Spirits high among those waiting to see the Queen lying in state
After a damp start, the sun shone on the thousands waiting on the South Bank on Wednesday.

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Your support makes all the difference.Despite the sombre occasion, there was something of a carnival air among those waiting to see the Queen lying in state in London.
Early birds who staked out a prime spot on Tuesday afternoon have now spent almost 24 hours on the banks of the Thames.
By midday, most were well acquainted with their neighbours in the queue, with one person joking they would need to add their new friends to their Christmas card list.
Others posed up for selfies with people they had met in the queue.
After a dreary start, the sun came out in the afternoon, providing an invaluable boost to morale.
While there was a universal feeling of wanting to pay oneās last respects to the Queen for 70 years of service, many people also admitted they wanted to experience āa little bit of historyā.
People clapped and cheered as regiments from the Royal Air Force and the Navy drafted in to help with crowd control filed past.
Patrols of police officers from various regional police forces also got a round of applause.
The Harkness family proved a big hit with reporters walking up and down the queue, primarily because Chloe Harkness, 11, was one of the youngest in the line.
Guidance from the Department of Culture, Media and Sport advised against bringing children along because of the expected wait, but Chloe had an inset day from school and was up for the challenge.
Neither Chloe or her father Lee, 51, have had any sleep since setting off from Lancashire on Tuesday night, but they, along with sister and aunt Louisa Harkness-Hudson, 53, had cheerfully participated in nine interviews by 3pm.
Chloe said she was āexcited but also tiredā and said she would look for her name in press clippings once the day was done.
Asked how she would feel stepping into Westminster Hall, she said: āI think I am going to be more grateful than sad.
āIām proud of what the Queenās done ā it is going to be one of those goose bump moments.ā
Asked why the mood was so cheerful, Mr Harkness, a clinical psychologist, said: āI think it is that we are all sharing something as a group of people.ā
He added: āThere is a sense of loss but it is borne out of shared respect for her.ā
āThere will be people in the queue who are upset and will shed a tear but there is a sense on the South Bank of sharing something as a country.ā
Nikki Hawkins, 58, and her daughter Alice, 24, had travelled down from Solihull in the West Midlands.
Mrs Hawkins said: āI know itās not meant to be pleasant but itās been pleasant talking to people, itās just a nice atmosphere.
āIām so glad we did it.ā
Her daughter, who hopes to write a book on the royal family one day, added: āWeāre all here for one reason, and itās nice being in a group.ā
Lisa Witherspoon, 44, from Harpenden in Hertfordshire, said: āIāve had a lovely day ā a really unexpected lovely day.
āIāve met lots of really lovely people and itās been such a positive atmosphere, itās just been wonderful.ā
She added: āLooking at everyone here today it makes you proud to be British.ā
Ms Witherspoon said it had been strange being interviewed so many times, but said she realised there was global interest in the story.
āItās incredible to see how much goes into all the security and organising of something like this.ā