Crown & Country: A History of England Through the Monarchy
Page 56
Two years later, it was all over. Though she had four decades more to live and reign, she would never wear the Imperial Crown again.
On 25 November 1861 Albert, who had been secretly warned that his eldest son, Albert-Edward, prince of Wales, was keeping a woman in his student rooms at Cambridge, travelled by train from Windsor to confront him. He spent the night at Madingley Hall just outside Cambridge, before returning to Windsor the following morning.
Already unwell before his journey, which had taken place in soaking-wet weather, his condition rapidly worsened. But Victoria was oblivious and his doctors powerless, doing little more than drugging him with ever more frequent slugs of brandy. Soon he was delirious, and on the night of 14 December his breathing began to change. Victoria was summoned and, confronting the truth at last, exclaimed, ‘This is death’ and fell on his body.
Once she emerged from the immediate paralysis of grief, Victoria’s first thought was to preserve Albert’s private memory for herself and her children. The Blue Room at Windsor, where he had died, was turned into a shrine, where she came to meditate each year on the anniversary of his death. Similarly, his rooms at Osborne were kept unchanged, with his pictures, knick-knacks and his omnipresent bust. Even his shaving-water continued to be put out as usual.
But would Albert’s public achievements, in identifying the monarchy with the forces of progress in the arts, industry and politics, survive as well? Here, on the contrary, Victoria’s behaviour seemed to risk throwing everything away. Locked in her own misery, she refused point blank either to come to London or make public appearances. Buckingham Palace, the now all-too-visible symbol of monarchy, stood empty and shuttered, and in 1864 some joker tied a mock advertisement to the gates: ‘These commanding premises to be let or sold, in consequence of the late occupant’s declining business’.
Two years later, in 1866, under immense pressure from the government, she agreed to open Parliament for the first time since Albert’s death. But she could not have made her real feelings plainer. She refused to walk along the Royal Gallery – his gallery. Or wear the crown. Or even read the speech. Instead, she sat, frozen and impassive, on the throne, with a black cap, a black dress and a long black veil, while the Lord Chancellor delivered the speech on her behalf.
The following year, Britain took ‘a step in the dark’ with the passage of the Second, much more radical, Reform Act. This gave the vote to the skilled urban working class and added more than a million voters to the roll.
The age of mass politics had begun.
Victoria reacted calmly, asserting, with her characteristically vigorous underlinings, that ‘the country was never so loyal or so devoted to their Sovereign as now’. Her confidence was soon put to the test by the dramatic events in France. On 2 September 1870 at Sedan, the Prussians crushed the French armies and took the Emperor Napoleon III prisoner. France declared a republic and, early the following year, a left-wing rising – the Commune – left the centre of Paris and its great public buildings a blackened, smouldering ruin.
As a century before, the republican infection quickly spread to Britain. The Republican newspaper was founded and more than fifty republican clubs established from Aberdeen to Plymouth.
Faced with this direct challenge to her throne, Victoria bestirred herself at last and in 1871 performed more public engagements than in the decade since Albert’s death. In February, she opened Parliament, wearing a new, small diamond crown. Weighing only a few ounces (in contrast to the two and a half pounds of the Imperial State Crown), it was designed to fit neatly over her widow’s cap and veil and, perched on top of her head, quickly became her acknowledged symbol.
In March, she presided, wearing rubies as well as diamonds, over the wedding of her daughter, Princess Louise, to the marquess of Lorne at Windsor Castle, and followed it by joining the couple on a drive through London. At the end of the month, she opened the Royal Albert Hall, which was packed to capacity with 8000 people. Finally, in June, she drove to the newly completed St Thomas’s Hospital, where her statue commemorates her visit. She paid tribute to Florence Nightingale; toured the building, naming one ward ‘Victoria’ and another ‘Albert’; and declared the hospital open. Albert’s improving, philanthropic legacy was, after all, safe in her hands.
Despite all this activity, public opinion hung in the balance, and on 6 November 1871, Sir Charles Wentworth Dilke, a Liberal MP and a baronet, openly called for a republic: ‘I say, for my part – and I believe the middle classes in general will say – let it come!’
The salvation of the ‘monarchy business’ came from an unexpected quarter. The behaviour of the prince of Wales – known to his family as ‘Bertie’ – had not improved since Albert’s death, and only the previous year he had been summoned as a witness in the sensational Mordaunt divorce case. But in late November 1871 he fell dangerously ill of typhoid fever. It was just ten years since his father had supposedly died of the same disease, and it seemed more than likely that there would be the same outcome.
As the royal family, headed by Victoria herself, gathered round the prince’s sickbed at Sandringham, a remarkable change took place in the popular mood. Hitherto the press had pilloried Albert-Edward as a good-for-nothing wastrel. Now it kept vigil with the afflicted family. The crisis came on 14 December, the anniversary of Albert’s death. But instead of succumbing, the prince survived and began a slow but sure recovery.
The opportunity was too good to miss for the Liberal prime minister, William Ewart Gladstone. Throughout his sixty-year-long political career, which took him from High Toryism in youth to the wilder shores of Liberalism in old age, Gladstone remained constant to the belief that religion was central to politics and that monarchy was the best embodiment of that relationship.
How better to reaffirm this belief and dish Dilke and the republicans than by holding a Day of National Thanksgiving for the prince’s recovery, with the queen and the prince of Wales processing through London to a service at St Paul’s? The only obstacle, ironically enough, was Victoria herself. She preferred her religion plain and private. And she detested cathedral services with what she saw as their hypocritical combination of religion and pomp.
But Gladstone, for all his religiosity, was an astute politician: the moment was too good to miss and he browbeat Victoria into acceptance. Their personal relations, awkward from the start, never recovered. But, having given way, the queen played her part to perfection.
Temple Bar, which has now been moved to a site by St Paul’s Cathedral, then still stood at the entrance to the City in Fleet Street. As the royal carriage passed through it, it halted to be greeted by the Lord Mayor. During the pause, Victoria seized her son’s hand, held it up in front of the vast crowd and kissed it extravagantly. It was a gesture worthy of her great predecessor, Queen Elizabeth I herself. The republican movement collapsed and Dilke himself forswore the faith, only to be later forced out of public life by charges of adultery.
In 1874 Gladstone fell and was replaced as prime minister by the other great figure in Victorian politics, the Tory leader, Benjamin Disraeli. Disraeli, feline and slippery as opposed to the craggy Gladstone, was a bundle of contradictions: dandy, novelist and supremely professional politician; baptized Jew and hardline Tory; elitist and populist; cynic and courtier. The moment he became prime minister, Disraeli set himself to charm Victoria, ageing though she was, as his ‘Faery Queen’. Victoria, used to Gladstone’s lecturings, responded with coquettish glee.
But she also took advantage of the change. Intensely conscious of her royalty, she had been reluctant to yield precedence to the Continental monarchs who bore the title ‘emperor’ or ‘empress’. But the declaration of the German Empire, which followed the defeat of France, raised a particular problem since in time her own eldest daughter, who had married the German crown prince, would be empress herself.
But wasn’t she the doyenne of European sovereigns? The ruler of the world’s greatest empire, with a fifth of the globe’s inhab
itants as her subjects? And in India, as heir of the Mughals, wasn’t she even regularly called ‘empress’? So from 1873 she began to badger about a formal assumption of the title.
The Bill to create her officially ‘Empress of India’ was introduced in 1876. Gladstone spoke vehemently against it. And even Disraeli harboured doubts, though he kept them to himself. But, once the Act had passed, he moved with characteristic dexterity to exploit it as the centre-piece of a new Tory ‘imperial policy of England’.
In 1875, he guaranteed communications to India by buying a controlling interest in the Suez Canal; in 1877 he engaged in a stand-off with Russia, Britain’s chief imperial rival, in the Balkans and the Bosporus; then in 1878 the old prestidigitator pulled off a final coup at the Congress of Berlin by acting as arbiter of Europe and bringing home ‘peace with honour’. As he returned to Downing Street in an open carriage, a huge bunch of flowers was thrust into his hands: ‘From the queen,’ the messenger bellowed above the cheers.
At the height of the crisis, the mob had chanted their new song:
We don’t want to fight but by Jingo if we do,
We’ve got the ships, we’ve got the men, we’ve got the money too.
Then they let off steam by breaking the windows of Gladstone’s fine house in Carlton House Terrace. ‘Dizzy’, Gladstone wrote, ‘is looking for the weak side of the English people.’ In ‘imperialism’, as it was soon called, he had found it.
But, deadly political rivals though they were (the mere thought of having to deliver Disraeli’s eulogy after his death in 1881 gave Gladstone a fit of diarrhoea), the triumphant late Victorian monarchy is their joint creation. The increasingly grandiose acts of national dedication were Gladstone’s progeny (though he intensely disliked the grandiosity); the mounting imperial stridency, enthusiastically abetted by the queen-empress herself, was Dizzy’s contribution. And the two came together in the celebrations for Victoria’s Diamond Jubilee in 1897.
European royalties were deliberately omitted: instead, pride of place was given to the prime ministers of the newly self-governing white colonies of the empire, together with troops representing all its diverse and many-coloured peoples. The celebrations culminated in a carefully rehearsed open-air service, held in brilliant July weather, in front of St Paul’s. Looking down on the ceremonies was the statue of Queen Anne, who had reigned almost two centuries before. Anne had come frequently to St Paul’s in great, popular processions to celebrate England’s victories over the French.
But, despite her shyness and idiosyncrasy, Victoria’s popularity was wider and deeper than that of any previous monarch. Her statue stands across the globe; she gave her name to hospitals and universities, cities and waterfalls, entire provinces, and to the greatest and most creative age in our history. She was Britannia, representing in her dumpy little person Britain and her empire, at once embattled and triumphant.
As the queen’s carriage pulled off at the end of the service, the choir-boys broke rank to scoop up the gravel that had been crushed by its wheels as a sort of sacred relic.
II
But, for all Victoria’s achievements, something was missing. On 23 March 1887, on one of her new-style royal progresses, Victoria visited Birmingham. She travelled by train and then drove from the station in a carriage procession to the magnificent town hall, for a civic reception which ended with a performance of Handel’s ‘Hallelujah Chorus’.
As she got back into her train, Victoria told the mayor she was delighted at the warmth of her welcome. But the Brummies felt cheated. ‘Why had there been so few carriages?’ Joseph Chamberlain, the Birmingham City boss, asked after dinner at Windsor a few days later. ‘Where was the Household Cavalry?’ The courtiers explained that Victoria preferred simplicity. ‘Simplicity’, replied Chamberlain, ‘was suitable to a Republic. But a Sovereign should make such visits with all possible state.’ There would be no ‘republican simplicity’ in the new reign.
Three years after her triumphant Diamond Jubilee, Victoria, now aged eighty-one, died. Her last word was ‘Bertie’.
Twenty-four hours later, Albert-Edward was making his accession speech at St James’s Palace, London. And it contained a bombshell. He would reign, he announced, as King Edward VII, not Albert I, as his mother had wished. For ‘I desire’, the new king declared, ‘that Albert’s name should stand alone.’ The Albertine monarchy, and its long Victorian aftermath, was over.
And this was only the start. Edward got rid of Osborne, which he detested, by giving it to the nation as a monument to his parents. He purged Windsor and Buckingham Palace, those ‘Scottish funeral parlours’, as he called them, of sixty years’ accumulation of clutter and mementos. He redecorated Buckingham Palace in the smart new white, gold and crimson style of the grand hotels and theatres where he had spent so much of his time as prince. Even the national memorial to Victoria was used to redesign the Mall and Buckingham Palace as the setting for the grand state ceremonies that Victoria, alive, had so much disliked. Edward’s sisters, devoted to Victoria’s memory, were horrified; everyone else rather approved.
Edward was in his sixtieth year. Browbeaten by his father and sidelined by his mother, he had gone his own way. He shot, he sailed, and he was by far the most successful royal breeder of racehorses ever. He loved the theatre, opera and bridge. He ate enormously and smoked heroically. And he remained an inveterate, if reasonably discreet, adulterer. In short, like George IV, that earlier prince of Wales who had had to wait too long for the throne, Edward had made pleasure a profession.
But whereas George’s dissipation had cost him his youthful good looks, Edward, unimpressive as a young man with bulbous eyes and a weak mouth and chin, gained girth and gravitas with age. He now looked every inch a king; he even looked a bit like Henry VIII. Above all, like both Henry VIII and George IV, he loved the pomp and circumstance of being king. Out went Victoria’s republican simplicity; in came stately sovereign splendour.
Edward decided to revive the state opening of Parliament, which Victoria had first truncated and then abandoned, in its full, colourful ritual. So, on 14 February, only three weeks after Victoria’s death, he processed to the gilded House of Lords. In place of his mother’s widow’s weeds, he wore the scarlet tunic of a field marshal under his crimson, gold and ermine robes; he read the speech himself; he even proposed changes to its contents until he was slapped down by the prime minister.
Not that Edward was hidebound by tradition, being, for instance, a pioneer motor-car enthusiast. Given his first spin by Lord Montagu at Beaulieu, Edward soon acquired a fleet of cars of his own, with their characteristic claret-painted bodywork; he converted part of the royal stables into garages; he added ‘Royal’ to the title of the Automobile Club and, looking every inch a Toad of Toad Hall in his loudly checked tweeds, he adored being driven at sixty miles an hour (three times the legal speed limit) on the straight stretches of the London–Brighton Road. He even considered introducing a motor coach into the coronation procession.
Indeed, Edward’s first thought had been that he would have a thoroughly modern coronation, magnificent of course, but free from all old-fashioned ‘tomfoolery’. His advisers, too, split into traditionalists and modernizers. Eventually, the traditionalists won.
It was even decided to reuse St Edward’s Crown as the actual coronation crown. Made for the Restoration of 1660 in imitation of the Tudor Imperial Crown, which the Puritans had smashed, it had last been used for the coronation of William and Mary in 1689. Now, lightened a little by paring away 12 of its 83 ounces of solid gold and restored to its original bulbous shape, it was refurbished to symbolize the historical continuity of the six other Edwards who had ruled before the king.
But, as once before in Edward’s life, his state of health intervened to dramatic effect. The coronation was due to take place on 26 June 1902. But, three days previously, the rehearsal at the Abbey was interrupted to announce that the coronation had been postponed indefinitely because of the king’s illness.
He underwent an emergency operation the following day for a burst appendix. His recovery was rapid and the ceremony took place on 9 August. It was impressive enough but it was a shadow of what had been planned. Edward was not strong enough to wear the St Edward’s Crown; the service was curtailed and he had to rest for half an hour before emerging from the Abbey.
But at least, on Saturday, 21 June 1902, Dame Clara Butt had premiered a new work by Edward Elgar at the Royal Albert Hall:
Land of Hope and Glory, Mother of the Free,
How shall we extol thee, who are born of thee?
Wider still and wider shall thy bounds be set;
God who made thee mighty, make thee mightier yet.
Make thee mightier yet! ‘Land of Hope and Glory’ caught the mood not only of celebration at the coronation but also of relief at the Treaty of Vereeniging, signed in May 1902, by which the Boer War was brought to a triumphant conclusion with the incorporation of the rebellious Afrikaner provinces into the self-governing Dominion of South Africa.
A year or two later, the huge Cullinan Diamond was found and the South African government decided to make a peace offering of it to Edward. The cheese-paring British government was reluctant to accept it because of its concerns about the cost of cutting and setting the stone. But Edward, with his characteristic love of splendour, insisted and the diamond, cut into two major stones, has become the brightest ornament of both the sceptre and the Imperial Crown. Edward, however, never used them.
But the war, with the near-universal sympathy for the Afrikaners in other countries, had also highlighted Britain’s isolation – now perceived to be dangerous rather than glorious – in Europe. It also gave Edward his opportunity in foreign policy. Edward, with visits as prince of Wales to India, Canada and the Middle East, had been the first monarch to know the empire at first hand. But, unlike his mother, his real interest lay in Europe. He had been brought up to speak French and German as fluently as English, and he spent two months of each year on an early summer holiday in France, followed by a month in autumn taking the waters at a German spa.