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Matriarch

Page 52

by Anne Edwards


  “His tenderness and Firmness”: Ibid.

  “Now she lies”: PH, p. 353.

  “I don’t want to die yet”: Viscount Esher, Vol. I, p. 282.

  “to the doleful sound”: Leslie, The Film of Memory, p. 162.

  “... a very small coffin”: Ibid.

  “The procession”: Ibid.

  “London was plunged in fog”: Ibid.

  Chapter 9

  “We are to be called”: PH, 354.

  “I believe this is”: Ibid.

  “The Sanctity of the Viscount Esher, Vol. I, p. 280.

  “I was tired”: Ibid., p. 288.

  “a smart difference of opinion”: Ibid., p. 285.

  “in tearing”: Ibid., p. 289.

  “some of them”: Hibbert, The Court at Windsor, footnote 240.

  “I do not know”: St. Aubyn, Edward VII, p. 140.

  “The King plays bridge”: Viscount Esher, Vol. I, p. 291.

  “The oak dining room”: Ibid., p. 291.

  “I regret”: Ibid., p. 292.

  “I sent a list of queries”: Ibid., p. 279.

  “I know better than all”: Battiscombe, p. 219.

  “The opening of”: Viscount Esher, Vol. I, p. 284.

  “Saw the King again”: Ibid., p. 297.

  “uncontested arbiter”: Duke of Windsor, A Family Album, p. 35.

  “Stiff as a breast-plate”: Ibid., p. 38.

  “Queen Alexandra”: Ibid., p. 39.

  “one could see handkerchiefs”: Ibid., p. 40.

  “I detest the sea”: PH, p. 366.

  “lest she spoil”: Duke of Windsor, A King’s Story, p. 17.

  “My darling Mama and Papa”: Gore, George V, p. 164.

  “My dearest little Bertie”: Ibid.

  “the only thing”: Battiscombe, p. 241.

  “little David caught”: Ibid.

  “You must not kill him”: Ibid., p. 240

  “to assume”: PH, p. 368.

  “the proper Royal”: Ibid.

  “I could never have”: PH, p. 369.

  “the drastically altered”: Duke of Windsor, A King’s Story, p. 18.

  “surrounded by pleasure”: Harry Price, p. 27.

  “simply deafening”: Ibid.

  “May and I went”: RA, George V’s Journal, January 16, 1902.

  “the Windsor climate”: Ibid.

  “The feminine”: Duke of Windsor, A King’s Story, p. 18.

  “I hope your kilts”: Ibid., p. 24.

  “Well, soon I”: Gore, George V, p. 184.

  “comforted by the fact”: Ibid.

  “formally almost coldly”: Lady Airlie, p. 102.

  “Dearest, dearest”: Ibid.

  “Money was the passport”: Ibid., p. 194.

  Chapter 10

  “Why”: Viscount Esher; Vol. I, p. 330.

  “I think he”: Ibid., p. 331.

  “I have never felt”: Lady Lygon to Lady Ampthill, June 27, 1902.

  “Oh I do pray”: PH, p. 372.

  “smoking a cigar”: Gore, George V, p. 180.

  “One of Prince Edward’s”: Viscount Esher, Vol. I, p. 345.

  “I don’t think”: Ibid.

  “One source”: Ibid., p. 346.

  “She is a funny”: Ibid., p. 346.

  “He had the Victorian’s”: Duke of Windsor, A King’s Story, p. 28.

  “an almost fanatical”: Ibid.

  “railroad precision”: Ibid.

  “His Royal Highness”: Ibid.

  “the seat of paternal”: Ibid.

  “a royal command”: Duke of Windsor, A Family Album, p. 24.

  “had difficulty enough”: Wheeler-Bennett, p. 27.

  “On this being reported”: Ibid., p. 29 (footnote).

  “I must always remember”: Lady Airlie, p. 112.

  “Very good reception”: PH, p. 372.

  “My Princess May”: Lady Lygon to Lady Ampthill, August 14, 1902.

  “all up the front”: Ibid.

  Chapter 11

  “Monarchy”: Harold Nicolson, George VI, p. 62.

  “A family on the throne”: Burke’s Peerage, p. 5455.

  “the home is revered”: Ibid.

  “pool without a ripple”: Ibid.

  “had found the”: Brent, p. 233.

  “let down”: Ibid.

  “kind, deep”: Keppel, p. 23.

  “a fascinating game”: Ibid.

  “Then, bets”: Ibid.

  “embossed with”: Ibid.

  “In my life”: Ibid.

  “quite unmoved”: Princess Marie Louise, p. 173.

  “that to wear it”: Ibid.

  “absolutely unruffled”: Ibid., p. 174.

  “I was horrified hearing”: Battiscombe, p. 253.

  “It is queer”: Viscount Esher, Vol. I, p. 373.

  “The house looked lovely”: RA, Queen Mary’s Diary, May 10, 1903.

  “Motherdear”: Ibid.

  “rang through the”: Lady Airlie, p. 107.

  “Her Majesty says”: Ibid.

  “How can I tell the King”: Ibid.

  “used to talk”: Ibid.

  “But Mama doesn’t”: Ibid., p. 109.

  “for an Imperial”: Morris, p. 146.

  “Much as I love him”: PA, p. 124.

  “Don’t worry about that”: Ibid.

  “from boyhood”: Ibid., p. 128.

  “My goodness!”: Gore, George V, p. 82.

  “Their ample figures”: PH, p. 382.

  “a swift jab”: Ibid.

  “jumpy”: Ibid., p. 392.

  “Of course it is a”: RA, George V, CC 51 39.

  “The pleasure I”: RA, Grand Duchess of Mecklenburg-Strelitz to Princess of Wales, January 12, 1905.

  “A charming man”: Gore, George V, p. 194.

  “freshly scrubbed”: Duke of Windsor, A King’s Story, p. 26.

  “where he would remain”: Ibid.

  “Old Black Joe”: Ibid.

  “was Dickens in a”: Ibid., p. 52.

  “scores of”: Ibid.

  “and as the”: Ibid.

  “who would”: Ibid., p. 54.

  “I really believe”: PH, p. 390.

  Chapter 12

  “Fancy you ‘Miss May’ ”: RA, QA to Princess of Wales, December 29, 1905.

  “Lovely India,”: PH, p. 396.

  “coddled by”: Collins and Lapierre, p. 26.

  “Everyone with”: Ibid.

  “In all the papers”: PH, p. 396

  “Your dresses”: Ibid.

  “out of his time”: Morris, p. 114.

  “with a respect”: Ibid.

  “regarded the Indians”: Ibid., p. 112.

  “a little bundle”: Arthur, George V, p. 87.

  “I have been reading”: Harold Nicolson, George V, pp. 86–87.

  “Dear David”: Battiscombe, p. 24.

  “I do envy you”: Ibid., p. 260.

  “I am glad”: Ibid., p. 261.

  “I must say”: Harold Nicolson, George V, p. 88.

  “No doubt”: Ibid.

  “convinced that”: Ibid.

  “in a dream”: PH, p. 398.

  “The Maharani”: Ibid.

  “We are now staying”: Ibid.

  “48 massed bands”: Ibid.

  “We steamed away”: Ibid.

  “I thank you”: Frankland, p. 9.

  “Darling Harry”: Ibid.

  “very cold and stiff”: Donaldson, p. 27.

  “Come in”: Saunders, p. 18.

  “David ought to have”: Harold Nicolson, George V, p. 31.

  “The two boys”: Ibid.

  “So Ena”: PH, p. 401.

  “swot up”: Ibid.

  “disturbing influence”: Duke of Windsor, A King’s Story, p. 42.

  “with an agonising problem”: Ibid.

  “with painful care”: Ibid.

  “Like little wantan”: Shakespeare, Henry VIII.

  “the common touch”: PH, p. 402.

  “Did y
ou see”: Ibid.

  “What can I say”: Debrett’s Foreign Royalties, p. 88.

  “to refresh ourselves”: PH, p. 404.

  “through ornamental gardens”: Ibid.

  “like a collossus”: Ibid.

  “The service in the church”: Gore, p. 211.

  “Just before our carriage”: Ibid.

  “I saw a man”: Ibid., p. 212.

  “not easy after the”: Harold Nicolson, George V, p. 95.

  “We can only thank”: PH, p. 406.

  “Very hot affair”, Harold Nicolson, George V, p. 96.

  “My birthday”: Gore, p. 213.

  “So Maud is sitting”: PH, p. 407.

  “old family”: Viscount Esher, Vol. II, p. 139.

  Chapter 13

  “walked off”: Ibid., p. 53.

  “Here Sir”: Duke of Windsor, A King’s Story, p. 51.

  “two hundred shoulders”: Tschumi, p. 45.

  “la Bonne cuisine”: Ibid.

  “a bonfire blaze”: Duke of Windsor, A King’s Story, p. 48.

  “an anxious eye”: Ibid.

  “The Navy will”: Ibid.

  “I am appalled”: Ibid.

  “The British constitutional”: Ibid.

  “to a hard iron bed”: Ibid.

  “blaring bugle”: Ibid.

  “he’s too puny”: Ibid.

  “You are the Prince”: Ibid., p. 63.

  “A moment later”: Ibid.

  “alternately going round”: Ibid.

  “six official cuts”: Ibid.

  “with true Irish sympathy”: Ibid.

  “a crude reminder of”: Ibid.

  “fortunately”: Ibid.

  “the next morning Finch”: Ibid.

  “You must”: Wheeler-Bennett, p. 32.

  “he was the most shy”: Ibid., p. 33.

  “where he seems to have”: Ibid.

  “grit and never-say-I’m”: Ibid.

  “wore such a sad”: Duke of Windsor, A King’s Story, p. 69.

  “You must remember”: Frankland, p. 10.

  “thundery weather”: Ibid.

  “Now that you are”: Ibid.

  “something of a handful”: Ibid.

  “academically, musically”: Ibid.

  “She will indeed”: PH, p. 417.

  Chapter 14

  “mere signing machine”: Hibbert, The Court of St. James’s, p. 54.

  “few prerogatives”: Ibid.

  “completely left in the dark”: Ibid.

  “that the poor”: St. Aubyn, Edward VII, p. 415.

  “the preaching of”: Ibid.

  “in the most vigourous”: Ibid.

  “perfectly disgraceful”: Ibid.

  “implacable warfare”: Times, April 30, 1909.

  “primarily a campaign”: St. Aubyn, Edward VII, p. 417.

  “both embarrassing”: Battiscombe, p. 268.

  “leave that horrid”: Ibid.

  “sat sad-eyed”: St. Aubyn, Edward VII, p. 419.

  “so unlike [the King]”: Ibid.

  “I am Caesar”: Stamper, p. 72.

  “Caesar was neither”: Ibid.

  “Caesar! Come here!”: Ibid.

  “You naughty”: Ibid.

  “the very essence”: St. Aubyn, Edward VII, pp. 380–381.

  “curious air”: Sitwell, p. 43.

  “because kings and queens”: Ibid.

  “hunched ... grey”: St. Aubyn, Edward VII, p. 473.

  “I shall work to the end”: Ibid.

  “At 11:45”: Harold Nicolson, George V, p. 105.

  “darling May”: Ibid.

  “Across the Mall”: Duke of Windsor, A King’s Story, p. 73.

  “grew with fatigue”: Ibid.

  “What did you say?”: Ibid.

  “May and I watched”: Harold Nicolson, George V, p. 125.

  “I went up” (footnote): J. A. Spender and Cyril Asquith, The Life of H. H. Asquith, p. 296.

  “that the High”: Times, May 10, 1910.

  “George dislikes”: RA, Queen Mary to Grand Duchess Augusta.

  “The Queen sent for me”: Viscount Esher, Vol. III, May 10, 1910, p. 1.

  “the blinds were down”: Ponsonby, p. 380.

  “I debated”: Ibid.

  “They want to take him”: Battiscombe, p. 273.

  “stood rigidly”: Ibid.

  “to show a foreign relative”: Ibid.

  “A glorious service”: Ibid.

  “They took him”: Ibid.

  “I am now very tired”: PH, p. 422.

  “The odd part”: Ibid., p. 423.

  “All the long”: Tuchman, Guns of August, p. 21.

  “a very nice boy”: Ibid., p. 16.

  “And so my Georgie”: Harold Nicolson, George V, p. 42.

  “cast earth upon the coffin”: Battiscombe, p. 273.

  “by the Grace of”: Ibid.

  “a mere child”: Viscount Esher, Vol. III, June 4, 1910, p. 7.

  “beyond the time”: Ibid.

  “subtle respect”: Duke of Windsor, A King’s Story, p. 75.

  “I am so awfully sorry”: Frankland, p. 18.

  “I saw Francis Knollys”: Viscount Esher, Vol. III, May 31, 1910, p. 5.

  “I have known all”: Viscount Esher, Vol II, p. 461.

  “abiding sense of his regal”: Times, May 24, 1910.

  “The whole task”: PH, p. 423.

  “There’ll be no wo’ar”: Pelissier’s Follies of 1909.

  “kept things together”: Times, May 24, 1910.

  Chapter 15

  “Life is too fatiguing”: PH, p. 424.

  “for we were so very”: Ibid.

  “broke down and wept”: Ibid.

  “lies with that of”: Ibid.

  “It is altogether”: Viscount Esher, Vol. III, August 21, 1910, p. 15.

  “running round”: Ibid.

  “I went yesterday”: Ibid., p. 16.

  “We had a drive”: Ibid., p. 17.

  “As far as”: Colville, p. 108 (footnote).

  “I believe the right”: Duke of Windsor’s papers, Queen Mary to Edward Prince of Wales, June II, 1910.

  “unwinning”: Ibid.

  “Not a sign of”: Ibid.

  “the King sat”: Ibid.

  “a week of intimate talk”: Ibid.

  “no bed of roses”: RA, Queen Mary to Grand Duchess Augusta, August 10, 1910.

  “so to speak”: PH, p. 423.

  “Her passion”: Ibid.

  “The fact”: Ibid.

  “she would no longer”: Ibid., p. 424.

  “I used to be rather”: Ibid.

  “serious jewels to display”: PH, p. 425.

  “to grow old”: PH, p. 431.

  “Willy dear”: Battiscombe, p. 274.

  “It is rather strange”: RA, George V, CC 8121.

  “I am sure”: RA, George V, CC 466.

  “I so understand”: RA, Grand Duchess Augusta to Queen Mary, December 15, 1910.

  “there was considerable”: Wheeler-Bennett, p. 46.

  “I am so afraid”: Ibid.

  “Well at last”: PH, p. 433.

  “I feel more”: Ibid.

  “I really am beginning”: Ibid., March 5, 1911.

  “I expect you will”: RA, George V, AA 3726, February 26, 1911.

  “Our dear old rooms”: RA, Queen Alexandra to Queen Mary, February 27, 1911.

  “Will be a great ordeal”: PH, p. 433.

  “a pitiable figure”: Battiscombe, p. 274.

  “hopeless & helpless”: Ibid.

  “My Darling May”: RA, Queen Alexandra to Queen Mary, February 27,1911 (footnote).

  “Just as well”: Battiscombe, p. 274

  “Oh! That we have been”: PH, p. 438.

  “May God bless”: PH, p. 441.

  “Eddy should be King”: Ibid.

  Chapter 16

  “had ceased to be”: Harold Nicolson, George V, p. 108.

  “profoundly shaken”: Ibid.

&n
bsp; “After a long talk”: Ibid., p. 138.

  “a new period: Tuchman, The Proud Tower, p. 461.

  “It is so funny”: Princess Marie Louise, p. 177.

  “Yes, of course”: Ibid.

  “absolutely did not”: Harold Nicolson, George V, p. 186.

  “I asked him”: Ibid., p. 185.

  “a fiasco for”: Winston Churchill, The World Crisis, Vol. I, p. 114.

  “deep and violent passions”: Ibid.

  “After Papa & Mama”: Duke of Windsor, A King’s Story, p. 79.

  “each with its vision”: Independent, Vol. 71, July 13, 1911.

  “multitudinously crowded”: Ibid.

  “bustling and brilliant”: Ibid.

  “double dazzling”: Ibid.

  “most beautiful”: RA, George V, Diary, June 22, 1911.

  “To me, who”: Ibid.

  “by the powerful and mild”: Times, June 22, 1911.

  “All the relatives”: Ibid.

  “I, Edward, Prince of Wales”: Ibid.

  “It reminded me so much”: RA, Queen Mary to Grand Duchess Augusta, June 25, 1911.

  “Then Mama was crowned”: Duke of Windsor, A King’s Story, p. 258a.

  “We left Westminster Abbey”: Ibid., 263a.

  “melliftously proclaiming”: Ibid., p. 81.

  “Half-fainting”: Ibid.

  “a painful discovery”: Ibid.

  Chapter 17

  “more English, and less”: Harper’s Magazine, July 1911.

  “a boisterously British”: Ibid.

  “not because he likes it”: Ponsonby, p. 392.

  “It is impossible”: Harold Nicolson, George V, p. 155.

  “What a remarkable year”: Tuchman, The Proud Tower, p. 47.

  “I am convinced”: Harold Nicolson, George V, p. 167.

  “The cost of such a proceeding”: Ibid.

  “not without a certain amount”: Ibid., p. 168.

  “unfitting for a ceremony”: Ibid.

  “wearing his crown”: Ibid.

  “an irresistible temptation”: Ibid., p. 169.

  “I shall never”: PH, p. 452.

  “mushroom bank”: Ibid.

  “vivid pink”: Ibid., p. 457.

  “It was a”: Queen Mary to Grand Duchess Augusta, September 8, 1911.

  “there were crowds”: Harold Nicolson, George V, p. 170.

  “a large square”: Our King and Queen, Vol. II, p. 504.

  “to suppose that”: Ibid., p. 505.

  “increasing solicitude”: PH, p. 458.

  “The jewel”: Ibid.

  “in a regular”: Viscount Esher, Vol. III, p. 81.

  “was the most wonderful”: PH, p. 459.

  “Mama’s emeralds”: Ibid., p. 460.

  “Each year”: RA, George V, CC 4–86.

  “very proud”: Ibid.

  “too European”: PH, p. 461.

  “I simply couldn’t help”: Ibid., p. 462.

  “What joy that there”: Ibid.

  “Characteristically feminine”: Colville, p. 111.

 

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