Seems the Queen spent Wednesday night in (the) hospital. She was released about noon on Thursday. She is 95 years old, and frankly hardly needs a reason. The other day, the Palace cancelled a trip to Northern Ireland.
A significant number of the royal family has used the hospital at one time or another. I recall reading that there was a suite set aside for their use, but I am not certain if this is accurate.
Her first hospital stay was her own birth; I long knew that she had been delivered by cesarean section, and for that to be done 95 years ago, something had to have gone drastically wrong. And it had; QE II was breech, and the Queen Mother had been pushing for more than 10 hours, so they decided the baby wasn’t going to come out alive any other way, and both of them made a full recovery.
(Bill Clinton, who also had a recent hospital stay, was also delivered that way; no, the “natural-born citizen” phrase in the Constitution is not about this.)
I had this mental image of her in a hospital bed, wearing a standard hospital gown, and her crown.
You won’t be surprised to hear that the crown stays under high security on display at the Tower of London.
Except when it’s brought out for the State Opening of Parliament - and in the days when she wore it for the Opening ceremony, she had it for a day or so in advance so that she could practice and get adjusted to the weight. Apparently on one occasion, when the corgis were let put for their early morning run, they went for one of the policemen on security duty in the Palace garden. Suddenly he heard a piercing whistle: the corgis stopped yapping and fell back, and he saw the Queen, in her nightie and curlers, with her fingers in her mouth - and the crown on her head.
What of it? I’m 60-years old and I’m going into hospital on 5th of November at 11:55. I suppose I’m out circa 14:00. Last time I was there it took about 2 hours. Could be they take me in and operate but I doubt that. Last time they said that there’s nothing to do unless something happens. Now something has happened, so in that sense bets are off.
To not keep you in suspense I tell that it’s about my left eye. I had some crude on my left eye’s lens (artificial one) on the inside. I was told that it happens that silica gathers some particles from the surrounding liquid and there’s nothing what to do except change the lens, but that’s too big an operation for such low bother. Now the thing that was attached to the lens has slipped off and floats around inside my eye. As it is quite a big particle it can damage my retina, so it could be that my eye will be opened and cleaned from the inside.
I was going to comment that its pretty messed she’s treated at a hospital that was named after her great grandfather who was euthanized by his doctor. But on checking apparently that was a George V not Edward VII: