st. giles. it s really interesting because as max is talking about, the family trying to heal potentially in making very public glue over the schisms that have arisen other the last several years, so too is the country. it is trying to also heal to come to terms. it has lost a matriarch. and i think interestingly, i have been listening to a lot of commentary from scotland, officials much better aware of the politics there, of the culture there, historians and the like, for the scottish people who will come out and line that royal mile there, as we saw yesterday, will be incredibly close to the people of the royal dynasty, to king charles and his brothers and sisters. it s sort of divided into three layers for them, i m told. first, allegiance to the queen and affection for the queen who is part of their everyday lives. she went to their farms, to their churches, to their town halls. she was in the villages. she was known up there very, very well. then comes the monarchy and t
the 10th of september. i shall now read the address. most gracious sovereign, we, your majesty s most dutiful and loyal subjects, the lord s spiritual and temporal in parliament beg to majesty the deep sympathy felt by this house in the grief your majesty has sustained by the death of her late beloved queen. your majesty s mother of blessed and glorious memory. to extend to all the royal family the deep sympathy of this house and the grief, which is shared by all members, to assure your majesty that the example of selfless public service, which our late sovereign displayed over her reign of 70 years, her untiming endeavors for the welfare of her peoples and her