The Columbus Dispatch

Corgi’s death hits Queen Elizabeth ‘extremely hard’

- By William Booth

LONDON — Reports from Buckingham Palace say that Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II is absolutely gutted by the loss of her beloved corgi, Willow — the last in a royal line of loyal, nippy dogs who have kept the monarch company during her entire reign.

The Daily Mail’s correspond­ent says the 91-year-old queen was hit “extremely hard” by the death of Willow, 14, who died on Sunday — was put down, actually — after suffering a bout with cancer.

For more than 80 years, Her Majesty has been surrounded by corgis. There’s hardly a family portrait that doesn’t include a couple of the tawny red, white-pawed, short-legged pooches under foot.

Elizabeth has been mad for Pembroke Welsh Corgis since childhood. During her long life, the queen hasn’t had just a corgi but, rather, a pack of corgis.

“She has mourned every one of her corgis over the years, but she has been more upset about Willow’s death than any of them,” a Buckingham Palace source told the Daily Mail. “It is probably because Willow was the last link to her parents and a pastime that goes back to her own childhood. It really does feel like the end of an era.”

Twitter was filled with notes of condolence­s for the queen’s loss of the royal couch-surfer.

Elle magazine posted a note at the end of its report, “Our thoughts go out to the Queen and her household during this difficult time.”

When Elizabeth was a little girl, her father, who would go on to be crowned King George VI, brought home a corgi named Dookie in 1933. Elizabeth was 7; her sister Margaret, 3.

For her 18th birthday, Princess Elizabeth was given a corgi of her own. Susan, who later accompanie­d Elizabeth on her honeymoon, become what breeders call the “foundation bitch.”

From Susan’s line came hundreds of corgi puppies — including the 30 that Her Majesty has had as companions through the years. From the queen’s breeding program at the Kennels of Windsor, hundreds of royal corgis have been whelped. Elizabeth never sold them but instead gave them to family friends.

The British press reports the breeding program quietly ended a couple of years ago. The queen didn’t want to leave behind dogs for others to tend.

The queen has, quite obviously, loved her pets. She reportedly took pride in feeding them herself — and was often photograph­ed on walks beside them. They leaped on the sofas. They insisted on tummy rubs. They chased a lot of rabbits.

The little dogs, too, have given much in return. They have softened and humanized a monarch who has sometimes been viewed as a cool, distant star (at least until “The Crown” TV series came along). The dogs have also been steady stand-ins for the sometimes-dysfunctio­nal royal family.

“In living memory, no world leader has been as widely identified with a particular animal as Elizabeth II with her corgis,” wrote Michael Joseph Gross in Vanity Fair. “Symbols of friendline­ss, they are shrewdly deployed for publicity purposes, lending warmth to her public image.”

For company, Elizabeth still has Vulcan and Candy — both “dorgis,” a corgi-dachshund mix.

The Guardian went with the headline: The Queen’s corgis are dead: Long live the ‘dorgis’

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