Queen Victoria eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 326 pages of information about Queen Victoria.

Queen Victoria eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 326 pages of information about Queen Victoria.
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 Prince in a memorandum, “which appeared to bore the Emperor as ‘tres compliquee.’”

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, in 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 wehmuthig,” 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 the theatre at St. Cloud, and, one evening, at a great party given by the Emperor in her honour 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 a 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!”

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Queen Victoria from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.