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On November 6, 1817, died the Princess Charlotte, only child of the
Prince Regent, and heir to the crown of England. Her short life had
hardly been a happy one. By nature impulsive, capricious, and
vehement, she had always longed for liberty; and she had never
possessed it. She had been brought up among violent family quarrels,
had been early separated from her disreputable and eccentric mother,
and handed over to the care of her disreputable and selfish father.
When she was seventeen, he decided to marry her off to the Prince of
Orange; she, at first, acquiesced; but, suddenly falling in love with
Prince Augustus of Prussia, she determined to break off the engagement.
This was not her first love affair, for she had previously carried on
a clandestine correspondence with a Captain Hess. Prince Augustus was
already married, morganatically, but she did not know it, and he did
not tell her. While she was spinning out the negotiations with the
Prince of Orange, the allied sovereign--it was June, 1814--arrived in
London to celebrate their victory. Among them, in the suite of the
Emperor of Russia, was the young and handsome Prince Leopold of
Saxe-Coburg. He made several attempts to attract the notice of the
Princess, but she, with her heart elsewhere, paid very little
attention. Next month the Prince Regent, discovering that his daughter
was having secret meetings with Prince Augustus, suddenly appeared
upon the scene and, after dismissing her household, sentenced her to a
strict seclusion in Windsor Park. "God Almighty grant me patience!"
she exclaimed, falling on her knees in an agony of agitation: then she
jumped up, ran down the backstairs and out into the street, hailed a
passing cab, and drove to her mother's house in Bayswater. She was
discovered, pursued, and at length, yielding to the persuasions of her
uncles, the Dukes of York and Sussex, of Brougham, and of the Bishop
of Salisbury, she returned to Carlton House at two o'clock in the
morning. She was immured at Windsor, but no more was heard of the
Prince of Orange. Prince Augustus, too, disappeared. The way was at
last open to Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg.
This Prince was clever enough to get round the Regent, to impress
the Ministers, and to make friends with another of the Princess's
uncles, the Duke of Kent. Through the Duke he was able to communicate
privately with the Princess, who now declared that he was necessary to
her happiness. When, after Waterloo, he was in Paris, the Duke's
aide-de-camp carried letters backwards and forwards across the
Channel. In January 1816 he was invited to England, and in May the
marriage took place.
The character of Prince Leopold contrasted strangely with that of
his wife. The younger son of a German princeling, he was at this time
twenty-six years of age; he had served with distinction in the war
against Napoleon; he had shown considerable diplomatic skill at the
Congress of Vienna; and he was now to try his hand at the task of
taming a tumultuous Princess. Cold and formal in manner, collected in
speech, careful in action, he soon dominated the wild, impetuous,
generous creature by his side. There was much in her, he found, of
which he could not approve. She quizzed, she stamped, she roared with
laughter; she had very little of that self-command which is especially
required of princes; her manners were abominable. Of the latter he was
a good judge, having moved, as he himself explained to his niece many
years later, in the best society of Europe, being in fact "what is
called in French de la fleur des pois." There was continual friction,
but every scene ended in the same way. Standing before him like a
rebellious boy in petticoats, her body pushed forward, her hands
behind her back, with flaming cheeks and sparkling eyes, she would
declare at last that she was ready to do whatever he wanted. "If you
wish it, I will do it," she would say. "I want nothing for myself," he
invariably answered; "When I press something on you, it is from a
conviction that it is for your interest and for your good."
Among the members of the household at Claremont, near Esher, where
the royal pair were established, was a young German physician,
Christian Friedrich Stockmar. He was the son of a minor magistrate in
Coburg, and, after taking part as a medical officer in the war, he had
settled down as a doctor in his native town. Here he had met Prince
Leopold, who had been struck by his ability, and, on his marriage,
brought him to England as his personal physician. A curious fate
awaited this young man; many were the gifts which the future held in
store for him--many and various--influence, power, mystery,
unhappiness, a broken heart. At Claremont his position was a very
humble one; but the Princess took a fancy to him, called him "Stocky,"
and romped with him along the corridors. Dyspeptic by constitution,
melancholic by temperament, he could yet be lively on occasion, and
was known as a wit in Coburg. He was virtuous, too, and served the
royal menage with approbation. "My master," he wrote in his diary, "is
the best of all husbands in all the five quarters of the globe; and
his wife bears him an amount of love, the greatness of which can only
be compared with the English national debt." Before long he gave proof
of another quality--a quality which was to colour the whole of his
life-cautious sagacity. When, in the spring of 1817, it was known that
the Princess was expecting a child, the post of one of her
physicians-in-ordinary was offered to him, and he had the good sense
to refuse it. He perceived that his colleagues would be jealous of
him, that his advice would probably not be taken, but that, if
anything were to go wrong, it would be certainly the foreign doctor
who would be blamed. Very soon, indeed, he came to the opinion that
the low diet and constant bleedings, to which the unfortunate Princess
was subjected, were an error; he drew the Prince aside, and begged him
to communicate this opinion to the English doctors; but it was
useless. The fashionable lowering treatment was continued for months.
On November 5, at nine o'clock in the evening, after a labour of over
fifty hours, the Princess was delivered of a dead boy. At midnight her
exhausted strength gave way. When, at last, Stockmar consented to see
her; he went in, and found her obviously dying, while the doctors were
plying her with wine. She seized his hand and pressed it. "They have
made me tipsy," she said. After a little he left her, and was already
in the next room when he heard her call out in her loud voice:
"Stocky! Stocky!" As he ran back the death-rattle was in her throat.
She tossed herself violently from side to side; then suddenly drew up
her legs, and it was over.
The Prince, after hours of watching, had left the room for a few
moments' rest; and Stockmar had now to tell him that his wife was
dead. At first he could not be made to realise what had happened. On
their way to her room he sank down on a chair while Stockmar knelt
beside him: it was all a dream; it was impossible. At last, by the
bed, he, too, knelt down and kissed the cold hands. Then rising and
exclaiming, "Now I am quite desolate. Promise me never to leave me,"
he threw himself into Stockmar's arms.
II
The tragedy at Claremont was of a most upsetting kind. The royal
kaleidoscope had suddenly shifted, and nobody could tell how the new
pattern would arrange itself. The succession to the throne, which had
seemed so satisfactorily settled, now became a matter of urgent doubt.
George III was still living, an aged lunatic, at Windsor,
completely impervious to the impressions of the outer world. Of his
seven sons, the youngest was of more than middle age, and none had
legitimate offspring. The outlook, therefore, was ambiguous. It seemed
highly improbable that the Prince Regent, who had lately been obliged
to abandon his stays, and presented a preposterous figure of debauched
obesity, could ever again, even on the supposition that he divorced
his wife and re-married, become the father of a family. Besides the
Duke of Kent, who must be noticed separately, the other brothers, in
order of seniority, were the Dukes of York, Clarence, Cumberland,
Sussex, and Cambridge; their situations and prospects require a brief
description. The Duke of York, whose escapades in times past with Mrs.
Clarke and the army had brought him into trouble, now divided his life
between London and a large, extravagantly ordered and extremely
uncomfortable country house where he occupied himself with racing,
whist, and improper stories. He was remarkable among the princes for
one reason: he was the only one of them--so we are informed by a
highly competent observer--who had the feelings of a gentleman. He had
been long married to the Princess Royal of Prussia, a lady who rarely
went to bed and was perpetually surrounded by vast numbers of dogs,
parrots, and monkeys. They had no children. The Duke of Clarence had
lived for many years in complete obscurity with Mrs. Jordan, the
actress, in Bushey Park. By her he had had a large family of sons and
daughters, and had appeared, in effect to be married to her, when he
suddenly separated from her and offered to marry Miss Wykeham, a crazy
woman of large fortune, who, however, would have nothing to say to
him. Shortly afterwards Mrs. Jordan died in distressed circumstances
in Paris. The Duke of Cumberland was probably the most unpopular man
in England. Hideously ugly, with a distorted eye, he was bad-tempered
and vindictive in private, a violent reactionary in politics, and was
subsequently suspected of murdering his valet and of having carried on
an amorous intrigue of an extremely scandalous kind. He had lately
married a German Princess, but there were as yet no children by the
marriage. The Duke of Sussex had mildly literary tastes and collected
books. He had married Lady Augusta Murray, by whom he had two
children, but the marriage, under the Royal Marriages Act, was
declared void. On Lady Augusta's death, he married Lady Cecilia
Buggin; she changed her name to Underwood, but this marriage also was
void. Of the Duke of Cambridge, the youngest of the brothers, not very
much was known. He lived in Hanover, wore a blonde wig, chattered and
fidgeted a great deal, and was unmarried.
Besides his seven sons, George III had five surviving daughters. Of
these, two--the Queen of Wurtemberg and the Duchess of
Gloucester--were married and childless. The three unmarried
princesses--Augusta, Elizabeth, and Sophia--were all over forty.
III
The fourth son of George III was Edward, Duke of Kent. He was now
fifty years of age--a tall, stout, vigorous man, highly-coloured, with
bushy eyebrows, a bald top to his head, and what hair he had carefully
dyed a glossy black. His dress was extremely neat, and in his whole
appearance there was a rigidity which did not belie his character. He
had spent his early life in the army--at Gibraltar, in Canada, in the
West Indies--and, under the influence of military training, had become
at first a disciplinarian and at last a martinet. In 1802, having been
sent to Gibraltar to restore order in a mutinous garrison, he was
recalled for undue severity, and his active career had come to an end.
Since then he had spent his life regulating his domestic arrangements
with great exactitude, busying himself with the affairs of his
numerous dependents, designing clocks, and struggling to restore order
to his finances, for, in spite of his being, as someone said who knew
him well "regle comme du papier a musique," and in spite of an income
of L24,000 a year, he was hopelessly in debt. He had quarrelled with
most of his brothers, particularly with the Prince Regent, and it was
only natural that he should have joined the political Opposition and
become a pillar of the Whigs.
What his political opinions may actually have been is open to
doubt; it has often been asserted that he was a Liberal, or even a
Radical; and, if we are to believe Robert Owen, he was a necessitarian
Socialist. His relations with Owen--the shrewd, gullible, high-minded,
wrong-headed, illustrious and preposterous father of Socialism and
Co-operation--were curious and characteristic. He talked of visiting
the Mills at New Lanark, he did, in fact, preside at one of Owen's
public meetings; he corresponded with him on confidential terms, and
he even (so Owen assures us) returned, after his death, from "the
sphere of spirits" to give encouragement to the Owenites on earth. "In
an especial manner," says Owen, "I have to name the very anxious
feelings of the spirit of his Royal Highness the Late Duke of Kent
(who early informed me that there were no titles in the spititual
spheres into which he had entered), to benefit, not a class, a sect, a
party, or any particular country, but the whole of the human race,
through futurity." "His whole spirit-proceeding with me has been most
beautiful," Owen adds, "making his own appointments; and never in one
instance has this spirit not been punctual to the minute he had
named." But Owen was of a sanguine temperament. He also numbered among
his proselytes President Jefferson, Prince Metternich, and Napoleon;
so that some uncertainty must still linger over the Duke of Kent's
views. But there is no uncertainty about another circumstance: his
Royal Highness borrowed from Robert Owen, on various occasions,
various sums of money which were never repaid and amounted in all to
several hundred pounds.
After the death of the Princess Charlotte it was clearly important,
for more than one reason, that the Duke of Kent should marry. From the
point of view of the nation, the lack of heirs in the reigning family
seemed to make the step almost obligatory; it was also likely to be
highly expedient from the point of view of the Duke. To marry as a
public duty, for the sake of the royal succession, would surely
deserve some recognition from a grateful country. When the Duke of
York had married he had received a settlement of L25,000 a year. Why
should not the Duke of Kent look forward to an equal sum? But the
situation was not quite simple. There was the Duke of Clarence to be
considered; he was the elder brother, and, if HE married, would
clearly have the prior claim. On the other hand, if the Duke of Kent
married, it was important to remember that he would be making a
serious sacrifice: a lady was involved.
The Duke, reflecting upon all these matters with careful attention,
happened, about a month after his niece's death, to visit Brussels,
and learnt that Mr. Creevey was staying in the town. Mr. Creevey was a
close friend of the leading Whigs and an inveterate gossip; and it
occurred to the Duke that there could be no better channel through
which to communicate his views upon the situation to political circles
at home. Apparently it did not occur to him that Mr. Creevey was
malicious and might keep a diary. He therefore sent for him on some
trivial pretext, and a remarkable conversation ensued.
After referring to the death of the Princess, to the improbability
of the Regent's seeking a divorce, to the childlessness of the Duke of
York, and to the possibility of the Duke of Clarence marrying, the
Duke adverted to his own position. "Should the Duke of Clarence not
marry," he said, "the next prince in succession is myself, and
although I trust I shall be at all times ready to obey any call my
country may make upon me, God only knows the sacrifice it will be to
make, whenever I shall think it my duty to become a married man. It is
now seven and twenty years that Madame St. Laurent and I have lived
together: we are of the same age, and have been in all climates, and
in all difficulties together, and you may well imagine, Mr. Creevey,
the pang it will occasion me to part with her. I put it to your own
feelings--in the event of any separation between you and Mrs.
Creevey... As for Madame St. Laurent herself, I protest I don't know
what is to become of her if a marriage is to be forced upon me; her
feelings are already so agitated upon the subject." The Duke went on
to describe how, one morning, a day or two after the Princess
Charlotte's death, a paragraph had appeared in the Morning Chronicle,
alluding to the possibility of his marriage. He had received the
newspaper at breakfast together with his letters, and "I did as is my
constant practice, I threw the newspaper across the table to Madame
St. Laurent, and began to open and read my letters. I had not done so
but a very short time, when my attention was called to an
extraordinary noise and a strong convulsive movement in Madame St.
Laurent's throat. For a short time I entertained serious apprehensions
for her safety; and when, upon her recovery, I enquired into the
occasion of this attack, she pointed to the article in the Morning
Chronicle."
The Duke then returned to the subject of the Duke of Clarence. "My
brother the Duke of Clarence is the elder brother, and has certainly
the right to marry if he chooses, and I would not interfere with him
on any account. If he wishes to be king--to be married and have
children, poor man--God help him! Let him do so. For myself--I am a
man of no ambition, and wish only to remain as I am... Easter, you
know, falls very early this year--the 22nd of March. If the Duke of
Clarence does not take any step before that time, I must find some
pretext to reconcile Madame St. Laurent to my going to England for a
short time. When once there, it will be easy for me to consult with my
friends as to the proper steps to be taken. Should the Duke of
Clarence do nothing before that time as to marrying it will become my
duty, no doubt, to take some measures upon the subject myself." Two
names, the Duke said, had been mentioned in this connection--those of
the Princess of Baden and the Princess of Saxe-Coburg. The latter, he
thought, would perhaps be the better of the two, from the circumstance
of Prince Leopold being so popular with the nation; but before any
other steps were taken, he hoped and expected to see justice done to
Madame St. Laurent. "She is," he explained, "of very good family, and
has never been an actress, and I am the first and only person who ever
lived with her. Her disinterestedness, too, has been equal to her
fidelity. When she first came to me it was upon L100 a year. That sum
was afterwards raised to L400 and finally to L1000; but when my debts
made it necessary for me to sacrifice a great part of my income,
Madame St. Laurent insisted upon again returning to her income of L400
a year. If Madame St. Laurent is to return to live amongst her
friends, it must be in such a state of independence as to command
their respect. I shall not require very much, but a certain number of
servants and a carriage are essentials." As to his own settlement, the
Duke observed that he would expect the Duke of York's marriage to be
considered the precedent. "That," he said, "was a marriage for the
succession, and L25,000 for income was settled, in addition to all his
other income, purely on that account. I shall be contented with the
same arrangement, without making any demands grounded on the
difference of the value of money in 1792 and at present. As for the
payment of my debts," the Duke concluded, "I don't call them great.
The nation, on the contrary, is greatly my debtor." Here a clock
struck, and seemed to remind the Duke that he had an appointment; he
rose, and Mr. Creevey left him.
Who could keep such a communication secret? Certainly not Mr.
Creevey. He hurried off to tell the Duke of Wellington, who was very
much amused, and he wrote a long account of it to Lord Sefton, who
received the letter "very apropos," while a surgeon was sounding his
bladder to ascertain whether he had a stone. "I never saw a fellow
more astonished than he was," wrote Lord Sefton in his reply, "at
seeing me laugh as soon as the operation was over. Nothing could be
more first-rate than the royal Edward's ingenuousness. One does not
know which to admire most--the delicacy of his attachment to Madame
St. Laurent, the refinement of his sentiments towards the Duke of
Clarence, or his own perfect disinterestedness in pecuniary matters."
As it turned out, both the brothers decided to marry. The Duke of
Kent, selecting the Princess of Saxe-Coburg in preference to the
Princess of Baden, was united to her on May 29, 1818. On June 11, the
Duke of Clarence followed suit with a daughter of the Duke of
Saxe-Meiningen. But they were disappointed in their financial
expectations; for though the Government brought forward proposals to
increase their allowances, together with that of the Duke of
Cumberland, the motions were defeated in the House of Commons. At this
the Duke of Wellington was not surprised. "By God!" he said, "there is
a great deal to be said about that. They are the damnedest millstones
about the necks of any Government that can be imagined. They have
insulted--PERSONALLY insulted--two-thirds of the gentlemen of England,
and how can it be wondered at that they take their revenge upon them
in the House of Commons? It is their only opportunity, and I think, by
God! they are quite right to use it." Eventually, however, Parliament
increased the Duke of Kent's annuity by L6000. The subsequent history
of Madame St. Laurent has not transpired.
IV
The new Duchess of Kent, Victoria Mary Louisa, was a daughter of
Francis, Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, and a sister of Prince Leopold.
The family was an ancient one, being a branch of the great House of
Wettin, which since the eleventh century had ruled over the March of
Meissen on the Elbe. In the fifteenth century the whole possessions of
the House had been divided between the Albertine and Ernestine
branches: from the former descended the electors and kings of Saxony;
the latter, ruling over Thuringia, became further subdivided into five
branches, of which the duchy of Saxe-Coburg was one. This principality
was very small, containing about 60,000 inhabitants, but it enjoyed
independent and sovereign rights. During the disturbed years which
followed the French Revolution, its affairs became terribly involved.
The Duke was extravagant, and kept open house for the swarms of
refugees, who fled eastward over Germany as the French power advanced.
Among these was the Prince of Leiningen, an elderly beau, whose
domains on the Moselle had been seized by the French, but who was
granted in compensation the territory of Amorbach in Lower Franconia.
In 1803 he married the Princess Victoria, at that time seventeen years
of age. Three years later Duke Francis died a ruined man. The
Napoleonic harrow passed over Saxe-Coburg. The duchy was seized by the
French, and the ducal family were reduced to beggary, almost to
starvation. At the same time the little principality of Amorbach was
devastated by the French, Russian, and Austrian armies, marching and
counter-marching across it. For years there was hardly a cow in the
country, nor enough grass to feed a flock of geese. Such was the
desperate plight of the family which, a generation later, was to have
gained a foothold in half the reigning Houses of Europe. The
Napoleonic harrow had indeed done its work, the seed was planted; and
the crop would have surprised Napoleon. Prince Leopold, thrown upon
his own resources at fifteen, made a career for himself and married
the heiress of England. The Princess of Leiningen, struggling at
Amorbach with poverty, military requisitions, and a futile husband,
developed an independence of character and a tenacity of purpose which
were to prove useful in very different circumstances. In 1814, her
husband died, leaving her with two children and the regency of the
principality. After her brother's marriage with the Princess
Charlotte, it was proposed that she should marry the Duke of Kent; but
she declined, on the ground that the guardianship of her children and
the management of her domains made other ties undesirable. The Princess
Charlotte's death, however, altered the case; and when the Duke of
Kent renewed his offer, she accepted it. She was thirty-two years
old--short, stout, with brown eyes and hair, and rosy cheeks, cheerful
and voluble, and gorgeously attired in rustling silks and bright
velvets.
She was certainly fortunate in her contented disposition; for she
was fated, all through her life, to have much to put up with. Her
second marriage, with its dubious prospects, seemed at first to be
chiefly a source of difficulties and discomforts. The Duke, declaring
that he was still too poor to live in England, moved about with uneasy
precision through Belgium and Germany, attending parades and
inspecting barracks in a neat military cap, while the English
notabilities looked askance, and the Duke of Wellington dubbed him the
Corporal. "God damme!" he exclaimed to Mr. Creevey, "d'ye know what
his sisters call him? By God! they call him Joseph Surface!" At
Valenciennes, where there was a review and a great dinner, the Duchess
arrived with an old and ugly lady-in-waiting, and the Duke of
Wellington found himself in a difficulty. "Who the devil is to take
out the maid of honour?" he kept asking; but at last he thought of a
solution. "Damme, Freemantle, find out the mayor and let him do it."
So the Mayor of Valenciennes was brought up for the purpose, and--so
we learn from Mr. Creevey--"a capital figure he was." A few days
later, at Brussels, Mr. Creevey himself had an unfortunate experience.
A military school was to be inspected--before breakfast. The company
assembled; everything was highly satisfactory; but the Duke of Kent
continued for so long examining every detail and asking meticulous
question after meticulous question, that Mr. Creevey at last could
bear it no longer, and whispered to his neighbour that he was damned
hungry. The Duke of Wellington heard him, and was delighted. "I
recommend you," he said, "whenever you start with the royal family in
a morning, and particularly with THE CORPORAL, always to breakfast
first." He and his staff, it turned out, had taken that precaution,
and the great man amused himself, while the stream of royal inquiries
poured on, by pointing at Mr. Creevey from time to time with the
remark, "Voila le monsieur qui n'a pas dejeune!"
Settled down at last at Amorbach, the time hung heavily on the
Duke's hands. The establishment was small, the country was
impoverished; even clock-making grew tedious at last. He brooded--for
in spite of his piety the Duke was not without a vein of
superstition--over the prophecy of a gipsy at Gibraltar who told him
that he was to have many losses and crosses, that he was to die in
happiness, and that his only child was to be a great queen. Before
long it became clear that a child was to be expected: the Duke decided
that it should be born in England. Funds were lacking for the journey,
but his determination was not to be set aside. Come what might, he
declared, his child must be English-born. A carriage was hired, and
the Duke himself mounted the box. Inside were the Duchess, her
daughter Feodora, a girl of fourteen, with maids, nurses, lap-dogs,
and canaries. Off they drove--through Germany, through France: bad
roads, cheap inns, were nothing to the rigorous Duke and the equable,
abundant Duchess. The Channel was crossed, London was reached in
safety. The authorities provided a set of rooms in Kensington Palace;
and there, on May 24, 1819, a female infant was born.
The child who, in these not very impressive circumstances, appeared
in the world, received but scant attention. There was small reason to
foresee her destiny. The Duchess of Clarence, two months before, had
given birth to a daughter, this infant, indeed, had died almost
immediately; but it seemed highly probable that the Duchess would
again become a mother; and so it actually fell out. More than this,
the Duchess of Kent was young, and the Duke was strong; there was
every likelihood that before long a brother would follow, to snatch
her faint chance of the succession from the little princess.
Nevertheless, the Duke had other views: there were prophecies... At
any rate, he would christen the child Elizabeth, a name of happy
augury. In this, however, he reckoned without the Regent, who, seeing
a chance of annoying his brother, suddenly announced that he himself
would be present at the baptism, and signified at the same time that
one of the godfathers was to be the Emperor Alexander of Russia. And
so when the ceremony took place, and the Archbishop of Canterbury
asked by what name he was to baptise the child, the Regent replied
"Alexandria." At this the Duke ventured to suggest that another name
might be added. "Certainly," said the Regent; "Georgina?" "Or
Elizabeth?" said the Duke. There was a pause, during which the
Archbishop, with the baby in his lawn sleeves, looked with some
uneasiness from one Prince to the other. "Very well, then," said the
Regent at last, "call her after her mother. But Alexandrina must come
first." Thus, to the disgust of her father, the child was christened
Alexandrina Victoria.
The Duke had other subjects of disgust. The meagre grant of the
Commons had by no means put an end to his financial distresses. It was
to be feared that his services were not appreciated by the nation. His
debts continued to grow. For many years he had lived upon L7000 a
year; but now his expenses were exactly doubled; he could make no
further reductions; as it was, there was not a single servant in his
meagre grant establishment who was idle for a moment from morning to
night. He poured out his griefs in a long letter to Robert Owen, whose
sympathy had the great merit of being practical. "I now candidly
state," he wrote, "that, after viewing the subject in every possible
way, I am satisfied that, to continue to live in England, even in the
quiet way in which we are going on, WITHOUT SPLENDOUR, and WITHOUT
SHOW, NOTHING SHORT OF DOUBLING THE SEVEN THOUSAND POUNDS WILL DO,
REDUCTION BEING IMPOSSIBLE." It was clear that he would be obliged to
sell his house for L51,300, if that failed, he would go and live on
the Continent. "If my services are useful to my country, it surely
becomes THOSE WHO HAVE THE POWER to support me in substantiating those
just claims I have for the very extensive losses and privations I have
experienced, during the very long period of my professional servitude
in the Colonies; and if this is not attainable, IT IS A CLEAR PROOF TO
ME THAT THEY ARE THEY ARE NOT APPRECIATED; and under that impression I
shall not scruple, in DUE time, to resume my retirement abroad, when
the Duchess and myself shall have fulfilled our duties in establishing
the ENGLISH birth of my child, and giving it material nutriment on the
soil of Old England; and which we shall certainly repeat, if
Providence destines, to give us any further increase of family."
In the meantime, he decided to spend the winter at Sidmouth, "in
order," he told Owen, "that the Duchess may have the benefit of tepid
sea bathing, and our infant that of sea air, on the fine coast of
Devonshire, during the months of the year that are so odious in
London." In December the move was made. With the new year, the Duke
remembered another prophecy. In 1820, a fortune-teller had told him,
two members of the Royal Family would die. Who would they be? He
speculated on the various possibilities: The King, it was plain, could
not live much longer; and the Duchess of York had been attacked by a
mortal disease. Probably it would be the King and the Duchess of York;
or perhaps the King and the Duke of York; or the King and the Regent.
He himself was one of the healthiest men in England. "My brothers," he
declared, "are not so strong as I am; I have lived a regular life. I
shall outlive them all. The crown will come to me and my children." He
went out for a walk, and got his feet wet. On coming home, he
neglected to change his stockings. He caught cold, inflammation of the
lungs set in, and on January 22 he was a dying man. By a curious
chance, young Dr. Stockmar was staying in the house at the time; two
years before, he had stood by the death-bed of the Princess Charlotte;
and now he was watching the Duke of Kent in his agony. On Stockmar's
advice, a will was hastily prepared. The Duke's earthly possessions
were of a negative character; but it was important that the
guardianship of the unwitting child, whose fortunes were now so
strangely changing, should be assured to the Duchess. The Duke was
just able to understand the document, and to append his signature.
Having inquired whether his writing was perfectly clear, he became
unconscious, and breathed his last on the following morning! Six days
later came the fulfilment of the second half of the gipsy's prophecy.
The long, unhappy, and inglorious life of George the Third of England
was ended.
II
Such was the confusion of affairs at Sidmouth, that the Duchess
found herself without the means of returning to London. Prince Leopold
hurried down, and himself conducted his sister and her family, by slow
and bitter stages, to Kensington. The widowed lady, in her voluminous
blacks, needed all her equanimity to support her. Her prospects were
more dubious than ever. She had L6000 a year of her own; but her
husband's debts loomed before her like a mountain. Soon she learnt
that the Duchess of Clarence was once more expecting a child. What had
she to look forward to in England? Why should she remain in a foreign
country, among strangers, whose language she could not speak, whose
customs she could not understand? Surely it would be best to return to
Amorbach, and there, among her own people, bring up her daughters in
economical obscurity. But she was an inveterate optimist; she had
spent her life in struggles, and would not be daunted now; and
besides, she adored her baby. "C'est mon bonheur, mes delices, mon
existence," she declared; the darling should be brought up as an
English princess, whatever lot awaited her. Prince Leopold came
forward nobly with an offer of an additional L3000 a year; and the
Duchess remained at Kensington.
The child herself was extremely fat, and bore a remarkable
resemblance to her grandfather. "C'est l'image du feu Roi!" exclaimed
the Duchess. "C'est le Roi Georges en jupons," echoed the surrounding
ladies, as the little creature waddled with difficulty from one to the
other.
Before long, the world began to be slightly interested in the
nursery at Kensington. When, early in 1821, the Duchess of Clarence's
second child, the Princess Elizabeth, died within three months of its
birth, the interest increased. Great forces and fierce antagonisms
seemed to be moving, obscurely, about the royal cradle. It was a time
of faction and anger, of violent repression and profound discontent. A
powerful movement, which had for long been checked by adverse
circumstances, was now spreading throughout the country. New passions,
new desires, were abroad; or rather old passions and old desires,
reincarnated with a new potency: love of freedom, hatred of injustice,
hope for the future of man. The mighty still sat proudly in their
seats, dispensing their ancient tyranny; but a storm was gathering out
of the darkness, and already there was lightning in the sky. But the
vastest forces must needs operate through frail human instruments; and
it seemed for many years as if the great cause of English liberalism
hung upon the life of the little girl at Kensington. She alone stood
between the country and her terrible uncle, the Duke of Cumberland,
the hideous embodiment of reaction. Inevitably, the Duchess of Kent
threw in her lot with her husband's party; Whig leaders, Radical
agitators, rallied round her; she was intimate with the bold Lord
Durham, she was on friendly terms with the redoubtable O'Connell
himself. She received Wilberforce-though, to be sure, she did not ask
him to sit down. She declared in public that she put her faith in "the
liberties of the People." It was certain that the young Princess would
be brought up in the way that she should go; yet there, close behind
the throne, waiting, sinister, was the Duke of Cumberland. Brougham,
looking forward into the future in his scurrilous fashion, hinted at
dreadful possibilities. "I never prayed so heartily for a Prince
before," he wrote, on hearing that George IV had been attacked by
illness. "If he had gone, all the troubles of these villains [the Tory
Ministers] went with him, and they had Fred. I [the Duke of York] their
own man for his life. He [Fred. I] won't live long either; that Prince
of Blackguards, 'Brother William,' is as bad a life, so we come in the
course of nature to be ASSASSINATED by King Ernest I or Regent Ernest
[the Duke of Cumberland]." Such thoughts were not peculiar to
Brougham; in the seething state of public feeling, they constantly
leapt to the surface; and, even so late as the year previous to her
accession, the Radical newspapers were full of suggestions that the
Princess Victoria was in danger from the machinations of her wicked
uncle.
But no echo of these conflicts and forebodings reached the little
Drina--for so she was called in the family circle--as she played with
her dolls, or scampered down the passages, or rode on the donkey her
uncle York had given her along the avenues of Kensington Gardens The
fair-haired, blue-eyed child was idolised by her nurses, and her
mother's ladies, and her sister Feodora; and for a few years there was
danger, in spite of her mother's strictness, of her being spoilt. From
time to time, she would fly into a violent passion, stamp her little
foot, and set everyone at defiance; whatever they might say, she would
not learn her letters--no, she WOULD NOT; afterwards, she was very
sorry, and burst into tears; but her letters remained unlearnt. When
she was five years old, however, a change came, with the appearance of
Fraulein Lehzen. This lady, who was the daughter of a Hanoverian
clergyman, and had previously been the Princess Feodora's governess,
soon succeeded in instilling a new spirit into her charge. At first,
indeed, she was appalled by the little Princess's outbursts of temper;
never in her life, she declared, had she seen such a passionate and
naughty child. Then she observed something else; the child was
extraordinarily truthful; whatever punishment might follow, she never
told a lie. Firm, very firm, the new governess yet had the sense to see
that all the firmness in the world would be useless, unless she could
win her way into little Drina's heart. She did so, and there were no
more difficulties. Drina learnt her letters like an angel; and she
learnt other things as well. The Baroness de Spath taught her how to
make little board boxes and decorate them with tinsel and painted
flowers; her mother taught her religion. Sitting in the pew every
Sunday morning, the child of six was seen listening in rapt attention
to the clergyman's endless sermon, for she was to be examined upon it
in the afternoon. The Duchess was determined that her daughter, from
the earliest possible moment, should be prepared for her high station
in a way that would commend itself to the most respectable; her good,
plain, thrifty German mind recoiled with horror and amazement from the
shameless junketings at Carlton House; Drina should never be allowed
to forget for a moment the virtues of simplicity, regularity,
propriety, and devotion. The little girl, however, was really in small
need of such lessons, for she was naturally simple and orderly, she
was pious without difficulty, and her sense of propriety was keen. She
understood very well the niceties of her own position. When, a child
of six, Lady Jane Ellice was taken by her grandmother to Kensington
Palace, she was put to play with the Princess Victoria, who was the
same age as herself. The young visitor, ignorant of etiquette, began to
make free with the toys on the floor, in a way which was a little too
familiar; but "You must not touch those," she was quickly told, "they
are mine; and I may call you Jane, but you must not call me Victoria."
The Princess's most constant playmate was Victoire, the daughter of
Sir John Conroy, the Duchess's major-domo. The two girls were very
fond of one another; they would walk hand in hand together in
Kensington Gardens. But little Drina was perfectly aware for which of
them it was that they were followed, at a respectful distance, by a
gigantic scarlet flunkey.
Warm-hearted, responsive, she loved her dear Lehzen, and she loved
her dear Feodora, and her dear Victoire, and her dear Madame de Spath.
And her dear Mamma, of course, she loved her too; it was her duty; and
yet--she could not tell why it was--she was always happier when she
was staying with her Uncle Leopold at Claremont. There old Mrs. Louis,
who, years ago, had waited on her Cousin Charlotte, petted her to her
heart's content; and her uncle himself was wonderfully kind to her,
talking to her seriously and gently, almost as if she were a grown-up
person. She and Feodora invariably wept when the too-short visit was
over, and they were obliged to return to the dutiful monotony, and the
affectionate supervision of Kensington. But sometimes when her mother
had to stay at home, she was allowed to go out driving all alone with
her dear Feodora and her dear Lehzen, and she could talk and look as
she liked, and it was very delightful.
The visits to Claremont were frequent enough; but one day, on a
special occasion, she paid one of a rarer and more exciting kind. When
she was seven years old, she and her mother and sister were asked by
the King to go down to Windsor. George IV, who had transferred his
fraternal ill-temper to his sister-in-law and her family, had at last
grown tired of sulking, and decided to be agreeable. The old rip,
bewigged and gouty, ornate and enormous, with his jewelled mistress by
his side and his flaunting court about him, received the tiny creature
who was one day to hold in those same halls a very different state.
"Give me your little paw," he said; and two ages touched. Next morning,
driving in his phaeton with the Duchess of Gloucester, he met the
Duchess of Kent and her child in the Park. "Pop her in," were his
orders, which, to the terror of the mother and the delight of the
daughter, were immediately obeyed. Off they dashed to Virginia Water,
where there was a great barge, full of lords and ladies fishing, and
another barge with a band; and the King ogled Feodora, and praised her
manners, and then turned to his own small niece. "What is your
favourite tune? The band shall play it." "God save the King, sir," was
the instant answer. The Princess's reply has been praised as an early
example of a tact which was afterwards famous. But she was a very
truthful child, and perhaps it was her genuine opinion.
III
In 1827 the Duke of York, who had found some consolation for the
loss of his wife in the sympathy of the Duchess of Rutland, died,
leaving behind him the unfinished immensity of Stafford House and
L200,000 worth of debts. Three years later George IV also disappeared,
and the Duke of Clarence reigned in his stead. The new Queen, it was
now clear, would in all probability never again be a mother; the
Princess Victoria, therefore, was recognised by Parliament as
heir-presumptive; and the Duchess of Kent, whose annuity had been
doubled five years previously, was now given an additional L10,000 for
the maintenance of the Princess, and was appointed regent, in case of
the death of the King before the majority of her daughter. At the same
time a great convulsion took place in the constitution of the State.
The power of the Tories, who had dominated England for more than forty
years, suddenly began to crumble. In the tremendous struggle that
followed, it seemed for a moment as if the tradition of generations
might be snapped, as if the blind tenacity of the reactionaries and
the determined fury of their enemies could have no other issue than
revolution. But the forces of compromise triumphed: the Reform Bill
was passed. The centre of gravity in the constitution was shifted
towards the middle classes; the Whigs came into power; and the
complexion of the Government assumed a Liberal tinge. One of the
results of this new state of affairs was a change in the position of
the Duchess of Kent and her daughter. From being the protegees of an
opposition clique, they became assets of the official majority of the
nation. The Princess Victoria was henceforward the living symbol of
the victory of the middle classes.
The Duke of Cumberland, on the other hand, suffered a corresponding
eclipse: his claws had been pared by the Reform Act. He grew
insignificant and almost harmless, though his ugliness remained; he
was the wicked uncle still--but only of a story.
The Duchess's own liberalism was not very profound. She followed
naturally in the footsteps of her husband, repeating with conviction
the catchwords of her husband's clever friends and the generalisations
of her clever brother Leopold. She herself had no pretensions to
cleverness; she did not understand very much about the Poor Law and
the Slave Trade and Political Economy; but she hoped that she did her
duty; and she hoped--she ardently hoped--that the same might be said
of Victoria. Her educational conceptions were those of Dr. Arnold,
whose views were just then beginning to permeate society. Dr. Arnold's
object was, first and foremost, to make his pupils "in the highest and
truest sense of the words, Christian gentlemen," intellectual
refinements might follow. The Duchess felt convinced that it was her
supreme duty in life to make quite sure that her daughter should grow
up into a Christian queen. To this task she bent all her energies;
and, as the child developed, she flattered herself that her efforts
were not unsuccessful. When the Princess was eleven, she desired the
Bishops of London and Lincoln to submit her daughter to an
examination, and report upon the progress that had been made. "I feel
the time to be now come," the Duchess explained, in a letter obviously
drawn up by her own hand, "that what has been done should be put to
some test, that if anything has been done in error of judgment it may
be corrected, and that the plan for the future should be open to
consideration and revision... I attend almost always myself every
lesson, or a part; and as the lady about the Princess is a competent
person, she assists Her in preparing Her lessons, for the various
masters, as I resolved to act in that manner so as to be Her Governess
myself. When she was at a proper age she commenced attending Divine
Service regularly with me, and I have every feeling that she has
religion at Her heart, that she is morally impressed with it to that
degree, that she is less liable to error by its application to her
feelings as a Child capable of reflection." "The general bent of Her
character," added the Duchess, "is strength of intellect, capable of
receiving with ease, information, and with a peculiar readiness in
coming to a very just and benignant decision on any point Her opinion
is asked on. Her adherence to truth is of so marked a character that I
feel no apprehension of that Bulwark being broken down by any
circumstances." The Bishops attended at the Palace, and the result of
their examination was all that could be wished. "In answering a great
variety of questions proposed to her," they reported, "the Princess
displayed an accurate knowledge of the most important features of
Scripture History, and of the leading truths and precepts of the
Christian Religion as taught by the Church of England, as well as an
acquaintance with the Chronology and principal facts of English
History remarkable in so young a person. To questions in Geography,
the use of the Globes, Arithmetic, and Latin Grammar, the answers
which the Princess returned were equally satisfactory." They did not
believe that the Duchess's plan of education was susceptible of any
improvement; and the Archbishop of Canterbury, who was also consulted,
came to the same gratifying conclusion.
One important step, however, remained to be taken. So far, as the
Duchess explained to the Bishops, the Princess had been kept in
ignorance of the station that she was likely to fill. "She is aware of
its duties, and that a Sovereign should live for others; so that when
Her innocent mind receives the impression of Her future fate, she
receives it with a mind formed to be sensible of what is to be
expected from Her, and it is to be hoped, she will be too well
grounded in Her principles to be dazzled with the station she is to
look to." In the following year it was decided that she should be
enlightened on this point. The well--known scene followed: the history
lesson, the genealogical table of the Kings of England slipped
beforehand by the governess into the book, the Princess's surprise,
her inquiries, her final realisation of the facts. When the child at
last understood, she was silent for a moment, and then she spoke: "I
will be good," she said. The words were something more than a
conventional protestation, something more than the expression of a
superimposed desire; they were, in their limitation and their
intensity, their egotism and their humility, an instinctive summary of
the dominating qualities of a life. "I cried much on learning it," her
Majesty noted long afterwards. No doubt, while the others were
present, even her dear Lehzen, the little girl kept up her
self-command; and then crept away somewhere to ease her heart of an
inward, unfamiliar agitation, with a handkerchief, out of her mother's
sight.
But her mother's sight was by no means an easy thing to escape.
Morning and evening, day and night, there was no relaxation of the
maternal vigilance. The child grew into the girl, the girl into the
young woman; but still she slept in her mother's bedroom; still she
had no place allowed her where she might sit or work by herself. An
extraordinary watchfulness surrounded her every step: up to the day of
her accession, she never went downstairs without someone beside her
holding her hand. Plainness and regularity ruled the household. The
hours, the days, the years passed slowly and methodically by. The
dolls--the innumerable dolls, each one so neatly dressed, each one with
its name so punctiliously entered in the catalogue--were laid aside,
and a little music and a little dancing took their place. Taglioni
came, to give grace and dignity to the figure, and Lablache, to train
the piping treble upon his own rich bass. The Dean of Chester, the
official preceptor, continued his endless instruction in Scripture
history, while the Duchess of Northumberland, the official governess,
presided over every lesson with becoming solemnity. Without doubt, the
Princess's main achievement during her school-days was linguistic.
German was naturally the first language with which she was familiar;
but English and French quickly followed; and she became virtually
trilingual, though her mastery of English grammar remained incomplete.
At the same time, she acquired a working knowledge of Italian and some
smattering of Latin. Nevertheless, she did not read very much. It was
not an occupation that she cared for; partly, perhaps, because the
books that were given her were all either sermons, which were very
dull, or poetry, which was incomprehensible. Novels were strictly
forbidden. Lord Durham persuaded her mother to get her some of Miss
Martineau's tales, illustrating the truths of Political Economy, and
they delighted her; but it is to be feared that it was the unaccustomed
pleasure of the story that filled her mind, and that she never really
mastered the theory of exchanges or the nature of rent.
It was her misfortune that the mental atmosphere which surrounded
her during these years of adolescence was almost entirely feminine. No
father, no brother, was there to break in upon the gentle monotony of
the daily round with impetuosity, with rudeness, with careless
laughter and wafts of freedom from the outside world. The Princess was
never called by a voice that was loud and growling; never felt, as a
matter of course, a hard rough cheek on her own soft one; never
climbed a wall with a boy. The visits to Claremont--delicious little
escapes into male society--came to an end when she was eleven years old
and Prince Leopold left England to be King of the Belgians. She loved
him still; he was still "il mio secondo padre or, rather, solo padre,
for he is indeed like my real father, as I have none;" but his
fatherliness now came to her dimly and indirectly, through the cold
channel of correspondence. Henceforward female duty, female elegance,
female enthusiasm, hemmed her completely in; and her spirit, amid the
enclosing folds, was hardly reached by those two great influences,
without which no growing life can truly prosper--humour and
imagination. The Baroness Lehzen--for she had been raised to that rank
in the Hanoverian nobility by George IV before he died--was the real
centre of the Princess's world. When Feodora married, when Uncle
Leopold went to Belgium, the Baroness was left without a competitor.
The Princess gave her mother her dutiful regards; but Lehzen had her
heart. The voluble, shrewd daughter of the pastor in Hanover,
lavishing her devotion on her royal charge, had reaped her reward in
an unbounded confidence and a passionate adoration. The girl would
have gone through fire for her "PRECIOUS Lehzen," the "best and truest
friend," she declared, that she had had since her birth. Her journal,
begun when she was thirteen, where she registered day by day the small
succession of her doings and her sentiments, bears on every page of it
the traces of the Baroness and her circumambient influence. The young
creature that one sees there, self-depicted in ingenuous clarity, with
her sincerity, her simplicity, her quick affections and pious
resolutions, might almost have been the daughter of a German pastor
herself. Her enjoyments, her admirations, her engouements were of the
kind that clothed themselves naturally in underlinings and exclamation
marks. "It was a DELIGHTFUL ride. We cantered a good deal. SWEET
LITTLE ROSY WENT BEAUTIFULLY!! We came home at a 1/4 past 1... At 20
minutes to 7 we went out to the Opera... Rubini came on and sang a
song out of 'Anna Boulena' QUITE BEAUTIFULLY. We came home at 1/2 past
11." In her comments on her readings, the mind of the Baroness is
clearly revealed. One day, by some mistake, she was allowed to take up
a volume of memoirs by Fanny Kemble. "It is certainly very pertly and
oddly written. One would imagine by the style that the authoress must
be very pert, and not well bred; for there are so many vulgar
expressions in it. It is a great pity that a person endowed with so
much talent, as Mrs. Butler really is, should turn it to so little
account and publish a book which is so full of trash and nonsense
which can only do her harm. I stayed up till 20 minutes past 9."
Madame de Sevigne's letters, which the Baroness read aloud, met with
more approval. "How truly elegant and natural her style is! It is so
full of naivete, cleverness, and grace." But her highest admiration
was reserved for the Bishop of Chester's 'Exposition of the Gospel of
St. Matthew.' "It is a very fine book indeed. Just the sort of one I
like; which is just plain and comprehensible and full of truth and
good feeling. It is not one of those learned books in which you have
to cavil at almost every paragraph. Lehzen gave it me on the Sunday
that I took the Sacrament." A few weeks previously she had been
confirmed, and she described the event as follows: "I felt that my
confirmation was one of the most solemn and important events and acts
in my life; and that I trusted that it might have a salutary effect on
my mind. I felt deeply repentant for all what I had done which was
wrong and trusted in God Almighty to strengthen my heart and mind; and
to forsake all that is bad and follow all that is virtuous and right.
I went with the firm determination to become a true Christian, to try
and comfort my dear Mamma in all her griefs, trials, and anxieties,
and to become a dutiful and affectionate daughter to her. Also to be
obedient to DEAR Lehzen, who has done so much for me. I was dressed in
a white lace dress, with a white crepe bonnet with a wreath of white
roses round it. I went in the chariot with my dear Mamma and the
others followed in another carriage." One seems to hold in one's hand a
small smooth crystal pebble, without a flaw and without a
scintillation, and so transparent that one can see through it at a
glance.
Yet perhaps, after all, to the discerning eye, the purity would not
be absolute. The careful searcher might detect, in the virgin soil,
the first faint traces of an unexpected vein. In that conventual
existence visits were exciting events; and, as the Duchess had many
relatives, they were not infrequent; aunts and uncles would often
appear from Germany, and cousins too. When the Princess was fourteen
she was delighted by the arrival of a couple of boys from Wurtemberg,
the Princes Alexander and Ernst, sons of her mother's sister and the
reigning duke. "They are both EXTREMELY TALL," she noted, "Alexander
is VERY HANDSOME, and Ernst has a VERY KIND EXPRESSION. They are both
extremely AMIABLE." And their departure filled her with corresponding
regrets. "We saw them get into the barge, and watched them sailing
away for some time on the beach. They were so amiable and so pleasant
to have in the house; they were ALWAYS SATISFIED, ALWAYS
GOOD-HUMOURED; Alexander took such care of me in getting out of the
boat, and rode next to me; so did Ernst." Two years later, two other
cousins arrived, the Princes Ferdinand and Augustus. "Dear Ferdinand,"
the Princess wrote, "has elicited universal admiration from all
parties... He is so very unaffected, and has such a very distinguished
appearance and carriage. They are both very dear and charming young
men. Augustus is very amiable, too, and, when known, shows much good
sense." On another occasion, Dear Ferdinand came and sat near me and
talked so dearly and sensibly. I do SO love him. Dear Augustus sat
near me and talked with me, and he is also a dear good young man, and
is very handsome." She could not quite decide which was the handsomer
of the two. "On the whole," she concluded, "I think Ferdinand
handsomer than Augustus, his eyes are so beautiful, and he has such a
lively clever expression; BOTH have such a sweet expression; Ferdinand
has something QUITE BEAUTIFUL in his expression when he speaks and
smiles, and he is SO good." However, it was perhaps best to say that
they were "both very handsome and VERY DEAR." But shortly afterwards
two more cousins arrived, who threw all the rest into the shade. These
were the Princes Ernest and Albert, sons of her mother's eldest
brother, the Duke of Saxe-Coburg. This time the Princess was more
particular in her observations. "Ernest," she remarked," is as tall as
Ferdinand and Augustus; he has dark hair, and fine dark eyes and
eyebrows, but the nose and mouth are not good; he has a most kind,
honest, and intelligent expression in his countenance, and has a very
good figure. Albert, who is just as tall as Ernest but stouter, is
extremely handsome; his hair is about the same colour as mine; his
eyes are large and blue, and he has a beautiful nose and a very sweet
mouth with fine teeth; but the charm of his countenance is his
expression, which is most delightful; c'est a la fois full of goodness
and sweetness, and very clever and intelligent." "Both my cousins,"
she added, "are so kind and good; they are much more formes and men of
the world than Augustus; they speak English very well, and I speak it
with them. Ernest will be 18 years old on the 21st of June, and Albert
17 on the 26th of August. Dear Uncle Ernest made me the present of a
most delightful Lory, which is so tame that it remains on your hand
and you may put your finger into its beak, or do anything with it,
without its ever attempting to bite. It is larger than Mamma's grey
parrot." A little later, "I sat between my dear cousins on the sofa
and we looked at drawings. They both draw very well, particularly
Albert, and are both exceedingly fond of music; they play very nicely
on the piano. The more I see them the more I am delighted with them,
and the more I love them... It is delightful to be with them; they are
so fond of being occupied too; they are quite an example for any young
person." When, after a stay of three weeks, the time came for the
young men and their father to return to Germany, the moment of parting
was a melancholy one. "It was our last HAPPY HAPPY breakfast, with
this dear Uncle and those DEAREST beloved cousins, whom I DO love so
VERY VERY dearly; MUCH MORE DEARLY than any other cousins in the
WORLD. Dearly as I love Ferdinand, and also good Augustus, I love
Ernest and Albert MORE than them, oh yes, MUCH MORE... They have both
learnt a good deal, and are very clever, naturally clever,
particularly Albert, who is the most reflecting of the two, and they
like very much talking about serious and instructive things and yet
are so VERY VERY merry and gay and happy, like young people ought to
be; Albert always used to have some fun and some clever witty answer
at breakfast and everywhere; he used to play and fondle Dash so
funnily too... Dearest Albert was playing on the piano when I came
down. At 11 dear Uncle, my DEAREST BELOVED cousins, and Charles, left
us, accompanied by Count Kolowrat. I embraced both my dearest cousins
most warmly, as also my dear Uncle. I cried bitterly, very bitterly."
The Princes shared her ecstasies and her italics between them; but it
is clear enough where her secret preference lay. "Particularly
Albert!" She was just seventeen; and deep was the impression left upon
that budding organism by the young man's charm and goodness and
accomplishments, and his large blue eyes and beautiful nose, and his
sweet mouth and fine teeth.
IV
King William could not away with his sister-in-law, and the Duchess
fully returned his antipathy. Without considerable tact and
considerable forbearance their relative positions were well calculated
to cause ill-feeling; and there was very little tact in the
composition of the Duchess, and no forbearance at all in that of his
Majesty. A bursting, bubbling old gentleman, with quarterdeck
gestures, round rolling eyes, and a head like a pineapple, his sudden
elevation to the throne after fifty-six years of utter insignificance
had almost sent him crazy. His natural exuberance completely got the
best of him; he rushed about doing preposterous things in an
extraordinary manner, spreading amusement and terror in every
direction, and talking all the time. His tongue was decidedly
Hanoverian, with its repetitions, its catchwords--"That's quite
another thing! That's quite another thing!"--its rattling
indomitability, its loud indiscreetness. His speeches, made repeatedly
at the most inopportune junctures, and filled pell-mell with all the
fancies and furies that happened at the moment to be whisking about in
his head, were the consternation of Ministers. He was one part
blackguard, people said, and three parts buffoon; but those who knew
him better could not help liking him--he meant well; and he was really
good-humoured and kind-hearted, if you took him the right way. If you
took him the wrong way, however, you must look out for squalls, as the
Duchess of Kent discovered.
She had no notion of how to deal with him--could not understand him
in the least. Occupied with her own position, her own
responsibilities, her duty, and her daughter, she had no attention to
spare for the peppery susceptibilities of a foolish, disreputable old
man. She was the mother of the heiress of England; and it was for him
to recognise the fact--to put her at once upon a proper footing--to
give her the precedence of a dowager Princess of Wales, with a large
annuity from the privy purse. It did not occur to her that such
pretensions might be galling to a king who had no legitimate child of
his own, and who yet had not altogether abandoned the hope of having
one. She pressed on, with bulky vigour, along the course she had laid
out. Sir John Conroy, an Irishman with no judgment and a great deal of
self-importance, was her intimate counsellor, and egged her on. It was
advisable that Victoria should become acquainted with the various
districts of England, and through several summers a succession of
tours--in the West, in the Midlands, in Wales--were arranged for her.
The intention of the plan was excellent, but its execution was
unfortunate. The journeys, advertised in the Press, attracting
enthusiastic crowds, and involving official receptions, took on the
air of royal progresses. Addresses were presented by loyal citizens,
the delighted Duchess, swelling in sweeping feathers and almost
obliterating the diminutive Princess, read aloud, in her German
accent, gracious replies prepared beforehand by Sir John, who,
bustling and ridiculous, seemed to be mingling the roles of major-domo
and Prime Minister. Naturally the King fumed over his newspaper at
Windsor. "That woman is a nuisance!" he exclaimed. Poor Queen
Adelaide, amiable though disappointed, did her best to smooth things
down, changed the subject, and wrote affectionate letters to Victoria;
but it was useless. News arrived that the Duchess of Kent, sailing in
the Solent, had insisted that whenever her yacht appeared it should be
received by royal salutes from all the men-of-war and all the forts.
The King declared that these continual poppings must cease; the
Premier and the First Lord of the Admiralty were consulted; and they
wrote privately to the Duchess, begging her to waive her rights. But
she would not hear of it; Sir John Conroy was adamant. "As her Royal
Highness's CONFIDENTIAL ADVISER," he said, "I cannot recommend her to
give way on this point." Eventually the King, in a great state of
excitement, issued a special Order in Council, prohibiting the firing
of royal salutes to any ships except those which carried the reigning
sovereign or his consort on board.
When King William quarrelled with his Whig Ministers the situation
grew still more embittered, for now the Duchess, in addition to her
other shortcomings, was the political partisan of his enemies. In 1836
he made an attempt to prepare the ground for a match between the
Princess Victoria and one of the sons of the Prince of Orange, and at
the same time did his best to prevent the visit of the young Coburg
princes to Kensington. He failed in both these objects; and the only
result of his efforts was to raise the anger of the King of the
Belgians, who, forgetting for a moment his royal reserve, addressed an
indignant letter on the subject to his niece. "I am really
ASTONISHED," he wrote, "at the conduct of your old Uncle the King;
this invitation of the Prince of Orange and his sons, this forcing him
on others, is very extraordinary... Not later than yesterday I got a
half-official communication from England, insinuating that it would be
HIGHLY desirable that the visit of YOUR relatives SHOULD NOT TAKE
PLACE THIS YEAR--qu'en dites-vous? The relations of the Queen and the
King, therefore, to the God-knows-what degree, are to come in shoals
and rule the land, when YOUR RELATIONS are to be FORBIDDEN the
country, and that when, as you know, the whole of your relations have
ever been very dutiful and kind to the King. Really and truly I never
heard or saw anything like it, and I hope it will a LITTLE ROUSE YOUR
SPIRIT; now that slavery is even abolished in the British Colonies, I
do not comprehend WHY YOUR LOT ALONE SHOULD BE TO BE KEPT A WHITE
LITTLE SLAVEY IN ENGLAND, for the pleasure of the Court, who never
bought you, as I am not aware of their ever having gone to any expense
on that head, or the King's ever having SPENT A SIXPENCE FOR YOUR
EXISTENCE... Oh, consistency and political or OTHER HONESTY, where
must one look for you!"
Shortly afterwards King Leopold came to England himself, and his
reception was as cold at Windsor as it was warm at Kensington. "To
hear dear Uncle speak on any subject," the Princess wrote in her
diary, "is like reading a highly instructive book; his conversation is
so enlightened, so clear. He is universally admitted to be one of the
first politicians now extant. He speaks so mildly, yet firmly and
impartially, about politics. Uncle tells me that Belgium is quite a
pattern for its organisation, its industry, and prosperity; the
finances are in the greatest perfection. Uncle is so beloved and
revered by his Belgian subjects, that it must be a great compensation
for all his extreme trouble." But her other uncle by no means shared
her sentiments. He could not, he said, put up with a water-drinker;
and King Leopold would touch no wine. "What's that you're drinking,
sir?" he asked him one day at dinner. "Water, sir." "God damn it,
sir!" was the rejoinder. "Why don't you drink wine? I never allow
anybody to drink water at my table."
It was clear that before very long there would be a great
explosion; and in the hot days of August it came. The Duchess and the
Princess had gone down to stay at Windsor for the King's birthday
party, and the King himself, who was in London for the day to prorogue
Parliament, paid a visit at Kensington Palace in their absence. There
he found that the Duchess had just appropriated, against his express
orders, a suite of seventeen apartments for her own use. He was
extremely angry, and, when he returned to Windsor, after greeting the
Princess with affection, he publicly rebuked the Duchess for what she
had done. But this was little to what followed. On the next day was the
birthday banquet; there were a hundred guests; the Duchess of Kent sat
on the King's right hand, and the Princess Victoria opposite. At the
end of the dinner, in reply to the toast of the King's health, he
rose, and, in a long, loud, passionate speech, poured out the vials of
his wrath upon the Duchess. She had, he declared, insulted
him--grossly and continually; she had kept the Princess away from him
in the most improper manner; she was surrounded by evil advisers, and
was incompetent to act with propriety in the high station which she
filled; but he would bear it no longer; he would have her to know he
was King; he was determined that his authority should be respected;
henceforward the Princess should attend at every Court function with
the utmost regularity; and he hoped to God that his life might be
spared for six months longer, so that the calamity of a regency might
be avoided, and the functions of the Crown pass directly to the
heiress-presumptive instead of into the hands of the "person now near
him," upon whose conduct and capacity no reliance whatever could be
placed. The flood of vituperation rushed on for what seemed an
interminable period, while the Queen blushed scarlet, the Princess
burst into tears, and the hundred guests sat aghast. The Duchess said
not a word until the tirade was over and the company had retired; then
in a tornado of rage and mortification, she called for her carriage
and announced her immediate return to Kensington. It was only with the
utmost difficulty that some show of a reconciliation was patched up,
and the outraged lady was prevailed upon to put off her departure till
the morrow.
Her troubles, however, were not over when she had shaken the dust
of Windsor from her feet. In her own household she was pursued by
bitterness and vexation of spirit. The apartments at Kensington were
seething with subdued disaffection, with jealousies and animosities
virulently intensified by long years of propinquity and spite.
There was a deadly feud between Sir John Conroy and Baroness
Lehzen. But that was not all. The Duchess had grown too fond of her
Major-Domo. There were familiarities, and one day the Princess
Victoria discovered the fact. She confided what she had seen to the
Baroness, and to the Baroness's beloved ally, Madame de Spath.
Unfortunately, Madame de Spath could not hold her tongue, and was
actually foolish enough to reprove the Duchess; whereupon she was
instantly dismissed. It was not so easy to get rid of the Baroness.
That lady, prudent and reserved, maintained an irreproachable
demeanour. Her position was strongly entrenched; she had managed to
secure the support of the King; and Sir John found that he could do
nothing against her. But henceforward the household was divided into
two camps.[*] The Duchess supported Sir John with all the abundance of
her authority; but the Baroness, too, had an adherent who could not be
neglected. The Princess Victoria said nothing, but she had been much
attached to Madame de Spath, and she adored her Lehzen. The Duchess
knew only too well that in this horrid embroilment her daughter was
against her. Chagrin, annoyance, moral reprobation, tossed her to and
fro. She did her best to console herself with Sir John's affectionate
loquacity, or with the sharp remarks of Lady Flora Hastings, one of
her maids of honour, who had no love for the Baroness. The subject
lent itself to satire; for the pastor's daughter, with all her airs of
stiff superiority, had habits which betrayed her origin. Her passion
for caraway seeds, for instance, was uncontrollable. Little bags of
them came over to her from Hanover, and she sprinkled them on her
bread and butter, her cabbage, and even her roast beef. Lady Flora
could not resist a caustic observation; it was repeated to the
Baroness, who pursed her lips in fury, and so the mischief grew.
[*] Greville, IV, 21; and August 15, 1839 (unpublished). "The cause
of the Queen's alienation from the Duchess and hatred of Conroy, the
Duke [of Wellington] said, was unquestionably owing to her having
witnessed some familiarities between them. What she had seen she
repeated to Baroness Spaeth, and Spaeth not only did not hold her
tongue, but (he thinks) remonstrated with the Duchess herself on the
subject. The consequence was that they got rid of Spaeth, and they
would have got rid of Lehzen, too, if they had been able, but Lehzen,
who knew very well what was going on, was prudent enough not to commit
herself, and who was, besides, powerfully protected by George IV and
William IV, so that they did not dare to attempt to expel her."
V
The King had prayed that he might live till his niece was of age;
and a few days before her eighteenth birthday--the date of her legal
majority--a sudden attack of illness very nearly carried him off. He
recovered, however, and the Princess was able to go through her
birthday festivities--a state ball and a drawing-room--with
unperturbed enjoyment. "Count Zichy," she noted in her diary, "is very
good-looking in uniform, but not in plain clothes. Count Waldstein
looks remarkably well in his pretty Hungarian uniform." With the
latter young gentleman she wished to dance, but there was an
insurmountable difficulty. "He could not dance quadrilles, and, as in
my station I unfortunately cannot valse and gallop, I could not dance
with him." Her birthday present from the King was of a pleasing
nature, but it led to a painful domestic scene. In spite of the anger
of her Belgian uncle, she had remained upon good terms with her
English one. He had always been very kind to her, and the fact that he
had quarrelled with her mother did not appear to be a reason for
disliking him. He was, she said, "odd, very odd and singular," but
"his intentions were often ill interpreted." He now wrote her a letter,
offering her an allowance of L10,000 a year, which he proposed should
be at her own disposal, and independent of her mother. Lord Conyngham,
the Lord Chamberlain, was instructed to deliver the letter into the
Princess's own hands. When he arrived at Kensington, he was ushered
into the presence of the Duchess and the Princess, and, when he
produced the letter, the Duchess put out her hand to take it. Lord
Conyngham begged her Royal Highness's pardon, and repeated the King's
commands. Thereupon the Duchess drew back, and the Princess took the
letter. She immediately wrote to her uncle, accepting his kind
proposal. The Duchess was much displeased; L4000 a year, she said,
would be quite enough for Victoria; as for the remaining L6000, it
would be only proper that she should have that herself.
King William had thrown off his illness, and returned to his normal
life. Once more the royal circle at Windsor--their Majesties, the
elder Princesses, and some unfortunate Ambassadress or Minister's
wife--might be seen ranged for hours round a mahogany table, while the
Queen netted a purse, and the King slept, occasionally waking from his
slumbers to observe "Exactly so, ma'am, exactly so!" But this recovery
was of short duration. The old man suddenly collapsed; with no
specific symptoms besides an extreme weakness, he yet showed no power
of rallying; and it was clear to everyone that his death was now close
at hand.
All eyes, all thoughts, turned towards the Princess Victoria; but
she still remained, shut away in the seclusion of Kensington, a small,
unknown figure, lost in the large shadow of her mother's domination.
The preceding year had in fact been an important one in her
development. The soft tendrils of her mind had for the first time
begun to stretch out towards unchildish things. In this King Leopold
encouraged her. After his return to Brussels, he had resumed his
correspondance in a more serious strain; he discussed the details of
foreign politics; he laid down the duties of kingship; he pointed out
the iniquitous foolishness of the newspaper press. On the latter
subject, indeed, he wrote with some asperity. "If all the editors," he
said, "of the papers in the countries where the liberty of the press
exists were to be assembled, we should have a crew to which you would
NOT confide a dog that you would value, still less your honour and
reputation." On the functions of a monarch, his views were
unexceptionable. "The business of the highest in a State," he wrote,
"is certainly, in my opinion, to act with great impartiality and a
spirit of justice for the good of all." At the same time the
Princess's tastes were opening out. Though she was still passionately
devoted to riding and dancing, she now began to have a genuine love of
music as well, and to drink in the roulades and arias of the Italian
opera with high enthusiasm. She even enjoyed reading poetry--at any
rate, the poetry of Sir Walter Scott.
When King Leopold learnt that King William's death was approaching,
he wrote several long letters of excellent advice to his niece. "In
every letter I shall write to you," he said, "I mean to repeat to you,
as a FUNDAMENTAL RULE, TO BE FIRM, AND COURAGEOUS, AND HONEST, AS YOU
HAVE BEEN TILL NOW." For the rest, in the crisis that was approaching,
she was not to be alarmed, but to trust in her "good natural sense and
the TRUTH" of her character; she was to do nothing in a hurry; to hurt
no one's amour-propre, and to continue her confidence in the Whig
administration! Not content with letters, however, King Leopold
determined that the Princess should not lack personal guidance, and
sent over to her aid the trusted friend whom, twenty years before, he
had taken to his heart by the death-bed at Claremont. Thus, once
again, as if in accordance with some preordained destiny, the figure
of Stockmar is discernible--inevitably present at a momentous hour.
On June 18, the King was visibly sinking. The Archbishop of
Canterbury was by his side, with all the comforts of the church. Nor
did the holy words fall upon a rebellious spirit; for many years his
Majesty had been a devout believer. "When I was a young man," he once
explained at a public banquet, "as well as I can remember, I believed
in nothing but pleasure and folly--nothing at all. But when I went to
sea, got into a gale, and saw the wonders of the mighty deep, then I
believed; and I have been a sincere Christian ever since." It was the
anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo, and the dying man remembered
it. He should be glad to live, he said, over that day; he would never
see another sunset. "I hope your Majesty may live to see many," said
Dr. Chambers. "Oh! that's quite another thing, that's quite another
thing," was the answer. One other sunset he did live to see; and he
died in the early hours of the following morning. It was on June 20,
1837.
When all was over, the Archbishop and the Lord Chamberlain ordered
a carriage, and drove post-haste from Windsor to Kensington. They
arrived at the Palace at five o'clock, and it was only with
considerable difficulty that they gained admittance. At six the
Duchess woke up her daughter, and told her that the Archbishop of
Canterbury and Lord Conyngham were there, and wished to see her. She
got out of bed, put on her dressing-gown, and went, alone, into the
room where the messengers were standing. Lord Conyngham fell on his
knees, and officially announced the death of the King; the Archbishop
added some personal details. Looking at the bending, murmuring
dignitaries before her, she knew that she was Queen of England. "Since
it has pleased Providence," she wrote that day in her journal, "to
place me in this station, I shall do my utmost to fulfil my duty
towards my country; I am very young, and perhaps in many, though not
in all things, inexperienced, but I am sure, that very few have more
real good will and more real desire to do what is fit and right than I
have." But there was scant time for resolutions and reflections. At
once, affairs were thick upon her. Stockmar came to breakfast, and
gave some good advice. She wrote a letter to her uncle Leopold, and a
hurried note to her sister Feodora. A letter came from the Prime
Minister, Lord Melbourne, announcing his approaching arrival. He came
at nine, in full court dress, and kissed her hand. She saw him alone,
and repeated to him the lesson which, no doubt, the faithful Stockmar
had taught her at breakfast. "It has long been my intention to retain
your Lordship and the rest of the present Ministry at the head of
affairs;" whereupon Lord Melbourne again kissed her hand and shortly
after left her. She then wrote a letter of condolence to Queen
Adelaide. At eleven, Lord Melbourne came again; and at half-past
eleven she went downstairs into the red saloon to hold her first
Council. The great assembly of lords and notables, bishops, generals,
and Ministers of State, saw the doors thrown open and a very short,
very slim girl in deep plain mourning come into the room alone and
move forward to her seat with extraordinary dignity and grace; they
saw a countenance, not beautiful, but prepossessing--fair hair, blue
prominent eyes, a small curved nose, an open mouth revealing the upper
teeth, a tiny chin, a clear complexion, and, over all, the strangely
mingled signs of innocence, of gravity, of youth, and of composure;
they heard a high unwavering voice reading aloud with perfect clarity;
and then, the ceremony was over, they saw the small figure rise and,
with the same consummate grace, the same amazing dignity, pass out
from among them, as she had come in, alone.
The new queen was almost entirely unknown to her subjects. In her
public appearances her mother had invariably dominated the scene. Her
private life had been that of a novice in a convent: hardly a human
being from the outside world had ever spoken to her; and no human
being at all, except her mother and the Baroness Lehzen, had ever been
alone with her in a room. Thus it was not only the public at large
that was in ignorance of everything concerning her; the inner circles
of statesmen and officials and high-born ladies were equally in the
dark. When she suddenly emerged from this deep obscurity, the
impression that she created was immediate and profound. Her bearing at
her first Council filled the whole gathering with astonishment and
admiration; the Duke of Wellington, Sir Robert Peel, even the savage
Croker, even the cold and caustic Greville--all were completely
carried away. Everything that was reported of her subsequent
proceedings seemed to be of no less happy augury. Her perceptions were
quick, her decisions were sensible, her language was discreet; she
performed her royal duties with extraordinary facility. Among the
outside public there was a great wave of enthusiasm. Sentiment and
romance were coming into fashion; and the spectacle of the little
girl-queen, innocent, modest, with fair hair and pink cheeks, driving
through her capital, filled the hearts of the beholders with raptures
of affectionate loyalty. What, above all, struck everybody with
overwhelming force was the contrast between Queen Victoria and her
uncles. The nasty old men, debauched and selfish, pig-headed and
ridiculous, with their perpetual burden of debts, confusions, and
disreputabilities--they had vanished like the snows of winter, and
here at last, crowned and radiant, was the spring. Lord John Russell,
in an elaborate oration, gave voice to the general sentiment. He hoped
that Victoria might prove an Elizabeth without her tyranny, an Anne
without her weakness. He asked England to pray that the illustrious
Princess who had just ascended the throne with the purest intentions
and the justest desires might see slavery abolished, crime diminished,
and education improved. He trusted that her people would henceforward
derive their strength, their conduct, and their loyalty from
enlightened religious and moral principles, and that, so fortified,
the reign of Victoria might prove celebrated to posterity and to all
the nations of the earth.
Very soon, however, there were signs that the future might turn out
to be not quite so simple and roseate as a delighted public dreamed.
The "illustrious Princess" might perhaps, after all, have something
within her which squared ill with the easy vision of a well-conducted
heroine in an edifying story-book. The purest intentions and the
justest desires? No doubt; but was that all? To those who watched
closely, for instance, there might be something ominous in the curious
contour of that little mouth. When, after her first Council, she
crossed the ante-room and found her mother waiting for her, she said,
"And now, Mamma, am I really and truly Queen?" "You see, my dear, that
it is so." "Then, dear Mamma, I hope you will grant me the first
request I make to you, as Queen. Let me be by myself for an hour." For
an hour she remained in solitude. Then she reappeared, and gave a
significant order: her bed was to be moved out of her mother's room.
It was the doom of the Duchess of Kent. The long years of waiting were
over at last; the moment of a lifetime had come; her daughter was
Queen of England; and that very moment brought her own annihilation.
She found herself, absolutely and irretrievably, shut off from every
vestige of influence, of confidence, of power. She was surrounded,
indeed, by all the outward signs of respect and consideration; but
that only made the inward truth of her position the more intolerable.
Through the mingled formalities of Court etiquette and filial duty,
she could never penetrate to Victoria. She was unable to conceal her
disappointment and her rage. "I1 n'y a plus d'avenir pour moi," she
exclaimed to Madame de Lieven; "je ne suis plus rien." For eighteen
years, she said, this child had been the sole object of her existence,
of her thoughts, her hopes, and now--no! she would not be comforted,
she had lost everything, she was to the last degree unhappy. Sailing,
so gallantly and so pertinaciously, through the buffeting storms of
life, the stately vessel, with sails still swelling and pennons
flying, had put into harbour at last; to find there nothing--a land of
bleak desolation.
Within a month of the accession, the realities of the new situation
assumed a visible shape. The whole royal household moved from
Kensington to Buckingham Palace, and, in the new abode, the Duchess of
Kent was given a suite of apartments entirely separate from the
Queen's. By Victoria herself the change was welcomed, though, at the
moment of departure, she could afford to be sentimental. "Though I
rejoice to go into B. P. for many reasons," she wrote in her diary,
"it is not without feelings of regret that I shall bid adieu for ever
to this my birthplace, where I have been born and bred, and to which I
am really attached!" Her memory lingered for a moment over visions of
the past: her sister's wedding, pleasant balls and delicious concerts
and there were other recollections. "I have gone through painful and
disagreeable scenes here, 'tis true," she concluded, "but still I am
fond of the poor old palace.
At the same time she took another decided step. She had determined
that she would see no more of Sir John Conroy. She rewarded his past
services with liberality: he was given a baronetcy and a pension of
L3000 a year; he remained a member of the Duchess's household, but his
personal intercourse with the Queen came to an abrupt conclusion.
II
It was clear that these interior changes--whatever else they might
betoken--marked the triumph of one person--the Baroness Lehzen. The
pastor's daughter observed the ruin of her enemies. Discreet and
victorious, she remained in possession of the field. More closely than
ever did she cleave to the side of her mistress, her pupil, and her
friend; and in the recesses of the palace her mysterious figure was at
once invisible and omnipresent. When the Queen's Ministers came in at
one door, the Baroness went out by another; when they retired, she
immediately returned. Nobody knew--nobody ever will know--the precise
extent and the precise nature of her influence. She herself declared
that she never discussed public affairs with the Queen, that she was
concerned with private matters only--with private letters and the
details of private life. Certainly her hand is everywhere discernible
in Victoria's early correspondence. The Journal is written in the
style of a child; the Letters are not so simple; they are the work of
a child, rearranged--with the minimum of alteration, no doubt, and yet
perceptibly--by a governess. And the governess was no fool: narrow,
jealous, provincial, she might be; but she was an acute and vigorous
woman, who had gained by a peculiar insight, a peculiar ascendancy.
That ascendancy she meant to keep. No doubt it was true that
technically she took no part in public business; but the distinction
between what is public and what is private is always a subtle one; and
in the case of a reigning sovereign--as the next few years were to
show--it is often imaginary. Considering all things--the characters of
the persons, and the character of the times--it was something more
than a mere matter of private interest that the bedroom of Baroness
Lehzen at Buckingham Palace should have been next door to the bedroom
of the Queen.
But the influence wielded by the Baroness, supreme as it seemed
within its own sphere, was not unlimited; there were other forces at
work. For one thing, the faithful Stockmar had taken up his residence
in the palace. During the twenty years which had elapsed since the
death of the Princess Charlotte, his experiences had been varied and
remarkable. The unknown counsellor of a disappointed princeling had
gradually risen to a position of European importance. His devotion to
his master had been not only whole--hearted but cautious and wise. It
was Stockmar's advice that had kept Prince Leopold in England during
the critical years which followed his wife's death, and had thus
secured to him the essential requisite of a point d'appui in the
country of his adoption. It was Stockmar's discretion which had
smoothed over the embarrassments surrounding the Prince's acceptance
and rejection of the Greek crown. It was Stockmar who had induced the
Prince to become the constitutional Sovereign of Belgium. Above all,
it was Stockmar's tact, honesty, and diplomatic skill which, through a
long series of arduous and complicated negotiations, had led to the
guarantee of Belgian neutrality by the Great Powers. His labours had
been rewarded by a German barony and by the complete confidence of
King Leopold. Nor was it only in Brussels that he was treated with
respect and listened to with attention. The statesmen who governed
England--Lord Grey, Sir Robert Peel, Lord Palmerston, Lord
Melbourne--had learnt to put a high value upon his probity and his
intelligence. "He is one of the cleverest fellows I ever saw," said
Lord Melbourne, "the most discreet man, the most well-judging, and
most cool man." And Lord Palmerston cited Baron Stockmar as the only
absolutely disinterested man he had come across in life, At last he
was able to retire to Coburg, and to enjoy for a few years the society
of the wife and children whom his labours in the service of his master
had hitherto only allowed him to visit at long intervals for a month or
two at a time. But in 1836 he had been again entrusted with an
important negotiation, which he had brought to a successful conclusion
in the marriage of Prince Ferdinand of Saxe-Coburg, a nephew of King
Leopold's, with Queen Maria II of Portugal. The House of Coburg was
beginning to spread over Europe; and the establishment of the Baron at
Buckingham Palace in 1837 was to be the prelude of another and a more
momentous advance.
King Leopold and his counsellor provide in their careers an example
of the curious diversity of human ambitions. The desires of man are
wonderfully various; but no less various are the means by which those
desires may reach satisfaction: and so the work of the world gets
done. The correct mind of Leopold craved for the whole apparatus of
royalty. Mere power would have held no attractions for him; he must be
an actual king--the crowned head of a people. It was not enough to do;
it was essential also to be recognised; anything else would not be
fitting. The greatness that he dreamt of was surrounded by every
appropriate circumstance. To be a Majesty, to be a cousin of
Sovereigns, to marry a Bourbon for diplomatic ends, to correspond with
the Queen of England, to be very stiff and very punctual, to found a
dynasty, to bore ambassadresses into fits, to live, on the highest
pinnacle, an exemplary life devoted to the public service--such were
his objects, and such, in fact, were his achievements. The "Marquis
Peu-a-peu," as George IV called him, had what he wanted. But this
would never have been the case if it had not happened that the
ambition of Stockmar took a form exactly complementary to his own. The
sovereignty that the Baron sought for was by no means obvious. The
satisfaction of his essential being lay in obscurity, in
invisibility--in passing, unobserved, through a hidden entrance, into
the very central chamber of power, and in sitting there, quietly,
pulling the subtle strings that set the wheels of the whole world in
motion. A very few people, in very high places, and exceptionally
well-informed, knew that Baron Stockmar was a most important person:
that was enough. The fortunes of the master and the servant,
intimately interacting, rose together. The Baron's secret skill had
given Leopold his unexceptionable kingdom; and Leopold, in his turn,
as time went on, was able to furnish the Baron with more and more keys
to more and more back doors.
Stockmar took up his abode in the Palace partly as the emissary of
King Leopold, but more particularly as the friend and adviser of a
queen who was almost a child, and who, no doubt, would be much in need
of advice and friendship. For it would be a mistake to suppose that
either of these two men was actuated by a vulgar selfishness. The
King, indeed, was very well aware on which side his bread was
buttered; during an adventurous and chequered life he had acquired a
shrewd knowledge of the world's workings; and he was ready enough to
use that knowledge to strengthen his position and to spread his
influence. But then, the firmer his position and the wider his
influence, the better for Europe; of that he was quite certain. And
besides, he was a constitutional monarch; and it would be highly
indecorous in a constitutional monarch to have any aims that were low
or personal.
As for Stockmar, the disinterestedness which Palmerston had noted
was undoubtedly a basic element in his character. The ordinary schemer
is always an optimist; and Stockmar, racked by dyspepsia and haunted
by gloomy forebodings, was a constitutionally melancholy man. A
schemer, no doubt, he was; but he schemed distrustfully,
splenetically, to do good. To do good! What nobler end could a man
scheme for? Yet it is perilous to scheme at all.
With Lehzen to supervise every detail of her conduct, with Stockmar
in the next room, so full of wisdom and experience of affairs, with
her Uncle Leopold's letters, too, pouring out so constantly their
stream of encouragements, general reflections, and highly valuable
tips, Victoria, even had she been without other guidance, would have
stood in no lack of private counsellor. But other guidance she had;
for all these influences paled before a new star, of the first
magnitude, which, rising suddenly upon her horizon, immediately
dominated her life.
III
William Lamb, Viscount Melbourne, was fifty-eight years of age, and
had been for the last three years Prime Minister of England. In every
outward respect he was one of the most fortunate of mankind. He had
been born into the midst of riches, brilliance, and power. His mother,
fascinating and intelligent, had been a great Whig hostess, and he had
been bred up as a member of that radiant society which, during the
last quarter of the eighteenth century, concentrated within itself the
ultimate perfections of a hundred years of triumphant aristocracy.
Nature had given him beauty and brains; the unexpected death of an
elder brother brought him wealth, a peerage, and the possibility of
high advancement. Within that charmed circle, whatever one's personal
disabilities, it was difficult to fail; and to him, with all his
advantages, success was well-nigh unavoidable. With little effort, he
attained political eminence. On the triumph of the Whigs he became one
of the leading members of the Government; and when Lord Grey retired
from the premiership he quietly stepped into the vacant place. Nor was
it only in the visible signs of fortune that Fate had been kind to
him. Bound to succeed, and to succeed easily, he was gifted with so
fine a nature that his success became him. His mind, at once supple
and copious, his temperament, at once calm and sensitive, enabled him
not merely to work, but to live with perfect facility and with the
grace of strength. In society he was a notable talker, a captivating
companion, a charming man. If one looked deeper, one saw at once that
he was not ordinary, that the piquancies of his conversation and his
manner--his free-and-easy vaguenesses, his abrupt questions, his
lollings and loungings, his innumerable oaths--were something more
than an amusing ornament, were the outward manifestation of an
individuality that was fundamental.
The precise nature of this individuality was very difficult to
gauge: it was dubious, complex, perhaps self--contradictory. Certainly
there was an ironical discordance between the inner history of the man
and his apparent fortunes. He owed all he had to his birth, and his
birth was shameful; it was known well enough that his mother had
passionately loved Lord Egremont, and that Lord Melbourne was not his
father. His marriage, which had seemed to be the crown of his youthful
ardours, was a long, miserable, desperate failure: the incredible Lady
Caroline, "With pleasures too refined to please, With too much spirit
to be e'er at ease, With too much quickness to be ever taught, With too
much thinking to have common thought," was very nearly the destruction
of his life. When at last he emerged from the anguish and confusion of
her folly, her extravagance, her rage, her despair, and her devotion,
he was left alone with endless memories of intermingled farce and
tragedy, and an only son, who was an imbecile. But there was something
else that he owed to Lady Caroline. While she whirled with Byron in a
hectic frenzy of love and fashion, he had stayed at home in an
indulgence bordering on cynicism, and occupied his solitude with
reading. It was thus that he had acquired those habits of study, that
love of learning, and that wide and accurate knowledge of ancient and
modern literature, which formed so unexpected a part of his mental
equipment. His passion for reading never deserted him; even when he
was Prime Minister he found time to master every new important book.
With an incongruousness that was characteristic, his favourite study
was theology. An accomplished classical scholar, he was deeply read in
the Fathers of the Church; heavy volumes of commentary and exegesis he
examined with scrupulous diligence; and at any odd moment he might be
found turning over the pages of the Bible. To the ladies whom he most
liked, he would lend some learned work on the Revelation, crammed with
marginal notes in his own hand, or Dr. Lardner's "Observations upon
the Jewish Errors with respect to the Conversion of Mary Magdalene."
The more pious among them had high hopes that these studies would lead
him into the right way; but of this there were no symptoms in his
after-dinner conversations.
The paradox of his political career was no less curious. By
temperament an aristocrat, by conviction a conservative, he came to
power as the leader of the popular party, the party of change. He had
profoundly disliked the Reform Bill, which he had only accepted at
last as a necessary evil; and the Reform Bill lay at the root of the
very existence, of the very meaning, of his government. He was far too
sceptical to believe in progress of any kind. Things were best as they
were or rather, they were least bad. "You'd better try to do no good,"
was one of his dictums, "and then you'll get into no scrapes."
Education at best was futile; education of the poor was positively
dangerous. The factory children? "Oh, if you'd only have the goodness
to leave them alone!" Free Trade was a delusion; the ballot was
nonsense; and there was no such thing as a democracy.
Nevertheless, he was not a reactionary; he was simply an
opportunist. The whole duty of government, he said, was "to prevent
crime and to preserve contracts." All one could really hope to do was
to carry on. He himself carried on in a remarkable manner--with
perpetual compromises, with fluctuations and contradictions, with
every kind of weakness, and yet with shrewdness, with gentleness, even
with conscientiousness, and a light and airy mastery of men and of
events. He conducted the transactions of business with extraordinary
nonchalance. Important persons, ushered up for some grave interview,
found him in a towselled bed, littered with books and papers, or
vaguely shaving in a dressing-room; but, when they went downstairs
again, they would realise that somehow or other they had been pumped.
When he had to receive a deputation, he could hardly ever do so with
becoming gravity. The worthy delegates of the tallow-chandlers, or the
Society for the Abolition of Capital Punishment, were distressed and
mortified when, in the midst of their speeches, the Prime Minister
became absorbed in blowing a feather, or suddenly cracked an unseemly
joke. How could they have guessed that he had spent the night before
diligently getting up the details of their case? He hated patronage
and the making of appointments--a feeling rare in Ministers. "As for
the Bishops," he burst out, "I positively believe they die to vex me."
But when at last the appointment was made, it was made with keen
discrimination. His colleagues observed another symptom--was it of his
irresponsibility or his wisdom? He went to sleep in the Cabinet.
Probably, if he had been born a little earlier, he would have been
a simpler and a happier man. As it was, he was a child of the
eighteenth century whose lot was cast in a new, difficult,
unsympathetic age. He was an autumn rose. With all his gracious
amenity, his humour, his happy-go-lucky ways, a deep disquietude
possessed him. A sentimental cynic, a sceptical believer, he was
restless and melancholy at heart. Above all, he could never harden
himself; those sensitive petals shivered in every wind. Whatever else
he might be, one thing was certain: Lord Melbourne was always human,
supremely human--too human, perhaps.
And now, with old age upon him, his life took a sudden, new,
extraordinary turn. He became, in the twinkling of an eye, the
intimate adviser and the daily companion of a young girl who had
stepped all at once from a nursery to a throne. His relations with
women had been, like everything else about him, ambiguous. Nobody had
ever been able quite to gauge the shifting, emotional complexities of
his married life; Lady Caroline vanished; but his peculiar
susceptibilities remained. Female society of some kind or other was
necessary to him, and he did not stint himself; a great part of every
day was invariably spent in it. The feminine element in him made it
easy, made it natural and inevitable for him to be the friend of a
great many women; but the masculine element in him was strong as well.
In such circumstances it is also easy, it is even natural, perhaps it
is even inevitable, to be something more than a friend. There were
rumours and combustions. Lord Melbourne was twice a co-respondent in a
divorce action; but on each occasion he won his suit. The lovely Lady
Brandon, the unhappy and brilliant Mrs. Norton... the law exonerated
them both. Beyond that hung an impenetrable veil. But at any rate it
was clear that, with such a record, the Prime Minister's position in
Buckingham Palace must be a highly delicate one. However, he was used
to delicacies, and he met the situation with consummate success. His
behaviour was from the first moment impeccable. His manner towards the
young Queen mingled, with perfect facility, the watchfulness and the
respect of a statesman and a courtier with the tender solicitude of a
parent. He was at once reverential and affectionate, at once the
servant and the guide. At the same time the habits of his life
underwent a surprising change. His comfortable, unpunctual days became
subject to the unaltering routine of a palace; no longer did he sprawl
on sofas; not a single "damn" escaped his lips. The man of the world
who had been the friend of Byron and the regent, the talker whose
paradoxes had held Holland House enthralled, the cynic whose
ribaldries had enlivened so many deep potations, the lover whose soft
words had captivated such beauty and such passion and such wit, might
now be seen, evening after evening, talking with infinite politeness
to a schoolgirl, bolt upright, amid the silence and the rigidity of
Court etiquette.
IV
On her side, Victoria was instantaneously fascinated by Lord
Melbourne. The good report of Stockmar had no doubt prepared the way;
Lehzen was wisely propitiated; and the first highly favourable
impression was never afterwards belied. She found him perfect; and
perfect in her sight he remained. Her absolute and unconcealed
adoration was very natural; what innocent young creature could have
resisted, in any circumstances, the charm and the devotion of such a
man? But, in her situation, there was a special influence which gave a
peculiar glow to all she felt. After years of emptiness and dullness
and suppression, she had come suddenly, in the heyday of youth, into
freedom and power. She was mistress of herself, of great domains and
palaces; she was Queen of England. Responsibilities and difficulties
she might have, no doubt, and in heavy measure; but one feeling
dominated and absorbed all others--the feeling of joy. Everything
pleased her. She was in high spirits from morning till night. Mr.
Creevey, grown old now, and very near his end, catching a glimpse of
her at Brighton, was much amused, in his sharp fashion, by the
ingenuous gaiety of "little Vic." "A more homely little being you
never beheld, when she is at her ease, and she is evidently dying to
be always more so. She laughs in real earnest, opening her mouth as
wide as it can go, showing not very pretty gums... She eats quite as
heartily as she laughs, I think I may say she gobbles... She blushes
and laughs every instant in so natural a way as to disarm anybody."
But it was not merely when she was laughing or gobbling that she
enjoyed herself; the performance of her official duties gave her
intense satisfaction. "I really have immensely to do," she wrote in
her Journal a few days after her accession; "I receive so many
communications from my Ministers, but I like it very much." And again,
a week later, "I repeat what I said before that I have so many
communications from the Ministers, and from me to them, and I get so
many papers to sign every day, that I have always a very great deal to
do. I delight in this work." Through the girl's immaturity the
vigorous predestined tastes of the woman were pushing themselves into
existence with eager velocity, with delicious force.
One detail of her happy situation deserves particular mention.
Apart from the splendour of her social position and the momentousness
of her political one, she was a person of great wealth. As soon as
Parliament met, an annuity of L385,000 was settled upon her. When the
expenses of her household had been discharged, she was left with
L68,000 a year of her own. She enjoyed besides the revenues of the
Duchy of Lancaster, which amounted annually to over L27,000. The first
use to which she put her money was characteristic: she paid off her
father's debts. In money matters, no less than in other matters, she
was determined to be correct. She had the instincts of a man of
business; and she never could have borne to be in a position that was
financially unsound.
With youth and happiness gilding every hour, the days passed
merrily enough. And each day hinged upon Lord Melbourne. Her diary
shows us, with undiminished clarity, the life of the young sovereign
during the early months of her reign--a life satisfactorily regular,
full of delightful business, a life of simple pleasures, mostly
physical--riding, eating, dancing--a quick, easy, highly
unsophisticated life, sufficient unto itself. The light of the morning
is upon it; and, in the rosy radiance, the figure of "Lord M."
emerges, glorified and supreme. If she is the heroine of the story, he
is the hero; but indeed they are more than hero and heroine, for there
are no other characters at all. Lehzen, the Baron, Uncle Leopold, are
unsubstantial shadows--the incidental supers of the piece. Her
paradise was peopled by two persons, and surely that was enough. One
sees them together still, a curious couple, strangely united in those
artless pages, under the magical illumination of that dawn of eighty
years ago: the polished high fine gentleman with the whitening hair
and whiskers and the thick dark eyebrows and the mobile lips and the
big expressive eyes; and beside him the tiny Queen--fair, slim,
elegant, active, in her plain girl's dress and little tippet, looking
up at him earnestly, adoringly, with eyes blue and projecting, and
half-open mouth. So they appear upon every page of the Journal; upon
every page Lord M. is present, Lord M. is speaking, Lord M. is being
amusing, instructive, delightful, and affectionate at once, while
Victoria drinks in the honied words, laughs till she shows her gums,
tries hard to remember, and runs off, as soon as she is left alone, to
put it all down. Their long conversations touched upon a multitude of
topics. Lord M. would criticise books, throw out a remark or two on
the British Constitution, make some passing reflections on human life,
and tell story after story of the great people of the eighteenth
century. Then there would be business a despatch perhaps from Lord
Durham in Canada, which Lord M. would read. But first he must explain
a little. "He said that I must know that Canada originally belonged to
the French, and was only ceded to the English in 1760, when it was
taken in an expedition under Wolfe: 'a very daring enterprise,' he
said. Canada was then entirely French, and the British only came
afterwards... Lord M. explained this very clearly (and much better
than I have done) and said a good deal more about it. He then read me
Durham's despatch, which is a very long one and took him more than 1/2
an hour to read. Lord M. read it beautifully with that fine soft voice
of his, and with so much expression, so that it is needless to say I
was much interested by it." And then the talk would take a more
personal turn. Lord M. would describe his boyhood, and she would learn
that "he wore his hair long, as all boys then did, till he was 17;
(how handsome he must have looked!)." Or she would find out about his
queer tastes and habits--how he never carried a watch, which seemed
quite extraordinary. "'I always ask the servant what o'clock it is,
and then he tells me what he likes,' said Lord M." Or, as the rooks
wheeled about round the trees, "in a manner which indicated rain," he
would say that he could sit looking at them for an hour, and "was
quite surprised at my disliking them. M. said, ' The rooks are my
delight.'"
The day's routine, whether in London or at Windsor, was almost
invariable. The morning was devoted to business and Lord M. In the
afternoon the whole Court went out riding. The Queen, in her velvet
riding--habit and a top-hat with a veil draped about the brim, headed
the cavalcade; and Lord M. rode beside her. The lively troupe went
fast and far, to the extreme exhilaration of Her Majesty. Back in the
Palace again, there was still time for a little more fun before
dinner--a game of battledore and shuttlecock perhaps, or a romp along
the galleries with some children. Dinner came, and the ceremonial
decidedly tightened. The gentleman of highest rank sat on the right
hand of the Queen; on her left--it soon became an established
rule--sat Lord Melbourne. After the ladies had left the dining-room,
the gentlemen were not permitted to remain behind for very long;
indeed, the short time allowed them for their wine-drinking formed the
subject--so it was rumoured--of one of the very few disputes between
the Queen and her Prime Minister;[*] but her determination carried the
day, and from that moment after-dinner drunkenness began to go out of
fashion. When the company was reassembled in the drawing-room the
etiquette was stiff. For a few moments the Queen spoke in turn to each
one of her guests; and during these short uneasy colloquies the
aridity of royalty was apt to become painfully evident. One night Mr.
Greville, the Clerk of the Privy Council, was present; his turn soon
came; the middle-aged, hard-faced viveur was addressed by his young
hostess. "Have you been riding to-day, Mr. Greville?" asked the Queen.
"No, Madam, I have not," replied Mr. Greville. "It was a fine day,"
continued the Queen. "Yes, Madam, a very fine day," said Mr. Greville.
"It was rather cold, though," said the Queen. "It was rather cold,
Madam," said Mr. Greville. "Your sister, Lady Frances Egerton, rides,
I think, doesn't she?" said the Queen. "She does ride sometimes,
Madam," said Mr. Greville. There was a pause, after which Mr. Greville
ventured to take the lead, though he did not venture to change the
subject. "Has your Majesty been riding today?" asked Mr. Greville. "Oh
yes, a very long ride," answered the Queen with animation. "Has your
Majesty got a nice horse?" said Mr. Greville. "Oh, a very nice horse,"
said the Queen. It was over. Her Majesty gave a smile and an
inclination of the head, Mr. Greville a profound bow, and the next
conversation began with the next gentleman. When all the guests had
been disposed of, the Duchess of Kent sat down to her whist, while
everybody else was ranged about the round table. Lord Melbourne sat
beside the Queen, and talked pertinaciously--very often a propos to
the contents of one of the large albums of engravings with which the
round table was covered--until it was half-past eleven and time to go
to bed.
[*] The Duke of Bedford told Greville he was "sure there was a
battle between her and Melbourne... He is sure there was one about the
men's sitting after dinner, for he heard her say to him rather
angrily, 'it is a horrid custom-' but when the ladies left the room
(he dined there) directions were given that the men should remain five
minutes longer." Greville Memoirs, February 26, 1840 (unpublished).
Occasionally, there were little diversions: the evening might be
spent at the opera or at the play. Next morning the royal critic was
careful to note down her impressions. "It was Shakespeare's tragedy of
Hamlet, and we came in at the beginning of it. Mr. Charles Kean (son
of old Kean) acted the part of Hamlet, and I must say beautifully. His
conception of this very difficult, and I may almost say
incomprehensible, character is admirable; his delivery of all the fine
long speeches quite beautiful; he is excessively graceful and all his
actions and attitudes are good, though not at all good-looking in
face... I came away just as Hamlet was over." Later on, she went to
see Macready in King Lear. The story was new to her; she knew nothing
about it, and at first she took very little interest in what was
passing on the stage; she preferred to chatter and laugh with the Lord
Chamberlain. But, as the play went on, her mood changed; her attention
was fixed, and then she laughed no more. Yet she was puzzled; it
seemed a strange, a horrible business. What did Lord M. think? Lord M.
thought it was a very fine play, but to be sure, "a rough, coarse
play, written for those times, with exaggerated characters." "I'm glad
you've seen it," he added. But, undoubtedly, the evenings which she
enjoyed most were those on which there was dancing. She was always
ready enough to seize any excuse--the arrival of cousins--a
birthday--a gathering of young people--to give the command for that.
Then, when the band played, and the figures of the dancers swayed to
the music, and she felt her own figure swaying too, with youthful
spirits so close on every side--then her happiness reached its height,
her eyes sparkled, she must go on and on into the small hours of the
morning. For a moment Lord M. himself was forgotten.
V
The months flew past. The summer was over: "the pleasantest summer
I EVER passed in MY LIFE, and I shall never forget this first summer
of my reign." With surprising rapidity, another summer was upon her.
The coronation came and went--a curious dream. The antique, intricate,
endless ceremonial worked itself out as best it could, like some
machine of gigantic complexity which was a little out of order. The
small central figure went through her gyrations. She sat; she walked;
she prayed; she carried about an orb that was almost too heavy to
hold; the Archbishop of Canterbury came and crushed a ring upon the
wrong finger, so that she was ready to cry out with the pain; old Lord
Rolle tripped up in his mantle and fell down the steps as he was doing
homage; she was taken into a side chapel, where the altar was covered
with a table-cloth, sandwiches, and bottles of wine; she perceived
Lehzen in an upper box and exchanged a smile with her as she sat,
robed and crowned, on the Confessor's throne. "I shall ever remember
this day as the PROUDEST of my life," she noted. But the pride was
soon merged once more in youth and simplicity. When she returned to
Buckingham Palace at last she was not tired; she ran up to her private
rooms, doffed her splendours, and gave her dog Dash its evening bath.
Life flowed on again with its accustomed smoothness--though, of
course, the smoothness was occasionally disturbed. For one thing,
there was the distressing behaviour of Uncle Leopold. The King of the
Belgians had not been able to resist attempting to make use of his
family position to further his diplomatic ends. But, indeed, why
should there be any question of resisting? Was not such a course of
conduct, far from being a temptation, simply "selon les regles?" What
were royal marriages for, if they did not enable sovereigns, in spite
of the hindrances of constitutions, to control foreign politics? For
the highest purposes, of course; that was understood. The Queen of
England was his niece--more than that--almost his daughter; his
confidential agent was living, in a position of intimate favour, at
her court. Surely, in such circumstances, it would be preposterous, it
would be positively incorrect, to lose the opportunity of bending to
his wishes by means of personal influence, behind the backs of the
English Ministers, the foreign policy of England.
He set about the task with becoming precautions. He continued in
his letters his admirable advice. Within a few days of her accession,
he recommended the young Queen to lay emphasis, on every possible
occasion, upon her English birth; to praise the English nation; "the
Established Church I also recommend strongly; you cannot, without
PLEDGING yourself to anything PARTICULAR, SAY TOO MUCH ON THE
SUBJECT." And then "before you decide on anything important I should
be glad if you would consult me; this would also have the advantage of
giving you time;" nothing was more injurious than to be hurried into
wrong decisions unawares. His niece replied at once with all the
accustomed warmth of her affection; but she wrote hurriedly--and,
perhaps, a trifle vaguely too. "YOUR advice is always of the GREATEST
IMPORTANCE to me," she said.
Had he, possibly, gone too far? He could not be certain; perhaps
Victoria HAD been hurried. In any case, he would be careful; he would
draw back--"pour mieux sauter" he added to himself with a smile. In
his next letters he made no reference to his suggestion of
consultations with himself; he merely pointed out the wisdom, in
general, of refusing to decide upon important questions off-hand. So
far, his advice was taken; and it was noticed that the Queen, when
applications were made to her, rarely gave an immediate answer. Even
with Lord Melbourne, it was the same; when he asked for her opinion
upon any subject, she would reply that she would think it over, and
tell him her conclusions next day.
King Leopold's counsels continued. The Princess de Lieven, he said,
was a dangerous woman; there was reason to think that she would make
attempts to pry into what did not concern her, let Victoria beware. "A
rule which I cannot sufficiently recommend is NEVER TO PERMIT people
to speak on subjects concerning yourself or your affairs, without you
having yourself desired them to do so." Should such a thing occur,
"change the conversation, and make the individual feel that he has
made a mistake." This piece of advice was also taken; for it fell out
as the King had predicted. Madame de Lieven sought an audience, and
appeared to be verging towards confidential topics; whereupon the
Queen, becoming slightly embarrassed, talked of nothing but
commonplaces. The individual felt that she had made a mistake.
The King's next warning was remarkable. Letters, he pointed out,
are almost invariably read in the post. This was inconvenient, no
doubt; but the fact, once properly grasped, was not without its
advantages. "I will give you an example: we are still plagued by
Prussia concerning those fortresses; now to tell the Prussian
Government many things, which we SHOULD NOT LIKE to tell them
officially, the Minister is going to write a despatch to our man at
Berlin, sending it BY POST; the Prussians ARE SURE to read it, and to
learn in this way what we wish them to hear. Analogous circumstances
might very probably occur in England. I tell you the TRICK," wrote His
Majesty, "that you should be able to guard against it." Such were the
subtleties of constitutional sovereignty.
It seemed that the time had come for another step. The King's next
letter was full of foreign politics--the situation in Spain and
Portugal, the character of Louis Philippe; and he received a
favourable answer. Victoria, it is true, began by saying that she had
shown the POLITICAL PART of his letter to Lord Melbourne; but she
proceeded to a discussion of foreign affairs. It appeared that she was
not unwilling to exchange observations on such matters with her uncle.
So far so good. But King Leopold was still cautious; though a crisis
was impending in his diplomacy, he still hung back; at last, however,
he could keep silence no longer. It was of the utmost importance to
him that, in his manoeuvrings with France and Holland, he should have,
or at any rate appear to have, English support. But the English
Government appeared to adopt a neutral attitude; it was too bad; not
to be for him was to be against him, could they not see that? Yet,
perhaps, they were only wavering, and a little pressure upon them from
Victoria might still save all. He determined to put the case before
her, delicately yet forcibly--just as he saw it himself. "All I want
from your kind Majesty," he wrote, "is, that you will OCCASIONALLY
express to your Ministers, and particularly to good Lord Melbourne,
that, as far as it is COMPATIBLE with the interests of your own
dominions, you do NOT wish that your Government should take the lead
in such measures as might in a short time bring on the DESTRUCTION of
this country, as well as that of your uncle and his family." The
result of this appeal was unexpected; there was dead silence for more
than a week. When Victoria at last wrote, she was prodigal of her
affection." It would, indeed, my dearest Uncle, be VERY WRONG of you,
if you thought my feelings of warm and devoted attachment to you, and
of great affection for you, could be changed--nothing can ever change
them"--but her references to foreign politics, though they were
lengthy and elaborate, were non-committal in the extreme; they were
almost cast in an official and diplomatic form. Her Ministers, she
said, entirely shared her views upon the subject; she understood and
sympathised with the difficulties of her beloved uncle's position; and
he might rest assured "that both Lord Melbourne and Lord Palmerston
are most anxious at all times for the prosperity and welfare of
Belgium." That was all. The King in his reply declared himself
delighted, and re-echoed the affectionate protestations of his niece.
"My dearest and most beloved Victoria," he said, "you have written me
a VERY DEAR and long letter, which has given me GREAT PLEASURE AND
SATISFACTION." He would not admit that he had had a rebuff.
A few months later the crisis came. King Leopold determined to make
a bold push, and to carry Victoria with him, this time, by a display
of royal vigour and avuncular authority. In an abrupt, an almost
peremptory letter, he laid his case, once more, before his niece. "You
know from experience," he wrote, "that I NEVER ASK ANYTHING OF YOU...
But, as I said before, if we are not careful we may see serious
consequences which may affect more or less everybody, and THIS ought
to be the object of our most anxious attention. I remain, my dear
Victoria, your affectionate uncle, Leopold R." The Queen immediately
despatched this letter to Lord Melbourne, who replied with a carefully
thought-out form of words, signifying nothing whatever, which, he
suggested, she should send to her uncle. She did so, copying out the
elaborate formula, with a liberal scattering of "dear Uncles"
interspersed; and she concluded her letter with a message of
"affectionate love to Aunt Louise and the children." Then at last King
Leopold was obliged to recognise the facts. His next letter contained
no reference at all to politics. "I am glad," he wrote, "to find that
you like Brighton better than last year. I think Brighton very
agreeable at this time of the year, till the east winds set in. The
pavilion, besides, is comfortable; that cannot be denied. Before my
marriage, it was there that I met the Regent. Charlotte afterwards
came with old Queen Charlotte. How distant all this already, but still
how present to one's memory." Like poor Madame de Lieven, His Majesty
felt that he had made a mistake.
Nevertheless, he could not quite give up all hope. Another
opportunity offered, and he made another effort--but there was not
very much conviction in it, and it was immediately crushed. "My dear
Uncle," the Queen wrote, "I have to thank you for your last letter
which I received on Sunday. Though you seem not to dislike my
political sparks, I think it is better not to increase them, as they
might finally take fire, particularly as I see with regret that upon
this one subject we cannot agree. I shall, therefore, limit myself to
my expressions of very sincere wishes for the welfare and prosperity
of Belgium." After that, it was clear that there was no more to be
said. Henceforward there is audible in the King's letters a curiously
elegiac note. "My dearest Victoria, your DELIGHTFUL little letter has
just arrived and went like AN ARROW TO MY HEART. Yes, my beloved
Victoria! I DO LOVE YOU TENDERLY... I love you FOR YOURSELF, and I
love in you the dear child whose welfare I tenderly watched." He had
gone through much; yet, if life had its disappointments, it had its
satisfactions too. "I have all the honours that can be given, and I
am, politically speaking, very solidly established." But there were
other things besides politics, there were romantic yearnings in his
heart. "The only longing I still have is for the Orient, where I
perhaps shall once end my life, rising in the west and setting in the
east." As for his devotion to his niece, that could never end. "I
never press my services on you, nor my councils, though I may say with
some truth that from the extraordinary fate which the higher powers
had ordained for me, my experience, both political and of private
life, is great. I am ALWAYS READY to be useful to you when and where
and it may be, and I repeat it, ALL I WANT IN RETURN IS SOME LITTLE
SINCERE AFFECTION FROM YOU."
VI
The correspondence with King Leopold was significant of much that
still lay partly hidden in the character of Victoria. Her attitude
towards her uncle had never wavered for a moment. To all his advances
she had presented an absolutely unyielding front. The foreign policy
of England was not his province; it was hers and her Ministers'; his
insinuations, his entreaties, his struggles--all were quite useless;
and he must understand that this was so. The rigidity of her position
was the more striking owing to the respectfulness and the affection
with which it was accompanied. From start to finish the unmoved Queen
remained the devoted niece. Leopold himself must have envied such
perfect correctitude; but what may be admirable in an elderly
statesman is alarming in a maiden of nineteen. And privileged
observers were not without their fears. The strange mixture of
ingenuous light-heartedness and fixed determination, of frankness and
reticence, of childishness and pride, seemed to augur a future that
was perplexed and full of dangers. As time passed the less pleasant
qualities in this curious composition revealed themselves more often
and more seriously. There were signs of an imperious, a peremptory
temper, an egotism that was strong and hard. It was noticed that the
palace etiquette, far from relaxing, grew ever more and more
inflexible. By some, this was attributed to Lehzen's influence; but,
if that was so, Lehzen had a willing pupil; for the slightest
infringements of the freezing rules of regularity and deference were
invariably and immediately visited by the sharp and haughty glances of
the Queen. Yet Her Majesty's eyes, crushing as they could be, were
less crushing than her mouth. The self-will depicted in those small
projecting teeth and that small receding chin was of a more dismaying
kind than that which a powerful jaw betokens; it was a self--will
imperturbable, impenetrable, unintelligent; a self-will dangerously
akin to obstinacy. And the obstinacy of monarchs is not as that of
other men.
Within two years of her accession, the storm-clouds which, from the
first, had been dimly visible on the horizon, gathered and burst.
Victoria's relations with her mother had not improved. The Duchess of
Kent, still surrounded by all the galling appearances of filial
consideration, remained in Buckingham Palace a discarded figure,
powerless and inconsolable. Sir John Conroy, banished from the
presence of the Queen, still presided over the Duchess's household, and
the hostilities of Kensington continued unabated in the new
surroundings. Lady Flora Hastings still cracked her malicious jokes;
the animosity of the Baroness was still unappeased. One day, Lady
Flora found the joke was turned against her. Early in 1839, travelling
in the suite of the Duchess, she had returned from Scotland in the
same carriage with Sir John. A change in her figure became the subject
of an unseemly jest; tongues wagged; and the jest grew serious. It was
whispered that Lady Flora was with child. The state of her health
seemed to confirm the suspicion; she consulted Sir James Clark, the
royal physician, and, after the consultation, Sir James let his tongue
wag, too. On this, the scandal flared up sky-high. Everyone was
talking; the Baroness was not surprised; the Duchess rallied
tumultuously to the support of her lady; the Queen was informed. At
last the extraordinary expedient of a medical examination was resorted
to, during which Sir James, according to Lady Flora, behaved with
brutal rudeness, while a second doctor was extremely polite. Finally,
both physicians signed a certificate entirely exculpating the lady.
But this was by no means the end of the business. The Hastings family,
socially a very powerful one, threw itself into the fray with all the
fury of outraged pride and injured innocence; Lord Hastings insisted
upon an audience of the Queen, wrote to the papers, and demanded the
dismissal of Sir James Clark. The Queen expressed her regret to Lady
Flora, but Sir James Clark was not dismissed. The tide of opinion
turned violently against the Queen and her advisers; high society was
disgusted by all this washing of dirty linen in Buckingham Palace; the
public at large was indignant at the ill-treatment of Lady Flora. By
the end of March, the popularity, so radiant and so abundant, with
which the young Sovereign had begun her reign, had entirely
disappeared.
There can be no doubt that a great lack of discretion had been
shown by the Court. Ill-natured tittle-tattle, which should have been
instantly nipped in the bud, had been allowed to assume disgraceful
proportions; and the Throne itself had become involved in the personal
malignities of the palace. A particularly awkward question had been
raised by the position of Sir James Clark. The Duke of Wellington,
upon whom it was customary to fall back, in cases of great difficulty
in high places, had been consulted upon this question, and he had
given it as his opinion that, as it would be impossible to remove Sir
James without a public enquiry, Sir James must certainly stay where he
was. Probably the Duke was right; but the fact that the peccant doctor
continued in the Queen's service made the Hastings family
irreconcilable and produced an unpleasant impression of unrepentant
error upon the public mind. As for Victoria, she was very young and
quite inexperienced; and she can hardly be blamed for having failed to
control an extremely difficult situation. That was clearly Lord
Melbourne's task; he was a man of the world, and, with vigilance and
circumspection, he might have quietly put out the ugly flames while
they were still smouldering. He did not do so; he was lazy and
easy-going; the Baroness was persistent, and he let things slide. But
doubtless his position was not an easy one; passions ran high in the
palace; and Victoria was not only very young, she was very headstrong,
too. Did he possess the magic bridle which would curb that fiery
steed? He could not be certain. And then, suddenly, another violent
crisis revealed more unmistakably than ever the nature of the mind
with which he had to deal.
VII
The Queen had for long been haunted by a terror that the day might
come when she would be obliged to part with her Minister. Ever since
the passage of the Reform Bill, the power of the Whig Government had
steadily declined. The General Election of 1837 had left them with a
very small majority in the House of Commons; since then, they had been
in constant difflculties--abroad, at home, in Ireland; the Radical
group had grown hostile; it became highly doubtful how much longer
they could survive. The Queen watched the development of events in
great anxiety. She was a Whig by birth, by upbringing, by every
association, public and private; and, even if those ties had never
existed, the mere fact that Lord M. was the head of the Whigs would
have amply sufficed to determine her politics. The fall of the Whigs
would mean a sad upset for Lord M. But it would have a still more
terrible consequence: Lord M. would have to leave her; and the daily,
the hourly, presence of Lord M. had become an integral part of her
life. Six months after her accession she had noted in her diary "I
shall be very sorry to lose him even for one night;" and this feeling
of personal dependence on her Minister steadily increased. In these
circumstances it was natural that she should have become a Whig
partisan. Of the wider significance of political questions she knew
nothing; all she saw was that her friends were in office and about
her, and that it would be dreadful if they ceased to be so. "I cannot
say," she wrote when a critical division was impending, "(though I
feel confident of our success) how low, how sad I feel, when I think
of the possibility of this excellent and truly kind man not remaining
my Minister! Yet I trust ferventIy that He who has so wonderfully
protected me through such manifold difficulties will not now desert
me! I should have liked to have expressed to Lord M. my anxiety, but
the tears were nearer than words throughout the time I saw him, and I
felt I should have choked, had I attempted to say anything." Lord
Melbourne realised clearly enough how undesirable was such a state of
mind in a constitutional sovereign who might be called upon at any
moment to receive as her Ministers the leaders of the opposite party;
he did what he could to cool her ardour; but in vain.
With considerable lack of foresight, too, he had himself helped to
bring about this unfortunate condition of affairs. From the moment of
her accession, he had surrounded the Queen with ladies of his own
party; the Mistress of the Robes and all the Ladies of the Bedchamber
were Whigs. In the ordinary course, the Queen never saw a Tory:
eventually she took pains never to see one in any circumstances. She
disliked the whole tribe; and she did not conceal the fact. She
particularly disliked Sir Robert Peel, who would almost certainly be
the next Prime Minister. His manners were detestable, and he wanted to
turn out Lord M. His supporters, without exception, were equally bad;
and as for Sir James Graham, she could not bear the sight of him; he
was exactly like Sir John Conroy.
The affair of Lady Flora intensified these party rumours still
further. The Hastings were Tories, and Lord Melbourne and the Court
were attacked by the Tory press in unmeasured language. The Queen's
sectarian zeal proportionately increased. But the dreaded hour was now
fast approaching. Early in May the Ministers were visibly tottering;
on a vital point of policy they could only secure a majority of five
in the House of Commons; they determined to resign. When Victoria
heard the news she burst into tears. Was it possible, then, that all
was over? Was she, indeed, about to see Lord M. for the last time? Lord
M. came; and it is a curious fact that, even in this crowning moment
of misery and agitation, the precise girl noted, to the minute, the
exact time of the arrival and the departure of her beloved Minister.
The conversation was touching and prolonged; but it could only end in
one way--the Queen must send for the Duke of Wellington. When, next
morning, the Duke came, he advised her Majesty to send for Sir Robert
Peel. She was in "a state of dreadful grief," but she swallowed down
her tears, and braced herself, with royal resolution, for the odious,
odious interview.
Peel was by nature reserved, proud, and shy. His manners were not
perfect, and he knew it; he was easily embarrassed, and, at such
moments, he grew even more stiff and formal than before, while his
feet mechanically performed upon the carpet a dancing-master's
measure. Anxious as he now was to win the Queen's good graces, his
very anxiety to do so made the attainment of his object the more
difficult. He entirely failed to make any headway whatever with the
haughty hostile girl before him. She coldly noted that he appeared to
be unhappy and "put out," and, while he stood in painful fixity, with
an occasional uneasy pointing of the toe, her heart sank within her at
the sight of that manner, "Oh! how different, how dreadfully
different, to the frank, open, natural, and most kind warm manner of
Lord Melbourne." Nevertheless, the audience passed without disaster.
Only at one point had there been some slight hint of a disagreement.
Peel had decided that a change would be necessary in the composition
of the royal Household: the Queen must no longer be entirely
surrounded by the wives and sisters of his opponents; some, at any
rate, of the Ladies of the Bedchamber should be friendly to his
Government. When this matter was touched upon, the Queen had intimated
that she wished her Household to remain unchanged; to which Sir Robert
had replied that the question could be settled later, and shortly
afterwards withdrew to arrange the details of his Cabinet. While he
was present, Victoria had remained, as she herself said, "very much
collected, civil and high, and betrayed no agitation;" but as soon as
she was alone she completely broke down. Then she pulled herself
together to write to Lord Melbourne an account of all that had
happened, and of her own wretchedness. "She feels," she said, "Lord
Melbourne will understand it, amongst enemies to those she most relied
on and most esteemed; but what is worst of all is the being deprived
of seeing Lord Melbourne as she used to do."
Lord Melbourne replied with a very wise letter. He attempted to
calm the Queen and to induce her to accept the new position
gracefully; and he had nothing but good words for the Tory leaders. As
for the question of the Ladies of the Household, the Queen, he said,
should strongly urge what she desired, as it was a matter which
concerned her personally, "but," he added, "if Sir Robert is unable to
concede it, it will not do to refuse and to put off the negotiation
upon it." On this point there can be little doubt that Lord Melbourne
was right. The question was a complicated and subtle one, and it had
never arisen before; but subsequent constitutional practice has
determined that a Queen Regnant must accede to the wishes of her Prime
Minister as to the personnel of the female part of her Household. Lord
Melbourne's wisdom, however, was wasted. The Queen would not be
soothed, and still less would she take advice. It was outrageous of
the Tories to want to deprive her of her Ladies, and that night she
made up her mind that, whatever Sir Robert might say, she would refuse
to consent to the removal of a single one of them. Accordingly, when,
next morning, Peel appeared again, she was ready for action. He began
by detailing the Cabinet appointments, and then he added "Now, ma'am,
about the Ladies-" when the Queen sharply interrupted him. "I cannot
give up any of my Ladies," she said. "What, ma'am!" said Sir Robert,
"does your Majesty mean to retain them all?" "All," said the Queen.
Sir Robert's face worked strangely; he could not conceal his
agitation. "The Mistress of the Robes and the Ladies of the
Bedchamber?" he brought out at last. "All," replied once more her
Majesty. It was in vain that Peel pleaded and argued; in vain that he
spoke, growing every moment more pompous and uneasy, of the
constitution, and Queens Regnant, and the public interest; in vain
that he danced his pathetic minuet. She was adamant; but he, too,
through all his embarrassment, showed no sign of yielding; and when at
last he left her nothing had been decided--the whole formation of the
Government was hanging in the wind. A frenzy of excitement now seized
upon Victoria. Sir Robert, she believed in her fury, had tried to
outwit her, to take her friends from her, to impose his will upon her
own; but that was not all: she had suddenly perceived, while the poor
man was moving so uneasily before her, the one thing that she was
desperately longing for--a loop-hole of escape. She seized a pen and
dashed off a note to Lord Melbourne.
"Sir Robert has behaved very ill," she wrote, "he insisted on my
giving up my Ladies, to which I replied that I never would consent,
and I never saw a man so frightened... I was calm but very decided,
and I think you would have been pleased to see my composure and great
firmness; the Queen of England will not submit to such trickery. Keep
yourself in readiness, for you may soon be wanted." Hardly had she
finished when the Duke of Wellington was announced. "Well, Ma'am," he
said as he entered, "I am very sorry to find there is a difficulty."
"Oh!" she instantly replied, "he began it, not me." She felt that only
one thing now was needed: she must be firm. And firm she was. The
venerable conqueror of Napoleon was outfaced by the relentless
equanimity of a girl in her teens. He could not move the Queen one
inch. At last, she even ventured to rally him. "Is Sir Robert so
weak," she asked, "that even the Ladies must be of his opinion?" On
which the Duke made a brief and humble expostulation, bowed low, and
departed.
Had she won? Time would show; and in the meantime she scribbled
down another letter. "Lord Melbourne must not think the Queen rash in
her conduct... The Queen felt this was an attempt to see whether she
could be led and managed like a child."[*] The Tories were not only
wicked but ridiculous. Peel, having, as she understood, expressed a
wish to remove only those members of the Household who were in
Parliament, now objected to her Ladies. "I should like to know," she
exclaimed in triumphant scorn, "if they mean to give the Ladies seats
in Parliament?"
[*] The exclamation "They wished to treat me like a girl, but I
will show them that I am Queen of England!" often quoted as the
Queen's, is apocryphal. It is merely part of Greville's summary of the
two letters to Melbourne. It may be noted that the phrase "the Queen
of England will not submit to such trickery" is omitted in "Girlhood,"
and in general there are numerous verbal discrepancies between the
versions of the journal and the letters in the two books.
The end of the crisis was now fast approaching. Sir Robert
returned, and told her that if she insisted upon retaining all her
Ladies he could not form a Government. She replied that she would send
him her final decision in writing. Next morning the late Whig Cabinet
met. Lord Melbourne read to them the Queen's letters, and the group of
elderly politicians were overcome by an extraordinary wave of
enthusiasm. They knew very well that, to say the least, it was highly
doubtful whether the Queen had acted in strict accordance with the
constitution; that in doing what she had done she had brushed aside
Lord Melbourne's advice; that, in reality, there was no public reason
whatever why they should go back upon their decision to resign. But
such considerations vanished before the passionate urgency of
Victoria. The intensity of her determination swept them headlong down
the stream of her desire. They unanimously felt that "it was
impossible to abandon such a Queen and such a woman." Forgetting that
they were no longer her Majesty's Ministers, they took the
unprecedented course of advising the Queen by letter to put an end to
her negotiation with Sir Robert Peel. She did so; all was over; she
had triumphed. That evening there was a ball at the Palace. Everyone
was present. "Peel and the Duke of Wellington came by looking very
much put out." She was perfectly happy; Lord M. was Prime Minister
once more, and he was by her side.
VIII
Happiness had returned with Lord M., but it was happiness in the
midst of agitation. The domestic imbroglio continued unabated, until
at last the Duke, rejected as a Minister, was called in once again in
his old capacity as moral physician to the family. Something was
accomplished when, at last, he induced Sir John Conroy to resign his
place about the Duchess of Kent and leave the Palace for ever;
something more when he persuaded the Queen to write an affectionate
letter to her mother. The way seemed open for a reconciliation, but
the Duchess was stormy still. She didn't believe that Victoria had
written that letter; it was not in her handwriting; and she sent for
the Duke to tell him so. The Duke, assuring her that the letter was
genuine, begged her to forget the past. But that was not so easy.
"What am I to do if Lord Melbourne comes up to me?" "Do, ma'am? Why,
receive him with civility." Well, she would make an effort... "But
what am I to do if Victoria asks me to shake hands with Lehzen?" "Do,
ma'am? Why, take her in your arms and kiss her." "What!" The Duchess
bristled in every feather, and then she burst into a hearty laugh.
"No, ma'am, no," said the Duke, laughing too. "I don't mean you are to
take Lehzen in your arms and kiss her, but the Queen." The Duke might
perhaps have succeeded, had not all attempts at conciliation been
rendered hopeless by a tragical event. Lady Flora, it was discovered,
had been suffering from a terrible internal malady, which now grew
rapidly worse. There could be little doubt that she was dying. The
Queen's unpopularity reached an extraordinary height. More than once
she was publicly insulted. "Mrs. Melbourne," was shouted at her when
she appeared at her balcony; and, at Ascot, she was hissed by the
Duchess of Montrose and Lady Sarah Ingestre as she passed. Lady Flora
died. The whole scandal burst out again with redoubled vehemence;
while, in the Palace, the two parties were henceforth divided by an
impassable, a Stygian, gulf.
Nevertheless, Lord M. was back, and every trouble faded under the
enchantment of his presence and his conversation. He, on his side, had
gone through much; and his distresses were intensified by a
consciousness of his own shortcomings. He realised clearly enough
that, if he had intervened at the right moment, the Hastings scandal
might have been averted; and, in the bedchamber crisis, he knew that
he had allowed his judgment to be overruled and his conduct to be
swayed by private feelings and the impetuosity of Victoria. But he was
not one to suffer too acutely from the pangs of conscience. In spite
of the dullness and the formality of the Court, his relationship with
the Queen had come to be the dominating interest in his life; to have
been deprived of it would have been heartrending; that dread
eventuality had been--somehow--avoided; he was installed once more, in
a kind of triumph; let him enjoy the fleeting hours to the full! And
so, cherished by the favour of a sovereign and warmed by the adoration
of a girl, the autumn rose, in those autumn months of 1839, came to a
wondrous blooming. The petals expanded, beautifully, for the last
time. For the last time in this unlooked--for, this incongruous, this
almost incredible intercourse, the old epicure tasted the
exquisiteness of romance. To watch, to teach, to restrain, to
encourage the royal young creature beside him--that was much; to feel
with such a constant intimacy the impact of her quick affection, her
radiant vitality--that was more; most of all, perhaps, was it good to
linger vaguely in humorous contemplation, in idle apostrophe, to talk
disconnectedly, to make a little joke about an apple or a furbelow, to
dream. The springs of his sensibility, hidden deep within him, were
overflowing. Often, as he bent over her hand and kissed it, he found
himself in tears.
Upon Victoria, with all her impermeability, it was inevitable that
such a companionship should have produced, eventually, an effect. She
was no longer the simple schoolgirl of two years since. The change was
visible even in her public demeanour. Her expression, once "ingenuous
and serene," now appeared to a shrewd observer to be "bold and
discontented." She had learnt something of the pleasures of power and
the pains of it; but that was not all. Lord Melbourne with his gentle
instruction had sought to lead her into the paths of wisdom and
moderation, but the whole unconscious movement of his character had
swayed her in a very different direction. The hard clear pebble,
subjected for so long and so constantly to that encircling and
insidious fluidity, had suffered a curious corrosion; it seemed to be
actually growing a little soft and a little clouded. Humanity and
fallibility are infectious things; was it possible that Lehzen's prim
pupil had caught them? That she was beginning to listen to siren
voices? That the secret impulses of self-expression, of
self-indulgence even, were mastering her life? For a moment the child
of a new age looked back, and wavered towards the eighteenth century.
It was the most critical moment of her career. Had those influences
lasted, the development of her character, the history of her life,
would have been completely changed.
And why should they not last? She, for one, was very anxious that
they should. Let them last for ever! She was surrounded by Whigs, she
was free to do whatever she wanted, she had Lord M.; she could not
believe that she could ever be happier. Any change would be for the
worse; and the worst change of all... no, she would not hear of it; it
would be quite intolerable, it would upset everything, if she were to
marry. And yet everyone seemed to want her to--the general public, the
Ministers, her Saxe-Coburg relations--it was always the same story. Of
course, she knew very well that there were excellent reasons for it.
For one thing, if she remained childless, and were to die, her uncle
Cumberland, who was now the King of Hanover, would succeed to the
Throne of England. That, no doubt, would be a most unpleasant event;
and she entirely sympathised with everybody who wished to avoid it.
But there was no hurry; naturally, she would marry in the end--but not
just yet--not for three or four years. What was tiresome was that her
uncle Leopold had apparently determined, not only that she ought to
marry, but that her cousin Albert ought to be her husband. That was
very like her uncle Leopold, who wanted to have a finger in every pie;
and it was true that long ago, in far-off days, before her accession
even, she had written to him in a way which might well have encouraged
him in such a notion. She had told him then that Albert possessed
"every quality that could be desired to render her perfectly happy,"
and had begged her "dearest uncle to take care of the health of one,
now so dear to me, and to take him under your special protection,"
adding, "I hope and trust all will go on prosperously and well on this
subject of so much importance to me." But that had been years ago,
when she was a mere child; perhaps, indeed, to judge from the
language, the letter had been dictated by Lehzen; at any rate, her
feelings, and all the circumstances, had now entirely changed. Albert
hardly interested her at all.
In later life the Queen declared that she had never for a moment
dreamt of marrying anyone but her cousin; her letters and diaries tell
a very different story. On August 26, 1837, she wrote in her journal:
"To-day is my dearest cousin Albert's 18th birthday, and I pray Heaven
to pour its choicest blessings on his beloved head!" In the subsequent
years, however, the date passes unnoticed. It had been arranged that
Stockmar should accompany the Prince to Italy, and the faithful Baron
left her side for that purpose. He wrote to her more than once with
sympathetic descriptions of his young companion; but her mind was by
this time made up. She liked and admired Albert very much, but she did
not want to marry him. "At present," she told Lord Melbourne in April,
1839, "my feeling is quite against ever marrying." When her cousin's
Italian tour came to an end, she began to grow nervous; she knew that,
according to a long-standing engagement, his next journey would be to
England. He would probably arrive in the autumn, and by July her
uneasiness was intense. She determined to write to her uncle, in order
to make her position clear. It must be understood she said, that
"there is no no engagement between us." If she should like Albert, she
could "make no final promise this year, for, at the very earliest, any
such event could not take place till two or three years hence." She
had, she said, "a great repugnance" to change her present position;
and, if she should not like him, she was "very anxious that it should
be understood that she would not be guilty of any breach of promise,
for she never gave any." To Lord Melbourne she was more explicit. She
told him that she "had no great wish to see Albert, as the whole
subject was an odious one;" she hated to have to decide about it; and
she repeated once again that seeing Albert would be "a disagreeable
thing." But there was no escaping the horrid business; the visit must
be made, and she must see him. The summer slipped by and was over; it
was the autumn already; on the evening of October 10 Albert,
accompanied by his brother Ernest, arrived at Windsor.
Albert arrived; and the whole structure of her existence crumbled
into nothingness like a house of cards. He was beautiful--she
gasped--she knew no more. Then, in a flash, a thousand mysteries were
revealed to her; the past, the present, rushed upon her with a new
significance; the delusions of years were abolished, and an
extraordinary, an irresistible certitude leapt into being in the light
of those blue eyes, the smile of that lovely mouth. The succeeding
hours passed in a rapture. She was able to observe a few more
details--the "exquisite nose," the "delicate moustachios and slight
but very slight whiskers," the "beautiful figure, broad in the
shoulders and a fine waist." She rode with him, danced with him,
talked with him, and it was all perfection. She had no shadow of a
doubt. He had come on a Thursday evening, and on the following Sunday
morning she told Lord Melbourne that she had "a good deal changed her
opinion as to marrying." Next morning, she told him that she had made
up her mind to marry Albert. The morning after that, she sent for her
cousin. She received him alone, and "after a few minutes I said to him
that I thought he must be aware why I wished them to come here--and
that it would make me too happy if be would consent to what I wished
(to marry me.)" Then "we embraced each other, and he was so kind, so
affectionate." She said that she was quite unworthy of him, while he
murmured that he would be very happy "Das Leben mit dir zu zubringen."
They parted, and she felt "the happiest of human beings," when Lord M.
came in. At first she beat about the bush, and talked of the weather,
and indifferent subjects. Somehow or other she felt a little nervous
with her old friend. At last, summoning up her courage, she said, "I
have got well through this with Albert." "Oh! you have," said Lord M.
It was decidedly a family match. Prince Francis Charles Augustus
Albert Emmanuel of Saxe-Coburg--Gotha--for such was his full
title--had been born just three months after his cousin Victoria, and
the same midwife had assisted at the two births. The children's
grandmother, the Dowager Duchess of Coburg, had from the first looked
forward to their marriage, as they grew up, the Duke, the Duchess of
Kent, and King Leopold came equally to desire it. The Prince, ever
since the time when, as a child of three, his nurse had told him that
some day "the little English May flower" would be his wife, had never
thought of marrying anyone else. When eventually Baron Stockmar
himself signified his assent, the affair seemed as good as settled.
The Duke had one other child--Prince Ernest, Albert's senior by one
year, and heir to the principality. The Duchess was a sprightly and
beautiful woman, with fair hair and blue eyes; Albert was very like
her and was her declared favourite. But in his fifth year he was
parted from her for ever. The ducal court was not noted for the
strictness of its morals; the Duke was a man of gallantry, and it was
rumoured that the Duchess followed her husband's example. There were
scandals: one of the Court Chamberlains, a charming and cultivated man
of Jewish extraction, was talked of; at last there was a separation,
followed by a divorce. The Duchess retired to Paris, and died
unhappily in 1831. Her memory was always very dear to Albert.
He grew up a pretty, clever, and high-spirited boy. Usually
well-behaved, he was, however, sometimes violent. He had a will of his
own, and asserted it; his elder brother was less passionate, less
purposeful, and, in their wrangles, it was Albert who came out top.
The two boys, living for the most part in one or other of the Duke's
country houses, among pretty hills and woods and streams, had been at
a very early age--Albert was less than four--separated from their
nurses and put under a tutor, in whose charge they remained until they
went to the University. They were brought up in a simple and
unostentatious manner, for the Duke was poor and the duchy very small
and very insignificant. Before long it became evident that Albert was
a model lad. Intelligent and painstaking, he had been touched by the
moral earnestness of his generation; at the age of eleven he surprised
his father by telling him that he hoped to make himself "a good and
useful man." And yet he was not over-serious; though, perhaps, he had
little humour, he was full of fun--of practical jokes and mimicry. He
was no milksop; he rode, and shot, and fenced; above all did he
delight in being out of doors, and never was he happier than in his
long rambles with his brother through the wild country round his
beloved Rosenau--stalking the deer, admiring the scenery, and
returning laden with specimens for his natural history collection. He
was, besides, passionately fond of music. In one particular it was
observed that he did not take after his father: owing either to his
peculiar upbringing or to a more fundamental idiosyncrasy he had a
marked distaste for the opposite sex. At the age of five, at a
children's dance, he screamed with disgust and anger when a little
girl was led up to him for a partner; and though, later on, he grew
more successful in disguising such feelings, the feelings remained.
The brothers were very popular in Coburg, and, when the time came
for them to be confirmed, the preliminary examination which, according
to ancient custom, was held in public in the "Giants' Hall" of the
Castle, was attended by an enthusiastic crowd of functionaries,
clergy, delegates from the villages of the duchy, and miscellaneous
onlookers. There were also present, besides the Duke and the Dowager
Duchess, their Serene Highnesses the Princes Alexander and Ernest of
Wurtemberg, Prince Leiningen, Princess Hohenlohe-Langenburg, and
Princess Hohenlohe-Schillingsfurst. Dr. Jacobi, the Court chaplain,
presided at an altar, simply but appropriately decorated, which had
been placed at the end of the hall; and the proceedings began by the
choir singing the first verse of the hymn, "Come, Holy Ghost." After
some introductory remarks, Dr. Jacobi began the examination. "The
dignified and decorous bearing of the Princes," we are told in a
contemporary account, "their strict attention to the questions, the
frankness, decision, and correctness of their answers, produced a deep
impression on the numerous assembly. Nothing was more striking in
their answers than the evidence they gave of deep feeling and of inward
strength of conviction. The questions put by the examiner were not
such as to be met by a simple "yes" or "no." They were carefully
considered in order to give the audience a clear insight into the
views and feelings of,the young princes. One of the most touching
moments was when the examiner asked the hereditary prince whether he
intended steadfastly to hold to the Evangelical Church, and the Prince
answered not only "Yes!" but added in a clear and decided tone: "I and
my brother are firmly resolved ever to remain faithful to the
acknowledged truth." The examination having lasted an hour, Dr. Jacobi
made some concluding observations, followed by a short prayer; the
second and third verses of the opening hymn were sung; and the
ceremony was over. The Princes, stepping down from the altar, were
embraced by the Duke and the Dowager Duchess; after which the loyal
inhabitants of Coburg dispersed, well satisfied with their
entertainment.
Albert's mental development now proceeded apace. In his seventeenth
year he began a careful study of German literature and German
philosophy. He set about, he told his tutor, "to follow the thoughts
of the great Klopstock into their depths--though in this, for the most
part," he modestly added, "I do not succeed." He wrote an essay on the
"Mode of Thought of the Germans, and a Sketch of the History of German
Civilisation," "making use," he said, "in its general outlines, of the
divisions which the treatment of the subject itself demands," and
concluding with "a retrospect of the shortcomings of our time, with an
appeal to every one to correct those shortcomings in his own case, and
thus set a good example to others." Placed for some months under the
care of King Leopold at Brussels, he came under the influence of
Adolphe Quetelet, a mathematical professor, who was particularly
interested in the application of the laws of probability to political
and moral phenomena; this line of inquiry attracted the Prince, and
the friendship thus begun continued till the end of his life. From
Brussels he went to the University of Bonn, where he was speedily
distinguished both by his intellectual and his social activities; his
energies were absorbed in metaphysics, law, political economy, music,
fencing, and amateur theatricals. Thirty years later his
fellow--students recalled with delight the fits of laughter into which
they had been sent by Prince Albert's mimicry. The verve with which
his Serene Highness reproduced the tones and gestures of one of the
professors who used to point to a picture of a row of houses in Venice
with the remark, "That is the Ponte-Realte," and of another who fell
down in a race and was obliged to look for his spectacles, was
especially appreciated.
After a year at Bonn, the time had come for a foreign tour, and
Baron Stockmar arrived from England to accompany the Prince on an
expedition to Italy. The Baron had been already, two years previously,
consulted by King Leopold as to his views upon the proposed marriage
of Albert and Victoria. His reply had been remarkable. With a
characteristic foresight, a characteristic absence of optimism, a
characteristic sense of the moral elements in the situation, Stockmar
had pointed out what were, in his opinion, the conditions essential to
make the marriage a success. Albert, he wrote, was a fine young fellow,
well grown for his age, with agreeable and valuable qualities; and it
was probable that in a few years he would turn out a strong handsome
man, of a kindly, simple, yet dignified demeanour." Thus, externally,
he possesses all that pleases the sex, and at all times and in all
countries must please." Supposing, therefore, that Victoria herself
was in favour of the marriage, the further question arose as to
whether Albert's mental qualities were such as to fit him for the
position of husband of the Queen of England. On this point, continued
the Baron, one heard much to his credit; the Prince was said to be
discreet and intelligent; but all such judgments were necessarily
partial, and the Baron preferred to reserve his opinion until he could
come to a trustworthy conclusion from personal observation. And then
he added: "But all this is not enough. The young man ought to have not
merely great ability, but a right ambition, and great force of will as
well. To pursue for a lifetime a political career so arduous demands
more than energy and inclination--it demands also that earnest frame
of mind which is ready of its own accord to sacrifice mere pleasure to
real usefulness. If he is not satisfied hereafter with the
consciousness of having achieved one of the most influential positions
in Europe, how often will he feel tempted to repent his adventure! If
he does not from the very outset accept it as a vocation of grave
responsibility, on the efficient performance of which his honour and
happiness depend, there is small likelihood of his succeeding."
Such were the views of Stockmar on the qualifications necessary for
the due fulfilment of that destiny which Albert's family had marked
out for him; and he hoped, during the tour in Italy, to come to some
conclusion as to how far the prince possessed them. Albert on his side
was much impressed by the Baron, whom he had previously seen but
rarely; he also became acquainted, for the first time in his life,
with a young Englishman, Lieutenant Francis Seymour, who had been
engaged to accompany him, whom he found sehr liebens-wurdig, and with
whom he struck up a warm friendship. He delighted in the galleries and
scenery of Florence, though with Rome he was less impressed. "But for
some beautiful palaces," he said, "it might just as well be any town
in Germany." In an interview with Pope Gregory XVI, he took the
opportunity of displaying his erudition. When the Pope observed that
the Greeks had taken their art from the Etruscans, Albert replied
that, on the contrary, in his opinion, they had borrowed from the
Egyptians: his Holiness politely acquiesced. Wherever he went he was
eager to increase his knowledge, and, at a ball in Florence, he was
observed paying no attention whatever to the ladies, and deep in
conversation with the learned Signor Capponi. "Voila un prince dont
nous pouvons etre fiers," said the Grand Duke of Tuscany, who was
standing by: "la belle danseuse l'attend, le savant l'occupe."
On his return to Germany, Stockmar's observations, imparted to King
Leopold, were still critical. Albert, he said, was intelligent, kind,
and amiable; he was full of the best intentions and the noblest
resolutions, and his judgment was in many things beyond his years. But
great exertion was repugnant to him; he seemed to be too willing to
spare himself, and his good resolutions too often came to nothing. It
was particularly unfortunate that he took not the slightest interest
in politics, and never read a newspaper. In his manners, too, there
was still room for improvement. "He will always," said the Baron,
"have more success with men than with women, in whose society he shows
too little empressement, and is too indifferent and retiring." One
other feature of the case was noted by the keen eye of the old
physician: the Prince's constitution was not a strong one. Yet, on the
whole, he was favourable to the projected marriage. But by now the
chief obstacle seemed to lie in another quarter, Victoria was
apparently determined to commit herself to nothing. And so it happened
that when Albert went to England he had made up his mind to withdraw
entirely from the affair. Nothing would induce him, he confessed to a
friend, to be kept vaguely waiting; he would break it all off at once.
His reception at Windsor threw an entirely new light upon the
situation. The wheel of fortune turned with a sudden rapidity; and he
found, in the arms of Victoria, the irrevocable assurance of his
overwhelming fate.
II
He was not in love with her. Affection, gratitude, the natural
reactions to the unqualified devotion of a lively young cousin who was
also a queen--such feelings possessed him, but the ardours of
reciprocal passion were not his. Though he found that he liked
Victoria very much, what immediately interested him in his curious
position was less her than himself. Dazzled and delighted, riding,
dancing, singing, laughing, amid the splendours of Windsor, he was
aware of a new sensation--the stirrings of ambition in his breast. His
place would indeed be a high, an enviable one! And then, on the
instant, came another thought. The teaching of religion, the
admonitions of Stockmar, his own inmost convictions, all spoke with
the same utterance. He would not be there to please himself, but for a
very different purpose--to do good. He must be "noble, manly, and
princely in all things," he would have "to live and to sacrifice
himself for the benefit of his new country;" to "use his powers and
endeavours for a great object--that of promoting the welfare of
multitudes of his fellowmen." One serious thought led on to another.
The wealth and the bustle of the English Court might be delightful for
the moment, but, after all, it was Coburg that had his heart. "While I
shall be untiring," he wrote to his grandmother, "in my efforts and
labours for the country to which I shall in future belong, and where I
am called to so high a position, I shall never cease ein treuer
Deutscher, Coburger, Gothaner zu sein." And now he must part from
Coburg for ever! Sobered and sad, he sought relief in his brother
Ernest's company; the two young men would shut themselves up together,
and, sitting down at the pianoforte, would escape from the present and
the future in the sweet familiar gaiety of a Haydn duet.
They returned to Germany; and while Albert, for a few farewell
months, enjoyed, for the last time, the happiness of home, Victoria,
for the last time, resumed her old life in London and Windsor. She
corresponded daily with her future husband in a mingled flow of German
and English; but the accustomed routine reasserted itself; the
business and the pleasures of the day would brook no interruption;
Lord M. was once more constantly beside her; and the Tories were as
intolerable as ever. Indeed, they were more so. For now, in these
final moments, the old feud burst out with redoubled fury. The
impetuous sovereign found, to her chagrin, that there might be
disadvantages in being the declared enemy of one of the great parties
in the State. On two occasions, the Tories directly thwarted her in a
matter on which she had set her heart. She wished her husband's rank
to be axed by statute, and their opposition prevented it. She wished
her husband to receive a settlement from the nation of L50,000 a year;
and, again owing to the Tories, he was only allowed L30,000. It was
too bad. When the question was discussed in Parliament, it had been
pointed out that the bulk of the population was suffering from great
poverty, and that L30,000 was the whole revenue of Coburg; but her
uncle Leopold had been given L50,000, and it would be monstrous to
give Albert less. Sir Robert Peel--it might have been expected--had
had the effrontery to speak and vote for the smaller sum. She was very
angry; and determined to revenge herself by omitting to invite a
single Tory to her wedding. She would make an exception in favour of
old Lord Liverpool, but even the Duke of Wellington she refused to
ask. When it was represented to her that it would amount to a national
scandal if the Duke were absent from her wedding, she was angrier than
ever. "What! That old rebel! I won't have him:" she was reported to
have said. Eventually she was induced to send him an invitation; but
she made no attempt to conceal the bitterness of her feelings, and the
Duke himself was only too well aware of all that had passed.
Nor was it only against the Tories that her irritation rose. As the
time for her wedding approached, her temper grew steadily sharper and
more arbitrary. Queen Adelaide annoyed her. King Leopold, too, was
"ungracious" in his correspondence; "Dear Uncle," she told Albert, "is
given to believe that he must rule the roost everywhere. "However,"
she added with asperity, "that is not a necessity." Even Albert
himself was not impeccable. Engulfed in Coburgs, he failed to
appreciate the complexity of English affairs. There were difficulties
about his household. He had a notion that he ought not to be
surrounded by violent Whigs; very likely, but he would not understand
that the only alternatives to violent Whigs were violent Tories; and
it would be preposterous if his Lords and Gentlemen were to be found
voting against the Queen's. He wanted to appoint his own Private
Secretary. But how could he choose the right person? Lord M. was
obviously best qualified to make the appointment; and Lord M. had
decided that the Prince should take over his own Private
Secretary--George Anson, a staunch Whig. Albert protested, but it was
useless; Victoria simply announced that Anson was appointed, and
instructed Lehzen to send the Prince an explanation of the details of
the case.
Then, again, he had written anxiously upon the necessity of
maintaining unspotted the moral purity of the Court. Lord M's pupil
considered that dear Albert was strait-laced, and, in a brisk
Anglo-German missive, set forth her own views. "I like Lady A. very
much," she told him, "only she is a little strict awl particular, and
too severe towards others, which is not right; for I think one ought
always to be indulgent towards other people, as I always think, if we
had not been well taken care of, we might also have gone astray. That
is always my feeling. Yet it is always right to show that one does not
like to see what is obviously wrong; but it is very dangerous to be
too severe, and I am certain that as a rule such people always greatly
regret that in their youth they have not been so careful as they ought
to have been. I have explained this so badly and written it so badly,
that I fear you will hardly be able to make it out."
On one other matter she was insistent. Since the affair of Lady
Flora Hastings, a sad fate had overtaken Sir James Clark. His
flourishing practice had quite collapsed; nobody would go to him any
more. But the Queen remained faithful. She would show the world how
little she cared for their disapproval, and she desired Albert to make
"poor Clark" his physician in ordinary. He did as he was told; but, as
it turned out, the appointment was not a happy one.
The wedding-day was fixed, and it was time for Albert to tear
himself away from his family and the scenes of his childhood. With an
aching heart, he had revisited his beloved haunts--the woods and the
valleys where he had spent so many happy hours shooting rabbits and
collecting botanical specimens; in deep depression, he had sat through
the farewell banquets in the Palace and listened to the Freischutz
performed by the State band. It was time to go. The streets were
packed as he drove through them; for a short space his eyes were
gladdened by a sea of friendly German faces, and his ears by a
gathering volume of good guttural sounds. He stopped to bid a last
adieu to his grandmother. It was a heartrending moment. "Albert!
Albert!" she shrieked, and fell fainting into the arms of her
attendants as his carriage drove away. He was whirled rapidly to his
destiny. At Calais a steamboat awaited him, and, together with his
father and his brother, he stepped, dejected, on board. A little
later, he was more dejected still. The crossing was a very rough one;
the Duke went hurriedly below; while the two Princes, we are told, lay
on either side of the cabin staircase "in an almost helpless state."
At Dover a large crowd was collected on the pier, and "it was by no
common effort that Prince Albert, who had continued to suffer up to
the last moment, got up to bow to the people." His sense of duty
triumphed. It was a curious omen: his whole life in England was
foreshadowed as he landed on English ground.
Meanwhile Victoria, in growing agitation, was a prey to temper and
to nerves. She grew feverish, and at last Sir James Clark pronounced
that she was going to have the measles. But, once again, Sir James's
diagnosis was incorrect. It was not the measles that were attacking
her, but a very different malady; she was suddenly prostrated by
alarm, regret, and doubt. For two years she had been her own
mistress--the two happiest years, by far, of her life. And now it was
all to end! She was to come under an alien domination--she would have
to promise that she would honour and obey... someone, who might, after
all, thwart her, oppose her--and how dreadful that would be! Why had
she embarked on this hazardous experiment? Why had she not been
contented with Lord M.? No doubt, she loved Albert; but she loved
power too. At any rate, one thing was certain: she might be Albert's
wife, but she would always be Queen of England. He reappeared, in an
exquisite uniform, and her hesitations melted in his presence like
mist before the sun. On February 10, 1840, the marriage took place.
The wedded pair drove down to Windsor; but they were not, of course,
entirely alone. They were accompanied by their suites, and, in
particular, by two persons--the Baron Stockmar and the Baroness
Lehzen.
III
Albert had foreseen that his married life would not be all plain
sailing; but he had by no means realised the gravity and the
complication of the difficulties which he would have to face.
Politically, he was a cipher. Lord Melbourne was not only Prime
Minister, he was in effect the Private Secretary of the Queen, and
thus controlled the whole of the political existence of the sovereign.
A queen's husband was an entity unknown to the British Constitution.
In State affairs there seemed to be no place for him; nor was Victoria
herself at all unwilling that this should be so. "The English," she
had told the Prince when, during their engagement, a proposal had been
made to give him a peerage, "are very jealous of any foreigner
interfering in the government of this country, and have already in
some of the papers expressed a hope that you would not interfere. Now,
though I know you never would, still, if you were a Peer, they would
all say, the Prince meant to play a political part. I know you never
would!" In reality, she was not quite so certain; but she wished
Albert to understand her views. He would, she hoped, make a perfect
husband; but, as for governing the country, he would see that she and
Lord M. between them could manage that very well, without his help.
But it was not only in politics that the Prince discovered that the
part cut out for him was a negligible one. Even as a husband, he
found, his functions were to be of an extremely limited kind. Over the
whole of Victoria's private life the Baroness reigned supreme; and she
had not the slightest intention of allowing that supremacy to be
diminished by one iota. Since the accession, her power had greatly
increased. Besides the undefined and enormous influence which she
exercised through her management of the Queen's private
correspondence, she was now the superintendent of the royal
establishment and controlled the important office of Privy Purse.
Albert very soon perceived that he was not master in his own house.
Every detail of his own and his wife's existence was supervised by a
third person: nothing could be done until the consent of Lehzen had
first been obtained. And Victoria, who adored Lehzen with unabated
intensity, saw nothing in all this that was wrong.
Nor was the Prince happier in his social surroundings. A shy young
foreigner, awkward in ladies' company, unexpansive and
self-opinionated, it was improbable that, in any circumstances, he
would have been a society success. His appearance, too, was against
him. Though in the eyes of Victoria he was the mirror of manly beauty,
her subjects, whose eyes were of a less Teutonic cast, did not agree
with her. To them--and particularly to the high-born ladies and
gentlemen who naturally saw him most--what was immediately and
distressingly striking in Albert's face and figure and whole demeanour
was his un-English look. His features were regular, no doubt, but
there was something smooth and smug about them; he was tall, but he
was clumsily put together, and he walked with a slight slouch. Really,
they thought, this youth was more like some kind of foreign tenor than
anything else. These were serious disadvantages; but the line of
conduct which the Prince adopted from the first moment of his arrival
was far from calculated to dispel them. Owing partly to a natural
awkwardness, partly to a fear of undue familiarity, and partly to a
desire to be absolutely correct, his manners were infused with an
extraordinary stiffness and formality. Whenever he appeared in
company, he seemed to be surrounded by a thick hedge of prickly
etiquette. He never went out into ordinary society; he never walked in
the streets of London; he was invariably accompanied by an equerry
when he rode or drove. He wanted to be irreproachable and, if that
involved friendlessness, it could not be helped. Besides, he had no
very high opinion of the English. So far as he could see, they cared
for nothing but fox-hunting and Sunday observances; they oscillated
between an undue frivolity and an undue gloom; if you spoke to them of
friendly joyousness they stared; and they did not understand either
the Laws of Thought or the wit of a German University. Since it was
clear that with such people he could have very little in common, there
was no reason whatever for relaxing in their favour the rules of
etiquette. In strict privacy, he could be natural and charming;
Seymour and Anson were devoted to him, and he returned their
affection; but they were subordinates--the receivers of his
confidences and the agents of his will. From the support and the
solace of true companionship he was utterly cut off.
A friend, indeed, he had--or rather, a mentor. The Baron,
established once more in the royal residence, was determined to work
with as wholehearted a detachment for the Prince's benefit as, more
than twenty years before, he had worked for his uncle's. The
situations then and now, similar in many respects, were yet full of
differences. Perhaps in either case the difficulties to be encountered
were equally great; but the present problem was the more complex and
the more interesting. The young doctor who, unknown and insignificant,
had nothing at the back of him but his own wits and the friendship of
an unimportant Prince, had been replaced by the accomplished confidant
of kings and ministers, ripe in years, in reputation, and in the
wisdom of a vast experience. It was possible for him to treat Albert
with something of the affectionate authority of a father; but, on the
other hand, Albert was no Leopold. As the Baron was very well aware,
he had none of his uncle's rigidity of ambition, none of his
overweening impulse to be personally great. He was virtuous and
well-intentioned; he was clever and well-informed; but he took no
interest in politics, and there were no signs that he possessed any
commanding force of character. Left to himself, he would almost
certainly have subsided into a high-minded nonentity, an aimless
dilettante busy over culture, a palace appendage without influence or
power. But he was not left to himself: Stockmar saw to that. For ever
at his pupil's elbow, the hidden Baron pushed him forward, with
tireless pressure, along the path which had been trod by Leopold so
many years ago. But, this time, the goal at the end of it was
something more than the mediocre royalty that Leopold had reached. The
prize which Stockmar, with all the energy of disinterested devotion,
had determined should be Albert's was a tremendous prize indeed.
The beginning of the undertaking proved to be the most arduous part
of it. Albert was easily dispirited: what was the use of struggling to
perform in a role which bored him and which, it was quite clear,
nobody but the dear good Baron had any desire that he should take up?
It was simpler, and it saved a great deal of trouble, to let things
slide. But Stockmar would not have it. Incessantly, he harped upon two
strings--Albert's sense of duty and his personal pride. Had the Prince
forgotten the noble aims to which his life was to be devoted? And was
he going to allow himself, his wife, his family, his whole existence,
to be governed by Baroness Lehzen? The latter consideration was a
potent one. Albert had never been accustomed to giving way; and now,
more than ever before, it would be humiliating to do so. Not only was
he constantly exasperated by the position of the Baroness in the royal
household; there was another and a still more serious cause of
complaint. He was, he knew very well, his wife's intellectual
superior, and yet he found, to his intense annoyance, that there were
parts of her mind over which he exercised no influence. When, urged on
by the Baron, he attempted to discuss politics with Victoria, she
eluded the subject, drifted into generalities, and then began to talk
of something else. She was treating him as she had once treated their
uncle Leopold. When at last he protested, she replied that her conduct
was merely the result of indolence; that when she was with him she
could not bear to bother her head with anything so dull as politics.
The excuse was worse than the fault: was he the wife and she the
husband? It almost seemed so. But the Baron declared that the root of
the mischief was Lehzen: that it was she who encouraged the Queen to
have secrets; who did worse--undermined the natural ingenuousness of
Victoria, and induced her to give, unconsciously no doubt, false
reasons to explain away her conduct.
Minor disagreements made matters worse. The royal couple differed
in their tastes. Albert, brought up in a regime of Spartan simplicity
and early hours, found the great Court functions intolerably
wearisome, and was invariably observed to be nodding on the sofa at
half-past ten; while the Queen's favourite form of enjoyment was to
dance through the night, and then, going out into the portico of the
Palace, watch the sun rise behind St. Paul's and the towers of
Westminster. She loved London and he detested it. It was only in
Windsor that he felt he could really breathe; but Windsor too had its
terrors: though during the day there he could paint and walk and play
on the piano, after dinner black tedium descended like a pall. He
would have liked to summon distinguished scientific and literary men
to his presence, and after ascertaining their views upon various
points of art and learning, to set forth his own; but unfortunately
Victoria "had no fancy to encourage such people;" knowing that she was
unequal to taking a part in their conversation, she insisted that the
evening routine should remain unaltered; the regulation interchange of
platitudes with official persons was followed as usual by the round
table and the books of engravings, while the Prince, with one of his
attendants, played game after game of double chess.
It was only natural that in so peculiar a situation, in which the
elements of power, passion, and pride were so strangely apportioned,
there should have been occasionally something more than mere
irritation--a struggle of angry wills. Victoria, no more than Albert,
was in the habit of playing second fiddle. Her arbitrary temper
flashed out. Her vitality, her obstinacy, her overweening sense of her
own position, might well have beaten down before them his
superiorities and his rights. But she fought at a disadvantage; she
was, in very truth, no longer her own mistress; a profound
preoccupation dominated her, seizing upon her inmost purposes for its
own extraordinary ends. She was madly in love. The details of those
curious battles are unknown to us; but Prince Ernest, who remained in
England with his brother for some months, noted them with a friendly
and startled eye. One story, indeed, survives, ill-authenticated and
perhaps mythical, yet summing up, as such stories often do, the
central facts of the case. When, in wrath, the Prince one day had
locked himself into his room, Victoria, no less furious, knocked on
the door to be admitted. "Who is there?" he asked. "The Queen of
England" was the answer. He did not move, and again there was a hail
of knocks. The question and the answer were repeated many times; but
at last there was a pause, and then a gentler knocking. "Who is
there?" came once more the relentless question. But this time the
reply was different. "Your wife, Albert." And the door was immediately
opened.
Very gradually the Prince's position changed. He began to find the
study of politics less uninteresting than he had supposed; he read
Blackstone, and took lessons in English Law; he was occasionally
present when the Queen interviewed her Ministers; and at Lord
Melbourne's suggestion he was shown all the despatches relating to
Foreign Affairs. Sometimes he would commit his views to paper, and
read them aloud to the Prime Minister, who, infinitely kind and
courteous, listened with attention, but seldom made any reply. An
important step was taken when, before the birth of the Princess Royal,
the Prince, without any opposition in Parliament, was appointed Regent
in case of the death of the Queen. Stockmar, owing to whose
intervention with the Tories this happy result had been brought about,
now felt himself at liberty to take a holiday with his family in
Coburg; but his solicitude, poured out in innumerable letters, still
watched over his pupil from afar. "Dear Prince," he wrote, "I am
satisfied with the news you have sent me. Mistakes, misunderstandings,
obstructions, which come in vexatious opposition to one's views, are
always to be taken for just what they are--namely, natural phenomena
of life, which represent one of its sides, and that the shady one. In
overcoming them with dignity, your mind has to exercise, to train, to
enlighten itself; and your character to gain force, endurance, and the
necessary hardness." The Prince had done well so far; but he must
continue in the right path; above all, he was "never to relax." "Never
to relax in putting your magnanimity to the proof; never to relax in
logical separation of what is great and essential from what is trivial
and of no moment; never to relax in keeping yourself up to a high
standard--in the determination, daily renewed, to be consistent,
patient, courageous." It was a hard programme perhaps, for a young man
of twenty-one; and yet there was something in it which touched the
very depths of Albert's soul. He sighed, but he listened--listened as
to the voice of a spiritual director inspired with divine truth. "The
stars which are needful to you now," the voice continued, "and perhaps
for some time to come, are Love, Honesty, Truth. All those whose minds
are warped, or who are destitute of true feeling, will BE APT TO
MISTAKE YOU, and to persuade themselves and the world that you are not
the man you are--or, at least, may become... Do you, therefore, be on
the alert be times, with your eyes open in every direction... I wish
for my Prince a great, noble, warm, and true heart, such as shall
serve as the richest and surest basis for the noblest views of human
nature, and the firmest resolve to give them development."
Before long, the decisive moment came. There was a General
Election, and it became certain that the Tories, at last, must come
into power. The Queen disliked them as much as ever; but, with a large
majority in the House of Commons, they would now be in a position to
insist upon their wishes being attended to. Lord Melbourne himself was
the first to realise the importance of carrying out the inevitable
transition with as little friction as possible; and with his consent,
the Prince, following up the rapprochement which had begun over the
Regency Act, opened, through Anson, a negotiation with Sir Robert
Peel. In a series of secret interviews, a complete understanding was
reached upon the difficult and complex question of the Bedchamber. It
was agreed that the constitutional point should not be raised, but
that on the formation of the Tory Government, the principal Whig
ladies should retire, and their places be filled by others appointed
by Sir Robert. Thus, in effect, though not in form, the Crown
abandoned the claims of 1839, and they have never been subsequently
put forward. The transaction was a turning point in the Prince's
career. He had conducted an important negotiation with skill and tact;
he had been brought into close and friendly relations with the new
Prime Minister; it was obvious that a great political future lay
before him. Victoria was much impressed and deeply grateful. "My
dearest Angel," she told King Leopold, "is indeed a great comfort to
me. He takes the greatest interest in what goes on, feeling with and
for me, and yet abstaining as he ought from biasing me either way,
though we talk much on the subject, and his judgment is, as you say,
good and mild." She was in need of all the comfort and assistance he
could give her. Lord M. was going, and she could hardly bring herself
to speak to Peel. Yes; she would discuss everything with Albert now!
Stockmar, who had returned to England, watched the departure of
Lord Melbourne with satisfaction. If all went well, the Prince should
now wield a supreme political influence over Victoria. But would all
go well?? An unexpected development put the Baron into a serious
fright. When the dreadful moment finally came, and the Queen, in
anguish, bade adieu to her beloved Minister, it was settled between
them that, though it would be inadvisable to meet very often, they
could continue to correspond. Never were the inconsistencies of Lord
Melbourne's character shown more clearly than in what followed. So long
as he was in office, his attitude towards Peel had been
irreproachable; he had done all he could to facilitate the change of
government, he had even, through more than one channel, transmitted
privately to his successful rival advice as to the best means of
winning the Queen's good graces. Yet, no sooner was he in opposition
than his heart failed him. He could not bear the thought of
surrendering altogether the privilege and the pleasure of giving
counsel to Victoria--of being cut off completely from the power and
the intimacy which had been his for so long and in such abundant
measure. Though he had declared that he would be perfectly discreet in
his letters, he could not resist taking advantage of the opening they
afforded. He discussed in detail various public questions, and, in
particular, gave the Queen a great deal of advice in the matter of
appointments. This advice was followed. Lord Melbourne recommended
that Lord Heytesbury, who, he said, was an able man, should be made
Ambassador at Vienna; and a week later the Queen wrote to the Foreign
Secretary urging that Lord Heytesbury, whom she believed to be a very
able man, should be employed "on some important mission." Stockmar was
very much alarmed. He wrote a memorandum, pointing out the
unconstitutional nature of Lord Melbourne's proceedings and the
unpleasant position in which the Queen might find herself if they were
discovered by Peel; and he instructed Anson to take this memorandum to
the ex-Minister. Lord Melbourne, lounging on a sofa, read it through
with compressed lips. "This is quite an apple-pie opinion," he said.
When Anson ventured to expostulate further, suggesting that it was
unseemly in the leader of the Opposition to maintain an intimate
relationship with the Sovereign, the old man lost his temper. "God
eternally damn it!" he exclaimed, leaping up from his sofa, and
dashing about the room. "Flesh and blood cannot stand this!" He
continued to write to the Queen, as before; and two more violent
bombardments from the Baron were needed before he was brought to
reason. Then, gradually, his letters grew less and less frequent, with
fewer and fewer references to public concerns; at last, they were
entirely innocuous. The Baron smiled; Lord M. had accepted the
inevitable.
The Whig Ministry resigned in September, 1841; but more than a year
was to elapse before another and an equally momentous change was
effected--the removal of Lehzen. For, in the end, the mysterious
governess was conquered. The steps are unknown by which Victoria was
at last led to accept her withdrawal with composure--perhaps with
relief; but it is clear that Albert's domestic position must have been
greatly strengthened by the appearance of children. The birth of the
Princess Royal had been followed in November, 1841, by that of the
Prince of Wales; and before very long another baby was expected. The
Baroness, with all her affection, could have but a remote share in
such family delights. She lost ground perceptibly. It was noticed as a
phenomenon that, once or twice, when the Court travelled, she was left
behind at Windsor. The Prince was very cautious; at the change of
Ministry, Lord Melbourne had advised him to choose that moment for
decisive action; but he judged it wiser to wait. Time and the pressure
of inevitable circumstances were for him; every day his predominance
grew more assured--and every night. At length he perceived that he
need hesitate no longer--that every wish, every velleity of his had
only to be expressed to be at once Victoria's. He spoke, and Lehzen
vanished for ever. No more would she reign in that royal heart and
those royal halls. No more, watching from a window at Windsor, would
she follow her pupil and her sovereign walking on the terrace among
the obsequious multitude, with the eye of triumphant love. Returning
to her native Hanover she established herself at Buckeburg in a small
but comfortable house, the walls of which were entirely covered by
portraits of Her Majesty. The Baron, in spite of his dyspepsia, smiled
again: Albert was supreme.
IV
The early discords had passed away completely--resolved into the
absolute harmony of married life. Victoria, overcome by a new, an
unimagined revelation, had surrendered her whole soul to her husband.
The beauty and the charm which so suddenly had made her his at first
were, she now saw, no more than but the outward manifestation of the
true Albert. There was an inward beauty, an inward glory which, blind
that she was, she had then but dimly apprehended, but of which now she
was aware in every fibre of her being--he was good--he was great! How
could she ever have dreamt of setting up her will against his wisdom,
her ignorance against his knowledge, her fancies against his perfect
taste? Had she really once loved London and late hours and
dissipation? She who now was only happy in the country, she who jumped
out of bed every morning--oh, so early!--with Albert, to take a walk,
before breakfast, with Albert alone! How wonderful it was to be taught
by him! To be told by him which trees were which; and to learn all
about the bees! And then to sit doing cross-stitch while he read aloud
to her Hallam's Constitutional History of England! Or to listen to him
playing on his new organ "The organ is the first of instruments," he
said); or to sing to him a song by Mendelssohn, with a great deal of
care over the time and the breathing, and only a very occasional false
note! And, after dinner, to--oh, how good of him! He had given up his
double chess! And so there could be round games at the round table, or
everyone could spend the evening in the most amusing way
imaginable--spinning counters and rings.' When the babies came it was
still more wonderful. Pussy was such a clever little girl ("I am not
Pussy! I am the Princess Royal!" she had angrily exclaimed on one
occasion); and Bertie--well, she could only pray MOST fervently that
the little Prince of Wales would grow up to "resemble his angelic
dearest Father in EVERY, EVERY respect, both in body and mind." Her
dear Mamma, too, had been drawn once more into the family circle, for
Albert had brought about a reconciliation, and the departure of Lehzen
had helped to obliterate the past. In Victoria's eyes, life had become
an idyll, and, if the essential elements of an idyll are happiness,
love and simplicity, an idyll it was; though, indeed, it was of a kind
that might have disconcerted Theocritus. "Albert brought in dearest
little Pussy," wrote Her Majesty in her journal, "in such a smart
white merino dress trimmed with blue, which Mamma had given her, and a
pretty cap, and placed her on my bed, seating himself next to her, and
she was very dear and good. And, as my precious, invaluable Albert sat
there, and our little Love between us, I felt quite moved with
happiness and gratitude to God."
The past--the past of only three years since--when she looked back
upon it, seemed a thing so remote and alien that she could explain it
to herself in no other way than as some kind of delusion--an
unfortunate mistake. Turning over an old volume of her diary, she came
upon this sentence--"As for 'the confidence of the Crown,' God knows!
No MINISTER, NO FRIEND, EVER possessed it so entirely as this truly
excellent Lord Melbourne possesses mine!" A pang shot through her--she
seized a pen, and wrote upon the margin--"Reading this again, I cannot
forbear remarking what an artificial sort of happiness MINE was THEN,
and what a blessing it is I have now in my beloved Husband REAL and
solid happiness, which no Politics, no worldly reverses CAN change; it
could not have lasted long as it was then, for after all, kind and
excellent as Lord M. is, and kind as he was to me, it was but in
Society that I had amusement, and I was only living on that
superficial resource, which I THEN FANCIED was happiness! Thank God!
for ME and others, this is changed, and I KNOW WHAT REAL HAPPINESS
IS--V. R." How did she know? What is the distinction between happiness
that is real and happiness that is felt? So a philosopher--Lord M.
himself perhaps--might have inquired. But she was no philosopher, and
Lord M. was a phantom, and Albert was beside her, and that was enough.
Happy, certainly, she was; and she wanted everyone to know it. Her
letters to King Leopold are sprinkled thick with raptures. "Oh! my
dearest uncle, I am sure if you knew HOW happy, how blessed I feel,
and how PROUD I feel in possessing SUCH a perfect being as my
husband..." such ecstasies seemed to gush from her pen unceasingly and
almost of their own accord. When, one day, without thinking, Lady
Lyttelton described someone to her as being "as happy as a queen," and
then grew a little confused, "Don't correct yourself, Lady Lyttelton,"
said Her Majesty. "A queen IS a very happy woman."
But this new happiness was no lotus dream. On the contrary, it was
bracing, rather than relaxing. Never before had she felt so acutely
the necessity for doing her duty. She worked more methodically than
ever at the business of State; she watched over her children with
untiring vigilance. She carried on a large correspondence; she was
occupied with her farm--her dairy--a whole multitude of household
avocations--from morning till night. Her active, eager little body
hurrying with quick steps after the long strides of Albert down the
corridors and avenues of Windsor, seemed the very expression of her
spirit. Amid all the softness, the deliciousness of unmixed joy, all
the liquescence, the overflowings of inexhaustible sentiment, her
native rigidity remained. "A vein of iron," said Lady Lyttelton, who,
as royal governess, had good means of observation, "runs through her
most extraordinary character." Sometimes the delightful routine of
domestic existence had to be interrupted. It was necessary to exchange
Windsor for Buckingham Palace, to open Parliament, or to interview
official personages, or, occasionally, to entertain foreign visitors
at the Castle. Then the quiet Court put on a sudden magnificence, and
sovereigns from over the seas--Louis Philippe, or the King of Prussia,
or the King of Saxony--found at Windsor an entertainment that was
indeed a royal one. Few spectacles in Europe, it was agreed, produced
an effect so imposing as the great Waterloo banqueting hall, crowded
with guests in sparkling diamonds and blazing uniforms, the long walls
hung with the stately portraits of heroes, and the tables loaded with
the gorgeous gold plate of the kings of England. But, in that wealth
of splendour, the most imposing spectacle of all was the Queen. The
little hausfrau, who had spent the day before walking out with her
children, inspecting her livestock, practicing shakes at the piano,
and filling up her journal with adoring descriptions of her husband,
suddenly shone forth, without art, without effort, by a spontaneous
and natural transition, the very culmination of Majesty. The Tsar of
Russia himself was deeply impressed. Victoria on her side viewed with
secret awe the tremendous Nicholas. "A great event and a great
compliment HIS visit certainly is," she told her uncle, "and the
people HERE are extremely flattered at it. He is certainly a VERY
STRIKING man; still very handsome. His profile is BEAUTIFUL and his
manners MOST dignified and graceful; extremely civil--quite alarmingly
so, as he is so full of attentions and POLITENESS. But the expression
of the EYES is FORMIDABLE and unlike anything I ever saw before." She
and Albert and "the good King of Saxony," who happened to be there at
the same time, and whom, she said, "we like much--he is so
unassuming-" drew together like tame villatic fowl in the presence of
that awful eagle. When he was gone, they compared notes about his
face, his unhappiness, and his despotic power over millions. Well! She
for her part could not help pitying him, and she thanked God she was
Queen of England.
When the time came for returning some of these visits, the royal
pair set forth in their yacht, much to Victoria's satisfaction. "I do
love a ship!" she exclaimed, ran up and down ladders with the greatest
agility, and cracked jokes with the sailors. The Prince was more
aloof. They visited Louis Philippe at the Chateau d'Eu; they visited
King Leopold in Brussels. It happened that a still more remarkable
Englishwoman was in the Belgian capital, but she was not remarked; and
Queen Victoria passed unknowing before the steady gaze of one of the
mistresses in M. Heger's pensionnat. "A little stout, vivacious lady,
very plainly dressed--not much dignity or pretension about her," was
Charlotte Bronte's comment as the royal carriage and six flashed by
her, making her wait on the pavement for a moment, and interrupting
the train of her reflections. Victoria was in high spirits, and even
succeeded in instilling a little cheerfulness into her uncle's sombre
Court. King Leopold, indeed, was perfectly contented. His dearest
hopes had been fulfilled; all his ambitions were satisfied; and for
the rest of his life he had only to enjoy, in undisturbed decorum, his
throne, his respectability, the table of precedence, and the punctual
discharge of his irksome duties. But unfortunately the felicity of
those who surrounded him was less complete. His Court, it was
murmured, was as gloomy as a conventicle, and the most dismal of all
the sufferers was his wife. "Pas de plaisanteries, madame!" he had
exclaimed to the unfortunate successor of the Princess Charlotte,
when, in the early days of their marriage, she had attempted a feeble
joke. Did she not understand that the consort of a constitutional
sovereign must not be frivolous? She understood, at last, only too
well; and when the startled walls of the state apartments re-echoed to
the chattering and the laughter of Victoria, the poor lady found that
she had almost forgotten how to smile.
Another year, Germany was visited, and Albert displayed the
beauties of his home. When Victoria crossed the frontier, she was much
excited--and she was astonished as well. "To hear the people speak
German," she noted in her diary, "and to see the German soldiers,
etc., seemed to me so singular." Having recovered from this slight
shock, she found the country charming. She was feted everywhere,
crowds of the surrounding royalties swooped down to welcome her, and
the prettiest groups of peasant children, dressed in their best
clothes, presented her with bunches of flowers. The principality of
Coburg, with its romantic scenery and its well-behaved inhabitants,
particularly delighted her; and when she woke up one morning to find
herself in "dear Rosenau, my Albert's birthplace," it was "like a
beautiful dream." On her return home, she expatiated, in a letter to
King Leopold, upon the pleasures of the trip, dwelling especially upon
the intensity of her affection for Albert's native land. "I have a
feeling," she said, "for our dear little Germany, which I cannot
describe. I felt it at Rosenau so much. It is a something which
touches me, and which goes to my heart, and makes me inclined to cry.
I never felt at any other place that sort of pensive pleasure and
peace which I felt there. I fear I almost like it too much."
V
The husband was not so happy as the wife. In spite of the great
improvement in his situation, in spite of a growing family and the
adoration of Victoria, Albert was still a stranger in a strange land,
and the serenity of spiritual satisfaction was denied him. It was
something, no doubt, to have dominated his immediate environment; but
it was not enough; and, besides, in the very completeness of his
success, there was a bitterness. Victoria idolised him; but it was
understanding that he craved for, not idolatry; and how much did
Victoria, filled to the brim though she was with him, understand him?
How much does the bucket understand the well? He was lonely. He went
to his organ and improvised with learned modulations until the sounds,
swelling and subsiding through elaborate cadences, brought some solace
to his heart. Then, with the elasticity of youth, he hurried off to
play with the babies, or to design a new pigsty, or to read aloud the
"Church History of Scotland" to Victoria, or to pirouette before her
on one toe, like a ballet-dancer, with a fixed smile, to show her how
she ought to behave when she appeared in public places. Thus did he
amuse himself; but there was one distraction in which he did not
indulge. He never flirted--no, not with the prettiest ladies of the
Court. When, during their engagement, the Queen had remarked with
pride to Lord Melbourne that the Prince paid no attention to any other
woman, the cynic had answered, "No, that sort of thing is apt to come
later;" upon which she had scolded him severely, and then hurried off
to Stockmar to repeat what Lord M. had said. But the Baron had
reassured her; though in other cases, he had replied, that might
happen, he did not think it would in Albert's. And the Baron was
right. Throughout their married life no rival female charms ever had
cause to give Victoria one moment's pang of jealosy
What more and more absorbed him--bringing with it a curious comfort
of its own--was his work. With the advent of Peel, he began to
intervene actively in the affairs of the State. In more ways than
one--in the cast of their intelligence, in their moral earnestness,
even in the uneasy formalism of their manners--the two men resembled
each other; there was a sympathy between them; and thus Peel was ready
enough to listen to the advice of Stockmar, and to urge the Prince
forward into public life. A royal commission was about to be formed to
enquire whether advantage might not be taken of the rebuilding of the
Houses of Parliament to encourage the Fine Arts in the United Kingdom;
and Peel, with great perspicacity, asked the Prince to preside over
it. The work was of a kind which precisely suited Albert: his love of
art, his love of method, his love of coming into contact--close yet
dignified--with distinguished men--it satisfied them all; and he threw
himself into it con amore. Some of the members of the commission were
somewhat alarmed when, in his opening speech, he pointed out the
necessity of dividing the subjects to be considered into "categories-"
the word, they thought, smacked dangerously of German metaphysics; but
their confidence returned when they observed His Royal Highness's
extraordinary technical acquaintance with the processes of fresco
painting. When the question arose as to whether the decorations upon
the walls of the new buildings should, or should not, have a moral
purpose, the Prince spoke strongly for the affirmative. Although many,
he observed, would give but a passing glance to the works, the painter
was not therefore to forget that others might view them with more
thoughtful eyes. This argument convinced the commission, and it was
decided that the subjects to be depicted should be of an improving
nature. The frescoes were carried out in accordance with the
commission's instructions, but unfortunately before very long they had
become, even to the most thoughtful eyes, totally invisible. It seems
that His Royal Highness's technical acquaintance with the processes of
fresco painting was incomplete!
The next task upon which the Prince embarked was a more arduous
one: he determined to reform the organisation of the royal household.
This reform had been long overdue. For years past the confusion,
discomfort, and extravagance in the royal residences, and in
Buckingham Palace particularly, had been scandalous; no reform had
been practicable under the rule of the Baroness; but her functions had
now devolved upon the Prince, and in 1844, he boldly attacked the
problem. Three years earlier, Stockmar, after careful enquiry, had
revealed in an elaborate memorandum an extraordinary state of affairs.
The control of the household, it appeared, was divided in the
strangest manner between a number of authorities, each independent of
the other, each possessed of vague and fluctuating powers, without
responsibility, and without co-ordination. Of these authorities, the
most prominent were the Lord Steward and the Lord
Chamberlain--noblemen of high rank and political importance, who
changed office with every administration, who did not reside with the
Court, and had no effective representatives attached to it. The
distribution of their respective functions was uncertain and peculiar.
In Buckingham Palace, it was believed that the Lord Chamberlain had
charge of the whole of the rooms, with the exception of the kitchen,
sculleries, and pantries, which were claimed by the Lord Steward. At
the same time, the outside of the Palace was under the control of
neither of these functionaries--but of the Office of Woods and
Forests; and thus, while the insides of the windows were cleaned by
the Department of the Lord Chamberlain--or possibly, in certain cases,
of the Lord Steward--the Office of Woods and Forests cleaned their
outsides. Of the servants, the housekeepers, the pages, and the
housemaids were under the authority of the Lord Chamberlain; the clerk
of the kitchen, the cooks, and the porters were under that of the Lord
Steward; but the footmen, the livery-porters, and the under-butlers
took their orders from yet another official--the Master of the Horse.
Naturally, in these circumstances the service was extremely defective
and the lack of discipline among the servants disgraceful. They
absented themselves for as long as they pleased and whenever the fancy
took them; "and if," as the Baron put it, "smoking, drinking, and
other irregularities occur in the dormitories, where footmen, etc.,
sleep ten and twelve in each room, no one can help it." As for Her
Majesty's guests, there was nobody to show them to their rooms, and
they were often left, having utterly lost their way in the complicated
passages, to wander helpless by the hour. The strange divisions of
authority extended not only to persons but to things. The Queen
observed that there was never a fire in the dining-room. She enquired
why. The answer was "the Lord Steward lays the fire, and the Lord
Chamberlain lights it;" the underlings of those two great noblemen
having failed to come to an accommodation, there was no help for
it--the Queen must eat in the cold.
A surprising incident opened everyone's eyes to the confusion and
negligence that reigned in the Palace. A fortnight after the birth of
the Princess Royal the nurse heard a suspicious noise in the room next
to the Queen's bedroom. She called to one of the pages, who, looking
under a large sofa, perceived there a crouching figure "with a most
repulsive appearance." It was "the boy Jones." This enigmatical
personage, whose escapades dominated the newspapers for several
ensuing months, and whose motives and character remained to the end
ambiguous, was an undersized lad of 17, the son of a tailor, who had
apparently gained admittance to the Palace by climbing over the garden
wall and walking in through an open window. Two years before he had
paid a similar visit in the guise of a chimney-sweep. He now declared
that he had spent three days in the Palace, hiding under various beds,
that he had "helped himself to soup and other eatables," and that he
had "sat upon the throne, seen the Queen, and heard the Princess Royal
squall." Every detail of the strange affair was eagerly canvassed. The
Times reported that the boy Jones had "from his infancy been fond of
reading," but that "his countenance is exceedingly sullen." It added:
"The sofa under which the boy Jones was discovered, we understand, is
one of the most costly and magnificent material and workmanship, and
ordered expressly for the accommodation of the royal and illustrious
visitors who call to pay their respects to Her Majesty." The culprit
was sent for three months to the "House of Correction." When he
emerged, he immediately returned to Buckingham Palace. He was
discovered, and sent back to the "House of Correction" for another
three months, after which he was offered L4 a week by a music hall to
appear upon the stage. He refused this offer, and shortly afterwards
was found by the police loitering round Buckingham Palace. The
authorities acted vigorously, and, without any trial or process of
law, shipped the boy Jones off to sea. A year later his ship put into
Portsmouth to refit, and he at once disembarked and walked to London.
He was re-arrested before he reached the Palace, and sent back to his
ship, the Warspite. On this occasion it was noticed that he had "much
improved in personal appearance and grown quite corpulent;" and so the
boy Jones passed out of history, though we catch one last glimpse of
him in 1844 falling overboard in the night between Tunis and Algiers.
He was fished up again; but it was conjectured--as one of the
Warspite's officers explained in a letter to The Times--that his fall
had not been accidental, but that he had deliberately jumped into the
Mediterranean in order to "see the life-buoy light burning." Of a boy
with such a record, what else could be supposed?
But discomfort and alarm were not the only results of the
mismanagement of the household; the waste, extravagance, and
peculation that also flowed from it were immeasurable. There were
preposterous perquisites and malpractices of every kind. It was, for
instance, an ancient and immutable rule that a candle that had once
been lighted should never be lighted again; what happened to the old
candles, nobody knew. Again, the Prince, examining the accounts, was
puzzled by a weekly expenditure of thirty-five shillings on "Red Room
Wine." He enquired into the matter, and after great difficulty
discovered that in the time of George III a room in Windsor Castle
with red hangings had once been used as a guard-room, and that five
shillings a day had been allowed to provide wine for the officers. The
guard had long since been moved elsewhere, but the payment for wine in
the Red Room continued, the money being received by a half-pay officer
who held the sinecure position of under-butler.
After much laborious investigation, and a stiff struggle with the
multitude of vested interests which had been brought into being by
long years of neglect, the Prince succeeded in effecting a complete
reform. The various conflicting authorities were induced to resign
their powers into the hands of a single official, the Master of the
Household, who became responsible for the entire management of the
royal palaces. Great economies were made, and the whole crowd of
venerable abuses was swept away. Among others, the unlucky half-pay
officer of the Red Room was, much to his surprise, given the choice of
relinquishing his weekly emolument or of performing the duties of an
under-butler. Even the irregularities among the footmen, etc., were
greatly diminished. There were outcries and complaints; the Prince was
accused of meddling, of injustice, and of saving candle-ends; but he
held on his course, and before long the admirable administration of
the royal household was recognised as a convincing proof of his
perseverance and capacity.
At the same time his activity was increasing enormously in a more
important sphere. He had become the Queen's Private Secretary, her
confidential adviser, her second self. He was now always present at
her interviews with Ministers. He took, like the Queen, a special
interest in foreign policy; but there was no public question in which
his influence was not felt. A double process was at work; while
Victoria fell more and more absolutely under his intellectual
predominance, he, simultaneously, grew more and more completely
absorbed by the machinery of high politics--the incessant and
multifarious business of a great State. Nobody any more could call him
a dilettante; he was a worker, a public personage, a man of affairs.
Stockmar noted the change with exultation. "The Prince," he wrote,
"has improved very much lately. He has evidently a head for politics.
He has become, too, far more independent. His mental activity is
constantly on the increase, and he gives the greater part of his time
to business, without complaining."
"The relations between husband and wife," added the Baron, "are all
one could desire."
Long before Peel's ministry came to an end, there had been a
complete change in Victoria's attitude towards him. His appreciation
of the Prince had softened her heart; the sincerity and warmth of his
nature, which, in private intercourse with those whom he wished to
please, had the power of gradually dissipating the awkwardness of his
manners, did the rest. She came in time to regard him with intense
feelings of respect and attachment. She spoke of "our worthy Peel,"
for whom, she said, she had "an EXTREME admiration" and who had shown
himself "a man of unbounded LOYALTY, COURAGE patriotism, and
HIGH-MINDEDNESS, and his conduct towards me has been CHIVALROUS
almost, I might say." She dreaded his removal from office almost as
frantically as she had once dreaded that of Lord M. It would be, she
declared, a GREAT CALAMITY. Six years before, what would she have
said, if a prophet had told her that the day would come when she would
be horrified by the triumph of the Whigs? Yet there was no escaping
it; she had to face the return of her old friends. In the ministerial
crises of 1845 and 1846, the Prince played a dominating part.
Everybody recognised that he was the real centre of the
negotiations--the actual controller of the forces and the functions of
the Crown. The process by which this result was reached had been so
gradual as to be almost imperceptible; but it may be said with
certainty that, by the close of Peel's administration, Albert had
become, in effect, the King of England.
VI
With the final emergence of the Prince came the final extinction of
Lord Melbourne. A year after his loss of office, he had been struck
down by a paralytic seizure; he had apparently recovered, but his old
elasticity had gone for ever. Moody, restless, and unhappy, he
wandered like a ghost about the town, bursting into soliloquies in
public places, or asking odd questions, suddenly, a propos de bottes.
"I'll be hanged if I do it for you, my Lord," he was heard to say in
the hall at Brooks's, standing by himself, and addressing the air
after much thought. "Don't you consider," he abruptly asked a
fellow-guest at Lady Holland's, leaning across the dinner-table in a
pause of the conversation, "that it was a most damnable act of Henri
Quatre to change his religion with a view to securing the Crown?" He
sat at home, brooding for hours in miserable solitude. He turned over
his books--his classics and his Testaments--but they brought him no
comfort at all. He longed for the return of the past, for the
impossible, for he knew not what, for the devilries of Caro, for the
happy platitudes of Windsor. His friends had left him, and no wonder,
he said in bitterness--the fire was out. He secretly hoped for a
return to power, scanning the newspapers with solicitude, and
occasionally making a speech in the House of Lords. His correspondence
with the Queen continued, and he appeared from time to time at Court;
but he was a mere simulacrum of his former self; "the dream," wrote
Victoria, "is past." As for his political views, they could no longer
be tolerated. The Prince was an ardent Free Trader, and so, of course,
was the Queen; and when, dining at Windsor at the time of the repeal
of the Corn Laws, Lord Melbourne suddenly exclaimed, "Ma'am, it's a
damned dishonest act!" everyone was extremely embarrassed. Her Majesty
laughed and tried to change the conversation, but without avail; Lord
Melbourne returned to the charge again and again with--"I say, Ma'am,
it's damned dishonest!"--until the Queen said "Lord Melbourne, I must
beg you not to say anything more on this subject now;" and then he held
his tongue. She was kind to him, writing him long letters, and always
remembering his birthday; but it was kindness at a distance, and he
knew it. He had become "poor Lord Melbourne." A profound disquietude
devoured him. He tried to fix his mind on the condition of Agriculture
and the Oxford Movement. He wrote long memoranda in utterly
undecipherable handwriting. He was convinced that he had lost all his
money, and could not possibly afford to be a Knight of the Garter. He
had run through everything, and yet--if Peel went out, he might be
sent for--why not? He was never sent for. The Whigs ignored him in
their consultations, and the leadership of the party passed to Lord
John Russell. When Lord John became Prime Minister, there was much
politeness, but Lord Melbourne was not asked to join the Cabinet. He
bore the blow with perfect amenity; but he understood, at last, that
that was the end.
For two years more he lingered, sinking slowly into unconsciousness
and imbecility. Sometimes, propped up in his chair, he would be heard
to murmur, with unexpected appositeness, the words of Samson:--
"So much I feel my general spirit droop, My hopes all flat, nature
within me seems, In all her functions weary of herself, My race of
glory run, and race of shame, And I shall shortly be with them that rest."
A few days before his death, Victoria, learning that there was no
hope of his recovery, turned her mind for a little towards that which
had once been Lord M. "You will grieve to hear," she told King
Leopold, "that our good, dear, old friend Melbourne is dying... One
cannot forget how good and kind and amiable he was, and it brings back
so many recollections to my mind, though, God knows! I never wish that
time back again."
She was in little danger. The tide of circumstance was flowing now
with irresistible fullness towards a very different consummation. The
seriousness of Albert, the claims of her children, her own inmost
inclinations, and the movement of the whole surrounding world,
combined to urge her forward along the narrow way of public and
domestic duty. Her family steadily increased. Within eighteen months
of the birth of the Prince of Wales the Princess Alice appeared, and a
year later the Prince Alfred, and then the Princess Helena, and, two
years afterwards, the Princess Louise; and still there were signs that
the pretty row of royal infants was not complete. The parents, more and
more involved in family cares and family happiness, found the pomp of
Windsor galling, and longed for some more intimate and remote retreat.
On the advice of Peel they purchased the estate of Osborne, in the
Isle of Wight. Their skill and economy in financial matters had
enabled them to lay aside a substantial sum of money; and they could
afford, out of their savings, not merely to buy the property but to
build a new house for themselves and to furnish it at a cost of
L200,000. At Osborne, by the sea-shore, and among the woods, which
Albert, with memories of Rosenau in his mind, had so carefully
planted, the royal family spent every hour that could be snatched from
Windsor and London--delightful hours of deep retirement and peaceful
work. The public looked on with approval. A few aristocrats might
sniff or titter; but with the nation at large the Queen was now once
more extremely popular. The middle-classes, in particular, were
pleased. They liked a love-match; they liked a household which
combined the advantages of royalty and virtue, and in which they
seemed to see, reflected as in some resplendent looking-glass, the
ideal image of the very lives they led themselves. Their own
existences, less exalted, but oh! so soothingly similar, acquired an
added excellence, an added succulence, from the early hours, the
regularity, the plain tuckers, the round games, the roast beef and
Yorkshire pudding oft Osborne. It was indeed a model Court. Not only
were its central personages the patterns of propriety, but no breath
of scandal, no shadow of indecorum, might approach its utmost
boundaries. For Victoria, with all the zeal of a convert, upheld now
the standard of moral purity with an inflexibility surpassing, if that
were possible, Albert's own. She blushed to think how she had once
believed--how she had once actually told HIM--that one might be too
strict and particular in such matters, and that one ought to be
indulgent towards other people's dreadful sins. But she was no longer
Lord M's pupil: she was Albert's wife. She was more--the embodiment,
the living apex of a new era in the generations of mankind. The last
vestige of the eighteenth century had disappeared; cynicism and
subtlety were shrivelled into powder; and duty, industry, morality,
and domesticity triumphed over them. Even the very chairs and tables
had assumed, with a singular responsiveness, the forms of prim
solidity. The Victorian Age was in full swing.
VII
Only one thing more was needed: material expression must be given
to the new ideals and the new forces so that they might stand
revealed, in visible glory, before the eyes of an astonished world. It
was for Albert to supply this want. He mused, and was inspired: the
Great Exhibition came into his head.
Without consulting anyone, he thought out the details of his
conception with the minutest care. There had been exhibitions before
in the world, but this should surpass them all. It should contain
specimens of what every country could produce in raw materials, in
machinery and mechanical inventions, in manufactures, and in the
applied and plastic arts. It should not be merely useful and
ornamental; it should teach a high moral lesson. It should be an
international monument to those supreme blessings of
civilisation--peace, progress, and prosperity. For some time past the
Prince had been devoting much of his attention to the problems of
commerce and industry. He had a taste for machinery of every kind, and
his sharp eye had more than once detected, with the precision of an
expert, a missing cog-wheel in some vast and complicated engine. A
visit to Liverpool, where he opened the Albert Dock, impressed upon
his mind the immensity of modern industrial forces, though in a letter
to Victoria describing his experiences, he was careful to retain his
customary lightness of touch. "As I write," he playfully remarked,
"you will be making your evening toilette, and not be ready in time
for dinner. I must set about the same task, and not, let me hope, with
the same result... The loyalty and enthusiasm of the inhabitants are
great; but the heat is greater still. I am satisfied that if the
population of Liverpool had been weighed this morning, and were to be
weighed again now, they would be found many degrees lighter. The docks
are wonderful, and the mass of shipping incredible. In art and science
he had been deeply interested since boyhood; his reform of the
household had put his talent for organisation beyond a doubt; and thus
from every point of view the Prince was well qualified for his task.
Having matured his plans, he summoned a small committee and laid an
outline of his scheme before it. The committee approved, and the great
undertaking was set on foot without delay.
Two years, however, passed before it was completed. For two years
the Prince laboured with extraordinary and incessant energy. At first
all went smoothly. The leading manufacturers warmly took up the idea;
the colonies and the East India Company were sympathetic; the great
foreign nations were eager to send in their contributions; the
powerful support of Sir Robert Peel was obtained, and the use of a
site in Hyde Park, selected by the Prince, was sanctioned by the
Government. Out of 234 plans for the exhibition building, the Prince
chose that of Joseph Paxton, famous as a designer of gigantic
conservatories; and the work was on the point of being put in hand
when a series of unexpected difficulties arose. Opposition to the
whole scheme, which had long been smouldering in various quarters,
suddenly burst forth. There was an outcry, headed by The Times,
against the use of the park for the exhibition; for a moment it seemed
as if the building would be relegated to a suburb; but, after a fierce
debate in the House, the supporters of the site in the Park won the
day. Then it appeared that the project lacked a sufficient financial
backing; but this obstacle, too, was surmounted, and eventually
L200,000 was subscribed as a guarantee fund. The enormous glass
edifice rose higher and higher, covering acres and enclosing towering
elm trees beneath its roof: and then the fury of its enemies reached a
climax. The fashionable, the cautious, the Protectionists, the pious,
all joined in the hue and cry. It was pointed out that the Exhibition
would serve as a rallying point for all the ruffians in England, for
all the malcontents in Europe; and that on the day of its opening
there would certainly be a riot and probably a revolution. It was
asserted that the glass roof was porous, and that the droppings of
fifty million sparrows would utterly destroy every object beneath it.
Agitated nonconformists declared that the Exhibition was an arrogant
and wicked enterprise which would infallibly bring down God's
punishment upon the nation. Colonel Sibthorpe, in the debate on the
Address, prayed that hail and lightning might descend from heaven on
the accursed thing. The Prince, with unyielding perseverance and
infinite patience, pressed on to his goal. His health was seriously
affected; he suffered from constant sleeplessness; his strength was
almost worn out. But he remembered the injunctions of Stockmar and
never relaxed. The volume of his labours grew more prodigious every
day; he toiled at committees, presided over public meetings, made
speeches, and carried on communications with every corner of the
civilised world--and his efforts were rewarded. On May 1, 1851, the
Great Exhibition was opened by the Queen before an enormous concourse
of persons, amid scenes of dazzling brilliancy and triumphant
enthusiasm.
Victoria herself was in a state of excitement which bordered on
delirium. She performed her duties in a trance of joy, gratitude, and
amazement, and, when it was all over, her feelings poured themselves
out into her journal in a torrential flood. The day had been nothing
but an endless succession of glories--or rather one vast glory--one
vast radiation of Albert. Everything she had seen, everything she had
felt or heard, had been so beautiful, so wonderful that even the royal
underlinings broke down under the burden of emphasis, while her
remembering pen rushed on, regardless, from splendour to
splendour--the huge crowds, so well--behaved and loyal-flags of all
the nations floating--the inside of the building, so immense, with
myriads of people and the sun shining through the roof--a little side
room, where we left our shawls--palm-trees and machinery--dear
Albert--the place so big that we could hardly hear the
organ--thankfulness to God--a curious assemblage of political and
distinguished men--the March from Athalie--God bless my dearest
Albert, God bless my dearest country!--a glass fountain--the Duke and
Lord Anglesey walking arm in arm--a beautiful Amazon, in bronze, by
Kiss--Mr. Paxton, who might be justly proud, and rose from being a
common gardener's boy--Sir George Grey in tears, and everybody
astonished and delighted.
A striking incident occurred when, after a short prayer by the
Archbishop of Canterbury, the choir of 600 voices burst into the
"Hallelujah Chorus." At that moment a Chinaman, dressed in full
national costume, stepped out into the middle of the central nave,
and, advancing slowly towards the royal group, did obeisance to Her
Majesty. The Queen, much impressed, had no doubt that he was an
eminent mandarin; and, when the final procession was formed, orders
were given that, as no representative of the Celestial Empire was
present, he should be included in the diplomatic cortege. He
accordingly, with the utmost gravity, followed immediately behind the
Ambassadors. He subsequently disappeared, and it was rumoured, among
ill-natured people, that, far from being a mandarin, the fellow was a
mere impostor. But nobody ever really discovered the nature of the
comments that had been lurking behind the matchless impassivity of
that yellow face.
A few days later Victoria poured out her heart to her uncle. The
first of May, she said, was "the GREATEST day in our history, the most
BEAUTIFUL and IMPOSING and TOUCHING spectacle ever seen, and the
triumph of my beloved Albert... It was the HAPPIEST, PROUDEST day in
my life, and I can think of nothing else. Albert's dearest name is
immortalised with this GREAT conception, HIS own, and my OWN dear
country SHOWED she was WORTHY of it. The triumph is IMMENSE."
It was. The enthusiasm was universal; even the bitterest scoffers
were converted, and joined in the chorus of praise. Congratulations
from public bodies poured in; the City of Paris gave a great fete to
the Exhibition committee; and the Queen and the Prince made a
triumphal progress through the North of England. The financial results
were equally remarkable. The total profit made by the Exhibition
amounted to a sum of L165,000, which was employed in the purchase of
land for the erection of a permanent National Museum in South
Kensington. During the six months of its existence in Hyde Park over
six million persons visited it, and not a single accident occurred.
But there is an end to all things; and the time had come for the
Crystal Palace to be removed to the salubrious seclusion of Sydenham.
Victoria, sad but resigned, paid her final visit. "It looked so
beautiful," she said. "I could not believe it was the last time I was
to see it. An organ, accompanied by a fine and powerful wind
instrument called the sommerophone, was being played, and it nearly
upset me. The canvas is very dirty, the red curtains are faded and
many things are very much soiled, still the effect is fresh and new as
ever and most beautiful. The glass fountain was already removed... and
the sappers and miners were rolling about the little boxes just as
they did at the beginning. It made us all very melancholy." But more
cheerful thoughts followed. When all was over, she expressed her
boundless satisfaction in a dithyrambic letter to the Prime Minister.
Her beloved husband's name, she said, was for ever immortalised, and
that this was universally recognised by the country was a source to
her of immense happiness and gratitude. "She feels grateful to
Providence," Her Majesty concluded, "to have permitted her to be
united to so great, so noble, so excellent a Prince, and this year
will ever remain the proudest and happiest of her life. The day of the
closing of the Exhibition (which the Queen regretted much she could
not witness), was the twelfth anniversary of her betrothal to the
Prince, which is a curious coincidence."
In 1851 the Prince's fortunes reached their high-water mark. The
success of the Great Exhibition enormously increased his reputation
and seemed to assure him henceforward a leading place in the national
life. But before the year was out another triumph, in a very different
sphere of action, was also his. This triumph, big with fateful
consequences, was itself the outcome of a series of complicated
circumstances which had been gathering to a climax for many years.
The unpopularity of Albert in high society had not diminished with
time. Aristocratic persons continued to regard him with disfavour; and
he on his side, withdrew further and further into a contemptuous
reserve. For a moment, indeed, it appeared as if the dislike of the
upper classes was about to be suddenly converted into cordiality; for
they learnt with amazement that the Prince, during a country visit,
had ridden to hounds and acquitted himself remarkably well. They had
always taken it for granted that his horsemanship was of some
second-rate foreign quality, and here he was jumping five-barred gates
and tearing after the fox as if he had been born and bred in
Leicestershire. They could hardly believe it; was it possible that
they had made a mistake, and that Albert was a good fellow after all?
Had he wished to be thought so he would certainly have seized this
opportunity, purchased several hunters, and used them constantly. But
he had no such desire; hunting bored him, and made Victoria nervous.
He continued, as before, to ride, as he himself put it, for exercise
or convenience, not for amusement; and it was agreed that though the
Prince, no doubt, could keep in his saddle well enough, he was no
sportsman.
This was a serious matter. It was not merely that Albert was
laughed at by fine ladies and sneered at by fine gentlemen; it was not
merely that Victoria, who before her marriage had cut some figure in
society, had, under her husband's influence, almost completely given
it up. Since Charles the Second the sovereigns of England had, with a
single exception, always been unfashionable; and the fact that the
exception was George the Fourth seemed to give an added significance
to the rule. What was grave was not the lack of fashion, but the lack
of other and more important qualities. The hostility of the upper
classes was symptomatic of an antagonism more profound than one of
manners or even of tastes. The Prince, in a word, was un-English. What
that word precisely meant it was difficult to say; but the fact was
patent to every eye. Lord Palmerston, also, was not fashionable; the
great Whig aristocrats looked askance at him, and only tolerated him
as an unpleasant necessity thrust upon them by fate. But Lord
Palmerston was English through and through, there was something in him
that expressed, with extraordinary vigour, the fundamental qualities
of the English race. And he was the very antithesis of the Prince. By
a curious chance it so happened that this typical Englishman was
brought into closer contact than any other of his countrymen with the
alien from over the sea. It thus fell out that differences which, in
more fortunate circumstances, might have been smoothed away and
obliterated, became accentuated to the highest pitch. All the
mysterious forces in Albert's soul leapt out to do battle with his
adversary, and, in the long and violent conflict that followed, it
almost seemed as if he was struggling with England herself.
Palmerston's whole life had been spent in the government of the
country. At twenty-two he had been a Minister; at twenty-five he had
been offered the Chancellorship of the Exchequer, which, with that
prudence which formed so unexpected a part of his character, he had
declined to accept. His first spell of office had lasted
uninterruptedly for twenty-one years. When Lord Grey came into power
he received the Foreign Secretaryship, a post which he continued to
occupy, with two intervals, for another twenty-one years. Throughout
this period his reputation with the public had steadily grown, and
when, in 1846, he became Foreign Secretary for the third time, his
position in the country was almost, if not quite, on an equality with
that of the Prime Minister, Lord John Russell. He was a tall, big man
of sixty-two, with a jaunty air, a large face, dyed whiskers, and a
long sardonic upper lip. His private life was far from respectable,
but he had greatly strengthened his position in society by marrying,
late in life, Lady Cowper, the sister of Lord Melbourne, and one of
the most influential of the Whig hostesses. Powerful, experienced, and
supremely self-confident, he naturally paid very little attention to
Albert. Why should he? The Prince was interested in foreign affairs?
Very well, then; let the Prince pay attention to him--to him, who had
been a Cabinet Minister when Albert was in the cradle, who was the
chosen leader of a great nation, and who had never failed in anything
he had undertaken in the whole course of his life. Not that he wanted
the Prince's attention--far from it: so far as he could see, Albert
was merely a young foreigner, who suffered from having no vices, and
whose only claim to distinction was that he had happened to marry the
Queen of England. This estimate, as he found out to his cost, was a
mistaken one. Albert was by no means insignificant, and, behind
Albert, there was another figure by no means insignificant
either--there was Stockmar.
But Palmerston, busy with his plans, his ambitions, and the
management of a great department, brushed all such considerations on
one side; it was his favourite method of action. He lived by
instinct--by a quick eye and a strong hand, a dexterous management of
every crisis as it arose, a half-unconscious sense of the vital
elements in a situation. He was very bold; and nothing gave him more
exhilaration than to steer the ship of state in a high wind, on a
rough sea, with every stitch of canvas on her that she could carry.
But there is a point beyond which boldness becomes rashness--a point
perceptible only to intuition and not to reason; and beyond that point
Palmerston never went. When he saw that the cast demanded it, he could
go slow--very slow indeed in fact, his whole career, so full of
vigorous adventure, was nevertheless a masterly example of the
proverb, "tout vient a point a qui sait attendre." But when he decided
to go quick, nobody went quicker. One day, returning from Osborne, he
found that he had missed the train to London; he ordered a special,
but the station master told him that to put a special train upon the
line at that time of day would be dangerous and he could not allow it.
Palmerston insisted declaring that he had important business in
London, which could not wait. The station-master supported by all the
officials, continued to demur the company, he said, could not possibly
take the responsibility. "On MY responsibility, then!" said
Palmerston, in his off-hand, peremptory way whereupon the
station-master ordered up the train and the Foreign Secretary reached
London in time for his work, without an accident. The story, is
typical of the happy valiance with which he conducted both his own
affairs and those of the nation. "England," he used to say, "is strong
enough to brave consequences." Apparently, under Palmerston's
guidance, she was. While the officials protested and shook in their
shoes, he would wave them away with his airy "MY responsibility!" and
carry the country swiftly along the line of his choice, to a
triumphant destination--without an accident. His immense popularity was
the result partly of his diplomatic successes, partly of his
extraordinary personal affability, but chiefly of the genuine
intensity with which he responded to the feelings and supported the
interests of his countrymen. The public knew that it had in Lord
Palmerston not only a high-mettled master, but also a devoted
servant--that he was, in every sense of the word, a public man. When
he was Prime Minister, he noticed that iron hurdles had been put up on
the grass in the Green Park; he immediately wrote to the Minister
responsible, ordering, in the severest language, their instant
removal, declaring that they were "an intolerable nuisance," and that
the purpose of the grass was "to be walked upon freely and without
restraint by the people, old and young, for whose enjoyment the parks
are maintained." It was in this spirit that, as Foreign Secretary, he
watched over the interests of Englishmen abroad. Nothing could be more
agreeable for Englishmen; but foreign governments were less pleased.
They found Lord Palmerston interfering, exasperating, and alarming. In
Paris they spoke with bated breath of "ce terrible milord Palmerston;"
and in Germany they made a little song about him--
"Hat der Teufel einen Sohn,
So ist er sicher Palmerston."
But their complaints, their threats, and their agitations were all
in vain. Palmerston, with his upper lip sardonically curving, braved
consequences, and held on his course.
The first diplomatic crisis which arose after his return to office,
though the Prince and the Queen were closely concerned with it, passed
off without serious disagreement between the Court and the Minister.
For some years past a curious problem had been perplexing the
chanceries of Europe. Spain, ever since the time of Napoleon a prey to
civil convulsions, had settled down for a short interval to a state of
comparative quiet under the rule of Christina, the Queen Mother, and
her daughter Isabella, the young Queen. In 1846, the question of
Isabella's marriage, which had for long been the subject of diplomatic
speculations, suddenly became acute. Various candidates for her hand
were proposed--among others, two cousins of her own, another Spanish
prince, and Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg, a first cousin of
Victoria's and Albert's; for different reasons, however, none of these
young men seemed altogether satisfactory. Isabella was not yet
sixteen; and it might have been supposed that her marriage could be
put off for a few years more; but this was considered to be out of the
question. "Vous ne savez pas," said a high authority, "ce que c'est
que ces princesses espagnoles; elles ont le diable au corps, et on a
toujours dit que si nous ne nous hations pas, l'heritier viendrait
avant le mari." It might also have been supposed that the young
Queen's marriage was a matter to be settled by herself, her mother,
and the Spanish Government; but this again was far from being the
case. It had become, by one of those periodical reversions to the ways
of the eighteenth century, which, it is rumoured, are still not
unknown in diplomacy, a question of dominating importance in the
foreign policies both of France and England. For several years, Louis
Philippe and his Prime Minister Guizot had been privately maturing a
very subtle plan. It was the object of the French King to repeat the
glorious coup of Louis XIV, and to abolish the Pyrenees by placing one
of his grandsons on the throne of Spain. In order to bring this about,
he did not venture to suggest that his younger son, the Duc de
Montpensier, should marry Isabella; that would have been too obvious a
move, which would have raised immediate and insurmountable opposition.
He therefore proposed that Isabella should marry her cousin, the Duke
of Cadiz, while Montpensier married Isabella's younger sister, the
Infanta Fernanda; and pray, what possible objection could there be to
that? The wily old King whispered into the chaste ears of Guizot the
key to the secret; he had good reason to believe that the Duke of
Cadiz was incapable of having children, and therefore the offspring of
Fernanda would inherit the Spanish crown. Guizot rubbed his hands, and
began at once to set the necessary springs in motion; but, of course,
the whole scheme was very soon divulged and understood. The English
Government took an extremely serious view of the matter; the balance
of power was clearly at stake, and the French intrigue must be
frustrated at all hazards. A diplomatic struggle of great intensity
followed; and it occasionally appeared that a second War of the
Spanish Succession was about to break out. This was avoided, but the
consequences of this strange imbroglio were far-reaching and
completely different from what any of the parties concerned could have
guessed.
In the course of the long and intricate negotiations there was one
point upon which Louis Philippe laid a special stress--the candidature
of Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg. The prospect of a marriage between a
Coburg Prince and the Queen of Spain was, he declared, at least as
threatening to the balance of power in Europe as that of a marriage
between the Duc de Montpensier and the Infanta; and, indeed, there was
much to be said for this contention. The ruin which had fallen upon
the House of Coburg during the Napoleonic wars had apparently only
served to multiply its vitality, for that princely family had by now
extended itself over Europe in an extraordinary manner. King Leopold
was firmly fixed in Belgium; his niece was Queen of England; one of
his nephews was the husband of the Queen of England, and another the
husband of the Queen of Portugal; yet another was Duke of Wurtemberg.
Where was this to end? There seemed to be a Coburg Trust ready to send
out one of its members at any moment to fill up any vacant place among
the ruling families of Europe. And even beyond Europe there were signs
of this infection spreading. An American who had arrived in Brussels
had assured King Leopold that there was a strong feeling in the United
States in favour of monarchy instead of the misrule of mobs, and had
suggested, to the delight of His Majesty, that some branch of the
Coburg family might be available for the position. That danger might,
perhaps, be remote; but the Spanish danger was close at hand; and if
Prince Leopold were to marry Queen Isabella the position of France
would be one of humiliation, if not of positive danger. Such were the
asseverations of Louis Philippe. The English Government had no wish to
support Prince Leopold, and though Albert and Victoria had some
hankerings for the match, the wisdom of Stockmar had induced them to
give up all thoughts of it. The way thus seemed open for a settlement:
England would be reasonable about Leopold, if France would be
reasonable about Montpensier. At the Chateau d'Eu, the agreement was
made, in a series of conversations between the King and Guizot on the
one side, and the Queen, the Prince, and Lord Aberdeen on the other.
Aberdeen, as Foreign Minister, declared that England would neither
recognise nor support Prince Leopold as a candidate for the hand of
the Queen of Spain; while Louis Philippe solemnly promised, both to
Aberdeen and to Victoria, that the Duc de Montpensier should not marry
the Infanta Fernanda until after the Queen was married and had issue.
All went well, and the crisis seemed to be over, when the whole
question was suddenly re-opened by Palmerston, who had succeeded
Aberdeen at the Foreign Office. In a despatch to the English Minister
at Madrid, he mentioned, in a list of possible candidates for Queen
Isabella's hand, Prince Leopold of Coburg; and at the same time he
took occasion to denounce in violent language the tyranny and
incompetence of the Spanish Government. This despatch, indiscreet in
any case, was rendered infinitely more so by being communicated to
Guizot. Louis Philippe saw his opportunity and pounced on it. Though
there was nothing in Palmerston's language to show that he either
recognised or supported Prince Leopold, the King at once assumed that
the English had broken their engagement, and that he was therefore
free to do likewise. He then sent the despatch to the Queen Mother,
declared that the English were intriguing for the Coburg marriage,
bade her mark the animosity of Palmerston against the Spanish
Government, and urged her to escape from her difficulties and ensure
the friendship of France by marrying Isabella to the Duke of Cadiz and
Fernanda to Montpensier. The Queen Mother, alarmed and furious, was
easily convinced. There was only one difficulty: Isabella loathed the
very sight of her cousin. But this was soon surmounted; there was a
wild supper-party at the Palace, and in the course of it the young
girl was induced to consent to anything that was asked of her. Shortly
after, and on the same day, both the marriages took place.
The news burst like a bomb on the English Government, who saw with
rage and mortification that they had been completely outmanoeuvred by
the crafty King. Victoria, in particular, was outraged. Not only had
she been the personal recipient of Louis Philippe's pledge, but he had
won his way to her heart by presenting the Prince of Wales with a box
of soldiers and sending the Princess Royal a beautiful Parisian doll
with eyes that opened and shut. And now insult was added to injury.
The Queen of the French wrote her a formal letter, calmly announcing,
as a family event in which she was sure Victoria would be interested,
the marriage of her son, Montpensier--"qui ajoutera a notre bonheur
interieur, le seul vrai dans ce monde, et que vous, madame, savez si
bien apprecier." But the English Queen had not long to wait for her
revenge. Within eighteen months the monarchy of Louis Philippe,
discredited, unpopular, and fatally weakened by the withdrawal of
English support, was swept into limbo, while he and his family threw
themselves as suppliant fugitives at the feet of Victoria.
II
In this affair both the Queen and the Prince had been too much
occupied with the delinquencies of Louis Philippe to have any wrath to
spare for those of Palmerston; and, indeed, on the main issue,
Palmerston's attitude and their own had been in complete agreement.
But in this the case was unique. In every other foreign
complication--and they were many and serious--during the ensuing
years, the differences between the royal couple and the Foreign
Secretary were constant and profound. There was a sharp quarrel over
Portugal, where violently hostile parties were flying at each other's
throats. The royal sympathy was naturally enlisted on behalf of the
Queen and her Coburg husband, while Palmerston gave his support to the
progressive elements in the country. It was not until 1848, however,
that the strain became really serious. In that year of revolutions,
when, in all directions and with alarming frequency, crowns kept
rolling off royal heads, Albert and Victoria were appalled to find
that the policy of England was persistently directed--in Germany, in
Switzerland, in Austria, in Italy, in Sicily--so as to favour the
insurgent forces. The situation, indeed, was just such a one as the
soul of Palmerston loved. There was danger and excitement, the
necessity of decision, the opportunity for action, on every hand. A
disciple of Canning, with an English gentleman's contempt and dislike
of foreign potentates deep in his heart, the spectacle of the popular
uprisings, and of the oppressors bundled ignominiously out of the
palaces they had disgraced, gave him unbounded pleasure, and he was
determined that there should be no doubt whatever, all over the
Continent, on which side in the great struggle England stood. It was
not that he had the slightest tincture in him of philosophical
radicalism; he had no philosophical tinctures of any kind; he was
quite content to be inconsistent--to be a Conservative at home and a
Liberal abroad. There were very good reasons for keeping the Irish in
their places; but what had that to do with it? The point was
this--when any decent man read an account of the political prisons in
Naples his gorge rose. He did not want war; but he saw that without
war a skilful and determined use of England's power might do much to
further the cause of the Liberals in Europe. It was a difficult and a
hazardous game to play, but he set about playing it with delighted
alacrity. And then, to his intense annoyance, just as he needed all
his nerve and all possible freedom of action, he found himself being
hampered and distracted at every turn by... those people at Osborne.
He saw what it was; the opposition was systematic and informed, and
the Queen alone would have been incapable of it; the Prince was at the
bottom of the whole thing. It was exceedingly vexatious; but
Palmerston was in a hurry, and could not wait; the Prince, if he would
insist upon interfering, must be brushed on one side.
Albert was very angry. He highly disapproved both of Palmerston's
policy and of his methods of action. He was opposed to absolutism; but
in his opinion Palmerston's proceedings were simply calculated to
substitute for absolutism, all over Europe, something no better and
very possibly worse--the anarchy of faction and mob violence. The
dangers of this revolutionary ferment were grave; even in England
Chartism was rampant--a sinister movement, which might at any moment
upset the Constitution and abolish the Monarchy. Surely, with such
dangers at home, this was a very bad time to choose for encouraging
lawlessness abroad. He naturally took a particular interest in
Germany. His instincts, his affections, his prepossessions, were
ineradicably German; Stockmar was deeply involved in German politics;
and he had a multitude of relatives among the ruling German families,
who, from the midst of the hurly-burly of revolution, wrote him long
and agitated letters once a week. Having considered the question of
Germany's future from every point of view, he came to the conclusion,
under Stockmar's guidance, that the great aim for every lover of
Germany should be her unification under the sovereignty of Prussia.
The intricacy of the situation was extreme, and the possibilities of
good or evil which every hour might bring forth were incalculable; yet
he saw with horror that Palmerston neither understood nor cared to
understand the niceties of this momentous problem, but rushed on
blindly, dealing blows to right and left, quite--so far as he could
see--without system, and even without motive--except, indeed, a
totally unreasonable distrust of the Prussian State.
But his disagreement with the details of Palmerston's policy was in
reality merely a symptom of the fundamental differences between the
characters of the two men. In Albert's eyes Palmerston was a coarse,
reckless egotist, whose combined arrogance and ignorance must
inevitably have their issue in folly and disaster. Nothing could be
more antipathetic to him than a mind so strangely lacking in patience,
in reflection, in principle, and in the habits of ratiocination. For
to him it was intolerable to think in a hurry, to jump to slapdash
decisions, to act on instincts that could not be explained. Everything
must be done in due order, with careful premeditation; the premises of
the position must first be firmly established; and he must reach the
correct conclusion by a regular series of rational steps. In
complicated questions--and what questions, rightly looked at, were not
complicated?--to commit one's thoughts to paper was the wisest course,
and it was the course which Albert, laborious though it might be,
invariably adopted. It was as well, too, to draw up a reasoned
statement after an event, as well as before it; and accordingly,
whatever happened, it was always found that the Prince had made a
memorandum. On one occasion he reduced to six pages of foolscap the
substance of a confidential conversation with Sir Robert Peel, and,
having read them aloud to him, asked him to append his signature; Sir
Robert, who never liked to commit himself, became extremely uneasy;
upon which the Prince, understanding that it was necessary to humour
the singular susceptibilities of Englishmen, with great tact dropped
that particular memorandum into the fire. But as for Palmerston, he
never even gave one so much as a chance to read him a memorandum, he
positively seemed to dislike discussion; and, before one knew where
one was, without any warning whatever, he would plunge into some
hare-brained, violent project, which, as likely as not, would
logically involve a European war. Closely connected, too, with this
cautious, painstaking reasonableness of Albert's, was his desire to
examine questions thoroughly from every point of view, to go down to
the roots of things, and to act in strict accordance with some
well-defined principle. Under Stockmar's tutelage he was constantly
engaged in enlarging his outlook and in endeavouring to envisage vital
problems both theoretically and practically--both with precision and
with depth. To one whose mind was thus habitually occupied, the
empirical activities of Palmerston, who had no notion what a principle
meant, resembled the incoherent vagaries of a tiresome child. What did
Palmerston know of economics, of science, of history? What did he care
for morality and education? How much consideration had he devoted in
the whole course of his life to the improvement of the condition of
the working-classes and to the general amelioration of the human race?
The answers to such questions were all too obvious; and yet it is easy
to imagine, also, what might have been Palmerston's jaunty comment.
"Ah! your Royal Highness is busy with fine schemes and beneficent
calculations exactly! Well, as for me, I must say I'm quite satisfied
with my morning's work--I've had the iron hurdles taken out of the
Green Park."
The exasperating man, however, preferred to make no comment, and to
proceed in smiling silence on his inexcusable way. The process of
"brushing on one side" very soon came into operation. Important
Foreign Office despatches were either submitted to the Queen so late
that there was no time to correct them, or they were not submitted to
her at all; or, having been submitted, and some passage in them being
objected to and an alteration suggested, they were after all sent off
in their original form. The Queen complained, the Prince complained:
both complained together. It was quite useless. Palmerston was most
apologetic--could not understand how it had occurred--must give the
clerks a wigging--certainly Her Majesty's wishes should be attended
to, and such a thing should never happen again. But, of course, it
very soon happened again, and the royal remonstrances redoubled.
Victoria, her partisan passions thoroughly aroused, imported into her
protests a personal vehemence which those of Albert lacked. Did Lord
Palmerston forget that she was Queen of England? How could she
tolerate a state of affairs in which despatches written in her name
were sent abroad without her approval or even her knowledge? What
could be more derogatory to her position than to be obliged to receive
indignant letters from the crowned heads to whom those despatches were
addressed--letters which she did not know how to answer, since she so
thoroughly agreed with them? She addressed herself to the Prime
Minister. "No remonstrance has any effect with Lord Palmerston," she
said. "Lord Palmerston," she told him on another occasion, "has as
usual pretended not to have had time to submit the draft to the Queen
before he had sent it off." She summoned Lord John to her presence,
poured out her indignation, and afterwards, on the advice of Albert,
noted down what had passed in a memorandum: "I said that I thought
that Lord Palmerston often endangered the honour of England by taking
a very prejudiced and one-sided view of a question; that his writings
were always as bitter as gall and did great harm, which Lord John
entirely assented to, and that I often felt quite ill from anxiety."
Then she turned to her uncle. "The state of Germany," she wrote in a
comprehensive and despairing review of the European situation, "is
dreadful, and one does feel quite ashamed about that once really so
peaceful and happy country. That there are still good people there I
am sure, but they allow themselves to be worked upon in a frightful
and shameful way. In France a crisis seems at hand. WHAT a very bad
figure we cut in this mediation! Really it is quite immoral, with
Ireland quivering in our grasp and ready to throw off her allegiance
at any moment, for us to force Austria to give up her lawful
possessions. What shall we say if Canada, Malta, etc., begin to trouble
us? It hurts me terribly." But what did Lord Palmerston care?
Lord John's position grew more and more irksome. He did not approve
of his colleague's treatment of the Queen. When he begged him to be
more careful, he was met with the reply that 28,000 despatches passed
through the Foreign Office in a single year, that, if every one of
these were to be subjected to the royal criticism, the delay would be
most serious, that, as it was, the waste of time and the worry
involved in submitting drafts to the meticulous examination of Prince
Albert was almost too much for an overworked Minister, and that, as a
matter of fact, the postponement of important decisions owing to this
cause had already produced very unpleasant diplomatic consequences.
These excuses would have impressed Lord John more favourably if he had
not himself had to suffer from a similar neglect. As often as not
Palmerston failed to communicate even to him the most important
despatches. The Foreign Secretary was becoming an almost independent
power, acting on his own initiative, and swaying the policy of England
on his own responsibility. On one occasion, in 1847, he had actually
been upon the point of threatening to break off diplomatic relations
with France without consulting either the Cabinet or the Prime
Minister. And such incidents were constantly recurring. When this
became known to the Prince, he saw that his opportunity had come. If
he could only drive in to the utmost the wedge between the two
statesmen, if he could only secure the alliance of Lord John, then the
suppression or the removal of Lord Palmerston would be almost certain
to follow. He set about the business with all the pertinacity of his
nature. Both he and the Queen put every kind of pressure upon the
Prime Minister. They wrote, they harangued, they relapsed into awful
silence. It occurred to them that Lord Clarendon, an important member
of the Cabinet, would be a useful channel for their griefs. They
commanded him to dine at the Palace, and, directly the meal was over,
"the Queen," as he described it afterwards, "exploded, and went with
the utmost vehemence and bitterness into the whole of Palmerston's
conduct, all the effects produced all over the world, and all her own
feelings and sentiments about it." When she had finished, the Prince
took up the tale, with less excitement, but with equal force. Lord
Clarendon found himself in an awkward situation; he disliked
Palmerston's policy, but he was his colleague, and he disapproved of
the attitude of his royal hosts. In his opinion, they were "wrong in
wishing that courtiers rather than Ministers should conduct the
affairs of the country," and he thought that they "laboured under the
curious mistake that the Foreign Office was their peculiar department,
and that they had the right to control, if not to direct, the foreign
policy of England." He, therefore, with extreme politeness, gave it to
be understood that he would not commit himself in any way. But Lord
John, in reality, needed no pressure. Attacked by his Sovereign,
ignored by his Foreign Secretary, he led a miserable life. With the
advent of the dreadful Schleswig-Holstein question--the most complex
in the whole diplomatic history of Europe--his position, crushed
between the upper and the nether mill-stones, grew positively
unbearable. He became anxious above all things to get Palmerston out
of the Foreign Office. But then--supposing Palmerston refused to go?
In a memorandum made by the Prince, at about this time, of an
interview between himself, the Queen, and the Prime Minister, we catch
a curious glimpse of the states of mind of those three high
personages--the anxiety and irritation of Lord John, the vehement
acrimony of Victoria, and the reasonable animosity of Albert--drawn
together, as it were, under the shadow of an unseen Presence, the
cause of that celestial anger--the gay, portentous Palmerston. At one
point in the conversation Lord John observed that he believed the
Foreign Secretary would consent to a change of offices; Lord
Palmerston, he said, realised that he had lost the Queen's
confidence--though only on public, and not on personal, grounds. But
on that, the Prince noted, "the Queen interrupted Lord John by
remarking that she distrusted him on PERSONAL grounds also, but I
remarked that Lord Palmerston had so far at least seen rightly; that
he had become disagreeable to the Queen, not on account of his person,
but of his political doings--to which the Queen assented." Then the
Prince suggested that there was a danger of the Cabinet breaking up,
and of Lord Palmerston returning to office as Prime Minister. But on
that point Lord John was reassuring: he "thought Lord Palmerston too
old to do much in the future (having passed his sixty-fifth year)."
Eventually it was decided that nothing could be done for the present,
but that the UTMOST SECRECY must be observed; and so the conclave
ended.
At last, in 1850, deliverance seemed to be at hand. There were
signs that the public were growing weary of the alarums and excursions
of Palmerston's diplomacy; and when his support of Don Pacifico, a
British subject, in a quarrel with the Greek Government, seemed to be
upon the point of involving the country in a war not only with Greece
but also with France, and possibly with Russia into the bargain, a
heavy cloud of distrust and displeasure appeared to be gathering and
about to burst over his head. A motion directed against him in the
House of Lords was passed by a substantial majority. The question was
next to be discussed in the House of Commons, where another adverse
vote was not improbable, and would seal the doom of the Minister.
Palmerston received the attack with complete nonchalance, and then, at
the last possible moment, he struck. In a speech of over four hours,
in which exposition, invective, argument, declamation, plain talk and
resounding eloquence were mingled together with consummate art and
extraordinary felicity, he annihilated his enemies. The hostile motion
was defeated, and Palmerston was once more the hero of the hour.
Simultaneously, Atropos herself conspired to favour him. Sir Robert
Peel was thrown from his horse and killed. By this tragic chance,
Palmerston saw the one rival great enough to cope with him removed
from his path. He judged--and judged rightly--that he was the most
popular man in England; and when Lord John revived the project of his
exchanging the Foreign Office for some other position in the Cabinet,
he absolutely refused to stir.
Great was the disappointment of Albert; great was the indignation
of Victoria. "The House of Commons," she wrote, "is becoming very
unmanageable and troublesome." The Prince, perceiving that Palmerston
was more firmly fixed in the saddle than ever, decided that something
drastic must be done. Five months before, the prescient Baron had
drawn up, in case of emergency, a memorandum, which had been carefully
docketed, and placed in a pigeon-hole ready to hand. The emergency had
now arisen, and the memorandum must be used. The Queen copied out the
words of Stockmar, and sent them to the Prime Minister, requesting him
to show her letter to Palmerston. "She thinks it right," she wrote,
"in order TO PREVENT ANY MISTAKE for the FUTURE, shortly to explain
WHAT IT IS SHE EXPECTS FROM HER FOREIGN SECRETARY. She requires: (1)
That he will distinctly state what he proposes in a given case, in
order that the Queen may know as distinctly to WHAT she has given her
Royal sanction; (2) Having ONCE GIVEN her sanction to a measure, that
it be not arbitrarily altered or modified by the Minister; such an act
she must consider as failing in sincerity towards the Crown, and
justly to be visited by the exercise of her Constitutional right of
dismissing that Minister." Lord John Russell did as he was bid, and
forwarded the Queen's letter to Lord Palmerston. This transaction,
which was of grave constitutional significance, was entirely unknown
to the outside world.
If Palmerston had been a sensitive man, he would probably have
resigned on the receipt of the Queen's missive. But he was far from
sensitive; he loved power, and his power was greater than ever; an
unerring instinct told him that this was not the time to go.
Nevertheless, he was seriously perturbed. He understood at last that
he was struggling with a formidable adversary, whose skill and
strength, unless they were mollified, might do irreparable injury to
his career. He therefore wrote to Lord John, briefly acquiescing in
the Queen's requirements--"I have taken a copy of this memorandum of
the Queen and will not fail to attend to the directions which it
contains"--and at the same time, he asked for an interview with the
Prince. Albert at once summoned him to the Palace, and was astonished
to observe, as he noted in a memorandum, that when Palmerston entered
the room "he was very much agitated, shook, and had tears in his eyes,
so as quite to move me, who never under any circumstances had known
him otherwise than with a bland smile on his face." The old statesman
was profuse in protestations and excuses; the young one was coldly
polite. At last, after a long and inconclusive conversation, the
Prince, drawing himself up, said that, in order to give Lord
Palmerston "an example of what the Queen wanted," he would "ask him a
question point-blank." Lord Palmerston waited in respectful silence,
while the Prince proceeded as follows: "You are aware that the Queen
has objected to the Protocol about Schleswig, and of the grounds on
which she has done so. Her opinion has been overruled, the Protocol
stating the desire of the Great Powers to see the integrity of the
Danish monarchy preserved has been signed, and upon this the King of
Denmark has invaded Schleswig, where the war is raging. If Holstein is
attacked also, which is likely, the Germans will not be restrained
from flying to her assistance; Russia has menaced to interfere with
arms, if the Schleswigers are successful. What will you do, if this
emergency arises (provoking most likely an European war), and which
will arise very probably when we shall be at Balmoral and Lord John in
another part of Scotland? The Queen expects from your foresight that
you have contemplated this possibility, and requires a categorical
answer as to what you would do in the event supposed." Strangely
enough, to this pointblank question, the Foreign Secretary appeared to
be unable to reply. The whole matter, he said, was extremely
complicated, and the contingencies mentioned by His Royal Highness
were very unlikely to arise. The Prince persisted; but it was useless;
for a full hour he struggled to extract a categorical answer, until at
length Palmerston bowed himself out of the room. Albert threw up his
hands in shocked amazement: what could one do with such a man?
What indeed? For, in spite of all his apologies and all his
promises, within a few weeks the incorrigible reprobate was at his
tricks again. The Austrian General Haynau, notorious as a rigorous
suppressor of rebellion in Hungary and Italy, and in particular as a
flogger of women, came to England and took it into his head to pay a
visit to Messrs. Barclay and Perkins's brewery. The features of
"General Hyena," as he was everywhere called--his grim thin face, his
enormous pepper-and-salt moustaches--had gained a horrid celebrity; and
it so happened that among the clerks at the brewery there was a
refugee from Vienna, who had given his fellow-workers a first-hand
account of the General's characteristics. The Austrian Ambassador,
scenting danger, begged his friend not to appear in public, or, if he
must do so, to cut off his moustaches first. But the General would
take no advice. He went to the brewery, was immediately recognised,
surrounded by a crowd of angry draymen, pushed about, shouted at,
punched in the ribs, and pulled by the moustaches until, bolting down
an alley with the mob at his heels brandishing brooms and roaring
"Hyena!" he managed to take refuge in a public house, whence he was
removed under the protection of several policemen. The Austrian
Government was angry and demanded explanations. Palmerston, who, of
course, was privately delighted by the incident, replied regretting
what had occurred, but adding that in his opinion the General had
"evinced a want of propriety in coming to England at the present
moment;" and he delivered his note to the Ambassador without having
previously submitted it to the Queen or to the Prime Minister.
Naturally, when this was discovered, there was a serious storm. The
Prince was especially indignant; the conduct of the draymen he
regarded, with disgust and alarm, as "a slight foretaste of what an
unregulated mass of illiterate people is capable;" and Palmerston was
requested by Lord John to withdraw his note, and to substitute for it
another from which all censure of the General had been omitted. On
this the Foreign Secretary threatened resignation, but the Prime
Minister was firm. For a moment the royal hopes rose high, only to be
dashed to the ground again by the cruel compliance of the enemy.
Palmerston, suddenly lamblike, agreed to everything; the note was
withdrawn and altered, and peace was patched up once more.
It lasted for a year, and then, in October, 1851, the arrival of
Kossuth in England brought on another crisis. Palmerston's desire to
receive the Hungarian patriot at his house in London was vetoed by
Lord John; once more there was a sharp struggle; once more Palmerston,
after threatening resignation, yielded. But still the insubordinate
man could not keep quiet. A few weeks later a deputation of Radicals
from Finsbury and Islington waited on him at the Foreign Office and
presented him with an address, in which the Emperors of Austria and
Russia were stigmatised as "odious and detestable assassins" and
"merciless tyrants and despots." The Foreign Secretary in his reply,
while mildly deprecating these expressions, allowed his real sentiments
to appear with a most undiplomatic insouciance There was an immediate
scandal, and the Court flowed over with rage and vituperation. "I
think," said the Baron, "the man has been for some time insane."
Victoria, in an agitated letter, urged Lord John to assert his
authority. But Lord John perceived that on this matter the Foreign
Secretary had the support of public opinion, and he judged it wiser to
bide his time.
He had not long to wait. The culmination of the long series of
conflicts, threats, and exacerbations came before the year was out. On
December 2, Louis Napoleon's coup d'etat took place in Paris; and on
the following day Palmerston, without consulting anybody, expressed in
a conversation with the French Ambassador his approval of Napoleon's
act. Two days later, he was instructed by the Prime Minister, in
accordance with a letter from the Queen, that it was the policy of the
English Government to maintain an attitude of strict neutrality
towards the affairs of France. Nevertheless, in an official despatch
to the British Amambassador in Paris, he repeated the approval of the
coup d'etat which he had already given verbally to the French
Ambassador in London. This despatch was submitted neither to the Queen
nor to the Prime Minister. Lord John's patience, as he himself said,
"was drained to the last drop." He dismissed Lord Palmerston.
Victoria was in ecstasies; and Albert knew that the triumph was his
even more than Lord John's. It was his wish that Lord Granville, a
young man whom he believed to be pliant to his influence, should be
Palmerston's successor; and Lord Granville was appointed.
Henceforward, it seemed that the Prince would have his way in foreign
affairs. After years of struggle and mortification, success greeted
him on every hand. In his family, he was an adored master; in the
country, the Great Exhibition had brought him respect and glory; and
now in the secret seats of power he had gained a new supremacy. He had
wrestled with the terrible Lord Palmerston, the embodiment of all that
was most hostile to him in the spirit of England, and his redoubtable
opponent had been overthrown. Was England herself at his feet? It
might be so; and yet... it is said that the sons of England have a
certain tiresome quality: they never know when they are beaten. It was
odd, but Palmerston was positively still jaunty. Was it possible?
Could he believe, in his blind arro--gance, that even his ignominious
dismissal from office was something that could be brushed aside?
III
The Prince's triumph was short-lived. A few weeks later, owing to
Palmerston's influence, the Government was defeated in the House, and
Lord John resigned. Then, after a short interval, a coalition between
the Whigs and the followers of Peel came into power, under the
premiership of Lord Aberdeen. Once more, Palmerston was in the
Cabinet. It was true that he did not return to the Foreign Office;
that was something to the good; in the Home Department it might be
hoped that his activities would be less dangerous and disagreeable.
But the Foreign Secretary was no longer the complacent Granville; and
in Lord Clarendon the Prince knew that he had a Minister to deal with,
who, discreet and courteous as he was, had a mind of his own. These
changes, however, were merely the preliminaries of a far more serious
development.
Events, on every side, were moving towards a catastrophe. Suddenly
the nation found itself under the awful shadow of imminent war. For
several months, amid the shifting mysteries of diplomacy and the
perplexed agitations of politics, the issue grew more doubtful and
more dark, while the national temper was strained to the
breaking-point. At the very crisis of the long and ominous
negotiations, it was announced that Lord Palmerston had resigned. Then
the pent-up fury of the people burst forth. They had felt that in the
terrible complexity of events they were being guided by weak and
embarrassed counsels; but they had been reassured by the knowledge
that at the centre of power there was one man with strength, with
courage, with determination, in whom they could put their trust. They
now learnt that that man was no longer among their leaders. Why? In
their rage, anxiety, and nervous exhaustion, they looked round
desperately for some hidden and horrible explanation of what had
occurred. They suspected plots, they smelt treachery in the air. It
was easy to guess the object upon which their frenzy would vent
itself. Was there not a foreigner in the highest of high places, a
foreigner whose hostility to their own adored champion was unrelenting
and unconcealed? The moment that Palmerston's resignation was known,
there was a universal outcry and an extraordinary tempest of anger and
hatred burst, with unparalleled violence, upon the head of the Prince.
It was everywhere asserted and believed that the Queen's husband
was a traitor to the country, that he was a tool of the Russian Court,
that in obedience to Russian influences he had forced Palmerston out
of the Government, and that he was directing the foreign policy of
England in the interests of England's enemies. For many weeks these
accusations filled the whole of the press; repeated at public
meetings, elaborated in private talk, they flew over the country,
growing every moment more extreme and more improbable. While
respectable newspapers thundered out their grave invectives, halfpenny
broadsides, hawked through the streets of London, re-echoed in
doggerel vulgarity the same sentiments and the same suspicions[*]. At
last the wildest rumours began to spread.
[*]"The Turkish war both far and near Has played the very deuce
then, And little Al, the royal pal, They say has turned a Russian;
Old Aberdeen, as may be seen, Looks woeful pale and yellow, And Old
John Bull had his belly full Of dirty Russian tallow."
Chorus: "We'll send him home and make him groan, Oh, Al! you've
played the deuce then; The German lad has acted sad And turned tail
with the Russians." * * * * * * "Last Monday night, all in a
fright, Al out of bed did tumble. The German lad was raving mad,
How he did groan and grumble! He cried to Vic, 'I've cut my stick:
To St. Petersburg go right slap.' When Vic, 'tis said, jumped out of
bed, And wopped him with her night-cap."
From Lovely Albert! a broadside preserved at the British Museum.
In January, 1854, it was whispered that the Prince had been seized,
that he had been found guilty of high treason, that he was to be
committed to the Tower. The Queen herself, some declared, had been
arrested, and large crowds actually collected round the Tower to watch
the incarceration of the royal miscreants.[*]
[*]"You Jolly Turks, now go to work,
And show the Bear your power.
It is rumoured over Britain's isle
That A------ is in the Tower;
The postmen some suspicion had,
And opened the two letters,
'Twas a pity sad the German lad
Should not have known much better!"
Lovely Albert!
These fantastic hallucinations, the result of the fevered
atmosphere of approaching war, were devoid of any basis in actual
fact. Palmerston's resignition had been in all probability totally
disconnected with foreign policy; it had certainly been entirely
spontaneous, and had surprised the Court as much as the nation. Nor
had Albert's influence been used in any way to favour the interests of
Russia. As often happens in such cases, the Government had been
swinging backwards and forwards between two incompatible
policies--that of non-interference and that of threats supported by
force--either of which, if consistently followed, might well have had
a successful and peaceful issue, but which, mingled together, could
only lead to war. Albert, with characteristic scrupulosity, attempted
to thread his way through the complicated labyrinth of European
diplomacy, and eventually was lost in the maze. But so was the whole
of the Cabinet; and, when war came, his anti-Russian feelings were
quite as vehement as those of the most bellicose of Englishmen.
Nevertheless, though the specific charges levelled against the
Prince were without foundation, there were underlying elements in the
situation which explained, if they did not justify, the popular state
of mind. It was true that the Queen's husband was a foreigner, who had
been brought up in a foreign Court, was impregnated with foreign
ideas, and was closely related to a multitude of foreign princes.
Clearly this, though perhaps an unavoidable, was an undesirable, state
of affairs; nor were the objections to it merely theoretical; it had
in fact produced unpleasant consequences of a serious kind. The
Prince's German proclivities were perpetually lamented by English
Ministers; Lord Palmerston, Lord Clarendon, Lord Aberdeen, all told
the same tale; and it was constantly necessary, in grave questions of
national policy, to combat the prepossessions of a Court in which
German views and German sentiments held a disproportionate place. As
for Palmerston, his language on this topic was apt to be unbridled. At
the height of his annoyance over his resignation, he roundly declared
that he had been made a victim to foreign intrigue. He afterwards
toned down this accusation; but the mere fact that such a suggestion
from such a quarter was possible at all showed to what unfortunate
consequences Albert's foreign birth and foreign upbringing might lead.
But this was not all. A constitutional question of the most
profound importance was raised by the position of the Prince in
England. His presence gave a new prominence to an old problem--the
precise definition of the functions and the powers of the Crown. Those
functions and powers had become, in effect, his; and what sort of use
was he making of them? His views as to the place of the Crown in the
Constitution are easily ascertainable; for they were Stockmar's; and
it happens that we possess a detailed account of Stockmar's opinions
upon the subject in a long letter addressed by him to the Prince at
the time of this very crisis, just before the outbreak of the Crimean
War. Constitutional Monarchy, according to the Baron, had suffered an
eclipse since the passing of the Reform Bill. It was now "constantly
in danger of becoming a pure Ministerial Government." The old race of
Tories, who "had a direct interest in upholding the prerogatives of
the Crown," had died out; and the Whigs were "nothing but partly
conscious, partly unconscious Republicans, who stand in the same
relation to the Throne as the wolf does to the lamb." There was a rule
that it was unconstitutional to introduce "the name and person of the
irresponsible Sovereign" into parliamentary debates on constitutional
matters; this was "a constitutional fiction, which, although
undoubtedly of old standing, was fraught with danger"; and the Baron
warned the Prince that "if the English Crown permit a Whig Ministry to
follow this rule in practice, without exception, you must not wonder
if in a little time you find the majority of the people impressed with
the belief that the King, in the view of the law, is nothing but a
mandarin figure, which has to nod its head in assent, or shake it in
denial, as his Minister pleases." To prevent this from happening, it
was of extreme importance, said the Baron, "that no opportunity should
be let slip of vindicating the legitimate position of the Crown." "And
this is not hard to do," he added, "and can never embarrass a Minister
where such straightforward loyal personages as the Queen and the
Prince are concerned." In his opinion, the very lowest claim of the
Royal Prerogative should include "a right on the part of the King to
be the permanent President of his Ministerial Council." The Sovereign
ought to be "in the position of a permanent Premier, who takes rank
above the temporary head of the Cabinet, and in matters of discipline
exercises supreme authority." The Sovereign "may even take a part in
the initiation and the maturing of the Government measures; for it
would be unreasonable to expect that a king, himself as able, as
accomplished, and as patriotic as the best of his Ministers, should be
prevented from making use of these qualities at the deliberations of
his Council." "The judicious exercise of this right," concluded the
Baron, "which certainly requires a master mind, would not only be the
best guarantee for Constitutional Monarchy, but would raise it to a
height of power, stability, and symmetry, which has never been
attained."
Now it may be that this reading of the Constitution is a possible
one, though indeed it is hard to see how it can be made compatible
with the fundamental doctrine of ministerial responsibility. William
III presided over his Council, and he was a constitutional monarch;
and it seems that Stockmar had in his mind a conception of the Crown
which would have given it a place in the Constitution analogous to
that which it filled at the time of William III. But it is clear that
such a theory, which would invest the Crown with more power than it
possessed even under George III, runs counter to the whole development
of English public life since the Revolution; and the fact that it was
held by Stockmar, and instilled by him into Albert, was of very
serious importance. For there was good reason to believe not only that
these doctrines were held by Albert in theory, but that he was making
a deliberate and sustained attempt to give them practical validity.
The history of the struggle between the Crown and Palmerston provided
startling evidence that this was the case. That struggle reached its
culmination when, in Stockmar's memorandum of 1850, the Queen asserted
her "constitutional right" to dismiss the Foreign Secretary if he
altered a despatch which had received her sanction. The memorandum was,
in fact, a plain declaration that the Crown intended to act
independently of the Prime Minister. Lord John Russell, anxious at all
costs to strengthen himself against Palmerston, accepted the
memorandum, and thereby implicitly allowed the claim of the Crown.
More than that; after the dismissal of Palmerston, among the grounds
on which Lord John justified that dismissal in the House of Commons he
gave a prominent place to the memorandum of 1850. It became apparent
that the displeasure of the Sovereign might be a reason for the
removal of a powerful and popular Minister. It seemed indeed as if,
under the guidance of Stockmar and Albert, the "Constitutional
Monarchy" might in very truth be rising "to a height of power,
stability, and symmetry, which had never been attained."
But this new development in the position of the Crown, grave as it
was in itself, was rendered peculiarly disquieting by the unusual
circumstances which surrounded it. For the functions of the Crown were
now, in effect, being exercised by a person unknown to the
Constitution, who wielded over the Sovereign an undefined and
unbounded influence. The fact that this person was the Sovereign's
husband, while it explained his influence and even made it inevitable,
by no means diminished its strange and momentous import. An ambiguous,
prepotent figure had come to disturb the ancient, subtle, and
jealously guarded balance of the English Constitution. Such had been
the unexpected outcome of the tentative and fainthearted opening of
Albert's political life. He himself made no attempt to minimise either
the multiplicity or the significance of the functions he performed. He
considered that it was his duty, he told the Duke of Wellington in
1850, to "sink his OWN INDIVIDUAL existence in that of his
wife--assume no separate responsibility before the public, but make
his position entirely a part of hers--fill up every gap which, as a
woman, she would naturally leave in the exercise of her regal
functions--continually and anxiously watch every part of the public
business, in order to be able to advise and assist her at any moment
in any of the multifarious and difficult questions or duties brought
before her, sometimes international, sometimes political, or social,
or personal. As the natural head of her family, superintendent of her
household, manager of her private affairs, sole CONFIDENTIAL adviser
in politics, and only assistant in her communications with the
officers of the Government, he is, besides, the husband of the Queen,
the tutor of the royal children, the private secretary of the
Sovereign, and her permanent minister." Stockmar's pupil had assuredly
gone far and learnt well. Stockmar's pupil!--precisely; the public,
painfully aware of Albert's predominance, had grown, too, uneasily
conscious that Victoria's master had a master of his own. Deep in the
darkness the Baron loomed. Another foreigner! Decidedly, there were
elements in the situation which went far to justify the popular alarm.
A foreign Baron controlled a foreign Prince, and the foreign Prince
controlled the Crown of England. And the Crown itself was creeping
forward ominously; and when, from under its shadow, the Baron and the
Prince had frowned, a great Minister, beloved of the people, had
fallen. Where was all this to end?
Within a few weeks Palmerston withdrew his resignation, and the
public frenzy subsided as quickly as it had arisen. When Parliament
met, the leaders of both the parties in both the Houses made speeches
in favour of the Prince, asserting his unimpeachable loyalty to the
country and vindicating his right to advise the Sovereign in all
matters of State. Victoria was delighted. "The position of my beloved
lord and master," she told the Baron, "has been defined for once amid
all and his merits have been acknowledged on all sides most duly.
There was an immense concourse of people assembled when we went to the
House of Lords, and the people were very friendly." Immediately
afterwards, the country finally plunged into the Crimean War. In the
struggle that followed, Albert's patriotism was put beyond a doubt,
and the animosities of the past were forgotten. But the war had
another consequence, less gratifying to the royal couple: it crowned
the ambition of Lord Palmerston. In 1855, the man who five years
before had been pronounced by Lord John Russell to be "too old to do
much in the future," became Prime Minister of England, and, with one
short interval, remained in that position for ten years.
The weak-willed youth who took no interest in polities and never
read a newspaper had grown into a man of unbending determination whose
tireless energies were incessantly concentrated upon the laborious
business of government and the highest questions of State. He was busy
now from morning till night. In the winter, before the dawn, he was to
be seen, seated at his writing-table, working by the light of the
green reading--lamp which he had brought over with him from Germany,
and the construction of which he had much improved by an ingenious
device. Victoria was early too, but she was not so early as Albert;
and when, in the chill darkness, she took her seat at her own
writing-table, placed side by side with his, she invariably found upon
it a neat pile of papers arranged for her inspection and her
signature. The day, thus begun, continued in unremitting industry. At
breakfast, the newspapers--the once hated newspapers--made their
appearance, and the Prince, absorbed in their perusal, would answer no
questions, or, if an article struck him, would read it aloud. After,
that there were ministers and secretaries to interview; there was a
vast correspondence to be carried on; there were numerous memoranda to
be made. Victoria, treasuring every word, preserving every letter, was
all breathless attention and eager obedience. Sometimes Albert would
actually ask her advice. He consulted her about his English: "Lese
recht aufmerksam, und sage wenn irgend ein Fehler ist,"[*] he would
say; or, as he handed her a draft for her signature, he would observe,
"Ich hab' Dir hier ein Draft gemacht, lese es mal! Ich dachte es ware
recht so."[**] Thus the diligent, scrupulous, absorbing hours passed
by. Fewer and fewer grew the moments of recreation and of exercise.
The demands of society were narrowed down to the smallest limits, and
even then but grudgingly attended to. It was no longer a mere
pleasure, it was a positive necessity, to go to bed as early as
possible in order to be up and at work on the morrow betimes.
[*] "Read this carefully, and tell me if there are any mistakes in
it."
[**] "Here is a draft I have made for you. Read it. I should think
this would do."
The important and exacting business of government, which became at
last the dominating preoccupation in Albert's mind, still left
unimpaired his old tastes and interests; he remained devoted to art,
to science, to philosophy, and a multitude of subsidiary activities
showed how his energies increased as the demands upon them grew. For
whenever duty called, the Prince was all alertness. With indefatigable
perseverance he opened museums, laid the foundation stones of
hospitals, made speeches to the Royal Agricultural Society, and
attended meetings of the British Association. The National Gallery
particularly interested him: he drew up careful regulations for the
arrangement of the pictures according to schools; and he
attempted--though in vain--to have the whole collection transported to
South Kensington. Feodora, now the Princess Hohenlohe, after a visit
to England, expressed in a letter to Victoria her admiration of Albert
both as a private and a public character. Nor did she rely only on her
own opinion. "I must just copy out," she said, "what Mr. Klumpp wrote
to me some little time ago, and which is quite true--'Prince Albert is
one of the few Royal personages who can sacrifice to any principle (as
soon as it has become evident to them to be good and noble) all those
notions (or sentiments) to which others, owing to their
narrow-mindedness, or to the prejudices of their rank, are so
thoroughly inclined strongly to cling.' There is something so truly
religious in this," the Princess added, "as well as humane and just,
most soothing to my feelings which are so often hurt and disturbed by
what I hear and see."
Victoria, from the depth of her heart, subscribed to all the
eulogies of Feodora and Mr. Klumpp. She only found that they were
insufficient. As she watched her beloved Albert, after toiling with
state documents and public functions, devoting every spare moment of
his time to domestic duties, to artistic appreciation, and to
intellectual improvements; as she listened to him cracking his jokes
at the luncheon table, or playing Mendelssohn on the organ, or
pointing out the merits of Sir Edwin Landseer's pictures; as she
followed him round while he gave instructions about the breeding of
cattle, or decided that the Gainsboroughs must be hung higher up so
that the Winterhalters might be properly seen--she felt perfectly
certain that no other wife had ever had such a husband. His mind was
apparently capable of everything, and she was hardly surprised to
learn that he had made an important discovery for the conversion of
sewage into agricultural manure. Filtration from below upwards, he
explained, through some appropriate medium, which retained the solids
and set free the fluid sewage for irrigation, was the principle of the
scheme. "All previous plans," he said, "would have cost millions; mine
costs next to nothing." Unfortunately, owing to a slight
miscalculation, the invention proved to be impracticable; but Albert's
intelligence was unrebuffed, and he passed on, to plunge with all his
accustomed ardour into a prolonged study of the rudiments of
lithography.
But naturally it was upon his children that his private interests
and those of Victoria were concentrated most vigorously. The royal
nurseries showed no sign of emptying. The birth of the Prince Arthur
in 1850 was followed, three years later, by that of the Prince
Leopold; and in 1857 the Princess Beatrice was born. A family of nine
must be, in any circumstances, a grave responsibility; and the Prince
realised to the full how much the high destinies of his offspring
intensified the need of parental care. It was inevitable that he
should believe profoundly in the importance of education; he himself
had been the product of education; Stockmar had made him what he was;
it was for him, in his turn, to be a Stockmar--to be even more than a
Stockmar--to the young creatures he had brought into the world.
Victoria would assist him; a Stockmar, no doubt, she could hardly be;
but she could be perpetually vigilant, she could mingle strictness
with her affection, and she could always set a good example. These
considerations, of course, applied pre-eminently to the education of
the Prince of Wales. How tremendous was the significance of every
particle of influence which went to the making of the future King of
England! Albert set to work with a will. But, watching with Victoria
the minutest details of the physical, intellectual, and moral training
of his children, he soon perceived, to his distress, that there was
something unsatisfactory in the development of his eldest son. The
Princess Royal was an extremely intelligent child; but Bertie, though
he was good-humoured and gentle, seemed to display a deep-seated
repugnance to every form of mental exertion. This was most
regrettable, but the remedy was obvious: the parental efforts must be
redoubled; instruction must be multiplied; not for a single instant
must the educational pressure be allowed to relax. Accordingly, more
tutors were selected, the curriculum was revised, the time-table of
studies was rearranged, elaborate memoranda dealing with every
possible contingency were drawn up. It was above all essential that
there should be no slackness: "Work," said the Prince, " must be
work." And work indeed it was. The boy grew up amid a ceaseless round
of paradigms, syntactical exercises, dates, genealogical tables, and
lists of capes. Constant notes flew backwards and forwards between the
Prince, the Queen, and tile tutors, with inquiries, with reports of
progress, with detailed recommendations; and these notes were all
carefully preserved for future reference. It was, besides, vital that
the heir to the throne should be protected from the slightest
possibility of contamination from the outside world. The Prince of
Wales was not as other boys; he might, occasionally, be allowed to
invite some sons of the nobility, boys of good character, to play with
him in the garden of Buckingham Palace; but his father presided, with
alarming precision, over their sports. In short, every possible
precaution was taken, every conceivable effort was made. Yet, strange
to say, the object of all this vigilance and solicitude continued to
be unsatisfactory--appeared, in fact, to be positively growing worse.
It was certainly very odd: the more lessons that Bertie had to do, the
less he did them; and the more carefully he was guarded against
excitements and frivolities, the more desirous of mere amusement he
seemed to become. Albert was deeply grieved and Victoria was sometimes
very angry; but grief and anger produced no more effect than
supervision and time-tables. The Prince of Wales, in spite of
everything, grew up into manhood without the faintest sign of
"adherence to and perseverance in the plan both of studies and life-"
as one of the Royal memoranda put it--which had been laid down with
such extraordinary forethought by his father.
II
Against the insidious worries of politics, the boredom of society
functions, and the pompous publicity of state ceremonies, Osborne had
afforded a welcome refuge; but it soon appeared that even Osborne was
too little removed from the world. After all, the Solent was a feeble
barrier. Oh, for some distant, some almost inaccessible sanctuary,
where, in true domestic privacy, one could make happy holiday, just as
if--or at least very, very, nearly--one were anybody else! Victoria,
ever since, together with Albert, she had visited Scotland in the
early years of her marriage, had felt that her heart was in the
Highlands. She had returned to them a few years later, and her passion
had grown. How romantic they were! And how Albert enjoyed them too!
His spirits rose quite wonderfully as soon as he found himself among
the hills and the conifers. "It is a happiness to see him," she wrote.
"Oh! What can equal the beauties of nature!" she exclaimed in her
journal, during one of these visits. "What enjoyment there is in them!
Albert enjoys it so much; he is in ecstasies here." "Albert said," she
noted next day, "that the chief beauty of mountain scenery consists in
its frequent changes. We came home at six o'clock." Then she went on a
longer expedition--up to the very top of a high hill. "It was quite
romantic. Here we were with only this Highlander behind us holding the
ponies (for we got off twice and walked about). . . . We came home at
half-past eleven,--the most delightful, most romantic ride and walk I
ever had. I had never been up such a mountain, and then the day was so
fine." The Highlanders, too, were such astonishing people. They "never
make difficulties," she noted, "but are cheerful, and happy, and
merry, and ready to walk, and run, and do anything." As for Albert he
"highly appreciated the good-breeding, simplicity, and intelligence,
which make it so pleasant and even instructive to talk to them." "We
were always in the habit," wrote Her Majesty, "of conversing with the
Highlanders--with whom one comes so much in contact in the Highlands."
She loved everything about them--their customs, their dress, their
dances, even their musical instruments. "There were nine pipers at the
castle," she wrote after staying with Lord Breadalbane; "sometimes one
and sometimes three played. They always played about breakfast-time,
again during the morning, at luncheon, and also whenever we went in
and out; again before dinner, and during most of dinner-time. We both
have become quite fond of the bag-pipes.
It was quite impossible not to wish to return to such pleasures
again and again; and in 1848 the Queen took a lease of Balmoral House,
a small residence near Braemar in the wilds of Aberdeenshire. Four
years later she bought the place outright. Now she could be really
happy every summer; now she could be simple and at her ease; now she
could be romantic every evening, and dote upon Albert, without a
single distraction, all day long. The diminutive scale of the house
was in itself a charm. Nothing was more amusing than to find oneself
living in two or three little sitting--rooms, with the children
crammed away upstairs, and the minister in attendance with only a tiny
bedroom to do all his work in. And then to be able to run in and out
of doors as one liked, and to sketch, and to walk, and to watch the
red deer coming so surprisingly close, and to pay visits to the
cottagers! And occasionally one could be more adventurous still--one
could go and stay for a night or two at the Bothie at
Alt-na-giuthasach--a mere couple of huts with "a wooden addition"--and
only eleven people in the whole party! And there were mountains to be
climbed and cairns to be built in solemn pomp. "At last, when the
cairn, which is, I think, seven or eight feet high, was nearly
completed, Albert climbed up to the top of it, and placed the last
stone; after which three cheers were given. It was a gay, pretty, and
touching sight; and I felt almost inclined to cry. The view was so
beautiful over the dear hills; the day so fine; the whole so
gemuthlich." And in the evening there were sword-dances and reels.
But Albert had determined to pull down the little old house, and to
build in its place a castle of his own designing. With great ceremony,
in accordance with a memorandum drawn up by the Prince for the
occasion, the foundation-stone of the new edifice was laid, and by
1855 it was habitable. Spacious, built of granite in the Scotch
baronial style, with a tower 100 feet high, and minor turrets and
castellated gables, the castle was skilfully arranged to command the
finest views of the surrounding mountains and of the neighbouring
river Dee. Upon the interior decorations Albert and Victoria lavished
all their care. The wall and the floors were of pitch-pine, and
covered with specially manufactured tartars. The Balmoral tartan, in
red and grey, designed by the Prince, and the Victoria tartan, with a
white stripe, designed by the Queen, were to be seen in every room:
there were tartan curtains, and tartan chair-covers, and even tartan
linoleums. Occasionally the Royal Stuart tartan appeared, for Her
Majesty always maintained that she was an ardent Jacobite.
Water-colour sketches by Victoria hung upon the walls, together with
innumerable stags' antlers, and the head of a boar, which had been
shot by Albert in Germany. In an alcove in the hall, stood a life-sized
statue of Albert in Highland dress.
Victoria declared that it was perfection. "Every year," she wrote,
"my heart becomes more fixed in this dear paradise, and so much more
so now, that ALL has become my dear Albert's own creation, own work,
own building, own lay-out... and his great taste, and the impress of
his dear hand, have been stamped everywhere."
And here, in very truth, her happiest days were passed. In after
years, when she looked back upon them, a kind of glory, a radiance as
of an unearthly holiness, seemed to glow about these golden hours.
Each hallowed moment stood out clear, beautiful, eternally
significant. For, at the time, every experience there, sentimental, or
grave, or trivial, had come upon her with a peculiar vividness, like a
flashing of marvellous lights. Albert's stalkings--an evening walk
when she lost her way--Vicky sitting down on a wasps' nest--a
torchlight dance--with what intensity such things, and ten thousand
like them, impressed themselves upon her eager consciousness! And how
she flew to her journal to note them down! The news of the Duke's
death! What a moment--when, as she sat sketching after a picnic by a
loch in the lonely hills, Lord Derby's letter had been brought to her,
and she had learnt that "ENGLAND'S, or rather BRITAIN'S pride, her
glory, her hero, the greatest man she had ever produced, was no
morel." For such were here reflections upon the "old rebel" of former
days. But that past had been utterly obliterated--no faintest memory
of it remained. For years she had looked up to the Duke as a figure
almost superhuman. Had he not been a supporter of good Sir Robert? Had
he not asked Albert to succeed him as commander-in-chief? And what a
proud moment it had been when he stood as sponsor to her son Arthur,
who was born on his eighty-first birthday! So now she filled a whole
page of her diary with panegyrical regrets. "His position was the
highest a subject ever had--above party--looked up to by all--revered
by the whole nation--the friend of the Sovereign... The Crown never
possessed--and I fear never WILL--so DEVOTED, loyal, and faithful a
subject, so staunch a supporter! To US his loss is IRREPARABLE... To
Albert he showed the greatest kindness and the utmost confidence...
Not an eye will be dry in the whole country." These were serious
thoughts; but they were soon succeeded by others hardly less
moving--by events as impossible to forget--by Mr. MacLeod's sermon on
Nicodemus--by the gift of a red flannel petticoat to Mrs. P.
Farquharson, and another to old Kitty Kear.
But, without doubt, most memorable, most delightful of all were the
expeditions--the rare, exciting expeditions up distant mountains,
across broad rivers, through strange country, and lasting several
days. With only two gillies--Grant and Brown--for servants, and with
assumed names. It was more like something in a story than real life.
"We had decided to call ourselves LORD AND LADY CHURCHILL AND AND
PARTY--Lady Churchill passing as MISS SPENCER and General Grey as DR.
GREY! Brown once forgot this and called me 'Your Majesty' as I was
getting into the carriage, and Grant on the box once called Albert
'Your Royal Highness,' which set us off laughing, but no one observed
it." Strong, vigorous, enthusiastic, bringing, so it seemed, good
fortune with her--the Highlanders declared she had "a lucky foot"--she
relished everything--the scrambles and the views and the contretemps
and the rough inns with their coarse fare and Brown and Grant waiting
at table. She could have gone on for ever and ever, absolutely happy
with Albert beside her and Brown at her pony's head. But the time came
for turning homewards, alas! the time came for going back to England.
She could hardly bear it; she sat disconsolate in her room and watched
the snow falling. The last day! Oh! If only she could be snowed up!
III
The Crimean War brought new experiences, and most of them were
pleasant ones. It was pleasant to be patriotic and pugnacious, to look
out appropriate prayers to be read in the churches, to have news of
glorious victories, and to know oneself, more proudly than ever, the
representative of England. With that spontaneity of feeling which was
so peculiarly her own, Victoria poured out her emotion, her
admiration, her pity, her love, upon her "dear soldiers." When she
gave them their medals her exultation knew no bounds. "Noble fellows!"
she wrote to the King of the Belgians, "I own I feel as if these were
MY OWN CHILDREN; my heart beats for THEM as for my NEAREST and DEAREST.
They were so touched, so pleased; many, I hear, cried--and they won't
hear of giving up their medals to have their names engraved upon them
for fear they should not receive the IDENTICAL ONE put into THEIR
HANDS BY ME, which is quite touching. Several came by in a sadly
mutilated state." She and they were at one. They felt that she had
done them a splendid honour, and she, with perfect genuineness, shared
their feeling. Albert's attitude towards such things was different;
there was an austerity in him which quite prohibited the expansions of
emotion. When General Williams returned from the heroic defence of
Kars and was presented at Court, the quick, stiff, distant bow with
which the Prince received him struck like ice upon the beholders. He
was a stranger still.
But he had other things to occupy him, more important, surely, than
the personal impressions of military officers and people who went to
Court. He was at work--ceaselessly at work--on the tremendous task of
carrying through the war to a successful conclusion. State papers,
despatches, memoranda, poured from him in an overwhelming stream.
Between 1853 and 1857 fifty folio volumes were filled with the
comments of his pen upon the Eastern question. Nothing would induce
him to stop. Weary ministers staggered under the load of his advice;
but his advice continued, piling itself up over their writing-tables,
and flowing out upon them from red box after red box. Nor was it
advice to be ignored. The talent for administration which had
reorganised the royal palaces and planned the Great Exhibition
asserted itself no less in the confused complexities of war. Again and
again the Prince's suggestions, rejected or unheeded at first, were
adopted under the stress of circumstances and found to be full of
value. The enrolment of a foreign legion, the establishment of a depot
for troops at Malta, the institution of periodical reports and
tabulated returns as to the condition of the army at Sebastopol--such
were the contrivances and the achievements of his indefatigable brain.
He went further: in a lengthy minute he laid down the lines for a
radical reform in the entire administration of the army. This was
premature, but his proposal that "a camp of evolution" should be
created, in which troops should be concentrated and drilled, proved to
be the germ of Aldershot.
Meanwhile Victoria had made a new friend: she had suddenly been
captivated by Napoleon III. Her dislike of him had been strong at
first. She considered that he was a disreputable adventurer who had
usurped the throne of poor old Louis Philippe; and besides he was
hand-in-glove with Lord Palmerston. For a long time, although he was
her ally, she was unwilling to meet him; but at last a visit of the
Emperor and Empress to England was arranged. Directly he appeared at
Windsor her heart began to soften. She found that she was charmed by
his quiet manners, his low, soft voice, and by the soothing simplicity
of his conversation. The good-will of England was essential to the
Emperor's position in Europe, and he had determined to fascinate the
Queen. He succeeded. There was something deep within her which
responded immediately and vehemently to natures that offered a
romantic contrast with her own. Her adoration of Lord Melbourne was
intimately interwoven with her half-unconscious appreciation of the
exciting unlikeness between herself and that sophisticated, subtle,
aristocratical old man. Very different was the quality of her
unlikeness to Napoleon; but its quantity was at least as great. From
behind the vast solidity of her respectability, her conventionality,
her established happiness, she peered out with a strange delicious
pleasure at that unfamiliar, darkly-glittering foreign object, moving
so meteorically before her, an ambiguous creature of wilfulness and
Destiny. And, to her surprise, where she had dreaded antagonisms, she
discovered only sympathies. He was, she said, "so quiet, so simple,
naif even, so pleased to be informed about things he does not know, so
gentle, so full of tact, dignity, and modesty, so full of kind
attention towards us, never saying a word, or doing a thing, which
could put me out... There is something fascinating, melancholy, and
engaging which draws you to him, in spite of any prevention you may
have against him, and certainly without the assistance of any outward
appearance, though I like his face." She observed that he rode
"extremely well, and looks well on horseback, as he sits high." And he
danced "with great dignity and spirit." Above all, he listened to
Albert; listened with the most respectful attention; showed, in fact,
how pleased he was "to be informed about things he did not know;" and
afterwards was heard to declare that he had never met the Prince's
equal. On one occasion, indeed--but only on one--he had seemed to grow
slightly restive. In a diplomatic conversation, "I expatiated a little
on the Holstein question," wrote the Prince in a memorandum, "which
appeared to bore the Emperor as 'tres compliquee.'"
Victoria, too, became much attached to the Empress, whose looks and
graces she admired without a touch of jealousy. Eugenie, indeed, in
the plenitude of her beauty, exquisitely dressed in wonderful Parisian
crinolines which set off to perfection her tall and willowy figure,
might well have caused some heart-burning in the breast of her
hostess, who, very short, rather stout, quite plain, in garish
middle-class garments, could hardly be expected to feel at her best in
such company. But Victoria had no misgivings. To her it mattered
nothing that her face turned red in the heat and that her purple
pork-pie hat was of last year's fashion, while Eugenie, cool and
modish, floated in an infinitude of flounces by her side. She was
Queen of England, and was not that enough? It certainly seemed to be;
true majesty was hers, and she knew it. More than once, when the two
were together in public, it was the woman to whom, as it seemed,
nature and art had given so little, who, by the sheer force of an
inherent grandeur, completely threw her adorned and beautiful
companion into the shade.
There were tears when the moment came for parting, and Victoria
felt "quite wehmuthig," as her guests went away from Windsor. But
before long she and Albert paid a return visit to France, where
everything was very delightful, and she drove incognito through the
streets of Paris in a "common bonnet," and saw a play in the theatre
at St. Cloud, and, one evening, at a great party given by the Emperor
in her honour at the Chateau of Versailles, talked a little to a
distinguished-looking Prussian gentleman, whose name was Bismarck. Her
rooms were furnished so much to her taste that she declared they gave
her quite a home feeling--that, if her little dog were there, she
should really imagine herself at home. Nothing was said, but three
days later her little dog barked a welcome to her as she entered the
apartments. The Emperor himself, sparing neither trouble nor expense,
had personally arranged the charming surprise. Such were his
attentions. She returned to England more enchanted than ever. "Strange
indeed," she exclaimed, "are the dispensations and ways of
Providence!"
The alliance prospered, and the war drew towards a conclusion. Both
the Queen and the Prince, it is true, were most anxious that there
should not be a premature peace. When Lord Aberdeen wished to open
negotiations Albert attacked him in a "geharnischten" letter, while
Victoria rode about on horseback reviewing the troops. At last,
however, Sebastopol was captured. The news reached Balmoral late at
night, and "in a few minutes Albert and all the gentlemen in every
species of attire sallied forth, followed by all the servants, and
gradually by all the population of the village-keepers, gillies,
workmen--"up to the top of the cairn." A bonfire was lighted, the
pipes were played, and guns were shot off. "About three-quarters of an
hour after Albert came down and said the scene had been wild and
exciting beyond everything. The people had been drinking healths in
whisky and were in great ecstasy." The "great ecstasy," perhaps, would
be replaced by other feelings next morning; but at any rate the war
was over--though, to be sure, its end seemed as difficult to account
for as its beginning. The dispensations and ways of Providence
continued to be strange.
IV
An unexpected consequence of the war was a complete change in the
relations between the royal pair and Palmerston. The Prince and the
Minister drew together over their hostility to Russia, and thus it
came about that when Victoria found it necessary to summon her old
enemy to form an administration she did so without reluctance. The
premiership, too, had a sobering effect upon Palmerston; he grew less
impatient and dictatorial; considered with attention the suggestions
of the Crown, and was, besides, genuinely impressed by the Prince's
ability and knowledge. Friction, no doubt, there still occasionally
was, for, while the Queen and the Prince devoted themselves to foreign
politics as much as ever, their views, when the war was over, became
once more antagonistic to those of the Prime Minister. This was
especially the case with regard to Italy. Albert, theoretically the
friend of constitutional government, distrusted Cavour, was horrified
by Garibaldi, and dreaded the danger of England being drawn into war
with Austria. Palmerston, on the other hand, was eager for Italian
independence; but he was no longer at the Foreign Office, and the
brunt of the royal displeasure had now to be borne by Lord John
Russell. In a few years the situation had curiously altered. It was
Lord John who now filled the subordinate and the ungrateful role; but
the Foreign Secretary, in his struggle with the Crown, was supported,
instead of opposed, by the Prime Minister. Nevertheless the struggle
was fierce, and the policy, by which the vigorous sympathy of England
became one of the decisive factors in the final achievement of Italian
unity, was only carried through in face of the violent opposition of
the Court.
Towards the other European storm-centre, also, the Prince's
attitude continued to be very different to that of Palmerston.
Albert's great wish was for a united Germany under the leadership of a
constitutional and virtuous Prussia; Palmerston did not think that
there was much to be said for the scheme, but he took no particular
interest in German politics, and was ready enough to agree to a
proposal which was warmly supported by both the Prince and the
Queen--that the royal Houses of England and Prussia should be united
by the marriage of the Princess Royal with the Prussian Crown Prince.
Accordingly, when the Princess was not yet fifteen, the Prince, a
young man of twenty-four, came over on a visit to Balmoral, and the
betrothal took place. Two years later, in 1857, the marriage was
celebrated. At the last moment, however, it seemed that there might be
a hitch. It was pointed out in Prussia that it was customary for
Princes of the blood royal to be married in Berlin, and it was
suggested that there was no reason why the present case should be
treated as an exception. When this reached the ears of Victoria, she
was speechless with indignation. In a note, emphatic even for Her
Majesty, she instructed the Foreign Secretary to tell the Prussian
Ambassador "not to ENTERTAIN the POSSIBILITY of such a question... The
Queen NEVER could consent to it, both for public and for private
reasons, and the assumption of its being TOO MUCH for a Prince Royal
of Prussia to come over to marry the Princess Royal of Great Britain
in England is too ABSURD to say the least. . . Whatever may be the
usual practice of Prussian princes, it is not EVERY day that one
marries the eldest daughter of the Queen of England. The question must
therefore be considered as settled and closed." It was, and the
wedding took place in St. James's Chapel. There were great
festivities--illuminations, state concerts, immense crowds, and
general rejoicings. At Windsor a magnificent banquet was given to the
bride and bridegroom in the Waterloo room, at which, Victoria noted in
her diary, "everybody was most friendly and kind about Vicky and full
of the universal enthusiasm, of which the Duke of Buccleuch gave us
most pleasing instances, he having been in the very thick of the crowd
and among the lowest of the low." Her feelings during several days had
been growing more and more emotional, and when the time came for the
young couple to depart she very nearly broke down--but not quite.
"Poor dear child!" she wrote afterwards. "I clasped her in my arms and
blessed her, and knew not what to say. I kissed good Fritz and pressed
his hand again and again. He was unable to speak and the tears were in
his eyes. I embraced them both again at the carriage door, and Albert
got into the carriage, an open one, with them and Bertie... The band
struck up. I wished good-bye to the good Perponchers. General
Schreckenstein was much affected. I pressed his hand, and the good
Dean's, and then went quickly upstairs."
Albert, as well as General Schreckenstein, was much affected. He
was losing his favourite child, whose opening intelligence had already
begun to display a marked resemblance to his own--an adoring pupil,
who, in a few years, might have become an almost adequate companion.
An ironic fate had determined that the daughter who was taken from him
should be sympathetic, clever, interested in the arts and sciences,
and endowed with a strong taste for memoranda, while not a single one
of these qualities could be discovered in the son who remained. For
certainly the Prince of Wales did not take after his father.
Victoria's prayer had been unanswered, and with each succeeding year
it became more obvious that Bertie was a true scion of the House of
Brunswick. But these evidences of innate characteristics only served
to redouble the efforts of his parents; it still might not be too late
to incline the young branch, by ceaseless pressure and careful
fastenings, to grow in the proper direction. Everything was tried. The
boy was sent on a continental tour with a picked body of tutors, but
the results were unsatisfactory. At his father's request he kept a
diary which, on his return, was inspected by the Prince. It was found
to be distressingly meagre: what a multitude of highly interesting
reflections might have been arranged under the heading: "The First
Prince of Wales visiting the Pope!" But there was not a single one.
"Le jeune prince plaisit a tout le monde," old Metternich reported to
Guizot, "mais avait l'air embarrasse et tres triste." On his
seventeenth birthday a memorandum was drawn up over the names of the
Queen and the Prince informing their eldest son that he was now
entering upon the period of manhood, and directing him henceforward to
perform the duties of a Christian gentleman. "Life is composed of
duties," said the memorandum, "and in the due, punctual and cheerful
performance of them the true Christian, true soldier, and true
gentleman is recognised... A new sphere of life will open for you in
which you will have to be taught what to do and what not to do, a
subject requiring study more important than any in which you have
hitherto been engaged." On receipt of the memorandum Bertie burst into
tears. At the same time another memorandum was drawn up, headed
"confidential: for the guidance of the gentlemen appointed to attend
on the Prince of Wales." This long and elaborate document laid down
"certain principles" by which the "conduct and demeanour" of the
gentlemen were to be regulated "and which it is thought may conduce to
the benefit of the Prince of Wales." "The qualities which distinguish
a gentleman in society," continued this remarkable paper, "are:--
(1) His appearance, his deportment and dress. (2) The character of his
relations with, and treatment of, others. (3) His desire and power to acquit
himself creditably in conversation or whatever is the occupation of the
society with which he mixes."
A minute and detailed analysis of these subheadings followed,
filling several pages, and the memorandum ended with a final
exhortation to the gentlemen: "If they will duly appreciate the
responsibility of their position, and taking the points above laid
down as the outline, will exercise their own good sense in acting UPON
ALL OCCASIONS all upon these principles, thinking no point of detail
too minute to be important, but maintaining one steady consistent line
of conduct they may render essential service to the young Prince and
justify the flattering selection made by the royal parents." A year
later the young Prince was sent to Oxford, where the greatest care was
taken that he should not mix with the undergraduates. Yes, everything
had been tried--everything... with one single exception. The
experiment had never been made of letting Bertie enjoy himself. But
why should it have been? "Life is composed of duties." What possible
place could there be for enjoyment in the existence of a Prince of
Wales?
The same year which deprived Albert of the Princess Royal brought
him another and a still more serious loss. The Baron had paid his last
visit to England. For twenty years, as he himself said in a letter to
the King of the Belgians, he had performed "the laborious and
exhausting office of a paternal friend and trusted adviser" to the
Prince and the Queen. He was seventy; he was tired, physically and
mentally; it was time to go. He returned to his home in Coburg,
exchanging, once for all, the momentous secrecies of European
statecraft for the little-tattle of a provincial capital and the
gossip of family life. In his stiff chair by the fire he nodded now
over old stories--not of emperors and generals--but of neighbours and
relatives and the domestic adventures of long ago--the burning of his
father's library--and the goat that ran upstairs to his sister's room
and ran twice round the table and then ran down again. Dyspepsia and
depression still attacked him; but, looking back over his life, he was
not dissatisfied. His conscience was clear. "I have worked as long as I
had strength to work," he said, "and for a purpose no one can impugn.
The consciousness of this is my reward--the only one which I desired
to earn."
Apparently, indeed, his "purpose" had been accomplished. By his
wisdom, his patience, and his example he had brought about, in the
fullness of time, the miraculous metamorphosis of which he had
dreamed. The Prince was his creation. An indefatigable toiler,
presiding, for the highest ends, over a great nation--that was his
achievement; and he looked upon his work and it was good. But had the
Baron no misgivings? Did he never wonder whether, perhaps, he might
have accomplished not too little but too much? How subtle and how
dangerous are the snares which fate lays for the wariest of men!
Albert, certainly, seemed to be everything that Stockmar could have
wished--virtuous, industrious, persevering, intelligent. And yet--why
was it--all was not well with him? He was sick at heart.
For in spite of everything he had never reached to happiness. His
work, for which at last he came to crave with an almost morbid
appetite, was a solace and not a cure; the dragon of his
dissatisfaction devoured with dark relish that ever-growing tribute of
laborious days and nights; but it was hungry still. The causes of his
melancholy were hidden, mysterious, unanalysable perhaps--too deeply
rooted in the innermost recesses of his temperament for the eye of
reason to apprehend. There were contradictions in his nature, which,
to some of those who knew him best, made him seem an inexplicable
enigma: he was severe and gentle; he was modest and scornful; he
longed for affection and he was cold. He was lonely, not merely with
the loneliness of exile but with the loneliness of conscious and
unrecognised superiority. He had the pride, at once resigned and
overweening, of a doctrinaire. And yet to say that he was simply a
doctrinaire would be a false description; for the pure doctrinaire
rejoices always in an internal contentment, and Albert was very far
from doing that. There was something that he wanted and that he could
never get. What was it? Some absolute, some ineffable sympathy? Some
extraordinary, some sublime success? Possibly, it was a mixture of
both. To dominate and to be understood! To conquer, by the same
triumphant influence, the submission and the appreciation of men--that
would be worth while indeed! But, to such imaginations, he saw too
clearly how faint were the responses of his actual environment. Who
was there who appreciated him, really and truly? Who COULD appreciate
him in England? And, if the gentle virtue of an inward excellence
availed so little, could he expect more from the hard ways of skill
and force? The terrible land of his exile loomed before him a frigid,
an impregnable mass. Doubtless he had made some slight impression: it
was true that he had gained the respect of his fellow workers, that
his probity, his industry, his exactitude, had been recognised, that
he was a highly influential, an extremely important man. But how far,
how very far, was all this from the goal of his ambitions! How feeble
and futile his efforts seemed against the enormous coagulation of
dullness, of folly, of slackness, of ignorance, of confusion that
confronted him! He might have the strength or the ingenuity to make
some small change for the better here or there--to rearrange some
detail, to abolish some anomaly, to insist upon some obvious reform;
but the heart of the appalling organism remained untouched. England
lumbered on, impervious and self-satisfied, in her old intolerable
course. He threw himself across the path of the monster with rigid
purpose and set teeth, but he was brushed aside. Yes! even Palmerston
was still unconquered--was still there to afflict him with his
jauntiness, his muddle-headedness, his utter lack of principle. It was
too much. Neither nature nor the Baron had given him a sanguine
spirit; the seeds of pessimism, once lodged within him, flourished in
a propitious soil. He
"questioned things, and did not find
One that would answer to his mind;
And all the world appeared unkind."
He believed that he was a failure and he began to despair.
Yet Stockmar had told him that he must "never relax," and he never
would. He would go on, working to the utmost and striving for the
highest, to the bitter end. His industry grew almost maniacal. Earlier
and earlier was the green lamp lighted; more vast grew the
correspondence; more searching the examination of the newspapers; the
interminable memoranda more punctilious, analytical, and precise. His
very recreations became duties. He enjoyed himself by time-table, went
deer-stalking with meticulous gusto, and made puns at lunch--it was the
right thing to do. The mechanism worked with astonishing efficiency,
but it never rested and it was never oiled. In dry exactitude the
innumerable cog-wheels perpetually revolved. No, whatever happened,
the Prince would not relax; he had absorbed the doctrines of Stockmar
too thoroughly. He knew what was right, and, at all costs, he would
pursue it. That was certain. But alas! in this our life what are the
certainties? "In nothing be over-zealous!" says an old Greek. "The due
measure in all the works of man is best. For often one who zealously
pushes towards some excellence, though he be pursuing a gain, is
really being led utterly astray by the will of some Power, which makes
those things that are evil seem to him good, and those things seem to
him evil that are for his advantage." Surely, both the Prince and the
Baron might have learnt something from the frigid wisdom of Theognis.
Victoria noticed that her husband sometimes seemed to be depressed
and overworked. She tried to cheer him up. Realising uneasily that he
was still regarded as a foreigner, she hoped that by conferring upon
him the title of Prince Consort (1857) she would improve his position
in the country. "The Queen has a right to claim that her husband
should be an Englishman," she wrote. But unfortunately, in spite of
the Royal Letters Patent, Albert remained as foreign as before; and as
the years passed his dejection deepened. She worked with him, she
watched over him, she walked with him through the woods at Osborne,
while he whistled to the nightingales, as he had whistled once at
Rosenau so long ago. When his birthday came round, she took the
greatest pains to choose him presents that he would really like. In
1858, when he was thirty-nine, she gave him "a picture of Beatrice,
life-size, in oil, by Horsley, a complete collection of photographic
views of Gotha and the country round, which I had taken by Bedford,
and a paper-weight of Balmoral granite and deers' teeth, designed by
Vicky." Albert was of course delighted, and his merriment at the
family gathering was more pronounced than ever: and yet... what was
there that was wrong?
No doubt it was his health. He was wearing himself out in the
service of the country; and certainly his constitution, as Stockmar
had perceived from the first, was ill-adapted to meet a serious
strain. He was easily upset; he constantly suffered from minor
ailments. His appearance in itself was enough to indicate the
infirmity of his physical powers. The handsome youth of twenty years
since with the flashing eyes and the soft complexion had grown into a
sallow, tired-looking man, whose body, in its stoop and its loose
fleshiness, betrayed the sedentary labourer, and whose head was quite
bald on the top. Unkind critics, who had once compared Albert to an
operatic tenor, might have remarked that there was something of the
butler about him now. Beside Victoria, he presented a painful
contrast. She, too, was stout, but it was with the plumpness of a
vigorous matron; and an eager vitality was everywhere visible--in her
energetic bearing, her protruding, enquiring glances, her small, fat,
capable, and commanding hands. If only, by some sympathetic magic, she
could have conveyed into that portly, flabby figure, that desiccated
and discouraged brain, a measure of the stamina and the self-assurance
which were so pre-eminently hers!
But suddenly she was reminded that there were other perils besides
those of ill-health. During a visit to Coburg in 1860, the Prince was
very nearly killed in a carriage accident. He escaped with a few cuts
and bruises; but Victoria's alarm was extreme, though she concealed
it. "It is when the Queen feels most deeply," she wrote afterwards,
"that she always appears calmest, and she could not and dared not
allow herself to speak of what might have been, or even to admit to
herself (and she cannot and dare not now) the entire danger, for her
head would turn!" Her agitation, in fact, was only surpassed by her
thankfulness to God. She felt, she said, that she could not rest
"without doing something to mark permanently her feelings," and she
decided that she would endow a charity in Coburg. "L1,000, or even
L2,000, given either at once, or in instalments yearly, would not, in
the Queen's opinion, be too much." Eventually, the smaller sum having
been fixed upon, it was invested in a trust, called the
"Victoria-Stift," in the name of the Burgomaster and chief clergyman
of Coburg, who were directed to distribute the interest yearly among a
certain number of young men and women of exemplary character belonging
to the humbler ranks of life.
Shortly afterwards the Queen underwent, for the first time in her
life, the actual experience of close personal loss. Early in 1861 the
Duchess of Kent was taken seriously ill, and in March she died. The
event overwhelmed Victoria. With a morbid intensity, she filled her
diary for pages with minute descriptions of her mother's last hours,
her dissolution, and her corpse, interspersed with vehement
apostrophes, and the agitated outpourings of emotional reflection. In
the grief of the present the disagreements of the past were totally
forgotten. It was the horror and the mystery of Death--Death, present
and actual--that seized upon the imagination of the Queen. Her whole
being, so instinct with vitality, recoiled in agony from the grim
spectacle of the triumph of that awful power. Her own mother, with whom
she had lived so closely and so long that she had become a part almost
of her existence, had fallen into nothingness before her very eyes!
She tried to forget, but she could not. Her lamentations continued
with a strange abundance, a strange persistency. It was almost as if,
by some mysterious and unconscious precognition, she realised that for
her, in an especial manner, that grisly Majesty had a dreadful dart in
store.
For indeed, before the year was out, a far more terrible blow was
to fall upon her. Albert, who had for long been suffering from
sleeplessness, went, on a cold and drenching day towards the end of
November, to inspect the buildings for the new Military Academy at
Sandhurst. On his return, it was clear that the fatigue and exposure
to which he had been subjected had seriously affected his health. He
was attacked by rheumatism, his sleeplessness continued, and he
complained that he felt thoroughly unwell. Three days later a painful
duty obliged him to visit Cambridge. The Prince of Wales, who had been
placed at that University in the previous year, was behaving in such a
manner that a parental visit and a parental admonition had become
necessary. The disappointed father, suffering in mind and body,
carried through his task; but, on his return journey to Windsor, he
caught a fatal chill. During the next week he gradually grew weaker
and more miserable. Yet, depressed and enfeebled as he was, he
continued to work. It so happened that at that very moment a grave
diplomatic crisis had arisen. Civil war had broken out in America, and
it seemed as if England, owing to a violent quarrel with the Northern
States, was upon the point of being drawn into the conflict. A severe
despatch by Lord John Russell was submitted to the Queen; and the
Prince perceived that, if it was sent off unaltered, war would be the
almost inevitable consequence. At seven o'clock on the morning of
December 1, he rose from his bed, and with a quavering hand wrote a
series of suggestions for the alteration of the draft, by which its
language might be softened, and a way left open for a peaceful
solution of the question. These changes were accepted by the
Government, and war was averted. It was the Prince's last memorandum.
He had always declared that he viewed the prospect of death with
equanimity. "I do not cling to life," he had once said to Victoria.
"You do; but I set no store by it." And then he had added: "I am sure,
if I had a severe illness, I should give up at once, I should not
struggle for life. I have no tenacity of life." He had judged
correctly. Before he had been ill many days, he told a friend that he
was convinced he would not recover. He sank and sank. Nevertheless, if
his case had been properly understood and skilfully treated from the
first, he might conceivably have been saved; but the doctors failed to
diagnose his symptoms; and it is noteworthy that his principal
physician was Sir James Clark. When it was suggested that other advice
should be taken, Sir James pooh-poohed the idea: "there was no cause
for alarm," he said. But the strange illness grew worse. At last,
after a letter of fierce remonstrance from Palmerston, Dr. Watson was
sent for; and Dr. Watson saw at once that he had come too late The
Prince was in the grip of typhoid fever. "I think that everything so
far is satisfactory," said Sir James Clark.[*]
[*] Clarendon, II, 253-4: "One cannot speak with certainty; but it
is horrible to think that such a life MAY have been sacrificed to Sir
J. Clark's selfish jealousy of every member of his profession." The
Earl of Clarendon to the Duchess of Manchester, December 17, 1861.
The restlessness and the acute suffering of the earlier days gave
place to a settled torpor and an ever--deepening gloom. Once the
failing patient asked for music--"a fine chorale at a distance;" and a
piano having been placed in the adjoining room, Princess Alice played
on it some of Luther's hymns, after which the Prince repeated "The
Rock of Ages." Sometimes his mind wandered; sometimes the distant past
came rushing upon him; he heard the birds in the early morning, and
was at Rosenau again, a boy. Or Victoria would come and read to him
"Peveril of the Peak," and he showed that he could follow the story,
and then she would bend over him, and he would murmur "liebes Frauchen"
and "gutes Weibchen," stroking her cheek. Her distress and her
agitation were great, but she was not seriously frightened. Buoyed up
by her own abundant energies, she would not believe that Albert's
might prove unequal to the strain. She refused to face such a hideous
possibility. She declined to see Dr. Watson. Why should she? Had not
Sir James Clark assured her that all would be well? Only two days
before the end, which was seen now to be almost inevitable by everyone
about her, she wrote, full of apparent confidence, to the King of the
Belgians: "I do not sit up with him at night," she said, "as I could
be of no use; and there is nothing to cause alarm." The Princess Alice
tried to tell her the truth, but her hopefulness would not be daunted.
On the morning of December 14, Albert, just as she had expected,
seemed to be better; perhaps the crisis was over. But in the course of
the day there was a serious relapse. Then at last she allowed herself
to see that she was standing on the edge of an appalling gulf. The
whole family was summoned, and, one after another, the children took a
silent farewell of their father. "It was a terrible moment," Victoria
wrote in her diary, "but, thank God! I was able to command myself, and
to be perfectly calm, and remained sitting by his side." He murmured
something, but she could not hear what it was; she thought he was
speaking in French. Then all at once he began to arrange his hair,
"just as he used to do when well and he was dressing." "Es kleines
Frauchen," she whispered to him; and he seemed to understand. For a
moment, towards the evening, she went into another room, but was
immediately called back; she saw at a glance that a ghastly change had
taken place. As she knelt by the bed, he breathed deeply, breathed
gently, breathed at last no more. His features became perfectly rigid;
she shrieked one long wild shriek that rang through the
terror-stricken castle and understood that she had lost him for ever.
The death of the Prince Consort was the central turning-point in
the history of Queen Victoria. She herself felt that her true life had
ceased with her husband's, and that the remainder of her days upon
earth was of a twilight nature--an epilogue to a drama that was done.
Nor is it possible that her biographer should escape a similar
impression. For him, too, there is a darkness over the latter half of
that long career. The first forty--two years of the Queen's life are
illuminated by a great and varied quantity of authentic information.
With Albert's death a veil descends. Only occasionally, at fitful and
disconnected intervals, does it lift for a moment or two; a few main
outlines, a few remarkable details may be discerned; the rest is all
conjecture and ambiguity. Thus, though the Queen survived her great
bereavement for almost as many years as she had lived before it, the
chronicle of those years can bear no proportion to the tale of her
earlier life. We must be content in our ignorance with a brief and
summary relation.
The sudden removal of the Prince was not merely a matter of
overwhelming personal concern to Victoria; it was an event of
national, of European importance. He was only forty-two, and in the
ordinary course of nature he might have been expected to live at least
thirty years longer. Had he done so it can hardly be doubted that the
whole development of the English polity would have been changed.
Already at the time of his death he filled a unique place in English
public life; already among the inner circle of politicians he was
accepted as a necessary and useful part of the mechanism of the State.
Lord Clarendon, for instance, spoke of his death as "a national
calamity of far greater importance than the public dream of," and
lamented the loss of his "sagacity and foresight," which, he declared,
would have been "more than ever valuable" in the event of an American
war. And, as time went on, the Prince's influence must have enormously
increased. For, in addition to his intellectual and moral qualities,
he enjoyed, by virtue of his position, one supreme advantage which
every other holder of high office in the country was without: he was
permanent. Politicians came and went, but the Prince was perpetually
installed at the centre of affairs. Who can doubt that, towards the
end of the century, such a man, grown grey in the service of the
nation, virtuous, intelligent, and with the unexampled experience of a
whole life-time of government, would have acquired an extraordinary
prestige? If, in his youth, he had been able to pit the Crown against
the mighty Palmerston and to come off with equal honours from the
contest, of what might he not have been capable in his old age? What
Minister, however able, however popular, could have withstood the
wisdom, the irreproachability, the vast prescriptive authority, of the
venerable Prince? It is easy to imagine how, under such a ruler, an
attempt might have been made to convert England into a State as
exactly organised, as elaborately trained, as efficiently equipped,
and as autocratically controlled, as Prussia herself. Then perhaps,
eventually, under some powerful leader--a Gladstone or a Bright--the
democratic forces in the country might have rallied together, and a
struggle might have followed in which the Monarchy would have been
shaken to its foundations. Or, on the other hand, Disraeli's
hypothetical prophecy might have come true. "With Prince Albert," he
said, "we have buried our... sovereign. This German Prince has
governed England for twenty-one years with a wisdom and energy such as
none of our kings have ever shown. If he had outlived some of our "old
stagers" he would have given us the blessings of absolute government."
The English Constitution--that indescribable entity--is a living
thing, growing with the growth of men, and assuming ever-varying forms
in accordance with the subtle and complex laws of human character. It
is the child of wisdom and chance. The wise men of 1688 moulded it
into the shape we know, but the chance that George I could not speak
English gave it one of its essential peculiarities--the system of a
Cabinet independent of the Crown and subordinate to the Prime
Minister. The wisdom of Lord Grey saved it from petrifaction and
destruction, and set it upon the path of Democracy. Then chance
intervened once more; a female sovereign happened to marry an able and
pertinacious man; and it seemed likely that an element which had been
quiescent within it for years--the element of irresponsible
administrative power--was about to become its predominant
characteristic and to change completely the direction of its growth.
But what chance gave chance took away. The Consort perished in his
prime; and the English Constitution, dropping the dead limb with
hardly a tremor, continued its mysterious life as if he had never
been.
One human being, and one alone, felt the full force of what had
happened. The Baron, by his fireside at Coburg, suddenly saw the
tremendous fabric of his creation crash down into sheer and
irremediable ruin. Albert was gone, and he had lived in vain. Even his
blackest hypochondria had never envisioned quite so miserable a
catastrophe. Victoria wrote to him, visited him, tried to console him
by declaring with passionate conviction that she would carry on her
husband's work. He smiled a sad smile and looked into the fire. Then he
murmured that he was going where Albert was--that he would not be
long. He shrank into himself. His children clustered round him and did
their best to comfort him, but it was useless: the Baron's heart was
broken. He lingered for eighteen months, and then, with his pupil,
explored the shadow and the dust.
II
With appalling suddenness Victoria had exchanged the serene
radiance of happiness for the utter darkness of woe. In the first
dreadful moments those about her had feared that she might lose her
reason, but the iron strain within her held firm, and in the intervals
between the intense paroxysms of grief it was observed that the Queen
was calm. She remembered, too, that Albert had always disapproved of
exaggerated manifestations of feeling, and her one remaining desire
was to do nothing but what he would have wished. Yet there were
moments when her royal anguish would brook no restraints. One day she
sent for the Duchess of Sutherland, and, leading her to the Prince's
room, fell prostrate before his clothes in a flood of weeping, while
she adjured the Duchess to tell her whether the beauty of Albert's
character had ever been surpassed. At other times a feeling akin to
indignation swept over her. "The poor fatherless baby of eight
months," she wrote to the King of the Belgians, "is now the utterly
heartbroken and crushed widow of forty-two! My LIFE as a HAPPY one is
ENDED! The world is gone for ME!... Oh! to be cut off in the prime of
life--to see our pure, happy, quiet, domestic life, which ALONE
enabled me to bear my MUCH disliked position, CUT OFF at
forty-two--when I HAD hoped with such instinctive certainty that God
never WOULD part us, and would let us grow old together (though HE
always talked of the shortness of life)--is TOO AWFUL, too cruel!" The
tone of outraged Majesty seems to be discernible. Did she wonder in
her heart of hearts how the Deity could have dared?
But all other emotions gave way before her overmastering
determination to continue, absolutely unchanged, and for the rest of
her life on earth, her reverence, her obedience, her idolatry. "I am
anxious to repeat ONE thing," she told her uncle, "and THAT ONE is my
firm resolve, my IRREVOCABLE DECISION, viz., that HIS wishes--HIS
plans--about everything, HIS views about EVERY thing are to be MY LAW!
And NO HUMAN POWER will make me swerve from WHAT HE decided and
wished." She grew fierce, she grew furious, at the thought of any
possible intrusion between her and her desire. Her uncle was coming to
visit her, and it flashed upon her that HE might try to interfere with
her and seek to "rule the roost" as of old. She would give him a hint.
"I am ALSO DETERMINED," she wrote, "that NO ONE person--may HE be ever
so good, ever so devoted among my servants--is to lead or guide or
dictate TO ME. I know HOW he would disapprove it... Though miserably
weak and utterly shattered, my spirit rises when I think ANY wish or
plan of his is to be touched or changed, or I am to be MADE TO DO
anything." She ended her letter in grief and affection. She was, she
said, his "ever wretched but devoted child, Victoria R." And then she
looked at the date: it was the 24th of December. An agonising pang
assailed her, and she dashed down a postcript--"What a Xmas! I won't
think of it."
At first, in the tumult of her distresses, she declared that she
could not see her Ministers, and the Princess Alice, assisted by Sir
Charles Phipps, the keeper of the Privy Purse, performed, to the best
of her ability, the functions of an intermediary. After a few weeks,
however, the Cabinet, through Lord John Russell, ventured to warn the
Queen that this could not continue. She realised that they were right:
Albert would have agreed with them; and so she sent for the Prime
Minister. But when Lord Palmerston arrived at Osborne, in the pink of
health, brisk, with his whiskers freshly dyed, and dressed in a brown
overcoat, light grey trousers, green gloves, and blue studs, he did not
create a very good impression.
Nevertheless, she had grown attached to her old enemy, and the
thought of a political change filled her with agitated apprehensions.
The Government, she knew, might fall at any moment; she felt she could
not face such an eventuality; and therefore, six months after the
death of the Prince, she took the unprecedented step of sending a
private message to Lord Derby, the leader of the Opposition, to tell
him that she was not in a fit state of mind or body to undergo the
anxiety of a change of Government, and that if he turned the present
Ministers out of office it would be at the risk of sacrificing her
life--or her reason. When this message reached Lord Derby he was
considerably surprised. "Dear me!" was his cynical comment. "I didn't
think she was so fond of them as THAT."
Though the violence of her perturbations gradually subsided, her
cheerfulness did not return. For months, for years, she continued in
settled gloom. Her life became one of almost complete seclusion.
Arrayed in thickest crepe, she passed dolefully from Windsor to
Osborne, from Osborne to Balmoral. Rarely visiting the capital,
refusing to take any part in the ceremonies of state, shutting herself
off from the slightest intercourse with society, she became almost as
unknown to her subjects as some potentate of the East. They might
murmur, but they did not understand. What had she to do with empty
shows and vain enjoyments? No! She was absorbed by very different
preoccupations. She was the devoted guardian of a sacred trust. Her
place was in the inmost shrine of the house of mourning--where she
alone had the right to enter, where she could feel the effluence of a
mysterious presence, and interpret, however faintly and feebly, the
promptings of a still living soul. That, and that only was her
glorious, her terrible duty. For terrible indeed it was. As the years
passed her depression seemed to deepen and her loneliness to grow more
intense. "I am on a dreary sad pinnacle of solitary grandeur," she
said. Again and again she felt that she could bear her situation no
longer--that she would sink under the strain. And then, instantly,
that Voice spoke: and she braced herself once more to perform, with
minute conscientiousness, her grim and holy task.
Above all else, what she had to do was to make her own the
master-impulse of Albert's life--she must work, as he had worked, in
the service of the country. That vast burden of toil which he had
taken upon his shoulders it was now for her to bear. She assumed the
gigantic load; and naturally she staggered under it. While he had
lived, she had worked, indeed, with regularity and conscientiousness;
but it was work made easy, made delicious, by his care, his
forethought, his advice, and his infallibility. The mere sound of his
voice, asking her to sign a paper, had thrilled her; in such a
presence she could have laboured gladly for ever. But now there was a
hideous change. Now there were no neat piles and docketings under the
green lamp; now there were no simple explanations of difficult
matters; now there was nobody to tell her what was right and what was
wrong. She had her secretaries, no doubt: there were Sir Charles
Phipps, and General Grey, and Sir Thomas Biddulph; and they did their
best. But they were mere subordinates: the whole weight of initiative
and responsibility rested upon her alone. For so it had to be. "I am
DETERMINED"--had she not declared it?--"that NO ONE person is to lead
or guide or dictate to ME;" anything else would be a betrayal of her
trust. She would follow the Prince in all things. He had refused to
delegate authority; he had examined into every detail with his own
eyes; he had made it a rule never to sign a paper without having
first, not merely read it, but made notes on it too. She would do the
same. She sat from morning till night surrounded by huge heaps of
despatch--boxes, reading and writing at her desk--at her desk, alas!
which stood alone now in the room.
Within two years of Albert's death a violent disturbance in foreign
politics put Victoria's faithfulness to a crucial test. The fearful
Schleswig-Holstein dispute, which had been smouldering for more than a
decade, showed signs of bursting out into conflagration. The
complexity of the questions at issue was indescribable. "Only three
people," said Palmerston, "have ever really understood the
Schleswig-Holstein business--the Prince Consort, who is dead--a German
professor, who has gone mad--and I, who have forgotten all about it."
But, though the Prince might be dead, had he not left a vicegerent
behind him? Victoria threw herself into the seething embroilment with
the vigour of inspiration. She devoted hours daily to the study of the
affair in all its windings; but she had a clue through the labyrinth:
whenever the question had been discussed, Albert, she recollected it
perfectly, had always taken the side of Prussia. Her course was clear.
She became an ardent champion of the Prussian point of view. It was a
legacy from the Prince, she said. She did not realise that the Prussia
of the Prince's day was dead, and that a new Prussia, the Prussia of
Bismarck, was born. Perhaps Palmerston, with his queer prescience,
instinctively apprehended the new danger; at any rate, he and Lord
John were agreed upon the necessity of supporting Denmark against
Prussia's claims. But opinion was sharply divided, not only in the
country but in the Cabinet. For eighteen months the controversy raged;
while the Queen, with persistent vehemence, opposed the Prime Minister
and the Foreign Secretary. When at last the final crisis arose--when
it seemed possible that England would join forces with Denmark in a
war against Prussia--Victoria's agitation grew febrile in its
intensity. Towards her German relatives she preserved a discreet
appearance of impartiality; but she poured out upon her Ministers a
flood of appeals, protests, and expostulations. She invoked the sacred
cause of Peace. "The only chance of preserving peace for Europe," she
wrote, "is by not assisting Denmark, who has brought this entirely
upon herself. The Queen suffers much, and her nerves are more and more
totally shattered... But though all this anxiety is wearing her out,
it will not shake her firm purpose of resisting any attempt to involve
this country in a mad and useless combat." She was, she declared,
"prepared to make a stand," even if the resignation of the Foreign
Secretary should follow. "The Queen," she told Lord Granville, "is
completely exhausted by the anxiety and suspense, and misses her
beloved husband's help, advice, support, and love in an overwhelming
manner." She was so worn out by her efforts for peace that she could
"hardly hold up her head or hold her pen." England did not go to war,
and Denmark was left to her fate; but how far the attitude of the
Queen contributed to this result it is impossible, with our present
knowledge, to say. On the whole, however, it seems probable that the
determining factor in the situation was the powerful peace party in
the Cabinet rather than the imperious and pathetic pressure of
Victoria.
It is, at any rate, certain that the Queen's enthusiasm for the
sacred cause of peace was short-lived. Within a few months her mind
had completely altered. Her eyes were opened to the true nature of
Prussia, whose designs upon Austria were about to culminate in the
Seven Weeks' War. Veering precipitately from one extreme to the other,
she now urged her Ministers to interfere by force of arms in support
of Austria. But she urged in vain.
Her political activity, no more than her social seclusion, was
approved by the public. As the years passed, and the royal mourning
remained as unrelieved as ever, the animadversions grew more general
and more severe. It was observed that the Queen's protracted privacy
not only cast a gloom over high society, not only deprived the
populace of its pageantry, but also exercised a highly deleterious
effect upon the dressmaking, millinery, and hosiery trades. This
latter consideration carried great weight. At last, early in 1864, the
rumour spread that Her Majesty was about to go out of mourning, and
there was much rejoicing in the newspapers; but unfortunately it
turned out that the rumour was quite without foundation. Victoria,
with her own hand, wrote a letter to The Times to say so. "This idea,"
she declared, "cannot be too explicitly contradicted. "The Queen," the
letter continued, "heartily appreciates the desire of her subjects to
see her, and whatever she CAN do to gratify them in this loyal and
affectionate wish, she WILL do... But there are other and higher
duties than those of mere representation which are now thrown upon the
Queen, alone and unassisted--duties which she cannot neglect without
injury to the public service, which weigh unceasingly upon her,
overwhelming her with work and anxiety." The justification might have
been considered more cogent had it not been known that those "other
and higher duties" emphasised by the Queen consisted for the most part
of an attempt to counteract the foreign policy of Lord Palmerston and
Lord John Russell. A large section--perhaps a majority--of the nation
were violent partisans of Denmark in the Schleswig-Holstein quarrel;
and Victoria's support of Prussia was widely denounced. A wave of
unpopularity, which reminded old observers of the period preceding the
Queen's marriage more than twenty-five years before, was beginning to
rise. The press was rude; Lord Ellenborough attacked the Queen in the
House of Lords; there were curious whispers in high quarters that she
had had thoughts of abdicating--whispers followed by regrets that she
had not done so. Victoria, outraged and injured, felt that she was
misunderstood. She was profoundly unhappy. After Lord Ellenborough's
speech, General Grey declared that he "had never seen the Queen so
completely upset." "Oh, how fearful it is," she herself wrote to Lord
Granville, "to be suspected--uncheered-- unguided and unadvised--and
how alone the poor Queen feels! " Nevertheless, suffer as she might,
she was as resolute as ever; she would not move by a hair's breadth
from the course that a supreme obligation marked out for her; she
would be faithful to the end.
And so, when Schleswig-Holstein was forgotten, and even the image
of the Prince had begun to grow dim in the fickle memories of men, the
solitary watcher remained immutably concentrated at her peculiar task.
The world's hostility, steadily increasing, was confronted and
outfaced by the impenetrable weeds of Victoria. Would the world never
understand? It was not mere sorrow that kept her so strangely
sequestered; it was devotion, it was self-immolation; it was the
laborious legacy of love. Unceasingly the pen moved over the
black-edged paper. The flesh might be weak, but that vast burden must
be borne. And fortunately, if the world would not understand, there
were faithful friends who did. There was Lord Granville, and there was
kind Mr. Theodore Martin. Perhaps Mr. Martin, who was so clever, would
find means to make people realise the facts. She would send him a
letter, pointing out her arduous labours and the difficulties under
which she struggled, and then he might write an article for one of the
magazines. "It is not," she told him in 1863, "the Queen's SORROW that
keeps her secluded. It is her OVERWHELMING WORK and her health, which
is greatly shaken by her sorrow, and the totally overwhelming amount
of work and responsibility--work which she feels really wears her out.
Alice Helps was wonderfully struck at the Queen's room; and if Mrs.
Martin will look at it, she can tell Mr. Martin what surrounds her.
From the hour she gets out of bed till she gets into it again there is
work, work, work,--letter-boxes, questions, etc., which are dreadfully
exhausting--and if she had not comparative rest and quiet in the
evening she would most likely not be ALIVE. Her brain is constantly
overtaxed." It was too true.
III
To carry on Albert's work--that was her first duty; but there was
another, second only to that, and yet nearer, if possible, to her
heart--to impress the true nature of his genius and character upon the
minds of her subjects. She realised that during his life he had not
been properly appreciated; the full extent of his powers, the supreme
quality of his goodness, had been necessarily concealed; but death had
removed the need of barriers, and now her husband, in his magnificent
entirety, should stand revealed to all. She set to work methodically.
She directed Sir Arthur Helps to bring out a collection of the
Prince's speeches and addresses, and the weighty tome appeared in 1862.
Then she commanded General Grey to write an account of the Prince's
early years--from his birth to his marriage; she herself laid down the
design of the book, contributed a number of confidential documents,
and added numerous notes; General Grey obeyed, and the work was
completed in 1866. But the principal part of the story was still
untold, and Mr. Martin was forthwith instructed to write a complete
biography of the Prince Consort. Mr. Martin laboured for fourteen
years. The mass of material with which he had to deal was almost
incredible, but he was extremely industrious, and he enjoyed
throughout the gracious assistance of Her Majesty. The first bulky
volume was published in 1874; four others slowly followed; so that it
was not until 1880 that the monumental work was finished.
Mr. Martin was rewarded by a knighthood; and yet it was sadly
evident that neither Sir Theodore nor his predecessors had achieved
the purpose which the Queen had in view. Perhaps she was unfortunate
in her coadjutors, but, in reality, the responsibility for the failure
must lie with Victoria herself. Sir Theodore and the others faithfully
carried out the task which she had set them--faithfully put before the
public the very image of Albert that filled her own mind. The fatal
drawback was that the public did not find that image attractive.
Victoria's emotional nature, far more remarkable for vigour than for
subtlety, rejecting utterly the qualifications which perspicuity, or
humour, might suggest, could be satisfied with nothing but the
absolute and the categorical. When she disliked she did so with an
unequivocal emphasis which swept the object of her repugnance at once
and finally outside the pale of consideration; and her feelings of
affection were equally unmitigated. In the case of Albert her passion
for superlatives reached its height. To have conceived of him as
anything short of perfect--perfect in virtue, in wisdom, in beauty, in
all the glories and graces of man--would have been an unthinkable
blasphemy: perfect he was, and perfect he must be shown to have been.
And so, Sir Arthur, Sir Theodore, and the General painted him. In the
circumstances, and under such supervision, to have done anything else
would have required talents considerably more distinguished than any
that those gentlemen possessed. But that was not all. By a curious
mischance Victoria was also able to press into her service another
writer, the distinction of whose talents was this time beyond a doubt.
The Poet Laureate, adopting, either from complaisance or conviction,
the tone of his sovereign, joined in the chorus, and endowed the royal
formula with the magical resonance of verse. This settled the matter.
Henceforward it was impossible to forget that Albert had worn the
white flower of a blameless life.
The result was doubly unfortunate. Victoria, disappointed and
chagrined, bore a grudge against her people for their refusal, in
spite of all her efforts, to rate her husband at his true worth. She
did not understand that the picture of an embodied perfection is
distasteful to the majority of mankind. The cause of this is not so
much an envy of the perfect being as a suspicion that he must be
inhuman; and thus it happened that the public, when it saw displayed
for its admiration a figure resembling the sugary hero of a moral
story-book rather than a fellow man of flesh and blood, turned away
with a shrug, a smile, and a flippant ejaculation. But in this the
public was the loser as well as Victoria. For in truth Albert was a
far more interesting personage than the public dreamed. By a curious
irony an impeccable waxwork had been fixed by the Queen's love in the
popular imagination, while the creature whom it represented--the real
creature, so full of energy and stress and torment, so mysterious and
so unhappy, and so fallible and so very human--had altogether
disappeared.
IV
Words and books may be ambiguous memorials; but who can
misinterpret the visible solidity of bronze and stone? At Frogmore,
near Windsor, where her mother was buried, Victoria constructed, at
the cost of L200,000, a vast and elaborate mausoleum for herself and
her husband. But that was a private and domestic monument, and the
Queen desired that wherever her subjects might be gathered together
they should be reminded of the Prince. Her desire was gratified; all
over the country--at Aberdeen, at Perth, and at Wolverhampton--statues
of the Prince were erected; and the Queen, making an exception to her
rule of retirement, unveiled them herself. Nor did the capital lag
behind. A month after the Prince's death a meeting was called together
at the Mansion House to discuss schemes for honouring his memory.
Opinions, however, were divided upon the subject. Was a statue or an
institution to be preferred? Meanwhile a subscription was opened; an
influential committee was appointed, and the Queen was consulted as to
her wishes in the matter. Her Majesty replied that she would prefer a
granite obelisk, with sculptures at the base, to an institution. But
the committee hesitated: an obelisk, to be worthy of the name, must
clearly be a monolith; and where was the quarry in England capable of
furnishing a granite block of the required size? It was true that
there was granite in Russian Finland; but the committee were advised
that it was not adapted to resist exposure to the open air. On the
whole, therefore, they suggested that a Memorial Hall should be
erected, together with a statue of the Prince. Her Majesty assented;
but then another difficulty arose. It was found that not more than
L60,000 had been subscribed--a sum insufficient to defray the double
expense. The Hall, therefore, was abandoned; a statue alone was to be
erected; and certain eminent architects were asked to prepare designs.
Eventually the committee had at their disposal a total sum of
L120,000, since the public subscribed another L10,000, while L50,000
was voted by Parliament. Some years later a joint stock company was
formed and built, as a private speculation, the Albert Hall.
The architect whose design was selected, both by the committee and
by the Queen, was Mr. Gilbert Scott, whose industry,
conscientiousness, and genuine piety had brought him to the head of
his profession. His lifelong zeal for the Gothic style having given
him a special prominence, his handiwork was strikingly visible, not
only in a multitude of original buildings, but in most of the
cathedrals of England. Protests, indeed, were occasionally raised
against his renovations; but Mr. Scott replied with such vigour and
unction in articles and pamphlets that not a Dean was unconvinced, and
he was permitted to continue his labours without interruption. On one
occasion, however, his devotion to Gothic had placed him in an
unpleasant situation. The Government offices in Whitehall were to be
rebuilt; Mr. Scott competed, and his designs were successful.
Naturally, they were in the Gothic style, combining "a certain
squareness and horizontality of outline" with pillar-mullions, gables,
high-pitched roofs, and dormers; and the drawings, as Mr. Scott
himself observed, "were, perhaps, the best ever sent in to a
competition, or nearly so." After the usual difficulties and delays
the work was at last to be put in hand, when there was a change of
Government and Lord Palmerston became Prime Minister. Lord Palmerston
at once sent for Mr. Scott. "Well, Mr. Scott," he said, in his jaunty
way, "I can't have anything to do with this Gothic style. I must
insist on your making a design in the Italian manner, which I am sure
you can do very cleverly." Mr. Scott was appalled; the style of the
Italian renaissance was not only unsightly, it was positively immoral,
and he sternly refused to have anything to do with it. Thereupon Lord
Palmerston assumed a fatherly tone. "Quite true; a Gothic architect
can't be expected to put up a Classical building; I must find someone
else." This was intolerable, and Mr. Scott, on his return home,
addressed to the Prime Minister a strongly-worded letter, in which he
dwelt upon his position as an architect, upon his having won two
European competitions, his being an A.R.A., a gold medallist of the
Institute, and a lecturer on architecture at the Royal Academy; but it
was useless--Lord Palmerston did not even reply. It then occurred to
Mr. Scott that, by a judicious mixture, he might, while preserving the
essential character of the Gothic, produce a design which would give a
superficial impression of the Classical style. He did so, but no
effect was produced upon Lord Palmerston. The new design, he said, was
"neither one thing nor 'tother--a regular mongrel affair--and he would
have nothing to do with it either." After that Mr. Scott found it
necessary to recruit for two months at Scarborough, "with a course of
quinine." He recovered his tone at last, but only at the cost of his
convictions. For the sake of his family he felt that it was his
unfortunate duty to obey the Prime Minister; and, shuddering with
horror, he constructed the Government offices in a strictly
Renaissance style.
Shortly afterwards Mr. Scott found some consolation in building the
St. Pancras Hotel in a style of his own.
And now another and yet more satisfactory task was his. "My idea in
designing the Memorial," he wrote, "was to erect a kind of ciborium to
protect a statue of the Prince; and its special characteristic was
that the ciborium was designed in some degree on the principles of the
ancient shrines. These shrines were models of imaginary buildings,
such as had never in reality been erected; and my idea was to realise
one of these imaginary structures with its precious materials, its
inlaying, its enamels, etc. etc." His idea was particularly
appropriate since it chanced that a similar conception, though in the
reverse order of magnitude, had occurred to the Prince himself, who had
designed and executed several silver cruet-stands upon the same model.
At the Queen's request a site was chosen in Kensington Gardens as near
as possible to that of the Great Exhibition; and in May, 1864, the
first sod was turned. The work was long, complicated, and difficult; a
great number of workmen were employed, besides several subsidiary
sculptors and metal--workers under Mr. Scott's direction, while at
every stage sketches and models were submitted to Her Majesty, who
criticised all the details with minute care, and constantly suggested
improvements. The frieze, which encircled the base of the monument,
was in itself a very serious piece of work. "This," said Mr. Scott,
"taken as a whole, is perhaps one of the most laborious works of
sculpture ever undertaken, consisting, as it does, of a continuous
range of figure-sculpture of the most elaborate description, in the
highest alto-relievo of life-size, of more than 200 feet in length,
containing about 170 figures, and executed in the hardest marble which
could be procured." After three years of toil the memorial was still
far from completion, and Mr. Scott thought it advisable to give a
dinner to the workmen, "as a substantial recognition of his
appreciation of their skill and energy." "Two long tables," we are
told, "constructed of scaffold planks, were arranged in the workshops,
and covered with newspapers, for want of table-cloths. Upwards of
eighty men sat down. Beef and mutton, plum pudding and cheese were
supplied in abundance, and each man who desired it had three pints of
beer, gingerbeer and lemonade being provided for the teetotalers, who
formed a very considerable proportion... Several toasts were given and
many of the workmen spoke, almost all of them commencing by "Thanking
God that they enjoyed good health;" some alluded to the temperance
that prevailed amongst them, others observed how little swearing was
ever heard, whilst all said how pleased and proud they were to be
engaged on so great a work."
Gradually the edifice approached completion. The one hundred and
seventieth life-size figure in the frieze was chiselled, the granite
pillars arose, the mosaics were inserted in the allegorical pediments,
the four colossal statues representing the greater Christian virtues,
the four other colossal statues representing the greater moral
virtues, were hoisted into their positions, the eight bronzes
representing the greater sciences--Astronomy, Chemistry, Geology,
Geometry, Rhetoric, Medicine, Philosophy, and Physiology--were fixed
on their glittering pinnacles, high in air. The statue of Physiology
was particularly admired. "On her left arm," the official description
informs us, "she bears a new-born infant, as a representation of the
development of the highest and most perfect of physiological forms;
her hand points towards a microscope, the instrument which lends its
assistance for the investigation of the minuter forms of animal and
vegetable organisms." At last the gilded cross crowned the dwindling
galaxies of superimposed angels, the four continents in white marble
stood at the four corners of the base, and, seven years after its
inception, in July, 1872, the monument was thrown open to the public.
But four more years were to elapse before the central figure was
ready to be placed under its starry canopy. It was designed by Mr.
Foley, though in one particular the sculptor's freedom was restricted
by Mr. Scott. "I have chosen the sitting posture," Mr. Scott said, "as
best conveying the idea of dignity befitting a royal personage." Mr.
Foley ably carried out the conception of his principal. "In the
attitude and expression," he said, "the aim has been, with the
individuality of portraiture, to embody rank, character, and
enlightenment, and to convey a sense of that responsive intelligence
indicating an active, rather than a passive, interest in those
pursuits of civilisation illustrated in the surrounding figures,
groups, and relievos... To identify the figure with one of the most
memorable undertakings of the public life of the Prince--the
International Exhibition of 1851--a catalogue of the works collected
in that first gathering of the industry of all nations, is placed in
the right hand." The statue was of bronze gilt and weighed nearly ten
tons. It was rightly supposed that the simple word "Albert," cast on
the base, would be a sufficient means of identification.
Lord Palmerston's laugh--a queer metallic "Ha! ha! ha!" with
reverberations in it from the days of Pitt and the Congress of
Vienna--was heard no more in Piccadilly; Lord John Russell dwindled
into senility; Lord Derby tottered from the stage. A new scene opened;
and new protagonists--Mr. Gladstone and Mr. Disraeli--struggled
together in the limelight. Victoria, from her post of vantage, watched
these developments with that passionate and personal interest which
she invariably imported into politics. Her prepossessions were of an
unexpected kind. Mr. Gladstone had been the disciple of her revered
Peel, and had won the approval of Albert; Mr. Disraeli had hounded Sir
Robert to his fall with hideous virulence, and the Prince had
pronounced that he "had not one single element of a gentleman in his
composition." Yet she regarded Mr. Gladstone with a distrust and
dislike which steadily deepened, while upon his rival she lavished an
abundance of confidence, esteem, and affection such as Lord Melbourne
himself had hardly known.
Her attitude towards the Tory Minister had suddenly changed when
she found that he alone among public men had divined her feelings at
Albert's death. Of the others she might have said "they pity me and
not my grief;" but Mr. Disraeli had understood; and all his
condolences had taken the form of reverential eulogies of the
departed. The Queen declared that he was "the only person who
appreciated the Prince." She began to show him special favour; gave
him and his wife two of the coveted seats in St. George's Chapel at
the Prince of Wales's wedding, and invited him to stay a night at
Windsor. When the grant for the Albert Memorial came before the House
of Commons, Disraeli, as leader of the Opposition, eloquently
supported the project. He was rewarded by a copy of the Prince's
speeches, bound in white morocco, with an inscription in the royal
hand. In his letter of thanks he "ventured to touch upon a sacred
theme," and, in a strain which re-echoed with masterly fidelity the
sentiments of his correspondent, dwelt at length upon the absolute
perfection of Albert. "The Prince," he said, "is the only person whom
Mr. Disraeli has ever known who realised the Ideal. None with whom he
is acquainted have ever approached it. There was in him a union of the
manly grace and sublime simplicity, of chivalry with the intellectual
splendour of the Attic Academe. The only character in English history
that would, in some respects, draw near to him is Sir Philip Sidney:
the same high tone, the same universal accomplishments, the same
blended tenderness and vigour, the same rare combination of romantic
energy and classic repose." As for his own acquaintance with the
Prince, it had been, he said, "one of the most satisfactory incidents
of his life: full of refined and beautiful memories, and exercising,
as he hopes, over his remaining existence, a soothing and exalting
influence." Victoria was much affected by "the depth and delicacy of
these touches," and henceforward Disraeli's place in her affections
was assured. When, in 1866, the Conservatives came into office,
Disraeli's position as Chancellor of the Exchequer and leader of the
House necessarily brought him into a closer relation with the
Sovereign. Two years later Lord Derby resigned, and Victoria, with
intense delight and peculiar graciousness, welcomed Disraeli as her
First Minister.
But only for nine agitated months did he remain in power. The
Ministry, in a minority in the Commons, was swept out of existence by
a general election. Yet by the end of that short period the ties which
bound together the Queen and her Premier had grown far stronger than
ever before; the relationship between them was now no longer merely
that between a grateful mistress and a devoted servant: they were
friends. His official letters, in which the personal element had
always been perceptible, developed into racy records of political news
and social gossip, written, as Lord Clarendon said, "in his best novel
style." Victoria was delighted; she had never, she declared, had such
letters in her life, and had never before known EVERYTHING. In return,
she sent him, when the spring came, several bunches of flowers, picked
by her own hands. He despatched to her a set of his novels, for which,
she said, she was "most grateful, and which she values much." She
herself had lately published her "Leaves from the Journal of our Life
in the Highlands," and it was observed that the Prime Minister, in
conversing with Her Majesty at this period, constantly used the words
"we authors, ma'am." Upon political questions, she was his staunch
supporter. "Really there never was such conduct as that of the
Opposition," she wrote. And when the Government was defeated in the
House she was "really shocked at the way in which the House of Commons
go on; they really bring discredit on Constitutional Government." She
dreaded the prospect of a change; she feared that if the Liberals
insisted upon disestablishing the Irish Church, her Coronation Oath
might stand in the way. But a change there had to be, and Victoria
vainly tried to console herself for the loss of her favourite Minister
by bestowing a peerage upon Mrs. Disraeli.
Mr. Gladstone was in his shirt-sleeves at Hawarden, cutting down a
tree, when the royal message was brought to him. "Very significant,"
he remarked, when he had read the letter, and went on cutting down his
tree. His secret thoughts on the occasion were more explicit, and were
committed to his diary. "The Almighty," he wrote, "seems to sustain
and spare me for some purpose of His own, deeply unworthy as I know
myself to be. Glory be to His name."
The Queen, however, did not share her new Minister's view of the
Almighty's intentions. She could not believe that there was any divine
purpose to be detected in the programme of sweeping changes which Mr.
Gladstone was determined to carry out. But what could she do? Mr.
Gladstone, with his daemonic energy and his powerful majority in the
House of Commons, was irresistible; and for five years (1869-74)
Victoria found herself condemned to live in an agitating atmosphere of
interminable reform--reform in the Irish Church and the Irish land
system, reform in education, reform in parliamentary elections, reform
in the organisation of the Army and the Navy, reform in the
administration of justice. She disapproved, she struggled, she grew
very angry; she felt that if Albert had been living things would never
have happened so; but her protests and her complaints were alike
unavailing. The mere effort of grappling with the mass of documents
which poured in upon her in an ever-growing flood was terribly
exhausting. When the draft of the lengthy and intricate Irish Church
Bill came before her, accompanied by an explanatory letter from Mr.
Gladstone covering a dozen closely-written quarto pages, she almost
despaired. She turned from the Bill to the explanation, and from the
explanation back again to the Bill, and she could not decide which was
the most confusing. But she had to do her duty: she had not only to
read, but to make notes. At last she handed the whole heap of papers
to Mr. Martin, who happened to be staying at Osborne, and requested
him to make a precis of them. When he had done so, her disapproval of
the measure became more marked than ever; but, such was the strength
of the Government, she actually found herself obliged to urge
moderation upon the Opposition, lest worse should ensue.
In the midst of this crisis, when the future of the Irish Church
was hanging in the balance, Victoria's attention was drawn to another
proposed reform. It was suggested that the sailors in the Navy should
henceforward be allowed to wear beards. "Has Mr. Childers ascertained
anything on the subject of the beards?" the Queen wrote anxiously to
the First Lord of the Admiralty. On the whole, Her Majesty was in
favour of the change. "Her own personal feeling," she wrote, "would be
for the beards without the moustaches, as the latter have rather a
soldierlike appearance; but then the object in view would not be
obtained, viz. to prevent the necessity of shaving. Therefore it had
better be as proposed, the entire beard, only it should be kept short
and very clean." After thinking over the question for another week,
the Queen wrote a final letter. She wished, she said, "to make one
additional observation respecting the beards, viz. that on no account
should moustaches be allowed without beards. That must be clearly
understood."
Changes in the Navy might be tolerated; to lay hands upon the Army
was a more serious matter. From time immemorial there had been a
particularly close connection between the Army and the Crown; and
Albert had devoted even more time and attention to the details of
military business than to the processes of fresco-painting or the
planning of sanitary cottages for the deserving poor. But now there
was to be a great alteration: Mr. Gladstone's fiat had gone forth, and
the Commander-in-Chief was to be removed from his direct dependence
upon the Sovereign, and made subordinate to Parliament and the
Secretary of State for War. Of all the liberal reforms this was the
one which aroused the bitterest resentment in Victoria. She considered
that the change was an attack upon her personal position--almost an
attack upon the personal position of Albert. But she was helpless, and
the Prime Minister had his way. When she heard that the dreadful man
had yet another reform in contemplation--that he was about to abolish
the purchase of military commissions--she could only feel that it was
just what might have been expected. For a moment she hoped that the
House of Lords would come to the rescue; the Peers opposed the change
with unexpected vigour; but Mr. Gladstone, more conscious than ever of
the support of the Almighty, was ready with an ingenious device. The
purchase of commissions had been originally allowed by Royal Warrant;
it should now be disallowed by the same agency. Victoria was faced by
a curious dilemma: she abominated the abolition of purchase; but she
was asked to abolish it by an exercise of sovereign power which was
very much to her taste. She did not hesitate for long; and when the
Cabinet, in a formal minute, advised her to sign the Warrant, she did
so with a good grace.
Unacceptable as Mr. Gladstone's policy was, there was something
else about him which was even more displeasing to Victoria. She
disliked his personal demeanour towards herself. It was not that Mr.
Gladstone, in his intercourse with her, was in any degree lacking in
courtesy or respect. On the contrary, an extraordinary reverence
impregnated his manner, both in his conversation and his
correspondence with the Sovereign. Indeed, with that deep and
passionate conservatism which, to the very end of his incredible
career, gave such an unexpected colouring to his inexplicable
character, Mr. Gladstone viewed Victoria through a haze of awe which
was almost religious--as a sacrosanct embodiment of venerable
traditions--a vital element in the British Constitution--a Queen by
Act of Parliament. But unfortunately the lady did not appreciate the
compliment. The well-known complaint--"He speaks to me as if I were a
public meeting-" whether authentic or no--and the turn of the sentence
is surely a little too epigrammatic to be genuinely
Victorian--undoubtedly expresses the essential element of her
antipathy. She had no objection to being considered as an institution;
she was one, and she knew it. But she was a woman too, and to be
considered ONLY as an institution--that was unbearable. And thus all
Mr. Gladstone's zeal and devotion, his ceremonious phrases, his low
bows, his punctilious correctitudes, were utterly wasted; and when, in
the excess of his loyalty, he went further, and imputed to the object
of his veneration, with obsequious blindness, the subtlety of
intellect, the wide reading, the grave enthusiasm, which he himself
possessed, the misunderstanding became complete. The discordance
between the actual Victoria and this strange Divinity made in Mr.
Gladstone's image produced disastrous results. Her discomfort and
dislike turned at last into positive animosity, and, though her
manners continued to be perfect, she never for a moment unbent; while
he on his side was overcome with disappointment, perplexity, and
mortification.
Yet his fidelity remained unshaken. When the Cabinet met, the Prime
Minister, filled with his beatific vision, would open the proceedings
by reading aloud the letters which he had received from the Queen upon
the questions of the hour. The assembly sat in absolute silence while,
one after another, the royal missives, with their emphases, their
ejaculations, and their grammatical peculiarities, boomed forth in all
the deep solemnity of Mr. Gladstone's utterance. Not a single comment,
of any kind, was ever hazarded; and, after a fitting pause, the
Cabinet proceeded with the business of the day.
II
Little as Victoria appreciated her Prime Minister's attitude
towards her, she found that it had its uses. The popular discontent at
her uninterrupted seclusion had been gathering force for many years,
and now burst out in a new and alarming shape. Republicanism was in
the air. Radical opinion in England, stimulated by the fall of
Napoleon III and the establishment of a republican government in
France, suddenly grew more extreme than it ever had been since 1848.
It also became for the first time almost respectable. Chartism had been
entirely an affair of the lower classes; but now Members of
Parliament, learned professors, and ladies of title openly avowed the
most subversive views. The monarchy was attacked both in theory and in
practice. And it was attacked at a vital point: it was declared to be
too expensive. What benefits, it was asked, did the nation reap to
counterbalance the enormous sums which were expended upon the
Sovereign? Victoria's retirement gave an unpleasant handle to the
argument. It was pointed out that the ceremonial functions of the
Crown had virtually lapsed; and the awkward question remained whether
any of the other functions which it did continue to perform were
really worth L385,000 per annum. The royal balance-sheet was curiously
examined. An anonymous pamphlet entitled "What does she do with it?"
appeared, setting forth the financial position with malicious clarity.
The Queen, it stated, was granted by the Civil List L60,000 a year for
her private use; but the rest of her vast annuity was given, as the
Act declared, to enable her "to defray the expenses of her royal
household and to support the honour and dignity of the Crown." Now it
was obvious that, since the death of the Prince, the expenditure for
both these purposes must have been very considerably diminished, and
it was difficult to resist the conclusion that a large sum of money
was diverted annually from the uses for which it had been designed by
Parliament, to swell the private fortune of Victoria. The precise
amount of that private fortune it was impossible to discover; but
there was reason to suppose that it was gigantic; perhaps it reached a
total of five million pounds. The pamphlet protested against such a
state of affairs, and its protests were repeated vigorously in
newspapers and at public meetings. Though it is certain that the
estimate of Victoria's riches was much exaggerated, it is equally
certain that she was an exceedingly wealthy woman. She probably saved
L20,000 a year from the Civil List, the revenues of the Duchy of
Lancaster were steadily increasing, she had inherited a considerable
property from the Prince Consort, and she had been left, in 1852, an
estate of half a million by Mr. John Neild, an eccentric miser. In
these circumstances it was not surprising that when, in 1871,
Parliament was asked to vote a dowry of L30,000 to the Princess Louise
on her marriage with the eldest son of the Duke of Argyle, together
with an annuity of L6,000, there should have been a serious outcry[*].
[*] In 1889 it was officially stated that the Queen's total savings
from the Civil List amounted to L824,025, but that out of this sum
much had been spent on special entertainments to foreign visitors.
Taking into consideration the proceeds from the Duchy of Lancaster,
which were more than L60,000 a year, the savings of the Prince
Consort, and Mr. Neild's legacy, it seems probable that, at the time
of her death, Victoria's private fortune approached two million
pounds.
In order to conciliate public opinion, the Queen opened Parliament
in person, and the vote was passed almost unanimously. But a few
months later another demand was made: the Prince Arthur had come of
age, and the nation was asked to grant him an annuity of L15,000. The
outcry was redoubled. The newspapers were filled with angry articles;
Bradlaugh thundered against "princely paupers" to one of the largest
crowds that had ever been seen in Trafalgar Square; and Sir Charles
Dilke expounded the case for a republic in a speech to his
constituents at Newcastle. The Prince's annuity was ultimately
sanctioned in the House of Commons by a large majority; but a minority
of fifty members voted in favour of reducing the sum to L10,000.
Towards every aspect of this distasteful question, Mr. Gladstone
presented an iron front. He absolutely discountenanced the extreme
section of his followers. He declared that the whole of the Queen's
income was justly at her personal disposal, argued that to complain of
royal savings was merely to encourage royal extravagance, and
successfully convoyed through Parliament the unpopular annuities,
which, he pointed out, were strictly in accordance with precedent.
When, in 1872, Sir Charles Dilke once more returned to the charge in
the House of Commons, introducing a motion for a full enquiry into the
Queen's expenditure with a view to a root and branch reform of the
Civil List, the Prime Minister brought all the resources of his
powerful and ingenious eloquence to the support of the Crown. He was
completely successful; and amid a scene of great disorder the motion
was ignominiously dismissed. Victoria was relieved; but she grew no
fonder of Mr. Gladstone.
It was perhaps the most miserable moment of her life. The
Ministers, the press, the public, all conspired to vex her, to blame
her, to misinterpret her actions, to be unsympathetic and
disrespectful in every way. She was "a cruelly misunderstood woman,"
she told Mr. Martin, complaining to him bitterly of the unjust attacks
which were made upon her, and declaring that "the great worry and
anxiety and hard work for ten years, alone, unaided, with increasing
age and never very strong health" were breaking her down, and "almost
drove her to despair." The situation was indeed deplorable. It seemed
as if her whole existence had gone awry; as if an irremediable
antagonism had grown up between the Queen and the nation. If Victoria
had died in the early seventies, there can be little doubt that the
voice of the world would have pronounced her a failure.
III
But she was reserved for a very different fate. The outburst of
republicanism had been in fact the last flicker of an expiring cause.
The liberal tide, which had been flowing steadily ever since the
Reform Bill, reached its height with Mr. Gladstone's first
administration; and towards the end of that administration the
inevitable ebb began. The reaction, when it came, was sudden and
complete. The General Election of 1874 changed the whole face of
politics. Mr. Gladstone and the Liberals were routed; and the Tory
party, for the first time for over forty years, attained an
unquestioned supremacy in England. It was obvious that their
surprising triumph was pre-eminently due to the skill and vigour of
Disraeli. He returned to office, no longer the dubious commander of an
insufficient host, but with drums beating and flags flying, a
conquering hero. And as a conquering hero Victoria welcomed her new
Prime Minister.
Then there followed six years of excitement, of enchantment, of
felicity, of glory, of romance. The amazing being, who now at last, at
the age of seventy, after a lifetime of extraordinary struggles, had
turned into reality the absurdest of his boyhood's dreams, knew well
enough how to make his own, with absolute completeness, the heart of
the Sovereign Lady whose servant, and whose master, he had so
miraculously become. In women's hearts he had always read as in an
open book. His whole career had turned upon those curious entities;
and the more curious they were, the more intimately at home with them
he seemed to be. But Lady Beaconsfield, with her cracked idolatry, and
Mrs. Brydges-Williams, with her clogs, her corpulence, and her legacy,
were gone: an even more remarkable phenomenon stood in their place. He
surveyed what was before him with the eye of a past-master; and he was
not for a moment at a loss. He realised everything--the interacting
complexities of circumstance and character, the pride of place mingled
so inextricably with personal arrogance, the superabundant
emotionalism, the ingenuousness of outlook, the solid, the laborious
respectability, shot through so incongruously by temperamental
cravings for the coloured and the strange, the singular intellectual
limitations, and the mysteriously essential female elements
impregnating every particle of the whole. A smile hovered over his
impassive features, and he dubbed Victoria "the Faery." The name
delighted him, for, with that epigrammatic ambiguity so dear to his
heart, it precisely expressed his vision of the Queen. The Spenserian
allusion was very pleasant--the elegant evocations of Gloriana; but
there was more in it than that: there was the suggestion of a
diminutive creature, endowed with magical--and mythical--properties,
and a portentousness almost ridiculously out of keeping with the rest
of her make-up. The Faery, he determined, should henceforward wave her
wand for him alone. Detachment is always a rare quality, and rarest of
all, perhaps, among politicians; but that veteran egotist possessed it
in a supreme degree. Not only did he know what he had to do, not only
did he do it; he was in the audience as well as on the stage; and he
took in with the rich relish of a connoisseur every feature of the
entertaining situation, every phase of the delicate drama, and every
detail of his own consummate performance.
The smile hovered and vanished, and, bowing low with Oriental
gravity and Oriental submissiveness, he set himself to his task. He
had understood from the first that in dealing with the Faery the
appropriate method of approach was the very antithesis of the
Gladstonian; and such a method was naturally his. It was not his habit
to harangue and exhort and expatiate in official conscientiousness; he
liked to scatter flowers along the path of business, to compress a
weighty argument into a happy phrase, to insinuate what was in his
mind with an air of friendship and confidential courtesy. He was
nothing if not personal; and he had perceived that personality was the
key that opened the Faery's heart. Accordingly, he never for a moment
allowed his intercourse with her to lose the personal tone; he
invested all the transactions of State with the charms of familiar
conversation; she was always the royal lady, the adored and revered
mistress, he the devoted and respectful friend. When once the personal
relation was firmly established, every difficulty disappeared. But to
maintain that relation uninterruptedly in a smooth and even course a
particular care was necessary: the bearings had to be most assiduously
oiled. Nor was Disraeli in any doubt as to the nature of the
lubricant. "You have heard me called a flatterer," he said to Matthew
Arnold, "and it is true. Everyone likes flattery, and when you come to
royalty you should lay it on with a trowel." He practiced what he
preached. His adulation was incessant, and he applied it in the very
thickest slabs. "There is no honor and no reward," he declared, "that
with him can ever equal the possession of your Majesty's kind
thoughts. All his own thoughts and feelings and duties and affections
are now concentrated in your Majesty, and he desires nothing more for
his remaining years than to serve your Majesty, or, if that service
ceases, to live still on its memory as a period of his existence most
interesting and fascinating." "In life," he told her, "one must have
for one's thoughts a sacred depository, and Lord Beaconsfield ever
presumes to seek that in his Sovereign Mistress." She was not only his
own solitary support; she was the one prop of the State. "If your
Majesty is ill," he wrote during a grave political crisis, "he is sure
he will himself break down. All, really, depends upon your Majesty."
"He lives only for Her," he asseverated, "and works only for Her, and
without Her all is lost." When her birthday came he produced an
elaborate confection of hyperbolic compliment. "To-day Lord
Beaconsfield ought fitly, perhaps, to congratulate a powerful
Sovereign on her imperial sway, the vastness of her Empire, and the
success and strength of her fleets and armies. But he cannot, his mind
is in another mood. He can only think of the strangeness of his
destiny that it has come to pass that he should be the servant of one
so great, and whose infinite kindness, the brightness of whose
intelligence and the firmness of whose will, have enabled him to
undertake labours to which he otherwise would be quite unequal, and
supported him in all things by a condescending sympathy, which in the
hour of difficulty alike charms and inspires. Upon the Sovereign of
many lands and many hearts may an omnipotent Providence shed every
blessing that the wise can desire and the virtuous deserve!" In those
expert hands the trowel seemed to assume the qualities of some lofty
masonic symbol--to be the ornate and glittering vehicle of verities
unrealised by the profane.
Such tributes were delightful, but they remained in the nebulous
region of words, and Disraeli had determined to give his blandishments
a more significant solidity. He deliberately encouraged those high
views of her own position which had always been native to Victoria's
mind and had been reinforced by the principles of Albert and the
doctrines of Stockmar. He professed to a belief in a theory of the
Constitution which gave the Sovereign a leading place in the councils
of government; but his pronouncements upon the subject were
indistinct; and when he emphatically declared that there ought to be
"a real Throne," it was probably with the mental addition that that
throne would be a very unreal one indeed whose occupant was unamenable
to his cajoleries. But the vagueness of his language was in itself an
added stimulant to Victoria. Skilfully confusing the woman and the
Queen, he threw, with a grandiose gesture, the government of England
at her feet, as if in doing so he were performing an act of personal
homage. In his first audience after returning to power, he assured her
that "whatever she wished should be done." When the intricate Public
Worship Regulation Bill was being discussed by the Cabinet, he told
the Faery that his "only object" was "to further your Majesty's wishes
in this matter." When he brought off his great coup over the Suez
Canal, he used expressions which implied that the only gainer by the
transaction was Victoria. "It is just settled," he wrote in triumph;
"you have it, Madam... Four millions sterling! and almost immediately.
There was only one firm that could do it--Rothschilds. They behaved
admirably; advanced the money at a low rate, and the entire interest
of the Khedive is now yours, Madam." Nor did he limit himself to
highly-spiced insinuations. Writing with all the authority of his
office, he advised the Queen that she had the constitutional right to
dismiss a Ministry which was supported by a large majority in the
House of Commons, he even urged her to do so, if, in her opinion,
"your Majesty's Government have from wilfulness, or even from
weakness, deceived your Majesty." To the horror of Mr. Gladstone, he
not only kept the Queen informed as to the general course of business
in the Cabinet, but revealed to her the part taken in its discussions
by individual members of it. Lord Derby, the son of the late Prime
Minister and Disraeli's Foreign Secretary, viewed these developments
with grave mistrust. "Is there not," he ventured to write to his
Chief, "just a risk of encouraging her in too large ideas of her
personal power, and too great indifference to what the public expects?
I only ask; it is for you to judge."
As for Victoria, she accepted everything--compliments, flatteries,
Elizabethan prerogatives--without a single qualm. After the long gloom
of her bereavement, after the chill of the Gladstonian discipline, she
expanded to the rays of Disraeli's devotion like a flower in the sun.
The change in her situation was indeed miraculous. No longer was she
obliged to puzzle for hours over the complicated details of business,
for now she had only to ask Mr. Disraeli for an explanation, and he
would give it her in the most concise, in the most amusing, way. No
longer was she worried by alarming novelties; no longer was she put
out at finding herself treated, by a reverential gentleman in high
collars, as if she were some embodied precedent, with a recondite
knowledge of Greek. And her deliverer was surely the most fascinating
of men. The strain of charlatanism, which had unconsciously captivated
her in Napoleon III, exercised the same enchanting effect in the case
of Disraeli. Like a dram-drinker, whose ordinary life is passed in
dull sobriety, her unsophisticated intelligence gulped down his rococo
allurements with peculiar zest. She became intoxicated, entranced.
Believing all that he told her of herself, she completely regained the
self-confidence which had been slipping away from her throughout the
dark period that followed Albert's death. She swelled with a new
elation, while he, conjuring up before her wonderful Oriental visions,
dazzled her eyes with an imperial grandeur of which she had only dimly
dreamed. Under the compelling influence, her very demeanour altered.
Her short, stout figure, with its folds of black velvet, its muslin
streamers, its heavy pearls at the heavy neck, assumed an almost
menacing air. In her countenance, from which the charm of youth had
long since vanished, and which had not yet been softened by age, the
traces of grief, of disappointment, and of displeasure were still
visible, but they were overlaid by looks of arrogance and sharp lines
of peremptory hauteur. Only, when Mr. Disraeli appeared, the
expression changed in an instant, and the forbidding visage became
charged with smiles. For him she would do anything. Yielding to his
encouragements, she began to emerge from her seclusion; she appeared in
London in semi-state, at hospitals and concerts; she opened
Parliament; she reviewed troops and distributed medals at Aldershot.
But such public signs of favour were trivial in comparison with her
private attentions. During his flours of audience, she could hardly
restrain her excitement and delight. "I can only describe my
reception," he wrote to a friend on one occasion, "by telling you that
I really thought she was going to embrace me. She was wreathed with
smiles, and, as she tattled, glided about the room like a bird." In
his absence, she talked of him perpetually, and there was a note of
unusual vehemence in her solicitude for his health. "John Manners,"
Disraeli told Lady Bradford, "who has just come from Osborne, says
that the Faery only talked of one subject, and that was her Primo.
According to him, it was her gracious opinion that the Government
should make my health a Cabinet question. Dear John seemed quite
surprised at what she said; but you are used to these ebullitions."
She often sent him presents; an illustrated album arrived for him
regularly from Windsor on Christmas Day. But her most valued gifts were
the bunches of spring flowers which, gathered by herself and her
ladies in the woods at Osborne, marked in an especial manner the
warmth and tenderness of her sentiments. Among these it was, he
declared, the primroses that he loved the best. They were, he said,
"the ambassadors of Spring, the gems and jewels of Nature." He liked
them, he assured her, "so much better for their being wild; they seem
an offering from the Fauns and Dryads of Osborne." "They show," he
told her, "that your Majesty's sceptre has touched the enchanted
Isle." He sat at dinner with heaped-up bowls of them on every side,
and told his guests that "they were all sent to me this morning by the
Queen from Osborne, as she knows it is my favorite flower."
As time went on, and as it became clearer and clearer that the
Faery's thraldom was complete, his protestations grew steadily more
highly--coloured and more unabashed. At last he ventured to import
into his blandishments a strain of adoration that was almost avowedly
romantic. In phrases of baroque convolution, he conveyed the message
of his heart. The pressure of business, he wrote, had "so absorbed and
exhausted him, that towards the hour of post he has not had clearness
of mind, and vigour of pen, adequate to convey his thoughts and facts
to the most loved and illustrious being, who deigns to consider them."
She sent him some primroses, and he replied that he could "truly say
they are 'more precious than rubies,' coming, as they do, and at such
a moment, from a Sovereign whom he adores." She sent him snowdrops, and
his sentiment overflowed into poetry. "Yesterday eve," he wrote,
"there appeared, in Whitehall Gardens, a delicate-looking case, with a
royal superscription, which, when he opened, he thought, at first,
that your Majesty had graciously bestowed upon him the stars of your
Majesty's principal orders. And, indeed, he was so impressed with this
graceful illusion, that, having a banquet, where there were many stars
and ribbons, he could not resist the temptation, by placing some
snowdrops on his heart, of showing that, he, too, was decorated by a
gracious Sovereign.
Then, in the middle of the night, it occurred to him, that it might
all be an enchantment, and that, perhaps, it was a Faery gift and came
from another monarch: Queen Titania, gathering flowers, with her
Court, in a soft and sea-girt isle, and sending magic blossoms, which,
they say, turn the heads of those who receive them.
A Faery gift! Did he smile as he wrote the words? Perhaps; and yet
it would be rash to conclude that his perfervid declarations were
altogether without sincerity. Actor and spectator both, the two
characters were so intimately blended together in that odd composition
that they formed an inseparable unity, and it was impossible to say
that one of them was less genuine than the other. With one element, he
could coldly appraise the Faery's intellectual capacity, note with
some surprise that she could be on occasion "most interesting and
amusing," and then continue his use of the trowel with an ironical
solemnity; while, with the other, he could be overwhelmed by the
immemorial panoply of royalty, and, thrilling with the sense of his
own strange elevation, dream himself into a gorgeous phantasy of
crowns and powers and chivalric love. When he told Victoria that
"during a somewhat romantic and imaginative life, nothing has ever
occurred to him so interesting as this confidential correspondence
with one so exalted and so inspiring," was he not in earnest after
all? When he wrote to a lady about the Court, "I love the
Queen--perhaps the only person in this world left to me that I do
love," was he not creating for himself an enchanted palace out of the
Arabian Nights, full of melancholy and spangles, in which he actually
believed? Victoria's state of mind was far more simple; untroubled by
imaginative yearnings, she never lost herself in that nebulous region
of the spirit where feeling and fancy grow confused. Her emotions,
with all their intensity and all their exaggeration, retained the
plain prosaic texture of everyday life. And it was fitting that her
expression of them should be equally commonplace. She was, she told
her Prime Minister, at the end of an official letter, "yours aff'ly V.
R. and I." In such a phrase the deep reality of her feeling is
instantly manifest. The Faery's feet were on the solid earth; it was
the ruse cynic who was in the air.
He had taught her, however, a lesson, which she had learnt with
alarming rapidity. A second Gloriana, did he call her? Very well,
then, she would show that she deserved the compliment. Disquieting
symptoms followed fast. In May, 1874, the Tsar, whose daughter had
just been married to Victoria's second son, the Duke of Edinburgh, was
in London, and, by an unfortunate error, it had been arranged that his
departure should not take place until two days after the date on which
his royal hostess had previously decided to go to Balmoral. Her
Majesty refused to modify her plans. It was pointed out to her that the
Tsar would certainly be offended, that the most serious consequences
might follow; Lord Derby protested; Lord Salisbury, the Secretary of
State for India, was much perturbed. But the Faery was unconcerned;
she had settled to go to Balmoral on the 18th, and on the 18th she
would go. At last Disraeli, exercising all his influence, induced her
to agree to stay in London for two days more. "My head is still on my
shoulders," he told Lady Bradford. "The great lady has absolutely
postponed her departure! Everybody had failed, even the Prince of
Wales... and I have no doubt I am not in favour. I can't help it.
Salisbury says I have saved an Afghan War, and Derby compliments me on
my unrivalled triumph." But before very long, on another issue, the
triumph was the Faery's. Disraeli, who had suddenly veered towards a
new Imperialism, had thrown out the suggestion that the Queen of
England ought to become the Empress of India. Victoria seized upon the
idea with avidity, and, in season and out of season, pressed upon her
Prime Minister the desirability of putting his proposal into practice.
He demurred; but she was not to be baulked; and in 1876, in spite of
his own unwillingness and that of his entire Cabinet, he found himself
obliged to add to the troubles of a stormy session by introducing a
bill for the alteration of the Royal Title. His compliance, however,
finally conquered the Faery's heart. The measure was angrily attacked
in both Houses, and Victoria was deeply touched by the untiring energy
with which Disraeli defended it. She was, she said, much grieved by
"the worry and annoyance" to which he was subjected; she feared she
was the cause of it; and she would never forget what she owed to "her
kind, good, and considerate friend." At the same time, her wrath fell
on the Opposition. Their conduct, she declared, was "extraordinary,
incomprehensible, and mistaken," and, in an emphatic sentence which
seemed to contradict both itself and all her former proceedings, she
protested that she "would be glad if it were more generally known that
it was HER wish, as people WILL have it, that it has been FORCED UPON
HER!" When the affair was successfully over, the imperial triumph was
celebrated in a suitable manner. On the day of the Delhi Proclamation,
the new Earl of Beaconsfield went to Windsor to dine with the new
Empress of India. That night the Faery, usually so homely in her
attire, appeared in a glittering panoply of enormous uncut jewels,
which had been presented to her by the reigning Princes of her Raj. At
the end of the meal the Prime Minister, breaking through the rules of
etiquette, arose, and in a flowery oration proposed the health of the
Queen-Empress. His audacity was well received, and his speech was
rewarded by a smiling curtsey.
These were significant episodes; but a still more serious
manifestation of Victoria's temper occurred in the following year,
during the crowning crisis of Beaconsfield's life. His growing
imperialism, his desire to magnify the power and prestige of England,
his insistence upon a "spirited foreign policy," had brought him into
collision with Russia; the terrible Eastern Question loomed up; and
when war broke out between Russia and Turkey, the gravity of the
situation became extreme. The Prime Minister's policy was fraught with
difficulty and danger. Realising perfectly the appalling implications
of an Anglo-Russian war, he was yet prepared to face even that
eventuality if he could obtain his ends by no other method; but he
believed that Russia in reality was still less desirous of a rupture,
and that, if he played his game with sufficient boldness and
adroitness, she would yield, when it came to the point, all that he
required without a blow. It was clear that the course he had marked
out for himself was full of hazard, and demanded an extraordinary
nerve; a single false step, and either himself, or England, might be
plunged in disaster. But nerve he had never lacked; he began his
diplomatic egg-dance with high assurance; and then he discovered that,
besides the Russian Government, besides the Liberals and Mr.
Gladstone, there were two additional sources of perilous embarrassment
with which he would have to reckon. In the first place there was a
strong party in the Cabinet, headed by Lord Derby, the Foreign
Secretary, which was unwilling to take the risk of war; but his
culminating anxiety was the Faery.
From the first, her attitude was uncompromising. The old hatred of
Russia, which had been engendered by the Crimean War, surged up again
within her; she remembered Albert's prolonged animosity; she felt the
prickings of her own greatness; and she flung herself into the turmoil
with passionate heat. Her indignation with the Opposition--with anyone
who ventured to sympathise with the Russians in their quarrel with the
Turks--was unbounded. When anti-Turkish meetings were held in London,
presided over by the Duke of Westminster and Lord Shaftesbury, and
attended by Mr. Gladstone and other prominent Radicals, she considered
that "the Attorney-General ought to be set at these men;" "it can't,"
she exclaimed, "be constitutional." Never in her life, not even in the
crisis over the Ladies of the Bedchamber, did she show herself a more
furious partisan. But her displeasure was not reserved for the
Radicals; the backsliding Conservatives equally felt its force. She
was even discontented with Lord Beaconsfield himself. Failing entirely
to appreciate the delicate complexity of his policy, she constantly
assailed him with demands for vigorous action, interpreted each
finesse as a sign of weakness, and was ready at every juncture to let
slip the dogs of war. As the situation developed, her anxiety grew
feverish. "The Queen," she wrote, "is feeling terribly anxious lest
delay should cause us to be too late and lose our prestige for ever! It
worries her night and day." "The Faery," Beaconsfield told Lady
Bradford, "writes every day and telegraphs every hour; this is almost
literally the case." She raged loudly against the Russians. "And the
language," she cried, "the insulting language--used by the Russians
against us! It makes the Queen's blood boil!" "Oh," she wrote a little
later, "if the Queen were a man, she would like to go and give those
Russians, whose word one cannot believe, such a beating! We shall
never be friends again till we have it out. This the Queen feels sure
of."
The unfortunate Prime Minister, urged on to violence by Victoria on
one side, had to deal, on the other, with a Foreign Secretary who was
fundamentally opposed to any policy of active interference at all.
Between the Queen and Lord Derby he held a harassed course. He gained,
indeed, some slight satisfaction in playing on the one against the
other--in stimulating Lord Derby with the Queen's missives, and in
appeasing the Queen by repudiating Lord Derby's opinions; on one
occasion he actually went so far as to compose, at Victoria's request,
a letter bitterly attacking his colleague, which Her Majesty forthwith
signed, and sent, without alteration, to the Foreign Secretary. But
such devices only gave a temporary relief; and it soon became evident
that Victoria's martial ardour was not to be sidetracked by
hostilities against Lord Derby; hostilities against Russia were what
she wanted, what she would, what she must, have. For now, casting
aside the last relics of moderation, she began to attack her friend
with a series of extraordinary threats. Not once, not twice, but many
times she held over his head the formidable menace of her imminent
abdication. "If England," she wrote to Beaconsfield, "is to kiss
Russia's feet, she will not be a party to the humiliation of England
and would lay down her crown," and she added that the Prime Minister
might, if he thought fit, repeat her words to the Cabinet. "This
delay," she ejaculated, "this uncertainty by which, abroad, we are
losing our prestige and our position, while Russia is advancing and
will be before Constantinople in no time! Then the Government will be
fearfully blamed and the Queen so humiliated that she thinks she would
abdicate at once. Be bold!" "She feels," she reiterated, "she cannot,
as she before said, remain the Sovereign of a country that is letting
itself down to kiss the feet of the great barbarians, the retarders of
all liberty and civilisation that exists." When the Russians advanced
to the outskirts of Constantinople she fired off three letters in a
day demanding war; and when she learnt that the Cabinet had only
decided to send the Fleet to Gallipoli she declared that "her first
impulse" was "to lay down the thorny crown, which she feels little
satisfaction in retaining if the position of this country is to remain
as it is now." It is easy to imagine the agitating effect of such a
correspondence upon Beaconsfield. This was no longer the Faery; it was
a genie whom he had rashly called out of her bottle, and who was now
intent upon showing her supernal power. More than once, perplexed,
dispirited, shattered by illness, he had thoughts of withdrawing
altogether from the game. One thing alone, he told Lady Bradford, with
a wry smile, prevented him. "If I could only," he wrote, "face the
scene which would occur at headquarters if I resigned, I would do so
at once."
He held on, however, to emerge victorious at last. The Queen was
pacified; Lord Derby was replaced by Lord Salisbury; and at the
Congress of Berlin der alte Jude carried all before him. He returned
to England in triumph, and assured the delighted Victoria that she
would very soon be, if she was not already, the "Dictatress of
Europe."
But soon there was an unexpected reverse. At the General Election
of 1880 the country, mistrustful of the forward policy of the
Conservatives, and carried away by Mr. Gladstone's oratory, returned
the Liberals to power. Victoria was horrified, but within a year she
was to be yet more nearly hit. The grand romance had come to its
conclusion. Lord Beaconsfield, worn out with age and maladies, but
moving still, an assiduous mummy, from dinner-party to dinner-party,
suddenly moved no longer. When she knew that the end was inevitable,
she seemed, by a pathetic instinct, to divest herself of her royalty,
and to shrink, with hushed gentleness, beside him, a woman and nothing
more. "I send some Osborne primroses," she wrote to him with touching
simplicity, "and I meant to pay you a little visit this week, but I
thought it better you should be quite quiet and not speak. And I beg
you will be very good and obey the doctors." She would see him, she
said, "when we, come back from Osborne, which won't be long."
"Everyone is so distressed at your not being well," she added; and she
was, "Ever yours very aff'ly V.R.I." When the royal letter was given
him, the strange old comedian, stretched on his bed of death, poised
it in his hand, appeared to consider deeply, and then whispered to
those about him, "This ought to be read to me by a Privy Councillor."
Meanwhile in Victoria's private life many changes and developments
had taken place. With the marriages of her elder children her family
circle widened; grandchildren appeared; and a multitude of new
domestic interests sprang up. The death of King Leopold in 1865 had
removed the predominant figure of the older generation, and the
functions he had performed as the centre and adviser of a large group
of relatives in Germany and in England devolved upon Victoria. These
functions she discharged with unremitting industry, carrying on an
enormous correspondence, and following with absorbed interest every
detail in the lives of the ever-ramifying cousinhood. And she tasted
to the full both the joys and the pains of family affection. She took
a particular delight in her grandchildren, to whom she showed an
indulgence which their parents had not always enjoyed, though, even to
her grandchildren, she could be, when the occasion demanded it,
severe. The eldest of them, the little Prince Wilhelm of Prussia, was
a remarkably headstrong child; he dared to be impertinent even to his
grandmother; and once, when she told him to bow to a visitor at
Osborne, he disobeyed her outright. This would not do: the order was
sternly repeated, and the naughty boy, noticing that his grandmama had
suddenly turned into a most terrifying lady, submitted his will to
hers, and bowed very low indeed.
It would have been well if all the Queen's domestic troubles could
have been got over as easily. Among her more serious distresses was
the conduct of the Prince of Wales. The young man was now independent
and married; he had shaken the parental yoke from his shoulders; he
was positively beginning to do as he liked. Victoria was much
perturbed, and her worst fears seemed to be justified when in 1870 he
appeared as a witness in a society divorce case. It was clear that the
heir to the throne had been mixing with people of whom she did not at
all approve. What was to be done? She saw that it was not only her son
that was to blame--that it was the whole system of society; and so she
despatched a letter to Mr. Delane, the editor of The Times, asking him
if he would "frequently WRITE articles pointing out the IMMENSE danger
and evil of the wretched frivolity and levity of the views and lives
of the Higher Classes." And five years later Mr. Delane did write an
article upon that very subject. Yet it seemed to have very little
effect.
Ah! if only the Higher Classes would learn to live as she lived in
the domestic sobriety of her sanctuary at Balmoral! For more and more
did she find solace and refreshment in her Highland domain; and twice
yearly, in the spring and in the autumn, with a sigh of relief, she
set her face northwards, in spite of the humble protests of Ministers,
who murmured vainly in the royal ears that to transact the affairs of
State over an interval of six hundred miles added considerably to the
cares of government. Her ladies, too, felt occasionally a slight
reluctance to set out, for, especially in the early days, the long
pilgrimage was not without its drawbacks. For many years the Queen's
conservatism forbade the continuation of the railway up Deeside, so
that the last stages of the journey had to be accomplished in
carriages. But, after all, carriages had their good points; they were
easy, for instance, to get in and out of, which was an important
consideration, for the royal train remained for long immune from
modern conveniences, and when it drew up, on some border moorland, far
from any platform, the highbred dames were obliged to descend to earth
by the perilous foot-board, the only pair of folding steps being
reserved for Her Majesty's saloon. In the days of crinolines such
moments were sometimes awkward; and it was occasionally necessary to
summon Mr. Johnstone, the short and sturdy Manager of the Caledonian
Railway, who, more than once, in a high gale and drenching rain with
great difficulty "pushed up"--as he himself described it--some unlucky
Lady Blanche or Lady Agatha into her compartment. But Victoria cared
for none of these things. She was only intent upon regaining, with the
utmost swiftness, her enchanted Castle, where every spot was charged
with memories, where every memory was sacred, and where life was
passed in an incessant and delightful round of absolutely trivial
events.
And it was not only the place that she loved; she was equally
attached to "the simple mountaineers," from whom, she said, "she
learnt many a lesson of resignation and faith." Smith and Grant and
Ross and Thompson--she was devoted to them all; but, beyond the rest,
she was devoted to John Brown. The Prince's gillie had now become the
Queen's personal attendant--a body servant from whom she was never
parted, who accompanied her on her drives, waited on her during the
day, and slept in a neighbouring chamber at night. She liked his
strength, his solidity, the sense he gave her of physical security;
she even liked his rugged manners and his rough unaccommodating
speech. She allowed him to take liberties with her which would have
been unthinkable from anybody else. To bully the Queen, to order her
about, to reprimand her--who could dream of venturing upon such
audacities? And yet, when she received such treatment from John Brown,
she positively seemed to enjoy it. The eccentricity appeared to be
extraordinary; but, after all, it is no uncommon thing for an
autocratic dowager to allow some trusted indispensable servant to
adopt towards her an attitude of authority which is jealously
forbidden to relatives or friends: the power of a dependent still
remains, by a psychological sleight-of-hand, one's own power, even
when it is exercised over oneself. When Victoria meekly obeyed the
abrupt commands of her henchman to get off her pony or put on her
shawl, was she not displaying, and in the highest degree, the force of
her volition? People might wonder; she could not help that; this was
the manner in which it pleased her to act, and there was an end of it.
To have submitted her judgment to a son or a Minister might have
seemed wiser or more natural; but if she had done so, she
instinctively felt, she would indeed have lost her independence. And
yet upon somebody she longed to depend. Her days were heavy with the
long process of domination. As she drove in silence over the moors she
leaned back in the carriage, oppressed and weary; but what a
relief--John Brown was behind on the rumble, and his strong arm would
be there for her to lean upon when she got out.
He had, too, in her mind, a special connection with Albert. In
their expeditions the Prince had always trusted him more than anyone;
the gruff, kind, hairy Scotsman was, she felt, in some mysterious way,
a legacy from the dead. She came to believe at last--or so it
appeared--that the spirit of Albert was nearer when Brown was near.
Often, when seeking inspiration over some complicated question of
political or domestic import, she would gaze with deep concentration
at her late husband's bust. But it was also noticed that sometimes in
such moments of doubt and hesitation Her Majesty's looks would fix
themselves upon John Brown.
Eventually, the "simple mountaineer" became almost a state
personage. The influence which he wielded was not to be overlooked.
Lord Beaconsfield was careful, from time to time, to send courteous
messages to "Mr. Brown" in his letters to the Queen, and the French
Government took particular pains to provide for his comfort during the
visits of the English Sovereign to France. It was only natural that
among the elder members of the royal family he should not have been
popular, and that his failings--for failings he had, though Victoria
would never notice his too acute appreciation of Scotch whisky--should
have been the subject of acrimonious comment at Court. But he served
his mistress faithfully, and to ignore him would be a sign of
disrespect to her biographer. For the Queen, far from making a secret
of her affectionate friendship, took care to publish it to the world.
By her orders two gold medals were struck in his honour; on his death,
in 1883, a long and eulogistic obituary notice of him appeared in the
Court Circular; and a Brown memorial brooch--of gold, with the late
gillie's head on one side and the royal monogram on the other--was
designed by Her Majesty for presentation to her Highland servants and
cottagers, to be worn by them on the anniversary of his death, with a
mourning scarf and pins. In the second series of extracts from the
Queen's Highland Journal, published in 1884, her "devoted personal
attendant and faithful friend" appears upon almost every page, and is
in effect the hero of the book. With an absence of reticence
remarkable in royal persons, Victoria seemed to demand, in this
private and delicate matter, the sympathy of the whole nation; and
yet--such is the world--there were those who actually treated the
relations between their Sovereign and her servant as a theme for
ribald jests.
II
The busy years hastened away; the traces of Time's unimaginable
touch grew manifest; and old age, approaching, laid a gentle hold upon
Victoria. The grey hair whitened; the mature features mellowed; the
short firm figure amplified and moved more slowly, supported by a
stick. And, simultaneously, in the whole tenour of the Queen's
existence an extraordinary transformation came to pass. The nation's
attitude towards her, critical and even hostile as it had been for so
many years, altogether changed; while there was a corresponding
alteration in the temper of--Victoria's own mind.
Many causes led to this result. Among them were the repeated
strokes of personal misfortune which befell the Queen during a cruelly
short space of years. In 1878 the Princess Alice, who had married in
1862 the Prince Louis of HesseDarmstadt, died in tragic circumstances.
In the following year the Prince Imperial, the only son of the Empress
Eugenie, to whom Victoria, since the catastrophe of 1870, had become
devotedly attached, was killed in the Zulu War. Two years later, in
1881, the Queen lost Lord Beaconsfield, and, in 1883, John Brown. In
1884 the Prince Leopold, Duke of Albany, who had been an invalid from
birth, died prematurely, shortly after his marriage. Victoria's cup of
sorrows was indeed overflowing; and the public, as it watched the
widowed mother weeping for her children and her friends, displayed a
constantly increasing sympathy.
An event which occurred in 1882 revealed and accentuated the
feelings of the nation. As the Queen, at Windsor, was walking from the
train to her carriage, a youth named Roderick Maclean fired a pistol
at her from a distance of a few yards. An Eton boy struck up Maclean's
arm with an umbrella before the pistol went off; no damage was done,
and the culprit was at once arrested. This was the last of a series of
seven attempts upon the Queen--attempts which, taking place at
sporadic intervals over a period of forty years, resembled one another
in a curious manner. All, with a single exception, were perpetrated by
adolescents, whose motives were apparently not murderous, since, save
in the case of Maclean, none of their pistols was loaded. These
unhappy youths, who, after buying their cheap weapons, stuffed them
with gunpowder and paper, and then went off, with the certainty of
immediate detection, to click them in the face of royalty, present a
strange problem to the psychologist. But, though in each case their
actions and their purposes seemed to be so similar, their fates were
remarkably varied. The first of them, Edward Oxford, who fired at
Victoria within a few months of her marriage, was tried for high
treason, declared to be insane, and sent to an asylum for life. It
appears, however, that this sentence did not commend itself to Albert,
for when, two years later, John Francis committed the same of fence,
and was tried upon the same charge, the Prince propounced that there
was no insanity in the matter. "The wretched creature," he told his
father, was "not out of his mind, but a thorough scamp." "I hope," he
added, "his trial will be conducted with the greatest strictness."
Apparently it was; at any rate, the jury shared the view of the
Prince, the plea of insanity was, set aside, and Francis was found
guilty of high treason and condemned to death; but, as there was no
proof of an intent to kill or even to wound, this sentence, after a
lengthened deliberation between the Home Secretary and the Judges, was
commuted for one of transportation for life. As the law stood, these
assaults, futile as they were, could only be treated as high treason;
the discrepancy between the actual deed and the tremendous penalties
involved was obviously grotesque; and it was, besides, clear that a
jury, knowing that a verdict of guilty implied a sentence of death,
would tend to the alternative course, and find the prisoner not guilty
but insane--a conclusion which, on the face of it, would have appeared
to be the more reasonable. In 1842, therefore, an Act was passed
making any attempt to hurt the Queen a misdemeanor, punishable by
transportation for seven years, or imprisonment, with or without hard
labour, for a term not exceeding three years--the misdemeanant, at the
discretion of the Court, "to be publicly or privately whipped, as
often, and in such manner and form, as the Court shall direct, not
exceeding thrice." The four subsequent attempts were all dealt with
under this new law; William Bean, in 1842, was sentenced to eighteen
months' imprisonment; William Hamilton, in 1849, was transported for
seven years; and, in 1850, the same sentence was passed upon
Lieutenant Robert Pate, who struck the Queen on the head with his cane
in Piccadilly. Pate, alone among these delinquents, was of mature
years; he had held a commission in the Army, dressed himself as a
dandy, and was, the Prince declared, "manifestly deranged." In 1872
Arthur O'Connor, a youth of seventeen, fired an unloaded pistol at the
Queen outside Buckingham Palace; he was immediately seized by John
Brown, and sentenced to one year's imprisonment and twenty strokes of
the birch rod. It was for his bravery upon this occasion that Brown
was presented with one of his gold medals. In all these cases the jury
had refused to allow the plea of insanity; but Roderick Maclean's
attempt in 1882 had a different issue. On this occasion the pistol was
found to have been loaded, and the public indignation, emphasised as
it was by Victoria's growing popularity, was particularly great.
Either for this or for some other reason the procedure of the last
forty years was abandoned, and Maclean was tried for high treason. The
result was what might have been expected: the jury brought in a
verdict of "not guilty, but insane"; and the prisoner was sent to an
asylum during Her Majesty's pleasure. Their verdict, however, produced
a remarkable consequence. Victoria, who doubtless carried in her mind
some memory of Albert's disapproval of a similar verdict in the case
of Oxford, was very much annoyed. What did the jury mean, she asked,
by saying that Maclean was not guilty? It was perfectly clear that he
was guilty--she had seen him fire off the pistol herself. It was in
vain that Her Majesty's constitutional advisers reminded her of the
principle of English law which lays down that no man can be found
guilty of a crime unless he be proved to have had a criminal
intention. Victoria was quite unconvinced. "If that is the law," she
said, "the law must be altered:" and altered it was. In 1883 an Act
was passed changing the form of the verdict in cases of insanity, and
the confusing anomaly remains upon the Statute Book to this day.
But it was not only through the feelings--commiserating or
indignant--of personal sympathy that the Queen and her people were
being drawn more nearly together; they were beginning, at last, to
come to a close and permanent agreement upon the conduct of public
affairs. Mr. Gladstone's second administration (1880-85) was a
succession of failures, ending in disaster and disgrace; liberalism
fell into discredit with the country, and Victoria perceived with joy
that her distrust of her Ministers was shared by an ever-increasing
number of her subjects. During the crisis in the Sudan, the popular
temper was her own. She had been among the first to urge the necessity
of an expedition to Khartoum, and, when the news came of the
catastrophic death of General Gordon, her voice led the chorus of
denunciation which raved against the Government. In her rage, she
despatched a fulminating telegram to Mr. Gladstone, not in the usual
cypher, but open; and her letter of condolence to Miss Gordon, in
which she attacked her Ministers for breach of faith, was widely
published. It was rumoured that she had sent for Lord Hartington, the
Secretary of State for War, and vehemently upbraided him. "She rated
me," he was reported to have told a friend, "as if I'd been a
footman." "Why didn't she send for the butler?" asked his friend.
"Oh," was the reply, "the butler generally manages to keep out of the
way on such occasions."
But the day came when it was impossible to keep out of the way any
longer. Mr. Gladstone was defeated, and resigned. Victoria, at a final
interview, received him with her usual amenity, but, besides the
formalities demanded by the occasion, the only remark which she made
to him of a personal nature was to the effect that she supposed Mr.
Gladstone would now require some rest. He remembered with regret how,
at a similar audience in 1874, she had expressed her trust in him as a
supporter of the throne; but he noted the change without surprise.
"Her mind and opinions," he wrote in his diary afterwards, "have since
that day been seriously warped."
Such was Mr. Gladstone's view,; but the majority of the nation by
no means agreed with him; and, in the General Election of 1886, they
showed decisively that Victoria's politics were identical with theirs
by casting forth the contrivers of Home Rule--that abomination of
desolation--into outer darkness, and placing Lord Salisbury in power.
Victoria's satisfaction was profound. A flood of new unwonted
hopefulness swept over her, stimulating her vital spirits with a
surprising force. Her habit of life was suddenly altered; abandoning
the long seclusion which Disraeli's persuasions had only momentarily
interrupted, she threw herself vigorously into a multitude of public
activities. She appeared at drawing-rooms, at concerts, at reviews; she
laid foundation-stones; she went to Liverpool to open an international
exhibition, driving through the streets in her open carriage in heavy
rain amid vast applauding crowds. Delighted by the welcome which met
her everywhere, she warmed to her work. She visited Edinburgh, where
the ovation of Liverpool was repeated and surpassed. In London, she
opened in high state the Colonial and Indian Exhibition at South
Kensington. On this occasion the ceremonial was particularly
magnificent; a blare of trumpets announced the approach of Her
Majesty; the "Natiohal Anthem" followed; and the Queen, seated on a
gorgeous throne of hammered gold, replied with her own lips to the
address that was presented to her. Then she rose, and, advancing upon
the platform with regal port, acknowledged the acclamations of the
great assembly by a succession of curtseys, of elaborate and
commanding grace.
Next year was the fiftieth of her reign, and in June the splendid
anniversary was celebrated in solemn pomp. Victoria, surrounded by the
highest dignitaries of her realm, escorted by a glittering galaxy of
kings and princes, drove through the crowded enthusiasm of the capital
to render thanks to God in Westminster Abbey. In that triumphant hour
the last remaining traces of past antipathies and past disagreements
were altogether swept away. The Queen was hailed at once as the mother
of her people and as the embodied symbol of their imperial greatness;
and she responded to the double sentiment with all the ardour of her
spirit. England and the people of England, she knew it, she felt it,
were, in some wonderful and yet quite simple manner, hers. Exultation,
affection, gratitude, a profound sense of obligation, an unbounded
pride--such were her emotions; and, colouring and intensifying the
rest, there was something else. At last, after so long,
happiness--fragmentary, perhaps, and charged with gravity, but true
and unmistakable none the less--had returned to her. The unaccustomed
feeling filled and warmed her consciousness. When, at Buckingham
Palace again, the long ceremony over, she was asked how she was, "I am
very tired, but very happy," she said.
III
And so, after the toils and tempests of the day, a long evening
followed--mild, serene, and lighted with a golden glory. For an
unexampled atmosphere of success and adoration invested the last
period of Victoria's life. Her triumph was the summary, the crown, of
a greater triumph--the culminating prosperity of a nation. The solid
splendour of the decade between Victoria's two jubilees can hardly be
paralleled in the annals of England. The sage counsels of Lord
Salisbury seemed to bring with them not only wealth and power, but
security; and the country settled down, with calm assurance, to the
enjoyment of an established grandeur. And--it was only
natural--Victoria settled down too. For she was a part of the
establishment--an essential part as it seemed--a fixture--a
magnificent, immovable sideboard in the huge saloon of state. Without
her the heaped-up banquet of 1890 would have lost its distinctive
quality--the comfortable order of the substantial unambiguous dishes,
with their background of weighty glamour, half out of sight.
Her own existence came to harmonise more and more with what was
around her. Gradually, imperceptibly, Albert receded. It was not that
he was forgotten--that would have been impossible--but that the void
created by his absence grew less agonising, and even, at last, less
obvious. At last Victoria found it possible to regret the bad weather
without immediately reflecting that her "dear Albert always said we
could not alter it, but must leave it as it was;" she could even enjoy
a good breakfast without considering how "dear Albert" would have
liked the buttered eggs. And, as that figure slowly faded, its place
was taken, inevitably, by Victoria's own. Her being, revolving for so
many years round an external object, now changed its motion and found
its centre in itself. It had to be so: her domestic position, the
pressure of her public work, her indomitable sense of duty, made
anything else impossible. Her egotism proclaimed its rights. Her age
increased still further the surrounding deference; and her force of
character, emerging at length in all its plenitude, imposed absolutely
upon its environment by the conscious effort of an imperious will.
Little by little it was noticed that the outward vestiges of
Albert's posthumous domination grew less complete. At Court the
stringency of mourning was relaxed. As the Queen drove through the
Park in her open carriage with her Highlanders behind her,
nursery-maids canvassed eagerly the growing patch of violet velvet in
the bonnet with its jet appurtenances on the small bowing head.
It was in her family that Victoria's ascendancy reached its highest
point. All her offspring were married; the number of her descendants
rapidly increased; there were many marriages in the third generation;
and no fewer than thirty-seven of her great-grandchildren were living
at the time of her death. A picture of the period displays the royal
family collected together in one of the great rooms at Windsor--a
crowded company of more than fifty persons, with the imperial
matriarch in their midst. Over them all she ruled with a most potent
sway. The small concerns of the youngest aroused her passionate
interest; and the oldest she treated as if they were children still.
The Prince of Wales, in particular, stood in tremendous awe of his
mother. She had steadily refused to allow him the slightest
participation in the business of government; and he had occupied
himself in other ways. Nor could it be denied that he enjoyed
himself--out of her sight; but, in that redoubtable presence, his
abounding manhood suffered a miserable eclipse. Once, at Osborne, when,
owing to no fault of his, he was too late for a dinner party, he was
observed standing behind a pillar and wiping the sweat from his
forehead, trying to nerve himself to go up to the Queen. When at last
he did so, she gave him a stiff nod, whereupon he vanished immediately
behind another pillar, and remained there until the party broke up. At
the time of this incident the Prince of Wales was over fifty years of
age.
It was inevitable that the Queen's domestic activities should
occasionally trench upon the domain of high diplomacy; and this was
especially the case when the interests of her eldest daughter, the
Crown Princess of Prussia, were at stake. The Crown Prince held
liberal opinions; he was much influenced by his wife; and both were
detested by Bismarck, who declared with scurrilous emphasis that the
Englishwoman and her mother were a menace to the Prussian State. The
feud was still further intensified when, on the death of the old
Emperor (1888), the Crown Prince succeeded to the throne. A family
entanglement brought on a violent crisis. One of the daughters of the
new Empress had become betrothed to Prince Alexander of Battenberg,
who had lately been ejected from the throne of Bulgaria owing to the
hostility of the Tsar. Victoria, as well as the Empress, highly
approved of the match. Of the two brothers of Prince Alexander, the
elder had married another of her grand-daughters, and the younger was
the husband of her daughter, the Princess Beatrice; she was devoted to
the handsome young man; and she was delighted by the prospect of the
third brother--on the whole the handsomest, she thought, of the
three--also becoming a member of her family. Unfortunately, however,
Bismarck was opposed to the scheme. He perceived that the marriage
would endanger the friendship between Germany and Russia, which was
vital to his foreign policy, and he announced that it must not take
place. A fierce struggle between the Empress and the Chancellor
followed. Victoria, whose hatred of her daughter's enemy was
unbounded, came over to Charlottenburg to join in the fray. Bismarck,
over his pipe and lager, snorted out his alarm. The Queen of England's
object, he said, was clearly political--she wished to estrange Germany
and Russia--and very likely she would have her way. "In family
matters," he added, "she is not used to contradiction;" she would
"bring the parson with her in her travelling bag and the bridegroom in
her trunk, and the marriage would come off on the spot." But the man
of blood and iron was not to be thwarted so easily, and he asked for a
private interview with the Queen. The details of their conversation
are unknown; but it is certain that in the course of it Victoria was
forced to realise the meaning of resistance to that formidable
personage, and that she promised to use all her influence to prevent
the marriage. The engagement was broken off; and in the following year
Prince Alexander of Battenberg united himself to Fraulein Loisinger,
an actress at the court theatre of Darmstad.
But such painful incidents were rare. Victoria was growing very
old; with no Albert to guide her, with no Beaconsfield to enflame her,
she was willing enough to abandon the dangerous questions of diplomacy
to the wisdom of Lord Salisbury, and to concentrate her energies upon
objects which touched her more nearly and over which she could
exercise an undisputed control. Her home--her court--the monuments at
Balmoral--the livestock at Windsor--the organisation of her
engagements--the supervision of the multitudinous details of her daily
routine--such matters played now an even greater part in her existence
than before. Her life passed in an extraordinary exactitude. Every
moment of her day was mapped out beforehand; the succession of her
engagements was immutably fixed; the dates of her journeys--to
Osborne, to Balmoral, to the South of France, to Windsor, to
London--were hardly altered from year to year. She demanded from those
who surrounded her a rigid precision in details, and she was
preternaturally quick in detecting the slightest deviation from the
rules which she had laid down. Such was the irresistible potency of
her personality, that anything but the most implicit obedience to her
wishes was felt to be impossible; but sometimes somebody was
unpunctual; and unpunctuality was one of the most heinous of sins.
Then her displeasure--her dreadful displeasure--became all too
visible. At such moments there seemed nothing surprising in her having
been the daughter of a martinet.
But these storms, unnerving as they were while they lasted, were
quickly over, and they grew more and more exceptional. With the return
of happiness a gentle benignity flowed from the aged Queen. Her smile,
once so rare a visitant to those saddened features, flitted over them
with an easy alacrity; the blue eyes beamed; the whole face, starting
suddenly from its pendulous expressionlessness, brightened and
softened and cast over those who watched it an unforgettable charm.
For in her last years there was a fascination in Victoria's amiability
which had been lacking even from the vivid impulse of her youth. Over
all who approached her--or very nearly all--she threw a peculiar
spell. Her grandchildren adored her; her ladies waited upon her with a
reverential love. The honour of serving her obliterated a thousand
inconveniences--the monotony of a court existence, the fatigue of
standing, the necessity for a superhuman attentiveness to the minutia:
of time and space. As one did one's wonderful duty one could forget
that one's legs were aching from the infinitude of the passages at
Windsor, or that one's bare arms were turning blue in the Balmoral
cold.
What, above all, seemed to make such service delightful was the
detailed interest which the Queen took in the circumstances of those
around her. Her absorbing passion for the comfortable commonplaces,
the small crises, the recurrent sentimentalities, of domestic life
constantly demanded wider fields for its activity; the sphere of her
own family, vast as it was, was not enough; she became the eager
confidante of the household affairs of her ladies; her sympathies
reached out to the palace domestics; even the housemaids and
scullions--so it appeared--were the objects of her searching
inquiries, and of her heartfelt solicitude when their lovers were
ordered to a foreign station, or their aunts suffered from an attack
of rheumatism which was more than usually acute.
Nevertheless the due distinctions of rank were immaculately
preserved. The Queen's mere presence was enough to ensure that; but,
in addition, the dominion of court etiquette was paramount. For that
elaborate code, which had kept Lord Melbourne stiff upon the sofa and
ranged the other guests in silence about the round table according to
the order of precedence, was as punctiliously enforced as ever. Every
evening after dinner, the hearth-rug, sacred to royalty, loomed before
the profane in inaccessible glory, or, on one or two terrific
occasions, actually lured them magnetically forward to the very edge
of the abyss. The Queen, at the fitting moment, moved towards her
guests; one after the other they were led up to her; and, while
dialogue followed dialogue in constraint and embarrassment, the rest
of the assembly stood still, without a word. Only in one particular
was the severity of the etiquette allowed to lapse. Throughout the
greater part of the reign the rule that ministers must stand during
their audiences with the Queen had been absolute. When Lord Derby, the
Prime Minister, had an audience of Her Majesty after a serious
illness, he mentioned it afterwards, as a proof of the royal favour,
that the Queen had remarked "How sorry she was she could not ask him
to be seated." Subsequently, Disraeli, after an attack of gout and in
a moment of extreme expansion on the part of Victoria, had been
offered a chair; but he had thought it wise humbly to decline the
privilege. In her later years, however, the Queen invariably asked Mr.
Gladstone and Lord Salisbury to sit down.
Sometimes the solemnity of the evening was diversified by a
concert, an opera, or even a play. One of the most marked indications
of Victoria's enfranchisement from the thraldom of widowhood had been
her resumption--after an interval of thirty years--of the custom of
commanding dramatic companies from London to perform before the Court
at Windsor. On such occasions her spirits rose high. She loved acting;
she loved a good plot; above all, she loved a farce. Engrossed by
everything that passed upon the stage she would follow, with childlike
innocence, the unwinding of the story; or she would assume an air of
knowing superiority and exclaim in triumph, "There! You didn't expect
that, did you?" when the denouement came. Her sense of humour was of a
vigorous though primitive kind. She had been one of the very few
persons who had always been able to appreciate the Prince Consort's
jokes; and, when those were cracked no more, she could still roar with
laughter, in the privacy of her household, over some small piece of
fun--some oddity of an ambassador, or some ignorant Minister's faux
pas. When the jest grew subtle she was less pleased; but, if it
approached the confines of the indecorous, the danger was serious. To
take a liberty called down at once Her Majesty's most crushing
disapprobation; and to say something improper was to take the greatest
liberty of all. Then the royal lips sank down at the corners, the
royal eyes stared in astonished protrusion, and in fact, the royal
countenance became inauspicious in the highest degree. The
transgressor shuddered into silence, while the awful "We are not
amused" annihilated the dinner table. Afterwards, in her private
entourage, the Queen would observe that the person in question was,
she very much feared, "not discreet"; it was a verdict from which
there was no appeal.
In general, her aesthetic tastes had remained unchanged since the
days of Mendelssohn, Landseer, and Lablache. She still delighted in
the roulades of Italian opera; she still demanded a high standard in
the execution of a pianoforte duet. Her views on painting were
decided; Sir Edwin, she declared, was perfect; she was much impressed
by Lord Leighton's manners; and she profoundly distrusted Mr. Watts.
From time to time she ordered engraved portraits to be taken of
members of the royal family; on these occasions she would have the
first proofs submitted to her, and, having inspected them with minute
particularity, she would point out their mistakes to the artists,
indicating at the same time how they might be corrected. The artists
invariably discovered that Her Majesty's suggestions were of the
highest value. In literature her interests were more restricted. She
was devoted to Lord Tennyson; and, as the Prince Consort had admired
George Eliot, she perused "Middlemarch:" she was disappointed. There
is reason to believe, however, that the romances of another female
writer, whose popularity among the humbler classes of Her Majesty's
subjects was at one time enormous, secured, no less, the approval of
Her Majesty. Otherwise she did not read very much.
Once, however, the Queen's attention was drawn to a publication
which it was impossible for her to ignore. "The Greville Memoirs,"
filled with a mass of historical information of extraordinary
importance, but filled also with descriptions, which were by no means
flattering, of George IV, William IV, and other royal persons, was
brought out by Mr. Reeve. Victoria read the book, and was appalled. It
was, she declared, a "dreadful and really scandalous book," and she
could not say "how HORRIFIED and INDIGNANT" she was at Greville's
"indiscretion, indelicacy, ingratitude towards friends, betrayal of
confidence and shameful disloyalty towards his Sovereign." She wrote
to Disraeli to tell him that in her opinion it was "VERY IMPORTANT
that the book should be severely censured and discredited." "The tone
in which he speaks of royalty," she added, "is unlike anything one
sees in history even, and is most reprehensible." Her anger was
directed with almost equal vehemence against Mr. Reeve for his having
published "such an abominable book," and she charged Sir Arthur Helps
to convey to him her deep displeasure. Mr. Reeve, however, was
impenitent. When Sir Arthur told him that, in the Queen's opinion,
"the book degraded royalty," he replied: "Not at all; it elevates it
by the contrast it offers between the present and the defunct state of
affairs." But this adroit defence failed to make any impression upon
Victoria; and Mr. Reeve, when he retired from the public service, did
not receive the knighthood which custom entitled him to expect.
Perhaps if the Queen had known how many caustic comments upon herself
Mr. Reeve had quietly suppressed in the published Memoirs, she would
have been almost grateful to him; but, in that case, what would she
have said of Greville? Imagination boggles at the thought. As for more
modern essays upon the same topic, Her Majesty, it is to be feared,
would have characterised them as "not discreet."
But as a rule the leisure hours of that active life were occupied
with recreations of a less intangible quality than the study of
literature or the appreciation of art. Victoria was a woman not only
of vast property but of innumerable possessions. She had inherited an
immense quantity of furniture, of ornaments, of china, of plate, of
valuable objects of every kind; her purchases, throughout a long life,
made a formidable addition to these stores; and there flowed in upon
her, besides, from every quarter of the globe, a constant stream of
gifts. Over this enormous mass she exercised an unceasing and minute
supervision, and the arrangement and the contemplation of it, in all
its details, filled her with an intimate satisfaction. The collecting
instinct has its roots in the very depths of human nature; and, in the
case of Victoria, it seemed to owe its force to two of her dominating
impulses--the intense sense, which had always been hers, of her own
personality, and the craving which, growing with the years, had become
in her old age almost an obsession, for fixity, for solidity, for the
setting up of palpable barriers against the outrages of change and
time. When she considered the multitudinous objects which belonged to
her, or, better still, when, choosing out some section of them as the
fancy took her, she actually savoured the vivid richness of their
individual qualities, she saw herself deliciously reflected from a
million facets, felt herself magnified miraculously over a boundless
area, and was well pleased. That was just as it should be; but then
came the dismaying thought--everything slips away, crumbles, vanishes;
Sevres dinner-services get broken; even golden basins go unaccountably
astray; even one's self, with all the recollections and experiences
that make up one's being, fluctuates, perishes, dissolves... But no!
It could not, should not be so! There should be no changes and no
losses! Nothing should ever move--neither the past nor the
present--and she herself least of all! And so the tenacious woman,
hoarding her valuables, decreed their immortality with all the
resolution of her soul. She would not lose one memory or one pin.
She gave orders that nothing should be thrown away--and nothing
was. There, in drawer after drawer, in wardrobe after wardrobe,
reposed the dresses of seventy years. But not only the dresses --the
furs and the mantles and subsidiary frills and the muffs and the
parasols and the bonnets--all were ranged in chronological order,
dated and complete. A great cupboard was devoted to the dolls; in the
china room at Windsor a special table held the mugs of her childhood,
and her children's mugs as well. Mementoes of the past surrounded her
in serried accumulations. In every room the tables were powdered thick
with the photographs of relatives; their portraits, revealing them at
all ages, covered the walls; their figures, in solid marble, rose up
from pedestals, or gleamed from brackets in the form of gold and
silver statuettes. The dead, in every shape--in miniatures, in
porcelain, in enormous life-size oil-paintings--were perpetually about
her. John Brown stood upon her writing-table in solid gold. Her
favourite horses and dogs, endowed with a new durability, crowded
round her footsteps. Sharp, in silver gilt, dominated the dinner
table; Boy and Boz lay together among unfading flowers, in bronze. And
it was not enough that each particle of the past should be given the
stability of metal or of marble: the whole collection, in its
arrangement, no less than its entity, should be immutably fixed. There
might be additions, but there might never be alterations. No chintz
might change, no carpet, no curtain, be replaced by another; or, if
long use at last made it necessary, the stuffs and the patterns must
be so identically reproduced that the keenest eye might not detect the
difference. No new picture could be hung upon the walls at Windsor,
for those already there had been put in their places by Albert, whose
decision