Very very sad to note the end of a reign that coincided, for its first Jubilee years, with the greatest years of British professional wrestling, which we celebrate here.
We cannot claim her late Majesty as a high-profile fan of our beloved wrestling. She let her husband appear ringside at a time when the great and the good didn't quite know what to make of professional wrestling.
But she perhaps represented far more of her subjects than keen fans like ourselves. She was, we understand, a closet fan, who enjoyed her small screen sessions.
At thousands and thousands of wrestling presentations, the audience sang "God Save the Queen", and so she presided over pin falls and public warnings, suspended purses and near unmaskings.
She was with us, and we enjoyed that.
God Save the King.
For the possible benefit of those of you who live outside the UK (and of others) there is a Book of Condolence on the Buckingham Palace website. Not the same as using a pen, but it is there.
I would think that there are "proper" Books in British Embassies throughout the world.