QUEEN VICTORIA ***
E-text prepared by Jonathan Ingram, S.R. Ellison, and Project Gutenberg Distributed Proofreaders
QUEEN VICTORIA
STORY OF HER LIFE AND REIGN
1819-1901
[ILLUSTRATION: QUEEN VICTORIA. (From a Photograph by Russell & Son.)]
'Her court was pure, her life serene; God gave her peace; her land reposed; A thousand claims to reverence closed In her as Mother, Wife, and Queen.'
TENNYSON.
'God bless the Queen for all her unwearied goodness! I admire her as a woman, love her as a friend, and reverence her as a Queen. Her courage, patience, and endurance are marvellous to me.'
NORMAN MACLEOD.
'A Prince indeed, Beyond all titles, and a household name, Hereafter, through all time, Albert the Good.'
TENNYSON.
PREFACE.
This brief life of Queen Victoria gives the salient features of her reign, including the domestic and public life, with a glance at the wonderful history and progress of our country during the past half-century. In the space at command it has been impossible to give extended treatment. The history is necessarily very brief, as also the account of the public and private life, yet it is believed no really important feature of her life and reign has been omitted.
It is a duty, incumbent on old and young alike, as well as a pleasing privilege, to mark how freedom has slowly 'broadened down, from precedent to precedent,' and how knowledge, wealth, and well-being are more widely distributed to-day than at any former period of our history. And this knowledge can only increase the gratitude of the reader for the golden reign of Queen Victoria, of whom it has been truly written:
A thousand claims to reverence closed In her as Mother, Wife, and Queen.
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER I.--Reign of Queen Victoria--Outlook of Royalty in 1819--Duke and Duchess of Kent--Birth of Victoria--Anecdotes.
CHAPTER II.--First Meeting with Prince Albert--Death of William IV.--Accession of Queen Victoria--First Speech from the Throne--Coronation--Life at Windsor--Personal Appearance--Betrothal to Prince Albert--Income from the Country.
CHAPTER III.--Marriage--Family Habits--Birth of Princess Royal--Queen's Views of Religious Training--Osborne and Balmoral--Death of the Duke of Wellington.
CHAPTER IV.--Chief Public Events, 1837-49--Rebellion in Canada--Opium War with China--Wars in North-west India--Penny Postage--Repeal of the Corn-laws--Potato Famine--Free Trade-Chartism.
CHAPTER V.--The Crimean War, 1854-55--Interest of the Queen and Prince Consort in the suffering Soldiers--Florence Nightingale--Distribution of Victoria Crosses by the Queen.
CHAPTER VI.--The Indian Mutiny, 1857-58--The Queen's Letter to Lord Canning.
CHAPTER VII.--Marriage of the Princess Royal--Twenty-first Anniversary of Wedding-day--Death of the Prince-Consort.
CHAPTER VIII.--Death of Princess Alice--Illness of Prince of Wales--The Family of the Queen--Opening of Indian Exhibition and Imperial Institute--Jubilee--Death of Duke of Clarence--Marriage of Princess May.
CHAPTER IX.--The Queen as an Artist and Author--In her Holiday Haunts--Norman Macleod--Letter to Mr Peabody--The Queen's Drawing-room--Her pet Animals--A Model Mistress--Diamond Jubilee--Death of the Queen.