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" IFEATURES i---1 Books Art Music Jjjjp News of Churches B —- . __WASHINGTON, D. C., SATURDAY, MAY 8, 1937. ~ " PAGEB— Jlritiali (Erourn (Errrmomj (Siitra S>olrmnitg to Major (Eljajttrr in Sfiatoro of Stmra ©rarna of $5ast anb present JBratos fEfjreabS Jfrom Centuries Cmptre Jpas libeb, anb Sttacbes ®fjem to tfje JJeto Iting, Witty | Symbolism Clotbeb in (gorgeous ^ageantrn. mhzin7p“eiiZVo^:- s»'“'sS* the coronation ceremonies . The high altar of Westminster Abbey where the King and Queen will take communion during the ceremony. The fald stools of the monarch and his consort are shown in the fore ground. —A. P. Photo. The imperia1 cfnt*. r, ■ lr^,«^.,.. .. .. -Wide World Photo. The Rouge Croix Pursuivant, Philip Walter Kerr, in the ceremonial dress in which he will appear during the procession attending the coronation. —Wide World Photo. A ---- The royal scepter which will he placed in the right hand of the King. —A. P. Photo. By Thomas R. Henry. FROM the ends of the earth multitudes are converging on ancient London and West minster Abbey this week to witness the coronation of a King. Many are from America which aupposedly thinks lightly of kings— >and not a few from Washington. They are drawn by diverse motives. A coronation is a “society” event. It attracts those eager for social pres tige. With its colorful pageantry it Is “the greatest show on earth,” oc curring only once in a generation and Tvith something of the same sort of appeal as a total eclipse of the Bun. It is an historical event. Those Who take part in it, however far re moved from the actual proceedings, feel the satisfaction of having been identified with a major chapter in the history of the times. They are identified with the great. But a coronation is more than all these things and draws people for profounder motives. It is a religious event, a mystical event. A man is raised to a superior and unique status—symbolically at leas." through this ceremony. He becomes a living, smiling, hand-shaking individual son, husband and father like so many millions of others—something akin to the intangible which in America we designate as the state and for which we have no very acceptable symbol. It is very different, in this respect, from an inauguration in the United States. Here a man takes an oath to perform faithfully certain duties, and there is more or less pomp and pageantry attending his assumption of office. But he remains exactly the tame sort, of man as he was before, and at the end of eight years will be one of the common herd again. 'T'HE man who is anointed and A crowned as King of Great Britain and Ireland becomes, symbolically, something different from what he was before and different from other men. He is, to paraphrase the biblical phrase, "barn again." He is the re cipient of a sacrament which can never be abrogated. The coronation is a solemn compact between the King and his people and the King and his God, which remains in force as long as he lives. Such is the religious point of view. From another point of view, the coro nation is a great and colorful drama —the drama of the history of England. The ancient Celts and their forest gods, the earliest Christians in their lonely monasteries, the Saxon con querors, the Norse sea rovers, the mailed Normans, the plumed Plan tagenets, the tartaned Stuarts, Arthur and Merlin, the saints and the war riors, he Black Prince and Shake speare—all enter into the sublime ceremony. It is all that England is or has been—and all epitomized in one individual, the King. Threads drawn from the dimmest depths of the race’s past are drawn together in the person of an individual. He is, for better or worse, England. At such a drama even the scoffer at the religious significance of the ceremony may well stand abashed. He must sense, as perhaps never be fore, contact with and perhaps Identi fication with the fathomless past of the speakers of his tongue. There is the music of trumpet and drum and the singing of choristers. There is an unheard music—wild higfiland love and battle songs, the shouting of the yoemen at Agincourt, the roar of the guns at Waterloo, the sound of the bagpipes at Lucknow. 'J'HE coronation ceremony is always held at Westminster Abbey, burial place of the greatest of the British race. There the bearers of the regalia, the flags of the empire, and the others who are to take part in the ceremony gather on the morning of coronation day. The guests go to their appointed seats. The streets are thronged with the millions come for a glimpse of the great ceremony. Upon their arrival at the west en trance of Westminster Abbey, the King and Queen are received by the bishops and lords carrying the regalia. The procession passes up the nave of the church into the choir while the choristers sing: "I was glad when they said unto me, We will go into the House of the Lord." This is an intimation of the religious significance of the ceremonials that are to follow. The Queen follows the bearers of her regalia and proceeds to her chair of state near the altar. There she re mains standing, surrounded by her mistresses of robes, ladies in waiting and regalia bearers. The King then is escorted to his chair of state. Both take their seats for the recognition, the first official act of the coronation ceremony. The Archbishop of Canterbury—who both by law and by unviolated ancient cus tom is the foremost figure in such a proceeding—advances from the altar. He is accompanied by the lord high chamberlain, the lord high constable, the lord high chancellor and the earl marshal. “Sirs, I here present unto you King George the Sixth, the undoubted King of this realm; wherefore all you who are come this day to do your homage and service, are you willing to do the same.” Four times he repeats this, turning to the east, the west, the north and the south. From each direction comes the response: * God save the King. 'T'HE trumpets sound. The arch bishop proceeds to the altar. The bearers of the regalia hand them to him one by one and he passes them KING GEORGE AND QUEEN ELIZABETH. _ —A. P. Photo. to the Dean of Westminster. All are placed on the altar—the golden spurs, the ring of St. Edward, the crown, the bracelets. All except the swords. The Bishop of Bath and Wells and 1 the Bishop of Oxford chant the litany: “Oh God, the Father of Heaven, have mercy on us miserable sinners." From the people: “Spare us, good Lord.” The bishops: “Oh God, the Son, redeemer of the world, have mercy on us miserable sinners. “Spare us, good Lord.” The King remains uncovered during the litany. Then comes the commun ion service by the Archbishop of Canterbury, ending with the recital of the creed: “I believe in one God, the Father Almighty, Maker of Heaven and earth, and of all things visible and Invisible." The coronation sermon then is preached by the Archbishop of York, according to his ancient prerogative, dating from the days when the actual coronation was made a prerogative of the Archbishop of Canterbury. Dur ing the sermon, the King sits facing the pulpit, with the Archbishop of Durham and the lords bearing the three swords which alone of the regalia have not been placed on the altar— Curtana, the pointless sword of mercy, the blunt sword of Justice to the spirituality, and the sharp-pointed sword of Justice to the temporality. The length and tenor of the sermon depend upon the Judgment of the archbishop, who is privileged to say about anything he pleases. In the old days there were some scorching tirades delivered when the preachers were not well satisfied with the moral state of the realm. By far the worst one was when Charles the II was crowned in Scotland, England still being in the hands of the Common wealth armies. The Bishop of Car lisle took the opportunity of damning the new king's father and mother— and the circumstances were such that there was nothing to be done about it. Recent coronation sermons, of course, have been invariably cir cumspect and eloquent. The conclusion of the sermon marks the beginning of the fftUjtolemnities of the occasion. 'T'HEN the Archbishop of Canterbury administers the oath, the King sitting In the chair of state. “Sir, Is Your Majesty willing to take the oath?” “I am willing.” “Will you solemnly promise and swear to govern the people of this United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and the Dominions thereto belonging according to the statutes In Parliament agreed on, and the respective laws and customs of the same?” “I solemnly promise so to do.” • “Will you to your power cause law and Justice In mercy to be executed in all your Judgments?” “I will.” "Will you, to the utmost of your The jeweled sword which will be handed by the King to the archbishop.— A.P. Photo. The Bishop of Bath and Wells, who U'ill share ho7iors in supporting his majesty in the procession a7id during the coro nation service in Westminster Abbey. —Wide World Photo. power, maintain the laws of God, the True Gospel, and the Protestant Re formed Religion established by law; and will you maintain and preserve inviolably the settlement of the Church and England and the doctrine, worship, discipline and government thereof, as by law established in Eng land; and will you preserve unto the bishops and clergy of England and to the churches committed to their charge all such rights and privileges as by law do or shall appertain to them or any of them?” "AH this I promise to do.” The King rises and proceeds to the altar, the sword of state carried before him. He kneels and places his right hand on the Bible, which the Arch bishop holds for him. The monarch repeats; "The things which I have here prom ised I will perform and keep. So help me God.” He kisses the Bible, and signs a transcript of the oath he has just taken. He returns to his chair. He and the Queen kneel while the choir sings, "Come, Holy Ghost.” 'T'HEN conies the most solemn cere mony of the entire coronation, the unction. It is the central act of the religious ceremonial. The King receives a sacrament which, from the religious point of view, sets him forever aside from other men. Hence forth until he dies, perhaps regardless of what he may do as an individual, this special sanction remains with him. Once the scriptural authority for the custom was a basis of the doctrine of the divine right of kings, which caused no end of trouble in the world. The king might be a silly ass or he might be a malevolent scoundrel—but be was the king, forever set apart from other men. Today It la far more than a for mality. It formed the baal* of the famous diocesan sermon of the Bishop of Bradford, last fall, which pre cipitated the abdication of Edward VIII. Could an ordained clergyman of the Church of England, presum ably acting with divine authority, bestow such a sacrament upon a man of whose acts he disapproved? More especially, as the bishop hastened to explain, could clergymen of other faiths be allowed to take part in such a ceremony? His contention was that its religious significance would be made light of. 'J'HE anointing ceremony Is per formed by the primate of the English Church, the Archbishop of Canterbury, and Is preceded by the prayer; “O Lord, Holy Father, who by anointing with oil didst of old make and consecrate kings, priests and prophets to teach and govern thy people Israel: Bless and sanctify thy chosen servant George, who by our office and ministry is now to be anointed with this oil and consecrated King of this realm; strengthen him, O Lord, with the Holy Ghost, the Com forter; confirm and stablish (cx) him with Thy free and princely spirit, the spirit of wisdom and government, the spirit of counsel and ghostly strength, the spirit of knowledge and true godliness; and fill him, O Lord, with the spirit of Thy holy fear, now and forever. Amen." The choir sings. The King is di vested of his crimson regal robe and takes off his ermine-lined cap of state. He rises. Four earls hold over his head a canopy of cloth of gold. He walks slowly to the altar and sits In the chair of St. Edward, over the Stone of Scone, or of Destiny, In which all his royal ancestors, with a single exception, have received the sacrament since the first Edward. The King kneels. The Dean of Westminster takes from the altar the ampulla, the golden eagle given to the exiled St. Thomas a Becket by the Virgin Mary. He pours some of the holy oil into the worn, ancient spoon, and holds it for the primate. The Archbishop of Canterbury makes the sign of the cross with the oil on the top of the King's head. "Be thy head anointed with holy oil, as were the kings, priests and prophets of old.” He makes the sign of the cross on the King’s breast "Be thy breast anointed with holy oil.” He makes the sign of the cross on the palms of both hands. "Be thy hands anointed wdth holy oil.” Head, heart, hands—the trinity of the man. His thoughts, his motive* his acts thus forever elevated sym bolically from the thoughts, motives and acts of other men. The man thus is mystically metamorphosed into the King. Henceforth he stands until he dies in a strange, solemn loneliness—the price set of old for those who would rule with heaven's sanction over their fellows. He has crossed a bourne over which there is no returning, forever and forever. gOLEMNLY the archbishop Intones: "And as Solomon was anointed King by Zadclc, the priest, and by Nathan, the prophet, so be you King over this people, whom the Lord, our God, has given you to rule and govern. In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost.” And then the prayer: "Our Lord Jes s Christ, the Son of God, who by his Father was anointed with the oil of gladness above his fellows, by his holy anointment pour down blessings of the Holy Ohost, and prosper the works of your hands: that by the assistance of His heavenly (Continued on Page B-30