Boris Johnson is preparing the publication of his memoirs, and in them there are very revealing data not only about himself, but also about the British Royal House. At a time when the royal family has been plagued by cancer, a disease for which Charles III and Kate Middleton have been treating in recent months, The former British Prime Minister has said that Elizabeth II suffered from bone cancer.
The British press has echoed some excerpts from this autobiography, paying special attention to the reality that, according to the former politician, tormented the days of the mother of the current king of England. Two years after the death of Elizabeth II, Johnson’s testimony calls into question the reasons why she supposedly lost her life at Balmoralat 96 years old: he did not die “of natural causes”, but there was something else behind his situation.
After other voices in the Conservative Party declared that the queen had cancer, the former prime minister assures that the monarch was aware that she had little time left to live due to the illness that, in his words, she suffered from. In his memoirs he tells how his last meeting with her was, two days before her death. “Edward Young, his private secretary, tried to prepare me”keep it up.
“She looked pale, was more hunched over and had bruises”
“He had known for a year or more that he had bone cancer, and his doctors were worried that at any moment he could go into a sharp decline,” says Johnson, as reported in the magazine. Newsweek. “‘It’s gotten much worse over the summer,’ he said. And then the secretary knocked on the door and ushered me into Her Majesty’s drawing room.”he adds.
“‘Good morning, Prime Minister,’ said the monarch, and as we sat facing each other on the blue-green sofas, I could immediately understand what Edward meant. (…) She seemed pale and more stooped, and He had dark bruises on his hands and wrists.probably from drips or injections,” says the former British politician. “But his mind, as Edward had also said, was completely untouched by his illness and from time to time in our conversation he still showed that big white smile with its sudden beauty that lifted the mood,” he emphasizes. “As Edward Young explained to me later, she knew everything (about her illness). The summer that was going to diebut she was determined to endure and fulfill her last duty: to oversee the peaceful and orderly transition from one government to the next, and, she waited to add another outgoing prime minister to her record,” he says. A story about which the Royal Family does not has been pronounced.