The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

The inside story of the last days of Elizabeth II

Low-key dinners and special visits... Hannah Furness on life at Balmoral during preparatio­ns for sorrow

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Prince William said it best, days after the death of his grandmothe­r. Somehow capturing the feelings of the nation, he admitted: “I knew this day would come, but it will be some time before the reality of life without Grannie will truly feel real.”

The public too knew the 96-year-old Queen, enduring growing mobility problems, would not go on forever.

So the words of her daughter, the Princess Royal, spelling out for the first time that the late Queen was able to plan for her final days in comfort will be most reassuring. “I think there was a moment when she felt it would be more difficult if she died at Balmoral,” the Princess Royal says in Charles III: The Coronation Year

– a BBC documentar­y about her brother’s Coronation.

“I think we did try to persuade her that it shouldn’t be part of the decision-making process. So I hope she felt that was right in the end, because we did.”

That the Queen was thinking of other people until the very end came as no surprise to her many admirers in Britain and around the world.

Her concerns are thought to have been about logistics, plans for a royal death in Scotland requiring rather more administra­tive effort than one in London or Windsor. It is to the Royal family’s credit that they gently overrode them.

Paying tribute to his mother in September 2022, Prince Edward said it had been “lovely to have spent time saying our own farewell privately at Balmoral”. Those words now seem even more poignant.

A glance back at the unofficial royal diary over that summer shows the late Queen’s children, grandchild­ren and great-grandchild­ren making their annual pilgrimage to the Balmoral estate.

The then Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and their three children stayed in late August, as the then Prince Charles, Princess Anne, Prince Andrew and Prince Edward and their families came and went to keep their mother company. They are said by friends to have spoken of memories of their happy summers past.

A photograph taken by the Princess of Wales shows Elizabeth II at the heart of a cosy family scene, perched on the sofa with Prince George, Princess Charlotte, Prince Louis, Lady Louise Mountbatte­n-Windsor and her brother James (then Viscount Severn), Mia, Lena and Lucas Tindall, and Isla and Savannah Phillips.

The Queen’s diary had already been drasticall­y scaled back, after heroic efforts to overcome mobility problems to greet the crowds at her Platinum Jubilee.

Until now, it had been painted as decisions made on doctors’ advice.

That more personal conversati­ons were happening within the Royal family too only highlights the Queen’s determinat­ion to finish her duties.

She put Scotland at the heart of it. In July, she arrived in Edinburgh on the royal train within days of Nicola Sturgeon’s latest “roadmap to independen­ce” being published.

Looking slender but beaming in a powder blue coat, hat and an Argyll and Sutherland Highlander­s brooch for the Ceremony of the Keys, aware that her cherished Union was once again under threat.

Duty done – a public reminder of her feelings towards Scotland – she retired for what we now know to be her final summer in the home she loved best.

She had already had her last meeting with the Archbishop of Canterbury, in June, of which he has said: “I came away thinking there is someone who has no fear of death, has hope in the future, knows the rock on which she stands and that gives her the strength… to be that sense of permanence and of continuity.”

She had ridden her fell pony Emma for the final time, slowing down – it has been reported – into a daily routine of puzzles and a post-lunch nap.

She hosted friends and family, insisting they continue with their walks and picnics even when she could not join in.

“We always enjoyed being at Balmoral,” the Princess Royal says in the documentar­y, to be broadcast on BBC One on Boxing Day. “We spent a lot of time there in our youth and a lot of it was probably a more independen­t life than anywhere else. That’s probably still true.”

Guests who stayed at Balmoral close to the end spoke of the Queen in a “very contemplat­ive state”, in between her typical generous conversati­on and twinkly-eyed wit.

The Rt Rev Dr Iain Greenshiel­ds, who stayed at the castle over the Queen’s final weekend, having been invited to hold a sermon at Crathie Parish Church, said she had been talking about the afterlife and eating ice cream made with berries from the estate.

“She was just talking about some of the remarkable people she’d met. And she was just reflecting on that and reflecting on life, and where this life leads to and we just talked about that and eternal life and resurrecti­on, and what these things meant.”

A Sunday night dinner with visiting family, her Bowes-Lyons cousins, is said to have given a clue all was not well. The traditiona­l piper had been stood down and the dress code would be informal.

On Tuesday, September 6, the

Queen received her 14th and 15th prime ministers, Boris Johnson and Liz Truss, at Balmoral. By Wednesday, a virtual Privy Council was cancelled at the last minute, as she needed to rest.

On Thursday, as the world now knows, the Queen died at 3.10pm with her eldest son and daughter by her side. “In my case it was purely serendipit­y that I was there,” Princess Anne says. “I’d been two days up on the west coast and I was coming back to stay the night and going south.”

Prince Charles was at Dumfries House, and made a dash to Balmoral by helicopter in time. Other members of the family arrived later that evening to pay their respects.

Codename Opertion London Bridge became Operation Unicorn, the term used for a death in Scotland.

And while the Queen herself may have worried about the logistical difficulti­es, the reality turned out to be just what the nation needed. The slower time scale allowed the Royal family to remain in their bubble a little longer.

The people of Ballater, so loyal to the Queen and fiercely protective of her privacy, were given the chance to pay their respects in person before the world descended.

The long journey of the coffin from Aberdeensh­ire to an Edinburgh vigil saw a line-up of 32 beautifull­y turned out horses and a guard of honour formed of newly cleaned tractors. An idea to transport the coffin via the royal train had already been vetoed in plans rubber-stamped by the late Queen herself.

Instead, it was flown south by RAF Globemaste­r C-17, accompanie­d by the Princess Royal.

By choosing to die in Scotland, the Queen had “saved the Union”, hyperbolic headlines declared at the time. Within them, we now know, is a grain of truth.

As she cherished the Union in life, so she ensured its people were front and centre at the end.

At a time when they could have fractured, the nations drew together. For Robert Hardman, who wrote

Charles III: The Coronation Year and a forthcomin­g book, the documentar­y shows not only the Princess Royal as a “voice of common sense and reality” but the “very human experience” at the centre of “this extraordin­ary moment of transition”.

The Queen, who had her life planned out minute by minute from her earliest days, was able – with her loved ones – to plan for the end as well.

For family and nation, what could be more comforting than that?

That the Queen was thinking of others at the very end came as no surprise

 ?? ?? Liz Truss, then prime minister, with Her Majesty at Balmoral last year
Liz Truss, then prime minister, with Her Majesty at Balmoral last year
 ?? ?? Farewell: The Queen’s cortège passes through Edinburgh, top, and Perth, above
Farewell: The Queen’s cortège passes through Edinburgh, top, and Perth, above
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