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Queen Death: Thread for unhinged Tweets, opinions and behaviour

The former Poet Laureate has written her own tribute and I think this thread is the best place for it.

Sentence spacing has been adjusted by me.


DAUGHTER

Your mother’s daughter, you set your face
to the road
that ran by the river; behind you, the castle,
its mute ballroom, lowered flag.
Stoic, your profile a head on a coin,
you followed the hearse
through sorrow’s landscape- a farmer, stood
on a tractor,
lifting his tweed cap; a group of anglers
shouldering their rods.
And now the villagers, silently raising
their mobile phones.
Then babies held aloft in the towns, to one day
be told they were there.

But you had your mother’s eyes, as a horse ran free
in a field;
a pheasant flared from a hedge
like a thrown bouquet;
journeying on through a harvest of strange love.

How they craned to glimpse their lives again
in her death; reminded
of Time’s relentless removals, their own bereavements,
as she passed.
The uplift of the high bridge over a dazzle of water;
a sense of ascending
into anointing light which dissolved into cloud.
Nine more slow grey miles to the Old Town; the last mile
a royal mile,

where they gathered ten-deep as your mother showed you
what she had meant.
Nightfall and downpour near London. Even the motorways paused; thousands of headlights in rain
as you shadowed her still; smatterings of applause
from verges and bridges.

Soon enough they would come to know this had long been
the Age of Grief;
that History was ahead of them. The crown of ice melting
on the roof of the world.
Tonight, childhood’s palace; the iPhone torches linking back
to medieval flame.
So you slowed and arrived with her, her only daughter,
and only her daughter.
 
The former Poet Laureate has written her own tribute and I think this thread is the best place for it.

Sentence spacing has been adjusted by me.


DAUGHTER

Your mother’s daughter, you set your face
to the road
that ran by the river; behind you, the castle,
its mute ballroom, lowered flag.
Stoic, your profile a head on a coin,
you followed the hearse
through sorrow’s landscape- a farmer, stood
on a tractor,
lifting his tweed cap; a group of anglers
shouldering their rods.
And now the villagers, silently raising
their mobile phones.
Then babies held aloft in the towns, to one day
be told they were there.

But you had your mother’s eyes, as a horse ran free
in a field;
a pheasant flared from a hedge
like a thrown bouquet;
journeying on through a harvest of strange love.

How they craned to glimpse their lives again
in her death; reminded
of Time’s relentless removals, their own bereavements,
as she passed.
The uplift of the high bridge over a dazzle of water;
a sense of ascending
into anointing light which dissolved into cloud.
Nine more slow grey miles to the Old Town; the last mile
a royal mile,

where they gathered ten-deep as your mother showed you
what she had meant.
Nightfall and downpour near London. Even the motorways paused; thousands of headlights in rain
as you shadowed her still; smatterings of applause
from verges and bridges.

Soon enough they would come to know this had long been
the Age of Grief;
that History was ahead of them. The crown of ice melting
on the roof of the world.
Tonight, childhood’s palace; the iPhone torches linking back
to medieval flame.
So you slowed and arrived with her, her only daughter,
and only her daughter.
Tbf that's excellent as far as poems go. I've seen worse lately :D
 
Hmm...:

Fc-AF4UXEAIhN08
 
So is their grief invalidated then?
To come back to this. I think some people are not feeling grief at all, just excitement at being part of something bigger and less dull than them esp those nutters in queues I keep seeing on Twitter being interviewed on tv. People like this:

That doesn’t look very much like grief, does it? They’re delighted
 
It's like going to a big show at the O2. Then fuck off back to their backwater town and tell their mates they were there.
It's confirmation once more of the truth that 99% of people's lives are pretty uneventful. So they're - and we're, realistically - always desperate to be part of something. Which is the cause for so much batshit behaviour.
 
The former Poet Laureate has written her own tribute and I think this thread is the best place for it.

Sentence spacing has been adjusted by me.


DAUGHTER

Your mother’s daughter, you set your face
to the road
that ran by the river; behind you, the castle,
its mute ballroom, lowered flag.
Stoic, your profile a head on a coin,
you followed the hearse
through sorrow’s landscape- a farmer, stood
on a tractor,
lifting his tweed cap; a group of anglers
shouldering their rods.
And now the villagers, silently raising
their mobile phones.
Then babies held aloft in the towns, to one day
be told they were there.

But you had your mother’s eyes, as a horse ran free
in a field;
a pheasant flared from a hedge
like a thrown bouquet;
journeying on through a harvest of strange love.

How they craned to glimpse their lives again
in her death; reminded
of Time’s relentless removals, their own bereavements,
as she passed.
The uplift of the high bridge over a dazzle of water;
a sense of ascending
into anointing light which dissolved into cloud.
Nine more slow grey miles to the Old Town; the last mile
a royal mile,

where they gathered ten-deep as your mother showed you
what she had meant.
Nightfall and downpour near London. Even the motorways paused; thousands of headlights in rain
as you shadowed her still; smatterings of applause
from verges and bridges.

Soon enough they would come to know this had long been
the Age of Grief;
that History was ahead of them. The crown of ice melting
on the roof of the world.
Tonight, childhood’s palace; the iPhone torches linking back
to medieval flame.
So you slowed and arrived with her, her only daughter,
and only her daughter.

I didn't know Adrian Mole was ever Poet Laureate.
 
I think this was a good, and respectful to people's actual feelings, reflection on the 'grief' narrative:



People outside the royal family (and perhaps some of the close household) aren't going through shock and bargaining and depression etc - they're just a bit sad, dimished, reflective.
 
People outside the royal family (and perhaps some of the close household) aren't going through shock and bargaining and depression etc - they're just a bit sad, dimished, reflective.

Not even that. Proximity to power has made them lose their minds.
 
I think this was a good, and respectful to people's actual feelings, reflection on the 'grief' narrative:



People outside the royal family (and perhaps some of the close household) aren't going through shock and bargaining and depression etc - they're just a bit sad, dimished, reflective.


The best scene in that movie 'The Queen' is where someone is telling Brenda she should be supporting the people in their grief for Diana and Brenda loses it; their grief? I've got two young grandchildren who have just lost their mother.
 
I think this was a good, and respectful to people's actual feelings, reflection on the 'grief' narrative:



People outside the royal family (and perhaps some of the close household) aren't going through shock and bargaining and depression etc - they're just a bit sad, dimished, reflective.


Capitalism encourages para-social relationships as they are easy to monetize, coupled with a media and political system that encourages conflating symbolism with reality. If your not upset by the queen it's because your not one of Us and we are all one of Us lest you feel shame.


Idfk, I don't earn the big bucks with this stuff I just flail and hope I'm right.
 
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