The queen’s granddaughter refuses to be a princess and works as a low-wage florist

The queen’s granddaughter refuses to be a princess and works as a low-wage florist


Lady Louise prefers to live away from the rigid rules and vanity bonfires of the London palace.

It sounds like the story of a Disney princess, but it’s real life. Louise of Windsor, Queen Elizabeth’s favorite granddaughter, accepted a temporary job in a flower shop. In addition to serving customers, she assembles bouquets, puts soil in pots, prunes plants and collects cash at the cashier. An hour earns £ 6.83, equivalent to R $ 41.80, less than £ 9.50 an hour of the minimum wage in England. The money will be used for day-to-day shopping in St. Andrews, Scotland, where she will be studying English from September.




The queen’s granddaughter refuses to be a princess and works as a low-wage florist

Traditional school approval will permanently remove Louise from London court and the relentless gaze of royal gossip tabloids. She could have assumed the title of princess and the treatment of Her Royal Highness from November, when she turned 18, a date set for her to decide. Days went by and Louise still didn’t speak. For now she continues to call herself ‘lady’, a title inherent in the daughter of a noble, just as Diana, descendant of a count, was known as Lady Di lei before becoming a princess when she married Carlo. With a discreet profile, contrary to the hustle and bustle of the monarchy, the daughter of the queen’s youngest is interested in drawing, painting and horses. “Her Majesty must have influenced Louise to want to be free,” said British dynasty expert Ian Lloyd. Even without assuming the status of princess, the young woman remains in the line of succession to the throne. It is 16 The abbreviation of this ordinal is: “16 °” 16 ignore in the line of heirs entitled to the crown of Elizabeth.

Source: Terra

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