THE REAL FAIRY TALE
With splendid pageantry and elegant costumes, royal weddings
bring up “fairy-tale” dreams of love and romance. “Fairy,” an English word,
comes from the French fée, which came
from the Latin fatare, “to enchant.” No
wonder royal weddings and “enchantment” go hand-in-hand—especially when there
is an engaging tug-of-the-heart story with the charms of Prince Harry and
Meghan Markle.
Following in his brother Prince William’s footsteps, Harry
not only married the woman he loves, but his spiritual partner as well. Only a
generation before—in the arranged marriage code-of-conduct royal world—such a
“love first, duty second, woman with a past” arrangement for any heir to the British
throne would have been, if not impossible, certainly one with consequences.
William and Harry’s parents’ wedding in 1981 stirred the
hope of “fairy tale” and yet, as Diana and Charles’ marriage played out, any
notion of “happily ever after” soon vanished. Theirs was an arranged marriage
that pretended it was not. Although times were changing when they married, the
social culture had not shifted enough to allow Prince Charles to follow his
true feelings. Perhaps even more consequential, the Windsor family was shadowed
by kinsman King Edward VIII who in 1936, with some political pressures, gave up
the throne “for the woman he loved.” The scandal was a little too close in
historical proximity for Charles to make a similar decision about marrying
someone for love who didn’t fit the “queenly model.”
Nonetheless,
almost seven decades after King Edward’s abdication, cultural changes were on Prince
Charles’ side—thanks in great part, ironically, to his late wife insisting on
bringing more heart into the royal
family. In 2005, 24 years after his marriage of “dynastic duty” to Diana,
Charles did not have to give up the throne nor start a palace revolt, yet, with
his queen’s blessing, he indeed married the woman who had been his longtime
friend and confidante—the woman he had long loved.
In
this more modern and egalitarian grand gesture, Charles and Camilla’s marriage put
the seal on “love over duty,” supporting Edward’s heartful claim that “he could
be a better king with the woman he loved at his side.” With such a legacy, when
it was time for Charles’ sons to marry, they fell in love with women who
matched their vision and compassion—beautiful “commoners” with “backgrounds” no
less!
So call royal weddings “fairy tales” if you must, but the
conscious connection that Princes William and Harry made in their marriages is
simply what I call the way life is meant to be when heads are clear and hearts are
strong. Whether king or prince
or commoner, “what your heart thinks is
great, is great,” poet Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote. “The soul’s emphasis is
always right.” ~
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