“Whoso thinks it slavery to serve under an eminent prince is mistaken; liberty is never sweeter than under a pious king.” – Clauidan
“A Prince whose piety, and whose virtues, combined with a manly firmness and consistency of character, have been for years the grand bulwark, not only of this country, but of the whole civilized world.” – John Bowles on King George III
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America’s last king
Removed his golden crown,
A sign of earthly order,
Upon his coronation day
When Communion commenced
And the Lord’s Supper was received,
For, he said, his Savior had suffered
With thorns wrapped ‘round His head
And the universe ran purple
As the robe Herod bestowed
To humiliate, in his heathen hauntiness.
As such, Christian kingship
Should begin bare-headed,
Boasting in naught but Christ’s sacrifice,
Every soul’s only dependence.
America’s last king
Knelt, as he would each day,
In supplication before his Master,
For by grace, he was sworn sovereign,
But by birth, a wretched sinner,
His own confession penned
Over praises towards his person
In the Book of Common Prayer.
He warned his preachers
Not to flatter him from the pulpit
In quest of royal reward,
For nothing was more favorable to him
Than hearing the Gospel proclaimed
Without ornamentation.
When a bishop bragged
About his scholarly apologia,
The wise monarch remarked,
“The faith needs no apology,”
And urged him, instead, to preach
With a plain tongue.
America’s last King
Understood the order of nature,
Still imbued with traces of Eden,
As God’s good book,
Second only to Holy Writ,
And the soil was the realm’s worth
To be stewarded, on his sacred oath.
His name meant “farmer,”
While his patron was a martyr,
Full fitting, for rain and blood
Nourish the land alike.
So he spoke to his subjects
About the sheep in the meadow
And the cows in the corn,
And gave out guineas to countryfolk
Too busy to appeal at the palace.
A barren woman begged the royal touch,
As the Confessor bequeathed it
From the age of Saxon saints,
And the King, to comfort her, conceded,
Laying hands on her head
And letting her kiss his ring,
Ruby red as a wound.
America’s last king
Proved faithful to his family,
Playing on the floor with his children,
With eyes for none but his wife.
He sought to cleanse the court of iniquity,
Insisting the Lord’s Day be observed
And blasphemy be banished,
Lest his kingdoms be cursed,
For heaven and earth must be unified,
Or the rivets of reality are removed.
His own reality would be shaken
By sickness and strife,
The rending of his empire
And reduction of his faculties,
And yet the dual attributes
Of farmer and martyr remained
Ever rich in him.
America’s last king
Had honor enough to die for,
According to thousands of Britons
And Americans too, loyal to the end,
Cut down by led, strung up by rope,
Their final hour tragic yet glorious,
Joining forever siblings split by sea.
The King praised and mourned them,
For he was nothing if not loyal
To those who dared remain so to him.
He offered any favor to a Methodist
Who defended his name against slander
With a rush of hot black ink,
But the man said he wished for naught
Save yet more grace to guard him,
And the King, pleased with his reply,
Was his protector from thence forth.
Dare I say, across the tide of time,
In the undertow of enlightenment,
When democratic despotism holds sway
And the common cry is “No Kings,”
We could do far worse,
Yes, immeasurably worse,
Than be blessed again
With such a king as he.

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