Johnson: Death of Elizabeth the Great leaves Britain enduring its saddest day
Several former prime ministers offered their tributes following the death of the Queen.
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Your support makes all the difference.Britain is enduring its āsaddest dayā following the death of āElizabeth the Greatā, Boris Johnson has said.
The Conservative MP was among the six living former prime ministers of Elizabethās reign to pay tribute, only two days after he met the monarch at Balmoral to resign from office.
He insisted the Queen, 96, spread āmagic around her kingdomā for an āunrivalledā 70 years and she possessed a āsimple power to make us happyā.
Mr Johnson said: āThis is our countryās saddest day. In the hearts of every one of us there is an ache at the passing of our Queen, a deep and personal sense of loss ā far more intense, perhaps, than we expected.
āIn these first grim moments since the news, I know that millions and millions of people have been pausing whatever they have been doing, to think about Queen Elizabeth, about the bright and shining light that has finally gone out.
āShe seemed so timeless and so wonderful that I am afraid we had come to believe, like children, that she would just go on and on.
āWave after wave of grief is rolling across the world, from Balmoral ā where our thoughts are with all the Royal Family ā and breaking far beyond this country and throughout that great Commonwealth of nations that she so cherished and which cherished her in return.
āAs is so natural with human beings, it is only when we face the reality of our loss that we truly understand what has gone. It is only really now that we grasp how much she meant for us, how much she did for us, how much she loved us.
āAs we think of the void she leaves, we understand the vital role she played, selflessly and calmly embodying the continuity and unity of our country.ā
Mr Johnson praised the Queenās ādeep wisdomā and her āseemingly inexhaustible but understated sense of dutyā.
He added: āThis is our countryās saddest day because she had a unique and simple power to make us happy. That is why we loved her. That is why we grieve for Elizabeth the Great, the longest-serving and in many ways the finest monarch in our history.ā
Mr Johnson said he believes the new King will āamply do justice to her legacyā.
Former Labour prime minister Sir Tony Blair said: āWe have lost not just our monarch but the matriarch of our nation, the figure who more than any other brought our country together, kept us in touch with our better nature, personified everything which makes us proud to be British.ā
He said the Queen had been on āsparkling formā when he last saw her a few months ago.
Former Conservative prime minister Sir John Major said the Queen had devoted her life to the service of our nation and its wellbeing.
He said: āIn her public duties she was selfless and wise, with a wonderful generosity of spirit. That is how she lived ā and how she led.
āFor millions of people ā across the Commonwealth and the wider world ā she embodied the heart and soul of our nation, and was admired and respected around the globe.
āAt this moment of deep sadness, I believe we all stand hand-in-hand with the Royal Family as they grieve the loss of one so loved.ā
Theresa May, the Conservative prime minister between 2016 and 2019, said: āHer Majesty devoted herself unreservedly to a life of service.
āShe was respected and admired not only by her own people but far beyond our family of nations.ā
The Conservative MP added: āOn the 75th anniversary of VE Day, Her Majesty reminded us to ānever give up, never despairā. It was an address that captured not just the national spirit, but Queen Elizabethās spirit.
āA sense of quiet determination, of courage, of faith, and of hope in the future.ā
Former Conservative Prime Minister David Cameron said there are āno words that can adequately express the sense of loss our nation will feelā.
In a statement posted on Twitter, he said the Queen had been āa rock of strength for our nation and the Commonwealthā.
He added he was āvery proudā to have served as the Queenās twelfth prime minister, adding it was a āprivilegeā to call on her āsage advice and wise counselā.
Gordon Brown, Labour prime minister between 2007 and 2010, wrote on Twitter: āThe United Kingdom, the Commonwealth, and the entire world are joined together in mourning this evening. HM Queen Elizabeth II served this country to the last. I offer my sincere condolences to the Royal Family. May she rest in peace.ā