Thursday 22 September 2022

The Mourning Ends....plus A Royal Referendum Down Under????





On Saturday afternoon I popped down to the area around Tower Bridge to see the phenomenal
crowds gathering in their thousands, all queuing up for the opportunity to file past The Queen's
coffin lying in State in Westminster Hall. They claimed that the queue was at one time almost
4 miles long with a waiting time over 12 hours. Now there's dedication for you not to mention
sheer patience.
 


As a kid growing up I was often baffled at why we had to share our Queen  with faraway
countries like Canada and Australia. But then I was soon to learn from my Geography lessons
in Primary School that The Queen was in fact the Head of the Commonwealth, something I now
consider as an outdated institution.

Apparently a YouGov Poll in 2020 revealed that 62% of Australians down under would
be quite content to replace the Monarch with an alternative Australian Head of State. And
Canadians are equally split on the issue.
But I did hear a while back that Australians may push for a fresh referendum once The Queen
passed on. So perhaps very soon
the issue will raise it's head once more Down Under.

But I was thinking that our Christmas Day won't quite be the same without The Queen's
Speech at 3:00pm. The King's Speech just won't be the same. And I imagine none of it meant 
as much to people around The Commonwealth as it did here at home. I think many here timed
The Queen's tv appearance with serving up the Christmas lunch with the turkey and all the trimmings.
And so I imagine that in King Charles's
first Festive speech he will undoubtedly focus on the life of our departed Queen.


Above: Extraordinary scenes as The Queen's coffin and cortege climbs
the Long Walk up to Windsor Castle and St George's Chapel.


Above: The Queen with Princess Anne by American photographer Annie Leibovitz
around the time of The Queen's 90th Birthday.



Above is a poignant and sad cartoon illustration by Morten Morland of The Times.
The image released online on the day of The Queen's Funeral touched a lot of people,
particularly isolated elderly people watching The Funeral on tv while contemplating living
out the rest of their lives without their loved one.




Above: Our Jubilee party table back in 2012 to celebrate The Queen's Diamond Jubilee
to mark 60 years since The Queen's accession to the throne in 1952.

Sadly that Summer in 2012 marked the start of my 6 year Cancer journey until
full Remission in 2019...literally months before the outbreak of Covid 19 when Cancer patients
were being turned away due to mass Covid Hospital admissions.
So reaching full Remission just before Covid arrived was surely the luckiest moment in
my life. And it does make you wonder about all the other cases that didn't get the fast tracking
NHS Service that I was lucky enough to get during those pre-Covid days.  



While in the vicinity of The Tower of London I thought I'd have a sneaky look in on
the Tower's big Summer project called Superbloom. And before I knew it one of the
Tower staff ushered me in, saying that entry to the moat was now free. So no nuisance of
booking an entrance ticket online. And I was able to go straight through and walk
among the wild flowers.
Superbloom at The Tower of London has transformed the Tower moat from a flat lawn
into a naturalistic landscape, a biodiverse habitat for pollinators in the heart of London.
And it seems that it will now be a permanent fixture at the Tower.

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