The Weight of Expectation: Princess Anne’s Unsolicited Review of the Crown Jewels
The world watched, glitter-eyed, as Queen Camilla was crowned, the ancient St. Edward’s Crown giving way to the arguably more manageable, but still dazzling, Queen Mary’s Crown. But while the masses debated the sustainability of the diamonds and the symbolism of the arches, only one royal perspective truly mattered: that of the famously unsentimental Princess Royal, Anne.

It was during a rather dull post-Coronation gala, amid the clinking of champagne flutes and the drone of minor European royalty discussing their travel woes, that Princess Anne was overheard. A junior reporter from a less-than-reputable broadsheet, emboldened by the potent combination of free canapés and journalistic ambition, cornered her near the potted palms.
“Your Royal Highness,” the young man chirped, thrusting a questionable microphone in her direction, “The crown! What did you make of the sheer… spectacle of Queen Camilla’s crown?”
Princess Anne, immaculate in an olive-green silk dress that looked suspiciously like it had been repurposed from a horse blanket (a rumour she would neither confirm nor deny), took a slow, deliberate sip of her water. Her expression was the perfect blend of mild disdain and utter practicality.
“Spectacle?” she repeated, her voice a low, gravelly hum that silenced the immediate vicinity. “Well, it was certainly heavy-looking.”
She paused, allowing the weight of her simple observation to sink in. The reporter’s pen hovered.
“I only hope,” she continued, fixing the young man with a steely, equestrian gaze, “that whoever was in charge of the sizing took into account the lateral G-forces involved in a long day of waving. You don’t want that thing slipping off mid-national anthem. It would be a nightmare for the staff to retrieve. All those little sharp bits.”
A courtier standing nearby visibly winced. The reporter, sensing gold, pressed for more artistic insight. “But the diamonds, Your Royal Highness! The sheer brilliance! The history!”
Princess Anne merely sighed, a sound that conveyed the accumulated exhaustion of eight centuries of monarchy. “Diamonds are very nice, of course. Excellent quality, I assume. But frankly, I was more concerned about the structural integrity of the velvet lining. All that heat under the lights—you’d be surprised how quickly velvet can compress. And an ill-fitting crown, much like a badly adjusted riding hat, gives you a terrible headache by lunchtime.”
She gestured vaguely in the direction of the newly crowned Queen, who was smiling beatifically ten yards away. “I trust she has a very good chiropractor on retainer. That level of neck strain is no small matter. You simply cannot afford to be lopsided for your official portraits.”
The young journalist, scribbling furiously, asked if the crown symbolised the new era of the monarchy.
Anne gave him a look that suggested he’d just asked her how many legs a horse had. “It symbolises a significant amount of insurance premium, a very robust security detail, and the need for a highly developed sense of balance. The new era, young man, is symbolised by whether or not we manage to keep the gutters clean at Balmoral. The crown is just… jewellery that makes it difficult to turn your head quickly.”
With a brisk nod, she executed a perfect conversational retreat, leaving the reporter reeling.
The Princess Royal’s genius, as always, lies in puncturing the grandeur with a simple, unassailable truth: Royal ceremony is often just a logistical nightmare in velvet and gold. While the world saw a glittering symbol of power, Princess Anne saw a dangerously heavy hat that needed better padding. And honestly? She’s probably the only one who had the common sense to say it.
Would you like me to write another short piece focusing on a different royal family member, perhaps Prince William’s thoughts on his father’s uniform, or a light-hearted piece about the future King George’s reaction to the ceremony?