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.

In the midst of this crisis, when the future of the Irish Church was hanging in the balance, Victoria’s attention was drawn to another proposed reform.  It was suggested that the sailors in the Navy should henceforward be allowed to wear beards.  “Has Mr. Childers ascertained anything on the subject of the beards?” the Queen wrote anxiously to the First Lord of the Admiralty.  On the whole, Her Majesty was in favour of the change.  “Her own personal feeling,” she wrote, “would be for the beards without the moustaches, as the latter have rather a soldierlike appearance; but then the object in view would not be obtained, viz. to prevent the necessity of shaving.  Therefore it had better be as proposed, the entire beard, only it should be kept short and very clean.”  After thinking over the question for another week, the Queen wrote a final letter.  She wished, she said, “to make one additional observation respecting the beards, viz. that on no account should moustaches be allowed without beards.  That must be clearly understood.”

Changes in the Navy might be tolerated; to lay hands upon the Army was a more serious matter.  From time immemorial there had been a particularly close connection between the Army and the Crown; and Albert had devoted even more time and attention to the details of military business than to the processes of fresco-painting or the planning of sanitary cottages for the deserving poor.  But now there was to be a great alteration:  Mr. Gladstone’s fiat had gone forth, and the Commander-in-Chief was to be removed from his direct dependence upon the Sovereign, and made subordinate to Parliament and the Secretary of State for War.  Of all the liberal reforms this was the one which aroused the bitterest resentment in Victoria.  She considered that the change was an attack upon her personal position—­almost an attack upon the personal position of Albert.  But she was helpless, and the Prime Minister had his way.  When she heard that the dreadful man had yet another reform in contemplation—­that he was about to abolish the purchase of military commissions—­she could only feel that it was just what might have been expected.  For a moment she hoped that the House of Lords would come to the rescue; the Peers opposed the change with unexpected vigour; but Mr. Gladstone, more conscious than ever of the support of the Almighty, was ready with an ingenious device.  The purchase of commissions had been originally allowed by Royal Warrant; it should now be disallowed by the same agency.  Victoria was faced by a curious dilemma:  she abominated the abolition of purchase; but she was asked to abolish it by an exercise of sovereign power which was very much to her taste.  She did not hesitate for long; and when the Cabinet, in a formal minute, advised her to sign the Warrant, she did so with a good grace.

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Queen Victoria from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.