The emotion is palpable in the United Kingdom. It is very difficult for the British people to accept the disappearance of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. On September 8, 2022, the sovereign bowed out at the age of 96 while she was at her castle in Balmoral, Scotland. Kate Middleton had not been able to come to his bedside, since she was in charge of the return to school of her three children, George, 9 years old, Charlotte, 7 years old and Louis, 4 years old. But the Princess of Wales and Duchess of Cambridge now has plenty of time to collect herself.
The remains of Queen Elizabeth II actually reached the City of London on September 13, 2022. She first spent a final night at Buckingham Palace, then was moved to Westminster Hall so that everyone could pass her coffin and her say “goodbye“. Kate Middleton is therefore there, like a pillar, a rock, to support her father-in-law, King Charles III, and her husband Prince William. But not too much is needed for the Duchess who collapses with sadness , at the slightest opportunity, as this mourning touches her heart. While greeting the crowd in front of Sandringham Castle, this Thursday, September 15, 2022, the Princess of Wales had to restrain herself not to shed one more tear , see several.
I can’t read them all!
She found herself face to face with a bed of flowers and camouflaged her grief with great difficulty. This is assured by Fran Morgan, a person who attended the scene, and who had the opportunity to speak with Kate Middleton. “She said she couldn’t believe all those cards and all those flowers left in front of the castleexplains Fran. But she also said: ‘I can’t read them all, otherwise I’ll start crying’“. If Kate seems particularly marked by the death of Elizabeth II, she is of course not the only one in the family to be regularly on the verge of tears. Prince William also reportedly said, faced with the crowd, that he was “overwhelmed with emotion” seeing this outpouring of moral support. Let’s hope that this is enough to help him hold on, in the face of sadness, on September 19, the day of the Queen’s funeral.