.There was a saying, not heard today so
often as formerly . .
And yet England is not as
Nineveh and Tyre, nor as Rome, nor as Spain. Herodotus relates how
the Athenians, returning to their city after it had been sacked and
burnt by Xerxes and the Persian army, were astonished to find, alive
and flourishing in the blackened ruins, the sacred olive tree, the
native symbol of their country.
So we today, at the heart of a
vanished empire, amid the fragments of demolished glory, seem to
find, like one of her own oak trees, standing and growing, the sap
still rising from her ancient roots to meet the spring, England
herself.
Backward travels our gaze,
beyond the grenadiers and the philosophers of the 18th century,
beyond the pikemen and the preachers of the 17th, back through the
brash adventurous days of the first Elizabeth and the hard
materialism of the Tudors and there at last we find them, or seem to
find them, in many a village church, beneath the tall tracery of a
perpendicular East window and the coffered ceiling of the chantry
chapel.
From brass and stone, from line
and effigy, their eyes look out at us, and we gaze into them, as if
we would win some answer from their silence."Tell us what it is that
binds us together; show us the clue that leads through a thousand
years; whisper to us the secret of this charmed life of England, that
we in our time may know how to hold it fast.
"What would they say"?
They would speak to us in our
own English tongue, the tongue made for telling truth in, tuned
already to songs that haunt the hearer like the sadness of
spring. They would tell us of that marvellous
land, so sweetly mixed of opposites in climate that all the seasons
of the year appear there in their greatest perfection; of the fields
amid which they built their halls, their cottages, their churches,
and where the same blackthorn showered its petals upon them as upon
us; they would tell us, surely of the rivers the hills and of the
island coasts of England.
One thing above all they
assuredly would not forget; Lancastrian or Yorkist, squire or lord,
priest or layman; they would point to the kingship of England, and
its emblems everywhere visible.
They would tell us too of a
palace near the great city which the Romans built at a ford of the
River Thames, to which men resorted out of all England to speak on
behalf of their fellows, a thing called 'Parliament'; and from
that hall went out their fellows with fur trimmed gowns and strange
caps on their heads, to judge the same judgments, and dispense the
same justice, to all the people of England.
Symbol, yet source of power;
person of flesh and blood, yet incarnation of an idea; the kingship
would have seemed to them, as it seems to us, to express the
qualities that are peculiarly England's: the unity of England,
effortless and unconstrained, which accepts the unlimited supremacy
of Crown in Parliament
so naturally as not to be
aware of it; the homogeneity of England, so profound and embracing
that the counties and the regions make it a hobby to discover their
differences and assert their peculiarities; the continuity of
England, which has brought this unity and this homogeneity about by
the slow alchemy of centuries.
For the unbroken life of the
English nation over a thousand years and more is a phenomenon unique
in history, the product of a specific set of circumstances like those
which in biology are supposed to start by chance a new line of
evolution. Institutions which elsewhere are recent and artificial
creations appear in England almost as works of nature, spontaneous
and unquestioned.
From this continuous life of a
united people in its island home spring, as from the soil of England,
all that is peculiar in the gifts and the achievements of the English
nation. All its impact on the outer world in earlier colonies, in the
later Pax Britannica, in government and lawgiving, in commerce and in
thought has flowed from impulses generated here. And this continuing
life of England is symbolised and expressed, as by nothing else, by
the English kingship. English it is, for all the leeks and thistles
grafted upon it here and elsewhere. The stock that received all these
grafts is English, the sap that rises through it to the extremities
rises from roots in English earth, the earth of England's history.
We in our day
ought well to guard, as highly to honour, the parent stem of
England, and its royal talisman; for we know not what
branches yet that wonderful tree will have the power to put
forth.
The danger is not always violence and force; them we have withstood before and can again.
The peril can also be indifference and humbug, which might squander the accumulated wealth of tradition and devalue our sacred symbolism to achieve some cheap compromise or some evanescent purpose.
The danger is not always violence and force; them we have withstood before and can again.
The peril can also be indifference and humbug, which might squander the accumulated wealth of tradition and devalue our sacred symbolism to achieve some cheap compromise or some evanescent purpose.
Enoch Powell (Speech to the Royal Society of St. George, on April 23, 1961)
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