King Charles and siblings hold silent vigil to late mother, Queen Elizabeth

Queen Elizabeth died on Thursday in her holiday home at Balmoral


Reuters September 13, 2022
King Charles III and other members of the royal family hold a vigil at St Giles' Cathedral, Edinburgh, in honour of Queen Elizabeth II as members of the public walk past. PHOTO: REUTERS

King Charles and his siblings held a silent vigil at the side of their mother Queen Elizabeth's coffin as it lay at rest in Edinburgh's historic cathedral, with thousands queuing for hours to pay their respects to Britain's longest-serving monarch.

With their heads bowed, Charles, wearing a kilt, alongside sister Princess Anne and brothers Princes Andrew and Edward, stood solemnly for 10 minutes next to the oak coffin, draped with the royal flag known as the Royal Standard of Scotland.

The flag was topped with a wreath of white flowers and the Crown of Scotland, historically used for the coronations of monarchs of Scotland.

They left the city's St. Giles Cathedral to applause from onlookers.

The coffin had earlier been brought from the Palace of Holyroodhouse, the monarch's official residence in Scotland, in a procession watched mostly in silence by a large, grieving crowd, with Charles and other royal family members walking slowly behind the hearse.

Mourners, some weeping, and others with heads bowed or curtsying, walked slowly past the coffin after having waited patiently for hours to be allowed into the cathedral.

"I had gone to see the queen so you can imagine my surprise when I saw members of the royal family there," said Frances Thain, 63. "I was just overwhelmed because there was so much to take in."

Michael Hainsworth, 70, a retired music teacher, was one of the first to enter the cathedral to see the coffin after a seven-hour wait, and people are expected to file past all night until the vigil ends at 3 p.m. (1400 GMT) on Tuesday.

"We were very upset. It was so emotional. It brought it all home," said Hainsworth as he comforted his crying wife.

Queen Elizabeth died on Thursday in her holiday home at Balmoral, in the Scottish Highlands, at the age of 96 after a 70-year reign, plunging Britain into mourning even as it faces an economic crisis and a change of government.

A YouGov poll said 44% of respondents said they had cried or shed a tear since her death.

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