say nothing either way.
For ’tis ne’er the way of kings to boast and brag,
Our princely state speaks well enough for us.
Lesser men yell self-aggrandising fuss,
In crown alone a king hath ample swag.
To you it falls, descendants of my subjects, to judge whether the Prince who fell at Bosworth Field, the last of England’s kings to die in war – you think you’d have caught one of those powdered Hanoverian ponces wielding a sword? Or that lascivious buffoon Charles II, who slavered over that buxom bint with the oranges? – is Leicester City’s salvation. All I will do is state these barren facts. Perchance they tell a tale upon their own.
’Twas on 5 September 2012 that men and women with spades – ‘archaeologists’, in the modern parlance – located the Church of Grey Friars in Leicester town, where a monument to me was known once to have stood, beneath ranks of metal motor horses serried in their oblong bays above.
I would not dwell upon the dusty past, for memory gives cause for melancholy yet. But it was there within that church, after I breathed my last one August day of 1485, that I was hastily laid to rest, without the ritual or the honour due my rank. And there it was that my waxen flesh decayed, until spine-curved skeleton was all that did remain.
If ever you saw the stage amusement bearing my name, as writ by that girlish, meretricious bard, you’ll know me for a wretch with hunch for back. A pitiful freak to all with eyes, like that Frankish git who roamed another cathedral by the Seine, forever plapping forth about his bells.
True it is that when I was a child, and ventured forth beyond Fotheringay Castle walls to take the airs, the boys who could not play for want of ball would point towards my back, accusing me of theft until I, enraged, replied: ‘How many times? I haven’t got your fucking ball.’
If neither the curving of spine nor yet the withering of limbs were so great as some have made them look – you can’t legislate against Tudor propaganda – a pretty sight I never was, for sure.
It was not in sooth entirely a hunch, but a malaise that came upon me as a child to twist me out of form. Idiopathic scoliosis is the doctorly term today. Google it at leisure for thyselves.
I do not beg thy pity for my shape, invert’d cur and hideous though I was. But kicking an inflated pig’s bladder, with fellows of my age – if not my rank – was a childhood joy denied me by this fate.
Like Clau-Clau-Claudius of Rome, lame stammerer who for a halfwit was mistook, I was not by nature shaped for sportive tricks. Deform’d, unfinish’d, sent forth before my time, I could not run or frolic with my contemporaries. But love the game I did from infant days, when nurse would make me stand between the posts, kicking inflated pig’s bladder towards her target while I, tiny custodian, did dive across the goal.
I was no Gordon Banks, who dived to save from Pelé like a salmon.
For I was small and bent, and for a ball had only blown-up gammon.
And again like Claudius, who long before me grew to rule where none foresaw, you could have got longer than 5,000–1, from the turf-accountant firm of WagerFred, against me taking the title coveted by all. The odds when I was born, the twelfth of thirteen babes to slither from one mother’s womb, in the autumntide of 1452, were in the many millions sure enough.
Yet that longed-for title I eventually did seize. My path to throne was winding as my spine, and how I journeyed isn’t swiftly told. Do Google, once again, if fancy takes. But don’t believe each and every word you read. Those were dangerous, violent times, and demanded stringent measures. We could not afford to be angels in those days.
Anyway, suffice it that I became the king in summertime of 1483, when I not long since had thirty turned, after my brother Edward IV left this earth. Tragically uncrowned was his son Edward V. Lovely kid, and so was his brother, Richard of Shrewsbury. Straight up – and yes, thanking you, I get the irony of that, stooping crookback that I was – you couldn’t put a price upon my grief when my nephews vanished from the Tower, though how or where they went none truly knows.
So it was in their absence that, come July that year when they were handing out the sceptres, it was I who received the premier title of England, the last of the House of York anointed in sight of God.
Funny old game, monarchy. All men crave it, and most would yield their lives merely to play the game of thrones at all. Yet uneasy hangs the head that wears the crown, for menace of dethronement cleaves ever close.
Know who’d confirm that? Nigel Pearson, twice our gaffer at Leicester City, that’s who. Nigel’s first spell as ruler endured but two years, like my own. Then he fell, though at the hand of our club chairman, the Slavic invader Milan Mandarić, not one of warlord Henry Tudor’s strikers with an axe.
Yet now and again a king doth rise again. Our Lord Jesus did so, gospel states, and so did my brother Edward IV, who was ousted by the Lancastrian Henry VI only to slaughter Henry (with a little help from his friends and relatives, truth be told) and be restored as king.
Like my brother, Nigel Pearson soon enough regained his throne. In 2010, ownership of Leicester City passed to Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, the leader of a company of men from the distant eastern land of Old Siam, who call themselves King Power Duty Free. Though by the thrice-beshitten shroud of Satan, what witless gibberish is that? For tell me how the power of a king can from onerous chains of duty e’er be loosed?
And it’s Leicester City, Leicester City FC.
We’re by far the greatest team
The world has ever seen.
Who now would gainsay the wisdom of such words? Yet in autumn of 2011, it struck the ear as a sardonic chant. For my Foxes languished low in the second tier, the so-called ‘Championship’ (I can’t be doing with these rebrandings. Second Division’s still good enough for me), when Srivaddhanaprabha restored Nigel to his coachly post.
Time and space are short, so we must leap ahead in mighty bounds. One year after Pearson’s restoration, I was discovered in car park tomb. Eighteen months after that, in May 2014, we rose again to the highest league, whither and thither we have yo-yo’d for so long.
The Premier League season did commence in August of that year, and hand on heart, our fortunes prospered not. A burst of joy when we thumped Man United 5–3 at home soon enough gave way to direst gloom. Christmas found us propping up the league, far adrift from every other club. In all the years that passed, but twice had Yuletide stragglers escaped the drop.
The New Year brought no succour, and in February all seemed lost. So did Nigel Pearson for a time. At home to Crystal Palace, trailing and fated to lose by one to nil, this bullish man did squeeze a rival player’s neck. It later spread abroad that he was gone, discharged. He thought himself that P45 was his. Yet a change of heart was had, and Pearson stayed, and gaffer still was he next month when the car park I forsook.
On 22 March of the year 2015, my skeleton was carried in procession to Leicester Cathedral, where four days later I duly was interred. The Archbishop of Canterbury attended, and members of the ruling house. Insultingly minor members, I might add. My namesake Duke of Gloucester (gormless old buffer) and Prince Edward’s missus, the Countess of Wessex. Would it have killed them to send a big gun like Philip, Prince of Denmark as well as Greece? Or Charles, who doth converse with flora to fill the time while waiting upon his queenly mother’s death?
But what doth it profit us to carp? Besides, the day was not a dead loss. That prancing mime Benedict Cumberbatch did read aloud an ode, as writ by Carol Ann Duffy, the Laureate of the land. I reproduce it, without anyone’s kind permission but by the right of kings, below.
Richard
My bones, scripted in light, upon cold soil,
a human braille. My skull, scarred by a crown,
emptied of history. Describe my soul
as