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The Prince and Princess of Wales leaving The Street in Scarborough #Royals #Scarborough #PrincessCatherine #PrinceofWales
– Rookie
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From The Street to The Rainbow Centre and everyone in between, we loved meeting you all in Scarborough today.
Showing what can be done when a community comes together!
– The Prince and Princess of Wales
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A beautiful sexy OTS rack above…….on one knee, one hand on his inner thigh, the other just under his neck to control his pleading……all laid out, bulge on display, very sexy…….
Then below he locks him a great crab, sitting on the small of his back, boots locked under pits, cranks it back…….
Then a great camel, sitting near his ass, arms locked around knees, both hands locked under his chin as he then adds some extra humiliation by licking the sweat from his face and ear…….If the dude gets hard for it, he’ll hardon will be crushed into the mat under all the weight……which is the point!! Get your dude in a camel then stiffen his hardon for extra pain and humiliation!!!!
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No official announcement of the princess’ engagement had yet been made. The name of Lieutenant Philip Mountbatten formerly Prince Philip of Greece has been repeatedly mentioned throughout the world. To inquire as about her engagement the Princess said ‘you must wait and see’.
There was, by now, one very regular visitor to the palace. In 1946, Prince Philip came back from the Far East and was appointed to a Royal Navy training unit. Palace staff noticed a new photograph on Princess Elizabeth’ desk. Following a night out with the Prince to see the musical Oklahoma!, she had taken to playing the song ‘People Will Say We’re In Love’ on her gramophone. Crawfie and others noted that the Prince’s sports car was an increasingly familiar sight at Buckingham Palace. He had even taken to inviting himself round to see Lilibet, as he acknowledged in a half-apology to the Queen. ‘However contrite,’ he wrote to her in June 1946, ‘I feel there is always a small voice that keeps saying “nothing ventured, nothing gained" - well, I did venture and I gained a wonderful time.’
SEPTEMBER 1946 BALMORAL
The next step would come when the Prince was invited to join the Royal Family house party in te Highlands, later that same summer. ‘I suppose I began to think about it seriously when I got back in forty-six and went to Balmoral,’ Prince Philip told his biographer, Basil Boothroyd. ‘It was probably then that we began to think about it seriously and even talk about it.’ That was the Duke’s understated version, long after the event, of what happened. He did rather more than talk about it. It was at Balmoral that the twenty-five-year-old Prince proposed to his twenty-year-old sweetheart. As the royal biographer, William Shawcrow, has revealed, the Prince was ecstatic when she accepted, and they then successfully sought the approval of the King and Queen. ‘I am sure I do not deserve all the good things which had happened to me,’ Prince Philip wrote to his future mother-in-law soon afterwards, in September 1946. ‘To have been spared in the war and seen victory, to have been given the chance to rest and re-adjust myself, to have fallen in love completely and unreservedly, makes all one’s personal and even the world’s troubles seem small and petty.” This recent ‘circumstance’, he added, had done ‘more for me than anything else in my life.’ | Queen of Our Times by Robert Hardman.
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Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip arriving for a state dinner at the Château Frontenac in Quebec City, Canada, 1964.
The rise of the sovereigntist movement from the 1960s weakened Quebec’s historic links with the Crown. Separatists purported to see it as a symbol of colonialism and of Ottawa’s ascendancy rather than as a vehicle for francophone particularity. The Queen’s visit to Charlottetown and Quebec in 1964 for the centennial of the Confederation conferences of 1864 elicited protests from some Quebec nationalists; given concerns for the Queen’s safety, there were calls for the cancellation of the tour. During the 1964 tour, the Queen herself acted with calm and courage, paying an eloquent tribute in French in the Quebec assembly to francophone culture in Canada. Vanier was disappointed and embarassed by the excessive security measures taken due to a gew hundred separatists, but admired the Queen’s poise and perseverance and applauded the decision of Prime Minister Pearson and Premier Lesage not to bow to pressure and cancel the tour | The Crown and Canadian Federalism by D. Michael Jackson
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