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                    April 18, 2013
		Eyewitness to history: A report from Dame Thatcher's funeral
Outside the entrance to Saint Clement Danes Church in London,  England, hundreds of us gathered and quietly waited for the hearse  carrying Margaret Thatcher's flag-draped coffin.  We greeted its  arrival with the sort of unbidden, hushed applause that sometimes  arises at transcendent moments. 
The coffin was removed from the hearse, carried through  the church to the other side, and placed on a caisson.  Meanwhile, I  walked to Fleet Street where I knew the funeral procession would pass.   Onlookers packed both sidewalks.
                            
                            
Church bells rang into the silence.
The  procession began.  A military band, with its mournful music, and  soldiers led followed by six gleaming black horses drawing the caisson  up Fleet Street toward Saint Paul's Cathedral where the funeral service  would take place.  Another black horse, saddled but riderless, walked  alongside.
Margaret Thatcher, a grocer's daughter from Grantham,  had rescued Great Britain from the sordid fate of socialist decline and  for that had been hated by some. 
Scorn for this  real freedom fighter never completely faded away and was present even  now.  A woman held aloft a protest sign.  No one reacted.  If we had, we  would have debased the occasion and ourselves.
As the procession passed, we applauded as before and  were left to wonder:  would a living Margaret Thatcher pass our way  again on either side of the Atlantic, and if so, would we possess  the wisdom to grant her power?
                            
Scott Varland is an American lawyer residing in London, England.   
                    



