Western Daily Press

Support from public for King at Easter

- PRESS ASSOCIATIO­N REPORTERS

THE King has been urged by a member of the public to “keep going strong”, as he greeted well-wishers after attending the Easter Sunday service at Windsor Castle yesterday.

Charles was applauded by crowds as he and Queen Camilla reemerged from St George’s Chapel to cries of “Happy Easter”, before a young boy presented Camilla with a posy of white and yellow flowers.

The well wishes follow the announceme­nt of the King’s cancer diagnosis, with one man telling Charles yesterday: “Happy Easter Your Majesty. Keep going strong, keep going strong, never give in.”

Another member of the public told the King: “We’re all rooting for you, we’ve all got your back.”

The King shook hands and spoke with those who had gathered at Windsor yesterday and told them: “You’re very brave to stand out here in the cold.”

Charles had smiled and waved at crowds as he arrived for the Easter Mattins Service alongside the Queen, joining other members of the royal family – including Anne, the Princess Royal, and her husband, Vice Admiral Sir Timothy Laurence; the Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh; and the Duke of York and Sarah, Duchess of York (pictured right).

The church service was the King’s most significan­t public appearance since his cancer diagnosis, and it took place just over a week after the Princess of Wales released an emotional video message disclosing that she had started a course of preventati­ve chemothera­py.

Kate and her husband, William, the Prince of Wales, and their children, Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis, who all attended the service last year, were absent from the Easter Sunday service yesterday.

The family have been spending the Easter holidays together as they adjust to Kate’s diagnosis, which was discovered in post-operative tests after major abdominal surgery.

The King’s attendance at church will be seen as a move to reassure the public after the shock news about his daughter-in-law, but the service was a smaller version of the annual gathering, with fewer members of the royal family present, as the King has paused public-facing duties while he continues treatment for cancer himself.

Charles was described by the palace as being “so proud” of the princess for her courage in speaking out, and is said to be in “the closest contact with his beloved daughter-inlaw”.

The King’s own treatment for cancer was announced at the start of February, but he has been carrying out low-key official duties behind palace walls.

Towards the end of February, Charles had an audience with Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and held a Privy Council in his first face-to-face official duties since the diagnosis.

Then, in March, the King held an in-person pre-Budget audience with Chancellor Jeremy Hunt, held a video call with Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, and had an audience with Baroness Scotland.

Over the course of last month, the monarch also welcomed a series of foreign officials to Buckingham Palace, including the high commission­ers of Jamaica, Tanzania and Singapore.

Last Tuesday, as the palace announced Charles’ attendance at the Easter Sunday service, he was pictured carrying out official duties for the first time since Kate shared her cancer news with the nation, as he met community and faith leaders from across the UK in London.

Ahead of Easter, the King reaffirmed his coronation pledge “not to be served, but to serve” with “my whole heart” in an audio address broadcast to a congregati­on at Worcester Cathedral, where the Royal Maundy Service was held in his absence last Thursday.

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 ?? Hollie Adams/Press Associatio­n ?? King Charles and Queen Camilla meet members of the public outside St George’s Chapel in Windsor yesterday
Hollie Adams/Press Associatio­n King Charles and Queen Camilla meet members of the public outside St George’s Chapel in Windsor yesterday

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