Baltimore Sun

Nearly a 5-mile line to pay respects

Wait time in London to Westminste­r Hall lasts at least 9 hours

- By Jill Lawless and Mike Corder

LONDON — Thousands of mourners waited for hours Thursday in a line that stretched for nearly 5 miles across London for the chance to spend a few minutes filing past Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin while she lies in state.

King Charles III spent the day in private to reflect on his first week on the throne.

The line to pay respects to the late queen at Westminste­r Hall was at least a ninehour wait, snaking across a bridge and along the south bank of the River Thames beyond Tower Bridge. But people said they didn’t mind the wait, and authoritie­s brought in portable toilets and other facilities to make the slog bearable.

“I’m glad there was a queue, because that gave us time to see what was ahead of us, prepared us and absorbed the whole atmosphere,” health care profession­al Nimisha Maroo said. “I wouldn’t have liked it if I’d had to just rush through.”

A week after the queen died at Balmoral Castle in Scotland after 70 years on the throne, the focus of commemorat­ions was in Westminste­r — the heart of political power in London. Her coffin will lie in state at Westminste­r Hall until Monday, when it will be taken across the street to Westminste­r Abbey for the queen’s funeral.

Buckingham Palace on Thursday released details about the service, the first

state funeral held in Britain since the death of former Prime Minister Winston Churchill in 1965. Royalty and heads of state from around the world are expected to be among the 2,000 people attending, with a smaller burial service planned for later Monday at Windsor Castle.

The queen will be buried in a private family service at Windsor alongside her husband, Prince Philip, who died last year.

The guest list for the state funeral is a roll-call of global power and pomp, from Japan’s Emperor Naruhito and King Felipe

VI of Spain to President Joe Biden, French President Emmanuel Macron and the prime ministers of Australia, Canada and New Zealand.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau — who first met the queen when he was a child and his father, Pierre Trudeau, was Canada’s leader — said the queen was “one of my favorite people in the world.”

“Her conversati­ons with me were always candid, we talked about anything and everything, she gave her best advice on a range of issues, she was always curious, engaged and thoughtful,” he said at a special session

of the Canadian Parliament in Ottawa.

After a day of high ceremony and high emotions Wednesday as the queen’s coffin was carried in somber procession from Buckingham Palace, the king was spending Thursday working and in “private reflection” at his Highgrove residence in western England. Charles has had calls with Biden and Macron and has been speaking to a host of world leaders.

Prince William, the heir to the throne, and his wife, Catherine, the Princess of Wales, visited the royal family’s Sandringha­m estate in

eastern England and chatted with well-wishers.

Other royals fanned out across the U.K. to thank people for their support, with the queen’s youngest son, Prince Edward, and his wife, Sophie, visiting Manchester, and the queen’s daughter, Princess Anne, in Glasgow.

On Wednesday, the queen left Buckingham Palace for the last time, borne on a horse-drawn carriage and saluted by cannons and the tolling of Big Ben, in a solemn procession through the flag-draped, crowdlined streets of London to Westminste­r Hall.

Her lying in state, meanwhile, allowed many Britons to say a personal goodbye to the only monarch most have ever known.

It’s also a huge logistical operation, with a designated 10-mile queuing route lined with first aid points and more than 500 portable toilets. There are 1,000 stewards and marshals working at any given time, and 30 religious leaders from a range of faiths to talk to those in line.

Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, the spiritual leader of the Church of England, wore a high-visibility vest emblazoned with the words “Faith Team” as he spoke to mourners. Welby, who will deliver a sermon at Elizabeth’s funeral on Monday, paid tribute to the queen as “someone you could trust totally, completely and absolutely, whose wisdom was remarkable.”

People old and young walked in a steady stream Thursday through the historic hall, where Guy Fawkes and Charles I were tried, where kings and queens hosted magnificen­t medieval banquets, and where previous monarchs have lain in state.

Keith Smart, an engineer and British Army veteran, wiped away tears as he left the hall. He had waited more than 10 hours for the chance to say goodbye.

“Everybody in the crowd was impeccably behaved. There was no malice, everybody was friends. It was fantastic,” he said. “And then, to come into that room and see that, I just broke down inside. I didn’t bow — I knelt to the floor, on my knees, bowed my head to the queen.”

 ?? PETR DAVID JOSEK/AP ?? An artist paints the scene Thursday near Westminste­r Hall, where the late Queen Elizabeth II lies in state.
PETR DAVID JOSEK/AP An artist paints the scene Thursday near Westminste­r Hall, where the late Queen Elizabeth II lies in state.

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