I once dreamed of this, your future breath1129Please respect copyright.PENANAXPGA7EN2Ih
in prayer for me, lost long, forever found;1129Please respect copyright.PENANAlkKKDQN1Sf
or sensed you from the backstage of my death,1129Please respect copyright.PENANAHNknBLd6Ji
as kings glimpse shadows on a battleground1129Please respect copyright.PENANA76q0DZhwqh
The last line of the first stanza of the poem Richard by Carol Ann Duffy says just this "grant me the carving of my name". This line is so achingly beautiful, so mournfully accurate and so intensely wistful.1129Please respect copyright.PENANApunIyzHSRo
For those of you perhaps unfamiliar with this incredible tale, I shall tell it for you.1129Please respect copyright.PENANAk4AxCBg13Y
It was 2012, and whilst on a quest to dig for the remains of missing King Richard III, a skeleton was uncovered in the first trench, on the first day. DNA tests were taken. Descendants were tracked down. The identity of the skeleton was confirmed as that of Shakespeare's infamous hunch-backed villain.1129Please respect copyright.PENANAVkXK4ozY13
Fast forward to 2015. It is March, and a seven hour procession carries the king from the university, to the battle ground where he fell, to the cathedral where he will later to be laid to rest. There is a formal ceremony handing over the king. He lies in state for three days. A custom made crown is placed on the wooden coffin.1129Please respect copyright.PENANAmY9DH6atMD
Thursday morning the king is buried. Benedict Cumberbatch reads a poem written for the king by Carol Ann Duffy. The events last until 10pm, where a moments silence is held. Only four people are present during the moments silence. That moment of silence was the most profound moment I have ever witnessed.1129Please respect copyright.PENANAKttp4fl5qu
This is a king that transcends the barriers of time. He fell in August 1485. He lay in a hastily dug grave for over five hundred years.1129Please respect copyright.PENANARtG9m42rIY
I have seen many comments wondering why we need such fanfare, such a display. Would the same ceremony not be accorded our current queen? Richard III was a monarch. He received a funeral fit for a king. He was granted what he was denied - the carving of his name. A grave and a coffin, a funeral and a headstone.1129Please respect copyright.PENANAaWz61LEi6A
Never in my life have I been so proud to be a part of this nation. The 2012 olympics didn't give me this sense of pride. Watching his coffin being drawn on a gun carriage through the streets of Leicester with hundreds of onlookers throwing white roses made my heart swell.1129Please respect copyright.PENANAWOLb26fWBs
It is incredible to witness the image of Richard III change. Purely by strange coincidence, when the skeleton was found I was studying Richard III in college. Overwhelmingly the material written about him was negative. Now I see more positive writings and interpretations of this 'villainous' king. People are straying from traditional views. Straying from Tudor propaganda and reviewing the king and realising that, actually, he wasn't as bad as he was made up to be.1129Please respect copyright.PENANABamdVyN2ZI
And perhaps it's silly, and perhaps it's childish, but I look at the pre-Tudor painting of Richard III and the reconstruction of his face and I don't see a murderer, I don't see a traitor. I don't even see a king. I see a man. I see a man that died and was humiliated in more ways than I can even imagine after his death. I see a man that was denied the proper funeral rites and denied the dignity of a royal funeral. It makes me so happy to know that we have given him what he was refused at last. That finally, he can rest.
RIP your grace.1129Please respect copyright.PENANAnWoZKoMniM
RIII x1129Please respect copyright.PENANAAW7cYRsROz