Until these days every one wore the antiquated Queen Anne Court suit, now superseded by modern garments, perhaps more convenient but certainly not so picturesque. Bagwig and flowered waistcoat, and hanging cast-steel rapier, and silken calves and buckled shoes,—and above all the abundant real point lace (upon which Lord Houghton more than once has commented with me as to the comparative superiority of his or mine,—both being of ancestral dinginess, and only to be washed in coffee)—these are ill exchanged for boots and trousers and straight black sword, and everything of grace and beauty diligently tailored away. When I last attended at St. James’s in honour of Prince Albert Victor’s first reception, I was, among twelve hundred, one of only three units who paid our respects in the stately fashions of Good Queen Anne: and I was glad to be complimented on my social courage as almost alone in those antiquated garments, and on my profusion of snow-white hair so suitably suggestive of the powdered polls of our ancestors. I remember my father in powder.
On this last occasion it was, as I have said, especially to pay my respects to the young Prince at his first levee: both he and his father with great kindness cordially shaking hands with the author of the following stanzas. The young Prince stood between his father and his kinsman, the Duke of Cambridge.
“Albert Victor! words
of blessing
Bright with omens
of the best,
Truly one such names possessing
Shall be throned
among the blest;
Albert,—sainted
now and glorious,
Long time in his
heavenly rest;
Victor,—everyway
victorious
Like our Empress
east and west!
“Prince! to-day the
Court bears witness
How, thy Royal
Sire beside,
With due graciousness and
fitness,
Dignity devoid
of pride,
Thou (thy gallant kinsman
near thee)
Dost with homage
far and wide,
And the praise of all to cheer
thee,
Humbly meet that
glittering tide!
“Prince, accept an old
man’s greeting,
Now some threescore
and fifteen,
Who can testify how fleeting
Life and all its
joys have been:
I have known thy Grandsire’s
favour,
And thy Parents’
grace have seen;
And I note the same sweet
savour
In the Grandson
of my Queen!”
As this is the Jubilee year, and I may not live to its completion,—for who can depend upon an hour?—I will here produce what has just occurred to my patriotism as a suitable ode on the great occasion. If short, it is all the better for music, and I humbly recommend its adoption as libretto to some chief musical composer.
Victoria’s Jubilee: for Music.
I.
(Major forte.)


