Our very special guests! 🧁☕️
The Queen has hosted a tea party for children supported by Dreams and Wishes, a charity dedicated to helping seriously ill children and their families build precious memories.
🫖🥪 After travelling by horse-drawn carriage from The Royal Mews, the children sat down to sandwiches and cakes with Her Majesty at Clarence House.
The Queen’s Equerry, Major Treasure, also set the children to task with a treasure hunt… leading to the stash of chocolate coins hidden under the Grenadier Guards’ hats! 💂
Dreams and Wishes was established in 2011 and is entirely volunteer-run, with a dedicated team committed to making every child’s wish a reality.
La prima foto ritrae l'attore Pierce Brosnan e sua moglie vent'anni fa, all'inizio del loro matrimonio.
La seconda foto li ritrae oggi.
Quando gli sciocchi gli fecero notare che era ingrassata, lui rispose semplicemente:
'È ai miei occhi la donna più bella del mondo, ha cresciuto i miei 5 figli con amore.
Già in passato l'ho amata per la sua personalità e non solo per la sua bellezza.
Ora la amo ancora di più. Sono molto orgoglioso di lei e cerco sempre di essere degno del suo amore'.
Questo significa sposare un uomo che vi ama così come siete
I’m heartbroken right now… no words can describe the pain of losing a podium in Formula 1 and in the streets Monaco, I’m devastated. We crossed the finish line in 3rd today, and thats all I want to remember. I’ve dreamed about that podium thousands times, we all working very hard for years to achieve moments like today and it doesn’t feel right for it to be taken away like this. I really hope the right outcome can be made. We will fight for it with my team.
In a corner of parliament at the far end of the Royal gallery a box lies permantly open containing sand from all five Normandy beaches -a reminder to both houses of the sacrifice & the cause of freedom fought for by brave service people on DDay June 6 th 1944. #DDay
A touching tribute to HLMTQ
Lilly of the Valley, a fragrant delicate bloom, which flourishes in gardens of Buckingham Palace was specifically requested to be included in Harriet Sperling’s wedding bouquet as a tribute to her husband’s granny.
Harriet Sperlings wears Emilia Wickstead, custom ivory satin heels by Jimmy Choo and a tiara and earrings by Pragnell, a family-run Mayfair jeweller that also designed her engagement ring.
📸Teddy Park
▶ https://t.co/WBDxvUxx51
Simply remembering events in Normandy on this day in 1944. Never forget. Evil flourishes when good men do nothing. On that day and the days that followed good men did many deeds to ensure the evil was eradicated. Remembering. Never forget.
These images were posted by the god mother of Henry Nowak.
Henry Nowak was killed on 3 December 2025.
It is now 3 June 2026.
For 182 days, his family lived without him. For 182 days, they waited.
Through Christmas, knowing his chair would be empty.
Through New Year, watching a year begin that he would not see.
Through every birthday, every milestone, every quiet Tuesday when grief sits heavier than it should.
For 182 days, they waited for a country to notice what had happened to their son.
They waited while UK mainstream media looked the other way. They waited while the Prime Minister could not find his name. They waited while the police force responsible for his final minutes drafted a press release before they drafted an apology.
They waited 176 days before the verdict.
They waited 180 days before the sentence.
They waited 181 days before the bodycam was released.
They waited 182 days before the 999 call was made public.
And we are still waiting.
Still waiting for the full footage. Still waiting for the officers to be named. Still waiting for the IOPC to deliver findings. Still waiting for the institutional reform that would mean the next teenager bleeding on a pavement is believed.
Justice is not late because it was complicated. It is late because Henry’s death did not fit the country’s preferred narrative of who deserves urgent grief.
A man with a knife stabbed a British teenager five times on a British street and was believed over him by British police. And it has taken six months for that single sentence to even begin reaching the public consciousness.
Imagine being his family. Imagine living in that silence. Imagine watching the country that should have surrounded you go quiet and slow and procedural while your son’s name disappeared into a court calendar.
We are angry because they should not have had to wait this long.
We are frustrated because they should not be waiting still.
We are loud because the institutions that should have been louder were not.
182 days.
Henry Nowak was 18. He should be 19 next month.
He won’t be.
Henry — forever 18. 🤍
#JusticeForHenryNowak
Every life matters.
One law. One standard. For everyone.
This is about justice, for Henry, for his family and for all our children. They deserve better.
I was so saddened to hear of the tragic loss of three service personnel from the Fleet Air Arm following a helicopter training exercise last night. William and I hold their families and friends in our hearts at this very difficult time. C
It is with deep sadness that we can confirm three members of the Royal Navy have died during a helicopter training exercise on Wednesday 3 June near Sourton, Devon.
Today, in Southampton Crown Court, Olivia Nowak stood up and spoke directly to the man who murdered her younger brother.
She did not shout. She did not insult him. She did not look for revenge.
She looked at Vickrum Digwa and said: “If you had known him, you would never have hurt him.”
Then she spoke about Henry.
“My brother was my first best friend, an unbreakable bond. We lived our life to the fullest together. He lit up every room that he walked into, and the world became less valuable the day he left.”
Sit with those words.
A sister, in front of her brother’s killer, in front of the press, in front of the country — and the first thing she chose to tell him was that Henry was worth knowing. That he was lovable. That if you had only spent five minutes with him, you would not have been able to do what you did.
That is not weakness. That is the highest form of strength any human being is capable of showing.
Mark Nowak stood outside the court today and demanded accountability from the police. Olivia stood inside the court and reminded the world who Henry actually was.
A father’s anger. A sister’s love. Both of them, on the same day, refusing to let Henry be reduced to a headline.
The Nowak family is the strongest thing in this story.
Olivia — thank you. For saying who Henry was. For making sure the country hears it from someone who actually knew him.
Henry — forever 18. 🤍
Last night, I made a simple request on X. I asked if anybody visiting Arlington National Cemetery for Memorial Day would stop by Alan’s grave and leave a photo for our family.
What happened next honestly caught me off guard.
By this afternoon, dozens of Americans from all walks of life had made the walk to Section 60 to visit SSG Alan W. Shaw. Veterans. Families. Complete strangers. People who had never met Alan, but chose to honor him anyway.
For one day on social media, people put aside the constant noise and negativity and came together for something bigger than themselves. My notifications filled with photos, kind messages, prayers, and stories from people honoring not just Alan, but so many of our fallen heroes.
I don’t think people fully understand what moments like this mean to Gold Star families. The fear is never just losing them. It’s losing them slowly over time as the world moves on and fewer people remember their name.
But today showed me that Alan will never be forgotten.
After years of watching social media reward some of the worst parts of humanity, today gave me a reminder that the good is still out there too.
Thank you to every single person who stopped by to visit Alan today, said his name, shared his story, or took a moment to honor the fallen.
This right here is the America Alan knew and loved enough to fight and die for.
And today, y’all showed us all that it’s still here and it’s still worth fighting for. 🇺🇸