 CHAPTER 9 OLD AGE Meanwhile, in Victoria's private life, many changes in 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 dead king Leopold in 1865 had removed the predominant figure of the older generation, and the functions he had performed as the center and advisor 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 Osburn 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 air 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 dispatched a letter to Mr. Delay in 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. Delay 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 the side, 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, moreland, far from any platform, the highbred dames were obliged to descend to earth by the perilous footboard, 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. Johnston, 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 learned 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 ghillie 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 neighboring 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 one's self. When Victoria meekly obeyed the abrupt commands of her henchmen 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 a 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 Harry 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 to 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 whiskey—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 honor. 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 a late ghillie'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 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 ribbled jests. Two. 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 gray hair whitened, the mature features mellowed, the short firm figure amplified and moved more slowly, supported by a stick. And simultaneously in the whole tenor 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 Hesse-Darmstadt, 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 McLean fired a pistol at her from a distance of a few yards. An eaten boy struck up McLean'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 40 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 McLean, 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 seem 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 offense and was tried upon the same charge, the Prince pronounced that there was no insanity in the matter. The arched 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, after a lengthened liberation 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 labor 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 18 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 17, 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 McLean's attempt in 1882 had a different issue. On this occasion, the pistol was found to have been loaded, and the public indignation, emphasized as it was by Victoria's growing popularity, was particularly great. Either for this or for some other reason, the procedure of the last 40 years was abandoned, and McLean 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 McLean 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 dispatched a fulminating telegram to Mr. Gladstone, not in the usual cipher, but open, and her letter of condolence to Ms. Gordon, in which she attacked her ministers for breach of faith, was widely published. It was rumored that she had sent for Lord Hardington, the Secretary of State for War, and vehemently upbraided him. She raided me, he was reported to have told a friend, as if I had 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 he 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, unwanted 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 blair of trumpets announced the approach of Her Majesty, the national 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 curtsies of elaborate and commanding grace. Next year was the 50th 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 all together 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, wore in some wonderful and yet quite simple manner hers. Exultation, affection, gratitude, a profound sense of obligation and 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 nonetheless, 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. 3. 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 jubileses can hardly be paralleled in the annals of England. The sage councils 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 of magnificent and movable 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. Norclet had be denied that he enjoyed himself out of her sight, but in that redoubtable presence his abounding manhood suffered a miserable eclipse. Once at Osburn 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 English woman 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 emperors had become betrothed to Prince Alexander of Battenburg, who had lately been ejected from the throne of Bulgaria, owing to the hostility of the Tsar. Victoria, as well as the emperors, highly approved of the match. Of the two brothers of Prince Alexander, the elder had married another of her granddaughters, and the younger was the husband of her daughter, the Princess Beatrice. She was devoted to the hats of young men, and she was delighted by the prospect of the third brother, on the whole the handsome as 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 emperors 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 lagers, 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 traveling 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 realize 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 Battenburg united himself to foiline Leusinga, an actress at the court theatre of Darmstadt. But such painful incidents were rare. Victoria was growing very old, with no Albert to guide her, with no Beaconsfield to inflame 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 organization 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 Martinette. But these storms, unnerving as they were while they lasted, were quickly over, and they grew more and more exceptional. With a return of happiness a gentle indignity flowed from the aged queen. Her smile, once so rare a visitant to those satin 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. Overall, 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 honor of serving her obliterated a thousand inconveniences, the monotony of accord existence, the fatigue of standing, the necessity for a superhuman attentiveness to the minutiae 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 confidant 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 precedents, was as punctiliously enforced as ever. Every evening after dinner, the hearthrung, sacred to royalty, loomed before the profane in inaccessible glory, or on one or two terrific occasions, actually lured the 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 Darby, 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 disraily 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 thralldom of widowhood had been her resumption, after an interval of 30 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, and grossed 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, an exclaim in triumph. There you didn't expect that, did you, when the denouement came? Her sense of humor 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 Indecorus the danger was serious. To take a liberty called down at once Her Majesty's most trushing 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 transgressors 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, Lancer, and Laplace. She still delighted in the roulade of Italian opera. She still demanded a high standard in the execution of her piano fort 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 proof 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 Elliot, she perused Middle March. 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 gravel 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 gravels, in discretion, in delicacy, in gratitude toward 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 defense 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 characterized them as not discreet. But as a rule, the leisure hours of that act of 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 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 savored 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, sev dinner services get broken, even golden basins go unaccountably astray, even oneself, 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 arranged 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. Mementos 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 favorite horses and dogs, endowed with a new durability, crowded round her footsteps. Sharp in silver guilt dominated the dinner table. Boy and boss laid 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 chins might change, no carpet, no curtain be replaced by another. Or, if long use and last made it necessary, the stuffs and 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 decisions were eternal. So, indeed, were victorious. To ensure that they should be, the aid of the camera was called in. Every single article in the Queen's possession was photographed from several points of view. These photographs were submitted to her majesty, and when, after careful inspection, she had approved of them, they were placed in a series of albums richly bound. Then, opposite each photograph, an entry was made indicating the number of the article, the number of the room in which it was kept, its exact position in the room, and all its principal characteristics. The fate of every object which had undergone this process was henceforth irrevocably sealed. The whole multitude, once and for all, took up its steadfast station, and Victoria, with a gigantic volume or two of the endless catalogue always beside her to look through, to ponder upon, to expatiate over, could feel with a double contentment that the transitoriness of the world had been arrested by the aptitude of her might. Thus the collection, ever multiplying, ever encroaching upon new fields of consciousness, ever rooting itself more firmly in the depths of instinct, became one of the dominating influences of that strange existence. It was a collection not merely of things and of thoughts, but of states of mind and ways of living as well. The celebration of anniversaries grew to be an important branch of it, of birthdays and marriage days and death days, each of which demanded its appropriate feeling, which, in its turn, must be itself expressed in an appropriate outward form. And the form, of course, the ceremony of rejoicing or lamentation, was stereotyped with the rest. It was part of the collection. On a certain day, for instance, flowers must be strewn on John Brown's monument at Balmoral, and the date of the yearly departure for Scotland was fixed by that fact. Inevitably it was around the central circumstance of death, death, the final witness to human mutability, that these commemorative cravings clustered most thickly. Might not even death itself be humbled, if one could recall enough, if one asserted with a sufficiently passionate and reiterated emphasis the eternity of love? Accordingly, every bed in which Victoria slept had attached to it at the back, on the right-hand side above the pillow, a photograph of the head and shoulders of Albert as he lay dead, surmounted by a wreath of immortell. At Balmoral, where memories came crowding so closely, the solid signs of memory appeared in surprising profusion. Obelisks, pyramids, tombs, statues, cairns, and seats of inscribed granite proclaimed Victoria's dedication to the dead. There, twice a year, on the days that followed her arrival, a solemn pilgrimage of inspection and meditation was performed. There, on August 26, Albert's birthday at the foot of the bronze statue of him in highland dress, the queen, her family, her court, her servants, and her tenantry met together, and in silence drank to the memory of the dead. In England, the tokens of remembrance populated hardly less. Not a day passed without some addition to the multi-fold assemblage, a gold statuette of Ross the Piper, a life-sized marble group of Victoria and Albert in medieval costume inscribed upon the base with the words, Allured to brighter worlds and led the way. A granite slab in the shrubbery at Osburn, informing the visitor of Waldman, the very favorite little docksunt of Queen Victoria, who brought him from Baden, April 1872, died July 11, 1881. At Frogmore, the great mausoleum perpetually enriched was visited almost daily by the queen when the court was at Windsor. But there was another, a more secret and hardly less holy shrine. The suite of rooms which Albert had occupied in the castle was kept forever shut away from the eyes of any save the most privileged. Within those precincts, everything remained as it had been at the prince's death. But the mysterious preoccupation of Victoria had commanded that her husband's clothing should be laid afresh each evening upon the bed, and that each evening the water should be set ready in the basin as if he were still alive, and this incredible rite was performed with scrupulous regularity for nearly forty years. Such was the inner worship, and still the flesh obeyed the spirit, still the daily hours of labor proclaimed Victoria's consecration to duty and to the ideal of the dead. Yet with the years the sense of self-sacrifice faded. The natural energies of that ardent being discharged themselves with satisfaction into the channel of public work. The love of business which from her girlhood had been strong within her reasserted itself in all its vigor, and in her old age to have been cut off from her papers and her boxes would have been not a relief, but an agony to Victoria. Thus, though toiling ministers might sigh and suffer, the whole process of government continued till the very end to pass before her. Nor was that all. Ancient precedent had made the validity of an enormous number of official transactions dependent upon the application of the royal sign manual, and a great proportion of the queen's working hours was spent in this mechanical task. Nor did she show any desire to diminish it. On the contrary, she voluntarily resumed the duty of signing commissions in the army from which she had been set free by active parliament, and from which during the years of middle life she had abstained. In no case would she countenance the proposal that she should use a stamp. But at last, when the increasing pressure of business made the delays of the antiquated system intolerable, she consented that, for certain classes of documents, her oral sanction should be sufficient. Each paper was read aloud to her, and she said at the end, Approved! Often for hours at a time she would sit with Albert's bust in front of her, while the word Approved! issued at intervals from her lips. The word came forth with a majestic sonority, for her voice now. How changed from the silvery treble of her girlhood was a contralto, full and strong. Chapter 9 Part 3 of Queen Victoria This is a LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For more information or to volunteer, please visit LibriVox.org. Queen Victoria by Giles Lytton Strachey Chapter 9 Part 3 4 The final years were years of apotheosis. In the dazzled imagination of her subjects, Victoria soared aloft toward the regions of divinity through a nimbus of purest glory. Criticism fell dumb. Deficiencies, which twenty years earlier would have been universally admitted, were now as universally ignored. That the nation's idol was a very incomplete representative of the nation was a circumstance that was hardly noticed, and yet it was conspicuously true. For the vast changes which out of the England of 1837 had produced the England of 1897 seemed scarcely to have touched the Queen. The immense industrial development of the period, the significance of which had been so thoroughly understood by Albert, meant little indeed to Victoria. The amazing scientific movement, which Albert had appreciated no less, left Victoria perfectly cold. Her conception of the universe and of man's place in it, and of the stupendous problems of nature and philosophy, remained throughout her life entirely unchanged. Her religion was the religion which she had learned from the Baroness Lateson and the Duchess of Kent. Here, too, it might have been supposed that Albert's views might have influenced her. For Albert, in matters of religion, was advanced. Disbelieving altogether in evil spirits, he had had his doubts about the miracle of the Gadarene swine. Stockmar, even, had thrown out in a remarkable memorandum on the education of the Prince of Wales the suggestion that while the child must unquestionably be brought up in the creed of the Church of England, it might nevertheless be in accordance with the spirit of the times to exclude from his religious training the inculcation of a belief in the supernatural doctrines of Christianity. This, however, would have been going too far, and all the royal children were brought up in complete orthodoxy. Anything else would have grieved Victoria, though her own conceptions of the orthodox were not very precise. But her nature, in which imagination and subtlety held so small a place, made her instinctively recoil from the intricate ecstasies of high Anglicanism, and she seemed to feel most at home in the simple faith of the Presbyterian Church of Scotland. This was what might have been expected, for Lateson was the daughter of a Lutheran pastor, and the Lutherans and the Presbyterians have much in common. For many years Dr. Norman MacLeod, an innocent Scotch minister, was her principal spiritual advisor, and when he was taken from her she drew much comfort from quiet chats about life and death with the cottagers and Balmoral. Her piety, absolutely genuine, found what it wanted in the sober exhortations of old John Grant and the devout saws of Mrs. P. Farquarson. They possessed the qualities which, as a child of fourteen, she had so sincerely admired in the Bishop of Chester's exposition of the Gospel of St. Matthew. They were just plain and comprehensible and full of truth and good feeling. The Queen, who gave her name to the age of Mill and of Darwin, never got any further than that. From the social movements of her time, Victoria was equally remote. Towards the smallest, no less than towards the greatest changes she remained inflexible. During her youth and middle age, smoking had been forbidden in polite society, and so long as she lived she would not withdraw her anathema against it. Kings might protest. Bishops and ambassadors invited to Windsor might be reduced in the privacy of their bedrooms to lie full-length upon the floor and smoke up the chimney. The interdict continued. It might have been supposed that a female sovereign would have lent her countenance to one of the most vital of all the reforms to which her epoch gave birth, the emancipation of women, but on the contrary the mere mention of such a proposal sent the blood rushing to her head. In 1870, her eye having fallen on the report of a meeting in favor of women's suffrage, she wrote to Mr. Martin in Royal Rage. The Queen is most anxious to enlist everyone who can speak or write to join in checking this mad wicked folly of women's rights, with all its attendant horrors on which her poor feeble sex is bent, forgetting every sense of womanly feeling and propriety. Lady, ought to get a good whipping. It is a subject which makes the Queen so furious that she cannot contain herself. God created men and women different, then let them remain each in their own position. Innocent has some beautiful lines on the difference of men and women in the Princess. Woman would become the most hateful, heartless, and disgusting of human beings were she allowed to un-sex herself, and where would be the protection which man was intended to give the weaker sex? The Queen is sure that Mrs. Martin agrees with her. The argument was irrefutable. Mrs. Martin agreed, and yet the canker spread. In another direction, Victoria's comprehension of the spirit of her age has been constantly asserted. It was for long the custom for courtly historians and polite politicians to compliment the Queen upon the correctness of her attitude toward the Constitution. But such praises seem hardly to be justified by the facts. In her later years, Victoria more than once alluded with regret to her conduct during the bedchamber crisis, and let it be understood that she had grown wiser since. Yet in truth it is difficult to trace any fundamental change, either in her theory or in her practice in constitutional matters throughout her life. The same despotic and personal spirit which led her to break off the negotiations with Peel is equally visible in her animosity towards Palmerston, in her threats of abdication to Disraeli, and in her desire to prosecute the Duke of Westminster for attending a meeting upon Bulgarian atrocities. The complex and delicate principles of the Constitution cannot be said to have come within the compass of her mental faculties, and in the actual developments which it underwent during her reign, she played a passive part. From 1840 to 1861, the power of the Crown steadily increased in England. From 1861 to 1901, it steadily declined. The first process was due to the influence of the Prince Consort, the second to that of a series of great ministers. During the first, Victoria was in effect a mere accessory. During the second, the threads of power which Albert had so laboriously collected inevitably fell from her hands into the vigorous grasp of Mr. Gladstone, Lord Beaconsfield, and Lord Salisbury. Perhaps absorbed as she was in routine, and difficult as she founded to distinguish at all clearly between the trivial and the essential, she was only dimly aware of what was happening. Yet at the end of her reign, the Crown was weaker than at any other time in English history. Paradoxically enough, Victoria received the highest eulogiums for assenting to a political evolution which, had she completely realized its import, would have filled her with supreme displeasure. Nevertheless, it must not be supposed that she was a second George III. Her desire to impose her will, vehement as it was, and unlimited by any principle, was yet checked by a certain shrewdness. She might oppose her ministers with extraordinary violence, she might remain utterly impervious to arguments and supplications, the pertinacity of her resolution might seem to be unconquerable, but at the very last moment of all, her obstinacy would give way. Her innate respect and capacity for business, and perhaps too the memory of Albert's scrupulous avoidance of extreme courses, prevented her from ever entering and impasse. By instinct she understood when the facts were too much for her, and to them she invariably yielded. After all, what else could she do? But if in all these ways the Queen and her epoch were profoundly separated, the points of contact between them also were not few. Victoria understood very well the meaning and the attractions of power and property, and in such learning the English nation too had grown to be more and more proficient. During the last fifteen years of the reign, for the short liberal administration of 1892 was a mere interlude, imperialism was the dominant creed of the country. It was Victoria's as well. In this direction, if in no other, she had allowed her mind to develop. Under Disraeli's tutelage, the British dominions over the seas had come to mean much more to her than ever before, and in particular she had grown enamored of the East. The thought of India fascinated her. She set to and learned a little Hindustani. She engaged some Indian servants, who became her inseparable attendants, and one of whom, Munshi Abdul Karim, eventually almost succeeded to the position which had once been John Brown's. At the same time, the imperialist temper of the nation invested her office with a new significance, exactly harmonizing with her own in most proclivities. The English polity was in the main a common sense structure, but there was always a corner in it where common sense could not enter, where somehow or other the ordinary measurements were not applicable and the ordinary rules did not apply. So our ancestors had laid it down, giving scope in their wisdom to that mystical element which, as it seems, can never quite be eradicated from the affairs of men. Naturally it was in the crown that the mysticism of the English polity was concentrated, the crown, with its venerable antiquity, its sacred associations, its imposing spectacular array. But for nearly two centuries common sense had been predominant in the great building, and the little unexplored inexplicable corner had attracted small attention. Then, with the rise of imperialism there was a change, for imperialism is a faith as well as a business. As it grew, the mysticism in English public life grew with it, and simultaneously a new importance began to attach to the crown. The need for a symbol, a symbol of England's might, of England's worth, of England's extraordinary and mysterious destiny, became felt more urgently than ever before. The crown was that symbol, and the crown rested upon the head of Victoria. Thus it happened that while by the end of the reign the power of the sovereign had appreciably diminished, the prestige of the sovereign had enormously grown. Yet this prestige was not merely the outcome of public changes, it was an intensely personal matter too. Victoria was the Queen of England, the Empress of India, the quintessential pivot round which the whole magnificent machine was revolving. But how much more besides? For one thing, she was of a great age, and almost indispensable qualification for popularity in England. She had given proof of one of the most admired characteristics of the race, persistent vitality. She had reigned for 60 years, and she was not out. And then she was a character. The outlines of her nature were firmly drawn, and even through the mists which enveloped royalty clearly visible. In the popular imagination her familiar figure filled with satisfying ease, a distinct and memorable place. It was, besides, the kind of figure which naturally called forth the admiring sympathy of the great majority of the nation. Goodness, they prized above every other human quality, and Victoria, who had said that she would be good at the age of twelve, had kept her word. Duty, conscience, morality, yes, in the light of those high beacons the Queen had always lived. She had passed her days in work and not in pleasure, in public responsibilities and family cares. The standard of solid virtue which had been set up so long ago amid the domestic happiness of Osburn had never been lowered for an instant. For more than half a century no divorced lady had approached the precincts of the court. Victoria, indeed, in her enthusiasm for wifey fidelity, had laid down a still stricter ordinance. She frowned severely upon any widow who married again. Considering that she herself was the offspring of a widow's second marriage, this prohibition might be regarded as an eccentricity, but no doubt it was an eccentricity on the right side. The middle classes, firm in the triple brass of their respectability, rejoiced with a special joy over the most respectable of queens. They almost claimed her, indeed, as one of themselves. But this would have been an exaggeration. For though many of her characteristics were most often found among the middle classes in other respects, in her manners, for instance, Victoria was decidedly aristocratic. And in one important particular she was neither aristocratic nor middle class. Her attitude toward herself was simply regal. Such qualities were obvious and important. But in the impact of a personality, it is something deeper, something fundamental and common to all its qualities that really tells. In Victoria it is easy to discern the nature of this underlying element. It was a peculiar sincerity. Her truthfulness, her single-mindedness, the vividness of her emotions and her unrestrained expression of them were the varied forms which this central characteristic assumed. It was her sincerity which gave her at once her impressiveness, her charm, and her absurdity. She moved through life with the imposing certitude of one to whom concealment was impossible, either towards her surroundings or towards herself. There she was, all of her, the Queen of England, complete and obvious. The world might take her or leave her, she had nothing more to show or to explain or to modify, and with her peerless carriage she swept along her path. And not only was concealment out of the question, reticence, reserve, even dignity itself, as it sometimes seemed, might be very well dispensed with. As Lady Littleton said, There is a transparency in her truth that is very striking, not a shade of exaggeration in describing feelings or facts like very few other people I ever knew. Many may be as true, but I think it goes off and along with some reserve. She talks all out, just as it is, no more and no less. She talked all out, and she wrote all out too. Her letters in the surprising jet of their expression remind one of a turned-on tap. What is within pours forth in an immediate spontaneous rush. Her utterly unliterary style has at least the merit of being a vehicle exactly suited to her thoughts and feelings, and even the platitude of her phraseology carries with it a curiously personal flavor. Undoubtedly it was through her writings that she touched the heart of the public. Not only in her Highland journals, where the mild chronicle of her private proceedings was laid bare without a trace either of affectation or of embarrassment, but also in those remarkable messages to the nation which from time to time she published in the newspapers, her people found her very close to them indeed. They felt instinctively Victoria's irresistible sincerity, and they responded, and in truth it was an endearing trait. The personality and the position too. The wonderful combination of them. That perhaps was what was finally fascinating in the case. The little old lady with her white hair and her plain morning clothes, in her wheelchair or her donkey carriage, one saw her so, and then, close behind, with their immediate suggestion of singularity, of mystery and of power, the Indian servants. That was the familiar vision, and it was admirable. But at chosen moments it was right that the widow of Windsor should step forth a parent queen. The last and the most glorious of such occasions was the Jubilee of 1897. Then as the splendid procession passed along, escorting Victoria through the thronged, re-echoing streets of London, on her progress of thanksgiving to St. Paul's Cathedral, the greatness of her realm and the adoration of her subjects blazed out together. The tears welled to her eyes, and while the multitude roared round her. How kind they are to me! How kind they are! she repeated over and over again. That night her message flew over the empire. From my heart I thank my beloved people. May God bless them! The long journey was nearly done. But the traveller who had come so far and through such strange experiences moved on with the old unfaltering step. The girl, the wife, the aged woman were the same. Vitality, conscientiousness, pride, and simplicity were hers to the latest hour. CHAPTER X THE END The evening had been golden, but after all the day was to close in cloud and tempest. Imperial needs, imperial ambitions involved the country in the South African war. There were checks, reverses, bloody disasters. For a moment the nation was shaken, and the public distresses were felt with intimate solicitude by the queen. But her spirit was high, and neither her courage nor her confidence wavered for a moment. Throwing herself heart and soul into the struggle, she labored with redoubled vigor, interested herself in every detail of the hostilities, and sought by every means in her power to render service to the national cause. In April 1900, when she was in her 81st year, she made the extraordinary decision to abandon her annual visit to the South of France and to go instead to Ireland, which had provided a particularly large number of recruits to the armies in the field. She stayed for three weeks in Dublin, driving through the streets in spite of the warnings of her advisors without an armed escort, and the visit was a complete success. But in the course of it she began for the first time to show signs of the fatigue of age. For the long strain and the unceasing anxiety brought by the war made themselves felt at last. Endowed by nature with a robust constitution, Victoria, though in periods of depression she had sometimes supposed herself an invalid, had in reality throughout her life enjoyed remarkably good health. In her old age she had suffered from a rheumatic stiffness of the joints, which had necessitated the use of a stick, and eventually a wheeled chair. But no other ailments attacked her, until in 1898 her eyesight began to be affected by incipient cataract. After that she found reading more and more difficult, though she could still sign her name, and even with some difficulty write letters. In the summer of 1900, however, more serious symptoms appeared. Her memory, in whose strength and precision she had so long prided herself, now sometimes deserted her. There was a tendency towards aphasia, and while no specific disease declared itself, by the autumn there were unmistakable signs of a general physical decay. Yet even in these last months the strain of iron held firm. The daily work continued. Nay, it actually increased, for the Queen with an astonishing pertenacity insisted upon communicating personally with an ever-growing multitude of men and women who had suffered through the war. By the end of the year the last remains of her ebbing strength had almost deserted her, and through the early days of the opening century it was clear that her dwindling forces were only kept together by an effort of will. On January 14th she had at Osborne an hour's interview with Lord Roberts, who had returned victorious from South Africa a few days before. She inquired with acute anxiety into all the details of the war. She appeared to sustain the exertion successfully, but when the audience was over there was a collapse. On the following day her medical attendance recognized that her state was hopeless, and yet for two days more the indomitable spirit fought on. For two days more she discharged the duties of a Queen of England. But after that there was an end of working, and then and not till then did the last optimism of those about her break down. The brain was failing, and life was gently slipping away. Her family gathered round her. For a little more she lingered, speechless and apparently insensible, and on January 22nd 1901 she died. When two days previously the news of the approaching end had been made public, astonished grief had swept over the country. It appeared as if some monstrous reversal of the course of nature was about to take place. The vast majority of her subjects had never known a time when Queen Victoria had not been reigning over them. She had become an indecisible part of their whole scheme of things, and that they were about to lose her appeared a scarcely possible thought. She herself, as she lay blind and silent, seemed to those who watched her to be divested of all thinking. Two have glided already, unawares, into oblivion. Yet perhaps in the secret chambers of consciousness she had her thoughts too. Perhaps her fading mind called up once more the shadows of the past to float before it, and retraced for the last time the vanished visions of that long history. Passing back and back through the cloud of years to older and ever-older memories, to the spring woods at Osburn so full of prim roses for Lord Beaconsfield, to Lord Palmerston's queer clothes and high demeanor, and Albert's face under the green lamp, and Albert's first stag at Balmoral, and Albert in his blue and silver uniform, and the Baron coming in through a doorway, and Lord M dreaming at Windsor with the rooks cawing in the elm trees, and the Archbishop of Canterbury on his knees in the dawn, and the old King's turkey cock ejaculations, and Uncle Leopold's soft voice at Claremont, and Leitzen with the globes, and her mother's feathers sweeping down towards her, and a great old repeater watch of her father's in its tortoise shell case, and a yellow rug, and some friendly flounces of springed muslin, and the trees and the grass at Kensington.