not via the royal
family but through Lord Dawson’s biographer.
George VI,
the current monarch’s grandfather, smoked two packs of cigarettes a day and had
already undergone the removal of his whole left lung by the time he died.
Nonetheless, the cause of his death was reported as coronary thrombosis, a
disease with less social stigma than the cancer that actually claimed him.
According to a recent biographer of Queen Elizabeth II (Gyles Brandreth, a
close friend of her husband’s), even her stated cause of death — “old age” —
was a euphemism for multiple myeloma, a kind of bone-marrow cancer.
So there’s
been widespread sympathy and praise for King Charles’s honesty. “His Majesty
has chosen to share his diagnosis,” the official statement explained, “to
prevent speculation and in the hope it may assist public understanding for all
those around the world who are affected by cancer.”
It was,
however, arguably the minimum amount of disclosure that the king could get away
with, given that any withdrawal from public duties would immediately be
noticed. Moreover, it did not specify which cancer he has — there are many
kinds — nor how advanced it is. As Richard Smith, former editor of the British
Medical Journal, wrote, whether the king might “be either right as rain or dead
in a few weeks.”
That said,
it’s probably asking too much to expect full candor from any head of state
about his or her health. American presidents are just as prone to keep their
medical information to themselves: Franklin Roosevelt hid the effects of his
polio; John Kennedy’s perma-tan distracted the world from his Addison’s disease
and probable celiac disease. A president’s physical and mental condition has a
tangible effect on both American politics and those of the rest of the world.
There will continue to be intense speculation about this question for the
septuagenarian and octogenarian candidates in the coming U.S. presidential
election, but no one expects either of them to tell the full truth.
The King’s
illness is surprising and unwelcome news. But at least British citizens can
take comfort in the fact that the monarchy is a ceremonial institution with a
clear and uncontroversial line of succession.
Miranda
Carter is the author of “George, Nicholas and Wilhelm: Three Royal Cousins and
the Road to World War I.”
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