
..in red.
One hundred years ago today, our beloved - and still sadly missed - HM The Queen Elizabeth, the longest-reigning monarch the United Kingdom ever had [and second-longest-reigning in history, after France's Louis XIV], was born.
Generations of people knew no other monarch except her. She saw 15 British prime ministers and 14 US presidents come and go during her reign, as well as numerous global conflicts from Korea to the Gulf, the Cold War from Stalin's death through to the fall of the Berlin Wall, the transition of Empire to Commonwealth (on occasions bloodily, sometimes peacefully), the rise and fall of apartheid in South Africa, myriad political scandals from Profumo to "Partygate", tragedies from the Aberfan disaster to IRA bombing campaigns to the Dunblane massacre to the Grenfell Tower inferno, the decline of major British industries, the invention of the internet and the rise of the information age, a palace intruder, Royal weddings and divorces and the "annus horribilis", the death of Diana [as well as her mum The Queen Mother, her sister Margaret, and her husband Prince Philip], pretending to parachute into the Olympic Stadium with James Bond, the COVID pandemic and "tea with Paddington". She gave Royal Assent to 2,820 public bills and 235 private bills into law, presided over 70 State Openings of Parliament and almost the same number of Christmas broadcasts - and heaven only knows how many other speeches or dedications she must have made during her extensive visits to just about every country on the planet!
When she died four years ago, millions watched coverage of her funeral, and thousands upon thousands of people paid tribute in person, queuing - myself included, for eleven hours - to pay respects at her lying in-state.
Cheers, Ma'am. Nothing's quite the same without you.
Here's another tribute (of sorts):
Then one of us will be a Queen,
And sit on a golden throne,
With a crown instead
Of a hat on her head,
And diamonds all her own!
With a beautiful robe of gold and green,
I've always understood;
I wonder whether
She'd wear a feather?
I rather think she should!
Oh, 'tis a glorious thing, I ween,
To be a regular Royal Queen!
No half-and-half affair, I mean,
No half-and-half affair,
But a right-down regular,
Regular, regular,
Regular Royal Queen!
She'll drive about in a carriage and pair,
With the King on her left-hand side,
And a milk-white horse,
As a matter of course,
Whenever she wants to ride!
With beautiful silver shoes to wear
Upon her dainty feet;
With endless stocks
Of beautiful frocks
And as much as she wants to eat!
Oh, 'tis a glorious thing, I ween,
To be a regular Royal Queen!
No half-and-half affair, I mean,
No half-and-half affair,
But a right-down regular,
Regular, regular,
Regular Royal Queen!
HM The Queen Elizabeth II (21st April 1926 - 8th September 2022)








I can't get used to saying: King Charles, or even the King - I agree, nothing is quite the same without her.
ReplyDeleteSx
I'm the same - and I certainly can never think, or even say "Queen Camilla".
Delete"The Queen" will always be, for me, Elizabeth. Jx
Queen Camilla?!?!? Comes nowhere near the Queen. I agree with both of you. I don't even live in the UK and still can't get use to King.
DeleteCamilla's a dog with a tiara. Jx
DeleteEven over here, it seems so different now.
ReplyDeleteI adore Hinge & Bracket!
Her death truly did end a very special era for everyone. Charles just isn't a patch on his mother. Nobody could be.
DeleteHinge & Bracket were fantabulosa - there were many people who really did believe they were old ladies, rather than two uniquely talented drag queens! Jx
They sure DON'T make them like that anymore...anywhere. And I suspect we will never see the likes of again.
ReplyDeleteIt would be impossible for anyone to emulate or replace such a towering figure. Like when Sir David Attenborough goes (which he will; it's his 100th birthday in May, so he's not going to hold out for that many years) - there isn't anyone else who even comes close... Jx
DeleteIndeed. "Grace, strength and humility" was my father's expression of her and he remembered all the black drapery when Victoria died!
ReplyDeleteSuch a huge difference between two Queens - Victoria was forever associated with mourning colours, and Elizabeth was perpetually seen in a whole gamut of colours and sparkles. And yes, your dad's observations were so right about her admirable qualities as monarch. Jx
DeleteQueen Elizabeth II, elle était si digne.
ReplyDeleteLe cadeau de la Grande-Bretagne :)
* d’Anjou 🇨🇦 🇬🇧
...et du Canada! Jx
Delete