- Eikon Basilike
The "Eikon Basilike" (Greek: Unicode|Εἰκὼν Βασιλική, the "Royal Portrait"), "The Pourtrature of His Sacred Majestie in His Solitudes and Sufferings", was a purported spiritual
autobiography attributed to KingCharles I of England . It was published onFebruary 9 ,1649 , ten days after the King was beheaded byParliament in the aftermath of theEnglish Civil War in1649 .Contents and authorship
Written in a simple, moving, and straightforward style in the form of a
diary , the book combines irenicprayer s urging the forgiveness of Charles's executioners with a justification of royalism and the King's political and military program that led to the Civil War.It is by no means certain that Charles wrote the book. After the Restoration,
John Gauden ,bishop of Worcester , claimed to have written it. Scholars continue to disagree about the merits of this claim, though assuming that Gauden wrote it, he had access to Charles's papers when he wrote it.Jeremy Taylor is also said to have had a hand in its revision, and to be the source of its title; an earlier draft bore the name "Suspiria Regalia", the "Royal Sighs."Some later editions of the Eikon Basilike contained a sworn statement by William
Levett , Esq., longtime courtier and groom of the bedchamber to the King, that Levett had witnessed Charles writing the text during the time that Levett accompanied him in his imprisonment on the Isle of Wight. [ [http://books.google.com/books?id=NZThfH7QUfQC&pg=PA284&lpg=PA284&dq=%22eikon+basilike%22+levet&source=web&ots=uJQZ1QSQNh&sig=sDLNwVyPUcqqKLH4Cvr6CmU6QZg&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=1&ct=result Eikon Basilike: Or, The King's Book, Charles, John Gauden, Edward Almack, Chatto and Windus1907] ] [ [http://books.google.com/books?id=HWEBAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA134&lpg=PA134&dq=%22eikon+basilike%22+levet&source=web&ots=Quwb81o5dn&sig=1fFgIVFtPm0m0HVVVt3219W2zek&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=6&ct=result Who Wrote Eikon Basilike?, Christopher Wordsworth, London, 1824] ] A witness to the King's execution, Levett later helped transport the King's body back to Windsor Castle for burial.Whoever wrote the Eikon Basilike, its author was an effective prose stylist, one who had partaken deeply of the solemn yet simple eloquence of Anglican piety as expressed in Cranmer's "
Book of Common Prayer ". The end result is an image of a steadfastmonarch who, while admitting his weaknesses, declares the truth of his religious principles and the purity of his political motives, while trusting in God despite adversity. Charles's chief weakness, it says, was in yielding to Parliament's demands for the head of the Earl of Strafford; for thissin , Charles paid with his throne and his life. Its portrait of Charles as a martyr invited comparison of the King toJesus .The
pathos of this dramatic presentation made it a master stroke of Royalistpropaganda . The book was quite popular despite official disapproval during the Protectorate and the Restoration; it went into 36 editions in 1649 alone. Because of the favourable impression the book made of the King, Parliament commissionedJohn Milton to write a riposte to it, which he published under the title "Eikonoklastes" ("The Icon-Breaker") in1649 . Milton's response sought to portray the image of Charles, and theabsolute monarchy he aspired to, as idols, claiming a reverence due only to God, and therefore justly overthrown to preserve the law of God. This theological counterattack failed to dislodge the sentimental narrative of the "Eikon" itself from public esteem.Its famous frontispiece
The heavily allegorical
frontispiece of the "Eikon Basilike" depicts the King as a Christianmartyr . TheLatin texts read:
* "IMMOTA, TRIVMPHANS" — "Unmoved, Triumphant" (scroll around the rock);
* "Clarior é tenebris" — "Brighter through the darkness" (beam from the clouds);
* "CRESCIT SUB PONDERE VIRTVS" — "Virtue grows beneath weights" (scroll around the tree);
* "Beatam & Æternam" — "Blessed and Eternal" (around the heavenly crown marked "GLORIA" ("Glory")); meant to be contrasted with:
** "Splendidam & Gravem" — "Splendid and Heavy" (aroundthe Crown ofEngland , removed from the King's head and lying on the ground), with the motto "Vanitas" ("vanity "); and
** "Asperam & Levem" — "Bitter and Light", the martyr'scrown of thorns held by Charles; contains the motto "Gratia" ("grace");
* "Coeli Specto" — "I look to Heaven";
* "IN VERBO TVO SPES MEA" — "In Thy Word is My Hope";
* "Christi Tracto" — "I entreat Christ" or "By the word of Christ";
* "Mundi Calco" — "I tread on the world".The frontispiece was engraved by William Marshall. In the first edition, the frontispiece was accompanied by Latin and English verses that explain it. The English verses go:
:"Tho' clogg'd with weighs of miseries":"Palm-like Depress'd, I higher rise"
:"And as th'unmoved Rock outbraues":"The boist'rous Windes and raging waues":"So triumph I. And shine more bright":"In sad Affliction's darksom night."
:"That Splendid, but yet toilsom Crown":"Regardlessly I trample down."
:"With joie I take this Crown of thorn":"Though sharp, yet easie to be born."
:"That heavn'nlie Crown, already mine":"I view with eies of Faith diuine."
:"I slight vain things, and do embrace":"Glorie, the just reward of Grace."
King Charles venerated by the Church of England
The "Eikon Basilike" and its portrait of Charles's execution as a martyrdom were so successful that, at the Restoration, a special commemoration of the King on
January 30 was added to theBook of Common Prayer , directing that the day be observed as an occasion forfasting andrepentance . OnMay 19 ,1660 , theConvocation ofCanterbury andYork canonised King Charles at the urging of Charles II, and added his name to the prayer book. Charles I is the onlysaint formally canonised by theChurch of England .The commemoration was removed from the prayer book by Queen Victoria in
1859 . Several Anglican churches andchapel s are dedicated to "King Charles the Martyr." TheSociety of King Charles the Martyr was established in1894 to work for the restoration of the King's name to theCalendar and to encourage the veneration of the Royal Martyr.Quotation
:I would rather choose to wear a crown of thorns with my Saviour, than to exchange that of gold, which is due to me, for one of lead, whose embased flexibleness shall be forced to bend and comply to the various and oft contrary dictates of any factions, when instead of reason and public concernments they obtrude nothing but what makes for the interest of parties, and flows from the partialities of private wills and passions. I know no resolutions more worthy a Christian king, than to prefer his conscience before his kingdoms.
References
External links
* [http://justus.anglican.org/resources/pc/charles/eikon/ The "Eikon Basilike"]
* [http://www.skcm.org/SKCM/skcm_main.html The Society of King Charles the Martyr] , dedicated to the commemoration of Charles I as a martyr for the Church of England.
* [http://www.brysons.net/miltonweb/eikonoklastes.html Selections and summary] of Milton's "Eikonoklastes".
* [http://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=5422 Eikon Basilike] atLiterary Encyclopedia
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