in our guest, sarah richardson, who is a royal historian and a professor of history at the university of warrick. she joins us from coventry in england. sarah, if you could write the lines in history that were saying right now, what would they be saying about what's happening? i will, i think it says a, a fitting stage to the last journey of the longest training british monarch. one has seen a transformational period in british history, and indeed the history of the walls, i'm so sorry, poignant, very solemn. we see that the coffin has arrived on english soil and will be transported now to buckingham palace, queens official residence, farrah. as we heard from our correspondent ellen fisher, there was sort of sunshine and bright blue skies in scotland. whereas it's almost feeding them in england. it's great and gloomy. yes, i understand that quite heavy ryan up fucking a palace where that's quite a large number of crowds awaiting the arrival of the coffin and it sort of matches the major, the country. very somber, solemn and fat wondering really full full the hold of the country and particularly