Good point ffinochio. I have fortunately never lived in a community where a child's death has occurred in a way that leads people to gather, and leave flowers or toys as a means of both empathising with the bereaved, and being a public marker of tragedy. I am not sure I would join in, though if the child had been in the same nursery class as a child from my family, maybe I'd feel differently.
The stiff upper lip approach to death seems to have diminished over a number of years, and is that a bad thing. When travelling in Southern Europe, or Ireland 40 years ago the road side shrines were noticeably something we didn't have in England. Now we do. A tradition has developed locally over the past 15 years or so, where fir trees in a particular local spot are decorated in memory of loved ones. It happens and Christmas and Easter, and is both beautiful and moving.