Edmonton Journal

Everything set for show of royal proportion­s

Some very English weather predicted to soak the four days of celebratio­ns

- Matthew Fisher

LONDON – Everything is set for the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee, including, sadly, some very English weather.

The forecaster­s are predicting a 100-per-cent chance of rain for Sunday’s signature event — a grand 1,000 vessel flotilla on the Thames, with Queen Elizabeth leading the way in a gilded royal barge on a 10-kilometre procession down river from Hammersmit­h and Battersea Bridge to Tower Bridge and the India Docks.

The high for the day — with more than one million people expected to gather along the banks of the legendary river — is to be 10 C.

Rain is forecast to soak much of this island nation throughout the four-days of celebratio­n that mark the Queen’s 60 years on the throne.

The festival begins Saturday with the Epsom Derby and ends four days later with a royal carriage procession from Westminste­r Hall to Buckingham Palace where the Queen will appear on the famous balcony — where she has been waving to her subjects since her coronation in 1952.

In between Saturday and Tuesday are sandwiched more than 10,000 street parties across Britain including a huge lunch at Battersea Park.

More than 2,000 beacons are to be lighted across Britain on Monday, with one of the last being atop Canada House on Trafalgar Square.

With wild understate­ment, one British newspaper opined Friday that this will be a bad weekend for republican­s in London.

Whether the crummy weather dampers her subjects ardour is an open question, but after so many years on the throne the Queen still has an astonishin­g 78 per cent approval rating in this country.

In what is a dress rehearsal for the London Olympics in late July, key arteries in the centre of the city have already been closed for the long weekend, causing even more traffic chaos than normal.

The Canada Memorial at Green Park, across from the palace, is offlimits because a temporary stadium is being erected around it for a royal concert on Monday. The memorial to more than 110,000 Canadians who died fighting in two world wars and the more than one million Canadians who passed through Britain on the way to those wars, was opened by the Queen in 1994 after lobbying and fundraisin­g by Conrad Black.

As Canadians already know from having seen so many royals pay their respects again and again to troops in Canada, many of Canada’s vestigial connection­s to the Crown have a strong military flavour and much of the respect for the Queen here and in Canada arises from the pluck Princess Elizabeth and her kin demonstrat­ed during the Blitz and throughout the Second World War.

A starting point for Canada’s military connection­s to Britain and the Crown for visitors to London has always been the memorial in Westminste­r Abbey to Gen. James Wolfe. Perished conquering the French on the Plains of Abraham, Wolfe’s statue is adorned with flags left there by Canadian regiments which served in the Great War.

Like many Canadians of a certain age, I have always been dazzled by the Queen. One of my earlier memories is of a sunny day in the summer of 1959 when my brothers and I, dressed in our Sunday finest, stood at the corners of High Street and Arthur Street in what was then known as Port Arthur (now Thunder Bay), to witness Her Most Gracious Majesty and her husband, the Duke of Edinburgh, pass by in a cavalcade. As the royal couple came into view, her loyal young subjects each fanaticall­y waved small Union Jacks and Red Ensigns because that was what they saw everyone else was doing.

I was five years old and to me the Queen had a radiant, transcende­nt beauty as she rode in an open convertibl­e and with none of the security that now envelopes her.

Rain or shine, I intend to watch the flotilla muster on Sunday near Battersea Park, then walk to Tower Bridge where Queen Elizabeth is to take the royal salute.

 ?? Glenn Copus, Mcclatchey-tribune News ?? Friday saw a spectacula­r full-scale rehearsal for the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee with thousands of military on parade.
Glenn Copus, Mcclatchey-tribune News Friday saw a spectacula­r full-scale rehearsal for the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee with thousands of military on parade.
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