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  • I'll take that.

    The first tag was the now doomed Cundy Street flats, built 1952, near Orange Square, Pimlico Road.
    The Queen Consort was living here in the early 70s, (in Stack House, the one pictured) when she was introduced to King Charles III who was then aged 21. He was a regular visitor.

    The second tag was an urn in Queens Sq, Bloomsbury. The two inscriptions were commissioned to celebrate the Queen's silver jubilee in 1977, one by Philip Larkin and the other by Ted Hughes.

    It was Larkin's one that Starmer quoted in his commemorative speech on Friday:

    In times when nothing stood
    But worsened or grew strange
    There was one constant good
    She did not change

    The other, by Hughes is more appropriate for cycle fans perhaps?

    A nation's a soul
    A soul is a wheel
    With a crown for a hub
    To keep it whole

    When Larkin submitted his, he sarcastically imagined what Hughes might offer and came up with this. Clearly not good friends then.

    The sky split apart in malice
    Stars rattled like pans on a shelf
    Crow shat on Buckingham Palace
    God pissed himself –

  • I’ll take that

    I should coco cocoa, I went to the trouble of framing both inscriptions!

    Clue: [queen] mother’s ruin

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