 CHAPTER V. PART 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 in 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 co-born 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 skillful 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 Osborn. 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 ineradically 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 pressure. 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 radiosynation. For him it was intolerable to think in a hurry to jump the slap-dash 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 fool's cap the substance of a confidential conversation with Sir Robert Peale, 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 humor the singular susceptibilities of Englishmen, with great tact, dropped that particular memorandum into the fire. But as for Palmerston, he never 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 harebrained 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. After 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 of 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 am quite satisfied with my morning's work. I have 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 dispatches 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 in 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 dispatches 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 dispatches 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 remonstress 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 in 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 a reply that twenty-eight thousand dispatches 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 favorably 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 dispatches. 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 into 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 pertenacity 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 labored 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 millstones, 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 these 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, realized 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 alarms 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 favor him. Sir Robert Peale 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, 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 pigeonhole 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, one, 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. Two, 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, and 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 modified, 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 had 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 blind 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 Horstein 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 Schleswiggers 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 point blank 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 Heinau, 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 Monsieur Barclay and Perkins's brewery. The features of General Hyena, as he was everywhere called, his grim thin face, his enormous pepper and salt mustaches, 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, sent in danger, begged his friend not to appear in public, or if he must do so, to cut off his mustaches first. But the general would take no advice. He went to the brewery, was immediately recognized, surrounded by a crowd of angry draymen, pushed about, shouted at, punched in the ribs, and pulled by the mustaches, until bolting down an alley with a mob at his heels, brandishing brooms and roaring, Hyena! he managed to take refuge in a public house. Wents, 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 lamb-like, 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 stigmatized 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 ambassador 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 arrogance, that even his ignominious dismissal from office was something that could be brushed aside? CHAPTER V. PART 3 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 councils, but they had been reassured by the knowledge that at the center of power there was one man with strength, with courage, with determination in whom they could put their trust. They now learned 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 smelled 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, hipony broadsides hawked through the streets of London, re-echoed in doggerel vulgarity, the same sentiments and the same suspicions. NOTE The Turkish war both foreign-year 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, O Al, you've played the deuce then. The German lad has acted sad and turned tale 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, he said, jumped out of bed and wop them with her nightcap. We'll send him home and make him groan, O Al, you've played the deuce then. The German lad has acted sad and turned tale with the russians. From lovely Albert, a broadside preserved at the British Museum. End of note. At last the wildest rumors began to spread. 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. Note. You jolly turks now go to work and show the barrier power. It is rumored over Britain's Isle that A is in the tower. The postman some suspicion had and opened the two letters. It was pity sad the German lad should not have known much better. Lovely Albert. End of note. These fantastic hallucinations, the result of the fevered atmosphere of approaching war, were devoid of any basis in actual fact. Palmerston's resignation 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 favor 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 and the Constitution, are easily ascertainable, for they were Stockmars. And it happens that we possess a detailed account of Stockmars' 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 and 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 monarchy, 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 dispatch 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 faint-hearted opening of Albert's political life. He himself made no attempt to minimize 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 advisor in politics, and only assistant in her communication with the offices 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 learned 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 favor 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 it 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. 1. The weak-willed youth who took no interest in politics, 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. 2. 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. 3. The day thus begun continued in unremitting industry. At breakfast the newspapers, the once hated newspapers, made their appearance, and the prints absorbed in their perusal would answer no questions, or if an article struck him, he 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. 3. Lese recht aufmerksam und sage, wenn irgendein Fehler ist, he would say. Note. Read this carefully, and tell me if there are any mistakes in it. End of note. Or, as he handed her a draft for her signature, he would observe. Ich dachte es war recht so. Note. Here is a draft I have made for you. Read it. I should think this would do. End of note. 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. 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 Haudenosa 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. Clump 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 principal, 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's 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. Clump. 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 Lansear's pictures, as she followed him round while he gave instructions about the breeding of cattle, or decided that the gains-borrows must be hung higher up so that the winter halters 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 ardor 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 realized 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 and 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. She could always set a good example. These considerations, of course, applied preeminently 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-humored 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 timetable 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 the 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 timetables. 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. 2. Against the insidious worries of politics, the boredom of society functions, and the pompous publicity of state ceremonies, Osborn had afforded a welcome refuge. But it soon appeared that even Osborn was too little removed from the world. After all, the Solent was a feeble barrier. Oh, for some distant, some almost inaccessible sanctuary, wherein 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 reading, 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 Bredelbane. 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 the dinner time. We both have become quite fond of the bagpipes. 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 Braymar 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 dot 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 bothy at Alt Nagyutathah, 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 palm. 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 deer hills, the day so fine, the whole so gemitly, 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 the 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 one hundred feet high and minor turrets and castellated gables, the castle was skillfully arranged to command the finest views of the surrounding mountains and of the neighboring 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 tartans. The Balmoral tartan in red and gray 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. Watercolor sketches by Victoria hung upon the walls together with innumerable stag zantlers and the head of a bore which had been shot by Albert in Germany. In an alcove in the hall stood a life-size 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 layout, and his great taste and the impress of his dear hand have been stamped everywhere. And here in very truth her happiest days were past. In after years when she looked back upon them a kind of glory or 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 marvelous lights. Albert's stalkings, an evening walk when she lost her way, Vicki sitting down on a wasp's 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 lock in the lonely hills, Lord Derby's letter had been brought to her, and she had learned that England, or rather Britain's pride, her glory, her hero, the greatest man she had ever produced was no more. For such were her 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 81st birthday. So now she filled a whole page of her diary with panagerical 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. McLeod's sermon on Nicodemus, by the gift of a red flannel petticoat to Mrs. P. Farquarson and another to old Kitty Kier. 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 ghillies, 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 Party, Lady Churchill passing as Miss Spencer and General Gray as Dr. Gray. 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 contra-tan, the rough-ins with their coarse fare and Brown and Grant waiting at table. She could have gone on forever 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. Three, 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 honor, 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 defense 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, dispatches, 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 advised to be ignored. The talent for administration, which had reorganized 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 enrollment 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 goodwill 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 aristocratic 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 willfulness and destiny. And to her surprise, where she had dreaded antagonisms, she discovered only sympathies. He was, she said, so quiet, so simple, naive 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 toward 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 Princeton memorandum, which appeared to bore the Emperor as très compliqué. 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 and 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 vey mootig 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 a theater at St. Cloud, and one evening at a great party given by the Emperor in her honor 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 to 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 Gahanistan letter, while Victoria rode about on horseback reviewing the troops. At last, however, Sebastopol was captured, the news reached Belmorrow 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 villagekeepers, ghillies, 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 health in whiskey 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. 4. 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 Belmoral 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 Vicki, and full of the universal enthusiasm, of which the Duke of Bucklew 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 and opened one with them and Bertie. The band struck up. I wished good-bye to the good perpunters. General Schreckenstein was much affected. I pressed his hand and the good deans, and then went quickly upstairs. Albert, as well as General Schreckenstein, was much affected. He was losing his favorite 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 sign of the House of Brunswick. But these evidences of innate characteristics only serve 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 meager. 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 à tout le monde, old Melinech reported to Gizot, mais avait l'air embarrass et très 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 hence forward 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 recognized. 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 gentleman appointed to attend on The Prince of Wales, this long and elaborate document laid down certain principles by which the conduct and demeanor of the gentleman 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, one, his appearance, his deportment, and dress, two, the character of his relations with, and treatment of others, three, 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 gentleman. 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 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 advisor 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 goats that ran upstairs to his sister's room and ran twice round the table and then ran down again. Dispepsia 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 impune. 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 warriest of men? Albert certainly seemed to be everything that Stockmore 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, unanalyzable, 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 unrecognized superiority. He had the pride at once resigned in 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 worthwhile 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 and 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 recognized, that he was a highly influential and extremely important man. But how far, how very far was all this from the goal of his ambitions? How feeble and futile his effort 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 barren 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 timetable, 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 cogwheels 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 overzealous, as in old Greek. The due measure in all the works of man is best, for often one who zealously pushes toward 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 learned something from the frigid wisdom of Theognus. Victoria noticed that her husband sometimes seemed to be depressed and overworked. She tried to cheer him up, realizing 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 Osborn, while he whistled to the nightingales as he had whistled once in Hosenau 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 39, she gave him a picture of Beatrice's life size in oil by Horsley, a complete collection of photographic views of Gota and the country round, which I had taken by Bedford, and a paper weight of Balmoral granite and deer's 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 shallow, tired-looking man whose body in its stoop and loose fleshiness betrayed the sedentary laborer, 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, inquiring 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 that were so preeminently hers. But suddenly she was reminded that there were other perils besides those of ill health. During a visit to Coborg 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 dared 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 Coborg. One thousand pounds, or even two thousand pounds, given either at once or in installments 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 burgo master and chief clergyman of Coborg, 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 in 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 realized that for her in a special 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 dispatch 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 1st 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 away 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 skillfully 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 pooped 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 it 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. Note Clarendon, vol. 2, pages 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. End of note The restlessness and the acute suffering of the earlier days gave place to a settled torpor at 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 it Rosenau again, a boy? Or Victoria would come and read to him Peverall 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. Bowied up by her own abundant energies, she would not believe that Alberts 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 14th, 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 remain 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. As klein as 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 forever.