Less than two months remain for the big day of Charles III. On May 6, he will be crowned King of the United Kingdom in a solemn ceremony at Westminster Abbey and will officially take over the job of preserving the institution that his mother, the Queen, protected for so long. Isabel II.
Also read: Charles III’s gift to his brother Eduardo for his 59th birthday: “New Duke of Edinburgh!”
for the father of Guillermo y Harry now is his time, but British media such as The Times still have many doubts. “What will Carlos be like as a monarch? Kind, obedient and happily married (for the second time)? Or irascible, insecure and frustrated by malfunctioning fountain pens?” they wonder.
According to the aforementioned media, the husband of Camilla Parker-Bowles your friends compare you to Igora character from the animated series Winnie the Pooh, depicted as a rather pessimistic and melancholic gray stuffed donkey. “Camilla cheers him up when he’s down, she pampers him when she needs it, she cheers him up when she doesn’t, and she knows how and when to win him over.”
An attitude that would have an explanation: “If the Queen had taken half the trouble in educating her children as in raising her horses, the royal family would not be in such an emotional mess”, collects the digital of the statements of a private secretary to historian Robert Lacey.
And it is that for The Times Charles is a “complicated” king: “For one thing, the king has enough emotional intelligence to send handwritten letters to strangers who are heartbroken or devastated. For another, it seems he didn’t even dare to hug Harry the day he died his mother.He is a kind man with a terrible character, a visionary who sometimes cannot see beyond his own navel, and a man who delights in hunting and shooting but who told his future daughter-in-law, Meghan Marklethat I could not bear to think of the suffering of any animal”. With less than two months to go before the big day, support for Carlos III does not seem to be universal and the new monarch will have to be attentive to the feelings of the British people.