He made his way on the coffin… an unwanted guest at Queen Elizabeth’s funeral!

Although there is almost unanimity on the tight organization in protocol and security, The state funeral of Queen Elizabeth The second was on Monday, which was attended by regarding two thousand guests, but the matter was not without the comments of the pioneers of social networking sites, albeit on very simple details that are difficult to control.

Activists on the communication sites circulated a video documenting a Alex Reed who called him unwelcome eight-legged, yes, that he was a spider who found himself intentionally or unintentionally on the coffin of the Queen in Westminster Abbey, and exactly in the wreath of flowers and leaves cut from the gardens of Buckingham Palace, which was on casket.

The spider also moved on a letter written by King Charles III, which stated: “In a loving and faithful memory. Charles R.”, before the spider finally disappears from view, and returns to the inside of the package.

And social networking sites transmitted the spider’s cat, and one of the tweets commented on Twitter: “The most famous spider in the world now,” while another tweet sarcastically said: “Have you been invited, my friend?”

Others also sympathized with the insect, which quickly and spontaneously found an interaction on the Internet, but not the web that it usually weaves, but the virtual.
One commented: “Imagine you are a spider in the garden and you sleep in a pink rose, then you wake up, stretch all your little legs and realize you are suddenly in Westminster Abbey, on the Queen’s coffin in front of world leaders and billions of people.”

It is noteworthy that with the advent of autumn, the season of spiders begins in Britain, a period that many fear due to the appearance of these small creatures in their homes in abundance.

Monday constituted an exceptional security challenge for the British capital, London, represented by the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II, who was 96 years old, following 70 years of rule.

The world witnessed the royal funeral or the funeral of the century, as some metaphorically called it, at the end of ten full days of national mourning, and hundreds of thousands of people gathered in the streets of London participated in the event, as well as millions around the world followed the coffin that lay in the midst of a storm that lasted for days that witnessed a ceremony marked by sophistication and blessing. and protection.

Elizabeth II rested on Monday evening at her final resting place in St George’s Chapel, Windsor Castle, following a solemn and emotional farewell in honor of the memory of a world-famous queen.

After a final ceremony in Windsor with the participation of 800 people, the Queen was buried on Monday evening in a closed family ceremony at the royal burial.

Prior to that, the chief custodian of the court broke his staff to put it on the coffin in a symbolic move to signify the end of her reign, following which Elizabeth II was absent from the public eye forever.
The ceremony concluded with the playing of the British national anthem.

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