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KING AND QUEEN

VISIT TO AMERICA

WEAKNESSES OF REPUBLIC

(From "The Post's'1 Representative.)

NEW YORK, December 7.

When President Roosevelt's wile remarked, after the King and Queen had accepted their invitation to visit the United States, that Americans were greatly interested in Royalty, and would take pride "in showing off the King, as vif he were an elder brother," she merely gave expression to a national sentiment that has been apparent in recent years—more so, jsince the rise of dictatorship, with its threat to democracy. The late King George had a deep personal interest in American affairs and a sincere affection of the American peqpje that were heartily reciprocated. At no time was this more manifest than on the occasion of his first broadcast to the Empire, [on Christmas Day, 1932. It was estimated that he had fifty million listeners in the United States. Even before that hisr.j toric incident, thoughtful Americans j regarded him not \ only as" the head ,of the British Commonwealth of Nations but as belonging to and: shared by all English-speaking peoples. With what eagerness did they, listen, to his voice! They were .delighted to discover that it bore no distinct accent. The motion picture and radio fraternity were instructed to adopt this form of diction. It would not be difficult to prove that American speech has come nearer to the parent English as the result of his thre appearances on the air. President Roosevelt, a consistent admirer of King George, led the nation in expressing sympathy when his life "moved peacefully to its close." PERSONIFICATION OF THE, . ..... STATE. ~. .. ■' In no part of the world are the varying classifications of liberty scanned more closely than in the United States. Rich educational endowments enable research to be carried on; in no sphere is it more searching than in. the sphere of government. Americans watched with interest the decline of monarchies. in Europe, and their replacement by dictatorships. Yet, at a time when there are fewer reigning monarchies in Europe than since the close of the Dark Ages, doubts are'expressed of the efficaqy of the republic—expressed by business men, teachers, workmen, who have been its staunch supporters. To them the monarchy found its highest expression in the person of the late King George. A constitutional authority, Mr. Ralph Adams Gram, eloquently illustrates this sentiment among the American people. :■ During King George's Jubilee, "all the magnificent and medieval panoply of high kingship was avidly, even enviously regarded by the citizenry of the United States. Somehow, behind the glittering show, men seemed to sense reality; there were stirrings of an older memory, for a few. generations—they are J hardly more than decades—could not wholly nullify the inheritance of five millenniums. After all, republicanism is a very bourgeois, nouveau riche affair." Mr. Gram thinks the American system is seriously at fault, in that the President has political party affiliations, which the Constitution never contemplated. To release him from them would give him status as the personification of the State in the consciousness of ,the people. "The most vital factor in kingship is just this incarnation, in one visible individual, of the traditions of a people, their patriotism, their ideals and their aspirations. This is why a King of today, like the King of England, is still,, in the eyes of his people, the august personification of the State."

Cup fixture over the Christmas holidays. It is as follows: — M. Dentice, D. Alexander, K. Parkin, IP. Rough, W. Coupland, W. Jarvis, I. Manley, F. Mooney, G. Rabone, J. F. Parker, L. Flanagin. The Canterbur-y side will be as follows:— I. A. Baxter, J. B. Smith, D. O. Masefield, A. Callaway, J. Wasoh, R. E. Empson, J. Reeves, W. Morley, A. Burgess, M. Marshall, and Rumbold.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19381230.2.97

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXXVI, Issue 156, 30 December 1938, Page 9

Word Count
623

KING AND QUEEN Evening Post, Volume CXXVI, Issue 156, 30 December 1938, Page 9

KING AND QUEEN Evening Post, Volume CXXVI, Issue 156, 30 December 1938, Page 9

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