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authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-04 06:57:13 -0800
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-04 06:57:13 -0800
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #63290 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/63290)
diff --git a/old/63290-0.txt b/old/63290-0.txt
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Life and Times of Queen Victoria; vol.
-2 of 4, by Robert Wilson
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Life and Times of Queen Victoria; vol. 2 of 4
-
-Author: Robert Wilson
-
-Release Date: September 25, 2020 [EBook #63290]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE AND TIMES OF QUEEN ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images available at The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: H.R.H. THE PRINCE OF WALES.
-
- (_From a Photograph by Mr. A. Bassano, London._)]
-
-
-
-
- THE
-
- LIFE AND TIMES
-
- OF
-
- QUEEN VICTORIA.
-
- BY
- ROBERT WILSON.
-
- Illustrated.
-
- VOL. II.
-
- [Illustration]
-
- CASSELL & COMPANY, LIMITED:
- _LONDON, PARIS & MELBOURNE_.
-
- [ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.]
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-COLONIAL HOME RULE AND FINANCIAL REFORM. PAGE
-
-Mr. Roebuck and Emigration--Self-Government and the
-Colonies--Unsympathetic Whig Policy--Radicals and the Colonial
-Office--The Peelites and Hudson’s Bay Company--Financial Reform--Mr.
-Cobden at Variance with Mr. Bright--Combined Agitators--The
-Demand for Retrenchment--Trade and the Flag--Tories and Taxes--A
-_reductio ad absurdum_--A Raid on a Surplus--International
-Arbitration--Parliamentary Reform--Parliament and the Jews--The
-Tories oppose the Alteration of the Parliamentary Oath--Episcopal
-Prejudice--Tory Obstructionists--An Ordnance Department Scandal--Mr.
-Delane’s Attacks on Lord Palmerston in the _Times_--The Queen
-Remonstrates against Lord Palmerston’s Recklessness--An
-Anti-Palmerstonian Cabal--Lady Palmerston’s Intrigues--Lord Brougham
-Betrays the Cabal--Palmerston’s Victory--Rome and France--The Second
-War--The Disaster of Chillianwalla--Indignation of the Country--Lord
-Gough’s Recall--Napier to the Rescue--The East India Directors Oppose
-Napier’s Appointment--The Convict War at the Cape--Boycotting the
-Governor 385
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-
-FAMILY CARES AND ROYAL DUTIES.
-
-Education of the Prince of Wales--Selection of Mr. Birch as Tutor--The
-Queen’s Jealousy of her Parental Authority--Her Letter to Melbourne on
-the Management of her Nursery--Her Ideas on Education--Prince Albert’s
-Plans for the Education of the Prince of Wales--Stockmar’s Advice--The
-Visit to Ireland--The Queen at Waterford--“Rebel Cork” _en fête_--The
-Visit to Dublin--Viceregal Festivities--The Visit to the National Model
-Schools--Shiel’s Speech--The Queen and the Duke of Leinster--Farewell
-at Kingstown--The Queen Dips the Royal Ensign--Loyal Ulster--The Visit
-to the Linen Hall--Lord Clarendon on the Queen’s Visit--A Cruise on the
-Clyde--Home in Balmoral--The Queen’s “Bothie”--The Queen’s University
-of Ireland--First Plans for the Great Exhibition--Opening of the London
-Coal Exchange--The Queen’s Barge--Death of Queen Adelaide 403
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-CLOUDS IN THE EAST AND ELSEWHERE.
-
-Political Wreckage--Force triumphs over Opinion--The State
-of France--Election of Prince Charles Louis Bonaparte as
-Prince-President--The Sad Plight of Italy--Palmerston’s Anti-Austrian
-Policy--Defeat of Piedmont--The Fall of Venice--Fall of the
-Roman Republic--A Cromwellian Struggle in Prussia--The Queen’s
-Partisanship--Her Prussian Sympathies--The Hungarian Refugees in
-Turkey--A Diplomatic Conflict with Russia--Opening of Parliament--Mr.
-Disraeli and Local Taxation--Parliamentary Reform--The Jonahs of the
-Cabinet--The Dispute with Greece--Don Pacifico’s Case--Coercion of
-Greece--Lord Palmerston meekly accepts an Insult from Russia--French
-Intervention--A Diplomatic Conflict in France--Recall of the
-French Ambassador--False Statements in Parliament--The Queen’s
-Indignation--The Don Pacifico Debate--The _Civis Romanus sum_
-Doctrine--Palmerston’s Victory--The West African Slave Trade 420
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-SOME EPOCH-MARKING LEGISLATION.
-
-The Colonies and Party Government--The Movement for Autonomy--Lord John
-Russell’s Colonial Bill--Tory Opposition to Colonial Federation--Mr.
-Adderley’s Plan--Mr. Gladstone’s Scheme for Colonial Church Courts--The
-Colonial Bills Mangled in the House of Lords--More English Doles
-for Ireland--An Irish Reform Bill--Lord John Russell Proposes to
-Abolish the Lord-Lieutenancy--The Queen’s Irish Policy--Her offer
-to Establish a Royal Residence in Ireland--The Bungled Budget--The
-Demand for Retrenchment--The Tories Insist on a Reduction of Official
-Salaries--Lord John Russell’s Commission on Establishments--The
-Queen and the Church--The Ecclesiastical Appeals Bill--The “Gorham
-Case”--Death of Peel--The Queen’s Sorrow--A Nation in Mourning--Peel’s
-Character and Career--The Queen’s Alarm about Prince Albert’s
-Health--The Queen at Work--The Queen’s Reading-Lamp 438
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.
-
-FALL OF THE WHIG CABINET.
-
-Debates on “No Popery”--Mutiny of the Irish Brigade--Defeat of Lord
-John Russell--Lord Stanley “sent for”--Timid Tories--Lord Stanley’s
-Interviews with the Queen--A Statesman’s “Domestic Duties”--Is
-Coalition Possible?--The Queen’s Mistake--The Duke of Wellington’s
-Advice--Return of the Whigs to Office--The Queen’s Aversions--The
-“No Popery” Bill Reduced to a Nullity--Another Bungled Budget--The
-Income Tax Controversy--The Pillar of Free Trade--The Window Tax
-and the House Duty--The Radicals and the Slave Trade--King “Bomba”
-and Mr. Gladstone--Cobden on General Disarmament--Palmerston in a
-Millennial Mood--The Whig-Peelite Intrigue--The Queen and the Kossuth
-Demonstrations--Another Quarrel with Palmerston--A Merry Council of
-State 463
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI.
-
-THE FESTIVAL OF PEACE AND THE _COUP D’ÉTAT_.
-
-The World’s Fair--Carping Critics--Churlish Ambassadors Rebuked by the
-Queen--Opening of the Great Exhibition--A Touching Sight--The Queen’s
-Comments on “_soi-disant_ Fashionables”--The Duke of Wellington’s
-Nosegay--Prince Albert among the Missionaries--The Queen’s Letter to
-Lord John Russell--Her Pride in her Husband--The London Season--The
-Duke of Brunswick’s Balloon “Victoria”--Bloomerism--The Queen at
-Macready’s Farewell Benefit--The Queen’s Costume Ball--The Spanish
-Beauty--An Ugly “Lion”--The Queen at the Guildhall Ball--Grotesque
-Civic Festivities--Royal Visits to Liverpool and Manchester--A
-Well-Dressed Mayor--The Queen on the “Sommerophone”--The _Coup
-d’État_--The Assassins of Liberty--The Appeal to France--The Queen’s
-Last Quarrel with Palmerston--Palmerston’s Fall--Outcry against the
-Queen--A “Presuming” Muscovite--The Queen’s Vindication 480
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.
-
-A YEAR OF EXCITEMENT AND PANIC.
-
-Cassandras in the Service Clubs--The Tories and the Queen’s
-Speech--Lord John Russell’s Triumph--The Militia Bill--Defeat of
-the Russell Ministry--Fall of the Whig Cabinet--Palmerston’s “Tit
-for Tat”--A Protectionist Government--Novices in Office--A Cabinet
-of Affairs--Mr. Disraeli’s Budget--Lord John Russell’s Fatal
-Blunder--The Second Burmese War--Dalhousie’s Designs on Burmah--How
-the Quarrel Grew--Lambert’s Indiscretion--The Attack on Rangoon--Fall
-of the Citadel--Annexation--Desultory Warfare--Dissolution of
-Parliament--The General Election--Equipoise of Parties--Factions
-and Free Trade--Palmerston’s Forecasts--Forcing the Hand of the
-Ministry--Death of the Duke of Wellington--The Queen’s Grief--The
-Nation in Mourning--The Lying-in-State--Shocking Scenes--The Funeral
-Pageant--The Ceremony in St. Paul’s--A Veteran in Tears--The Laureate’s
-Votive Wreath--Review of the Duke’s Character 496
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII.
-
-THE LAST YEAR OF “THE GREAT PEACE.”
-
-Abortive Attacks on the Ministry--Mr. Disraeli’s First Budget--Fall
-of the Tory Cabinet--The Queen and Lord Aberdeen--Organising
-the Coalition--A Ministry of “All the Talents”--The Queen and
-South Kensington--A Miser’s Legacy to the Queen--Sport at
-Balmoral--Proclamation of the Second Empire--The “Battle of the
-Numeral”--The Queen Initiates a Policy--Personal Government in the
-Victorian Age--A Servile Minister--Lord Malmesbury’s Spies--Napoleon
-III. and “Mrs. Howard”--Creole Card-Parties at Kensington--Napoleon
-III. Proposes to Marry the Queen’s Niece--Lord John Russell’s Education
-Scheme--Mr. Gladstone’s First Budget--The India Bill--Transportation
-of Convicts to Australia Stopped--The Gold Fever in Australia--The
-Rush to the Diggings--The First Gold Ships in the Thames--Gold
-Discoveries and Free Trade--Chagrin of the Protectionists--The Rise in
-Prices--Practical Success of Peel’s Fiscal Policy--Strikes and Dear
-Bread--End of the Great Peace 515
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX.
-
-DRIFTING TO WAR.
-
-Origin of the Crimean War--Russia and “the Sick Man”--Coercing
-Turkey--The Dispute about the Holy Places--A Monkish
-Quarrel--Contradictory Concessions--The Czar and the Tory
-Ministry of 1844--The Secret Compact with Peel, Wellington, and
-Aberdeen--Nesselrode’s Secret Memorandum--The Czar and Sir Hamilton
-Seymour--Lord John Russell’s Admissions--The Czar’s Bewilderment--Lord
-Stratford de Redcliffe--The Marplot at Constantinople--A Hectoring
-Russian Envoy--The Allied Fleets at Besika Bay--The Conference of
-Vienna--The Vienna Note--The Turkish Modifications--The Case for
-England--The British Fleet in the Euxine--A Caustic Letter of the
-Queen to Lord Aberdeen--Prince Albert’s Warnings--The Massacre
-of Sinope--Internal Feuds in the Cabinet--Lord John Russell’s
-Intrigues--Palmerston’s Resignation and Return--The Fire at
-Windsor--Birth of Prince Leopold--The Camp at Chobham--The Czar’s
-Daughters--Naval Review at Spithead--Royal Visit to Ireland 540
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX.
-
-WAR.
-
-The War Fever in 1854--Attacks on Prince Albert--Aberdeen’s
-Correspondence with the Queen--The Queen’s Opinion of
-the Country--“Loyal, but a little mad”--Stockmar on the
-Constitution--Prince Albert’s Position at Court--The Privileges of
-a Reigning Queen’s Husband--Debates on the Prince’s Position--The
-Peace and War Parties--Mr. Cobden’s Influence--A new Vienna Note--A
-Challenge to Russia--The Russian Ambassador leaves London--Recall of
-Sir H. Seymour from St. Petersburg--Russian Intrigues with the German
-Powers--The Czar’s Counter-Propositions--His Sarcastic Letter to
-Napoleon III.--An Austrian Compromise--Lord Clarendon’s _Ultimatum_ to
-Russia--The Czar’s Reply--Declaration of War--Omar Pasha’s Victories
-in the Principalities--The Siege of Silistria--Evacuation of the
-Principalities--The Rising in Greece--The Allies at the Piræus--The
-Allies occupy Gallipoli--Another English Blunder--Invasion of the
-Crimea--The Duke of Newcastle and a Sleepy Cabinet--Lord Raglan’s
-Opinion on the War--The Landing of the Allies at Eupatoria--Battle of
-the Alma--Russian Fleet Sunk at Sebastopol--At Balaclava--Death of
-Marshal St. Arnaud--The Siege of Sebastopol--Battles of Balaclava and
-Inkermann--Mismanagement of the War--Public Indignation against the
-Government--Mr. Roebuck’s Motion--Fall of the Coalition Ministry 574
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXI.
-
-PARTY GOVERNMENT AND WAR.
-
-Stratford de Redcliffe Cooling Down--Tory Distrust of the French
-Alliance--The Queen’s Kindness to Lord Aberdeen--The Emperor Napoleon
-and Prince Albert--The Prince Visits France--The Queen at Balmoral--Her
-Feelings towards the Prince of Prussia--The Queen holds a Council
-of War--She Demands Reinforcements for Lord Raglan--Napoleon’s
-Alarm--Prince Albert’s Plan for an Army of Reserve--The Queen on
-the Austrian Proposals--Her Anxiety about the Troops--Raglan’s
-Meagre Despatches--The Queen and Miss Nightingale--At Work for
-the Soldiers--Extorting Information from Lord Raglan--Ministerial
-Changes--Lord John Russell’s Selfishness--A Miserly Whig Duke--The
-Queen’s Disgust at Russell’s Treachery--Resignation of Russell--Fall of
-the Coalition--The Queen and the Crisis--She holds out the Olive Branch
-to Palmerston--Palmerston’s Cabinet--Quarrel between Mr. Disraeli
-and Lord Derby--The Sebastopol Committee--Mr. Roebuck and Prince
-Albert--The Vienna Conference and the Death of Czar Nicholas--The
-Austrian Compromise--Parties and the War--Russell’s Humiliation--He
-Resigns in Disgrace--The Queen Quashes the Peace Negotiations--A Royal
-Blunder--The Queen tries to Gag the Peelites--Aberdeen Browbeaten by
-the Court--Canrobert’s Resignation--Crimean Successes--Failure of the
-Attack on the Redan--Death of Raglan 618
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXII.
-
-ROYALTY AND THE WAR.
-
-Financing the War--The Queen’s Opinion of War Loans--A Dreadful
-Winter--Distress in the Country--The “Devil” in Devonshire--Bread
-Riots--War Loans and a War Budget--The Queen and the Wounded
-Soldiers--Her Condemnation of “the Hulks”--Presentation of War Medals
-in Hyde Park--Visit of the Emperor and Empress of the French--A Plot
-to Capture the Queen--Councils of War at Windsor--The Grand Chapter of
-the Order of the Garter--Imperial Compliments--Napoleon III. in the
-City--At the Opera--The Queen’s Birthday Gift to the Emperor--Scarlet
-Fever at Osborne--Prorogation of Parliament--A Court Intrigue with
-Dom Pedro of Portugal--The Queen Visits Paris--Her Reception at St.
-Cloud--The Ball at the Hôtel de Ville--Staring at the “Koh-i-noor”--At
-the Tomb of the Great Emperor--Prince Bismarck’s Introduction to the
-Queen--Home again--Lord Clarendon on the Queen’s Visit to Paris--How
-the Prince of Wales Enjoyed himself--At Balmoral--The Bonfire on
-Craig Gowan--Sebastopol Rejoicings--“A Witches’ Dance supported by
-Whisky”--Courtship of the Princess Royal--Prince Frederick William of
-Prussia--His Proposal of Marriage--Attacks of the _Times_--Visit of
-Victor Emmanuel--His Reputation in Paris--Memorial of the Grenadier
-Guards--Fresh Charges against Prince Albert--His Vindication of the
-Crimean Officers 643
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIII.
-
-THE END OF THE WAR.
-
-Lord Raglan’s Successor--“Take Care of Dowb”--Lord Panmure’s
-Nepotism--The Crisis of the War--Gortschakoff’s Last Struggle--The
-Battle of the Tchernaya River--France and the War--A Despondent
-Court--Divided Counsels among the Allies--The Bridge of Rafts--The
-Grand Bombardment--French Attack on the Malakoff--British Attack on
-the Redan--Why the Attack Failed--The “Hero of the Redan”--Pélissier’s
-Message to Simpson--Appeal to Sir Colin Campbell--Evacuation of the
-Redan--Fall of Sebastopol--Retreat of the Russians to the North
-Town--Paralysis of the Victors--The Queen’s Anger--Her Remonstrances
-with Lord Panmure--A New Commander-in-Chief--Taking Care of
-“Dowb”--Codrington Chosen--The Wintry Crimean Watch--Diplomatic
-Humiliation of Palmerston--France Negotiates Secretly Terms of Peace
-with Austria--Palmerston’s Indignant Remonstrances--The Queen Objects
-to Prosecute the War Alone--The Surrender of Palmerston--He Abandons
-the Turks--An Unpopular Peace--The Tories Offer to Support the
-Peace--The Queen and the Parliament of 1856 669
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIV.
-
-PEACE AND PARLIAMENT.
-
-Opening of Parliament--A Cold Speech from the Throne--Moderation of
-Militant Toryism--Mr. Disraeli’s Cynical Strategy--The Betrayal of
-Kars--The Life Peerage Controversy--Baron Parke’s Nickname--More
-Attacks on Prince Albert--Court Favouritism among Men of Science--The
-Congress of Paris--How France Betrayed England--Walewski’s Intrigues
-with Orloff--Mr. Greville’s Pictures of French Official Life--Snubbing
-Bonapartist Statesmen--Peace Proclaimed--Popular Rejoicings--A Memento
-of the Congress--The Terms of Peace--The Tripartite Treaty--The
-Queen’s Opinion of the Settlement--Parliamentary Criticism on the
-Treaty of Paris--Stagnation of Public Life in England--The Queen’s
-“Happy Family” Dinner Party--A little “Tiff” with America--The
-Restoration of H.M.S. _Resolute_--The Budget--Palmerston’s Tortuous
-Italian Policy--The Failure of his Domestic Policy--The Confirmation
-of the Princess Royal--Robbery of the Royal Nursery Plate--Prince
-Alfred’s Tutor--Reviews of Crimean Troops--Debates on the Purchase
-System--Lord Hardinge’s Tragic Death--The Duke of Cambridge as
-Commander-in-Chief--Miss Nightingale’s Visit to Balmoral--Coronation
-of the Czar--Russian Chicanery at Paris--A Bad Map and a False
-Frontier--Quarrel between Prussia and Switzerland--Quarrel between
-England and the Sicilies--Death of the Queen’s Half-Brother--Settlement
-of the Dispute with Russia--“The Dodge that Saved us” 679
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXV.
-
-TWO LITTLE WARS AND A “PENAL DISSOLUTION.”
-
-The Queen’s New Year Greeting to Napoleon III.--A Gladstone-Disraeli
-Coalition--A Scene in the Carlton Club--Mr. Disraeli’s Attack on Lord
-Palmerston’s Foreign Policy--The Queen Consents to Reduce the Income
-Tax--A Fallacious Budget, with Imaginary Remissions--The Persian
-War--General Outram’s Victories--Unpopularity of the War--Making War
-without Consulting Parliament--The Rupture with China--A “Prancing
-Proconsul”--The Bombardment of Canton--Defeat of Lord Palmerston,
-and his Appeal to the Country--A Penal Dissolution--Abortive
-Coalition between the Peelites and Tories--Mr. Gladstone and the
-Intriguers--Split in the Peelite Party--Palmerston’s Victory at
-the Polls--The Rout of the Manchester School--The Lesson of the
-Election--Opening of the New Parliament--The Work of the Session--Mr.
-Gladstone’s Obstruction of the Divorce Bill--The Settlement of the
-Neufchâtel Difficulty--The Question of the Principalities--Visit of the
-French Emperor to the Queen 699
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVI.
-
-THE INDIAN MUTINY.
-
-The Centenary of Plassey--Rumours of Rebellion--Causes of the
-Mutiny--The Annexation of Oudh--Lord Dalhousie’s Indian Policy--Its
-Disturbing Effect on the Minds of the Natives--The Royal Family of
-Delhi--The Hindoo “Sumbut”--The Discontent of the Bengal Army--The
-Grievances of the Sepoy--The Greased Cartridges--The Mystery of
-the “Chupatties”--Mutiny of the Garrison at Meerut--The March to
-Delhi--Sir Henry Lawrence at Lucknow--The Tragedy of Cawnpore--Death
-of the Commander-in-Chief--Who took Delhi?--Sir John Lawrence in
-the Punjab--The Saviour of India--Lord Canning at Calcutta--First
-Relief of Lucknow--Despatch of Sir Colin Campbell--Second Relief of
-Lucknow--Savage Fighting at the Secunder-baugh--The Queen’s Letter to
-Sir Colin Campbell--His Retreat to Cawnpore--His Management of the
-Campaign--Windham’s Defeat at the Pandoo River--Sir Colin Campbell’s
-Victory over the Gwalior Army 720
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVII.
-
-THE ROYAL MARRIAGE.
-
-Birth of Princess Beatrice--Death of the Duchess of Gloucester--A Royal
-Romance--Franco-Russian Intrigues--The Art Treasures Exhibition at
-Manchester--Announcement of the Marriage of the Princess Royal--Prince
-Albert’s Views on Royal Grants--The Controversy on the Grant to the
-Princess Royal--Visit of the Grand Duke Constantine--The Christening
-of Princess Beatrice--Prince Albert’s Title as Prince Consort
-Legalised--The First Distribution of the Victoria Cross--Opposition to
-the Order--The Queen’s Visit to Manchester--Departure of the Prince
-of Wales to Germany--The Queen and the Indian Mutiny--Her Controversy
-with Lord Palmerston--Sudden Death of the Duchess of Nemours--The
-Marriage of the Princess Royal--The Scene in the Chapel--On the Balcony
-of Buckingham Palace--The Illuminations in London--The Bride and
-Bridegroom at Windsor--The Last Adieus--The Departure of the Bride and
-Bridegroom to Germany 738
-
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- PAGE
-
-The Prince of Wales (_From a Photograph by Mr.
-A. Bassano, London_) _Frontispiece_
-
-The Western Suburbs of Victoria, Vancouver
-Island 385
-
-St. George’s Chapel, Windsor 388
-
-John Bright (1857) 389
-
-Royal Palace, Naples 392
-
-Lady Palmerston 393
-
-Sir Charles Napier 396
-
-The Battle of Gujerat 397
-
-The British Troops Entering Multan 400
-
-Sir Harry Smith 401
-
-Victoria Castle, Killiney--Bray Head in the distance 404
-
-Royal Visit to Ireland: the Queen Leaving Kingstown 405
-
-Visit of the Queen and Prince Albert to the Linen
-Hall, Belfast 409
-
-Castleton of Braemar 412
-
-At Balmoral: a Morning Call 413
-
-The Royal Barge 416
-
-Opening of the London Coal Exchange--Arrival of
-the Royal Procession at the Custom-House Quay 417
-
-The Chamber of Representatives, Brussels 420
-
-Louis Kossuth (1850) 421
-
-The White Drawing-Room, Windsor Castle 424
-
-The Piræus, Athens 425
-
-Grand Entrance, Westminster Palace 429
-
-Mr. (afterwards Sir Alexander) Cockburn 432
-
-Cape Town 433
-
-Mr. Gladstone (1855) 436
-
-Windsor Castle: View from the Quadrangle 437
-
-View in Phœnix Park, Dublin 440
-
-Mr. Horsman 441
-
-The Funeral of Sir Robert Peel: the Tenantry
-Assembling at the Lodge, Drayton Manor 444
-
-The Funeral of Sir Robert Peel: the Ceremony in
-Drayton Bassett Church 445
-
-Meeting of the Ladies’ Committee at Stafford
-House in Aid of the Great Exhibition 449
-
-Cambridge House, Piccadilly (1854) 452
-
-The Queen and Prince Arthur (_After Winterhalter_,
-1850) _To face_ 452
-
-Pate’s Assault on the Queen 453
-
-Lord John Russell (1850) 456
-
-The Royal Apartments, Holyrood Palace 461
-
-St. Stephen’s Crypt, Westminster Palace 464
-
-Mr. Locke King 465
-
-The Green Drawing-Room, Windsor Castle 468
-
-Sir George Cornewall Lewis 469
-
-The Caffre War: Natives Attacking a Convoy 472
-
-Group of Dyaks 473
-
-Lord Carlisle 476
-
-The Great Exhibition, Hyde Park 477
-
-Sir Joseph Paxton 481
-
-Opening of the Great Exhibition, Hyde Park
-(_After the Picture by Eugène Lamé_) _To face_ 482
-
-St. George’s Hall, Liverpool 484
-
-The Royal Visit to Worsley Hall: the State Barge
-on the Bridgwater Canal 485
-
-The Queen’s Arrival in Peel Park: Children of the
-Manchester and Salford Schools Singing the
-National Anthem 489
-
-The Coup d’État: Lancers Charging the Crowd in
-the Boulevards of Paris 492
-
-Prince Charles Louis Napoleon 493
-
-Diana Fountain, Bushey Park 496
-
-Harnessing the Black Horses at the Royal Mews,
-Buckingham Palace (_After the Painting by
-Charles Lutyens. In the Possession of the
-Earl of Bradford_) 497
-
-Sidney Herbert (_After the Statue by Foley_) 500
-
-St. Albans, from Verulam 501
-
-View near Rangoon 504
-
-Major Fraser’s Storming Party Carrying the Stockade
-in Front of Rangoon 505
-
-Walmer Castle 508
-
-The Duke of Wellington (_After the Portrait by
-Count D’Orsay_) 509
-
-The Wellington Monument in St. Paul’s Cathedral,
-completed in 1878 (_By Alfred Stevens_) 513
-
-North Terrace and Wykeham Tower, Windsor
-Castle 516
-
-The Duke of Argyle 517
-
-View in Braemar 520
-
-The Queen’s Visit to the Britannia Tubular Bridge 521
-
-Queen Victoria (_After the Equestrian Portrait
-by Count D’Orsay_) _To face_ 521
-
-Notre Dame, Paris (West Front) 524
-
-Comte de Montalembert 525
-
-Mdlle. Eugenia de Montijo, afterwards Empress
-of the French 529
-
-Prince Jeróme Bonaparte 532
-
-Sketch in the Outer Cloisters, Windsor Castle 533
-
-The Conveying of Australian Gold from the East
-India Docks to the Bank of England (_After the
-Engraving in the “Illustrated London News”_) 537
-
-Study of a Child (_After an Etching by the Queen_) 539
-
-Off the Coast of Asia Minor (Turkey in Asia) 540
-
-Bazaar in Constantinople 541
-
-Convent of the Nativity, Bethlehem 544
-
-Interior of the Chapel of the Nativity, Bethlehem 545
-
-The Nicolai Bridge across the Neva, St. Petersburg 548
-
-Lord Stratford de Redcliffe (_From a Photograph
-by Messrs. Boning and Small_) 549
-
-Town Hall, Vienna 552
-
-Prince Menschikoff 553
-
-The Mosque of Selim II. at Adrianople 557
-
-The Duke of Newcastle 560
-
-Destruction of the Turkish Fleet at Sinope 561
-
-The Throne Room, Windsor Castle 564
-
-Sebastopol 565
-
-Fire in the Prince of Wales’s Tower, Windsor
-Castle 568
-
-The Queen at the Camp at Chobham _To face_ 568
-
-Runnymede 569
-
-Spithead 572
-
-Balmoral Castle from the Road 573
-
-The Outer Cloisters and Anne Boleyn’s Window,
-Windsor Castle 577
-
-Russian Repulse at Silistria 580
-
-Lord Raglan 581
-
-The Queen Waving Farewell to the _Duke of
-Wellington_ Flag-ship 585
-
-Marshal St. Arnaud 588
-
-Forts Alexander and Peter the Great, Cronstadt 589
-
-Omar Pasha 592
-
-Map of the Crimea 593
-
-The Barracks Hospital, Scutari 596
-
-Odessa 597
-
-Heights of the Alma 600
-
-Sir John Burgoyne 601
-
-Pembroke Lodge, Richmond 604
-
-Codrington’s Brigade (23rd Royal Welsh Fusileers)
-at the Alma 605
-
-General Canrobert 608
-
-Entrance to Balaclava Harbour 609
-
-Sir Colin Campbell 612
-
-Balaclava--“The Thin Red Line” (_After the Painting
-by Robert Gibb, R.S.A. In the Possession
-of Archibald Ramsden, Esq., Leeds_) 613
-
-Valley of Inkermann 616
-
-The Storm off Balaclava 617
-
-Mr. Roebuck (1858) 620
-
-Buckingham Palace, from St. James’s Park 621
-
-Miss Nightingale and the Nurses in the Barracks
-Hospital at Scutari 625
-
-Henry VIII.’s Gateway, Windsor Castle 628
-
-Refreshment Room, House of Lords 629
-
-Mr. Sidney Herbert (afterwards Lord Herbert of
-Lea) 632
-
-The Winter Palace, St. Petersburg 633
-
-Grand Reception Room, Windsor Castle 636
-
-The Hundred Steps, Windsor Castle 637
-
-View in the Crimea: The Palace Woronzow,
-Alupka 641
-
-The Wounded Soldier’s Toast--“The Queen!” 645
-
-The Queen Distributing the Crimean Medal at the
-Horseguards Parade Ground _To face_ 647
-
-Windsor Castle from the Brocas 648
-
-The Queen Investing the Emperor of the French
-with the Order of the Garter 649
-
-The Waterloo Room, Windsor Castle 652
-
-The Royal and Imperial Visit to the Crystal
-Palace: the Procession down the Nave 653
-
-The Queen at the Fête in the Forest of St. Germain 657
-
-Map of Crathie and Braemar 660
-
-The Wooing of the Princess Royal 664
-
-Count Cavour 665
-
-Balaclava: at Peace (_From a Drawing made
-Twenty-five Years after the Crimean War_) 668
-
-Cathcart’s Hill, Crimea 669
-
-French Attack on the Malakoff 672
-
-General Todleben 673
-
-The Throne Room, St James’s Palace (_From a
-Photograph by H. N. King_) 677
-
-View in the Crimea: Jalta 680
-
-Miss Nightingale 681
-
-The Emperor of Austria 684
-
-The Conference of Paris, 1856 685
-
-Visit of the Queen and Prince Albert to the
-_Resolute_ 689
-
-Portsmouth 692
-
-Sir De Lacy Evans 693
-
-View in Berne 697
-
-Old Windsor Lock (_From a Photograph by Taunt
-and Co., Oxford_) 701
-
-Sir John Bowring 705
-
-Chinese Lorchas in the Canton River 709
-
-The Cascade: Virginia Water 712
-
-Plan of Windsor Castle 713
-
-The Duke of Cambridge (_From a Photograph by
-Bassano_) 717
-
-The Barracks at Meerut 721
-
-Sir James Outram 725
-
-Cawnpore 729
-
-Lord Lawrence 733
-
-Scene at the First Relief of Lucknow 736
-
-The Hastings Chantry, St George’s Chapel,
-Windsor 741
-
-The Victoria Cross 744
-
-The Queen Distributing the Victoria Crosses in
-Hyde Park 745
-
-The Crimson Drawing-Room, Windsor Castle 749
-
-Marriage of the Princess Royal (_After the Picture
-by John Philip, R.A._) _To face_ 751
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: THE WESTERN SUBURBS OF VICTORIA, VANCOUVER ISLAND.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-COLONIAL HOME RULE AND FINANCIAL REFORM.
-
- Mr. Roebuck and Emigration--Self-Government and the
- Colonies--Unsympathetic Whig Policy--Radicals and the Colonial
- Office--The Peelites and Hudson’s Bay Company--Financial
- Reform--Mr. Cobden at Variance with Mr. Bright--Combined
- Agitators--The Demand for Retrenchment--Trade and the Flag--Tories
- and Taxes--A _reductio ad absurdum_--A Raid on a
- Surplus--International Arbitration--Parliamentary
- Reform--Parliament and the Jews--The Tories oppose the Alteration
- of the Parliamentary Oath--Episcopal Prejudice--Tory
- Obstructionists--An Ordnance Department Scandal--Mr. Delane’s
- Attacks on Lord Palmerston in the _Times_--The Queen Remonstrates
- against Lord Palmerston’s Recklessness--An Anti-Palmerstonian
- Cabal--Lady Palmerston’s Intrigues--Lord Brougham Betrays the
- Cabal--Palmerston’s Victory--Rome and France--The Second War--The
- Disaster of Chillianwalla--Indignation of the Country--Lord Gough’s
- Recall--Napier to the Rescue--The East India Directors Oppose
- Napier’s Appointment--The Convict War at the Cape--Boycotting the
- Governor.
-
-
-Another notable event in the Colonial history of 1849 was the
-introduction by Mr. Roebuck, on the 14th of May, of a Bill for the
-better government of the Colonies. The debate on this measure brought
-vividly before the minds of thoughtful men the folly upon which our
-step-motherly treatment of the Colonies was based. “Emigration by
-itself,” exclaimed Mr. Roebuck, “is misery;” and yet the idea of
-colonisation which prevailed at the Colonial Office was simply to
-transport as many people as possible to distant wilds, utterly
-regardless of their ultimate fate. Why should we not introduce something
-like system, asked Mr. Roebuck, into our Colonial policy, and recognise
-the fact that it was now not tribute, but trade that we might expect to
-get from them? His proposal was to have one plan for settling a colony,
-another for organising it when settled, and a third for groups of
-colonies in confederation or union. His panacea for all Colonial ills
-was to get rid of “red tape” at the Colonial Office and to give the
-Colonies Home Rule. The difficulties, said Mr. Hawes, as representing
-Lord Grey and the Colonial Office, in the way of granting Home Rule to
-North-American Colonies would be insuperable; besides, England had far
-too many Colonies already, so that it was of little use to bring forward
-schemes for settling new ones! Whigs like Lord John Russell condemned a
-policy which tended to substitute a fixed Parliamentary rule for the
-discretion of a responsible Minister, and contended that physical
-impediments rendered the union of Canada into one Dominion impossible.
-Mr. Gladstone, however, warmly supported Mr. Roebuck’s policy. Even then
-the leaven of the Home Ruler was working in his mind. Mr. Roebuck was
-beaten by 116 to 73. But this did not put a stop to these Colonial
-debates.
-
-On the 26th of June Sir William Molesworth moved an Address to the Queen
-begging for a Commission to inquire into the Administration of the
-Colonies, more especially with a view to lessen the cost of their
-government, and to give free scope to individual enterprise in
-colonising. He startled the House by quoting figures which showed that,
-in fifteen years, “a series of remarkable events in the Colonies” had
-cost England the modest sum of eighty millions sterling. It could not
-have cost more to settle 4,000,000 able and energetic emigrants in
-Australia alone; and yet in the whole Colonial Empire in 1849, it
-appears there were not more than 1,000,000 persons of British or Irish
-descent. Charles Buller some years before had condemned the Colonial
-Office for its arbitrary character, its indifference to local feeling,
-and its ignorance of local wants, its procrastination and vacillation,
-its secrecy and irresponsibility, its servitude to parties and cliques,
-its injustice, and its disorder. In this debate Lord Grey’s
-Administration was held to aptly illustrate all these vices; and yet
-Lord Grey had become Colonial Minister because he stood pledged to cure
-them. Lord Grey’s idea of Colonial government seemed to be either to
-rule the Colony with a high hand from London, or, if it had some
-semblance of representative institutions, to govern it by means of a
-violent Party minority in the popular Chamber, co-operating with a
-majority of the Council nominated by the Crown. Self-government for
-Colonies that were fit for it, and intelligent government for those that
-were not, were Sir William Molesworth’s remedies. A strong plea for
-reducing the extravagant outlay on official salaries and useless
-military expenditure was pressed; and protests against convict
-emigration, which, together with our misgovernment, drove honest English
-Colonists to the United States, were entered. Mr. Hume and Mr.
-Gladstone, on behalf of the Radicals and Peelites, gave a general
-support to the motion; but the indefatigable Mr. Hawes came smilingly to
-the defence of Lord Grey with his stereotyped “_Non possumus_,” and Lord
-John Russell declared that the scope of the reference to the Commission
-was too vast and wide for practical purposes. His novel argument was
-that to attempt to define the limits of Imperial and local questions
-must end in bitter disputes between the Colonies and the mother country.
-Undeterred by the failure of the Radicals to force a rational Colonial
-policy on the Whigs, the Peelites next took up the matter, and on the
-19th of June Lord Lincoln moved an Address to the Crown expressing the
-opinion that the Hudson’s Bay Company, to which Vancouver Island had
-been granted by Royal Charter, was ill-adapted for ruling or developing
-the resources of a colony founded on principles of political and
-commercial freedom, and generally challenging the validity of the grant.
-One would have thought that it needed little argument to demonstrate the
-unwisdom of founding a colony to be ruled by an absentee proprietary,
-earning its revenues by a trading monopoly. The history of the United
-States was full of examples of this species of folly, and both Lord
-Lincoln and Mr. Hume argued their case with the greatest ability. But
-they spoke to no purpose, for just as Mr. Hume was warming to his work
-the House was counted out! In these days, when the air is full of
-schemes for Imperial Federation, and Home Rule, it is interesting to
-note how, in 1849, the battle of Colonial Reform was fought by a
-combination of Conservative Peelites and “stalwart” Radicals, against
-the Whigs, who were jealously opposed to all extensions of Colonial
-autonomy.
-
-After Colonial policy, and not long after it in point of interest, came
-Finance. The erratic schemes of the Chancellor of the Exchequer in the
-preceding year, together with the distress which afflicted the country,
-had made everybody dissatisfied with the financial policy of the
-Government. The Protectionists were always at hand to suggest that the
-pressure of taxation was due to Free Trade. The Free Traders were never
-weary of retorting that it was due to extravagant expenditure, and could
-be remedied by retrenchment. Mr. Cobden and Mr. Bright thus felt that
-their mission in life did not end with the Repeal of the Corn Laws. If
-they were to keep the ground they had taken, it seemed to them they must
-start an agitation to reduce public expenditure. Mr. Bright rather
-favoured the notion of agitating for an extension of the Franchise, on
-the supposition that, if more taxpayers had votes, Government, in
-deference to their prejudices, would be chary of augmenting public
-burdens. Ultimately, however, they agreed to combine the two
-agitations,[1] and work with each other as before. The popular feeling
-in favour of economy was first manifested by the formation of Financial
-Reform Associations in the large towns--that of Liverpool being
-especially energetic--and they were soon busy discussing a practical
-plan, which emanated from the fertile brain of Cobden, for the remission
-of the Malt Tax and other public burdens. Cobden’s scheme was simply to
-effect retrenchment by going back to the scale of expenditure that was
-deemed adequate in 1835, and in this way he proposed to reduce taxation
-by about £10,000,000 sterling. Quite a flutter of excitement ran through
-the
-
-[Illustration: ST. GEORGE’S CHAPEL, WINDSOR.]
-
-House of Commons when, on the 26th of February, he brought his plan
-under its notice. He contended that military expenditure had caused the
-increase of £10,000,000, which he desired to reduce. Therefore he moved
-that the expenditure under this head be diminished with all practicable
-speed. The insular position of England was itself a sure defence against
-her enemies.
-
-[Illustration: JOHN BRIGHT (1857).]
-
-Provided she did not interfere recklessly with foreign nations, she had
-less to fear in 1849 than in 1835. Why, then, should the military and
-naval expenditure of 1835 be exceeded? Vast sums of money, too, were
-spent on the Colonies. Here also a reduction might be effected, for the
-English taxpayer got no more food from the Colonies than the foreign one
-did. At this period it was evident that Mr. Cobden had not put to the
-test the sound maxim that “trade follows the flag.” The answer of the
-Chancellor of the Exchequer was that in 1835, to the expenditure of
-which Mr. Cobden wanted to revert, no adequate provision had been made
-for the true wants of the country; and that, since then, many things had
-happened to increase expenditure unavoidably. The introduction of steam
-into the Navy was an illustration of these changes. Moreover, the
-Government had reduced expenditure by about a million and a half
-sterling--and that was surely a pledge of their earnestness as financial
-reformers.
-
-The Tories put Mr. Herries forward to attack both parties. He blamed
-Ministers for encouraging the financial reformers, and denounced Mr.
-Cobden for the violence of his speeches out of doors on the subject. The
-policy of the Tories was to demand that expenditure should not be
-lessened, whilst there was ground for anxiety as to foreign affairs. One
-of their arguments was an odd one. It was that, as the revenue was still
-maintained in spite of the repeal of vast sums of taxation, there was no
-ground for pretending that retrenchment was necessary because the people
-felt that taxation was pressing hard on them. They did not seem to see
-that this was either an argument in favour of raising revenue without
-imposing any taxes at all--which was a _reductio ad absurdum_--or an
-argument to show that reductions of taxation still left Government with
-enough money in hand to defend the interests of the country, which was
-virtually an admission that Mr. Cobden’s plan, if tried, could do no
-harm. The Free Traders made a bid for the rural vote by arguing that, if
-the landed interest wanted the relief which the Protectionists promised
-them, they ought to vote for the reduction in expenditure, which would
-enable Parliament to grant that relief. Mr. Cobden’s first scheme of
-Financial Reform was rejected by a vote of 275 to 78. But this did not
-allay the uneasiness of the public, who began to fret over the
-extraordinary delay that took place in the production of the Budget. It
-was not till the 29th of June that Sir Charles Wood made his financial
-statement to the House. It was not a cheering one. The expenditure,
-which was £53,287,110, had exceeded the Ministerial estimate by
-£1,219,379, and it exceeded the revenue of the year by £269,378. Of
-course, by excluding unexpected outlays on Irish distress, Canadian
-emigration, &c., a more favourable state of accounts could be shown;
-but, as the excluded money had been spent, there was really no reason
-for ignoring it. For the coming year his estimated expenditure, he said,
-would be £52,157,696, and his estimated receipts would yield, he hoped,
-a surplus over that of £94,304. Sir Charles Wood’s strongest points were
-that every effort would be made to keep current expenditure within
-current income, and that instead of using small surpluses to remit small
-sums of taxation, they would be kept as the nucleus of large surpluses,
-for the reduction of large amounts of taxation. The Radicals and
-Financial Reformers were not satisfied with Sir Charles Wood’s long list
-of objectionable taxes that had been removed. In spite of all that,
-expenditure increased--and what was worse, there was a steady increase
-in permanent burdens on the revenue, in the shape of charges for the
-Public Debt. Mr. Hume demanded that Excise be done away with, and that
-the example of Sir James Graham, who reduced the expenses of the
-Admiralty by £1,200,000, be followed. Mr. Milner Gibson attacked the
-paper duty, the newspaper stamp duty, and the tax on advertisements, as
-taxes on knowledge; and he cited the petition of the Messrs. Chambers
-of Edinburgh, who declared that the paper duty had stopped the
-continuance of a work for the humbler classes which they were bringing
-out, and of which there had been a sale of 80,000 copies. Everybody
-wanted some special duty repealed, either that on hops, bricks, soap,
-beer, malt, tea, or timber. The Budget was felt to be unsatisfactory,
-for, as Mr. Cobden said, it made the two ends barely meet. At the close
-of the Session (20th of July) Mr. Herries supplemented this discussion
-by starting another question--that of raising some portion of the
-supplies of the State by a fixed duty on corn. The Protectionists argued
-that Sir Charles Wood’s estimates were too sanguine, and that more taxes
-must be imposed on the people, unless a small duty were put on foreign
-corn. This was not to be a protective duty, but one merely for revenue
-purposes, and as such surely it was justifiable. It would be only a tax
-on food in name; in fact, the defence of the proposal was like the Irish
-vagrant’s apology for the existence of her baby--“Please, sir, it’s only
-a very little one.” Of course the Free Traders sprang upon Mr. Herries
-with great glee. The Tories were going round the country promising the
-farmers Protection. But when they came to the House of Commons all they
-ventured to ask for was a small fixed duty on corn, which was to be
-levied not for protective but for revenue purposes. The position was an
-awkward one for Mr. Herries. Either his small fixed duty did or did not
-raise the price of corn. If it did, he was deceiving the House of
-Commons. If it did not, he was deceiving his clients among the farmers.
-His move was obviously one for putting heart into a desponding faction.
-
-It has been said that Mr. Cobden and Mr. Bright had come to the
-conclusion that, side by side with the agitation for retrenchment, there
-should be pressed forward that for Parliamentary Reform. Accordingly,
-Mr. Hume introduced his motion for Parliamentary Reform in the House of
-Commons on the 4th of June, demanding Household Suffrage, Vote by
-Ballot, Triennial Parliaments, and something approaching to equal
-electoral districts. The opposition of the Whigs, who argued that reform
-was unnecessary because many good measures had been passed by
-Parliament, and that to extend the franchise would endanger the
-Monarchy, induced the House to reject the motion by a vote of 268 to 82.
-
-But a topic far more interesting to the Queen, whose speciality is
-Foreign Policy, was brought under the notice of the House of Commons by
-Mr. Cobden a few days after Mr. Hume’s motion was disposed of. He
-suggested a plan whereby wars might cease, and civilised nations might
-compose their quarrels by Arbitration. On the 12th of June Cobden moved
-an Address to the Crown, praying that Foreign Powers might be invited to
-concur in treaties binding them to accept Arbitration in settling their
-disputes with each other. The Government did not openly resist the
-motion. They got rid of it by putting up Lord Palmerston to move the
-“previous question;” but the tone of the debate showed that, though the
-House was dubious about the practicability of Mr. Cobden’s plan, it had
-been profoundly impressed with his reasoning.
-
-[Illustration: ROYAL PALACE, NAPLES.]
-
-The Whigs, embarrassed by the refusal of Jewish Members to take the
-Parliamentary Oath, next introduced a Bill expunging from the form of
-the oath the words “on the true faith of a Christian.” The only bitter
-opponents of the measure were the Tories, for most of the Peelites, like
-Mr. Gladstone, supported it. The Commons passed the measure readily
-enough; but in the House of Lords the hostility of the Episcopal Bench
-was fatal to it. Another measure was sacrificed to the ecclesiasticism
-which was then prevalent in Parliament. That was the Bill to legalise
-marriage with a Deceased Wife’s Sister, which Mr. Stuart Wortley
-introduced on the 3rd of May, and the most vehement opponents of which
-were Mr. Goulburn, Mr. Gladstone, and Sir R. Inglis. Mr. Wortley carried
-the Second Reading without much difficulty; but when Mr. Goulburn
-threatened to use the forms of the House to obstruct the further
-progress of the measure, it was withdrawn.
-
-Foreign affairs originated some acrimonious debates in both Houses
-during the Session. On the 6th of March a question was put by Lord
-Stanley to
-
-[Illustration: LADY PALMERSTON.]
-
-Lord Lansdowne asking if it were true that a Government contractor had
-been allowed to withdraw arms from a Government store, and supply them
-to the insurgents in Sicily. Lord Lansdowne could not deny that the
-allegation was true; and the incident not only caused a great deal of
-excitement in the country, but it was one that gave much pain to the
-Queen, who naturally saw in it the reckless hand of Lord Palmerston. The
-secret history of the affair was this: Mr. Delane, the editor of the
-_Times_, happened to meet a Mr. Hood--an Army contractor--accidentally.
-In conversation Mr. Hood incidently mentioned to Mr. Delane that when
-certain Sicilian agents applied to him for stores, he explained that he
-had none on hand, having supplied all he possessed to the Government.
-But he observed that if he could persuade the Government to let him have
-these back, he would hand them over to the Sicilian insurrectionary
-agents, replacing the Government stores in due time. The contractor
-applied to the Ordnance Department, stating that his application had a
-political, as well as a commercial, object. The Department, therefore,
-referred the matter to Lord Palmerston, who sanctioned the transaction.
-The _Times_ immediately published this story, and its attacks on Lord
-Palmerston for having insulted Austria, and connived at insurrection in
-Sicily, annoyed the Queen so seriously that Lord John Russell compelled
-Lord Palmerston to apologise to the King of Naples, for whom he
-cherished a supreme contempt. But when the scandal grew clamant, Mr.
-Bankes opened up an attack in the House of Commons on Lord Palmerston.
-He, however, mixed up with it a great deal of general criticism on the
-policy of the Government in Italy, and gave Lord Palmerston an
-opportunity of winning an easy victory by posing as a friend of freedom,
-and a martyr to the doctrine of nationalities. Lord Palmerston, writes
-Mr. Greville, delivered, in reply to his antagonist, “a slashing,
-impudent speech, full of sarcasm, jokes, and claptrap, the whole
-eminently successful. He quizzed Bankes unmercifully, he expressed
-ultra-Liberal sentiments to please the Radicals, and he gathered shouts,
-laughter, and applause as he dashed and rattled along.”
-
-On the 22nd of March Lord Aberdeen headed another abortive attack on the
-Foreign Policy of the Government. He complained that whereas Lord
-Palmerston had been active in menacing Austria if she meddled with
-Sardinia, he had spoken smooth things to Sardinia--never going further
-than warning her that if she broke existing treaties, she would be doing
-a dangerous thing. Aberdeen’s attack was regarded as a semi-official
-expression of the ideas of the Sovereign on Lord Palmerston’s policy;
-and it came to this, that Palmerston had made England an object of
-aversion in every capital in Europe, by interfering between Governments
-and their subjects, in a manner which brought on him the animosity of
-both. He had been arrogant to the despots, and, whilst he had encouraged
-the rebels, he had tamely abandoned them, whenever it became irksome to
-defend them. In this debate the Foreign Office was convicted of having
-suppressed an important despatch relating to Austro-Sardinian affairs in
-the papers laid before Parliament. The truth is that the Cabinet did not
-know what was and what was not included in the papers that Lord
-Palmerston chose to publish; and Lord Palmerston sometimes did not even
-give his colleagues enough information to enable them to answer
-questions. One example of this is worth recording, because it directly
-affected the Queen. In May, Lord Lansdowne, in reply to a question of
-Lord Beaumont, told the House of Lords that “no communication whatever
-had been made by the Austrian Government to ours relative to their
-intervention in Italy.” But Collosedo, the Austrian Minister, had five
-days before that gone to Lord Palmerston and communicated to him, by
-order of the Austrian Government, their objects in interfering in Italy.
-Palmerston kept his colleagues in utter ignorance of this interview; and
-when the truth leaked out, Lord Lansdowne had to set himself right the
-best way he could. As for Palmerston, when he was challenged with
-deceiving his colleagues, and suppressing the fact that this Austrian
-communication had been made to him, he replied impudently that “he had
-quite forgotten it.” His needlessly violent anti-Austrian policy,
-coupled with delinquencies of this kind, was intensely annoying to the
-Queen. Writing under the date of June 3rd, Mr. Greville, in his Journal,
-says, “The Duke of Bedford told me a few days ago that the Queen had
-been again remonstrating about Palmerston more strongly than ever. This
-was in reference to the suppressed Austrian despatch which made such a
-noise. She then sent for Lord John Russell, and told him she could not
-stand it any longer, and he must make some arrangements to get rid of
-Lord Palmerston. This communication was just as fruitless as all her
-preceding ones. I don’t know what Lord John said--he certainly did not
-pacify her; but, as usual, there it ended. But the consequences of her
-not being able to get any satisfaction from her Minister have been that
-she has poured her feelings and her wrongs into the more sympathetic
-ears of her late Ministers, and I believe that the Queen has told Peel
-everything--all her own feelings and wishes, and all that passes on the
-subject.”
-
-In these circumstances an anti-Palmerstonian cabal was naturally formed.
-Lord Aberdeen, a devoted friend of the Queen, attempted to organise a
-movement for driving Palmerston from office; but the great obstacle was
-Peel. Nothing could induce him to upset the Ministry which was pledged
-to procure a fair trial for Free Trade. The Court Party, however,
-suggested that, if censured, Palmerston might resign and his colleagues
-stay in; or that they might all resign, and then, when it was shown that
-no other Government could be formed, and that the Peelites could render
-the formation of another Ministry impossible, Lord John Russell and his
-colleagues might come back to power, without Lord Palmerston. The scheme
-failed; but, as Mr. Greville says, the curious thing to note about it is
-“the _carte du pays_ it exhibits,” and the remarkable and most improper
-position which Palmerston occupied _vis-à-vis_ the Queen and his own
-colleagues. “I know not,” writes Mr. Greville, “where to look for a
-parallel to such a mass of anomalies--the Queen turning from her own
-Prime Minister to confide in the one who was supplanted by him; a
-Minister talking over quietly and confidentially with an outsider by
-what circumstances and what agency his colleague, the Minister for
-Foreign Affairs, might be excluded from the Government; the Queen
-abhorring her Minister, and unable to rid herself of him; John Russell,
-fascinated and subjugated by the ascendency of Palmerston, submitting to
-everything from him, and supporting him right and wrong, the others not
-concealing from those they are in the habit of confiding in their
-disapprobation of the conduct and policy of their colleague, while they
-are all the time supporting the latter and excusing the former, and
-putting themselves under the obligation of identifying themselves with
-his proceedings, and standing or falling with them.”[2]
-
-[Illustration: SIR CHARLES NAPIER.]
-
-Ultimately, however, a confederacy was formed between Lords Aberdeen,
-Stanley, and Brougham to oust Lord Palmerston during the last days of
-the Session, and the Queen, like every other prudent politician in the
-country, who had been alarmed by Palmerston’s restlessness, rejoiced in
-the prospect of getting rid of him. Unfortunately, the only Peer of the
-three who was in earnest in this business was Lord Aberdeen; and yet,
-when the 20th of July, the day for the attack, drew nigh, it was certain
-that the Government would be defeated. Palmerston then played his trump
-card. Lady Palmerston wrote a letter to Brougham, who was to lead the
-attack, conveying to him some mysterious threat, and he promptly
-betrayed his associates. “He made a miserable speech,” writes Mr.
-Greville, “which enraged his colleagues and all the opponents of the
-Government, who swore
-
-[Illustration: THE BATTLE OF GUJERAT.]
-
-(and it was true) that he had sold them.” Brougham’s speech, however,
-contained one good point which deserved to live. It was in it that he
-condemned the interference, not only of our regular diplomatic body in
-the affairs of the Mediterranean Powers, but also the interference of
-“that mongrel sort of monster--half nautical, half political--diplomatic
-vice-admirals, speculative ship-captains, observers of rebellion, and
-sympathisers therewith.” The Government were in a minority in the House,
-but they contrived to get a majority of twelve by proxies, in obtaining
-which Lady Palmerston had displayed marvellous address. Thus was the
-great game of faction played at the expense of the people in the early
-years of the Queen’s reign. Not that the people cared much about the
-matter, for it was only those who were behind the scenes who could
-fairly appreciate what Lord Palmerston’s spirited policy really meant.
-It was Radical, but it was reckless; and not only the Queen, but every
-well-informed statesman--including Liberals like Mr. Cobden and Mr.
-Bright--simply lived in daily terror, lest the Foreign Secretary might
-suddenly involve the country in a wanton and purposeless European war.
-
-Another important debate was raised by Lord Beaumont, on the 14th of
-May, on French intervention in Rome. The States of the Church had long
-been preparing for a revolt against Papal misgovernment. Pius IX.
-therefore determined to modify the policy of his predecessors, and a
-hapless scheme for satisfying the democracy, by appointing lay
-councillors to work with or check a priestly government was tried--the
-Pope refusing to bate one jot or tittle of his temporal authority. The
-lay councillors could only meet and debate. They could not initiate
-reforms. No sooner had this constitution been granted than the
-revolution swept over Italy, and the Romans demanded the same
-concessions as had been extorted by the Neapolitans. Concessions were
-given with the intention that they should be withdrawn. Rossi--once
-French ambassador at Rome--was made Prime Minister, and to extricate the
-country from financial embarrassment, he proposed to mortgage the
-property of the Church. He was, however, assassinated when entering the
-Capitol; and then the Cardinals began to retract the concessions which
-had been made to Liberalism. The people rose, insisting that the Pope
-should protect the Constitution, and assuring him of their fidelity. He
-then fled to Gaeta. Attempts to reconcile the Pontiff and his people
-failed. The Roman Republic was proclaimed, and peace established, when
-suddenly France interfered to restore his Holiness. It was to prevent
-France from having a pretext for interfering in Italy that Lord Minto’s
-mission was undertaken, and thus another failure had to be debited to
-Lord Palmerston’s foreign policy. Naturally Lords Aberdeen and Brougham
-taunted the Government with the failure of the Minto mission. But taunts
-were powerless to extort from Ministers a statement of their relation to
-the French expedition. In the House of Commons, however, those who
-objected to French interference with the Roman people succeeded in
-obtaining from Lord Palmerston an expression of disapproval of the
-course which France had taken; but that was all.
-
-Far and away the most important foreign debate of the Session was that
-which Mr. Osborne raised on the Austro-Hungarian question in July.
-Hungary had been crushed by the aid which Russia, unrebuked or
-unrestrained by the shadow of a protest from Palmerston, had given her
-Austrian masters; and the Liberal Party, always jealous of Austria as
-the representative of Absolutist ideas, were wrathful accordingly. But
-the discussion had no practical result. It was merely marked by a
-declaration from Lord Palmerston, which came too late to be useful, to
-the effect that the heart and soul of the country were enlisted on the
-side of Hungary.
-
-For Englishmen no debate was graver than the one on the state of the
-nation, which Mr. Disraeli raised at the end of the Session. He
-attributed the distress in the country to Free Trade, and he attacked
-every branch of Ministerial policy. But the weak point of his brilliant
-harangue was that it meant nothing, for not only was he unable to take
-over the Government himself, but he had no practical proposal to make,
-save his insinuated suggestion to restore Protection. Sir Robert Peel’s
-speech, however, carried the House in favour of the Government. It was a
-complete vindication of his fiscal policy, and its conclusion was
-memorable, because in it he traced our immunity from revolutionary
-excesses to his abandonment of taxes on food in 1846.
-
-Early in the year the Queen was disturbed by evil tidings from India.
-Hard fighting was reported from the banks of the Chenab. The Sikhs, it
-was true, were in retreat; but our victory was a barren one, as we
-captured neither prisoners, guns, nor standards, and sacrificed two of
-our Generals (Cureton and Havelock), who fell at the head of their
-regiments. In losing Cureton, her Majesty lost the finest cavalry
-officer in her service. The fact was that, though we had conquered, we
-had not subdued the Sikhs at the end of our first war with them. In
-April, 1848, a Sikh chief murdered two British officers at Multan. This
-was followed by a general outbreak, which was met on the whole
-successfully by the desperate efforts of Lieutenant Edwardes and a mere
-handful of men. Multan was besieged in June, 1848; but 5,000 of our Sikh
-auxiliaries deserted to the enemy, and our army had to retreat. We had
-not enough troops in the Punjab to control the rising, and our
-auxiliaries under the Maharajah were not trustworthy. On the other hand,
-the rebel chief Shere Sing, at the beginning of 1849, had 40,000 men
-under his orders, and once again British supremacy in India was
-trembling in the balance. On the 5th of March, however, still worse news
-came to London. Lord Gough, with inconceivable recklessness, had, on the
-14th of January, attacked the enemy in a strong position at
-Chillianwalla with a small British force worn out by fatigue. The
-conditions of the combat ensured disaster. Our troops, it is true, took
-the Sikh positions, but during
-
-[Illustration: THE BRITISH TROOPS ENTERING MULTAN.]
-
-the night had to abandon them. The loss of life on our side was
-enormous, and Lord Gough, though he fought like a hero in the thickest
-of the _mêlée_, was not to be found at a critical moment to give orders.
-The news of this disaster was received with universal indignation. The
-Government attempted to allay public feeling by appointing Sir William
-Gomm to succeed Lord Gough; but as Sir William was believed to be
-equally incompetent, a demand for Sir Charles Napier’s appointment
-became clamant. “We dined,” writes Lord Malmesbury, in his Diary on the
-4th of March, “with the Colchesters, and were introduced to Sir Charles
-Napier. He is a little
-
-[Illustration: SIR HARRY SMITH.]
-
-man, with grey hair brushed back from his face, with an immense hooked,
-pointed nose, small eyes, and wears spectacles, very like the
-conventional face of a Jew. He is appointed to retrieve our affairs in
-India, and when the Duke of Wellington named him to the post he at first
-hesitated, until the Duke told him if he did not go he would go
-himself.”[3] Why did Napier hesitate? Because, it seems, the Directors
-of the East India Company not only objected to his appointment, but
-threatened to prevent him from having a seat on the Council, an insult
-which Napier could hardly brook. “You have no idea of the difficulties
-I have had in dealing with these men,” said Sir John Cam Hobhouse, then
-President of the Indian Board of Control, to Mr. Greville. “I have
-brought the Government, the Duke of Wellington, _and the Queen_ all to
-bear upon them, and all in vain.” Mr. Greville advised Hobhouse to bring
-another power--that of the House of Commons--to bear on the Company. In
-other words, he advised the Government to go down boldly and inform
-Parliament that they had appointed Napier, and if the Directors of the
-Company refused to pay his salary as a Member of Council, to ask the
-House to vote it. The Cabinet appointed Napier, and the Directors
-acquiesced, fearing to face the responsibility of thwarting the
-Government in doing what the Queen and the country desired.
-
-But before Gough could be recalled, he redeemed the disaster of
-Chillianwalla at Gujerat. The news of this successful battle, which was
-fought on the 21st of February, reached the Queen on the 1st of April.
-It meant that the crisis in India was over, and it lifted from her mind
-the burden of a supreme anxiety. Multan, too, had fallen, and finally
-the East India Company, admitting at last that it was impossible to
-protect their frontier from attack, annexed the Punjab on the 29th of
-March, 1849, thus closing the history of the Sikhs as an independent
-nation. England had found in them the most fearless and formidable of
-enemies. Since the annexation of their country, they have been the
-staunchest and the most loyal of the Queen’s Indian subjects.
-
-One serious colonial dispute must be noticed, for it led to an early
-experiment in “boycotting.” Lord Grey, on the 4th of September, 1848, by
-an Order in Council, had turned the Cape of Good Hope into a convict
-settlement. The colonists resented this act with the hottest
-indignation. Angry meetings were held at Cape Town; and the Governor,
-Sir Harry Smith, was violently blamed because he refused to take on
-himself the responsibility of suspending the “injurious and degrading
-measure.” When the first convict ship, the _Neptune_, arrived in Simon’s
-Bay on the 19th of September, the church bells in Cape Town were tolled
-in half-minute time. The Municipality demanded that the vessel be sent
-back. The populace, in mass meetings, adopted what they called “the
-Pledge”--an obligation to “drop connection with any person who may
-assist convicted felons.” In fact, the process which in Ireland has
-recently been termed “boycotting” was resorted to, and supplies were
-refused to the army, navy, and all Government establishments. The law
-was impotent in face of such opposition, and very soon the Governor, Sir
-Harry Smith, was compelled to bake his own bread even in his own house.
-The colonists finally triumphed. The Order in Council was withdrawn, so
-far as it referred to the Cape, and the _Neptune_ left, without having
-landed a single convict. The episode is one of the earliest instances on
-record of the successful application of “boycotting” to defeat an
-unpopular policy.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-
-FAMILY CARES AND ROYAL DUTIES.
-
- Education of the Prince of Wales--Selection of Mr. Birch as
- Tutor--The Queen’s Jealousy of her Parental Authority--Her Letter
- to Melbourne on the Management of her Nursery--Her Ideas on
- Education--Prince Albert’s Plans for the Education of the Prince of
- Wales--Stockmar’s Advice--The Visit to Ireland--The Queen at
- Waterford--“Rebel Cork” _en fête_--The Visit to Dublin--Viceregal
- Festivities--The Visit to the National Model Schools--Shiel’s
- Speech--The Queen and the Duke of Leinster--Farewell at
- Kingstown--The Queen Dips the Royal Ensign--Loyal Ulster--The Visit
- to the Linen Hall--Lord Clarendon on the Queen’s Visit--A Cruise on
- the Clyde--Home in Balmoral--The Queen’s “Bothie”--The Queen’s
- University of Ireland--First Plans for the Great
- Exhibition--Opening of the London Coal Exchange--The Queen’s
- Barge--Death of Queen Adelaide.
-
-
-In April, 1849, Prince Albert is found writing a letter to the Dowager
-Duchess of Gotha announcing a very important event in the Queen’s
-family. “The children,” he says, “grow more than well. Bertie (the
-Prince of Wales) will be given over in a few weeks into the hands of a
-tutor, whom we have found in a Mr. Birch, a young, good-looking, amiable
-man.” Mr. Birch, subsequently Rector of Prestwich, near Manchester, was
-eminently qualified for the grave and delicate duty for which the Queen
-selected him. He had taken high honours at Cambridge, and had been not
-only Captain of the School, but had also served as an under-master at
-Eton. Yet Mr. Birch can hardly be credited with the Scheme of Education
-adopted in the Royal Family. That had been arranged by the Queen
-herself, in consultation with her consort and Baron Stockmar. Her fixed
-idea was that the heart as well as the head must be trained, and that
-not only must the education of her children be truly moral, but it must
-be essentially English. She resolved to discover the kind of tutor whom
-she could trust, and then, having found him, to trust him implicitly.
-
-The Queen, it may here be said, has ever set an example to women of
-exalted rank and station by reason of the undeviating support she has
-given to those who undertook the education of her children. But in doing
-this her Majesty has been most jealous in asserting her parental rights,
-and punctilious in recognising the high responsibilities which they
-involve. As far back as 1842, in a very pretty letter to Lord Melbourne,
-she asked him for advice about the reorganisation of her nursery, and a
-question came up as to the choice of the lady who should superintend it.
-The Queen, accepting the fact that her public duties prevented her from
-personally managing the education of her family as completely as she
-might have wished, fully admitted that it was necessary to appoint a
-lady of high rank and culture for that purpose. But then arose the
-difficulty of satisfying her Majesty’s desire to retain in her own hands
-the completest headship of her family. A governess of high rank really
-competent to do the work as the Queen meant that it should be done
-
-[Illustration: VICTORIA CASTLE, KILLINEY--BRAY HEAD IN THE DISTANCE.]
-
-might choose to consider herself as an official responsible to the
-country first, and to the parents of the Royal children afterwards.
-Against such an idea the Queen most resolutely set her face. “I feel,”
-her Majesty writes, on behalf of herself and her husband, that “she (the
-Royal governess) ought to be responsible only to _us_, and _we_ to the
-country and nation.”[4] It was in pursuance of this idea that her
-Majesty made great sacrifices to keep her children as closely as
-possible in contact with her. Many curious memoranda from her pen exist,
-and through them all there runs the same thought--simplicity and
-domesticity must be the leading characteristics of the training of the
-Royal family. For example, whenever it was possible, the Queen insisted
-on retaining in her own hands the _religious_ education of her family,
-and it is now known that she did this from a dread lest their minds
-might at the most plastic period of life receive a sectarian bias. High
-Anglicanism was then militant, and many intrigues were set on foot by
-its professors to effect a lodgment in the Palace. The education of the
-Princess Royal, afterwards Princess Imperial of Germany, was almost
-entirely supervised and directed by the Queen herself, and with results
-much appreciated in Germany, where, through her tact, culture, high
-character, and strong common sense, her Imperial Highness has won for
-herself a position of unique political and social influence. The
-education of the Prince of Wales, however, now came more directly under
-the hands of Prince Albert; and one point of the highest importance to
-decide was whether it should be conservative or
-
-[Illustration: ROYAL VISIT TO IRELAND: THE QUEEN LEAVING KINGSTOWN.]
-
-liberal in its character. Prince Albert decided that it must be liberal
-in this sense, that it should prepare the Heir Apparent for taking his
-position in a changeful state of society, whose institutions were, to a
-great extent, in a transition stage. Every effort was to be made to
-prevent him from getting into his mind a notion that existing
-institutions were _sacrosanct_, and that resistance to all change was a
-sacred and patriotic duty. The history of George III. had evidently not
-been studied in vain. “The proper duty of Sovereigns in this country,”
-wrote Stockmar to Prince Albert, “is not to take the lead in change, but
-to act as a balance-wheel on the movements of the social body.” Above
-all, it was determined that the education of the young Prince must be at
-bottom English, and not foreign. Furnished with these principles to
-guide him, and with general instructions to make the basis of the young
-Prince’s training as broad and comprehensive as possible--to make it
-scientific as well as classical--Mr. Birch essayed his arduous task,
-aided not a little by shrewd advice from Bishop Wilberforce and Sir
-James Clark, the Queen’s favourite physician.
-
-The sweetest days of summer were clouded for the Queen in 1849 by
-painful memories of the shock she received on the 19th of May. On that
-day an Irishman named Hamilton, with a morbid craving for notoriety,
-tried to shoot her when she was driving with her children in her
-carriage down Constitution Hill. Her Majesty, with great tact, engaged
-the attention of her little ones by conversation, and with a sign
-directed her coachman to drive on as if nothing had happened, so that
-her husband, who was riding in advance, knew nothing of the affair--not
-even of the attempt of the mob to “lynch” Hamilton. His pistol was
-loaded with blank cartridge, but in spite of that he was sentenced to
-seven years’ transportation.
-
-It has been said that Ireland, exhausted by the abortive rebellion of
-1848, had been settling down into sullen tranquillity. There were many
-signs visible of a better feeling towards the Government in the country.
-The Queen accordingly suggested that it might be well to take advantage
-of the improving condition of things, and pay a Royal visit to Ireland.
-Her Majesty, however, primarily desired that the Irish people should
-benefit, and not be burdened, by the presence of Royalty. She therefore
-expressed a wish that the visit should not be made in such a form as to
-put the country, which had suffered so much from distress, to any great
-expense. Prince Albert, ever practical, suggested that in that case the
-best way of carrying out the Queen’s idea was to make this visit a
-simple yachting cruise. The Queen, he said, might call at the ports of
-Cork, Waterford, Wexford, Dublin, and Belfast on her annual journey to
-the North of Scotland, and perchance touch at Glasgow, thereby
-compensating it for the loss of the Royal visit in 1847. Lord Clarendon
-fully endorsed the views of the Queen and her husband in a letter to
-Lord John Russell. “Everything,” he wrote, “tends to secure for the
-Queen an enthusiastic reception, and the one drawback, which is the
-general distress of all classes, has its advantage, for it will enable
-the Queen to do what is kind and considerate to those who are
-suffering.”
-
-On the 27th of June the official intimation that the Queen was to visit
-Ireland was received by the Irish people with every manifestation of
-delight. If there were some who, rebels at heart, sympathised little
-with the tone of popular feeling, they concealed their aversion. The sex
-of the Sovereign indeed ensured her a courteous reception, from a nation
-proud of its gallantry, and justly renowned for the warmth of its
-hospitality. It was then finally decided that the visit should be made
-when Parliament rose. On the 27th of August the Queen, Prince Albert,
-and their four eldest children accordingly embarked for Ireland. “It is
-done!” writes the amiable and somewhat effusive Lady Lyttelton, who
-watched the squadron from the windows of Osborne, till it faded from her
-eyes. “England’s fate is afloat ... and _we_ are left lamenting.” There
-was, however, no serious cause for anxiety. When the Royal squadron
-steamed into the Cove of Cork, in the golden light of a summer sunset,
-the air was soon gleaming with rockets, and bonfires, kindled by the
-excitable and kindly peasantry, blazed on every height in welcome of
-their Queen. The next morning, the 3rd of August, brought a happy omen.
-The day was dull and grey, but no sooner did the Queen set her foot on
-land at the Cove--since called Queenstown in honour of the event--than a
-sudden sunburst lit up the scene with dazzling radiance. The Royal party
-in the _Fairy_ steamed up “the pleasant waters of the river Lee,” and
-all along the route crowds of loyal people lined the banks, cheering the
-Queen and her family as she passed along. In Cork itself--“rebel
-Cork”--there was no sign of disaffection. Nothing could be warmer or
-more cordial than the welcome accorded to her Majesty, who was touched
-by the hearty gaiety and good humour of her excitable hosts. A true
-kindly Celtic welcome, such as any Sovereign might have envied, made her
-experiences of Cork sunny memories for many long years afterwards. The
-extreme beauty of the women seems, however, to have produced an equally
-deep impression on her Majesty, who refers to this point in her diary of
-the visit.
-
-On the 4th of August the Royal party proceeded to Waterford, which they
-reached in the afternoon. Curiously enough, one of the ships in their
-squadron of escort had actually been stationed there two years
-previously, to overawe the rebellious people. Now all these dark and
-bitter memories seemed to have passed away. Waterford vied with Cork in
-its loyal demonstration, and the feeling of regret was universal that
-the Royal party did not land and go through the town. Prince Albert and
-his two sons, however, steamed up to the city from the anchorage
-opposite Duncannon fort, ten miles from the town. Next came the visit to
-Dublin--never to be forgotten in the annals of the Irish capital.
-
-It was on the 5th of August, as the sun was going down, that the Royal
-squadron reached Kingstown--threading its way with some difficulty
-through the craft, gay with joyful bunting, that crowded the sea. The
-Queen was greatly struck by the picturesque appearance of the place, and
-when she and the Prince landed next morning, amidst a salute from the
-men-of-war in the harbour, her reception was a revelation even to those
-who had anticipated that she would be lovingly greeted. Never was there
-such cheering--especially from the ladies, whose hearts were captivated
-by the Royal children. If, said one old lady, the Queen would only
-consent to call one of the young princes Patrick, all Ireland would die
-for her. The Royal party soon arrived at the Viceregal Lodge, in the
-Phœnix Park, and the routefrom Sandymount Station was again lined by
-crowds of enthusiastic and loyal sightseers. It was noted that even the
-poorest houses were gay with flowers. “It was a most wonderful and
-striking spectacle,” says the Queen, in her notes of her visit--“such
-masses of human beings, so enthusiastic, so excited, and yet perfect
-order maintained.” All that was worth seeing in Dublin was seen, and the
-people were charmed with the simple, gracious bearing of her Majesty,
-and the ease and freedom with which she went among them. A memorable
-visit was made by the Queen to the National Model Schools, where she and
-the Prince were introduced by Archbishop Whateley to the venerable
-Archbishop Murray, a picturesque and patriarchal Catholic prelate, whose
-saintly life and generous liberal ideas had previously attracted the
-attention of Prince Albert. His Grace had indeed risked much by
-protecting these schools against the attacks of some of the bigots of
-his church, and the Queen was powerfully impressed with the excellence
-of the system of instruction given at them. Speaking of this interesting
-episode in the House of Commons, Richard Lalor Shiel--the last of the
-great Irish rhetoricians--said, “Amongst the most remarkable incidents
-that occurred when the Queen was in Ireland was her visit to the schools
-of the National Board of Education, which took place (by accident, of
-course) before she visited the College of the Holy and Undivided
-Trinity. It was a fine spectacle to see the consort, so worthy of her,
-attended by the representatives of the Presbyterian Church, by the
-Protestant Archbishop of Dublin, and by the Catholic Archbishop of
-Dublin--with those venerable ecclesiastics at her side, differing in
-creed, but united by the common brotherhood of Christianity in the
-performance of one of the noblest duties which their common Christianity
-prescribed; it was a fine thing to see the Sovereign of a great empire
-surrounded by groups of those little children who gazed on her with
-affectionate amazement, while she returned their looks with fondness
-almost maternal; and, better than all, it was noble and thrilling,
-indeed, to see the emotions by which that great lady was moved when her
-heart beat with a high and holy aspiration that she might live to see
-the benefits of education carried out in their full and perfect
-development.” There was a levée, of course, at which four thousand
-persons attended to pay their respects to their Sovereign. There was a
-brilliant review of the troops in the Phœnix Park, followed by visits to
-the Royal Irish Academy, the College of Surgeons, and the Royal Dublin
-Society, at whose cattle-shows Prince Albert was a frequent competitor.
-His speech, in reply to an Address from the Society, attracted much
-attention at the time, on account of his sound advice on the economic
-condition of Ireland, and the grateful thanks which he gave to the Irish
-people for their marks of warm attachment to the Queen and her family.
-The Prince was one of the first rural economists to impress on the
-chiefs of the Society the necessity for anticipating impending changes
-in agriculture. He advised them to stimulate to the utmost
-stock-breeding in Ireland.
-
-[Illustration: VISIT OF THE QUEEN AND PRINCE ALBERT TO THE LINEN HALL,
-BELFAST.]
-
-A visit paid by the Queen to Carton appears to have made a strong
-impression on her. Carton is the seat of the Duke of Leinster, and his
-delicate attentions to her and her family, and his skill in planning a
-pleasant excursion for them, elicits from her pen the remark in her
-“Diary” that his Grace was “one of the kindest and best of men.” The
-Royal leave-taking at Kingstown was quite an affecting ceremony. The
-crowd at the pier was denser than it had ever been within living memory,
-and its shouts rent the air. When the Queen heard how her kind hosts
-were bidding her Godspeed, she immediately climbed up on the paddle-box
-and stood waving her handkerchief in token of her appreciation of their
-loyalty. She directed the ship’s engines to be slowed, so that the
-vessel might glide slowly past the pier. By a felicitous inspiration she
-ordered the Royal Standard to be dipped three times, in honour of the
-people on the shore, and as a mark of her grateful appreciation of their
-affection.
-
-Loyal Ulster was next visited, and, as might have been expected, the
-reception of the Queen in this busy hive of industry was exceptionally
-effusive, even for Ireland. Belfast was _en fête_ when the Royal
-visitors landed, and old folk still speak of the scene on the quay as
-marking a red letter day in their lives. Bunting was streaming
-everywhere in the air. Dense crowds cheering and shouting, and waving
-hats and handkerchiefs, occupied every coign of vantage, and though the
-Queen had only four hours to spend in the city, she contrived, under
-competent guidance, to see many of the more interesting places and
-institutions which illustrate the strong character of the mixed race
-whose energy, ability, pertinacity, and industry have made Ulster, with
-her unkindly soil and climate, the richest province in Ireland. Ulster
-commands the bulk of the linen trade of the world, and, naturally, the
-institutions and factories connected with that industry arrested the
-Queen’s attention during her flying visit to the commercial capital of
-Ireland. An alarming gale detained her the next day in Belfast Lough,
-but after it blew over the Royal party steamed away to the Scottish
-shore.
-
-The Royal visit to Ireland had two good results. It brought home to the
-minds of the Irish people the fact that their country, and their
-interests, were of great personal concern to the Queen and her husband.
-It demonstrated to the rest of the United Kingdom the fact that the
-personal attachment of the Irish people to the Monarchy was as strong as
-could be desired, and that if they were rebels at heart it was not the
-Queen, but the Viceregal Bureaucracy in Dublin Castle, who had soured
-their blood. Everybody who had observed the effect of the Queen’s
-progress through Ireland was charmed with the success of the expedition.
-“I saw Lord Lansdowne last night,” writes Mr. Greville in his Journal
-(14th August), “just returned from Ireland, having had an escape on the
-railroad, for the train ran off the rails. He said nothing could surpass
-the success of the Queen’s visit in every respect; every circumstance
-favourable, no drawbacks or mistakes, all persons and parties pleased,
-much owing to the tact of Lord Clarendon, and the care he had bestowed
-on all the arrangements and details, which made it all go off so
-admirably. The Queen herself was delighted, and appears to have played
-her part uncommonly well. Clarendon, of course, was overjoyed at the
-complete success of what was his own plan,[5] and satisfied with the
-graciousness and attention of the Court to him. In the beginning, and
-while the details were in preparation, he was considerably disgusted at
-the petty difficulties that were made, but he is satisfied now. Lord
-Lansdowne says the departure was quite affecting, and he could not see
-it without being moved; and he thinks beyond doubt that this visit will
-produce permanent good effects in Ireland.”[6] Clarendon himself was
-evidently more than delighted with the effect of the Royal visit. He
-informed Sir George Grey that he believed “there was not an Irishman in
-Dublin who did not consider that the Queen had paid him a personal
-compliment by mounting the paddle-box of her steamer as she was leaving,
-and ordering the Royal Standard to be dipped in acknowledgment of the
-affectionate adieus which came from the crowds on the shore.”[7] But the
-odd thing was that the members of the seditious clubs who had threatened
-to create disturbances when the Queen’s visit was first mooted, caught
-the prevailing contagion of loyalty, and professed to be among the most
-affectionate of her subjects. Still, Clarendon was far too astute a
-statesman to imagine that a Royal visit would smooth away all the
-difficulties of his position and administration as Viceroy. It could
-not, as he acknowledges in another letter to Sir George Grey, “remove
-evils which are the growth of ages.” At the same time, it indirectly
-helped the country by bringing some money into it. Royalty can always
-beneficially direct the expenditure of Fashion, and after the Queen had
-by her example shown that there was no danger to be dreaded in visiting
-Ireland, rich English tourists began to go over there holiday-making,
-greatly to the advantage of the people. But when all this was apparent
-to the Queen’s advisers, it seems strange that they did not then deem it
-their duty to devise a plan for strengthening the golden link of the
-Crown between England and Ireland. If one brief Royal visit produced
-such an excellent effect, why did they not propose another? If it were
-impossible to provide for the residence for the Queen regularly during a
-portion of the year in Ireland, it might have been possible for the
-Royal Family to arrange that in their annual visit to Balmoral they
-should cruise northwards along the Irish coast, and gladden some of the
-Irish towns and provinces with their presence.
-
-Ugly weather followed the Royal squadron from Belfast Lough to the
-Clyde, but a singularly brilliant reception at Glasgow compensated the
-Queen for any discomforts she may have endured on the voyage. The visit
-to “the second city of the Empire,” as its inhabitants love to call it,
-was all too brief, for the Festival of St. Grouse had been celebrated
-two days before, and Prince Albert was eagerly desirous of pressing on
-to the moors. On the evening of the 14th of August--the day of the
-reception at Glasgow--he wrote to Stockmar a hurried note, deploring the
-“vile passage” on the 12th from Belfast to Loch Ryan, and saying how
-much he had been impressed by their procession, through five to six
-hundred thousand human beings all cheering wildly in the streets of
-Glasgow.
-
-[Illustration: CASTLETON OF BRAEMAR.]
-
-On the 15th of August they were at Balmoral, the Queen recording in her
-“Diary” that it seemed like a dream to her after all the excitement of
-their tour to be in “our dear Highland home again.” For a brief time her
-Majesty was able to enjoy a real holiday. She was not much worried by
-politics--which have been, after all, the chief business of her life.
-The seclusion, and the dry, bracing air of Balmoral, acted like tonics
-on her mind and spirits. In a letter which he wrote to Stockmar on his
-thirtieth birthday, which was gaily celebrated in the family circle at
-Balmoral, Prince Albert said, “Victoria is happy and cheerful, and
-enjoys a love and homage in this country, of which in the summer’s tour
-we have received the most striking proofs. The children are well and
-grow apace. The Highlands are glorious, and the game abundant.” One of
-the pleasantest of surprises was prepared for the Queen a fortnight
-after her arrival. It was an excursion to a small mountain cabin, or
-“bothie” as the Highlanders call it, to which she had taken a fancy at
-Alt-na-Giuthasach. In “Leaves from the Journal of Our Life in the
-Highlands,” the Queen gives the following description of her
-expedition:--“We arrived at our little ‘bothie’ at two o’clock, and were
-amazed at the transformation. There are two huts, and to the one in
-which we live a wooden addition has been made. We have a charming little
-dining-room, sitting-room, bedroom, and dressing-room, all _en suite_;
-and there is a little room where Caroline Dawson (the Maid of Honour)
-sleeps, one for her maid, and a little pantry. In the other house, which
-is only a few yards
-
-[Illustration: AT BALMORAL: A MORNING CALL.]
-
-distant, is the kitchen, where the people generally sit, a small room
-where the servants dine, and another, which is a sort of store-room, and
-a loft above in which the men sleep. Margaret French (my maid),
-Caroline’s maid, Löhlein[8] (Albert’s valet), a cook, Shackle[9] (a
-footman), and Macdonald are the only people with us in the house, old
-John Gordon and his wife excepted. Our rooms are delightfully papered,
-the ceilings as well as walls, and very nicely furnished. We lunched as
-soon as we arrived, and at three walked down (about twenty minutes’
-walk) to the loch called ‘Muich’; which some say means ‘darkness’ or
-‘sorrow.’ Here we found a large boat, into which we all got, and
-Macdonald, Duncan, Grant, and Coutts rowed; old John Gordon and two
-others going in another boat with the net.”
-
-But neither the Queen nor Prince Albert was of a mind that their Irish
-visit should be a fruitless one, and soon their busy brains were
-brooding over schemes for Ireland which marked their interest in her
-affairs. The “Godless” Colleges, which had been founded by Sir Robert
-Peel, were to be opened in October. They were three in number--one in
-Belfast, one in Cork, and one in Galway, and their education was to be
-secular and untheological. But each College gave facilities for
-conducting the spiritual training of the students under “Deans”
-appointed by the various sects and churches. The Queen and her husband
-had many conversations with men of light and leading of all parties in
-Ireland, as to the organisation of these Colleges, and the Prince, as a
-practical educationist, soon hit the blot in it. Who was to confer the
-degrees? Were the Colleges to do so? Or were they to be united by the
-common federating bond of a University, whose officials should guide the
-examinations, and form the policy that would best advance, not the
-interests of one College, but the interests of all? Her Majesty and the
-Prince, when they were in Ireland, came to the conclusion that unless
-the Colleges were affiliated under a University, they would soon
-degenerate into sectarian seminaries. But, before taking active steps in
-the matter, they laid their opinions before Sir Robert Peel. He at once
-concurred in the Prince’s views; and Lord Clarendon, who had at first
-felt doubtful about their soundness, ultimately accepted them also. Thus
-it came to pass that the Queen’s Colleges were federated under the
-Queen’s University of Ireland, and that a general desire was manifested
-that Prince Albert should be the first Chancellor. This office he
-declined to accept, mainly in the interest of the Queen. The Colleges
-and the University, he feared, might one day become the battle-grounds
-of faction, and it would then be very distressing for her Majesty to
-find her husband entangled in the political blood-feuds of Ireland.
-Subsequent events proved that these anticipations were correct. Lord
-Clarendon ultimately accepted the Chancellorship of the Queen’s
-University of Ireland.
-
-At this time, as has been stated, the present Castle at Balmoral was not
-built. Balmoral, in fact, was simply the modest family residence of a
-Highland laird, and by no means well fitted for the establishment of the
-Court. However, the business of the Court and the State could not be
-neglected on that account, and Ministers and officials showed great zeal
-and consideration in assisting her Majesty to the utmost of their power
-in transacting it in such a remote corner of her Empire. In Mr.
-Greville’s Journal we have a curious entry (15th September) bearing on
-this point, and illustrating the holiday life of the Queen in the
-Highlands at that time. “On Monday, the 3rd,” writes Mr. Greville, “on
-returning from Hillingdon, I found a summons from John Russell to be at
-Balmoral on Wednesday, the 5th, at half-past two, for a Council, to
-order a prayer for relief against the cholera.... I started on Wednesday
-morning at half-past six, and arrived at Balmoral exactly at half-past
-two. It is a beautiful road from Perth to Balmoral, particularly from
-Blairgowrie to the Spittal of Glenshee, and thence to Braemar. Much as I
-dislike Courts and all that appertains to them, I am glad to have made
-this expedition, and to have seen the Queen and Prince in their Highland
-retreat, where they certainly appear to great advantage. The place is
-very pretty; the house very small. They live there without any state
-whatever; they live not merely like private gentlefolks, but like very
-small gentlefolks--small house, small rooms, small establishment. There
-are no soldiers, and the whole guard of the Sovereign and Royal Family
-is a single policeman, who walks about the grounds to keep off
-impertinent intruders or improper characters. Their attendants consisted
-of Lady Douro and Miss Dawson, Lady and Maid of Honour; George Anson and
-Gordon; Birch, the Prince of Wales’s tutor; and Miss Hildyard, the
-governess of the children. They live with the greatest simplicity and
-ease. The Prince shoots every morning, returns to luncheon, and then
-they walk and drive. The Queen is running in and out of the house all
-day long, and often goes about alone, walks into cottages, and sits and
-chats with the old women. I never before was in society with the Prince
-or had any conversation with him. On Thursday morning John Russell and I
-were sitting together after breakfast, when he came in and sat down with
-us, and we conversed for about three-quarters of an hour. I was greatly
-struck with him. I saw at once (what I had always heard) that he is very
-intelligent and highly cultivated; and, moreover, that he has a
-thoughtful mind, and thinks of subjects worth thinking about. He seemed
-very much at his ease, very gay, pleasant, and without the least
-stiffness or air of dignity. After luncheon we went to the Highland
-gathering at Braemar--the Queen, the Prince, four children, and two
-ladies in one pony-carriage, John Russell, Mr. Birch, Miss Hildyard,
-and I in another; Anson and Gordon on the box; one groom, no more. The
-gathering was at the old castle at Braemar, and a pretty sight enough.
-We returned as we came, and then everybody strolled about till dinner.
-We were only nine people, and it was all very easy and really
-agreeable--the Queen in very good humour, and talkative; the Prince
-still more so, and talking very well; no form, and everybody seemed at
-their ease. In the evening we withdrew to the only room there is besides
-the dining-room, which serves for billiards, library (hardly any books
-in it), and drawing-room. The Queen and Prince and her ladies, and
-Gordon, soon went back to the dining-room, where they had a Highland
-dancing-master, who gave them lessons in reels. We (John Russell and I)
-were not admitted to this exercise, so we played at billiards. In
-process of time they came back, when there was a little talk, and soon
-after they went to bed.”[10]
-
-[Illustration: THE ROYAL BARGE.]
-
-[Illustration: OPENING OF THE LONDON COAL EXCHANGE--ARRIVAL OF THE ROYAL
-PROCESSION AT THE CUSTOM-HOUSE QUAY. (_See p. 418._)]
-
-Shortly before the holiday at Balmoral ended, the Queen and Prince
-Albert were a little mortified to find that one of their projects, or
-rather one of the Prince’s projects, was going awry. This was the
-preliminary movement which was intended to lead up to the organisation
-of a great International Industrial Exhibition. The idea of holding such
-an exhibition had occurred to the Prince in July, 1849. It seems to have
-been suggested to him by the great Frankfort Fairs of the sixteenth
-century. His Royal Highness had also noticed that one or two small
-pioneer exhibitions held by the Society of Arts, had produced good
-effects in improving the quality of English products. He argued that an
-exhibition on an international scale would produce still greater
-effects, not only on our manufactures, but on those of the world. It
-would be a tournament of Peace, in which the Captains of Industry would
-be the competitors in the lists.
-
-On the 30th of July, 1849, the Prince held a conference at Buckingham
-Palace with four confidential persons--Mr. Henry Cole, Mr. Francis
-Fuller, Mr. Scott Russell, and Mr. Thomas Cubitt, and they resolved to
-hold the exhibition if possible, not in the quadrangle of Somerset
-House, as the Government had suggested, but in Hyde Park itself. They
-also arranged to take steps to test the feeling of the industrial
-districts on the subject before going further. But in all this
-preliminary work of “sounding” influential persons, the Prince had given
-peremptory orders that his name should not be publicly mentioned.
-Unfortunately, Mr. Cole, with Hibernian effusiveness, had been tempted
-to disobey these orders at a meeting in Dublin, much to the annoyance of
-the Queen and her husband. “Praising me at meetings,” wrote his Royal
-Highness to Colonel Phipps, “looks as if I were to be advertised and
-used as a means of drawing a full house, &c.”--and if there was anything
-which was unspeakably offensive to the Queen, it was the use of her or
-her husband’s name for purposes of puffery.
-
-A few days after this disagreeable little episode (27th September) the
-Queen and her family left Balmoral for Osborne. They broke their journey
-at Howick, where they spent a night with Lord Grey, and in a few days
-after that they received tidings which filled their hearts with the
-utmost sorrow. The ever-faithful Anson, the Prince’s first Secretary,
-died, and the Queen’s household was filled with the deepest regret. The
-Queen herself wrote a touching letter to King Leopold, which shows how
-her heart bled for the widow of her most zealous servant; and Lady
-Lyttelton, writing on the 9th of November, says: “Every face shows how
-much has been felt; the Prince and Queen in floods of tears, and quite
-shut up.” All through the record of the Queen’s life, indeed, we find
-evidence of the cordial relations which bound her to those who served
-her. Their zeal indeed has been great, but it has been more than
-equalled by her sympathetic appreciation of it.
-
-Colonel Phipps succeeded Mr. Anson as Privy Purse, and Colonel
-(afterwards General) Grey as the Prince’s Secretary.
-
-When the gloom of winter began to spread over London, the loyal citizens
-were sadly distressed to learn that a projected Royal visit to the city
-would be robbed of more than half its _éclat_. The Queen had promised to
-come and open the New Coal Exchange on the 30th of October. But alas,
-her Majesty had sickened with the chicken-pox, and the ceremony was
-performed by Prince Albert alone. Yet the Londoners were not without
-compensation. This visit to the City was memorable because of the first
-public appearance in a pageant of State, of the Prince of Wales, and the
-Princess Royal. The spectacle revived picturesque memories of “the
-spacious times of Great Elizabeth,” for the Royal party proceeded to
-London by the silent highway of the river. Twenty-seven brawny watermen
-rowed the Queen’s Barge from Westminster Stairs to the City, and,
-strange to say, for once the fog and murky atmosphere of London in early
-winter cleared away, and the ceremony took place in the sunshine, under
-a sky of Italian brilliancy. The crowds covered every possible corner
-where human beings could cluster. The long lines of shipping on each
-bank of the Pool were bright with bunting, and black with swarming
-sightseers. The cheering was overpowering when the fair-haired young
-Prince was seen in the barge, and both the Royal children, though they
-went through the ordeal quietly and prettily, were obviously a little
-frightened and nervous. “The Prince,” wrote Lady Lyttelton to Mrs.
-Gladstone, “was perfect in taste and manner, putting the Prince of Wales
-forward without affectation, and very dignified and kind himself.” The
-procession on the water was gorgeous in the extreme. State liveries were
-blazing everywhere. Civic costumes of feudal times kindled many ancient
-memories; and the Lord Mayor’s barge, which led the way, was a miracle
-of garish splendour. Lady Lyttelton says that what struck her most was
-not only the cheering, but the affectionate expression on the faces of
-the people when they craned forward to get a glimpse of the little
-Prince and Princess. But of one civic speaker and his speech in the
-Rotunda her ladyship says it “was most pompous; and he is ridiculous in
-voice and manner. And his immense size, and cloak, and wig, and great
-voice addressing the Prince of Wales about his being the ‘pledge and
-promise of a long race of kings,’ looked quite absurd. Poor Princey did
-not seem at all to guess what he meant.” The Queen was rather
-sad-hearted at missing this first public reception of her children,
-which was the occasion of such an outburst of popular enthusiasm, loyal
-huzzas, and joy-bells ringing all over London town, not to mention
-thunderous salutations from the Tower guns--“enough,” says Lady
-Lyttelton, “to drive one mad.”
-
-On the 2nd of December the Royal home was turned into a house of
-mourning. On that day the good Dowager-Queen Adelaide passed away from
-among the small but appreciative circle of friends and relatives who
-admired and loved her. The Queen’s grief was deep and sincere. “Though
-we daily expected this sad event,” writes her Majesty to King Leopold,
-“yet it came so suddenly when it did come, as if she had never been ill,
-and I can hardly realise the truth now.... She was truly motherly in her
-kindness to us and our children, and it always made her happy to be with
-us and to see us!”[11]
-
-Queen Adelaide, it may be here noted, was one of the earliest of funeral
-reformers. Struck by the wastefulness and the bad taste of funereal
-pageants, she left what the Queen calls “the most affecting directions”
-for her burial, ordering that it should be conducted with the utmost
-simplicity and privacy--the only exceptional arrangement being that she
-desired her coffin to be borne by seamen, in homage to the memory of her
-husband, William IV., the Sailor-King. A simple-hearted, kindly,
-Christian lady, whose hands were ever swift in doing good--such is a
-brief abstract of the life and character of the Dowager-Queen Adelaide.
-
-[Illustration: THE CHAMBER OF REPRESENTATIVES, BRUSSELS.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-CLOUDS IN THE EAST AND ELSEWHERE.
-
- Political Wreckage--Force triumphs over Opinion--The State of
- France--Election of Prince Charles Louis Bonaparte as
- Prince-President--The Sad Plight of Italy--Palmerston’s
- Anti-Austrian Policy--Defeat of Piedmont--The Fall of Venice--Fall
- of the Roman Republic--A Cromwellian Struggle in Prussia--The
- Queen’s Partisanship--Her Prussian Sympathies--The Hungarian
- Refugees in Turkey--A Diplomatic Conflict with Russia--Opening of
- Parliament--Mr. Disraeli and Local Taxation--Parliamentary
- Reform--The Jonahs of the Cabinet--The Dispute with Greece--Don
- Pacifico’s case--Coercion of Greece--Lord Palmerston meekly accepts
- an Insult from Russia--French Intervention--A Diplomatic Conflict
- in France--Recall of the French Ambassador--False Statements in
- Parliament--The Queen’s Indignation--The Don Pacifico Debate--The
- _Civis Romanus sum_ Doctrine--Palmerston’s Victory--The West
- African Slave Trade.
-
-
-When the year 1850 opened the counter-revolution had been accomplished.
-Much political and social wreckage disfigured the Continent, but the
-tempest which had produced it was over. What remained was an uneasy
-after-swell agitating the restless ocean of discontent. Force had, in
-fact, triumphed over opinion, and Europe was at last tranquil.
-
-In France, after Louis Philippe fell, the country was left a prey to
-four factions or parties. One demanded an absolute monarchy; another
-demanded a parliamentary monarchy; a third demanded a military empire,
-based on universal suffrage; a fourth demanded a republic. The partisans
-of the republic triumphed in the first instance. But it fell, a victim
-to the voracity of its own children. The Government of Lamartine was
-poetic and Utopian,
-
-[Illustration: LOUIS KOSSUTH (1850).]
-
-and its experiment of creating national workshops in which the workers
-were to be paid by the State, was not only fantastic but fatal. The
-State found it had no work to give. It found it had no money to spend in
-wages; and the artisans of the national establishments were accordingly
-advised to join the army. This disastrous adventure in Socialism was
-followed by another insurrection in Paris--in which, by the way, the
-Archbishop of Paris and thousands of less eminent persons were slain.
-What Prince Bismarck would call the “psychological moment” for the
-interposition of a clever adventurer with a suggestion of compromise had
-manifestly arrived. Accordingly, the advent of Prince Charles Louis
-Bonaparte was hailed with a sense of relief by all parties--wearied to
-despair by the futile conflicts of factions. Although M. Grévy vainly
-endeavoured by a motion in the Chamber to procure the proscription of
-the Prince, his Highness was elected President of the Republic on the
-10th of December, 1848, by five and a half million out of seven and a
-half million votes. He took the oath to preserve the Republic, without
-compunction. But when the year 1850 opened, he was busily plotting for
-its destruction, and manufacturing failure for its institutions.
-
-The plight of Italy was a sad one. Austria had successfully met the
-attempt to seize her Italian provinces. She had crushed Piedmont so
-completely that, in 1849, there was danger lest she might be tempted to
-invade that State, and thus provoke the interference of Republican
-France. Lord Palmerston accordingly endeavoured to mediate between
-Austria and Piedmont. The idea of mediation was chimerical, for Austria,
-having made heavy sacrifices to hold her Cisalpine territories, and
-having succeeded in doing so by force, could hardly be expected to
-accept with equanimity Lord Palmerston’s favourite dogma, that the
-Italian provinces of Austria were to her not a source of strength, but
-of weakness. Austria repudiated all proposals for a conference of
-mediation, unless they were limited to discuss what Piedmont owed her as
-an indemnity, and the guarantees which could be given against
-Piedmontese turbulence. Diplomacy had well-nigh exhausted its resources
-in endeavouring to bring Austria to submit the points at issue to a
-Congress at Brussels, when the whole situation was suddenly changed.
-Joseph Mazzini and his school, convinced that Austria was checked by
-France and England, overthrew the Governments of Florence and Rome,
-which were under Austrian tutelage. Revolution headed by a monarch had
-failed. Its victory, argued Mazzini, under Republican leadership, would
-be a signal triumph for the Republican idea. The success of Mazzini and
-his followers led to the formation of a violent anti-Austrian Ministry
-in Piedmont.
-
-But again Austria triumphed. Piedmont was crushed at Novara on the 23rd
-of March, 1849. Venice was on the eve of surrender, and when the Pope,
-who had fled to Gaeta, appealed to the Catholic Powers for aid, Austria
-was thus quite free to help him. The prospect of Austria bringing
-Central as well as North Italy under her sway alarmed France, and
-accordingly the Republican Government in Paris sent an army under
-Oudinot, which suppressed the Republican Government at Rome. The Grand
-Duke of Tuscany was restored, the revolution in the Sicilies quenched in
-blood, and the dream of Italian independence dissipated. Nor was this
-the only triumph of Absolutism under Austria. The revolution in Hungary
-was suppressed, but not till Russia came to the assistance of Austria.
-
-In Prussia, too, the monarchy, after a Cromwellian struggle with a
-factious Parliament, had completely restored its authority, and to
-Prussia the smaller German States now began to turn for leadership in
-consolidating themselves into a German Empire. Unhappily the King of
-Prussia failed to respond to this feeling when Austria was struggling
-with the revolution in Italy. At the beginning of 1850 he accordingly
-found the feeling in favour of unifying Germany opposed by three great
-Powers--France, Russia, and Austria, the last, indeed, claiming, on
-behalf of the Archduke John, to be the executive head and heir of the
-defunct German Confederation of 1815. By the Constitution of Kremsir,
-Austria had consolidated her possessions--German, Magyar, Sclavonic, and
-Italian--into one federal State, and, in a sense, she had thereby
-withdrawn from the German Confederation. Her policy of obstructing
-consolidation in disintegrated Germany was therefore alike ungenerous
-and unjust.
-
-Through this maze of difficulty the Queen and Prince Albert steered a
-clear course. They were both partisans--one might say strong and zealous
-partisans--of Teutonic consolidation under Prussia. Austria, they held,
-had played for her own hand, and, by adopting Schwarzenberg’s policy of
-consolidating her dominions in purely Austrian interests, she had
-abandoned her claim to guide the destinies of the smaller German States,
-in purely German interests. But, however strongly the Queen felt on this
-point, her influence was used to moderate the extravagant anti-Austrian
-antipathies of Lord Palmerston, and it largely contributed to keep the
-country out of war. At last, however, a cloud rose in the East which
-threatened us with calamity.
-
-When Austria, by summoning to her aid the armed hordes of Russia,
-stamped out the movement for Hungarian independence, several Hungarian
-and Polish patriots--Kossuth, Ban, and others--fled to Turkey. Austria
-and Russia demanded their extradition. The Sultan refused to surrender
-the refugees, and De Titoff and Stürmer, Russian and Austrian
-ambassadors, suspended diplomatic relations with the Porte. The Sultan
-appealed to Britain and France against this outrageous violation of the
-unity of nations. Britain remonstrated in firm but courteous language,
-and Austria and Russia both withdrew their demands, but not before the
-British fleet had moved within the forbidden limits of the Dardanelles,
-in anticipation of a refusal. Lord Palmerston’s apology for thus
-violating the treaty of 1841 was that the fleet had been driven into
-forbidden waters by “stress of weather.” As there was notoriously no
-“stress of weather,” this explanation merely irritated the Czar, and
-planted in his heart the germ of that fierce hatred of England, which
-culminated in the Crimean War.
-
-Parliament was opened on the 31st of January, 1850, by Commission, and,
-as had been anticipated, the Protectionists made, not an attack, but
-rather a reconnoissance in force against the Government. During the
-recess they had gone through the country painting the darkest pictures
-of the condition of England. According to their speeches, one would have
-imagined that another famine had smitten the nation; and for all this
-pessimism there was but one justification. No doubt everybody who
-depended on the soil for a livelihood was suffering from distress.
-Prices had fallen, and farmers had not taken kindly to the new order of
-things. But the masses of the people, especially in industrial centres,
-were enjoying greater comfort than ever. The revenue was showing signs
-of buoyancy; the foreign trade of the
-
-[Illustration: THE WHITE DRAWING-ROOM, WINDSOR CASTLE.]
-
-country had increased, and pauperism had diminished. All these cheering
-facts were concealed from the public by the Conservative agitators, who
-concentrated attention on one point--the admitted and deplorable
-distress of the landed interest. The real desire of the Tory party at
-this time was to turn out the Government and restore Protection. The
-Duke of Richmond’s indiscreet speech on the Address in the House of
-Lords proves that. But, conscious of the difficulty of suddenly
-upsetting the fiscal system which was based on Free Trade, they
-concealed their real purpose. Mr. Disraeli therefore supported a
-Protectionist amendment to the Address in reply to the Queen’s Speech,
-on the ground that the landed interests were entitled to a certain
-amount of relief from public burdens, in compensation for the loss of
-Protection. On the 19th of February, Mr. Disraeli had to show his hand.
-He then moved for a committee to revise the Poor Law so as to mitigate
-distress among the agricultural class. This debate is worth noticing,
-because it may be said to have definitely originated the perennial
-movement for local taxation reform, which is always an object of
-enthusiasm to what may be called the country party, when out of office.
-Mr. Disraeli’s idea was to transfer from local rates to the Imperial
-Treasury (1), Poor Law establishment charges; (2), rates which had
-nothing to do with the relief of the poor, and were only raised by
-
-[Illustration: THE PIRÆUS, ATHENS.]
-
-Poor Law machinery as a matter of convenience--such as rates for
-registration of births, deaths, and marriages, for getting up jury
-lists, and the like; and (3), the rate for supporting the casual poor.
-His case was not decided on its merits. Members did not look to what was
-in the motion, but to what was behind it, namely, the restoration of
-Protection, or an increase in Income Tax to provide funds for the relief
-of local burdens. Sir James Graham’s frank admission, as a landlord,
-that relief in the rate would be swallowed by an increase in the rents,
-and that it was the landlord and not the tenant who would profit,
-determined many, who did not deny the abstract justice of Mr. Disraeli’s
-contention, to vote against him. The sensational incident in the debate
-was the speech of Mr. Gladstone, who supported Mr. Disraeli against his
-own leaders. In fact, he replied to Sir James Graham. Despite the
-support of Peel, the Government, instead of having a majority of forty,
-as they expected, were saved from defeat only by a majority of twenty.
-From that day till now a clever debater, by a skilful motion in favour
-of relief of local taxation, has always been able to weaken the majority
-of the strongest of Ministries. Local taxation is the vulnerable point
-of Governments, and it is the one subject with which they all seem
-afraid to deal in a bold and comprehensive spirit. All they do is to
-denounce the evil in Opposition, and palliate its existence when in
-Power.
-
-The agitation for Parliamentary Reform had increased. Some of the
-Peelites, notably Sir J. Graham, had warned Lord John Russell that they
-were in favour of an extension of the franchise, and Lord John himself
-had abandoned the doctrine of finality. Mr. Hume, therefore, brought
-forward his annual motion on the 28th of February, hinting plainly that
-he would have no objection to extend its scope so as to include female
-franchise, and the substitution of an elective for a hereditary House of
-Lords. It was quite certain that Lord John Russell was by this time of
-opinion that some safe concessions might be made to the Radicals.
-Several of his colleagues, however--_e.g._, Mr. Labouchere--were of a
-different opinion, and it is accordingly right to say that those who
-denounced Lord John’s “apostasy,” when he opposed Mr. Hume, were
-somewhat unfair. Had the Prime Minister produced a Reform Bill this
-Session, every question which it might be possible to deal with would
-have been put aside. But as he was not likely to carry his own
-colleagues with him in advocating reform, not only would this sacrifice
-have been made in vain, but a Government which, in the existing state of
-parties, was indispensable to the nation, would have fallen. Mr. Hume
-was beaten by a vote of 242 against 96, though the Prime Minister’s
-argument against him was rather a plea for delay, than a defiant “_Non
-possumus_.”
-
-Writing on the 10th of February, Mr. Greville says in his Journal, “The
-brightness of the Ministerial prospect was very soon clouded over, and
-last week their disasters began. There was first of all the Greek
-affair, and then the case of the Ceylon witnesses--matters affecting
-Lord Palmerston and Lord Grey”--the Jonahs of the Cabinet. “The Greek
-case,” continues Mr. Greville, “will probably be settled, thanks to
-French mediation, but it was a bad and discreditable affair, and has
-done more harm to Palmerston than any of his greater enormities. The
-other Ministers are extremely annoyed at it, and at the sensation it has
-produced.” The Greek case was briefly this: Mr. Finlay, a British
-subject in Athens, alleged that King Otho had enclosed a bit of his land
-in the Royal Garden, and demanded compensation. The King offered him the
-same compensation that had been accepted as fair by other owners of
-enclosed land in Mr. Finlay’s position. This Mr. Finlay refused, and he
-demanded £1,500 for the land which, it was admitted, he had bought for
-£10. Don Pacifico, a Portuguese Jew from Gibraltar, sought damages for
-the pillage of his house by the Athenian mob. He claimed £31,534. The
-value of his furniture was shown to be £2,181. The balance was supposed
-to represent the value of documents proving that he had a claim on the
-Portuguese Government for £27,000. Mr. Finlay and Don Pacifico had not
-raised their claims in the ordinary law courts, and to the amazement of
-everybody, Lord Palmerston proposed to employ the mailed might of
-England to collect their bad debts. He peremptorily ordered the Greek
-Government to pay these exaggerated claims, on pain of inflicting on
-Greece a blockade and reprisals within twenty-four hours. On the 18th of
-January, Admiral Parker, with the Mediterranean Fleet, blockaded the
-Piræus--for, contrary to Lord Palmerston’s expectations, Greece refused
-to comply with his demands. The Greek Government appealed for protection
-to France and Russia--whose Governments being with that of Britain joint
-guarantors for the independence of Greece, were justly annoyed that
-their good offices had not been invoked by Lord Palmerston. Count
-Nesselrode, burning to avenge the defeat of the Czar over the question
-of the Hungarian refugees in Turkey, sent a remonstrance to Lord
-Palmerston, which was couched in the language of bitter contempt and
-studied insolence. The French Government, on the other hand, pretending
-that our agent in Athens had blundered, courteously offered to extricate
-Lord Palmerston from his difficulties by using the influence of France,
-to compose the dispute with Greece. On the 12th of February Lord
-Palmerston ordered the British Envoy to inform Admiral Parker that he
-must suspend coercive operations. It was not till the 2nd of March that
-these instructions arrived, and in the interval the Admiral had been
-vigorously coercing the Greeks. France was naturally irritated at this
-untoward incident, all the more that Lord Palmerston’s explanation of
-the delay was deemed unsatisfactory. Ultimately, the matter was settled
-on Greece agreeing to pay Mr. Wyse, the British Minister, £8,500 to be
-distributed by him as he thought just among the claimants--the value of
-Don Pacifico’s lost vouchers against the Portuguese Government to be
-determined by arbitration.
-
-This compromise, however, was made by negotiation in London. A French
-steamer conveyed the purport of it to Mr. Wyse, the British Envoy at
-Athens, on the 24th of April. He, however, said that he had no
-instructions from his Government to countermand his original orders,
-which were to renew coercion if the French Envoy at Athens could not
-induce the Greeks to submit. Coercion was therefore again applied, and
-the Greek Government on the 27th submitted to Mr. Wyse’s demands. These
-were more onerous in some respects than the terms agreed on by the
-London Convention, and Lord Palmerston persisted in adhering to the
-Athenian arrangement. M. Gros at Athens, finding he could not persuade
-Mr. Wyse to act on the London Convention, had on the 21st of April
-officially intimated that his action as mediator was ended. This, argued
-Lord Palmerston coolly, left the British Envoy--in the absence of
-instructions from England--free to renew coercion, and to enter into the
-Athenian arrangement. Palmerston, in other words, claimed the right to
-take advantage of his own delay, in notifying to Mr. Wyse the result of
-the London Convention, to refuse to act on the finding of that
-Convention. It is but fair to say that the Queen was quite as indignant
-as the Government of France, at Lord Palmerston’s rude and provocative
-conduct. Lord John Russell intimated to her the fact that the French
-Government had met the affront with which Lord Palmerston had rewarded
-their efforts to extricate him from the effect of his own blunder, by
-recalling M. Drouyn de Lhuys. Her Majesty promptly directed her husband,
-who acted as her confidential secretary, to send the Prime Minister one
-of those curt, cutting notes, which invariably indicate her displeasure.
-
- “MY DEAR LORD JOHN,--Both the Queen and myself are exceedingly
- sorry at the news your letter contained. We are not surprised,
- however, that Lord Palmerston’s mode of doing business should not
- be borne by the susceptible French Government with the same good
- humour and forbearance as by his colleagues.
-
- “Ever yours truly,
-
- “ALBERT.
-
- “Buckingham Palace, 15th May, 1850.”[12]
-
-The view which the Queen took was the fair and common-sense one, namely,
-that we should act on the London Convention. The Convention of London
-which we made with France gave us certain terms. By an accident, for
-which Palmerston was responsible, Mr. Wyse at Athens had extorted better
-ones for us at Athens. It was not high policy, but sharp practice; it
-was not in the spirit of enlightened diplomacy, but in the spirit of the
-meanest attorneydom, that any claim to benefit by the “accident” which
-had given better terms to us at Athens than at London, was pressed by
-Lord Palmerston.
-
-But the Queen’s troubles did not end here. Her birthday was celebrated
-on the 15th of May, and the absence of the French and Russian
-Ambassadors from the usual Foreign Office dinner on that occasion,
-naturally roused suspicion. It was not known that the French
-representative had been recalled, and that France and England were in
-open diplomatic conflict. What was the meaning of the absence of these
-ambassadors? asked Society at the great rout at Devonshire House on the
-night of the 19th. Questions to this effect were put to Ministers in
-both Houses. Lord Lansdowne said that the departure of M. Drouyn de
-Lhuys was purely accidental; and Lord Palmerston had the effrontery to
-declare, in reply to Mr. Milner Gibson, that M. de Lhuys had merely gone
-to Paris as a medium of communication between the two Governments. But
-the _Times_ reported in due course that General de la Hitte, Minister of
-War, had intimated from the tribune of the French Assembly that, because
-Lord Palmerston’s explanations in regard to points at issue between the
-two Governments were not such as France had a right to expect, “the
-President had ordered General de la Hitte to recall their Ambassador
-from London.” Nothing could exceed the mortification of the Queen when
-she was informed of the almost simultaneous publication of these
-contradictory official statements. Her detestation of equivocal and
-shuffling Ministerial explanations has long passed into a proverb. Her
-Majesty’s theory, in fact, is that the Minister is for the time the
-trustee of the honour of the Crown, and that, especially in foreign
-countries, where the relation between the British Sovereign and her
-Ministers is ill understood, the Crown is held personally responsible
-for what the Minister says, in all matters affecting
-
-[Illustration: GRAND ENTRANCE, WESTMINSTER PALACE.]
-
-the external relations of the kingdom. In plain English, the Queen has
-always held that if a Minister tells a lie in Parliament, nine people
-out of ten on the Continent will suspect that she has ordered or induced
-him to tell it. Hence her indignation on reading Lord Palmerston’s reply
-to Mr. Milner Gibson’s question was tinged with a feeling of personal
-humiliation and shame. Public opinion was similarly excited when the
-newspapers were studied, and fuller questions were immediately put to
-Lord Lansdowne and Lord John Russell. They gave evasive and
-prevaricating answers, attempting to explain away the French
-Ambassador’s letter of recall, much to the disgust of all parties in
-Parliament. The tide of anger rose higher every day that the scandal was
-discussed. Lord John Russell told his brother, the Duke of Bedford, that
-Ministers must defend Palmerston on this occasion, but, after the
-dispute came to an end, he would have Palmerston dismissed from the
-Foreign Office. “He is,” writes Mr. Greville on the 19th of May, “to see
-the Queen on Tuesday, who will of course be boiling over with
-indignation;” for by this time Baron Brunnow, the Russian Ambassador,
-had warned Lord John that he, too, must ask to be relieved from his
-post, as “it was impossible for him to stay here to be on bad terms with
-Palmerston.”
-
-The question has often been asked, Why did English statesmen get up in
-both Houses of Parliament and tell a series of falsehoods which they
-knew must be discovered in forty-eight hours by official refutation from
-France? The fact is, Lord Palmerston had deceived his colleagues. He
-assured them that M. de Lhuys had taken back to Paris explanations so
-conciliatory, that his letter of recall would be quietly cancelled.
-Assured by Palmerston that he had made the cancelling of the recall a
-certainty, Lord Lansdowne and Lord John Russell assumed that the letter
-of recall was suppressed, and they both answered as if it never had
-existed. On the 25th of May, Mr. Greville writes:--“The morning before
-yesterday the Duke of Bedford came here again. He had seen Lord John
-since, and heard what passed with the Queen. She was full of this
-affair, and again urged all her objections to Lord Palmerston. This time
-she found Lord John better disposed than heretofore, and he is certainly
-revolving in his mind how the thing can be done. He does not by any
-means contemplate going out himself, or breaking up the Government. What
-he looks to is this, that the Queen should take the initiative, and urge
-Palmerston’s removal from the Foreign Office. She is quite ready to do
-this as soon as she is assured of her wishes being attended to.”[13]
-
-Lord John Russell screwed up his courage to the point of contemplating
-the removal of Lord Palmerston from the Foreign Office to some other
-department of State, he himself undertaking the duties of Foreign
-Secretary along with those of the Premiership. Such a combination is
-never a wise one. Even in recent times, when Lord Salisbury attempted to
-unite in his own person the two offices, the strain was found to be
-greater than his strength could bear; and in the case of Lord John,
-whose health was at this time capricious and precarious, it was perhaps
-as well that at the eleventh hour he shrank from proposing the change to
-Lord Palmerston. Lord John has been accused of lack of courage in
-connection with this affair. The truth is, that a perverted chivalry
-prompted him to stand by Lord Palmerston. The Greek affair was hardly
-defensible. But it was bruited about that the Opposition, under cover of
-condemning Lord Palmerston in that special case, meant to direct a
-severe attack on the foreign policy of the Government as a whole. Lord
-Palmerston’s colleagues had, however, permitted themselves not only to
-be identified with that policy, but had thought fit to defend every
-blunder he had made in carrying it out. Lord John Russell, then, cannot
-be blamed for considering that to desert the Foreign Secretary on the
-Greek Question, would have been tantamount to making him the scapegoat
-of the Cabinet. Hence, in spite of the Queen’s strong feeling in the
-matter, it was agreed that Palmerston should not be “thrown over.”
-
-After much fencing between the leaders of the two parties, the first of
-the attacks, which led to a series of debates almost unparalleled in our
-history as displays of sustained Parliamentary eloquence, was made in
-the House of Lords on the 17th of June. Lord Stanley moved a vote of
-censure on the Ministry for their coercive measures in Greece,
-affirming, however, the general proposition that it was the right and
-duty of the Government to secure to British subjects in foreign States,
-the full protection of the laws of those States. The scene was a
-memorable one. The House was crowded in every part, and the conflict
-began with an amusing farce. The Peeress’s Gallery was crammed to
-overflowing, and when Lady Melbourne and Lady Newport, under Lord
-Brougham’s escort, went to their places, they found them filled, and
-were ignominiously turned away. Brougham, however, espied Bunsen, the
-Prussian Minister, in the gallery, and requested him to retire to his
-proper seat in the Ambassadors’ quarter, but he refused. Then Brougham
-went down to his own place, and avenged himself on Bunsen by calling the
-attention of their lordships to the fact that there was “a stranger in
-the Peeress’s Gallery,” adding, “if he does not come down, I shall move
-your lordships to enforce the order of the House. It is the more
-intolerable as he has a place assigned to him in another part, and he is
-now keeping the room of _two Peeresses_.” As Bunsen was notoriously a
-fat, overgrown man, Brougham’s malicious personality was received with
-shouts of laughter. But it had no effect on the stolid Prussian, who
-kept his seat till Sir Augustus Clifford, Usher of the Black Rod, made
-him retire.[14]
-
-The issue before the House was simple enough. (1), Lord Palmerston had
-agreed with M. Drouyn de Lhuys that if the terms which M. Gros, the
-French Envoy at Athens, proposed on behalf of Greece were rejected by
-Mr. Wyse, the British Envoy, coercion should not be again applied
-without special orders from Britain. But if M. Gros threw up his office
-of mediator because the Greeks declined to let him offer fair terms,
-then of course Mr. Wyse was to
-
-[Illustration: MR. (AFTERWARDS SIR ALEXANDER) COCKBURN.]
-
-resort to coercion without further instructions. (2), M. Drouyn de Lhuys
-and Lord Palmerston in London agreed on a settlement, the terms of which
-were less onerous than those demanded by Mr. Wyse. (3), Though this was
-informally communicated by the French to Mr. Wyse, he rejected the terms
-which M. Gros offered on behalf of Greece, contending that he had no
-instructions from Lord Palmerston as to the adoption of any other
-course. (4), M. Gros then dropped the negotiations. Mr. Wyse, again
-arguing that he was without instructions, ordered coercion to be
-applied, upon which the Greek Government yielded. The pith of the
-dispute centred in one point. Did Palmerston or did he not send Mr. Wyse
-instructions as to the arrangement made in London with M. Drouyn de
-Lhuys? The French said that their Envoy abandoned negotiations because
-Mr. Wyse was unreasonable. Lord Palmerston contended that Mr. Wyse was
-of opinion that M. Gros had dropped mediation because the
-
-[Illustration: CAPE TOWN.]
-
-Greeks were unreasonable, and that therefore, in terms of the
-arrangement made in London, Mr. Wyse was justified in resorting to
-coercion without further instructions. Mr. Wyse may have been mistaken
-in supposing that M. Gros retired from the negotiations in the
-circumstances which, according to the London Convention, would have
-justified a resort to coercion without further reference to Lord
-Palmerston. If that were the case, the Government had a good defence;
-for it would have been unfair to censure them for Mr. Wyse’s blunder.
-But was it the case? How could Mr. Wyse have blundered in interpreting
-the conditions of the London Convention, if no instructions in
-accordance with that Convention had been sent to him? The complaint was
-that the Foreign Secretary had neglected to send these instructions, and
-a close and careful examination of Palmerston’s own Blue-book, fails to
-bring to light the slightest proof that they ever were sent. Therefore
-it was clear (1), that England had broken a binding diplomatic compact
-with France, and (2), that this breach of faith had enabled Mr. Wyse at
-Athens to extort by force from a small, weak Power more onerous terms
-than the English Government had agreed with France to accept in London.
-The House of Lords took this view of the matter, and when the debate
-ended, in the grey dawn of a summer’s morning, it was found on division
-that there was a majority of 37 against the Government.
-
-Some members of the Cabinet were for resignation. Many friends of the
-Government thought that Palmerston should personally offer the Queen his
-resignation, begging her not to accept that of his colleagues if they
-tendered theirs. But the Foreign Secretary made no offer to resign, and
-at first the Cabinet resolved to take no more notice of the vote of
-censure in the Upper House. Ultimately, they found that they must notice
-it, and as their Foreign Policy as a whole was impugned, they decided
-not to abandon the Foreign Secretary. On the 20th of June, Lord John
-Russell explained why he would not resign. He gave two reasons--one good
-and the other bad,--the first being one of which the Queen approved. It
-was that a change of Government, in consequence of a resolution of the
-House of Lords, would be unconstitutional, because, in his opinion, it
-might be dangerous even to the House of Lords to lay upon it the
-responsibility of controlling her Majesty’s Executive. Two precedents,
-one a hundred years old, and one taken from 1833, when the Peers, on the
-motion of the Duke of Wellington, censured Lord Grey’s Foreign Policy in
-Portugal, were ingeniously cited by Lord John Russell in support of this
-constitutional doctrine. But his second reason was characteristically
-Palmerstonian. He said that the House of Lords had laid it down, that it
-was the duty of the British Government to see that British subjects in
-Foreign States got full protection from the laws of those States. That
-was a _limitation_ of duty which Lord John Russell refused to recognise,
-because, said he, a Foreign State might make bad laws, and it would be
-the duty of England to prevent her subjects from being injured by those
-laws. No principle is more clearly established in international law than
-this--that a Sovereign State has an absolute right to dictate the terms
-on which any alien shall abide on its soil.[15] If the alien does not
-like the law of the Foreign State, he has no business to call on his own
-countrymen to defend him by force of arms in refusing to obey it, seeing
-that it was not at their request or in their interest, but of his own
-free will, and in pursuit of his own fortune, he went to live or traffic
-abroad. In fact, to lay it down that England might levy war on any
-country, whose laws Englishmen residing in that country considered
-inequitable, was tantamount to proclaiming her _hostis humani generis_.
-Yet such was the doctrine which the House of Commons, in spite of the
-protests of the Tories, of Radicals like Mr. Cobden and Mr. Bright, and
-Peelites like Sir Robert Peel and Mr. Gladstone, cheerfully accepted
-from the Whigs at this period. The only thing that can be said in its
-defence is that it is a doctrine which the House has never dared to
-apply to a stronger Power than Greece--never to a Power like Russia,
-which deports English Jews, nor like Germany, which deports English
-residents, personally obnoxious to Prince Bismarck, in the most
-arbitrary manner. It is doubtful if it would even dare to apply it to an
-autonomous colony like Victoria, had her Government refused, as was
-threatened, to permit the Irish informer, James Carey, to reside within
-her frontier.
-
-Having decided to defy the House of Lords, the Government hit on an
-ingenious plan for neutralising the vote of censure. They put up Mr.
-Roebuck on the 21st of June to move a vote of confidence in them not
-touching the Greek dispute, but approving generally of their Foreign
-Policy as one likely “to preserve untarnished the honour and dignity of
-this country.” The debate, which lasted five days, was a veritable
-tournament of Titans. On both sides speeches were made that touch the
-highest point to which Parliamentary eloquence can reach. Mr. Cockburn,
-afterwards Lord Chief Justice, delivered an oration by which, at one
-bound, he leapt into the first rank of British orators. Peel delivered
-the last speech he was fated to make in the great assembly, on which for
-years he had played with the easy mastery of a musician on his favourite
-instrument. Palmerston himself spoke for four hours and a quarter with
-more than his usual dash and intrepidity, and with surprising moderation
-and good taste--basing his case virtually on the application of the
-_civis Romanus sum_ doctrine to British Foreign Policy. This was the
-point in it which Mr. Gladstone demolished in a passionate protest, that
-may be said to have become classical. But in the end the Government
-triumphed by a majority of 46! Yet, on the face of the facts, they had
-absolutely no case. Why, then, were they victorious? For many reasons.
-In the then divided state of parties, the Government was felt to be the
-only possible Government. Palmerston, by adroitly spreading the report
-that the attack on
-
-[Illustration: MR. GLADSTONE (1855).]
-
-him was really fomented by the agents of the despotic Powers, whose
-policy he had persistently opposed, won strong support from the
-Radicals. The Whigs felt that as the Foreign Policy of the Government as
-a whole was attacked, they were bound to defend the Ministry, quite
-irrespective of Palmerston’s possibly objectionable method of carrying
-out that policy. Moreover, it was undoubtedly a weak point in the
-tactics of the Opposition, that they did not venture to submit in the
-House of Commons, the motion of censure which they had carried in the
-House of Lords. But though Lord Palmerston’s triumph was complete, the
-Queen continued to be dissatisfied
-
-[Illustration: WINDSOR CASTLE: VIEW FROM THE QUADRANGLE.]
-
-with his reckless manner of managing the Foreign Office. Pressure was
-put on him by the concurrence of Lord John Russell, the Duke of Bedford,
-Lord Lansdowne, and Lord Clarendon to take another department, which,
-however, he refused to do. For the time--confident in his popularity--he
-was able to hold his position, but ere a year had elapsed her Majesty’s
-warnings were fulfilled, and Lord John was simply compelled to force him
-to retire.[16] It must be here told how this whole controversy ended.
-Before the debate closed, it was announced that we had accepted, with
-some trifling modifications in detail, the French proposals made on
-behalf of Greece. The demands of the claimants in support of whom we had
-been brought to the brink of war with France, were finally assessed at
-£10,000--about one-thirtieth part of the sum they originally asked!
-
-No other question of Foreign Policy agitated the House of Commons in
-1850, save Mr. Hutt’s proposal to withdraw the British war-ships engaged
-in suppressing the West African slave trade. The cost of the squadron
-had made its maintenance unpopular even with Liberals, and when Lord
-John Russell threatened to stake the existence of his Ministry on it,
-the Queen was distressed to learn that there was every prospect of his
-being defeated, at a time when a change of Government would have
-produced the utmost confusion. A meeting of the Liberal Party was
-convened by the Prime Minister at Downing Street, and pressure, which
-they hardly dared to resist, induced the malcontents to support the
-Government. Mr. Hutt’s motion was lost, many Ministerialists, however,
-complaining bitterly that the Prime Minister had concussed them into
-voting against their convictions.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-SOME EPOCH-MARKING LEGISLATION.
-
- The Colonies and Party Government--The Movement for Autonomy--Lord
- John Russell’s Colonial Bill--Tory Opposition to Colonial
- Federation--Mr. Adderley’s Plan--Mr. Gladstone’s Scheme for
- Colonial Church Courts--The Colonial Bills Mangled in the House of
- Lords--More English Doles for Ireland--An Irish Reform Bill--Lord
- John Russell Proposes to Abolish the Lord Lieutenancy--The Queen’s
- Irish Policy--Her offer to Establish a Royal Residence in
- Ireland--The Bungled Budget--The Demand for Retrenchment--The
- Tories Insist on a Reduction of Official Salaries--Lord John
- Russell’s Commission on Establishments--The Queen and the
- Church--The Ecclesiastical Appeals Bill--The “Gorham Case”--Death
- of Peel--The Queen’s Sorrow--A Nation in Mourning--Peel’s Character
- and Career--The Queen’s Alarm about Prince Albert’s Health--The
- Queen at Work--The Queen’s Reading-Lamp.
-
-
-Far more interesting, however, was the Colonial legislation of the
-Government in 1850, which indeed might be termed epoch-marking. The
-Queen had at the opening of the Session indicated in her Speech from the
-Throne that a measure extending Constitutional government to the
-Colonies would be introduced. It was known that she was personally of
-opinion that the Colonies were giving promise of a growth so rapid, that
-it would be impossible for any length of time to hold them in the
-leading-strings of the Colonial Office. The incessant attacks which had
-been made on Lord Grey in Parliament and in the Press merely served to
-confirm the Queen in this opinion. It was, therefore, with great
-satisfaction that she discovered that men of light and leading on both
-sides of the House of Commons were so far agreed on the subject, that it
-was deemed practicable by Lord John Russell to minimise the friction
-between the Colonies and the Colonial Office, by conceding to the
-Colonists large powers of representative self-government. Lord John
-Russell explained the scheme which embodied these ideas on the 8th of
-February. To the Cape Colony he granted two Chambers. The first was
-representative, and elected under a property qualification. The second,
-or Legislative Council, was to be elected by persons with a higher
-property qualification, who had been named by the Crown or municipal
-bodies for magisterial and municipal offices as individuals of weight
-and influence. For Australia he proposed a system under which there
-should be only one Legislative Council, two-thirds elected by the
-people, and one-third named by the Governor, on the pattern of the
-system adopted by New South Wales, but with power to the Colonists to
-change to the bi-cameral or two-Chamber system if they preferred it.
-Provision was made for constituting, on petition of any two Colonies, a
-Federal Assembly representing all the Colonial Legislatures, to frame a
-common tariff, or initiate a common policy for dealing with waste lands.
-It was in introducing this great scheme that Lord John Russell said
-that, whilst reserving questions of military defence, the central idea
-of his Colonial policy was this: political freedom can be best promoted
-in the Colonies by acting on the general rule, that while the Imperial
-Government must be their representative in all foreign relations, it
-will interfere in their domestic affairs no further than may be
-manifestly necessary to prevent a conflict in the State itself.
-
-By finally and formally establishing this principle, the Government of
-the Queen did all that was humanly possible to repair the wrong done to
-England and the English people by her grandfather, George III., who
-flung away, not a crown, as did James II., but a virgin continent, to
-gratify an absolutist prejudice.
-
-The Bill passed the House of Commons, though the scheme was open to
-objection. Had it not been open to objection, it would have been a
-perfect Bill, “that faultless monster,” to adapt Pope’s line, “which the
-world ne’er saw.” On the whole, however, it was wonderfully well
-received. Its opponents objected mainly to the adoption of the
-uni-cameral instead of the bi-cameral system, namely, that of governing
-by one instead of by two Legislative Assemblies. Why, it was asked,
-should Australia be limited to one Legislative Assembly when the Cape
-was permitted to have two? Another objection was to the introduction of
-a Federative Assembly, which was opposed bitterly as a novelty even by
-Tory politicians like Mr. Disraeli, who in after-years strongly
-advocated Imperial Federation. Another more valid objection urged by
-Radicals like Sir W. Molesworth, was that the scheme gave the Colonial
-Office too much power. There was good sense in his contention, supported
-by Tories like Mr. Adderley (afterwards Lord Norton), that the Colonial
-Parliament should not only be vested with all legislative powers which
-were _not_ Imperial, but that this should be done by mentioning the
-powers that _were_ Imperial, and leaving everything not mentioned in
-that category, to be considered as Colonial. This point gave rise to an
-able and thoughtful debate on the report of the Bill after it emerged
-from
-
-[Illustration: VIEW IN PHŒNIX PARK, DUBLIN.]
-
-Committee, in which it may be interesting to state that Mr. Gladstone
-delivered a speech in support of the Tory-Radical opposition, which may
-be said to contain the germs of the principle on which his Irish Home
-Rule Bill of 1886 was based. On the other hand, to Mr. Gladstone must be
-credited the oddest and most ridiculous of all the amendments to the
-measure. His ecclesiasticism induced him to propose that in every Colony
-the Church of England be authorised to form a synod independent of the
-Imperial or Colonial Government, and empowered to make laws binding on
-Anglican Colonists. The idea of empowering the Anglican Church courts in
-our free Colonies to make regulations, quite independently of the Crown
-or the Colony, which were to be not only binding _in foro conscientiæ_,
-but were also to have the force of law, in Royal and Colonial courts,
-was not only mediæval, but monstrous. Yet it was only rejected by 187 to
-182. Perhaps this accounted for what was by far the most trenchant
-speech made in opposition to the Bill, that of the Bishop of Oxford in
-the House of Lords, though even he did not venture to reject the
-measure, his proposal being merely to refer
-
-[Illustration: MR. HORSMAN.]
-
-it to a Committee. It was a speech that would have defeated the
-Government, but for Lord Grey’s conciliatory offer to go on with the
-Bill even if the House struck out the clause enabling Colonial
-Legislatures to alter their constitution, and the clause enabling the
-Colonists to form a Federative Assembly. This won for the Government a
-majority of 13. As the clause sanctioning a Federative Assembly was
-carried in the Lords, against the bitter opposition of the Tories, only
-by a majority of one, it was eventually abandoned. They further marred
-the Bill by conferring exceptional political privileges on wealthy
-squatters, and by prohibiting any Legislative Chamber from eliminating
-its non-elective element. The interesting thing to notice is how the
-Tory Party of the day completely stamped out the germ of that Imperial
-policy of Colonial confederation which Lord John Russell and Lord Grey
-so wisely strove to plant. As “amended” by the Lords, the Bill passed
-into law, much to the satisfaction of the Queen, who, when she
-sanctioned the measure, felt sure that a vigilant personal
-superintendence of the details of Colonial, as well as foreign affairs,
-would not thereafter be added to the already arduous duties and
-anxieties of the Sovereign.
-
-Ireland, as usual, was this Session the object or victim of an
-eleemosynary financial policy. She had hanging over her, in the shape of
-relief loans made during ten years, an unliquidated debt of £4,483,000.
-Besides that, some of the Poor Law Unions were so burdened with debt
-contracted for local purposes--frequently purposes of jobbery--that they
-needed help. Lord John Russell therefore proposed to consolidate the
-unliquidated local debts since 1839, and, subject to existing conditions
-of interest, extend the period of repayment to forty years. For the
-immediate relief of bankrupt and semi-bankrupt Unions he proposed
-another advance from the Treasury of £300,000. The justification for
-these loans, which were sanctioned, was that the Irish landowners could
-not pay the interest on the local debt, in addition to the existing
-poor-rates.
-
-Ireland having been decimated by famine and emigration, it was
-considered that it would not be unsafe to lower her elective franchise
-to one of £8 of annual rateable value, more especially as such a
-proposal tended to conciliate, without concession, the Radical agitators
-for Parliamentary reform in England. It did not, however, conciliate Mr.
-Hume, who caustically reminded Sir William Somerville, the Chief
-Secretary for Ireland, when he introduced the Irish Franchise Bill, that
-it put the franchise on a narrower basis than that of Cape Colony, and
-contended that Irishmen should at least be treated as generously as
-Hottentots. The Bill enacted that instead of each voter being compelled
-to claim registration, local authorities should make up lists of voters,
-subject to the usual objections--in other words, that the rate-book
-should be a self-acting register. The Tories failed in their attack on
-the Bill in the House of Commons; but in the Lords they succeeded in
-raising the qualification to £15, and in altering the registration
-clause so that new voters must each claim to be registered before they
-were put on the voters’ roll. The two Houses ultimately accepted a
-compromise. The Government agreed to increase the qualification from £8
-to £12, and the Tories agreed to abandon their alteration of the
-registration clauses.
-
-On the 18th of May, Lord John Russell brought in a memorable Bill to
-abolish the office of Lord-Lieutenant--an office the maintenance of
-which has undoubtedly given an Imperial sanction to the Separatist
-principle in Ireland. The idea of the Whigs was that the Lord-Lieutenant
-was an anachronism. The Minister representing Ireland in the House of
-Commons, though popularly called Secretary for Ireland, is really and
-legally only Chief Secretary to the Lord-Lieutenant. Sometimes he sits
-in the Cabinet when the Lord-Lieutenant does not, and then he is his
-master’s superior. The Lord-Lieutenant, argued Lord John, had all the
-responsibility, but never the freedom of action of a Minister of the
-Crown, and the abolition of his office would facilitate that blending of
-the Irish and Imperial administrations, which would go far to destroy
-the Separatist feeling in Ireland. The Queen was very much inclined to
-favour this step, and for a curious reason. Her Irish tour had impressed
-her with the fact that her social influence in Ireland might be turned
-to good account in winning the hearts of a chivalrous and generous
-people, thereby converting the golden link of the Crown into a healing
-institution of conciliation. But it was somewhat embarrassing to all
-parties for the Sovereign to reside regularly in a country, in which the
-official head of the State was her own Viceroy. Were the Viceroyalty
-abolished, the Queen promised Lord John Russell that she would from time
-to time visit Ireland in State, and keep up the Viceregal Lodge in
-Phœnix Park as a Royal Palace. As for the business of Ireland, it would,
-according to Lord John, be best carried on by a fourth Secretary of
-State. The Tories opposed the Bill, because they contended that Lord
-Clarendon’s success in governing Ireland proved that the Viceroyalty was
-useful, and because the creation of a fourth Secretary of State was
-objectionable, for it would necessitate an expensive administrative
-establishment, and perchance lead to conflicts of authority between the
-Irish Secretary and the Home Secretary. The Irish members were divided
-in opinion. Some supported and some opposed the Bill, because it might
-tend to stimulate Nationalism. Others supported and opposed it for
-precisely the opposite reason. A third section, as to whose sincerity
-there could be no doubt, opposed it because it would spoil the trade of
-Dublin. The general feeling of the country was expressed by Peel, who
-said he was willing that the experiment should be made, though he said
-so with hesitancy, but he was also desirous, if it were possible, to see
-the Irish Administration merged in the Home Office, and not conducted by
-a fourth Secretary of State.[17] The measure was read a second time by a
-vote of 295 to 70, but introduced as it was when the country was in a
-fever of excitement over Lord Palmerston’s foreign quarrels, the country
-took little interest in it, and it was not pressed further.
-
-Lord Clarendon having in October, 1849, dismissed from the Commission of
-the Peers, Lord Roden and other Orange magistrates who had been privy to
-a fray at Dolly’s Brae in the preceding July, their case was brought
-before the House of Lords this Session by Lord Stanley, on the 12th of
-July. Stanley delivered a bitter attack on Lord Clarendon, but when he
-made it clear that he did not propose to do anything more than move for
-papers and correspondence relating to the affair, it was obvious that he
-had forced on a debate merely to gratify his Orange supporters. Lord
-Clarendon defended himself successfully, and convinced everybody that he
-had simply done his duty as an impartial administrator.
-
-The financial condition of the country was so favourable that Sir C.
-
-[Illustration: THE FUNERAL OF SIR ROBERT PEEL: THE TENANTRY ASSEMBLING
-AT THE LODGE, DRAYTON MANOR.]
-
-Wood, in his Budget Speech of 15th March, said there was a surplus at
-his disposal of £2,225,000. His estimates for the coming year, on the
-basis of existing taxation and anticipated expenditure, led him to
-expect a surplus of £1,500,000. Therefore, there was room for some
-remission of taxes. The first charge on a surplus, he held ought to be
-for the reduction of the National Debt--and for that purpose he set
-aside half his hoped-for surplus. As to the rest, he proposed to exhaust
-it: first, in reducing the Stamp Duties on the Transfer of Land, and on
-mortgages under £1,000, and in converting the Stamp Duty on leases into
-a uniform one of ½ per cent.; and secondly, in ameliorating the lot of
-the badly-housed labouring classes by repealing the tax on bricks.
-Though the Budget was ridiculed by the economists, Sir C. Wood’s
-proposals were agreed to, with the exception of the alteration in the
-Stamp Duties. It was argued successfully that though the new scale of
-Stamp Duties would reduce the revenue derived from small sums, they
-would increase, out of all proportion to this reduction, the revenue
-from large sums, so that under the pretext of reducing, Sir Charles Wood
-was actually increasing his revenue. Never was there such haggling and
-bungling. Nobody seemed to understand a scheme which was complex in
-detail, and explained by a Minister who was indistinct in his
-articulation and confused in exposition. Sir Charles Wood had more than
-once to withdraw his proposals, and substitute others, but finally he
-accepted a reduction of ½ instead of 1 per cent. on legal conveyances,
-and 1/8 instead of ½ per cent. on mortgages. The result showed that
-his opponents were right, and that he was utterly wrong in his
-calculations of the effect his reductions would have on the revenue of
-the year.
-
-[Illustration: THE FUNERAL OF SIR ROBERT PEEL: THE CEREMONY IN DRAYTON
-BASSETT CHURCH.]
-
-The demand for retrenchment which had been originally raised by the
-Radicals, was now emphasised by the Protectionists. Following the
-example of some of their party in the Colonies, they saw in an attack on
-the cost of establishments, a means of annoying a Free Trade Government,
-and perchance of relieving the rural taxpayers, who undoubtedly were
-suffering by the loss of Protection. Mr. Henley accordingly first
-appeared with a motion to reduce official salaries. Whereupon Lord John
-Russell intervened with a motion for a Select Committee to inquire into
-the subject. Mr. Disraeli opposed to this an amendment to the effect
-that the House had enough information, and that the Government ought not
-to shirk the responsibility of initiating, without delay, every
-practicable reduction in the cost of establishments. His party followed
-him faithfully, though some, like John Wilson Croker, condemned his
-tactics and his speech as “Jacobinical.”[18] Mr. Hume also supported
-him, but Mr. Bright thought that if a Committee recommended reductions,
-they would be more patiently borne by the victims than if they were
-enforced by the Government. Mr. Horsman outdid Mr. Disraeli and Mr.
-Hume, for he demanded that ecclesiastical establishments should also
-come within the purview of the Committee: Lord John, however, carried
-his motion. Mr. Cobden then brought forward resolutions in favour of a
-general reduction of expenditure, contending that it would be possible
-to save £10,000,000 by cutting down expenditure to the standard of 1835.
-The Radical financial reformers declared that their object was to reduce
-taxation that pressed on Labour and impeded production, and that the
-best way of doing that was to curtail expenditure on the Army and Navy,
-which were in excess of the strength necessary for National Defence,
-provided the Foreign Office pursued a policy of non-intervention. Whigs
-and Tories united in defeating Mr. Cobden. Mr. Henry Drummond next, on
-behalf of the Protectionist Tories, moved that adequate means be adopted
-to reduce taxation, and thereby increase the wage-fund of the country.
-His plan was to cut down all official salaries, and revise all burdens
-that checked the growth of raw produce. The motion was disposed of by
-carrying the “previous question,” because, though some Radicals like Mr.
-Hume and Mr. Bright voted for it, most people saw in it a Protectionist
-“trap.” Lord Duncan very nearly on a subsequent occasion repealed the
-Window Tax,[19] but Mr. Milner Gibson failed in his attack on the Paper
-Duty, as did Mr. Cayley in his effort to repeal the Malt Tax.
-
-After much determined opposition from the Tories, with whom Mr.
-Gladstone acted on this occasion, the Government succeeded in carrying
-the appointment of a Royal Commission to inquire into the condition of
-the Universities--a proposal which had the warm support of the Queen and
-Prince Albert, in consequence of which some foolish people went about
-saying that there was a conspiracy on foot to Germanise the academic
-system of England.
-
-The Bishop of London’s Ecclesiastical Appeals Bill, which was introduced
-into the House of Lords on the 3rd of June, touched on matters regarding
-which the Queen has always been sensitive--the relation of the Church to
-the prerogative of the Crown. The principle of the Bill was that
-ecclesiastical appeals should be tried, not before the Judicial
-Committee of the Privy Council as representing the Queen, but before an
-assemblage of Bishops, whose decision should be binding, not merely on
-the Judicial Committee, but on the Queen also. This, of course,
-destroyed her supremacy over the Established Church of England, a
-prerogative of the Crown which has always been tenaciously guarded. The
-Bill was rejected. And here it may be well to record what it was that
-led to its introduction. It was introduced to tranquillise the High
-Churchmen and Tractarians, who were smarting over the decision of the
-famous “Gorham case.”
-
-Mr. Gorham had been presented by the Crown to the benefice of Bramford
-Speke in August, 1847. When the Bishop examined him, he found that he
-was an extreme Low Churchman, and that he denied that spiritual
-regeneration was conferred by the sacrament of Baptism; also that his
-views on other matters, such as predestination and election, were those
-of the narrowest Presbyterian Calvinists. The Bishop of Exeter refused
-to institute Mr. Gorham, and, after much litigation, the case was
-appealed by him from the Court of Arches to the Judicial Committee, who
-decided that Mr. Gorham’s views were not incompatible with the
-Thirty-nine Articles. The Judicial Committee on this occasion consisted
-of the Archbishops of Canterbury and York and the Bishop of London.
-Associated with them were the Master of the Rolls (Lord Langdale), the
-Lord Chief Justice (Lord Campbell), Mr. Baron Parke, Vice-Chancellor,
-Sir J. Knight Bruce, Dr. Lushington, and the Right Hon. Pemberton Leigh.
-The complaint of the Churchmen was that the ruling of a Bishop and an
-ecclesiastical court on a disputed point of doctrine was not only
-considered, but actually reversed by a secular tribunal the large
-majority of whose members were laymen, and the clerical members of which
-could not vote, but merely gave their opinion to the lay members who
-formed the Judicial Committee. Churchmen passionately resented these
-proceedings, and the excitement they raised was fierce and
-uncontrollable. The Gorham Appeal Case was the badge of the Church’s
-servitude to the State. The Bishop of London’s Bill was an attempt to
-remove that badge by constituting a purely ecclesiastical tribunal to
-try all ecclesiastical appeals, thereby avoiding the necessity for
-submitting them to lay judges.
-
-When the Queen prorogued Parliament the shadow of mourning was over both
-Houses. Sir Robert Peel had died suddenly on the 2nd of July. Returning
-on horseback from a visit to Buckingham Palace on the 29th of June, he
-met Miss Ellice, one of Lady Dover’s daughters, on Constitution Hill. As
-he bowed to her, his horse shied at the Green Park railings, and threw
-him. His fifth rib was broken, and its jagged end pierced the lung with
-a mortal wound. He lingered in great agony for three days, and it is
-hardly possible to describe the extraordinary sensation his accident and
-illness produced throughout the country. Party animosities vanished, and
-the nation with one voice joined the Queen in the expressions of sorrow
-which came from her when she said, “The country mourns over him as over
-a father.”[20]
-
-Peel’s character will, for this generation, be an enigma. Look at one
-aspect of it, and it seems as the character of a patriot of the pure
-Roman type, who flourished in the days “when none were for a Party, and
-all were for the State.” Look at another aspect of it, and it seems as
-if it were permeated by the conscious insincerity of the unscrupulous
-political intriguer, whose stock-in-trade was Party principle, which he
-bought and sold for power in the Parliamentary market. One thing is
-clear. His abandonment of Protection could not possibly have been due to
-a love of office. He knew too well when he determined to repeal the Corn
-Laws, that he doomed himself to political ostracism. Two things seem to
-account for Peel’s difficulties with his partisans. He saw clearly, but
-he did not see far. He used his influence as a political leader to
-become a Minister, but the Minister of the Queen, and not the Minister
-of his Party. Long before Catholic Emancipation triumphed he ought to
-have seen that its triumph was inevitable, and the same may be said of
-the repeal of the Corn Laws. When he suddenly awoke to the fact that in
-the one case war, and in the other famine was impending, he reversed his
-policy, but he had to change front so quickly that he had not time to
-“educate his Party.” On both occasions he had to choose between his
-Party and the nation. On neither did he shrink from making his choice as
-a patriot, even at the cost of his reputation as a far-seeing statesman,
-or a faithful Party leader. Mr. Disraeli said he was not the greatest
-statesman, but the greatest Member of Parliament England ever produced.
-That was a just estimate of his magical power of mastering and managing
-the House of Commons. But it did no justice to his genius for
-administration, his vast and accurate knowledge of affairs, and latterly
-the serene judicial temper of mind, in which he dealt with the most
-agitating and perplexing political problems. Coldness, secretiveness,
-and egotism were the only flaws in a character, which otherwise almost
-realised the loftiest ideal of British patriotism.
-
-At the beginning of 1850 the Queen became grievously alarmed about the
-health of Prince Albert. The toil and anxieties of politics during the
-years of revolution and counter-revolution had sadly worn his nervous
-system. In addition to his work as confidential private secretary to the
-Queen, his own occupations, which have been noticed from time to time in
-these pages, had grown more numerous and varied each year. As Mr.
-Gladstone once observed of Mr. Ayrton, “he was a cormorant for work.” As
-Sir Theodore Martin says, “Ministers and diplomatists found him at every
-interview possessed of an encyclopædic range of information, extending
-even to the minutest details.” The Court at this time was a rich
-treasure-store of information regarding the inner history of Courts and
-Embassies on the Continent, on which our diplomatists were grateful to
-draw for aid and suggestions, when appointed to difficult and delicate
-missions. “But to the claims of politics,” writes Sir Theodore Martin,
-“had to be added those which science, art, and questions of social
-improvement were constantly forcing upon the Prince’s attention.... He
-was habitually an early riser. Even in winter he would be up by seven,
-and dispose of a great deal of work before breakfast, by the light of
-the green German lamp, the original of which he had brought over with
-him, and which has since become so familiar an object in our English
-homes.[21] The Queen shared his early habits; but before her Majesty
-joined him in the sitting-room, where their writing-tables stood always
-side by side, much had, as a rule, been prepared for her
-consideration--much done to lighten the pressure of those labours, both
-of head and hands, which are inseparable from the discharge of the
-Sovereign’s duties.”[22] These labours ultimately produced insomnia or
-sleeplessness, and at the beginning of the year the Queen, writing from
-Windsor to Baron Stockmar, alludes to a suggestion from their doctor
-that his Royal Highness should take a trip to Brussels, and adds:--“For
-the sake of his health, which, I assure you, is the cause of my shaken
-nerves, I could quite bear this sacrifice. He _must_ be set right before
-we go to London, or God knows how ill he may get.”
-
-[Illustration: MEETING OF THE LADIES’ COMMITTEE AT STAFFORD HOUSE IN AID
-OF THE GREAT EXHIBITION.]
-
-The Queen’s affectionate desires could not be gratified. The business of
-organising the Great Exhibition of 1851 proved more engrossing than had
-been anticipated, not merely because the idea at the bottom of it was
-her husband’s, but because he was found to be the only man in England
-who thoroughly understood the scheme. As Lord Granville, in a letter to
-Prince Albert’s secretary, remarked, his Royal Highness seemed to be
-almost the only person who had considered the subject as a whole and in
-details. “The whole thing,” said Lord Granville, “would fall to pieces
-if he left it to itself.”
-
-On the 21st of February a brilliant meeting in support of the
-undertaking was held at Willis’s Rooms, which was attended by the
-diplomatic representatives of the leading nations. This was followed up
-by a grand banquet at the Mansion House, which was attended by the great
-dignitaries of State, the Foreign Ambassadors, the Royal Commissioners
-for the Exhibition, and the heads of the county and municipal
-magistracy. After the Royal Commission had been appointed, the questions
-of site, space, and finance were those which pressed for settlement, and
-without doubt the last gave the Queen the utmost anxiety. The public,
-she saw, must be induced to support the scheme, and meetings be
-organised for the purpose of making its advantages known. Prince
-Albert’s speech at this banquet, however, struck the key-note of all the
-subsequent advocacy which the Exhibition received. The age, said he, was
-advancing towards the realisation of a unity of mankind, to be attained
-as the result and product, and not by the destruction, of national
-characteristics. Science, by abridging distance, was increasing the
-communicability of ideas. The principle of the division of labour was
-gradually being applied everywhere, giving rise to specialism, but
-specialism practised in publicity, and under the stimulus of competition
-and capital. Thus was Man winning new powers in fulfilling his mission
-in the world--the discovery of Natural Laws and the conquest of Nature
-by compliance with them. The central idea of this Exhibition of 1851 was
-to give a true test, and a living picture of the point at which
-civilised Man had arrived in carrying out his mission, and to serve as a
-base of operations for further efforts which might carry Humanity
-upwards and onwards to a larger and loftier stage. Such, in a brief
-paraphrase, were the views of Prince Albert, and they ran through the
-country amidst a chorus of approval. The whole nation responded to the
-appeal of his Royal Highness, despite the metaphysics and mysticism
-which slightly tinged it, and the delight of the Queen was
-correspondingly great. We can easily understand that King Leopold was at
-first under the impression that a speech of such stately but restrained
-eloquence, rich in thought and fruitful in suggestion, must have been
-read. The Queen, however, informed him that he was mistaken. It was, she
-says, prepared most carefully and laboriously, and then written down;
-after which it was spoken freely and fluently without reference to the
-manuscript. “This,” says the Queen, in her letter to the King of the
-Belgians, “he does so well that no one believes he is ever nervous,
-which he is.” On the 23rd of February a meeting of ladies was held at
-Stafford House, under the presidency of the Duchess of Sutherland, with
-the object of inviting the women of England to assist in promoting the
-success of the Exhibition, and a very influential committee was formed
-for this purpose.
-
-When Easter arrived the Queen’s anxiety grew greater as she saw the
-Prince showing signs of increasing fatigue. At last, yielding to her
-importunity, he agreed to leave London and take a brief holiday at
-Windsor. But his idea of a holiday was peculiar. It was to devise a
-system of draining Osborne, and utilising the sewage, &c., of the
-estate.
-
-Age and infirmity had now begun to tell sadly on the Duke of Wellington,
-and he had become anxious as to the future of the army. Whilst he was
-alive and strong, as he said, he could hold the Commandership-in-chief.
-But his position was entirely exceptional for a subject, and in theory
-at least the office ought to be vested in the Sovereign, or some one
-very near the Throne. Englishmen have ever been a little jealous of
-permitting this post to be occupied by a subject. The favour it confers
-on him, and the influence which--if he has a magic personality--he may
-wield, might, if wedded to ambition, lead to untoward changes. But the
-fact that the Sovereign was a woman rendered it impossible to vest the
-Commandership-in-chief in the Crown. The Duke, therefore, to the
-surprise of the Queen, who apparently had never thought about the
-matter, suddenly proposed that arrangements should be made for
-installing Prince Albert as his successor. It says much for the sagacity
-and good sense of the Queen and Prince that neither of them liked the
-proposal--although it was one which would have presented an irresistible
-temptation to most young men. The Prince pleaded want of military
-experience. The Duke replied that his plan was to appoint under the
-Prince, as Chief of the Staff, the general who had most experience in
-the army. But this did not seem to weigh much with the Queen. Probably
-she knew her husband’s nature better than the Duke, and was perfectly
-well aware that he would never permit himself to hold office as an
-ornamental “dummy.” The revolution he wrought in Cambridge after he
-became Chancellor of the University gives us an indication of what must
-have happened in the army had he consented to become the Duke’s
-successor. It would be wrong to say that the Queen paid much heed to the
-objection on the score of inexperience. Like the Duke, she fully
-believed that her husband’s extraordinary power of work, and pertinacity
-of resolution, would soon fit him for the post. But, on the other hand,
-it was quite clear that the work would absorb all his time. In short, as
-the Prince would be certain to insist on doing the duty of the office to
-the fullest extent, and on his own responsibility, it was equally
-certain that if he became Commander-in-chief, he must abandon all his
-other occupations--even the chemical researches on the utilisation of
-sewage, in his pursuance of which he imagined at the time that he had
-within his grasp a discovery that would immortalise him as a benefactor
-of humanity. Moreover, how was the Queen to replace him as her private
-secretary? So much assiduous service could not be expected from any
-other holder of that office as Prince Albert cheerfully gave, and it was
-furthermore an office the duties of which, at a time when the Sovereign
-was beginning to wield an ever-increasing consultative and moderating
-influence on public affairs, were necessarily augmenting. Then the Queen
-also urged that as she believed the Prince was undertaking too much work
-already, she could not approve of his burdening himself with more. To
-sum up the views of the Queen and her husband on this difficult and
-delicate affair: many able generals could do the duty of
-Commander-in-chief as well, if not better, than the Prince. Nobody,
-however, in the kingdom could possibly do the work he was then doing for
-the Queen as well as he did it, and so the flattering proposal was put
-aside. Had it been accepted, and had the Prince overhauled the Horse
-Guards as he did the University of Cambridge, perhaps the terrible and
-shameful disasters of the Crimea might have been avoided. On the other
-hand, it may be doubted if even his patient resolution would have
-enabled him to reform in so short a time the military administration
-which collapsed in 1854. In that case, the Court would have been blamed,
-and blamed unjustly, for the departmental catastrophes that still invest
-the Crimea with bitter memories for British soldiers.
-
-[Illustration: CAMBRIDGE HOUSE, PICCADILLY (1854).]
-
-On the 1st of May the Duke of Connaught was born. His birthday was
-coincident with that of the Duke of Wellington, and he had as his
-sponsors two of the most illustrious soldiers of Europe--the great Duke
-himself, and Prince William of Prussia, afterwards Emperor of Germany.
-The ceremony of baptism took place on the 22nd of June, when the Prince
-was christened Arthur William Patrick Albert, the Duke and the Prince of
-Prussia both being present.
-
-[Illustration: THE QUEEN AND PRINCE ARTHUR.
-
-(_After Winterhalter, 1850._)]
-
-As spring gave place to summer, the shadow of death fell on the Royal
-Family. We have seen how genuine and profound was the Queen’s sorrow
-over the death of Peel. But closely following that sad event came the
-serious illness of the Duke of Cambridge, a kind-hearted Prince, noted
-for his _bonhomie_ and for the profusion of his charities. The Queen was
-assiduous in her attentions to her uncle, whom she dearly loved, and one
-of her visits to his sick bed accidentally exposed her to a cowardly
-outrage. When she was leaving Cambridge House, sad-eyed and sorrowful, a
-man suddenly stepped forward and struck at her face with a cane. Her
-bonnet protected her somewhat, but her forehead was cruelly bruised by
-the assault. “The perpetrator is a dandy,” writes Prince Albert to
-Stockmar, “whom you must have often seen in the park, where he makes
-himself conspicuous.” He was one Robert Pate, formerly a lieutenant in
-the army. After being tried for his offence on the 11th of July, he was
-sentenced to seven years’ transportation. No motive could be assigned
-for the outrage, and the jury refused to accept Pate’s plea of insanity.
-
-[Illustration: PATE’S ASSAULT ON THE QUEEN.]
-
-The Duke of Cambridge, it may here be said, died on the 8th of July.
-
-Meantime, as if to add to the Queen’s private griefs, an extraordinary
-attack was made in the press upon Prince Albert and the Exhibition
-Commissioners. The building was to be in Hyde Park, and this invasion of
-one of the pleasure-grounds of “the people” was resented. The truth is
-that a rich and selfish clique of families dwelling in the neighbourhood
-objected to a great public show, likely to attract multitudes of
-sightseers, coming between the wind and their nobility, and they
-represented “the people” for the occasion. The extent to which they were
-sensitive as to the rights of the populace may be indicated by one
-suggestion which they made. It was that the Exhibition be transported as
-a nuisance to the Isle of Dogs, where “the people” dwell in teeming
-masses. At last an attack was organised on the Exhibition Commissioners
-in Parliament, and the Queen, knowing well that if it were successful,
-the project must be abandoned, was sorely grieved at the folly and
-prejudice which inspired the opposition. The _Times_ was very bitter.
-Even Mr. Punch, notorious for his sentimental devotion to the Queen,
-proved himself a sad recreant on this occasion, and Leech made fun of
-the Prince, because the public were a little niggardly with their
-subscriptions,[23] which fell far short of £100,000, which was the
-lowest estimate tendered for the building. But though the attempt of “a
-little knot of selfish persons,” as the Queen calls them in a letter in
-which she implores Stockmar to come and comfort her and her husband in
-their troubles, to drive the Exhibition out of Hyde Park failed, and
-their attacks in Parliament collapsed, the Prince was still “plagued
-about the Exhibition,” and the old symptoms of insomnia reappeared,
-greatly to the alarm of her Majesty. At last a way out of all their
-difficulties was opened up. It was proposed to establish a guarantee
-fund to meet any deficit that might be incurred, and on the 12th of June
-it was started by a subscription of £50,000 from Messrs. Peto, the
-contractors. In a few days the subscriptions sufficed to solve the
-financial problem. Ultimately, to the surprise of those who had scoffed
-at the Prince’s sanguine anticipations, not only were the guarantors
-freed from all responsibility, but when the Exhibition accounts were
-closed, the Commissioners found themselves with a balance of a quarter
-of a million in hand. The work was accordingly begun without further
-delay.
-
-But no sooner had one source of vexation vanished than another was
-opened. In August the Queen, mortified at further displays of wayward
-recklessness on Lord Palmerston’s part, and failing to inspire the Prime
-Minister with enough courage to rebuke him, at last determined to take
-the matter in hand herself. Although Palmerston was then at the height
-of his popularity, owing to the triumph of his _civis Romanum sum_
-doctrine in the Don Pacifico debate, her Majesty penned a Memorandum to
-Lord John Russell, which has become historic. It is dated the 16th of
-August, and was written at Osborne. In it she accepts Lord Palmerston’s
-disavowal of an intention to offer her any disrespect by his past
-neglect, but, to prevent fresh mistakes, she deems it as well to say
-that in future she requires--
-
-“(1) That he (the Foreign Secretary) will distinctly state what he
-proposes in a given case, in order that the Queen may know as distinctly
-to what she has given her Royal sanction. (2) Having once given her
-sanction to a measure, that it be not arbitrarily altered or modified by
-the Minister. Such an act she must consider as failure in sincerity
-towards the Crown, and justly to be visited by the exercise of her
-Constitutional right of dismissing that Minister. She expects to be kept
-informed of what passes between him and the Foreign Ministers before
-important decisions are taken based on that intercourse; to receive the
-foreign despatches in good time, and to have the drafts for her approval
-sent to her in sufficient time to make herself acquainted with their
-contents before they must be sent off.” Lord John Russell sent this
-Memorandum to Palmerston, who lightly pleaded pressure of business in
-palliation of his past faults, but promised to behave better in time to
-come. Had he been a man of high spirit or sensitive feelings, he would
-have resigned when the Queen’s Memorandum was sent to him. High spirit,
-however, was not to be expected from the Minister that sent a British
-fleet to coerce Greece, though he dared not utter a word of protest
-against the Russian invasion of Hungary,[24] or who, whilst he could be
-swift to resent an impertinence from a decrepit Power like Spain,
-accepted with the utmost meekness a rebuke from Russia in reference to
-the Greek affair, couched in the language of deliberate insult. On the
-contrary, whilst his friends gave out that he was manfully fighting the
-battle of the people against the Sovereign and the foreign Prince, who
-was “the power behind the Throne,” Palmerston was abasing himself before
-both. He implored Prince Albert to intercede for him with the Queen in
-order that she might grant him an interview. The Prince, in a Memorandum
-dated 17th of August, 1850, writes:--
-
-“After the Council for the Speech from the Throne for the Prorogation of
-Parliament on the 14th I saw Lord Palmerston, as he had desired it. He
-was very _much agitated, shook, and had tears in his eyes_, so as to
-quite move me, who never under any circumstances had known him otherwise
-than with a bland smile on his face.” It was not the condemnation of his
-policy, he told Prince Albert, that affected him most closely. The
-“accusation that he had been wanting in his respect to the Queen, whom
-he had every reason to respect as his Sovereign, and as a woman whose
-virtues he admired, and to whom he was bound by every tie of duty and
-gratitude, was an imputation on his honour as a gentleman, and if he
-could have made himself guilty of it, he was almost no longer fit to be
-tolerated in society.”[25] The “almost” is
-
-[Illustration: LORD JOHN RUSSELL (1850).]
-
-characteristically Palmerstonian. Her Majesty, according to Prince
-Albert, did not impute any _intentional_ want of regard to Lord
-Palmerston; but her complaint was that he never submitted any question
-to her “intact,” that is to say, he always contrived to commit the
-Government before the Queen could express an opinion. As her opinion had
-of late been at variance with Lord Palmerston’s, this mode of doing
-business was to her objectionable. Her Majesty had always been frank
-with her Ministers, and when overruled, she had accepted loyally their
-decision. “She knew,” said the Prince, “that they were going to battle
-together, and that she was going to receive the blows which were aimed
-at the Government; and that she had these last years received several
-such as no Sovereign of England had before been obliged to put up with,
-and which had been most painful to her.” She did not wish to trouble
-her Ministers about details. But when principles were settled at their
-conferences, she thought she too should be consulted and advised.
-Palmerston’s excuse was the old one--want of time; but he said he was
-willing to come to the Palace at any moment to Prince Albert, and give
-any explanations that might be wanted either to the Queen or her
-husband.
-
-If the Prince’s account be correct, the Minister seems to have conducted
-himself throughout this interview with hysterical servility, which may,
-however, have been simulated. As for his penitence, it was short-lived.
-In September he had another quarrel with the Queen over the wording of a
-despatch, in which he had foolishly gone out of his way to impugn the
-honour of England. This despatch rose out of the Haynau incident. The
-Austrian General Haynau had come to England on a visit, and the Radicals
-stirred up public feeling against him on account of his brutality in
-crushing the Hungarian insurrection, more especially for his cowardly
-conduct in stripping women, and flogging them publicly. When he went to
-visit the Brewery of Messrs. Barclay and Perkins, the workmen in the
-place recognised him. They turned out _en masse_, assaulted, hustled,
-and insulted “the Austrian butcher,” till he fled in terror from the
-premises, and took refuge in a little public-house, from which the
-police smuggled him away. Naturally, Lord Palmerston expressed his
-regret to the Austrian Ambassador; but it was also necessary to send a
-formal Note on the subject to the Austrian Government. This Note was a
-model of Palmerstonian maladroitness. In the first place, it contained
-an uncalled-for imputation on the English people, because it admitted
-that they were so incapable of courtesy and self-control that no
-foreigner was safe in England who happened to be unpopular. Secondly, it
-implied that Haynau had been imprudent in visiting England at all. The
-Queen, whose views were shared by the Prime Minister, objected to both
-of these statements--one as derogatory to the honour of England, the
-other as needlessly offensive to Austria. But, on her objecting, she
-discovered that it was impossible to alter the Note, which had been sent
-to the Austrian Ambassador _before_ the draft had been submitted to her.
-The Queen, however, insisted on the withdrawal of the Note, and so did
-Lord John Russell. Palmerston first of all tried to browbeat the Prime
-Minister by threatening to resign. But when Lord John informed him (16th
-of October) that the threat was futile, Palmerston submissively withdrew
-the Note, and substituted for it another drawn up in accordance with the
-Queen’s views.
-
-Another serious conflict of opinion between the Queen and Lord
-Palmerston at this period arose out of the dispute between Denmark and
-the German States as to the settlement of Schleswig-Holstein. The German
-population of these Duchies had revolted against the petty tyranny of
-the Danes, and it was notorious that they were supported secretly by
-Prussia. The rebellion was suppressed; and though almost all the
-Liberals of Europe were in favour of letting the Duchies be incorporated
-in Germany, the Governments of the various Powers took the contrary
-view. The Austro-Prussian Convention at Olmütz, of 29th November,
-restoring peace and stipulating for the disarmament of the Duchies, left
-the matter uncertain; but Austria was obviously for thwarting, whilst
-Prussia was for gratifying, the aspirations of the German or national
-party in the Duchies. All through this controversy the Queen was
-anti-Austrian, and strongly in favour of letting the
-Schleswig-Hoisteiners have their own way. Palmerston, and in this he was
-powerfully supported by the Tories, was violently pro-Austrian, and used
-the influence of England as far as possible to prevent the Duchies
-gravitating to Germany. For the moment he was successful. But subsequent
-events, as all the world knows, justified the wiser and more liberal
-views of the Queen.
-
-On the 26th of August, 1850, Louis Philippe died; in fact, the sad news
-of his death greeted the Queen and her husband a few days after their
-return from a brief visit to the King of the Belgians at Ostend, and
-marred the celebration of Prince Albert’s thirty-first birthday at
-Osborne.
-
-On the 27th of August the Royal Family migrated northwards. The Queen
-and Prince Albert opened the great railway bridges at Newcastle and
-Berwick, and then went on to Edinburgh, where they stayed at Holyrood
-Palace.
-
-The reception of the Queen in the “grey metropolis of the North” was
-picturesque as well as enthusiastic. The Royal Company of Archers in
-their quaint old costume, headed by the Duke of Buccleuch, claimed their
-historic right of acting as the Queen’s body-guard, and they surrounded
-her carriage as it drove through swarming crowds from the railway
-station to the Palace, in which no Queen of Scotland had set foot since
-Mary Stuart crossed its threshold, never to return to it again.
-Immediately after her arrival, the Queen and her family began to explore
-the Palace and its ruined precincts, and she records her delight in her
-Diary at discovering in the crumbling Abbey the tomb “of Flora
-Macdonald’s mother,” not the Flora Macdonald who assisted the Young
-Pretender to escape, but a lady of the Clanranald family, who was then
-serving as a Maid of Honour. Next morning the Queen and “the children”
-drove round the park, and climbed Arthur’s Seat, and the Prince
-proceeded to lay the foundation-stone of the National Gallery of Arts,
-whilst the rest of the day was spent in sightseeing. At half-past eight
-on the following morning her Majesty started for Balmoral, which she
-reached in the afternoon. Here, as Prince Albert says in one of his
-letters to Stockmar, they tried to strengthen their hearts amid the
-stillness and solemnity of the mountains,[26] and truly they had much
-need of rest. The harassing conflicts with Lord Palmerston, the deaths
-of Peel, Louis Philippe, Queen Adelaide, the Duke of Cambridge, and the
-faithful Anson, and the news that the Queen of the Belgians was dying,
-contributed to produce in the Queen great depression of spirits.
-
-The sport on the hills delighted the Prince. The primitive life and
-guileless character of the people vastly interested the Queen, who has
-left on record her account of several curious excursions she made, and
-of the gathering of clansmen at Braemar, which she witnessed. Writing on
-the 12th of September, 1850, her Majesty says in her “Leaves from a
-Journal of Our Life in the Highlands,” “We lunched early, and then went
-at half-past two o’clock, with the children and all our party, except
-Lady Douro, to the Gathering at the Castle of Braemar, as we did last
-year. The Duffs, Farquharsons, the Leeds’s, and those staying with them,
-and Captain Forbes and forty of his men who had come over from Strath
-Don, were there. Some of our people were there also. There were the
-usual games of ‘putting the stone,’ ‘throwing the hammer’ and ‘caber,’
-and racing up the hill of Craig Cheunnich, which was accomplished in
-less than six minutes and a half; and we were all much pleased to see
-our gillie Duncan,[27] who is an active, good-looking young man, win. He
-was far before the others the whole way. It is a fearful exertion. Mr.
-Farquharson brought him up to me afterwards. Eighteen or nineteen
-started, and it looked very pretty to see them run off in their
-different coloured kilts, with their white shirts (the jackets or
-doublets they take off for all the games), and scramble up through the
-wood, emerging gradually at the edge of it, and climbing the hill.
-
-“After this we went into the Castle, and saw some dancing; the prettiest
-was a reel by Mr. Farquharson’s children and some other children, and
-the ‘Ghillie Callum,’ beautifully danced by John Athole Farquharson, the
-fourth son. The twelve children were all there, including the baby, who
-is two years old.
-
-“Mama, Charles, and Ernest joined us at Braemar. Mama enjoys it all very
-much; it is her first visit to Scotland. We left after the dancing.”
-
-The Court returned to Windsor late in the autumn, and one of the first
-dismal communications made to her Majesty was that of the death of the
-Queen of the Belgians on the 11th of October. “Victoria is greatly
-distressed,” writes Prince Albert to Stockmar. “Her aunt was her only
-confidante and friend. Sex, age, culture, feeling, rank--in all these
-they were so much on a par, that a relation of unconstrained friendship
-naturally grew up between them.” This friendship, it may be added,
-survived even the treachery of Queen Louise’s father, Louis Philippe, in
-the matter of the Spanish marriages.
-
-The end of the year 1850 was marked by another amazing epidemic of
-bigotry on the part of the people and the Government, which was very
-distressing to the serene and evenly balanced minds of the Queen and her
-husband. This was known as the “Papal Aggression movement,” and it is
-in these days difficult to understand how a sensible nation could have
-been swept into its vortex.
-
-On the 24th of September the Pope issued a Brief re-establishing the
-Roman Catholic hierarchy in England. In other words, he substituted
-Bishops and Archbishops deriving their titles from their sees, for the
-Vicars Apostolic who govern Romish missions in heathen lands. He
-partitioned England into sees, very much as the Wesleyans had mapped it
-into circuits and districts. The act was purely one of ecclesiastical
-administration, and of no concern to any body but the small Roman
-Catholic community in England. But prominent leaders of the Church began
-to talk about it in extravagant terms, as if it constituted the
-spiritual annexation of England to Rome, and as if it were a formal
-assertion of the authority of the Pope over that of the Queen. The
-Cardinal Archbishop of Westminster, Dr. Nicholas Wiseman, and Father
-(now Cardinal) Newman, were particularly indiscreet in their references
-to the Papal Brief. Dr. Wiseman, for example, issued a pompous Pastoral
-“Given out of the Flaminian Gate of Rome,” on the 7th of October,
-boasting that “Catholic England had been restored to its orbit in the
-ecclesiastical firmament, from which its light had long vanished.”
-
-Dr. Ullathorne, the Bishop of Birmingham, was one of those prelates who
-had the sense and tact to see what mischief would spring from Cardinal
-Wiseman’s folly, and he did his best to explain the real meaning of the
-Papal Brief. But his voice was like that of one crying in the
-wilderness. Did not Father Newman, preaching at Dr. Ullathorne’s
-enthronisation, say that “the people of England, who for so many years
-have been separated from the see of Rome, are about, of their own free
-will, to be added to the Holy Church”? Was it not clear, despite the
-reasonable explanations of Dr. Ullathorne and others, that what the
-Papists really meant was that the Reformation was now reversed, and that
-England was reconquered for Rome? Outraged Protestantism, arguing in
-this fashion, without distinction of party or sect, accordingly rose in
-its wrath, and hurled angry defiance at the Pope. The bigots, taking
-advantage of this outburst of popular passion, demanded that the law
-should step in and punish the insolent priesthood, who thus challenged
-the prerogatives of the Crown.
-
-On the 4th of November, Lord John Russell addressed to the Bishop of
-Durham a letter, almost equalling Cardinal Wiseman’s in its folly. The
-Prime Minister, in fact, gave expression to the worst phase of
-contemporary excitement, and fully endorsed the ridiculous notion that a
-prelate, who had but recently been restored to, and even then was kept
-on, his throne in Rome by foreign bayonets, had established his
-supremacy over England, in a manner inconsistent with the authority of
-the Queen. This Durham letter further stimulated the frenzy of
-intolerance into which England plunged. Meetings were held everywhere
-protesting against Papal aggression, and transmitting loyal addresses to
-the Queen. Guy Fawkes’ Day was celebrated with more
-
-[Illustration: THE ROYAL APARTMENTS, HOLYROOD PALACE.
-
-1, Throne Room; 2, Breakfast Parlour; 3, Evening Drawing-room; 4, Grand
-Staircase; 5, Morning Drawing-room.]
-
-than usual zeal, and in most towns effigies of the Pope and Cardinal
-Wiseman were paraded through hooting crowds, and burnt in bonfires
-amidst the derision of the populace. The Universities and the
-Corporation of London in December sent deputations in great state to
-Windsor to present addresses to the Queen, protesting against insidious
-attacks on the authority, prerogatives, and exclusive jurisdiction of
-the Crown. The Queen’s replies to these addresses were spirited but
-calm, and absolutely free from intolerance. “I would never have
-consented,” she tells her “aunt Gloucester” in a letter written after
-the deputations had been received, “to say anything which breathed a
-spirit of intolerance. Sincerely Protestant as I always have been and
-always shall be, and indignant as I am at those who call themselves
-Protestants, while they are in fact quite the contrary,[28] I much
-regret the unchristian and intolerant spirit exhibited by many people at
-the public meetings. I cannot bear to hear the violent abuse of the
-Catholic religion, which is so painful and so cruel towards the many
-good and innocent Roman Catholics.”[29]
-
-On the last day of December, 1850, the Queen was gratified to hear that
-one of her husband’s cherished designs had been carried out. The
-building for the International Exhibition had risen from the ground in
-Hyde Park with the magical rapidity of a fairy palace. The design which
-had been chosen was that of a French artist, and Londoners had looked on
-with amazement at the erection of the great central dome of crystal,
-which dwarfed even that of St. Paul’s into insignificance. The plan for
-carrying out the design was suggested by Mr. Paxton, chief
-superintendent of the Duke of Devonshire’s gardens, and it was but an
-expansion of the grand conservatory which he had built for his Grace at
-Chatsworth. Iron and glass were the materials used for its construction.
-The cast-iron columns and girders were all alike--four columns and four
-girders being placed in relative positions forming a square of 24 feet,
-which could be raised to any height, or expanded laterally in any
-required direction, merely by joining other columns and girders to them.
-The building, therefore, grew up in multiples of twenty-four, and it
-could be taken to pieces just as readily as if it had been a doll’s
-house, and put up on any other site in exactly the same form. As a
-matter of fact, after the Exhibition was held in 1851, this wonderful
-Palace of Crystal was removed to Sydenham, where it has long been one of
-the raree-shows of London. The building covered 18 acres of ground, and
-gave an exhibiting surface of 21 acres; in truth, it was, within ten
-feet, twice the width of St. Paul’s, and four times as long. The
-contractors, Messrs. Fox, Henderson, and Co., accepted the order for the
-work on the 26th of July, and though there was not a single bar of iron
-or pane of glass prepared at that date, they handed the completed
-building over to the Commissioners, ready for painting and fitting, on
-the last day of the year.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.
-
-FALL OF THE WHIG CABINET.
-
- Debates on “No Popery”--Mutiny of the Irish Brigade--Defeat of Lord
- John Russell--Lord Stanley “sent for”--Timid Tories--Lord Stanley’s
- Interviews with the Queen--A Statesman’s “Domestic Duties”--Is
- Coalition Possible?--The Queen’s Mistake--The Duke of Wellington’s
- Advice--Return of the Whigs to Office--The Queen’s Aversions--The
- “No Popery” Bill Reduced to a Nullity--Another Bungled Budget--The
- Income Tax Controversy--The Pillar of Free Trade--The Window Tax
- and the House Duty--The Radicals and the Slave Trade--King “Bomba”
- and Mr. Gladstone--Cobden on General Disarmament--Palmerston in a
- Millennial Mood--The Whig-Peelite Intrigue--The Queen and the
- Kossuth Demonstrations--Another Quarrel with Palmerston--A Merry
- Council of State.
-
-
-On the 4th of February, 1851, Parliament assembled with the din of the
-agitation over Papal aggression ringing in its ears. Men talked of
-nothing save the legislation that might be necessary to check the
-encroachments of Rome. But it was not supposed that the course of the
-Government would be other than smooth, for not only was the Prime
-Minister in full accord with the popular feeling against Papal
-aggression, but the great International Exhibition dwarfed public
-interest in purely party questions. We shall see how these anticipations
-were falsified by events, and how the Whig Government was hurried to its
-doom. One of the politicians behind the scenes, who forecast the fall of
-the Cabinet more accurately than the public, was Mr. Cobden. “I expect,”
-he writes on the 19th of February in one of his letters, “that this ‘No
-Popery’ cry will prove fatal to the Ministry. It is generally thought
-that the Government will be in a minority on some important question,
-probably the Income Tax, in less than a fortnight. The Irish Catholic
-members are determined to do everything to turn out Lord John. Indeed,
-Ireland is in such a state of exasperation with the Whigs, that no Irish
-member having a Catholic constituency will have a chance of being
-elected again unless he votes through thick and thin to upset the
-Ministry.”[30]
-
-The Address to the Queen was carried in both Houses. The Queen’s Speech
-promised a measure for resisting the assumption that a foreign Power had
-a right to confer ecclesiastical titles in England; and some forthcoming
-Chancery reforms, and reforms in the registration of titles, were also
-promised. The Protectionists harped on their old string--agricultural
-distress. The Radicals complained that the Government gave them no hope
-of cutting down taxation, and grumbled because no reference was made to
-Parliamentary reform. But they fought rather shy of the proposed
-legislation against Papal aggression; yet speaking generally, the “No
-Popery” cry was popular in both Houses of Parliament.
-
-[Illustration: ST. STEPHEN’S CRYPT, WESTMINSTER PALACE.]
-
-On the 7th of February, Lord John Russell moved for leave to introduce
-his Ecclesiastical Titles Bill, which prevented the assumption of such
-titles “in respect of places in the United Kingdom,” and he was met by a
-scathing attack from Mr. Roebuck, who condemned the measure as
-retrograde and reactionary. The feebleness of the Bill was in comic
-contrast with the fierce agitation which had produced it, and with the
-extravagant terms of the Premier’s speech, which might have led one to
-suppose the Penal Laws were being re-enacted. As Mr. Roebuck said, if
-Dr. Wiseman called himself Archbishop, instead of Archbishop of
-Westminster, the Bill could not even touch him. For four nights did the
-debate drag on, till ultimately leave to introduce the measure was
-carried by a majority of 332. The Irish members, had they been sixty
-Quakers instead of sixty Catholics, could dictate terms to any Ministry
-in a keen party fight, and as they were determined to punish Lord John
-Russell for his Ecclesiastical Titles Bill, it was obvious that on some
-other question where a close division was expected the Government would
-be beaten by the votes of their Irish supporters. It was an ominous sign
-that they were saved from defeat only by a majority of
-
-[Illustration: MR. LOCKE KING.]
-
-sixteen on Mr. Disraeli’s motion for the relief of agricultural
-distress. But the fatal blow came when Mr. Locke King, on the 20th of
-February, brought forward his motion for leave to introduce a Bill for
-equalising the town and county franchise, by reducing the latter to the
-limit of £10 yearly value. Although Lord John Russell promised to bring
-in a measure for improving representation, he resisted Mr. King’s
-motion. It was then carried against him by a vote of 100 against 52.
-“The Ecclesiastical Titles Bill,” writes Mr. Cobden to his friend Mr. J.
-Parker, “is the real cause of the upset of the Whig coach, or rather of
-the coachman leaping from the box to escape an upset. This measure
-cannot be persevered in by any Government so far as Ireland is
-concerned, for no Government can exist if fifty Irish members are
-pledged to vote against them under all circumstances when they are in
-danger. A dissolution would give at least fifty members to do that
-work, and they would be all watched as they are now by their
-constituents. This mode of fighting by means of adverse votes in the
-House is far more difficult to deal with by our aristocratic rulers than
-was the plan of O’Connell, when he called his monster meetings. They
-could be stopped by a proclamation or put down by soldiers, but neither
-of these modes will avail in the House. What folly,” adds Mr. Cobden, as
-if he had even then foreseen the success of Parnellism in our day, “it
-was to give a real representation to the Irish counties, and to think of
-still maintaining the old persecuting ascendency.”[31] On the 22nd of
-February, Lord John, as Mr. Cobden says, “leaped from the box,” for on
-that day he and his colleagues resigned.
-
-The Queen sent for Lord Stanley, who frankly told her that he could not
-undertake to form a Ministry. He, however, said he would try to form one
-if Lord John Russell failed to reconstruct his defeated Cabinet. Lord
-Stanley’s motive for refusing office is to be found in the fact that
-there was a serious division of opinion among his followers, on the one
-question that was vital to their existence as a party. Some of the
-ablest of them, led by Mr. Walpole and Mr. Henley, objected to any
-proposal to tax foreign corn, and yet if the Protectionists refused to
-do that, their _locus standi_ in the country was gone. Her Majesty next
-appealed to Lord John Russell to form a coalition with the Peelites.
-This project proved to be hopeless. The Peelites were bitterly opposed
-to the Ecclesiastical Titles Bill, and though Lord John offered to
-attenuate it to the verge of absolute nullity, they could not sanction
-it in any shape or form. Moreover, Sir James Graham was afraid that if
-he joined a Whig Ministry he might quarrel with Lord Palmerston, and
-Lord Grey was equally afraid that he might quarrel with Sir James
-Graham. The Peelite leaders also thought that before a Coalition
-Government could be organised with any chance of success, it must be
-preceded by co-operation in opposition, between the two parties to it,
-and hence they wished Lord Stanley to form a Ministry which, from its
-Protectionist policy, must needs have but a brief existence. This
-abortive attempt to form an alliance between the Whigs and the Peelites
-is memorable, because it was the first step that led them both on the
-path which brought them to the celebrated and fateful Coalition of 1852.
-
-On the 26th of February, the Queen accordingly sent for Lord Stanley
-again, and he, with a somewhat rueful countenance, pledged himself to
-try and form a Cabinet. Again he failed, and for reasons which are given
-by Lord Malmesbury in his diary under the date of the 28th of February.
-“We met,” writes Lord Malmesbury, “at Lord Stanley’s in St. James’s
-Square, and have failed in forming a Government. He had previously
-requested me to take the Colonial Office, which I consider a great
-compliment, as it is one of the hardest worked of places. Those
-assembled were Mr. Disraeli, Sir John Pakington, Mr. Walpole, Lord
-Hardwicke, Mr. Henley, Mr. Herries, Lord John Manners, and Lord
-Eglinton. Everything went smoothly, each willingly accepting the
-respective post to which Lord Stanley appointed him, excepting Mr.
-Henley, who made such difficulties about himself, and submitted so many
-upon various subjects, that Lord Stanley threw up the game, to the great
-disappointment and disgust of most of the others present. Mr. Henley
-seemed quite overpowered by the responsibility he was asked to undertake
-as President of the Board of Trade, and is evidently a most nervous man.
-Mr. Disraeli did not conceal his anger at his want of courage and
-interest in the matter.... In the House of Lords, Lord Stanley announced
-his failure, and did not conceal it as being caused by the want of
-experience in public business which he found existed in his party. This
-is possibly the case, but what really caused the break up of the
-conference was the timid conduct of Mr. Henley and Mr. Herries.[32] Mr.
-Herries,” adds Lord Malmesbury, “at this conference, looked like an old
-doctor who had just killed a patient, and Mr. Henley like the undertaker
-who was to bury him.” Lord Stanley gave a half-sarcastic turn to his
-announcement in the House of Lords of the various motives which had led
-his friends to refuse office. There was a titter when he said that one
-gentleman had declined to serve because he was pressed with domestic
-duties, which gave occasion for one of Lord Stanley’s brightest jokes.
-Lady Jocelyn ironically asked Stanley who it was who was so anxious
-about his domestic duties. “It is not Jocelyn,” was the cutting
-reply.[33] An attempted combination with the Peelites had broken down,
-though Mr. Gladstone was offered a high post in the Cabinet, and the
-Queen then summoned the Duke of Wellington for his advice.
-
-Matters were at an absolute deadlock. There were three questions in the
-public mind--Protection _versus_ Free Trade, Parliamentary Reform, and
-Papal Aggression. As Prince Albert put it in a memorandum which he drew
-up for the Duke’s consideration, on the _first_ question Peelites,
-Radicals, and Whigs were united, and formed a solid working majority. On
-the _second_ question they were also united against the Protectionists.
-But on the _third_ question the Whigs and Protectionists were united
-against the Peelites and the Radicals reinforced by the Irish party. Any
-policy that could unite Peelites, Whigs, Radicals, and Irish would
-therefore furnish a majority capable of keeping in office a Cabinet that
-could carry on the Queen’s Government. But the Peelites, the Irish, and
-the Radicals were just as determined that there should be no anti-Papal
-legislation, as the Whigs and Protectionists were determined on
-demanding it. Why not, in such circumstances, leave Papal aggression an
-_open question_, in a Coalition Ministry of Whigs, Peelites, and
-Radicals, allowing Lord John Russell to go on with an attenuated
-Ecclesiastical Titles Bill, and Sir James Graham to oppose it? This
-suggestion
-
-[Illustration: THE GREEN DRAWING-ROOM, WINDSOR CASTLE.]
-
-obviously sprang from the opinion which the Queen had held strongly ever
-since the year 1846, that the country would never get an efficient
-Government till a Coalition Ministry was formed. It was, however, quite
-impracticable. The Queen made no allowance for the ease with which a
-Cabinet loses prestige in the atmosphere of passion which pervades the
-House of Commons, where the fact that a Cabinet is even suspected of
-being divided destroys its moral authority. Neither the Duke of
-Wellington nor Lord Lansdowne, who was also consulted, could advise the
-Queen to put forward this project. The Duke, in fact, advised her to
-send for Lord John Russell once again. This was accordingly done. “The
-last act of the drama fell out last night,” writes Mr. Greville on the
-4th of March, “as everybody foresaw it would and must.” Lord John
-returned to office with his Ministry unchanged, which, says Mr.
-Greville, “was better than trying some trifling patching-up, or some
-shuffling of the same pack, and it makes a future reconstruction more
-easy.” On the same night Lord Granville dined at the Palace. “The Queen
-and Prince Albert,” writes Mr. Greville, “both talked to him a great
-deal of what has been passing, and very openly. She is satisfied with
-herself, as well she may be, and hardly with anybody else;
-
-[Illustration: SIR GEORGE CORNEWALL LEWIS.]
-
-not dissatisfied personally with Stanley, of whom she spoke in terms
-indicative of liking him. She thinks Lord John Russell and his Cabinet
-might have done more than they did to obtain Graham and the Peelites,
-and might have made the Papal question more of an open question; but
-Granville says that it is evident she is heart and soul with the
-Peelites, so strong is the influence of Sir Robert, and they are very
-stout and determined about Free Trade. The Queen and Prince think this
-resuscitated concern very shaky, and that it will not last. Her
-favourite aversions are, first and foremost, Palmerston, and Disraeli
-next. It is very likely that this latter antipathy (which no doubt
-Stanley discovered) contributed to his reluctance to form a Government.
-Such is the feeling about him in their minds.” Mr. Disraeli, aware of
-their antipathy, had, indeed, offered to efface himself or to accept any
-office, no matter how humble, that would not bring him into personal
-communication with the Sovereign, in order to facilitate the return of
-his party to power. It may be here convenient to note that the Queen,
-though entertaining strong personal opinions about the capacity of her
-Ministers, has been ever prompt to change them when they gave her good
-reasons for doing so. Her antipathy to Peel in 1839 was notorious. Yet
-when Peel became Prime Minister he completely won her confidence. Her
-antipathy to Palmerston ceased after he left the Foreign Office and
-became Prime Minister, and the same may be said of her aversion to Mr.
-Disraeli, who, as Lord Beaconsfield, received from the Crown a tribute
-of homage and favour rarely accorded to any subject.
-
-The reinstatement of the Whigs pleased nobody. However, a dissolution
-was dreaded, and all parties were therefore forced to tolerate them. But
-they were, as a Government, utterly discredited, and their final fall
-was imminent. On their return to office, the Government produced a new
-edition of their Ecclesiastical Titles Bill. It consisted simply in a
-declaration that the assumption of such titles was illegal. What may be
-termed the stringent penal clauses were cut out, and in this form the
-measure was received with universal displeasure, mingled with contempt.
-The bigots complained that the measure was rendered futile. The Radicals
-complained that it was a concession to the bigots. As for the Irish
-members, they opposed what was left of it, simply to compel the
-Government to drain the chalice of mortification to the lees. So
-ingeniously was the Bill obstructed that it was not read a third time
-till a month after its introduction. The House of Lords passed it after
-debating the second reading for two nights. Its opponents predicted it
-would be a dead letter, and events verified their prophecies. As Sir
-George Cornewall Lewis said, “Neither the assumption of the territorial
-title nor the prohibition to assume it was of the least practical
-importance.”[34]
-
-The story of the Parliamentary Session of 1851 may be briefly told. The
-obstruction of the Ecclesiastical Titles Bill left little time for
-legislation. Sir Charles Wood, as usual, bungled the Budget. He had a
-comfortable surplus of £2,521,000. His estimates were careful and
-judicious, and showed on the basis of existing taxation an anticipated
-surplus of £1,892,000. It was in disposing of this sum that Sir Charles
-plunged into a sea of difficulties. He said it would not enable him to
-abolish the Income Tax, the retention of which, during the early days of
-Free Trade, he recommended as necessary for the stability of the fiscal
-system. Hence he proposed to spend his estimated surplus in (1),
-reducing debt by about £1,000,000; (2), in commuting a tax “which bore
-on the health and morals of the lower classes,” namely, the Window Tax,
-into a house duty; (3), in reducing the duty on foreign and colonial
-coffee to a uniform rate of threepence in the pound; (4), in reducing
-the timber duty by fifty per cent.; (5), and by transferring to the
-State a certain proportion of the local charge for maintaining pauper
-lunatics. On the 17th of February, in Committee of Ways and Means, Sir
-Charles accordingly moved that the Income Tax and Stamp Duties in
-Ireland be renewed for a limited period. The manner in which the Budget
-was received clearly showed that it would be unpopular. The Tories
-attacked it because the Income Tax was to be retained, and the transfer
-of the charge for pauper lunatics they ridiculed as a mockery of relief
-to the distressed rural ratepayers. Mr. Hume complained that there was
-no attempt made to reduce military expenditure by asking the Colonies to
-bear the cost of their own defence. The representatives of the large
-towns protested violently against commuting the Window Tax into a house
-duty. The controversy was, however, cut short by Lord John Russell’s
-resignation after his defeat on Mr. Locke King’s resolution, to which
-reference has already been made.
-
-On the 5th of April Sir Charles Wood, after his usual manner, brought
-forward a new Budget. He proposed now to levy a uniform duty of
-ninepence on the annual value of houses, and sixpence on shops, without
-reference to the number of their windows. This would in nearly all cases
-impose a smaller burden on houses than the Window Tax, the capricious
-and unequal incidence of which had made it intensely unpopular--the
-greatest relief being given to the houses which had more windows than
-were proportionate to their annual value. The loss from the Window Tax
-and the reduction of the duty on coffee left a surplus of £924,000 for
-emergencies, and Sir Charles Wood was still deaf to the demand for the
-abolition of the Income Tax. The Tories contended that the tax had been
-granted to meet a deficit. There was now no deficit, therefore the tax
-ought to be removed. The Whigs admitted these facts, but denied the
-conclusion drawn from them. The tax, they argued, ought not to be
-removed, because a new reason had risen for its continuance, namely,
-that the Income Tax enabled the Government to minimise the loss to the
-revenue which might be entailed by the abandonment of protective duties.
-This, in fact, is the clue to all the tangled Income Tax controversies
-of the time. The Income Tax was in truth the keystone of Peel’s Free
-Trade policy. The Tories, therefore, spared no pains to strike it out of
-the fabric of fiscal legislation which he and the Whigs had built up.
-Yet the injustice and frauds perpetrated under the Income Tax were
-admitted on all sides; and finally an effort was made by Mr. Hume to
-limit the renewal of the tax to one year, and refer the whole question
-of its assessment and incidence to a Select Committee. Mr. Hume’s motion
-was carried against the Government by a vote of 244 to 230. But the
-fatal objection to it, as Mr. Sidney Herbert pointed out, was that,
-unless the Government had the Income Tax secured to them for three
-years, they could not make permanent
-
-[Illustration: THE CAFFRE WAR: NATIVES ATTACKING A CONVOY.]
-
-reductions in the duties on coffee and timber. It was absurd to dream of
-entering on a policy which involved further remission of taxation, so
-long as £5,000,000 of the revenue--for that was what the Income Tax
-brought in--depended on an annual vote of the House. Then the _concordia
-discors_ of the majority was made manifest. As everybody had voted with
-Mr. Hume from different motives, it was impossible to get competent men
-to serve on the Committee. That difficulty, however, was after much
-trouble overcome, and the Government made the best of the situation.
-They accepted defeat; Lord John Russell, however, stipulating that,
-whatever might be done, the national credit must be maintained. In other
-words, he accepted the proposal on the ground that, though the motion
-granting the Income Tax for one year only was carried, there was no
-serious intention of refusing to renew the tax if necessary; and that it
-would be necessary was, of course, certain, unless the £5,500,000
-derived from it were replaced by protective duties. This was not a very
-logical position, and Mr. Disraeli seized the opening which it gave him.
-Hume’s victory, technically speaking, implied that the financial
-arrangements of the country were in a provisional state.
-
-[Illustration: GROUP OF DYAKS.]
-
-Why, then, asked Mr. Disraeli, sacrifice any revenue at all till
-something like permanence had been imparted to these arrangements? On
-the 30th of July he brought forward a futile motion to this effect in a
-grandiose speech, and was supported by Mr. Gladstone, whose antipathy to
-the Government was fast becoming uncontrollable. Yet Mr. Gladstone’s
-argument was sound enough. To surrender the Window Tax for one like the
-hated House Duty, which rested on a narrow basis and was vitiated by
-special anomalies of inequality and injustice of incidence, that had
-secured its abolition in 1834, was surely bad finance. And what was
-gained? Six-sevenths of the house property of the country were exempted
-from taxation--house property being a fair enough subject for taxation,
-provided it be assessed on fair general principles. Nothing could be
-more precarious than the position of the Income Tax; yet but for it the
-surplus in hand, which Sir Charles Wood was flinging away, would not
-exist. Mr. Disraeli, however, in spite of Mr. Gladstone’s support, lost
-his motion. His inconsistency in voting for Mr. Cayley’s proposal, on
-the 8th of May, to abolish the Malt Tax, which yielded £5,000,000 of
-revenue, and in protesting, on the 30th of June, against the sacrifice
-of £1,600,000 of surplus, as ruinous to public credit, was, of course,
-disastrous to his pleading.
-
-In the debates on Colonial Policy the Government were more successful
-than could have been anticipated. Mr. Baillie’s motion censuring Lord
-Torrington’s maladministration of the affairs of Ceylon was defeated by
-a large majority, which, says Mr. Greville, set the Cabinet, smarting
-from various reverses at the time, “on their legs again.”
-
-On the 18th of April a much more important subject was broached by Sir
-W. Molesworth, who moved a series of resolutions demanding that the
-Colonies should be made autonomous, and charged to provide for their own
-defence. Other motions of the same sort as this one sprang from the
-_animus_ against the Colonial Office which then existed among all
-parties. As Mr. Urquhart said in debate, independent members were of
-opinion that, if the good sense of the country did not put down the
-Colonial Office, the Colonial Office would put down the Empire. The
-objection of the Government to Sir W. Molesworth’s proposal was the old
-one to all Colonial reforms--that it must lead to the abandonment of our
-Colonial Empire. The debate was adjourned, and was not resumed.
-
-The chronic discontent of the Cape Colonists, smarting under Lord Grey’s
-abortive design to quarter convicts on them, led to some acrimonious
-discussions, which aggravated popular antipathy to the costly Caffre War
-which was raging. Lord John Russell, however, contrived to evade attacks
-by persuading the House of Commons to appoint a Select Committee to
-inquire into the relations of the Colony to the Caffre tribes.
-
-The Radicals of the Manchester school had raised early in the Session an
-agitation against Sir James Brooke, popularly called Rajah Brooke, of
-Sarawak. Rajah Brooke had waged war on the Dyak tribes because they were
-aggressive pirates. The Manchester school denied that the Dyaks were
-pirates, and contended that Sir James Brooke simply levied war on the
-natives in order to seize their territory. Mr. Hume insisted on
-referring the matter to a Select Committee, but he was defeated by a
-large majority, and the result of the debate was to exonerate Sir James
-Brooke from the charges of brutality and barbarism that had been
-advanced against him.
-
-The slave-hunting squadron in West Africa was another question as to
-which the Government were sadly harried. The cost of keeping up the
-squadron rendered it extremely unpopular, and Mr. Hume forced the
-Government, in Committee of Supply, to make a statement as to its work.
-According to Lord Palmerston, it was active, energetic, and successful
-in suppressing the infamous traffic in slaves, and the House of Commons
-thought that the results of the squadron’s operations were so valuable
-that England ought not to grudge the money spent upon it. On the other
-hand, the Party of Economy contended that the reduction in the slave
-trade was due, not to the English squadron, but to the new policy of
-Brazil, whose Government had begun to co-operate with ours in seizing
-slave-traders, destroying barracoons, and releasing slaves.
-
-Foreign affairs but slightly interested Parliament in 1851. No doubt a
-great deal of excitement was produced by the two letters on the State
-prosecutions by the Neapolitan Government, which Mr. Gladstone addressed
-to Lord Aberdeen, and much indignation was expressed at the stupid
-tyranny of King “Bomba,” whose dungeons were full of political
-prisoners. The charges of cruelty and injustice caused Sir De Lacy Evans
-to question the Foreign Secretary on the subject in the House of
-Commons, and from Lord Palmerston’s reply it turned out that above
-20,000 persons were then confined in Neapolitan prisons for political
-offences, most of whom had been deprived of liberty in flagrant
-violation of the existing laws of their country. Copies of Mr.
-Gladstone’s letter were sent by Lord Palmerston to every foreign
-Government, in the hope that a joint-remonstrance from the Powers might
-put an end to King Ferdinand’s outrages on civilisation.
-
-Mr. Cobden renewed his annual motion for bringing about a general
-disarmament among the European nations; and undoubtedly his speech was
-received with much more sympathy than usual by the House of Commons and
-the country. It was the year of the International Exhibition, and all
-the world was talking of fraternity among the nations, and of their
-strife being limited, in the golden future, to peaceful contests in the
-fields of industry. “We are witnessing now,” said Mr. Cobden in a
-memorable passage of his speech, “what a few years ago no one could have
-predicted as possible. We see men meeting together from all countries in
-the world, more like the gatherings of nations in former times, when
-they came up for a great religious festival; we find men speaking
-different languages and bred in different habits associating in one
-common temple erected for their gratification and reception.” The
-Government, he held, might with everlasting honour to themselves seize
-the favourable hour for broaching a peace policy, and endeavour to win
-the assent of Europe to a project for universal disarmament. The idea
-then in men’s minds was that England should set the example by
-approaching France with a proposal, that each country should reduce its
-armaments to the footing on which they stood at the time of the Syrian
-dispute. Lord Palmerston approved generally of Mr. Cobden’s objects, and
-was willing to say that he would do everything in his power to bring
-about the friendliest relations with France. But he did not wish to be
-fettered beforehand with definite instructions to open up at once
-negotiations for mutual disarmament; and, professing himself satisfied
-with this expression of opinion, Mr. Cobden withdrew his motion.
-
-The Jews in the Session of 1851 failed to remove the political
-disabilities under which members of their community lay.[35] They
-carried their point in the House of Commons. In the House of Lords,
-however, the Tories threw the Jewish Disabilities Relief Bill out by a
-vote of 144 to 108. A hot controversy arose over the attempt of Alderman
-Salomons, the newly-elected member for Greenwich, to take the Oath
-without repeating the words, “On the true faith of a Christian.” It
-ended in the Alderman being removed from his seat by the
-Serjeant-at-Arms, and in Lord John Russell carrying a motion denying Mr.
-Salomons’s right to sit whilst he was unsworn.
-
-[Illustration: LORD CARLISLE.]
-
-The smaller measures of the Session included a Bill for strengthening
-the appellate branch of the Court of Chancery by appointing two extra
-judges. The Bill to legalise marriage with a deceased wife’s sister,
-though carried in the House of Commons, was, as usual, rejected in the
-Lords. Parliament was prorogued by the Queen in person on the 8th of
-August, and the occasion
-
-[Illustration: THE GREAT EXHIBITION, HYDE PARK.]
-
-was interesting, for the representatives of the people for the first
-time went into her presence from the new House of Commons, which had at
-last been made ready for occupation. The long procession through the
-grand corridors, between the two chambers, was accordingly a little more
-orderly than usual. The Royal Speech was devoted to a brief review of a
-barren but not unimportant Session.
-
-Legislation, in fact, had been brought to a standstill by the anti-Papal
-Bill, which had been obstinately obstructed. The prestige of the
-Ministry was gone, and their natural strength completely abated by the
-mutiny of the Irish Whigs. And yet, when Lord John Russell resumed
-office after his resignation, he gained rather than lost in power, and
-the attack on him became more and more languid every day. The truth is
-that the people did not think much about politics after May, 1851. The
-Ministry was safe after the failure of the Tories to take their places.
-But it was no stronger than when it had been beaten on Mr. Locke King’s
-motion, and its lease of office depended largely on the tolerance of
-disdain. The people were indeed preoccupied with the Great Industrial
-Exhibition of All Nations to such an extent that they paid no more
-attention, during the latter half of the Session, to the doings of the
-Government, than to the debates of a local vestry. “There is,” writes
-Mr. Greville on the 8th of June, “a picture in _Punch_ of the
-shipwrecked Government saved by the ‘Exhibition’ steamer, which really
-is historically true, thanks in great measure to the attractions of the
-Exhibition, which has acted on the public as well as upon Parliament....
-There has been so much indifference and _insouciance_ about politics and
-parties that John Russell and his Cabinet have been released from all
-present danger. The cause of Protection gets weaker and weaker every
-day; all sensible and practical men give it up as hopeless.”[36] That he
-had been saved by the “Great Exhibition” steamer evidently did not
-satisfy Lord John Russell. Hence he seems to have been ever hankering
-after a plan for strengthening his Cabinet by the addition to it of a
-Peelite element. Sir George Cornewall Lewis was sent down to Netherby in
-September to intrigue with Sir James Graham for this purpose, but
-Graham, though offered the Board of Control, or as it would now be
-called the India Office, refused to join the Cabinet because he was
-afraid lest Lord John Russell might make dangerous concessions to the
-Party who were agitating for Parliamentary Reform. It is interesting to
-note that Lord Palmerston strongly opposed this project of inviting
-Graham to join the Whig Cabinet, and strove hard to induce his
-colleagues to make their overtures to Mr. Gladstone. It is impossible to
-blame Sir James for the course he took. Lord John Russell’s incurable
-antipathy to statistical research induced him to hand over the question
-of Reform to a small Ministerial Committee, consisting of Lord Minto,
-Lord Carlisle, and Sir C. Wood, and so little did the Whigs love Reform,
-that some of them, like Lord Lansdowne, had resolved to leave the
-Cabinet if a strong Reform measure were proposed.
-
-Another circumstance helped to weaken the Ministry. Lord Palmerston, as
-usual, succeeded during the autumn in again irritating the Queen and his
-own colleagues by one of his singular freaks at the Foreign Office. When
-Louis Kossuth, the Hungarian patriot, arrived at Southampton on the 23rd
-of October, he was welcomed by a popular demonstration, and some leading
-Radicals took part in it. Lord Palmerston immediately resolved to
-receive him, and it became known that if he did this the Austrian
-Government would recall their Ambassador. Lord John Russell pointed out
-the impropriety of the step which Lord Palmerston obstinately insisted
-on taking. Palmerston’s last word on the subject to the Prime Minister
-was that he considered he had a right to receive M. Kossuth privately
-and unofficially, and that he would not be dictated to as to the
-reception of a guest in his own house, though his office was at the
-disposal of the Government. A meeting of the Cabinet was immediately
-summoned, and the matter was laid before those present by Lord John
-Russell. It was agreed that Lord Palmerston could not with propriety
-receive Kossuth, and he promised to submit to the decision of his
-colleagues. Up to this point everything went smoothly, and the Queen was
-greatly relieved in mind to learn that the Foreign Secretary had been so
-reasonable as to promise _not_ to insult a friendly Power. Her feeling
-on the subject was that, being at peace with Austria, we had no right to
-get up demonstrations in favour of persons who had been endeavouring to
-upset the Austrian Government. “I was at Windsor,” writes Mr. Greville
-on the 16th of November, “for a Council on Friday. There I saw Lord
-Palmerston and Lord John mighty merry and cordial, talking and laughing
-together. Those breezes leave nothing behind, particularly with
-Palmerston, who never loses his temper, and treats everything with
-gaiety and levity. The Queen is vastly displeased with the Kossuth
-demonstrations, especially at seeing him received at Manchester with as
-much enthusiasm as attended her own visit to that place.... Delane[37]
-is just come from Vienna, where he had a long interview with
-Schwarzenberg, who treated, or at least affected to do so, the Kossuth
-reception with contempt and indifference.”[38] Two days after Mr.
-Greville made this entry in his Diary, to the amazement of the Queen and
-Lord John Russell, Lord Palmerston, addressing a deputation that waited
-on him from Finsbury and Islington, expressed on behalf of England his
-strong sympathy with the cause of the Hungarian revolutionary leaders.
-He had kept the word of promise to the ear, but had broken it to the
-hope. What he had said was infinitely more irritating to Austria than
-his reception of Kossuth could have been. The breach of faith with his
-indignant colleagues was inexcusable, and it prepared the way for
-Palmerston’s expulsion from the Cabinet, which followed his recognition
-of the _coup d’état_ in December.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI.
-
-THE FESTIVAL OF PEACE AND THE _COUP D’ÉTAT_.
-
- The World’s Fair--Carping Critics--Churlish Ambassadors Rebuked by
- the Queen--Opening of the Great Exhibition--A Touching Sight--The
- Queen’s Comments on “_soi-disant_ Fashionables”--The Duke of
- Wellington’s Nosegay--Prince Albert among the Missionaries--The
- Queen’s Letter to Lord John Russell--Her Pride in her Husband--The
- London Season--The Duke of Brunswick’s Balloon
- “Victoria”--Bloomerism--The Queen at Macready’s Farewell
- Benefit--The Queen’s Costume Ball--The Spanish Beauty--An Ugly
- “Lion”--The Queen at the Guildhall Ball--Grotesque Civic
- Festivities--Royal Visits to Liverpool and Manchester--A
- Well-Dressed Mayor--The Queen on the “Sommerophone”--The _Coup
- d’État_--The Assassins of Liberty--The Appeal to France--The
- Queen’s Last Quarrel with Palmerston--Palmerston’s Fall--Outcry
- against the Queen--A “Presuming” Muscovite--The Queen’s
- Vindication.
-
-
-During the greater part of the Session of 1851 the English people, to
-use a phrase of Mr. Disraeli’s, “were not up to politics.” It was the
-year of the marvellous World’s Fair, or Great International Exhibition,
-and the keen interest which it aroused diverted public attention from
-Ministerial blundering. But though the interest of the country in the
-Exhibition was strong, it was feeble compared with that which the Queen
-and Prince Albert took in it. In spring, when the Court returned to
-London, the Prince concentrated all his energies on the labour of
-organising the arrangements for the opening of the Crystal Palace. All
-through March and April he worked night and day, undaunted by the
-carping criticisms of those who predicted that the direst calamities
-would spring from the Exhibition. These foolish persons asserted that
-the Exhibition Commissioners were simply organising a foreign invasion
-of London. To attract to the capital dense crowds of foreigners, they
-declared, would lead to riot, to the spread of revolutionary doctrines,
-to the introduction of pestilence and of foreign forms of immorality,
-and to the ruin of British trade, the secrets of which would be revealed
-to our competitors in the markets of the world. Colonel Sibthorp, in the
-Debate on the Address, actually implored Heaven to destroy the Crystal
-Palace by hail or lightning, and others declared that the Queen would
-most surely be assassinated by some foreign conspirators, on the opening
-day of the great show.
-
-The diplomatic body in London also behaved churlishly to the promoters
-of the scheme, arguing that foreigners, by coming in contact with the
-democratic institutions of England, would lose their taste for
-Absolutism. When Prince Albert proposed that the Ambassadors should have
-an opportunity of taking part in the proceedings by presenting an
-Address to the Queen, M. Van de Weyer, as senior member of the
-diplomatic body in London, privately asked the opinion of his colleagues
-on the subject. They all gave their assent with one exception, Baron
-Brunnow, who was “not at home” when M. Van de Weyer called on him. But
-at a meeting of the diplomatic body it was decided by a majority of them
-not to present any Address to her Majesty. This decision was arrived at
-mainly by the influence of Brunnow, who said he could not permit the
-Russian nation or people to be mentioned in an Address of this kind. He
-was also jealous of allowing M. Van de Weyer or any other Ambassador to
-speak for the Russian Government. The Queen was chagrined at this
-incivility, and instructed M. Van de Weyer to tell his colleagues that
-of course she could not compel them “to accept a courtesy which anywhere
-else would be looked on as a favour.” Brunnow, however, held out. In the
-end it was agreed that the Ambassadors should present no Address, but
-merely be formally presented to the Queen at the opening function, and,
-having bowed, that they should file away to the side of the platform,
-where they certainly did not cut an imposing figure during the ceremony
-of inauguration.
-
-[Illustration: SIR JOSEPH PAXTON.]
-
-On the 29th of April the Queen made a private visit to the Exhibition,
-and returned from it saying that her eyes were positively dazzled with
-“the myriads of beautiful things” which met her view. Though some of the
-Royal Family, like the Duke of Cambridge, were afraid that there might
-be a riot on the opening day, the Queen was not affected in the least by
-their warnings, asserting that she had the completest faith in the good
-sense, good humour, and chivalrous loyalty of her people. Nor was this
-confidence misplaced. On the day of the opening, she was received with
-passionate demonstrations of loyal enthusiasm from the crowds, amounting
-in the aggregate to about 700,000 persons, who came forth to see her
-pass. As for those who entered the building, they seemed awestruck with
-astonishment at the brilliant scene, radiant with life and colour, which
-lay before their eyes. At half-past eleven on the 1st of May the Royal
-_cortège_ left the Palace, and filed along in a stately procession
-through the enormous crowds who swarmed in the Green Park and in Hyde
-Park. “A little rain fell,” writes the Queen, “just as we started, but
-before we came near the Crystal Palace the sun shone and gleamed upon
-the gigantic edifice, upon which the flags of all the nations were
-floating. We drove up Rotten Row, and got out at the entrance on that
-side. The glimpse of the transept through the iron gates, the waving
-palms, flowers, statues, myriads of people filling the galleries and
-seats around, gave us a sensation which I can never forget, and I felt
-much moved. We went for a moment to a little side room, where we left
-our shawls, and where we found Maria and Mary [now Princess of Teck],
-and outside which were standing the other Princes. In a few seconds we
-proceeded, Albert leading me, having Vicky at his right hand and Bertie
-[Prince of Wales] holding mine.... The tremendous cheers, the joy
-expressed in every face, the immensity of the building, the mixture of
-palms, flowers, trees, statues, fountains, the organ (with 200
-instruments and 600 voices, which sounded like nothing), and my beloved
-husband, the author of this ‘Peace-Festival,’ which united the industry
-of all nations of the earth--all this was moving indeed, and it was and
-is a day to live for ever.”[39] When the National Anthem had been sung,
-Prince Albert, at the head of the Commissioners, read their Report to
-the Queen. She in turn read a short reply. A brief prayer was offered by
-the Archbishop of Canterbury, and then the “Hallelujah Chorus” was sung.
-The grand State procession of all the dignitaries was then formed, and
-walked along the whole length of the crowded nave amidst deafening
-cheers. “Every one’s face,” writes the Queen in her Diary, “was bright
-and smiling, many with tears in their eyes. Many Frenchmen called out
-‘Vive la Reine!’.... The old Duke and Lord Anglesey walked arm in arm,
-which was a touching sight.” When the procession returned to the point
-from which it started, Lord Breadalbane proclaimed the Exhibition open
-in the name of the Queen, whereupon there was a flourish of trumpets and
-more cheering. “Everybody,” writes the Queen,
-
-[Illustration: OPENING OF THE GREAT EXHIBITION, HYDE PARK.
-
-(_After the Picture by Eugène Lamé._)]
-
-“was astonished and delighted. Sir George Grey (Home Secretary) in
-tears.” On the way home her Majesty again met with a magnificent
-reception. After entering the Palace, she and the Prince showed
-themselves on the balcony and bowed their adieus to the vast throng,
-whose loyal shouts rent the air. The most perfect order was maintained,
-and, writes the Queen, “the wicked and absurd reports of dangers of
-every kind which a set of people, namely, _soi-disant_ fashionables and
-the most violent Protectionists spread, are silenced.... I must not,”
-she adds, “omit to mention an interesting episode of this day, namely,
-the visit of the good old Duke on this his eighty-second birthday to his
-little godson, our dear little boy.[40] He came to us both at five, and
-we gave him a golden cup and some toys, which he himself had chosen, and
-Arthur gave him a nosegay.” From every quarter congratulations on the
-complete success of the day poured in upon the Queen, and though 700,000
-spectators lined the route between the Exhibition and the Palace, no
-accidents and not a single police case could be traced to this enormous
-gathering of sightseers.
-
-One result of the Exhibition was the celebration of the one hundred and
-fiftieth anniversary of the Society for Propagating the Gospel in
-Foreign Parts. It was thought that the great gathering of foreigners
-offered a fitting occasion for celebrating an event of the kind, and
-Prince Albert was asked to preside over the commemoration. His Royal
-Highness agreed, but stipulated that the celebration was to have no
-denominational or sectarian turn. Representatives of all parties,
-therefore, were invited; and the Prince’s speech, which he prepared with
-unusual care, was marked by broad catholicity of feeling, and was
-admirably in harmony with the great festival of civilisation which he
-himself had organised. Lord John Russell was so deeply impressed with
-the speech, that he wrote to the Queen congratulating her on the effect
-that it had produced. In reply the Queen wrote as follows:--“We are both
-much pleased at what Lord John Russell says about the Prince’s speech of
-yesterday. It was on so ticklish a subject, that we could not feel
-certain beforehand how it might be taken.” At the same time, the Queen
-felt sure that the Prince would say the right thing, from her entire
-confidence in his great tact and judgment. The Queen, at the risk of not
-appearing sufficiently modest (and yet why should a wife ever be modest
-about her husband’s merits?), must say that she thinks Lord John Russell
-will admit now that the Prince is possessed of very extraordinary powers
-of mind and heart. She feels so proud of being his wife, that she cannot
-refrain from herself paying a tribute to his noble character.”[41]
-
-As might have been expected, the London season of the Exhibition year
-was an exceptionally brilliant one. It was marked by a strange
-combination of eccentricity and gaiety. The Duke of Brunswick kept the
-town talking with sufficient volubility, and his voyage to France in a
-balloon, the “Victoria,” with Mr. Green, the aëronaut, was a nine days’
-wonder. In midsummer “Bloomerism” whetted the wits of Londoners. The
-votaries of “Bloomerism” took their name from the wife of a gallant
-American officer. This lady invented a new costume for women, consisting
-of loose trousers gathered at the ankles, a short, full skirt, and a
-broad hat. Adventuresses and “advanced” ladies tried to popularise the
-costume, but failed. Ridicule killed their cause, and when barmaids in
-public-houses and “fast” women generally began to adopt “Bloomerism,”
-its doom was sealed. The season of 1851 was, indeed, clouded with but
-one dismal fact; the aristocracy were somewhat pinched because
-agricultural prices were low, and yet the nobility bore their part in
-the great vortex of hospitality, which the World’s Fair had set
-whirling, bravely enough. London swarmed with distinguished foreigners,
-and balls and routs and dinner-parties went on without ceasing.
-
-[Illustration: ST. GEORGE’S HALL, LIVERPOOL.]
-
-The first striking event of the season was the withdrawal of Macready
-from the stage on the 1st of February, and from the Memoirs of that
-great actor we find that the Queen made a point of being present at his
-farewell performance on the 26th of February at Drury Lane--the scene of
-his triumphs, not only as an actor but as a manager, who had restored
-Shakespeare’s plays to the stage in their fullest integrity. Nor was
-this the only performance which her Majesty honoured with her presence.
-Writing on May 17th, Lord Malmesbury records that “Lady Londonderry
-appeared at the Duke of Devonshire’s play in a gown trimmed with green
-birds, small ones round the body and down the sides, and large ones down
-the centre. The beak of one of the birds caught in the Queen’s dress,
-and was some time before it could be disentangled.” On the 12th of June
-there was a grand fancy ball at the Palace, the period chosen for
-illustration being the time of Charles II. The nobility and gentry
-appeared in the characters of their ancestors. The high officers of
-State donned the costumes of their predecessors in the reign of the
-“Merry Monarch.” “We went to the Queen’s Ball,” writes Lord Malmesbury;
-“it is said that her Majesty received 600 excuses out of 1,400
-invitations, and that she did not fill up their places. I thought it
-very inferior to the first two. Most of the fancy dresses shabby, as if
-they had been got up cheap.”
-
-[Illustration: THE ROYAL VISIT TO WORSLEY HALL: THE STATE BARGE ON THE
-BRIDGWATER CANAL.]
-
-This was the season during which “the Spanish beauty,” Mademoiselle de
-Montijo, afterwards Empress of the French, shone meteor-like in London
-Society, and divided the honours with Narvaez, “an ugly, little fat man,
-with a vile expression of countenance,” according to Lord Malmesbury,
-and who, after being Prime Minister of Spain, and having headed many
-pronunciamientos, uttered one famous _bon mot_ on his deathbed. When he
-was asked by the priest to forgive his enemies, he answered, “I have
-none, as I always got rid of them.”[42]
-
-On the 9th of July, however, the most remarkable event of the season
-took place. It was the gorgeous ball given at Guildhall by the Lord
-Mayor and Corporation of the City of London to celebrate the success of
-the Great Exhibition. That success was now assured. The weekly takings
-at the gates had never been less than £10,298. In one week they had
-amounted to £22,189, and already Prince Albert was discussing, with his
-confidential advisers, what they should do with the large surplus which
-they were certain they would have in hand. The crowning triumph of the
-undertaking was therefore celebrated by the City magnates with more than
-their usual display of lavish magnificence. The Queen and Prince Albert
-accepted invitations, and when they started in their State carriage from
-Buckingham Palace, they drove through dense crowds of people, amidst
-shouts of congratulations delivered in all sorts of tongues. Nay, when
-they left the Guildhall on the morning of the 10th of July, at daybreak,
-they were amazed to find loyal crowds still waiting to cheer them, with
-no diminution of enthusiasm as they drove home. “A million of people,”
-writes the Prince to Baron Stockmar on the 14th of July, “remained till
-three in the morning in the streets, and were full of enthusiasm towards
-us.” He says, also, that the ball passed off “brilliantly,”[43] but with
-this must be read, as a mild corrective, the description given by Lord
-Malmesbury in his Diary, which is as follows:--“July 10th.--Went in the
-evening to Madame Van de Weyer’s. I hear the ball to the Queen at the
-Guildhall was extremely amusing. People very ridiculous. The ladies
-passed her at a run, never curtseying, and then returned to stare at
-her. Some of the gentlemen passed with their arms round the ladies’
-waists, others holding them by the hand at arm’s length, as if they were
-going to dance a minuet. One man kissed his hand to the Queen as he went
-by, which set her Majesty off in a fit of laughter.” The ball, however,
-marked the beginning of the end of this splendid season. “To-night,”
-writes Prince Albert to Baron Stockmar in the letter just alluded to,
-“we have our last ball. The day after to-morrow I come back here to dine
-with the Agricultural Society.... On the 18th we return to Osborne for
-good.” It was not, however, till the 28th of July that the Court removed
-to Osborne, and on the 18th they visited the Crystal Palace once more.
-This visit the Queen describes in a letter to Stockmar, in which she
-says:--“The immense number of manufacturers with whom we have spoken
-have gone away delighted. The thousands who are at the Crystal Palace
-when we are leaving are all so loyal and so gratified, many never having
-seen us before. All this will be of a use not to be described. It
-identifies us with the people, and gives them an additional cause for
-loyalty and attachment.”
-
-On the 27th of August the Queen, Prince Albert, and their family left
-Osborne for Balmoral, which had now been purchased by the Prince from
-its owner. On the journey northwards they were received at Peterborough
-by the venerable Bishop of that see, who had been her Majesty’s tutor,
-and a touching interview took place between the Queen and her old
-preceptor. At Boston and Doncaster loyal addresses were presented, the
-party passing the night at the Angel Inn, Doncaster, much to the delight
-of the inhabitants of that town. On the 28th they reached Edinburgh,
-where they occupied the State apartments at Holyrood, and drove through
-the town in the evening. Next day they arrived at Balmoral, where they
-remained till the 7th of October. During this holiday the Queen and her
-husband devoted themselves to the rural occupations that always while
-away the autumn in the Highlands--the Queen walking, driving, riding,
-sketching, and visiting the cottages of the poor people in her
-neighbourhood, with whom she had become an especial favourite--the
-Prince pursuing his favourite sport of deer-stalking, with even more
-than his wonted ardour. They also entertained many distinguished guests,
-among whom may be mentioned Hallam the historian, and Liebig the
-chemist, who were both charmed with the welcome which they received, and
-with the easy simplicity of the Queen’s life in her northern home.
-
-On the 8th of October they proceeded to Edinburgh, and met with one or
-two adventures by the way which brought vividly to the Queen’s mind the
-hazards of railway travelling. When nearing Forfar the axle of a
-carriage truck became overheated by friction, and the train was stopped
-till the truck was uncoupled. At Kirkliston there was an explosion of
-steam in one of the feeder-pipes of the engine, which delayed the train
-for an hour, and prevented the Royal party from reaching Edinburgh till
-eight o’clock at night. Next morning they resumed their journey. At
-Lancaster, where they stopped for luncheon, the Queen and her children
-went to view John of Gaunt’s ancient castle, and she was presented with
-its keys at the gateway of the stronghold--two addresses being read to
-her, which she herself has said were “very prettily worded.” In the
-afternoon the Royal party reached Croxteth Park, the seat of the Earl of
-Sefton. Next morning they started to visit Liverpool, calling on Lord
-Derby at Knowsley Park on the way.
-
-They would have been welcomed with a splendid reception from the Mayor
-and Corporation and inhabitants of the great northern seaport, had not
-the weather broken, and had not torrents of rain poured down without
-ceasing, veiling everything and everybody in the densest fog. Still the
-Queen persisted in proceeding with the appointed programme, and,
-good-naturedly determined to make the best of the unpropitious elements,
-she visited the eastern and southern districts of the town, inspected
-the docks by land, viewed them from the Mersey from the deck of the
-_Fairy_, and made a return progress through the central and northern
-streets, which by this time were one sea of mud, where, however, patient
-and loyal crowds stood waiting to cheer their Sovereign and her family
-as they passed. “We proceeded,” writes her Majesty, “to the Council
-Room, where we stood on a throne, and received the addresses of the
-Mayor and Corporation, to which I read an answer, and then knighted the
-Mayor, Mr. Bent, a very good man.” What seems to have pleased the Queen
-most was her visit to St. George’s Hall, a building which she
-enthusiastically described as “being worthy of ancient Athens.” Here she
-had to step out on the balcony and stand in the rain bowing her
-acknowledgments to the vast crowd who stood cheering with undamped
-ardour in the street below. From Liverpool the Queen and her party,
-attended by Lady Ellesmere, the Duke of Wellington, Lord and Lady
-Westminster, and Lord and Lady Wilton, proceeded in a barge along the
-Bridgwater Canal to Worsley Hall, the seat of Lord Ellesmere. The barge
-was towed by four horses, and whilst one half was covered in, over that
-part which was open an awning was stretched. “The boat,” writes the
-Queen, “glided along in a most noiseless and dream-like manner amidst
-the cheers of the people who lined the sides of the canal.” At Worsley
-Hall the Queen met Mr. Nasmyth, the inventor of the steam-hammer, and
-she seems to have been greatly delighted with his conversation, and
-fascinated by his drawings and maps explaining his investigations into
-the geography of the moon. The evening, indeed, was devoted mainly to
-scientific conversation, this ascetic turn being given to it by the
-arrival of the news that the first great submarine telegraph cable had
-been successfully laid between Dover and Calais. Next day, the 10th of
-October, the weather brightened, and the Royal party visited Manchester,
-the working people of the town turning out in holiday garb to welcome
-their Sovereign. “A very intelligent but painfully unhealthy-looking
-population they all were, men as well as women”--such is the Queen’s
-description of her hosts. In the Peel Park, Salford, her reception by
-82,000 school children of all sects and creeds, and their singing of the
-National Anthem, appear to have surprised and impressed her profoundly.
-She also remarked “the beautifully dressed” Mr. Potter, the Mayor of
-Manchester, “the Mayor and Corporation of which town,” writes the Queen,
-“had till now been too Radical to have robes.” Mr. Potter was duly
-knighted for his courtesy and kindness to the Royal party, and the Queen
-expressed herself as especially delighted with the order and good
-behaviour of the crowds who followed. She notes, however, in her Diary
-“that there are no really fine buildings” in Manchester--an observation
-which serves to mark the progress made by this now splendid city since
-1851. Next day the Royal party left Worsley Hall, passed again through
-Manchester, and through Stockport, Crewe, Stafford, Rugby, Weedon,
-Wolverton, and Watford, where their carriages were found waiting for
-them ready to post to Windsor, which they reached at half-past seven in
-the evening.
-
-On the 14th of October the Queen paid her final visit to the Great
-Exhibition, and she records the fact that “an organ, accompanied by a
-fine and powerful brass instrument, the Sommerophone, was being played,
-and it nearly upset me.” The Sommerophone had a compass of five octaves,
-and
-
-[Illustration: THE QUEEN’S ARRIVAL IN PEEL PARK: CHILDREN OF THE
-MANCHESTER AND SALFORD SCHOOLS SINGING THE NATIONAL ANTHEM.]
-
-when played by its inventor, Herr Sommer--the only performer who could
-make it discourse music--was one of the marvels of a year singularly
-full of the marvellous. Next day the grand show was closed with somewhat
-scant ceremony, the Queen writing in her Diary, “How sad and strange to
-think that this great and bright time has passed away like a dream,
-after all its triumph and success.” It is curious to observe that in the
-contemporary expressions of public feeling which were prompted by the
-wind-up of the Exhibition, the same note of melancholy is sounded, as if
-there were abroad a half-conscious foreboding that the Festival of Peace
-was only too likely to be followed by War.
-
-These forebodings were justifiable. Affairs abroad began to assume a
-threatening aspect. It has been shown how the enthusiastic
-demonstrations with which Louis Kossuth had been honoured in England had
-caused the Queen many anxious moments. Her mind was sadly troubled,
-also, by the ostentatious display of sympathy which Lord Palmerston
-extended to the Hungarian patriot, and by the veiled threat of Austria
-to recall her Ambassador if these demonstrations continued. Mr. Greville
-has somewhat maliciously said that the Queen’s feelings on this subject
-were caused by jealousy. Kossuth’s reception at Manchester, he observes,
-had been even more enthusiastic than her own. _Hinc illæ lacrymæ._ Here
-Mr. Greville does her Majesty a gross injustice. The abhorrence of the
-English Court for Austrian Absolutism was strong and unstinted, and most
-forcible expression is given to it in many letters from Prince Albert to
-Stockmar. England, however, was at peace with Austria, and had no
-interest in going to war with her. But the Queen argued that it would be
-impossible to keep up even the semblance of friendly relations with
-foreign States, if her Foreign Secretary were to pose as the friendly
-protector of every rebel leader who had attempted to upset their
-Government, or received addresses in which their rulers were stigmatised
-as “odious assassins.” Her anger against Lord Palmerston was not to be
-appeased by his apologists, who reminded her that he was taking a
-popular and democratic line, which was sure to win for the Queen the
-affection of the people, thereby more than compensating her for the loss
-of Austria’s goodwill. Her answer, penned by herself in a vigorous
-letter to Lord John Russell on the 21st of November, was:--“It is no
-question with the Queen whether she pleases the Emperor of Austria or
-not, but whether she gives him a just ground of complaint or not. And if
-she does so she can never believe that this will add to her popularity
-with her own people.”[44] We have already[45] described the action which
-was taken by the Cabinet in relation to this business, and it now
-remains to record the next quarrel which her Majesty had with Lord
-Palmerston, and which ultimately led to his expulsion from the Ministry.
-
-On the morning of the 4th of December the Queen was at Osborne, and
-there she was informed of the _coup d’état_ in Paris on the 2nd inst.
-The Prince-President, Charles Louis Napoleon Bonaparte, though he had
-sworn to protect the Republic, had, in concert with a clique of
-conspirators,[46] long before the 1st of December determined to restore
-the Empire. The first thing to do was to win over the army. The next to
-disgust the nation with Parliamentary institutions. The former task was
-easily accomplished. The latter, however, was somewhat more difficult,
-and the manner in which the conspirators set about it was most
-ingenious. Every newspaper that directed attention to the dangerous
-drift of the Prince-President’s policy was suppressed. He began to
-conspire, says Alexis de Tocqueville, “from November 10th, 1848. His
-direct instructions to Oudinot, and his letter to Ney only a few months
-after his election, showed his determination not to submit to
-Parliamentary Government. Then followed his dismissal of Ministry after
-Ministry, until he had degraded the office to a clerkship. Then came the
-semi-royal progress, then the reviews of Satory, the encouragement of
-treasonable cries, the selection for all the high appointments in the
-army of Paris of men whose infamous character fitted them to be tools.
-Then he publicly insulted the Assembly at Dijon, and at last, in
-October, we knew his plans were laid. It was then only that we began to
-think what were our means of defence, but that was no more a conspiracy
-than it is a conspiracy in travellers to look for their pistols when
-they see a band of robbers advancing.”[47]
-
-Two powerful motives urged the Prince-President forward. The time for
-the revision of the Constitution was approaching, a fundamental law of
-which was that he was ineligible for re-election at the expiry of his
-term of office. This law virtually forced him to choose between
-usurpation and obscurity, unless he could get it revised in his
-interests. But it was evident to him that it would not be so revised,
-unless popular pressure were put upon the Assembly, by some imposing
-demonstration of the masses in his favour. To win their sympathies he
-demanded the abolition of the Electoral Law of May 31st, 1850. That law
-imposed a three years’ residential qualification on the voter, and in
-practice it reduced the electorate from 10,000,000 to 7,000,000
-electors. The electoral law of May 31st was therefore the
-Prince-President’s moral weapon against the Assembly. The Assembly,
-however, refused to further his policy on both points, and endeavoured
-to protect itself against reprisals by authorising its President to
-exercise such control over the army as he might deem necessary for its
-protection. This in turn was resented by the Prince-President as an
-attack on the prerogatives of the Executive, and Cabinet after Cabinet
-fell in the course of the struggle between the Chief of the State and
-the Parliament. But the end was within sight when a Bill
-
-[Illustration: THE COUP D’ÉTAT: LANCERS CHARGING THE CROWD IN THE
-BOULEVARDS OF PARIS.]
-
-determining the responsibility of the Prince-President and his Ministers
-was brought forward. It provided for the punishment and trial of
-Ministers and of the Prince-President in the event of their violating
-the Constitution, and it was the last measure of importance which the
-Chamber was permitted to consider. On the night of the 1st of December
-the Prince-President and his coadjutors secretly printed a number of
-decrees, which were posted before daybreak on the walls of Paris. These
-announced the dissolution of the National Assembly and of the Council of
-State; the abrogation of the law of May 31st, 1850; the convocation of
-the French electoral colleges from the 14th to the 21st of December; and
-the proclamation of a state of siege in Paris. The Prince-President
-further submitted to the electors a new programme, of which the chief
-points were (1), a responsible chief named for ten years; (2), Ministers
-dependent on the Executive alone; (3), a Council of State; (4), a
-Legislature elected by universal suffrage without _scrutin de liste_,
-and (5), a Second Assembly, or Senate, filled with all the illustrious
-persons of the nation. In a word, he proposed to revive the system under
-which the First Consul transformed France into a military Empire.
-Proclamations appealing to the army
-
-[Illustration: PRINCE CHARLES LOUIS NAPOLEON.]
-
-were also issued. As for the Chamber, its members were arrested when
-they attempted to offer a protest. All prominent men who might have
-organised opposition among the masses were suddenly captured and thrown
-into prison. At the first show of popular resistance, the troops, who
-had been plied with strong drink for the occasion, fired on the
-people--in fact, the army seized France, and, having gagged and bound
-her, laid her at the feet of the Bonapartists. When Mr. Senior asked M.
-de Tocqueville if he did not think that the contest had been virtually
-forced on by the Assembly, we have said that the French statesman denied
-the charge. M. de Tocqueville contended that the proposition to put the
-army under the orders of the President of the Chamber was absurd,
-because it was impracticable, and need not have alarmed the
-Prince-President. The army had been so corrupted that it would not have
-obeyed the orders of the Chamber. As for the law of responsibility, that
-was not meant as a step in a conspiracy to crush the Prince-President.
-This law, M. de Tocqueville assured Mr. Senior, was sent up to the
-Chamber by the Council of State, who had been two years at work on it,
-and the Committee of the Chamber, fearing lest it might provoke a
-collision with the President, actually refused to declare it urgent.
-“Though I have said,” observed De Tocqueville, “that he (the
-Prince-President) has been conspiring since his election, I do not
-believe that he intended to strike so soon. His plan was to wait till
-next March, when the fears of May, 1852, would be most intense. Two
-circumstances forced him on more rapidly. One was the candidature of the
-Prince de Joinville. He thought him the only dangerous competitor. The
-other was an agitation set on foot by the Legitimists in the _Conseils
-Généraux_ for the repeal of the law of May 31st. That law was his moral
-weapon against the Assembly, and he feared that if he delayed, it might
-be repealed without him.”[48] The brutality displayed by the police who
-dispersed the Legislative Assembly, and by the soldiery who fired in the
-most wanton manner on the 3rd of December, without any justification
-whatever, on the houses, and on peaceful passers-by along the boulevards
-of Paris, was stigmatised by the public opinion of England as barbarous
-and outrageous. It set the educated classes in France without
-distinction of party against the Prince-President to such an extent,
-that it became a mark of social and intellectual distinction to refuse
-to recognise or serve under the new _régime_. In the provinces the
-Prince-President’s tactics of repression were equally successful, and
-some 10,000 persons were seized and transported to penal settlements,
-without being convicted by any form of legal trial. The papers of the
-distinguished statesmen and generals who were alleged to have been
-conspiring against the Prince-President were ransacked; but no trace of
-evidence was found against them, and they were accordingly never brought
-to trial at all. Having thus destroyed the Constitution by the sword,
-Prince Charles Louis Bonaparte appealed for a vote of indemnity to a
-nation which had no alternative but to choose between him and anarchy.
-The result of this appeal was a vote of 7,439,000 votes in his favour,
-and 640,737 against him--M. de Montalembert, to the grief and surprise
-of the educated classes, being among those who joined the majority.
-
-What was the attitude of the Queen to these events? On the 5th of
-December, Lord Palmerston sent a despatch to Lord Normanby, the British
-Ambassador at Paris, stating that “it is her Majesty’s desire that
-nothing should be done by her Ambassador at Paris which could wear the
-appearance of an interference of any kind in the internal affairs of
-France.” Lord Normanby accordingly called on M. Turgot, Minister of
-Foreign Affairs, to communicate this instruction, and apologised for his
-delay in making the communication. M. Turgot sarcastically replied that
-the delay was not of importance, as he had two days before that heard
-from M. de Walewski, the French Envoy in London, that Lord Palmerston
-had approved of the deeds of the Prince-President. When the despatch
-from Lord Normanby recording this interview reached the Queen, she sent
-it to Lord John Russell, pointing out that Lord Palmerston’s approval of
-the _coup d’état_ was not only a defiance of her own personal wishes,
-but also of a resolution of the Cabinet. Lord John Russell complained to
-Lord Palmerston about the matter, but instead of expressing regret, the
-latter sent to Lord Normanby a despatch strongly approving of the _coup
-d’état_, which, however, he concealed from the Prime Minister and the
-Queen. It was not till the 18th of December that Lord John Russell was
-able to inform the Queen that he had at last received from Lord
-Palmerston an explanation, which was so unsatisfactory that he had been
-compelled to write to that turbulent Minister “in the most decisive
-terms.” In plain English, Lord John called on Palmerston to resign. He
-sent in his resignation promptly enough, excusing himself by saying that
-his approval of the _coup d’état_ was but the expression of a personal
-and not of an official opinion. The whole correspondence was submitted
-to the Queen, who accepted the resignation of the Foreign Secretary with
-alacrity. “It was quite clear to the Queen,” writes Prince Albert in a
-letter to the Prime Minister, “that we were entering on most dangerous
-times, in which Military Despotism and Red Republicanism will for some
-time be the only powers on the Continent, to both of which the
-Constitutional Monarchy of England will be equally hateful.” The
-calmative influence of England, her Majesty thought, should be used to
-assuage and not embitter the conflicts abroad which produce such a
-perilous state of things. But this influence, she held, had “been
-rendered null by Lord Palmerston’s personal manner of conducting the
-foreign affairs, and the universal hatred which he has succeeded in
-inspiring on the Continent.”
-
-On the 22nd of December a Cabinet Meeting unanimously condemned
-Palmerston’s conduct, and the post vacated by him was accepted by Lord
-Granville, who was installed at the Foreign Office on the 27th of
-December. Lord Palmerston’s friends forthwith began to fill the Press
-with foolish reports, that he had been dismissed because foreign Courts
-had influenced the Queen against him. These insinuations were utterly
-unjust. For when Baron Brunnow asked Lord John Russell to contradict
-these rumours, the Queen wrote to Lord John as follows:--“Baron
-Brunnow’s letter is in fact very presuming, as it insinuates the
-possibility of changes of government in this country taking place at the
-instigation of Foreign Ministers, and the Queen is glad that Lord John
-gave him a dignified answer.” Palmerston’s dismissal, in truth, was due
-to his incurable recklessness, and his inveterate habit of not only
-compromising both the Queen and the Cabinet without consulting them, but
-of acting contrary to the course which had been definitely adopted by
-Queen and Cabinet alike, in grave and delicate affairs. Louis Napoleon
-was the only personage of distinction who regretted his fall. “So long
-as he was in office,” remarked the Prince-President cynically, “England
-would have no allies.”
-
-[Illustration: DIANA FOUNTAIN, BUSHEY PARK.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.
-
-A YEAR OF EXCITEMENT AND PANIC.
-
- Cassandras in the Service Clubs--The Tories and the Queen’s
- Speech--Lord John Russell’s Triumph--The Militia Bill--Defeat of
- the Russell Ministry--Fall of the Whig Cabinet--Palmerston’s “Tit
- for Tat”--A Protectionist Government--Novices in Office--A Cabinet
- of Affairs--Mr. Disraeli’s Budget--Lord John Russell’s Fatal
- Blunder--The Second Burmese War--Dalhousie’s Designs on Burmah--How
- the Quarrel Grew--Lambert’s Indiscretion--The Attack on
- Rangoon--Fall of the Citadel--Annexation--Desultory
- Warfare--Dissolution of Parliament--The General Election--Equipoise
- of Parties--Factions and Free Trade--Palmerston’s
- Forecasts--Forcing the Hand of the Ministry--Death of the Duke of
- Wellington--The Queen’s Grief--The Nation in Mourning--The
- Lying-in-State--Shocking Scenes--The Funeral Pageant--The Ceremony
- in St. Paul’s--A Veteran in Tears--The Laureate’s Votive
- Wreath--Review of the Duke’s Character.
-
-
-Eighteen hundred and fifty-two was a year fruitful in alarms and
-excitement. The excitement arose from the discovery of gold in Australia
-towards the end of the year 1851, and from the rich supplies of the
-precious metal which came pouring in from the new El Dorado. The alarms
-arose from the unsettled state of affairs abroad, the tortuous policy of
-Louis Napoleon, and Cassandra-like warnings from military writers that
-the national defences were utterly untrustworthy. A troublesome Caffre
-War at the Cape had also been draining away the best blood of the army
-during eighteen months, and absorbing troops who could be ill spared at
-home.
-
-Parliament met on the 3rd of February, and members, of course, could
-talk of nothing save the rupture between Lord Palmerston and the
-Ministry. The Queen’s Speech suggested, as topics of legislation,
-certain Reports of Commissions on the practice and proceedings in the
-Supreme Court of Law and
-
-[Illustration: HARNESSING THE BLACK HORSES AT THE ROYAL MEWS, BUCKINGHAM
-PALACE.
-
-(_After the Painting by Charles Lutyens, in the Possession of the Earl
-of Bradford._)]
-
-Equity, the reorganisation of the Government of New Zealand, and
-Parliamentary Reform. Why, asked the Tories, was there no allusion to
-agricultural distress? Was it not absurd to congratulate the country on
-the fact that remission of import duties had not diminished revenue,
-when revenue was only maintained by the unpopular and iniquitous Income
-Tax? Why was no notice taken of the open and ostentatious defiance by
-the Roman Catholics of the Act against Papal Aggression? For the
-tranquillity of Ireland the Government surely ought not to take credit,
-inasmuch as it was due to the exodus of the Irish people to America. As
-for Parliamentary Reform, Lord Derby declared contemptuously that there
-were not 500 reasonable men in the country who wanted a new Reform Bill.
-These criticisms, however, fell flat. The one question of the hour was,
-Why had the Foreign Secretary resigned? and explanations were given by
-Lord John Russell and Lord Palmerston. “In all my experience,” says Mr.
-Greville, writing of this incident, “I never recollect such a triumph as
-Lord John Russell achieved, and such complete discomfiture as
-Palmerston’s.... Palmerston was weak and inefficient, and it is pretty
-certain he was taken by surprise, and was unprepared for all that John
-Russell brought forward. Not a man of weight or influence said a word
-for him, nobody but Milnes [afterwards Lord Houghton] and [Lord] Dudley
-Stuart. The Queen’s letter was decisive, for it was evident his conduct
-must have been intolerable to elicit such charges and rebukes; and it
-cannot fail to strike everybody that no man of common spirit, and who
-felt a consciousness of innocence, would have brooked anything so
-insulting.”[49]
-
-But Palmerston, though a fallen Minister, was not the man to sit meekly
-under such a mortification. As he said himself, he would soon give Lord
-John Russell “tit for tat.” His chance for retaliation came when the
-arbitrary acts of the Prince-President of the French Republic roused the
-fighting instincts of the English people. A wave of panic ran over the
-country, and it was asserted that as Charles Louis Bonaparte had founded
-his power by the sword, so by free use of the sword must he keep it. M.
-Berryer had expressed in the Chamber the taunt which was freely
-whispered through France, that the Prince-President’s aim was to
-establish an “Empire without genius and without military glory.” Surely,
-then, Englishmen argued, France under this unscrupulous usurper must be
-forced into war, in order to divert her attention from the bondage in
-which she is held by her Autocrat and his army. But if France must needs
-make war so that the French people may get military glory in
-compensation for civil liberty, a war on England, whose Press teemed
-with insulting criticisms on the brutality of the _coup d’état_, was of
-all wars the one most likely to be popular with the French soldiery.
-From such reasoning it was but a corollary that England was, as usual,
-utterly unprepared for attack, and a panic-cry was accordingly revived
-in favour of strengthening her defensive forces. Yielding to this cry,
-Lord John Russell introduced his celebrated Militia Bill, which
-organised a local as distinguished from a general militia--that is to
-say, a force whose regiments could be called on for service, not in any
-part of the United Kingdom, but only in their own counties. This was the
-weak point of the scheme, and the Duke of Wellington did not conceal his
-bad opinion of it. Fortified by the Duke’s moral support, Lord
-Palmerston assailed the Militia Bill of the Government with relentless
-ferocity. On the 20th of February he carried against the Government, by
-a majority of nine, an amendment in favour of organising a general
-instead of a local militia, and Lord John Russell resigned on the 23rd
-of February. Thus fell the last Whig Cabinet that has ruled England--all
-succeeding Liberal Ministries being either coalitions of Whigs,
-Peelites, and Radicals, or of Whigs and Radicals alone.
-
-For reasons which have been already given, the times were not propitious
-for a coalition of this sort. The Queen had therefore no option but to
-send for Lord Derby, and ask him to form a Protectionist Ministry. She
-was, of course, deeply sensible of the fact that by recent declarations
-in favour of Protection, no Ministry of which he was the head could
-command the confidence of the nation. Indeed, Lord Derby himself was
-aware of this. But as his followers had joined Lord Palmerston in
-ejecting the Whigs, he felt that he could not in honour shrink from the
-embarrassing task of forming a Cabinet to govern the country, with a
-certain majority against him in the House of Commons, and a dubious
-majority at his back in the House of Lords. A futile attempt was made to
-induce Lord Palmerston to join the Tory Cabinet--the Queen agreeing to
-accept him as a Minister, provided he did not go to the Foreign Office,
-and was not entrusted with the leadership of the House of Commons.
-Palmerston refused all Lord Derby’s overtures, because he did not care
-to cast in his lot with a Party which was committed to Protection. One
-Tory leader, however, shared none of Lord Derby’s fears for the future.
-Writing in his Diary on the 20th of February, Lord Malmesbury
-says:--“Went to Disraeli’s after breakfast, and found him in a state of
-delight at the idea of coming into office. He said he ‘felt just like a
-young girl going to her first ball,’ constantly repeating, ‘now we have
-got a _status_.’”
-
-The chief appointments in the new Cabinet were as follows:--The Earl of
-Derby, Prime Minister; Lord St. Leonards, Lord Chancellor; Mr. Disraeli,
-Chancellor of the Exchequer, as to which the joke current in Society at
-the time was “that Benjamin’s mess will be five times as great as the
-others;”[50] the Earl of Malmesbury, Foreign Secretary; Sir John
-Pakington, Colonial Secretary; Mr. Spencer Walpole, Home Secretary; Mr.
-Herries, President of the Board of Control;[51] Earl of Lonsdale, Lord
-Privy Seal. The only members of the Cabinet who had ever held office
-before were Lord Derby and Lord Lonsdale, and the country was anxious as
-to the competence of a Cabinet of novices to carry on the Government of
-the Queen. “The new Government,” writes Mr. Greville, “is treated with
-great contempt, and many of the appointments are pitiable.” Sir George
-Cornewall Lewis, in a letter to Sir Edmund Head, remarks that “the chief
-effect of the change has been that Graham and Cardwell have come to sit
-among the Whigs, while Gladstone and Sidney Herbert sit below the
-gangway.”[52] As for Lord Palmerston--though he got Lady Palmerston to
-invite Lord John Russell to one of her parties, and otherwise showed in
-public some desire to be reconciled to him--he told Lord Clarendon
-privately that “John Russell had given him his independence, and he
-meant to avail himself of that advantage.”[53] Moreover, to add to Lord
-Derby’s perplexities, there soon arose great complaints against Mr.
-Disraeli as Leader of the House of Commons. “They say,” writes Mr.
-Greville, “that he does not play his part as Leader with tact and
-propriety, and treats his opponents impudently and uncourteously.”
-
-[Illustration: SIDNEY HERBERT. (_After the Statue by Foley._)]
-
-The new Government promised the Queen that they would wind up the
-affairs of the Session as quickly as possible, and as a dissolution was
-objectionable at that critical moment, they assured her that they would
-bring forward no contentious business. They introduced a Militia Bill,
-designed to meet the objections of Lord Palmerston to the measure of
-Lord John Russell. Though Mr. Walpole, the Minister in charge of the
-Bill, covered the Cabinet with ridicule by proposing that every
-militiaman who served two years should get a vote for the county in
-which he was enrolled, public contempt was diverted from the Ministry to
-the Opposition. By an inconceivable blunder, Lord John Russell, without
-consulting with his colleagues, came down to the House of Commons and
-opposed the second reading of a Bill, to the principle of which he knew
-the majority were already committed by the vote that had expelled him
-from office. He thus gave Lord Palmerston an opportunity of making a
-bitter attack on him. He also led his Party to a defeat as sure as it
-was disastrous. He discovered dissensions and divisions of opinion among
-his followers, the exposure of which not only demoralised them, but
-weakened public confidence in them as a competent governing
-organisation. This blunder settled the destiny of Lord John Russell. All
-sections of the Opposition now joined Mr. Bright in saying that Lord
-John must never again be permitted to lead the Liberal Party. The
-incident, unimportant as it seems, was of high historic significance. It
-rendered the Coalition Ministry under Lord Aberdeen inevitable. It
-rendered Whig Cabinets henceforth impossible in England.
-
-[Illustration: ST. ALBANS, FROM VERULAM.]
-
-Mr. Disraeli’s Budget speech was a brilliant performance which pleased
-everybody but his own Party. Its principal point was to provide for the
-continuance of the Income Tax for one year. But what made it interesting
-was its glowing eulogy of the Free Trade measures of Sir Robert Peel,
-not to mention the elaborate statistics by which Mr. Disraeli, while
-silent on the Corn Duties, proved that incomparable benefits had been
-conferred on the country by Peel’s tariffs, and by his reductions of
-import duties. The oration was, of course, a bid for the accession of
-Palmerston and the Peelites to the Tory Party. “Disraeli’s speech on
-introducing his Budget,” writes Lord Malmesbury, “has produced a bad
-effect in the country, for the farmers, though reconciled to giving up
-Protection, expected relief in other ways, and he does not give a hint
-at any measure for their advantage.”[54] A night or two afterwards, Mr.
-Disraeli had therefore to make a vague recantation of his change of
-opinions, and at a Mansion House dinner Lord Derby did his best to
-explain away the Budget speech of his embarrassing colleague, by an
-elaborate exposition of the doctrine of compromise, on which he said
-British institutions were founded.
-
-During the first part of the Parliamentary Session of 1852 the cause of
-Parliamentary Reform made but little progress. Mr. Hume, on the 25th of
-March, moved for leave to bring in a Bill for the extension of the
-Franchise. Though he tried to galvanise his party into vigorous life by
-a scornful and defiant retort to Lord Derby’s recent attack on
-democracy,[55] the discussion of the subject was felt to be academic
-rather than practical, and his motion was rejected by a vote of 244 to
-39. A similar fate attended Mr. Locke King when he, too, brought in his
-motion to assimilate the County and Borough Franchise. Several debates
-were devoted to the question of the prevalence of bribery at elections,
-and Lord John Russell’s Bill, empowering the Crown to direct a
-Commission of Inquiry into any place at which an Election Committee
-reported the existence of bribery, was carried through both Houses of
-Parliament. The disfranchisement of Sudbury and St. Albans for corrupt
-practices had left four seats in the House of Commons to dispose of. Mr.
-Disraeli’s scheme for allocating them to the West Riding of Yorkshire
-and the Southern Division of Lancashire was, however, rejected on Mr.
-Gladstone’s amendment--a defeat which was a sharp reminder to the
-Ministry that, so long as they were in a minority and refused to
-dissolve Parliament, they could not hope to control the House of Commons
-when contentious business came before it.
-
-An attack on the endowment of Maynooth College by Mr. Spooner, who
-demanded an inquiry into the system of education pursued at that
-seminary, wasted much time. Both parties, with a General Election
-impending, shrank from offending the Roman Catholic voters too deeply.
-Yet they were equally afraid of displeasing the aggressive Protestantism
-of the country. After repeated adjournments the matter dropped, chiefly
-owing to a significant threat from Mr. Gladstone and Lord John Russell,
-that to attack Maynooth was to reopen the whole question of the
-distribution of ecclesiastical endowments in Ireland, a question the
-discussion of which could not be advantageous to the Anglican minority
-in that kingdom. A barren debate on the remission of the Hop Duty, and
-Mr. Milner Gibson’s failure to carry resolutions condemning the Paper
-Duty, the Duty on advertisements, and the Stamp Duty on newspapers,
-together with Mr. Disraeli’s success in carrying his provisional Budget,
-continuing the Income Tax for one year, sum up the financial business of
-the Session. By the end of June all the measures which the Government
-had proposed to pass were disposed of.
-
-Lord Derby’s first Government may have consisted of novices, but it
-evidently did excellent practical work as a Cabinet of affairs. For
-between its accession to office and the dissolution of Parliament it
-passed the Militia Act, the New Zealand Constitution Act, several good
-Law Reforms, including an Act to simplify special pleading and to amend
-procedure in the Common Law Courts, an Act extending the jurisdiction of
-County Courts, and another to abolish the office of the Masters in the
-Court of Chancery. Besides these, they passed useful Acts for improving
-the water supply of London, and restricting intramural interments.
-
-Parliament was prorogued by the Queen in person on the 1st of July, one
-of the most interesting passages in her speech referring to the origin
-of the second Burmese war, and the capture of Rangoon and
-Martaban--events the record of which need not detain us long.
-
-The second Burmese war ostensibly arose out of a complaint made to the
-Indian Government by a Mr. Sheppard, master of a Madras trading
-vessel.[56] He alleged that he had been imprisoned and fined by the
-Governor of Rangoon on the false charge of having thrown a man
-overboard. This was followed by other complaints from British subjects,
-who had been ill-used by the Burmese authorities, and the Rangoon
-merchants declared that, unless they were protected against the lawless
-exactions of the Governor’s subordinates and dependants--who had been
-told by him to get money as best they could, seeing he had none with
-which to pay their salaries--they must abandon all efforts to trade in
-the country. The Governor-General of India came to the conclusion that
-these complaints were justifiable, and easily proved that the Treaty of
-Yandaboo, made at the end of the first Burmese war, had been violated.
-Commodore Lambert was accordingly sent in H.M.S. _Fox_ and two steamers
-to Rangoon, with a courteous message seeking reparation from the King of
-Ava, on account of the conduct of the Governor of Rangoon. The request
-was refused, and it was followed by a more peremptory demand. The Court
-of Ava replied in a conciliatory tone, recalled the Governor of Rangoon,
-and appointed a new one, who treated Commander Fishbourne, Lambert’s
-second in command, with some discourtesy. Commodore Lambert forthwith
-blockaded Rangoon, and seized a vessel belonging to the Burmese
-king.[57] On the 10th of January, four days after the blockade was
-established, the _Fox_ was compelled to destroy a hostile stockade on
-the river. After some diplomatic fencing between the Indian Government
-and the King of Ava, an ultimatum was sent to his Majesty. He still
-refused to make any concessions, and war was declared.
-
-[Illustration: VIEW NEAR RANGOON.]
-
-General Goodwin, with a contingent from the Bengal Army, sailed from
-
-[Illustration: MAJOR FRASER’S STORMING PARTY CARRYING THE STOCKADE IN
-FRONT OF RANGOON.]
-
-India for the mouth of the Irawaddy on the 28th of March. He arrived
-there on the 2nd of April, and on the 5th stormed and captured Martaban,
-where the enemy, five thousand strong, fought behind a river line of
-defences extending over 800 yards. In the meantime, General Goodwin had
-been reinforced by a contingent from Madras, and Commodore Lambert had
-destroyed the stockades on the Rangoon river. It was then determined to
-attack Rangoon on the 9th of April. On the 11th, Rear-Admiral Austen
-cleared the way for the army by destroying the whole line of river
-defences on both banks. On the 12th three regiments of infantry and part
-of the artillery were landed, and the contest was, to the surprise of
-the General, commenced by the Burmese, who left their stockades and
-attacked the flanks of our advance. A strong stockade which stood in the
-way was carried, after severe losses. Major Fraser, Commanding Engineer,
-took the ladders to the fort, and mounting its defences alone, attracted
-by his gallantry the storming party round him which drove the enemy from
-the position. The troops were ordered to march on Rangoon, but by a
-different road from that on which the Burmese had made preparations to
-meet them. They carried by assault the Grand Pagoda, the fall of which
-citadel made us masters of the town. All the posts on the river fell
-into our hands in turn, and on the 27th of July Lord Dalhousie, the
-Governor-General of India, arrived at Rangoon, and congratulated the
-army on its victories. He then returned to Calcutta. On the 9th of
-October General Goodwin occupied Prome with a strong force, and in
-November an expedition was sent against Pegu, which was taken, after
-some sharp fighting, on the 20th of that month. After this victory Lord
-Dalhousie annexed the whole province to the British dominions; indeed,
-had it not been that he had an objection to expose British India to
-contact with the frontier of China, he would probably have annexed the
-whole of Burmah. Our small garrison at Pegu was then subjected to
-harassing attacks by the Burmese, and the war dragged slowly on. The
-Burmese always fled to the jungle whenever our men attacked them,
-returning to annoy our troops whenever they fell back on their quarters.
-Our capture of the chief centres of population and defence was not
-followed by the submission of the people. There were few roads in the
-country. General Goodwin had not adequate transport for his artillery.
-The climate had sadly weakened his forces, so that the unexpected
-prolongation of the war, however disappointing to the country, was
-inevitable.
-
-After the prorogation of Parliament, on the 1st of July, it was
-dissolved on the 21st of August. On all important questions the
-Government during the Session had held uncertain and ambiguous language,
-appealing to the hopes of all parties alike. There was no strong feeling
-in the country on any subject save that of Free Trade, and it soon
-became apparent that the majority of the electors would not tolerate a
-return to Protection, or the imposition of a protective duty on corn.
-Still, the Protectionists were able to defeat some very able and
-distinguished men, notably Sir George Cornewall Lewis in Herefordshire,
-Sir George Grey in Northumberland, and Mr. Cardwell in Liverpool. In
-each case their successors were feeble mediocrities. Edinburgh, however,
-elected Macaulay without his even becoming a candidate. But though the
-Tories did not gain enough seats to enable them to abolish Free Trade,
-they had fully 300 staunch supporters who would vote like one man for
-their policy. The Opposition was more numerous, but it was split up into
-Whigs, Radicals, Peelites, and the Irish brigade, pledged not to give
-any vote that might tend to bring Lord John Russell back to office. The
-attitude of the Government was very equivocal during the contest. “They
-have,” writes Mr. Greville, “sacrificed every other object to that of
-catching votes; at one time, and at one place, representing themselves
-as Free Traders, in another as Protectionists, and everywhere pandering
-to the ignorance and bigotry of the masses by fanning the No Popery
-flame. Disraeli announced that he had no thoughts, and never had any, of
-attempting to restore Protection in the shape of import duties; but he
-made magnificent promises of the great things the Government meant to do
-for the farmers and the owners of land--by a scheme the nature and
-details of which he refused to reveal.” This scheme was to be one
-giving compensation by fiscal arrangements to the landed interest for
-the loss of the Corn Duties. Fear of an alliance between the Whigs, the
-Peelites, and the Manchester Radicals, on the basis of reduced
-expenditure and fresh Reform Bills, caused many Whigs to desert their
-Party. The Opposition was in a truly deplorable state. Their resentment
-against Lord John Russell, to whose mismanagement they attributed their
-electoral reverses, was deep and bitter. Malcontents openly advocated
-that the leadership should be transferred to Lord Lansdowne; and Lord
-Palmerston said that though he would be willing to join a Lansdowne
-Cabinet if formed, he would never serve _under_ Lord John Russell,
-though he had no objection to serve _with_ him. Lord Lansdowne’s
-hostility to Parliamentary Reform rendered him incapable of leading a
-Party that could not afford to dispense with Liberal votes. Moreover, he
-objected from chivalrous motives to take the leadership unless Lord John
-Russell asked him to do so. Lord John, on the other hand, told Sir J.
-Graham that he had made up his mind not to join any Government unless he
-was replaced in his post as Premier--an arrangement which would have
-simply perpetuated those divisions and dissensions in the Liberal Party
-that enabled the Tories to hold office. Lord Palmerston forecast the
-fate of the Government with wonderful shrewdness, when he said that the
-chances were they would fall on some mountebankish proposal for helping
-everybody out of the taxes, without adding to the burdens on the
-taxpayer.[58]
-
-The Queen’s Speech, so to speak, showed the cloven hoof of the
-Protectionists. One paragraph filled the Free Traders with the darkest
-suspicions. It ran as follows:--“It gives me pleasure to be enabled, by
-the blessing of Providence, to congratulate you on the generally
-improved condition of the country, and especially of the industrious
-classes. If you should be of opinion that recent legislation, in
-contributing with other causes to this happy result, has at the same
-time inflicted unavoidable injury on certain important interests, I
-recommend you dispassionately to consider how far it may be practicable
-equitably to mitigate that injury, and to enable the industry of the
-country to meet successfully that unrestricted competition to which
-Parliament in its wisdom has decided that it should be subjected.”
-Writing to his wife on the day after the debate on the Address, Mr.
-Cobden alluded to this paragraph as “a queer, tricky allusion to the
-Free Trade question,” which “brought on a sharp attack upon the
-Government last night, and as all parties are agreed to force the
-Disraelites, I hope we shall bring matters to an end soon.”[59] The
-great aim of the Opposition, without distinction of faction, was to
-force the Government to say, frankly and fairly, whether they did or did
-not accept Free Trade in its entirety. But in the meantime an event
-occurred which for the moment stilled the clamour of contending
-parties, and united the whole nation in one great wail of mourning.
-
-That event was the death of the Duke of Wellington at Walmer Castle on
-the 14th of September. This mournful calamity had been long expected.
-But when it happened the people seemed incapable of realising it. “It
-was,” said Prince Albert in a letter to Colonel Phipps, “as if in a
-tissue a particular thread which was worked into every pattern was
-suddenly withdrawn.” Moreover, it broke the last link that bound the
-nineteenth to the eighteenth century. “He was,” wrote the Queen to King
-Leopold, “the pride and good genius, as it were, of this country; the
-most loyal and devoted subject, and the staunchest supporter the Crown
-ever had. He was to us a true friend and most valuable adviser.... We
-shall soon stand sadly alone. Aberdeen is almost the only personal
-friend of the kind left to us--Melbourne, Peel, Liverpool, now the
-Duke--all gone.”[60]
-
-[Illustration: WALMER CASTLE.]
-
-The Queen would at once, and of her own motion, have ordered a public
-funeral, with the highest honours of State, for the remains of the
-illustrious dead, following the precedent set in the case of Nelson.
-She, however,
-
-[Illustration: THE DUKE OF WELLINGTON.
-
-(_After the Portrait by Count D’Orsay._)]
-
-deemed that a solemn vote of Parliament would confer additional
-distinction on the ceremony. It was thus determined that the body of the
-Duke should lie in the custody of a Guard of Honour until both Houses of
-Parliament could meet in November and pass a resolution in favour of
-burying, in St. Paul’s Cathedral, the Victor of Waterloo by the side of
-the Victor of the Nile. The pages of _Hansard_ are full of the glowing
-tributes to the memory of the great Duke, paid by the foremost orators
-of the Senate. Of these, one of the most brilliant came from Mr.
-Disraeli, and it subsequently gave rise to a good deal of scandal. A
-morning paper published a translation--said to come from the pen of the
-late Mr. Abraham Hayward, Q.C.--of the eulogium passed by M. Thiers in
-the French Chamber on the Emperor Napoleon I. This certainly bore such a
-suspiciously close resemblance to Mr. Disraeli’s oration, that the
-English orator was accused of plagiarism. But the highest tribute of
-homage to the Duke of Wellington came from the English people, to whom
-the Duke seemed to embody all the manly virtues of their race. To this
-fact Mr. Cobden himself bears striking, though grudging, testimony in a
-letter to his friend Mr. Thomasson, of Bolton, condemning the militant
-policy which led to an ever-increasing war expenditure. “Let as ask
-ourselves candidly,” he writes, “whether the country at large is in
-favour of any other policy than that which has been pursued by the
-aristocracy, Whig and Tory, for a century and a half? The man who
-impersonated that policy more than any other was the Duke of Wellington,
-and I had the daily opportunity of witnessing, at the Great Exhibition
-last year, that all other objects of interest sank to insignificance,
-even in that collection of a world’s wonders, when he made his entry
-into the Crystal Palace. The frenzy of admiration and enthusiasm which
-took possession of a hundred thousand people of all classes at the very
-announcement of his name, was one of the most impressive lessons I ever
-had of the real tendencies of the English character.”[61]
-
-On the announcement of the Duke’s death every town in England displayed
-the customary emblems of mourning. When, on the 10th of November, the
-arrangements for the public funeral were well advanced, the corpse was
-removed, under military escort, from Walmer Castle to the great hall in
-Chelsea Hospital, where it was received by the Lord Chamberlain, and
-laid in state on a bier prepared for the purpose. On the 11th, the
-Queen, Prince Albert, and their family privately visited the Hospital,
-and paid their last respects to their dead friend. After they left, the
-Chelsea Pensioners, the Life Guards and Grenadiers, and the children of
-the Duke of York’s Schools were admitted. On the 12th, the nobility and
-gentry who held tickets of admission from the Lord Chamberlain came, and
-then there ensued a scene of deplorable confusion. Eighteen thousand
-persons passed before the bier between nine o’clock in the morning and
-five in the afternoon, and many thousands more, after waiting wearily
-outside in rain and gusty weather, turned away hopelessly when darkness
-set in.
-
-When the public appeared next day (Saturday) claiming admission, the
-crowd before the Hospital gates in the morning simply overwhelmed the
-police. As it grew and gathered, the press became unbearable, and a
-surging mass of spectators fought and struggled with each other for
-their lives. Yells of agony rent the air; men and women were knocked
-down, or fell fainting for want of breath. Screaming children were held
-aloft in the air to escape suffocation by mothers, who themselves
-disappeared every minute in the struggle. A great cloud of steam exhaled
-from the heaving multitude, and far and near the approaches were
-impassable. After some time the police, reinforced by soldiery, gained
-control over the crowd, and some 50,000 persons then passed through the
-hall. On Monday better arrangements prevailed, and 50,000 persons
-passed the body with the greatest ease. On Tuesday 60,000, and on
-Wednesday 65,000 persons were admitted. On Saturday three persons, and
-on Tuesday two, perished in the crush.
-
-On Wednesday a squadron of cavalry conveyed the corpse to the Horse
-Guards.
-
-As it became clear that the day of the funeral (the 18th of November)
-would be kept as one of almost religious solemnity, and that no business
-would be done in London, the Bills of Exchange and Notes (Metropolis)
-Bill was passed quickly through Parliament. It enacted that bills
-falling due on the 18th of November should become payable and be
-presented on the 17th, but that, if paid before 2 p.m. on the 19th, they
-should not be subject to charges for notarial protest.
-
-On the morning of the 18th of November the great funeral pageant, which
-Charles Dickens irreverently termed “a masquerade dipped in ink,” passed
-to St. Paul’s, through streets draped in black. Heavy rain and biting
-wind did not prevent spectators from perching themselves all through the
-preceding night on every spot where a glimpse of the procession could be
-obtained. Windows, roofs of houses, porticoes, balconies, every “coign
-of vantage” were covered with mourners. A million and a half of
-spectators gazed at the procession, and few ever forgot the strange and
-sudden silence into which the multitude was everywhere hushed, when the
-head of the column appeared, led by the dark, frowning masses of the
-Rifle Brigade, marching to the beat of muffled drum and the wail of the
-“Dead March” in _Saul_. Solemnly,
-
- “Sad and slow,
- As fits an universal woe,”
-
-one of the most wondrous of military pageants filed past to the strains
-of mournful martial music. When the car with the remains of the Duke
-appeared, a thrill of sorrowful emotion surged through the crowd at each
-point of the route, as they saw “warriors carry the warrior’s pall.”
-Strange unutterable thoughts were aroused at the sight of the narrow and
-curiously emblazoned tenement which contained all that Time and Death
-had left of him who had overcome the master of modern Europe, but who,
-in turn, had himself fallen before a Conqueror unconquerable by the
-mightiest. To this exaltation of feeling succeeded an outburst of homely
-grief when the Duke’s favourite charger, led by his venerable groom,
-appeared following his master’s coffin. When the procession came to
-Temple Bar it was received by the Lord Mayor and Corporation, and at ten
-minutes to twelve it reached St. Paul’s.
-
-The appearance of the cathedral will never be forgotten. Tiers of seats
-covered with black cloth rose on every side of the nave. The sombre
-draperies of the interior threw up the florid architecture of the great
-Protestant temple in relief of dazzling whiteness, and rows of gas jets
-round the cornices shed a soft, warm radiance on the scene. The service
-was choral. The Dean read the lesson, and when the “Nunc dimittis” was
-chanted, a dirge accompanied by trumpets followed, at the end of which
-the body was slowly lowered into the vault, the while the organ and wind
-instruments pealed forth the sad strains of the “Dead March.” As the
-coffin slowly vanished from view a wave of intensely sorrowful emotion
-passed over the vast assembly of mourners. Prince Albert visibly shook
-with grief. The veteran Marquis of Anglesey lost control of his
-feelings. Tears suddenly coursed down his furrowed cheeks, and, stepping
-forward, he placed his trembling hand on the vanishing coffin, as if to
-bid a last farewell to his old chief and companion in arms. The rest of
-the service proceeded in the usual manner, the conclusion of the ritual
-being Handel’s anthem--“His body is buried in peace.” Thereupon Garter
-King at Arms stepped forward and proclaimed the style and titles of the
-illustrious dead, and the Comptroller of the Household of the Duke
-advanced, broke his staff of office, and handed the pieces to Garter
-King at Arms, who laid them in the grave. The Bishop of London
-pronounced the benediction, and all was over.
-
-The Queen and Prince Albert were of opinion that no _éloge_ on the great
-Duke was in better taste than Lord John Russell’s; but, perhaps, the one
-that will best stand the test of time was that of Alfred Tennyson:--
-
- “Where shall we lay the man whom we deplore?
- Here in streaming London’s central roar,
- Let the sound of those he wrought for,
- And the feet of those he fought for,
- Echo round his bones for evermore.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Mourn, for to us he seems the last,
- Remembering all his greatness in the past,
- No more in soldier fashion will he greet
- With lifted hand the gazer in the street.
- O friends, our chief state-oracle is mute:
- Mourn for the man of long-enduring blood,
- The statesman-warrior, moderate, resolute,
- Whole in himself, a common good.
- Mourn for the man of amplest influence,
- Yet clearest of ambitious crimes,
- Our greatest yet with least pretence,
- Great in council and great in war,
- Foremost captain of his time,
- Rich in sowing common-sense,
- And, as the greatest only are,
- In his simplicity sublime.
- O good grey head, which all men knew,
- O voice from which their omens all men drew,
- O iron nerve to true occasion true,
- O fall’n at length that tower of strength
- Which stood four-square to all the winds that blew.
- Such was he whom we deplore.
- The long self-sacrifice of life is o’er.
- The great World-victor’s victor will be seen no more.”
-
-[Illustration: THE WELLINGTON MONUMENT IN ST. PAUL’S CATHEDRAL,
-COMPLETED IN 1878. (_By Alfred Stevens._)]
-
-Though much has been written about the career of the Duke of Wellington,
-a brief review of his character may not be amiss here. “His striking
-characteristic was his judgment,” writes Mr. Spencer Walpole. “He had no
-doubt in addition capacity and courage. He could not have fought
-Salamanca without the one, and he would not have held Waterloo without
-the other. But in capacity he was not, possibly, superior to Moore; in
-courage he was not superior to Gough. He was a great general, not
-because he had a great intellect, but because he made fewer mistakes
-than other men.”[62] His success in war was as conspicuous as his
-failure in politics, and for the simplest of reasons. He was the only
-great soldier of his time who understood that to triumph in battle it
-is necessary to have the most exact and minute knowledge of the
-mechanism of an army, to know as thoroughly how a soldier’s knapsack
-should be buckled, as how a mighty campaign should be planned. In this
-consisted his superiority over Napoleon I., who concentrated his mind on
-the grand scheme of a battle or a campaign, leaving to his subordinates
-the task of carrying it out in detail. All Napoleon’s subordinates could
-do the work of subordinates better than their Imperial master. Not one
-of Wellington’s subordinates, from the Marquis of Anglesey himself down
-to the humblest private, could do his individual work better than the
-Duke could do it for him. It was this easy mastery in handling all the
-machinery of war that enabled him to readjust his arrangements so much
-more quickly than his opponents could, when any part of a
-carefully-planned scheme miscarried. But just because he did not possess
-the same minute and exact knowledge of the political organism, he
-constantly fell into grievous errors in statesmanship. Starting with
-wrong premises in politics, he perpetually blundered into erroneous
-conclusions. His saving virtue as a politician was his strong common
-sense. It taught him with unerring certitude when a thing _must_ be done
-long before his reasoning faculty, obscured by faulty data, taught him
-that it ought to be done. He never regarded himself as in any sense the
-servant of the people. It was as the sworn servant of the Crown that he
-always spoke and acted, and the only test he ever applied to any project
-of legislation was whether it was likely to strengthen or weaken the
-Monarchy. No considerations of personal consistency, conviction, or
-convenience could deter him from accepting or abandoning a policy or a
-principle, if it could be shown that by doing either he prevented the
-authority of his Sovereign from being undermined. Duty to the Crown was
-the pole-star of his life. To gain a point for the advantage of his
-Sovereign he would even push aside all considerations of personal
-dignity. Sir Francis Doyle tells a story about him which illustrates
-most curiously this dominant trait in his character. One day, when Sir
-Francis Doyle’s father was dining at Apsley House, the Duke said to him,
-“After the battle of Talavera I wanted the Spanish force to make a
-movement, and called upon Cuesta to take the necessary steps, but he
-demurred. He said, by way of answer, ‘For the honour of the Spanish
-Crown I cannot attend to the directions of the British general, unless
-that British general go upon his knees and entreat me to follow his
-advice.’ Now,” proceeded the Duke, “I wanted this thing done, while as
-to going upon my knees I did not care a twopenny damn, so down I
-plumped.”[63] This little anecdote gives one a clearer insight into the
-secret of the Duke of Wellington’s public life than all the biographies
-of him that have ever been written.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII.
-
-THE LAST YEAR OF “THE GREAT PEACE.”
-
- Abortive Attacks on the Ministry--Mr. Disraeli’s First Budget--Fall
- of the Tory Cabinet--The Queen and Lord Aberdeen--Organising the
- Coalition--A Ministry of “All the Talents”--The Queen and South
- Kensington--A Miser’s Legacy to the Queen--Sport at
- Balmoral--Proclamation of the Second Empire--The “Battle of the
- Numeral”--The Queen Initiates a Policy--Personal Government in the
- Victorian Age--A Servile Minister--Lord Malmesbury’s
- Spies--Napoleon III. and “Mrs. Howard”--Creole Card-Parties at
- Kensington--Napoleon III. Proposes to Marry the Queen’s Niece--Lord
- John Russell’s Education Scheme--Mr. Gladstone’s First Budget--The
- India Bill--Transportation of Convicts to Australia Stopped--The
- Gold Fever in Australia--The Rush to the Diggings--The First Gold
- Ships in the Thames--Gold Discoveries and Free Trade--Chagrin of
- the Protectionists--The Rise in Prices--Practical Success of Peel’s
- Fiscal Policy--Strikes and Dear Bread--End of the Great Peace.
-
-
-No sooner had the Duke of Wellington been buried than rival parties
-resumed the war of faction. The Free Traders, who had been resuscitating
-the old anti-Corn Law organisation in the North of England, resolved to
-force from the Ministry an unambiguous declaration against Protection.
-Mr. Charles Villiers accordingly moved a series of resolutions on the
-23rd of November, affirming, that the Free Trade policy of the country
-had been wise, just, and beneficial[64]--“three odious epithets,” said
-Mr. Disraeli, which could not be accepted by the Tory Party. He
-ridiculed this attempt to revive the cries of “exhausted factions and
-obsolete politics.” He was himself fain, however, to propose a
-resolution, which admitted that Free Trade had cheapened the necessaries
-of life, which bound the Government to adhere to that policy, but which
-did not contain any formal recantation of Protectionist principles.[65]
-Mr. Bright hit the weak spot in these tactics when he asked, was it
-safest to let the national verdict on Free Trade be drawn up by Mr.
-Villiers, who advocated it, or by Mr. Disraeli, who did not advocate it,
-and the majority of whose followers were pledged to exact from the
-people some kind of compensation to the landed interest for the repeal
-of the bread tax? Had it suited Lord Palmerston to let the Ministry be
-beaten, nothing could have prevented their defeat. But, as we have seen,
-he had resolved never to serve under Lord John Russell; and there was
-too much reason to fear that at the moment Lord John was the only
-possible Premier in the event of Lord Derby resigning office.
-
-“A moderate resolution,” writes Sir George Cornewall Lewis to Sir Edmund
-Head, “had been prepared by Graham, and assented to by Lord John and
-Gladstone. Charles Villiers was willing to move it, but Cobden insisted
-on something stronger, in the secret hope that the House would reject
-it, and thus damage itself in public opinion, thereby promoting the
-cause of Parliamentary Reform. Palmerston got possession of the
-resolution prepared by Graham, and moved it as an intermediate
-proposition.”[66] The resolution affirmed the principle of Free Trade,
-but not in terms obtrusively offensive to the Tories. It was eagerly
-accepted by Mr. Disraeli, who saw in it the means of deliverance from
-his enemies, and it was carried by a majority of 468 to 53--the minority
-representing all the Tories who were prepared to cling to Protection,
-even after it had been formally abandoned by Mr. Disraeli in his
-audacious address to his constituents.[67]
-
-Mr. Disraeli’s tactics in thus evading defeat have sometimes been cited
-as a proof of his skill. In reality, they were the outcome of
-inexperience and exaggerated self-confidence. He did not correctly
-understand why Sir James Graham and Mr. Gladstone desired to move a
-moderate resolution. They were, of course, anxious not to turn out the
-Ministry before Mr. Disraeli’s Budget saw the light. They were morally
-certain that it would contain some fantastic proposals, which must not
-only wreck the popularity of the Government, but destroy public
-confidence for ever in Mr. Disraeli’s financial skill. Events proved
-that they were right in their calculation.
-
-[Illustration: NORTH TERRACE AND WYKEHAM TOWER, WINDSOR CASTLE.]
-
-On the 3rd of December, in a speech of dazzling brilliancy, Mr. Disraeli
-introduced his famous and fatal Budget. It reduced the Malt Tax by
-one-half. The House Duty was raised from 9d. to 1s. 6d. in the £, and
-extended from houses of £20 to houses of £10 rental. Light dues paid by
-ships other than for the support of lighthouses pure and simple were
-taken off. Tea duties were to be reduced gradually by small annual
-amounts from 2s. 2¼d. to 1s. a
-
-[Illustration: THE DUKE OF ARGYLE.]
-
-pound. The Income Tax was to be extended to funded property and salaries
-in Ireland. A distinction was drawn in taxing permanent and precarious
-incomes, the exemption for industrial incomes being limited to £100 a
-year, and for incomes from property to £50; and the rates of assessment
-per £ were 7d. on incomes from rent of land and from funds, but only
-5¼d. on incomes from farming, trade, and salaries. Farmers’ incomes
-were to be taken as a third instead of a half of their rents. The
-remissions were so balanced by the additions to taxation that no surplus
-on the estimated revenue could be shown. A surplus of £400,000 was,
-however, manufactured by appropriating as revenue the repayments on
-local loans made to the Exchequer Loan Commission--repayments hitherto
-used for clearing off debt. The scheme could not stand criticism. After
-four nights’ debate, it was utterly demolished, Mr. Gladstone’s speech
-attacking it being one of the few which are said to have ever really
-turned doubtful votes in the House of Commons. The addition to the House
-Tax, pressing, as it did, on those who would come within the extended
-range of the Income Tax, infuriated the urban voters. The remission of
-half the Malt Tax failed to satisfy a landed interest, hungering for
-compensation for the abolition of the Corn Laws, because a reduced Malt
-Tax, it was agreed, benefited nobody but the publicans and the brewers.
-An extension of the Income Tax to funded property, Mr. Gladstone
-contended, was a breach of Mr. Pitt’s pledge to the public creditor, in
-1798, that no distinct and special tax should ever be laid on the
-stockholder as such. Mr. Gladstone, like all the eminent financial
-authorities, protested against recognising the illusory principle of a
-graduated Income Tax, which lurked in the distinction made between
-permanent and precarious incomes. He further protested against the
-danger of estimating too narrowly for the services of the year, and
-urged with incontestable force that it was a vicious principle to reckon
-as surplus revenue £400,000 of repayments on the score of local
-loans--that is to say, to regard the repayment of borrowed money as true
-income. The Government were beaten on their Budget, by a vote of 305 to
-286, on the morning of the 17th of December.[68] In the evening Lord
-Derby handed his resignation to the Queen at Osborne.
-
-Her Majesty, fully aware of the reasons that rendered Lord John Russell
-an impossible Premier, now saw her way to organising the strong
-Government of capable and experienced statesmen which, ever since 1846,
-she had held could only be formed by a coalition of the Whigs and the
-Peelites. She accordingly summoned Lord Aberdeen and Lord Lansdowne to
-assist her out of the Ministerial crisis. Gout prevented Lord Lansdowne
-from attending at Osborne. His ill-health, together with his loyalty to
-Lord John Russell, and the disinclination of the Peelites to serve under
-him, rendered it impossible for him to accept the Premiership. It was
-equally impossible for the Queen to ask Lord Palmerston to become Prime
-Minister, after the recent events which had led to his dismissal from
-the Foreign Office. Hence Lord Aberdeen, though the head of the smallest
-faction, was the candidate for the Premiership who least divided the
-Opposition. He was therefore charged with the task of forming a
-Cabinet.[69] On the 28th of December the famous Coalition Ministry was
-organised--Lord Cranworth was Lord Chancellor; Lord Aberdeen, Prime
-Minister; Mr. Gladstone, Chancellor of the Exchequer; Lord Palmerston,
-Home Secretary; Lord John Russell,[70] Foreign Secretary; the Duke of
-Newcastle, Colonial Secretary; Mr. Sidney Herbert, War Secretary; Sir J.
-Graham, First Lord of the Admiralty; Lord Granville, President of the
-Council; Sir C. Wood, President of the Board of Control; the Duke of
-Argyle, Lord Privy Seal; Sir W. Molesworth, Chief Commissioner of Works;
-the Marquis of Lansdowne, a Minister without office. “The success of our
-excellent Aberdeen’s arduous task,” writes the Queen to the King of the
-Belgians, “and the formation of so brilliant and strong a Cabinet would,
-I was sure, please you. It is the realisation of the country’s and our
-own most ardent wishes, and it deserves success, and will, I think,
-command support.”[71] The Queen here simply reflected public opinion.
-Never had a Cabinet of abler men, individually speaking, ruled England
-since the Ministry of “All the Talents” fell from power. But the
-Sovereign and her people both forgot that in our strange and anomalous
-constitution no Cabinet is, as a rule, so weak as a Cabinet of strong
-men. This Ministry, which started on its career on the flood-tide of
-Court and popular favour, was destined, by its vacillation in foreign
-policy, to lead the country into the terrible calamity of a European
-war. It was doomed to fall amidst the execrations even of those who,
-like Mr. Cobden, declared that to his dying day he could never
-sufficiently regret giving one of the votes that brought it into power.
-
-After the formation of the Government, the usual explanations of the
-position of affairs were given in both Houses of Parliament, Lord Derby
-attempting to show that the destruction of his Ministry had been plotted
-by an unprincipled combination of hostile factions. On the contrary, as
-Sir George Cornewall Lewis says in one of his letters, “there was no
-real anxiety on the part of the Opposition to turn out the Government;
-the sections of it were divided, and there was none of that ‘coalition’
-which Lord Derby spoke of. The Budget, however, was more than human
-flesh and blood could bear. The promises of a substitute for Protection
-which Disraeli had made at the Elections rendered it necessary that the
-Government should propose something which appeared for the benefit of
-the agriculturists. They sounded some of their supporters among the
-county members as to a transfer from the local rates to the Consolidated
-Fund; but I believe the answer they got was, that a measure which
-destroyed the power of the magistrates and the local authorities would
-not be acceptable to their party. They had nothing then to propose but a
-reduction of the Malt Tax, which created a large deficit, and rendered
-an increase of taxation necessary. This latter object was effected by
-doubling and enlarging the House Tax. Disraeli was evidently very
-confident of the success of his Budget, and impatient to produce it. But
-when it had been out a week it was clear the country would not agree to
-it. The farmers did not care about the reduction of the Malt Tax; but
-the towns did care very decidedly for the increase of the House Tax, and
-showed a strong objection to it.... Having made their Budget a means of
-redeeming their promise to give their party an equivalent for
-Protection, they could not modify it, and therefore defeat on it was
-vital.”[72] On the 31st of December all the appointments under the new
-Government were filled up, and Parliament was adjourned till the 10th of
-February, 1853.
-
-[Illustration: VIEW IN BRAEMAR.]
-
-In the early part of the year the Queen was much distressed by reason of
-her husband’s anxieties in connection with the affairs of the Great
-Exhibition. His idea was to apply the surplus in the hands of the
-Exhibition Commissioners
-
-[Illustration: QUEEN VICTORIA.
-
-(_After the Equestrian Portrait by Count D’Orsay_)]
-
-to the purchase of a site at South Kensington, for the Science and Art
-Institution which he hoped to see created. Ninety acres of land were
-bought for £342,500, of which sum Government advanced £177,500, with the
-intention of transferring the National Gallery to the site. The agent of
-the Commissioners, however, had in purchasing the land stupidly agreed
-to take it on a building lease, under conditions which would have
-destroyed their plans, and involved them in the dilemma of repudiating
-their agent, or incurring liabilities to erect dwelling-houses, which
-they dared not undertake. The vendor, Baron Villars, generously
-permitted them to make other arrangements for buying the fee-simple of
-the land; but the anxieties of the Prince during the period when the
-issue was in suspense preyed terribly on his mind and health, and the
-Queen has herself recorded how she exhausted all means in her power to
-cheer and sustain him in his distress.
-
-[Illustration: THE QUEEN’S VISIT TO THE BRITANNIA TUBULAR BRIDGE.]
-
-Her Majesty’s birthday was spent in the sunshine of domestic happiness
-at Osborne. In the festivities of the season the Queen, early in June,
-assures her uncle, King Leopold, that she and her family joined only to
-a limited extent. They gave two State balls and two State concerts. They
-go, she says, three or four times a week to the play or opera, are
-hardly ever later than midnight in going to bed and, but for the
-fagging business of public affairs, the Season “would be nothing to us.”
-During the summer, life at Osborne was diversified by several short
-yachting excursions round the South Coast. In August the Queen planned
-and carried out a brief visit to her uncle, King Leopold of Belgium,
-reaching Antwerp on the 10th in the Royal yacht in a tempest of wind and
-rain. At the King’s country seat at Laeken the Royal party spent four
-bright and happy days, saddened only by the too visible gap in the
-family circle, left by the death of Queen Louise. The disagreeable and
-tempestuous voyage homeward was only broken by a charming visit to
-Terneusen, where the simple hospitality and quaint old-world ways of the
-villagers greatly delighted her Majesty, who seems to have passed a
-pleasant day among them.
-
-On the 30th of August her Majesty was amazed to receive information at
-Balmoral to the effect that an eccentric old barrister called Nield had
-bequeathed a legacy of £250,000 to her. John Camden Nield was a miser,
-who had pinched and starved himself for thirty years to add to his
-patrimony. The Queen very properly resolved to refuse the legacy if Mr.
-Nield had any relations living who had a claim to the money;[73] but as
-it appeared he had none, she accepted the gift. The holiday at Balmoral
-was as bright and happy as could be wished. “Nothing,” writes Lord
-Malmesbury, who was in attendance on the Queen at this time, “can exceed
-the good nature with which I am treated, both by her Majesty and the
-Prince. Balmoral is an old country house in bad repair, and totally
-unfit for Royal personages.... The Royal party consists of the Duchess
-of Kent, the ladies in waiting, Colonel Phipps, and Sir Arthur Gordon.
-The rooms are so small that I am obliged to write my despatches on my
-bed, and to keep the window constantly open to admit the necessary
-quantity of air; and my private secretary, George Harris, lodged
-somewhere three miles off. We played at billiards every evening, the
-Queen and the Duchess being constantly obliged to get up from their
-chairs to be out of the way of the cues. Nothing could be more cheerful
-and evidently perfectly happy than the Queen and Prince, or more kind to
-every one round them. I never met any man so remarkable for the variety
-of information on all subjects as the latter, with a great fund of
-humour _quand il se déboutonne_.” The Prince himself records in his
-Diary,[74] however, that “Balmoral is in full splendour, and the people
-there are very glad that it is now entirely our own.” On the 4th of
-September Lord Malmesbury writes:--“The Prince had a wood driven not far
-from the house. After we had been posted in line, two fine stags passed
-me, which I missed. Colonel Phipps fired next, and lastly, the Prince,
-without any effect. The Queen had come out to see the sport, lying down
-in the heather by the Prince, and witnessed all these fiascos, to our
-humiliation.”[75] This happy holiday was sadly broken by the death of
-the Duke of Wellington, which brought the Court unexpectedly back to
-Windsor in October, their route being through Edinburgh, Preston,
-Chester, and North Wales, where they inspected, on the 14th of October,
-the Britannia tubular bridge over the Menai Straits. The Queen drove
-through the bridge in a State carriage drawn by men, while Prince
-Albert, accompanied by Mr. R. Stephenson, walked across on the roof of
-the tube. On reaching the south end, the party descended to the water’s
-edge, from which they obtained a complete view of the magnificent
-proportions of the gigantic structure.
-
-During 1852 one striking event in Foreign Affairs that occupied the
-attention of the Queen was the transformation of the French Republic
-into the Second Empire. In Paris, on the 1st of January, Charles Louis
-Napoleon was installed at Notre Dame as President of France, and he
-promulgated a new Constitution, preserving little of the form and none
-of the spirit of Liberty. The whole Executive was to be vested in the
-President, who was to be advised by a Council of State, a Senate of
-nobles nominated for life, and a powerless legislative body elected by
-universal suffrage for six years, whose transactions at the demand of
-five members could be kept secret. The next step taken by the
-Prince-President was to issue Decrees on the 23rd of January, compelling
-the Orleans Princes to sell their real and personal property in France
-within a year, and confiscating the property settled on the family by
-Louis Philippe previous to his accession in 1830. This raised a storm of
-indignation among all Frenchmen who were not accomplices of the
-Prince-President in the _coup d’état_, and it caused Montalembert to
-resign his seat on the Consultative Commission of the 2nd of December.
-De Morny and Fould also resigned, M. de Persigny replacing the
-former.[76] To the Queen, whose partiality for the Orleans family was
-well known, these Decrees were painfully offensive. The
-Prince-President’s strongest partisan in England, Lord Malmesbury, wrote
-a letter remonstrating with him, and the reply serves to illustrate the
-character of the men who consented to serve in the Senate. “He (the
-Prince-President),” says Lord Malmesbury in a letter to Lord Cowley,
-British Ambassador at Paris, “declared the confiscation necessary, as
-even some of his own Senators had been tampered with by Orleanist agents
-and money.”[77] On September 13th this patriotic Senate prayed for “the
-
-[Illustration: NOTRE DAME, PARIS (WEST FRONT).]
-
-re-establishment of the hereditary sovereign power in the Bonaparte
-family;” and on the 4th of November the Prince-President announced that
-he had in view the restoration of the Empire, and ordered the French
-people to be consulted on the matter. The French people, when consulted,
-were for the restoration--7,839,552 voting “Yes,” and 254,501 “No.” The
-vote was cast on the 21st of November, three days after Wellington was
-laid in the grave. As Cobden said, one might almost picture the third
-Napoleon rising from the yet open tomb of the vanquisher of the
-first.[78] On the 2nd of December Charles Louis Napoleon was declared
-Emperor of the French under the title of Napoleon III. The Constitution
-of January was confirmed with some slight modifications. A Royal title
-was given to Jérôme Bonaparte, Napoleon’s uncle. St. Arnaud, Magnan, and
-Castillane were created Marshals of France; and then there arose the
-first of the Imperial difficulties--that of obtaining recognition from
-the European Courts.
-
-[Illustration: COMTE DE MONTALEMBERT.]
-
-The Queen took a thoroughly sensible view of the situation. The
-atrocities of December and the confiscation of the Orleans property had
-not prepossessed her Majesty in favour of the French Emperor. But in her
-opinion there was no essential difference between such a Republic as had
-been established by the _coup d’état_ strengthened by the Constitution
-of January, and a military Empire without glory or genius. If the vast
-majority of Frenchmen were desirous of transforming their
-Prince-President into an Emperor, that was their affair, and Foreign
-Courts had no concern in the matter. The Queen was, therefore, strongly
-in favour of recognising the title of the Emperor of the French, and of
-according to him the customary courtesy of addressing him in ceremonial
-communications as _mon frère_.[79] The Northern Courts, however, could
-not bring themselves to treat as an equal, an adventurer who, to use
-his own expression in announcing his marriage in the Chamber on the 22nd
-of January, 1853, “had frankly taken up before Europe the _position de
-parvenu_.” Ultimately they all yielded to facts, and with the exception
-of Russia, agreed to address Charles Louis Bonaparte as their “brother.”
-The haughty autocrat of Muscovy, who had smiled on him approvingly when
-he strangled Liberty in France, frowned on the attempt to raise on its
-ruins a fabric of Empire, claiming parity with the ancient dominion of
-the Romanoffs. The Czar, therefore, persisted in addressing the French
-Emperor, not as “my brother,” but “my cousin.” This trivial slight is
-mentioned here, because it had subsequently a potent influence on the
-fortunes of England.
-
-“England,” writes Sir Theodore Martin, “conceded the phrase _mon frère_
-without a grudge.”[80] That is a somewhat misleading statement. It was
-certainly decided in England that the Emperor should be recognised some
-little time before the Empire was proclaimed, because everybody knew
-that its proclamation was inevitable. Having determined that the
-Prince-President was to be recognised in some fashion as Emperor, a
-question as to style was raised by the pedants of diplomacy, which
-showed where the “grudge” lay. It gave rise to that most grotesque of
-diplomatic struggles--the once famous but now forgotten Battle of the
-Numeral. Charles Louis Bonaparte, through his envoys, let it be known at
-the Court of the Queen that he meant to call himself Napoleon III. “Why
-Napoleon the Third?” asked alarmed Diplomacy. “Clearly he means to filch
-from us a recognition of the ephemeral title of the Duc de Reichstadt,
-the son and heir of Napoleon I., who was proclaimed when the First
-Empire crashed into ruins.” It was a crafty device to avenge Waterloo
-with the blast of a herald’s trumpet, and to wipe out fifty years of
-French history, just as the Parliament of the Restoration tried to
-efface the Commonwealth by dating the statutes of 1660, as of the
-twelfth year of the Merry Monarch’s reign. The usurper might be
-recognised by England as Napoleon II., perhaps, but never, argued Lord
-Malmesbury, as Napoleon III., for that would have countenanced more than
-our recognition of the Second Empire was actually meant to convey. It
-would have implied a recognition of the Emperor’s _hereditary_, as
-distinguished from his _elective_, title to the Throne. Most wearisome
-were the disputes and most tiresome the conferences between Lord
-Malmesbury, then Foreign Secretary, and the French Ambassador on this
-subject. At last it was agreed that we should accept the disagreeable
-numeral, after the French Government admitted in writing that it was not
-to imply our recognition of the Emperor’s hereditary right to the
-Imperial Crown of France. From first to last, however, Lord Malmesbury
-and the other diplomatists were mistaken. Very little reflection might
-have taught them that if the numeral were meant to efface Waterloo, and
-the Monarchies of the Bourbons and the Barricades, the usurper would
-have styled himself Napoleon V., and not Napoleon III., for his elder
-uncle Joseph and his father Louis both survived the young and ill-fated
-Duc de Reichstadt. A hereditary title, moreover, would not need to have
-been consecrated by a _plebiscite_, and the reign of its wearer would
-not have been dated from 1852, but from the date of Louis Bonaparte’s
-death. It is, therefore, natural to ask how Charles Louis Bonaparte came
-to style himself the Third and not the Second Emperor. The explanation
-illustrates the facility with which the tragicomedy of fussy English
-diplomacy is transformed into farce at the touch of fact. Lord
-Malmesbury, who is rendered supremely ridiculous by the story, tells it
-himself as follows in his Diary:--
-
-“December 29 (1852). We went to Heron Court. Whole country under water.
-Lord Cowley[81] relates a curious anecdote as to the origin of the
-numeral III. in the Emperor’s title. The Prefect of Bourges, where he
-slept the first night of his progress, had given instructions that the
-people were to shout ‘Vive Napoléon!’ But he wrote ‘Vive Napoléon!!!’
-The people took the three notes of interjection for a numeral. The
-President, on hearing it, sent the Duc de Mortemart to the Prefect to
-know what the cry meant. When the whole thing was explained, the
-President, tapping the Duke on the shoulder, said, ‘_Je ne savais pas
-que j’avais un Préfet Machiavéliste._’”[82]
-
-After the proclamation of the French Emperor, his matrimonial schemes
-touched the family connections of the Queen somewhat closely. The
-Emperor’s marriage, in truth, was the favourite topic for gossip and
-scandal in every high social circle in Europe. As a matter of fact,
-Charles Louis Napoleon was averse from marriage. Two women were already
-devoted to him; perhaps more zealously than any bride of exalted rank
-could ever be. One was Madame Favart de l’Anglade, a creole, who lived
-some time at Kensington Gate, and whose whist and dinner parties have,
-perhaps, not yet been quite forgotten in the old Court suburb. (Lord
-Malmesbury, it may be said in passing, was told by Kisseleff, the
-Russian Ambassador at Paris, that had the _coup d’état_ failed, Charles
-Louis Bonaparte and De Morny were to have fled for concealment to this
-lady’s house.) The other woman who exercised so much influence on the
-Prince-President’s life was a Mrs. Howard. She was his mistress, and he
-created her Comtesse de Beauregard after he broke off his intimacy with
-her.[83] This event was virtually an intimation of his intention to
-marry. He was anxious to have an heir--for obviously none of the
-Bonapartes were fit to succeed him. To perpetuate a dynasty a Royal
-bride would be useful, and to enable him to obtain a Royal bride,
-Charles Louis Bonaparte persuaded France to proclaim him Emperor.
-
-His first project was to seek in marriage the Princess Caroline
-Stephanie de Vasa, a grand-daughter of the Grand Duchess of Baden, and
-daughter of Prince Gustave de Vasa, son of the last King of Sweden of
-the old legitimate dynasty. The proposal was not accepted, and the lady
-afterwards married a German Prince. In December, however, Walewski was
-sent to the English Court to ask the hand of the Princess Adelaide of
-Hohenlohe for his Imperial master, greatly to the disquietude of the
-Queen, who was her aunt. On the 28th of December, when the Tory
-Ministers went to Windsor to deliver up their seals of office, the Queen
-began at once to discuss this delicate affair with them. Lord Malmesbury
-says:--“The Prince (Albert) read a letter from Prince Hohenlohe on the
-subject, which amounted to this, that he was not sure of the settlement
-being satisfactory, and that there were objections of religion and
-morals. The Queen and Prince talked of the marriage reasonably, and
-weighed the _pros_ and _cons_. Afraid the Princess should be dazzled if
-she heard of the offer. I said I knew an offer would be made to the
-father. Walewski would go himself. The Queen alluded to the fate of all
-the wives of the rulers of France since 1789, but did not object
-positively to the marriage.”[84] This project, however, fell to the
-ground, and the Emperor, tired of being rejected by Princesses, acted on
-the wise apophthegm of Ovid--_Si qua vis apte nubere, nube pari_. On the
-22nd of January, 1853, he announced his intention of marrying Eugenia de
-Montijo, Countess of Théba, daughter of the Donna Maria Manuela
-Kirkpatrick, Dowager Countess de Montijo, by the Count de Montijo, an
-officer of rank in the Spanish army. The father of the Donna Maria
-Manuela Kirkpatrick was British Consul at Malaga, and supposed to be
-descended from the assassin of the Red Comyn, whose family motto, “I mak
-sickar” (“I make sure”), perpetuates grim
-
-[Illustration: MDLLE. EUGENIA DE MONTIJO, AFTERWARDS EMPRESS OF THE
-FRENCH.]
-
-memories of his loyalty to the Bruce. His Majesty told the deputations
-from the Senate, the Legislative Body and the Council of State, that
-whilst it was his aim to place France once more within the pale of the
-old Monarchies, that result would be better attained by policy than by
-“Royal alliances, which create feelings of false security, and
-frequently substitute family interests for those of the nation.” Now,
-any dispute which engages Europe in diplomatic controversy that finally
-leads to war, is apt to produce fresh groupings of the Powers. An
-Imperial parvenu seeking for a respectable ally finds in these new
-groupings excellent opportunities for insinuating himself into “the pale
-of the old monarchies.” Hence the Emperor’s marriage was a sinister omen
-for England, because it was his fixed idea that England was the most
-profitable ally France could have. The Queen, however, on hearing that
-the Emperor’s marriage was a love match, imagined that his abandonment
-of an attempt to contract a Royal alliance gave additional force to his
-assurance at Bordeaux, on the 9th of October, 1852, that the “Empire was
-Peace,” and that under its guidance France was about to enter on a busy
-epoch of Industrialism. English Society approved of the marriage,[85]
-and the Press was loud in its praises of the Imperial pair.[86] Nobody,
-indeed, had the faintest suspicion at the time that war was in store for
-us--a war which gave the French Emperor that very alliance with England
-for which he was then scheming. But before describing the events that
-led up to the most disastrous calamity that darkens the Queen’s reign,
-it may be well to sketch briefly the chief points in the Home Policy of
-her Majesty’s Ministers during 1853.
-
-It has been said that there were only two great projects in which the
-Queen interested herself during this year, filled, as it was, with
-distracting anxieties as to foreign affairs--the Budget and the India
-Government Bill. There was, however, a third: Lord John Russell’s
-scheme--unhappily abortive--for establishing a national system of public
-instruction.
-
-Parliament met on the 10th of February, and Mr. Disraeli called Sir
-James Graham and Sir Charles Wood to account for speaking rudely of the
-French Emperor in their hustings addresses. Nothing came of his pungent
-attack, and public interest in politics was languid till April arrived,
-when Mr. Gladstone introduced his celebrated Budget--the first of a
-series that enabled him to divide with Sir Robert Peel the glory of
-being the greatest Finance Minister of the Victorian age.
-
-Mr. Gladstone found that Mr. Disraeli, by under-estimating his revenue
-and over-estimating his expenditure, had left him with a surplus, not of
-£461,000, but of £2,307,000.[87] Unexpected military expenditure, due to
-dread of a French invasion, had reduced this surplus to £807,000. The
-primary feature in Mr. Gladstone’s Budget was the extension of the tax
-on personal property devised by will to real property, and also to
-personal property that passed by settlement. This, Mr. Gladstone
-reckoned, would ultimately bring in £2,000,000, and put him in a
-position to deal with the Income Tax, which came to an end in 1853. He
-proposed to continue the Income Tax at sevenpence in the pound for two
-years, then to reduce it to sixpence, and in three years after that to
-reduce it to fivepence. He extended the tax to Ireland, but, by way of
-compensation, remitted the debts which Ireland had recently incurred to
-the Imperial Treasury. He increased the duties on Scotch spirits from
-3s. 5d. to 4s. 8d., and on Irish spirits from 2s. 8d. to 3s. 4d. a
-gallon, and thus, he reckoned, he had a surplus of £2,151,000 to spend.
-How did he spend it? He abolished the duty on soap, thereby terminating
-the last of the taxes on the four “necessaries”--salt, leather, and
-candles were the other three--which Adam Smith condemned a century
-before.[88] He reduced the taxes on 256 minor articles of food, besides
-tea, advertisements, carriages, dogs, male servants, apples, cheese,
-cocoa, butter, and raisins. He reduced the rate of postage to the
-Colonies--a reduction which, it is surprising to find, had not been even
-suggested by Mr. Disraeli or any of his predecessors in the highest of
-Imperial interests. An ingenious feature in his Budget was his
-manipulation of the Funds. Old Three per Cent. Consols, which could be
-paid off at a year’s notice, sold for a little over par, that is to say,
-£100 of stock sold for a little more than £100. New Three per Cents,
-however, which were not redeemable for twenty years, sold for
-£103--_i.e._, £100 of stock was worth in the market £103, the difference
-of £3 representing the value of the State guarantee to pay interest on
-the stock for twenty years. Hence, he said, if he gave a like guarantee
-for some of the unguaranteed stock, he might lay hands on the increment
-of value thereby added to it for the benefit of the State. He
-accordingly permitted fundholders to exchange £100 of Consols, or
-“Reduced Three per Cents.” for Exchequer bonds,[89] or for £82 10s. in
-New Three and a Half per Cent. Stock, guaranteed for forty years to pay
-£2 17s. 9d. of interest, or for £110 irredeemable Two and a Half per
-Cent. Stock. Mr. Spencer Walpole has said
-
-[Illustration: PRINCE JÉRÔME BONAPARTE.]
-
-that “in breadth, in comprehension, in boldness, in knowledge, and in
-originality,” Mr. Gladstone’s first Budget will compare with Peel’s
-greatest efforts in 1842 and 1845.[90] But even Mr. Walpole admits that,
-whereas Peel’s Budgets can be tested by results, Mr. Gladstone’s can be
-judged of only from its intention. The Crimean war--which he did not
-foresee, and which, as will be shown presently, was then brewing--upset
-all his calculations. It was not favourable to conversion of debt;
-moreover, the new succession duty did not bring in one-fourth of the
-estimated sum.[91] Only one important change was effected in the scheme.
-The duty on advertisements, which Mr. Gladstone proposed should be
-reduced to 6d., was abolished by the odd and novel method of moving and
-carrying an amendment substituting the cipher (0) for the figure 6(d.),
-in the resolution of the Chancellor of the Exchequer. Mr. Hume
-challenged the competence of the House of Commons in Committee to adopt
-a resolution with a “nought” in it instead of a definite figure, but the
-Speaker ruled against him.
-
-[Illustration: SKETCH IN THE OUTER CLOISTERS, WINDSOR CASTLE.]
-
-The India Bill was introduced by Sir C. Wood on the 3rd of June, 1853.
-The complaints against the system under which India was ruled were that
-it led to wars, deficits, maladministration of justice, neglect of
-public works and of education. The Dual Government of the Imperial Board
-of Control and the Court of Directors of the East India Company was
-maintained, but the Court of Directors was reduced from thirty members
-to eighteen, twelve of whom were to be chosen by the Company, and six
-nominated by the Crown, who were to be Indian officials of ten years’
-service. The new system, which was to prevail till Parliament chose to
-change it, put an end to the old plan of leasing the Indian Empire for a
-term of years to a Company of merchant adventurers. As to patronage,
-competition was substituted for nomination as the mode of entering the
-public service. Direct appointments to the Indian Army were, however,
-left in the hands of the Directors of the Company. The scheme was warmly
-discussed, the friends of the Company insisting on immediate
-legislation; its enemies, thinking that in time they might be able to
-educate the country up to the point of abolishing the authority of the
-Directors, and transferring the government of India absolutely to the
-Crown,[92] pressed for delay. Mr. Disraeli and the bulk of the Tories
-were for postponing legislation, but in the end the Government carried
-the Bill.
-
-Lord John Russell, on the 4th of April, explained his scheme for
-establishing a system of national education. The main point in it was
-that it empowered Municipal Authorities to raise a rate in aid of
-voluntary schools, the rate to be applied to pay twopence in the week
-for each scholar, provided fourpence or fivepence were contributed from
-other sources. The scheme was, however, abandoned. Lord John had in his
-speech foreshadowed the introduction of a Bill imposing drastic reforms
-on the Universities, and this roused the Tory Party to obstruct his
-proposals. It is but fair to draw attention to this Bill, because Lord
-John Russell is entitled to the credit of having been the first
-statesman to present a comprehensive scheme for organising primary
-education, based on the principle that it is the duty of the community
-to provide for the instruction of the people by levying an education
-rate. This, said Mr. W. J. Fox, was “a most important step in the
-progress of public instruction.”
-
-A Bill empowering the Local Governments in Canada to deal with Clergy
-Reserves was introduced by Mr. F. Peel on the 15th of February. It is
-notable because the debates on it illustrate the difference between the
-ideas of the two parties in the State as to Colonial Government--the
-Tories in those days being on the whole opposed to granting the Colonies
-privileges of self-government, whilst the Liberals favoured such grants.
-In 1791 it was enacted that whenever the Crown disposed of waste lands
-in Canada, one-seventh of their value should be reserved for the support
-of the Protestant clergy. The funds, it seems, had not been fairly
-distributed, the Established Churches of England and Scotland having
-received the largest share of them. In 1840 the Imperial Legislature had
-confirmed this appropriation by restraining the Canadian Legislatures
-from meddling with these funds. The Bill of the Government simply gave
-the Canadian Legislature the right of dealing with them as it thought
-fit, on the ground that the disposal of lands which derived their value
-from Canadian capital and Canadian enterprise was a matter of Colonial
-rather than of Imperial concern. The Bill was passed.
-
-On the 11th of July a Bill for altering the punishment of transportation
-was introduced into the House of Lords by the Lord Chancellor. Only one
-Colony--Western Australia--was willing to receive convicts, and not more
-than 800 to 1,000 a year could be sent there. The Government proposed,
-therefore, to limit transportation to such cases of crime as would carry
-a sentence of fourteen years’ imprisonment, and substitute shorter
-periods of imprisonment for offences, which up till now had been
-punished by varying periods of transportation.
-
-This proposal, which was carried, was forced on the State by the great
-changes which had been effected in the Australian Colonies after the
-discovery of gold in New South Wales. Here it may be well to notice the
-manner in which these gold discoveries were made, and their effect on
-the prosperity of the Empire.
-
-It was on the 10th of September, 1852, that the West India mail steamer
-brought news to England which revived the old yearning for the discovery
-of the fabled El Dorado--dormant in the English breast since the days of
-Raleigh. Gold, it was reported, had been found near Bathurst, in New
-South Wales, where a frantic rush to the diggings had taken place. The
-merchant left his warehouse, the shopman his counter, even the lawyers
-deserted their clients--all eager to join in the headlong race to the
-mines. But all the gold they were likely to win could not possibly
-balance the loss caused to the Colony at the time by the mad stampede of
-the shepherds, who abandoned their countless flocks for the mines. The
-gold fever was further exacerbated by the subsequent discovery of
-another rich deposit in Victoria. America had found her El Dorado in
-California; Englishmen accordingly heard with pride that they, too, had
-come into a richer heritage in the hitherto despised convict settlements
-of Australasia. On the 23rd of November, 1852, three vessels from
-Australia sailed into the Thames with a cargo of seven tons of solid
-gold. The _Eagle_ brought 160,000 ounces, worth £600,000, and she had
-made the passage from Melbourne to the Downs in seventy-six days; the
-_Sapphire_ and _Pelham_, from Sydney, brought 14,668 ounces and 27,762
-ounces respectively; the _Maitland_, from Sydney, followed with 14,326
-ounces; the _Australia_, the first steamer that arrived from these
-Colonies, next came in with a still larger quantity; and in December the
-_Dido_ appeared with a cargo of gold-dust valued at £400,000.
-
-Politically the Protectionists tried to turn these discoveries to some
-account. They had predicted that Free Trade would ruin the country. On
-the contrary, £6,000,000 of taxation had been remitted since 1846, and
-yet there was no shrinkage of revenue. Exports had risen from
-£58,000,000 to £78,000,000, the shipping trade was brisker than ever,
-and on the 1st of January, 1853, there were not quite 800,000 paupers in
-the country.[93] Even the landed interest could not pretend to have been
-ruined, seeing that the Income Tax assessment under Schedule B, which
-is levied on rents of agricultural land, had risen from £46,328,811 in
-1845 to £46,681,488 in 1852. This tide of prosperity under Free Trade
-seemed certain to flow rather than to ebb, so that the Tories were
-taunted with the utter failure of their dismal Protectionist prophecies.
-It need hardly be said that the Queen, who, as a strong Free Trader, had
-watched with deep anxiety the result of the great revolution in fiscal
-policy which she had helped Peel to initiate, was intensely gratified,
-not to say relieved in mind, when the figures illustrating the
-commercial condition of her realm were brought under her notice. The
-Protectionists, however, had an answer to these facts. It was, they
-averred, the unexpected discovery of gold in Australia that had saved
-the country from the ruin which they predicted must come from Free
-Trade. It may be pointed out that the figures we have given for the
-purpose of showing how the trade of the country stood after 1846, cover
-the period _before_, and not the period _after_, gold was imported from
-Australia--a circumstance which the Queen and Prince Albert were quick
-to note and appreciate. The Tory Protectionists, in fact, completely
-misunderstood the effect which would be produced by any sudden increase
-in the supply of gold. That effect was two-fold: (1) on the mother
-country, and (2) on the Australian Colonies.
-
-There is very little mystery about the effect of an increase in the
-production of gold. The more we put into the market the less valuable
-will it become. If we double the quantity of gold in circulation, it
-follows that an article which could be bought for a sovereign will not
-be sold for less than two sovereigns. The price of the article is thus
-said to rise, whereas the value, or, properly speaking, the purchasing
-power of the gold, for which it is exchanged, is said to fall. An
-increase in the stock of gold ought, therefore, to lead to a rise in
-prices, and to a fall or depreciation in the value of the metal. In 1853
-some foolish persons therefore predicted that gold would soon be as
-cheap as silver; and yet, though the supply was trebled, gold was not
-trebly depreciated in value. “Undoubtedly some effect,” says Mr.
-Walpole, “was consequently made on prices; but the effect was probably
-only slowly and gradually felt. Gold was absorbed in vast and
-unprecedented quantities in the arts, and the supply which was actually
-available for barter was not immediately augmented to the same
-degree.”[94] It is difficult to understand how so able a writer has been
-led into an error which must vitiate every deduction drawn from the
-effect of the Australian gold discoveries on the prosperity of the
-English people, in the Victorian period. Nobody has ever been able to
-estimate even approximately the amount of gold that is absorbed in the
-arts. All that we know is that the amount is so small, that it could not
-affect such an enormous increase in the supply as that which came from
-Australia.[95] Besides, as gold did not fall much in value, it was not
-likely that it would be much absorbed in the arts. But, then, what
-became of all the gold that was so suddenly poured into England from
-Australia? Some of it was absorbed in coinage,[96] but not enough to
-account for the absorption of the vast quantity that remained. The key
-to the puzzle is, in truth, to be found in the statistics of commerce
-which we have already cited.
-
-[Illustration: THE CONVEYING OF AUSTRALIAN GOLD FROM THE EAST INDIA
-DOCKS TO THE BANK OF ENGLAND.
-
-(_After the Engraving in the “Illustrated London News.”_)]
-
-The value of gold was kept up in spite of the sudden increase in the
-supply, because, under Free Trade, the commerce of the country began to
-expand by leaps and bounds. The Australian supplies, in fact, were
-absorbed in trade, for it is obvious that the sudden expansion of
-business which followed from Free Trade must have caused a corresponding
-demand for money, not only to conduct the operations of barter, but to
-pay the wages of the additional workers who produced the articles sold
-for money. When this fact is grasped, it is easy to understand what the
-Australian gold discoveries did for England. Had no new supplies of gold
-been found in 1853, Free Trade would have brought serious disasters in
-its wake, but not precisely in the form predicted by the Tories. The
-sudden expansion of trade would have caused a sudden demand for gold;
-the value of gold must have risen. Supposing gold had thus doubled in
-value, then the prices of commodities would have been halved, that is to
-say, one hundred oxen would have sold only for as many sovereigns as
-fifty sold for before the value of gold was thus increased. Everybody
-who had to make a fixed money payment, such as rent or interest, would
-have had their payment doubled, for they would have had to produce twice
-as much to meet their obligations as originally sufficed for that
-purpose. The burden of the National Debt, for example, would have been
-doubled, for, to pay every pound’s worth of interest to the fundholder,
-the public would have had to realise what represented two pounds’ worth
-of wealth when the interest was first fixed. In fact, the only people
-who would have gained, would have been the few who had to receive fixed
-payments, at the expense of the many who had to make them. The discovery
-of gold at a time when a liberated and expanding trade was causing an
-increased demand for the metal was thus a providential coincidence. By
-preventing the demand from outrunning the supply, it prevented a sudden
-increase in the value of the metal, which must have reduced prices and
-upset all the monetary arrangements of the country.
-
-What was the effect of the discovery of gold on the Australian Colonies?
-Very much the same as the discovery of rich deposits of any other
-saleable ore, excepting in this respect, that gold is the one metal that
-commands an immediate sale, at a high and very slightly varying price.
-Land, Labour, and Capital are the three great requisites of production.
-Of these Australia, prior to 1853, had only the first in abundance. The
-gold mines attracted a rush of emigrants to Australia. But gold mining
-is a lottery in which the prizes fall to the few. The average earnings
-of the digger were soon found to be lower than the wages paid in other
-employments. Hence crowds of men who had been attracted to the mines
-soon left them, and were ready to follow other pursuits, so that the
-gold rush gave Australia the second element in production--labour. But
-the gold which was won, and the demands of the mining population, soon
-stimulated industry and increased wealth in the Colonies--in other
-words, the gold rush brought to Australia the third requisite of
-production--capital.
-
-The Australian gold discoveries, therefore, transformed an insignificant
-penal settlement into a rich and queenly Commonwealth, and saved England
-from the gold famine, with its disastrous fall in prices, which a sudden
-expansion of trade must inevitably have produced after Protective duties
-were abolished. There were, however, two shadows on the picture. The
-gold rush to Australia depleted the labour market at home. The demands
-of the Australian Colonies for British goods, after gold had been
-discovered, were enormous. A sudden diminution in the supply of labour,
-combined with a corresponding increase in the demand for the goods which
-Labour produces, naturally led to a demand in England for increased
-wages. Strikes broke out all over the country. Labour was scarce and
-business brisk, and though the conflict was, except in rare cases,
-unaccompanied by violence, it may be said that generally speaking
-victory lay rather with the workers than with their masters. Wages were
-forced up, which was perhaps fortunate, because, as the year wore on, it
-soon became apparent that a bad harvest in England, France, and Germany
-would seriously increase the price of food.[97] The enormous impetus
-given to industry, and the rise in wages which followed, enabled skilled
-labour to bear this increase in the price of bread. The unskilled
-labourers, however, who from lack of organisation cannot “strike” with
-much effect, suffered acutely, especially towards the end of the year.
-But by that time a calamity was within measurable distance, which
-diverted the minds of the English people from dear bread and bad
-harvests. That calamity was the Crimean war, which rendered 1853 the
-last year of “The Great Peace” which followed the battle of Waterloo.
-
-[Illustration: STUDY OF A CHILD.
-
-(_After an Etching by the Queen._)]
-
-[Illustration: OFF THE COAST OF ASIA MINOR (TURKEY IN ASIA).]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX.
-
-DRIFTING TO WAR.
-
- Origin of the Crimean War--Russia and “the Sick Man”--Coercing
- Turkey--The Dispute about the Holy Places--A Monkish
- Quarrel--Contradictory Concessions--The Czar and the Tory Ministry
- of 1844--The Secret Compact with Peel, Wellington, and
- Aberdeen--Nesselrode’s Secret Memorandum--The Czar and Sir Hamilton
- Seymour--Lord John Russell’s Admissions--The Czar’s
- Bewilderment--Lord Stratford de Redcliffe--The Marplot at
- Constantinople--A Hectoring Russian Envoy--The Allied Fleets at
- Besika Bay--The Conference of Vienna--The Vienna Note--The Turkish
- Modifications--The Case for England--The British Fleet in the
- Euxine--A Caustic Letter of the Queen to Lord Aberdeen--Prince
- Albert’s Warnings--The Massacre of Sinope--Internal Feuds in the
- Cabinet--Lord John Russell’s Intrigues--Palmerston’s Resignation
- and Return--The Fire at Windsor--Birth of Prince Leopold--The Camp
- at Chobham--The Czar’s Daughters--Naval Review at Spithead--Royal
- Visit to Ireland.
-
-
-When Parliament was prorogued on the 20th of August, 1853, the following
-passage was inserted in the Queen’s Speech. “It is with deep interest
-and concern that her Majesty has viewed the serious misunderstanding
-which has recently risen between Russia and the Ottoman Porte. The
-Emperor of the French has united with her Majesty in earnest endeavours
-to reconcile differences, the continuance of which might involve Europe
-in war.” The war to which these differences led has ever been regarded
-by the Queen as the one heart-breaking calamity of her reign--a calamity
-hardly equalled by the great Mutiny, which, though it nearly wrecked her
-Eastern Empire, ended in establishing her authority more firmly than
-ever in her Asiatic dominions. No such tangible result as that followed,
-however, from the war into which the country was now being rapidly
-hurried. The results of this war--the battles, the siege operations,
-“the moving accidents by flood and field”--are all well known; but its
-causes are to this day very imperfectly understood by Englishmen. The
-folly and weakness of the Aberdeen Ministry, the influence of Prince
-Albert, the aggressive designs of Russia, the obstinacy and brutality of
-the Turks, the determination of Napoleon III. to foment a disturbance
-from which he might emerge with the status of a Ruler who had linked the
-throne of a parvenu in an alliance with an ancient monarchy, the
-factious desire of the Tory Opposition to entangle the Coalition
-Ministry in Foreign troubles--to all these causes have different writers
-traced the Crimean war. Let us, then, examine carefully, and closely,
-the development of the dispute that broke the peace of Europe in
-connection with the attitude to it--sometimes, it must be frankly said,
-a wrong attitude--which the Queen and the Court of St. James’s held.
-
-[Illustration: BAZAAR IN CONSTANTINOPLE.]
-
-The geographical conditions of Russia, and the political state of
-Turkey, favoured the outbreak of war between these States. Russia has no
-outlet to the sea except through the Baltic in the north, which is
-frozen in winter, and through the Bosphorus in the south, which is open
-all the year, but which is dominated by the Sultan so long as
-Constantinople is the capital of Turkey. Russia has, therefore, an
-obvious interest either in making Turkey her vassal, or in expelling the
-Turks from Europe, and establishing a Power at Constantinople in
-servitude to the Czar. It is almost a heresy to say that Russia has not
-aimed at seizing Constantinople herself. Yet if we are to base our
-judgment on authentic historical documents, and not on the heated
-imaginings of excited Russophobists, it is necessary to say this. The
-Emperor Nicholas was the most aggressive of modern Czars, and there is
-no reason to doubt the cynical candour with which he expressed his views
-on this subject to Sir George Hamilton Seymour, in his conversations
-with him early in the year.[98] Yet it is certain that his ideas as to
-the reconstitution of European Turkey in the event of the Turkish Empire
-breaking up, took the form of organising a series of autonomous States,
-which, like the Danubian Principalities in 1853, should be under his
-protection, though, perhaps, under the nominal suzerainty of the
-Turks--by that time banished to Asia Minor--“bag and baggage.” These
-ideas may have been right or wrong. It is, however, just to say that
-they were the ideas of the Czar, and that they do not correspond with
-the scheme for making Constantinople the capital of Russia, which most
-popular English writers accuse him of cherishing.[99] The interest of
-Russia being thus revealed, let us see where her opportunity lay. It lay
-in the fact that the Ottomans, though they had enough bodily strength to
-conquer, had never enough brain-power to govern a European Empire. In
-this respect they differed signally from the equally savage hordes of
-Manchu Tartars, who overran China, and who, instead of destroying,
-adapted themselves to the civilisation with which they came in contact.
-The Christian provinces of Turkey, and the Greek Christians, under the
-rule of the Sultan were misgoverned, plundered, and at times tortured by
-the myrmidons of a barbarous and feeble autocracy. The Russian Czar, as
-head of a nation fanatically devoted to the Greek cult, could always
-find in this misgovernment and oppression apt opportunity for
-interfering between the Sultan and his Greek subjects. Moreover, in
-every act of interference the Czar of Muscovy knows that he will be
-supported to the death by the fervid fanaticism of the Russian people.
-
-But the example of other Powers was not wanting in 1853 to emphasise the
-promptings of interest and opportunity. In 1852 the Turks determined to
-strike a blow at Montenegro, with which they had for centuries waged
-chronic warfare. The Sublime Porte sent Omar Pasha to occupy the
-Principality of the Black Mountain. Austria, alarmed at the prospect,
-despatched Count Leiningen to Constantinople, and instructed him to
-press for the recall of Omar. The Porte yielded to this demand, and
-recalled him.[100]
-
-Nor was Austria the only Power that was demonstrating the ease with
-which Turkey might be coerced. France had a dispute pending with Turkey,
-as to the privileges of the Roman Catholic monks in Jerusalem--a dispute
-into which the French Emperor, when Prince-President in 1850, had
-entered with vigour, for the purpose of conciliating the French clergy.
-Mr. Kinglake insinuates that Napoleon III. manufactured this quarrel in
-order to force on a European war that might strengthen his position. It
-is but fair to say that the Emperor inherited the controversy from Louis
-Philippe.[101] As it led to the assertion of claims on the part of
-Russia, the rejection of which by Turkey caused the Crimean war, it may
-be well briefly to set forth its salient points.
-
-In 1740 the Porte, in a treaty with France, granted to the Roman
-Catholic monks and clergy in Jerusalem the custody of certain places in
-the Holy Land, associated with the memory of Christ, and to which Greek
-and Latin Christians were in the habit of making pilgrimages. The Great
-Church of Bethlehem, the Sanctuary of the Nativity, the Tomb of the
-Virgin, the Stone of Anointing, and the Seven Arches of the Virgin in
-the tomb of the Holy Sepulchre, were among the Sacred Places thus
-ceded.[102] During the Revolution, French zeal for maintaining the
-privileges of the Romish clergy in Syria grew cool, and the Holy Places
-in the custody of the Latin monks were shockingly neglected. The Greek
-Christians, however, not only visited these consecrated spots as
-pilgrims, but piously repaired them with the sanction of the Porte, thus
-acquiring by firmans from the Sultan the privilege of worshipping in
-them. The policy of the Porte seems to have been to induce Latins and
-Greeks to share the use of the sacred shrines. But Latins and Greeks,
-under the protection of France and Russia respectively, each claimed an
-exclusive right of control and guardianship over them. The dispute had
-been carried on in a desultory way till, in 1850, it was narrowed down
-to this point: France, on behalf of the Latin monks, contended that, in
-order to pass into the grotto of the Holy Manger, they should have
-exclusive possession of the key of the Church of Bethlehem, and of one
-of the keys--the other being in Greek custody--of each of the two doors
-of the Holy Manger; further, that the Sanctuary of the Nativity itself
-should be ornamented with a silver star, and the arms of France. In
-February, 1853, the Porte adjudicated on the rival claims in a letter
-addressed to the French Chargé d’Affaires, and in a firman to the Greek
-patriarch. The representative of France was told that the Latins were to
-have the keys they demanded. The Patriarch was told that Greeks,
-Armenians, and Latins should have keys also, and that the Latins were
-not to have any of the exclusive rights over the Holy Places that they
-claimed. When it became known that the Porte had thus spoken with “two
-voices,” France complained that the exclusive rights demanded by her
-under the Treaty of 1740 were denied in the firman. Russia, on behalf of
-the Greeks, claimed credit for moderation in accepting the firman as a
-compromise, and insisted on its being publicly proclaimed at Jerusalem
-as a charter of Greek privileges. The Porte, in deference to the
-opposition of France, refused to make public proclamation of the
-firman.[103] The Russian Consul-General left Jerusalem in high dudgeon.
-“The Latins,” says Mr. Walpole, “on hearing the decision of the Porte,
-that they should be allowed to celebrate mass once a year in the Church
-of the Virgin, near Gethsemane, but that they should not be allowed to
-disturb the altar and its ornaments, declared that it was impossible to
-celebrate mass on a schismatic slab of marble, and before a crucifix
-whose feet were separated.”[104] In this quarrel of a few ignorant monks
-over the mummeries of their rival rituals lay the germ of that great war
-in which England sacrificed the lives of 28,000 brave men, and spent
-£30,000,000 of sterling treasure!
-
-[Illustration: CONVENT OF THE NATIVITY, BETHLEHEM.]
-
-The Porte endeavoured, by contradictory concessions, such as by publicly
-reading the firman, and by permitting the Latins to put a star over the
-altar of the Nativity, to please both parties--but in vain. Russia,
-towards the end of 1852, had moved a _corps d’armée_ on the frontier of
-Moldavia. France threatened to send her fleet to Syria; and in the end
-of February, 1853, the Czar sent Prince Menschikoff on a special mission
-to Constantinople, for the purpose of enforcing the Russian demands.
-
-The turn in affairs that placed Lord Aberdeen at the head of the Queen’s
-Government did not tend to moderate these demands, or induce the Czar to
-treat the Porte with any delicacy. The Czar, in fact, was honestly
-convinced that his views as to the future of Turkey were, in the main,
-shared by Lord Aberdeen, and therefore by the British Cabinet. It was
-
-[Illustration: INTERIOR OF THE CHAPEL OF THE NATIVITY, BETHLEHEM.]
-
-well known that when the Czar visited England, in 1844, he had discussed
-the Eastern Question with the Queen and her principal advisers, and that
-he and Lord Aberdeen had become personal friends. His Majesty had
-propounded to Peel and Aberdeen his fixed idea that it would be well, in
-view of the impending dissolution of the Ottoman Empire, that England
-and Russia should agree as to the disposal of its European provinces. As
-Austria would follow Russia, an Anglo-Russian coalition would
-necessarily dictate terms to France, who, by her support of Mehemet Ali,
-had shown that her interests were as hostile to those of England in
-Egypt, as they were to those of Russia in Syria. In fact, the Czar’s
-conversations with the Tory Ministers in 1844 were almost identical with
-those which he subsequently held with Sir Hamilton Seymour in 1853. Sir
-Theodore Martin asserts that Peel rejected these overtures, saying that
-England did not regard the dissolution of Turkey as imminent, that she
-wanted no Turkish territory for herself, that she merely desired to
-prevent any government in Egypt from closing the road to India, and that
-she must decline to pledge herself to accept Russian plans for disposing
-of the Turkish territory, till events rendered its disposal a pressing
-question.[105] Sir Theodore Martin, however, admits that there was “a
-general concurrence in the principle expressed” by the Czar, that no
-Great Power--least of all France--should be permitted to aggrandise
-itself at the expense of Turkey. Now, it seems certain that up to the
-very moment when war was declared, the Emperor Nicholas was convinced
-that Lord Aberdeen’s Government would never take sides with France
-against him, in any quarrel about Turkey. He was convinced, despite the
-despatches of the British Ministry, that the ideas of the British
-Government and his own in regard to the future of Turkey, were in
-principle the same--and this conviction he evidently carried away with
-him from England in 1844. He must have been, therefore, too stupid to
-correctly understand what Peel said to him, or Peel must have said more
-to him than Sir Theodore Martin felt himself at liberty to record, in
-his masterly but discreet biography of Prince Albert. The manifest
-reluctance of Lord Aberdeen to thwart the Russian Emperor, and his
-obvious embarrassment when his duty forced him to comment publicly on
-Russian diplomacy in 1853, indicate that something more _was_ said. What
-it was has been revealed by Lord Malmesbury in an entry in his Diary
-under date the 3rd of June, 1853. “There is,” says Lord Malmesbury, who
-speaks with the authority of one who had held the seals of the Foreign
-Office, “a circumstance which I think must strongly influence Lord
-Aberdeen at this moment; which is, that when the Emperor Nicholas came
-to England in 1844, he, Sir Robert Peel (then Prime Minister), the Duke
-of Wellington, and Lord Aberdeen (then Foreign Secretary) drew up and
-signed a memorandum, the spirit and scope of which was to support Russia
-in her legitimate protectorship of the Greek religion and the Holy
-Shrines, and to do so without consulting France. When Lord Derby’s
-government came in, at first, I was unable to understand the mysterious
-allusions which Brunnow[106] made now and then, and which he retracted
-when he saw that either I knew nothing of this paper, or that I desired
-to ignore it. Since it was composed and written, the position of affairs
-in Europe is totally changed, and is even reversed. In 1840 the events
-in the East had then estranged England and France from one another, and
-Louis Napoleon did not exist as a factor in European policy. Now he is
-Emperor of the French, and the Duke and Peel are dead, yet it is not
-unnatural to believe that Nicholas, finding Lord Aberdeen Prime
-Minister, and the sole survivor of these three English statesmen, should
-feel that the moment had arrived, so long wished for by Russia, to fall
-upon Turkey.... He believes that Lord Aberdeen never will join France
-against him, and probably thinks Palmerston stultified by the drudgery
-of the Home Office.”[107] This passage in Lord Malmesbury’s Diary
-explains why Lord Beaconsfield used to say that he knew as a fact within
-his own knowledge, that had Lord Aberdeen not come to power in 1852, the
-Crimean war would never have broken out.[108] Perhaps it explains why
-Mr. Cobden and Mr. Bright declared that if the Tories had not been
-driven from Office in 1852, the Crimean war would have been avoided. It
-is now only too easy to understand that, if he had this Secret
-Memorandum in his possession, the Czar Nicholas naturally believed that
-the British Government were not serious in their antagonism. It is also
-easy to understand why Lord Aberdeen always shrank from speaking the
-firm word of warning, which would have induced Russia to pause ere her
-troops crossed the Pruth, and draw back whilst it was possible to draw
-back with honour.
-
-The existence of an informal understanding between the Czar and the old
-Tory Government of 1844 shows us why his Majesty, in conversation with
-Sir Hamilton Seymour, on the 9th and 14th of January, 1853, reopened the
-question which he believed he had virtually arranged with that
-Government. The last living representative of it--Lord Aberdeen--was
-Prime Minister of England; Turkey was in a more decrepit condition than
-ever; France seemed bent on reviving the Napoleonic legend--of evil omen
-to England in Egypt; nay, she was challenging the claim of Russia to
-secure protection for the Greek Christians in the Ottoman Empire--a
-claim which the Tory leaders in 1844 were disposed to favour.[109] The
-Czar therefore thought it most opportune to say to Sir Hamilton Seymour,
-as he had said to Wellington and Peel, that Turkey, “the Sick Man,” was
-dying on their hands, that England and Russia should either agree what
-should or should not be done with his heritage when he died, and,
-further, to suggest that the Christian provinces of Turkey should be
-organised as independent States under Russian protection, whilst England
-occupied Egypt and Candia.[110] Lord John Russell’s reply to these
-conversations must have also misled the Czar, preoccupied as he was with
-the fact that, in terms of the Secret Memorandum of 1844, England and
-Russia had agreed on a common policy in Turkey. Lord John, in effect,
-said that, as the British Government did not think that the Turk was
-quite moribund, it was premature to discuss any project, negative or
-positive, for disposing of his territory, and that England had no desire
-for territorial aggrandisement. But he went on to add that he thought
-the Sultan should be “advised” to treat his Christian subjects justly
-and humanely, because, if he did so, the Czar would not find it
-“necessary to apply that exceptional protection which his Imperial
-Majesty has found so burdensome and inconvenient, though no doubt
-_prescribed by duty and sanctioned by treaty_.” The words here
-italicised were not altogether in accord with the facts, for no treaty
-sanctioned in plain, definite terms this “exceptional protection;”
-moreover, they admitted the whole Russian case; for, as will be seen, it
-was precisely because the Czar was supposed to be bent on extorting from
-Turkey an extension of the sanction given by existing treaties to the
-Russian Protectorate over her oppressed Christian subjects, that Turkey
-and England went to war with Russia. Whether that war was right or
-wrong, this is certain: it was waged by the English Government to rebut
-a claim, which that Government at the outset admitted. The Czar, through
-Count Nesselrode, expressed himself satisfied with the self-denying
-pledges which had passed between the Russian and English Governments,
-and, as England had promised not to entertain any project for the
-protection of Turkey without a previous understanding with Russia, so
-Russia, he said, gave a similar undertaking to England. But he observed
-that the surest way to prevent the fall of Turkey would be to induce the
-Porte to treat the Greek Christians with equity and humanity. The
-English Government, delighted with this friendly communication, advised
-the Porte to compose the dispute between France and Russia, by offering
-to accept any arrangement which these two Powers would take as
-satisfactory. It remonstrated with France for having been the first, not
-only to raise the quarrel about the Holy Places, but also to support her
-demands by a threat of war. This was a second admission on the part of
-England that in this controversy Russia was in the right. Napoleon III.
-recalled M. de Lavalelle, his hectoring Envoy at Constantinople, and
-sent M. de La Cour in his place. Russia ceased her warlike preparations
-on the Moldavian frontier, and the war-cloud on the horizon began to
-melt away.
-
-[Illustration: THE NICOLAI BRIDGE ACROSS THE NEVA, ST. PETERSBURG.]
-
-Unfortunately for the prospects of peace, Lord Aberdeen ordered Lord
-Stratford de Redcliffe to resume his duties as Ambassador at
-Constantinople.
-
-[Illustration: LORD STRATFORD DE REDCLIFFE.
-
-(_From a Photograph by Messrs. Boning and Small._)]
-
-Stratford de Redcliffe was a man of indomitable strength of character,
-restless energy, and invincible tenacity of purpose. His fitness for the
-office of a mediator between Turkey, Russia, and France, charged
-specially to avert war, may be estimated by the following entry in Lord
-Malmesbury’s Diary, under date February 25th, 1854:--“Lord Bath,” writes
-Lord Malmesbury, “has come back from Constantinople, and says that Lord
-Stratford openly boasts having got his personal revenge against the Czar
-by fomenting the war. He told Lord Bath so.” According to Lord
-Malmesbury, his hatred to the Czar dated from the time when his Majesty
-refused to receive him as Ambassador at St. Petersburg. It is now beyond
-doubt that Lord Stratford de Redcliffe, from the beginning to the end
-of the negotiations between the Powers, acted the part of a Marplot. As
-Prince Albert, in a letter to Baron Stockmar on the 27th of November,
-said, “The prospects of a peaceful settlement in the East do not
-improve. Lord Stratford fulfils his instructions to the letter, but he
-so contrives that we are getting constantly deeper and deeper into a war
-policy.” It is impossible to describe in truer words the malign and
-baneful influence of the diplomatist who, to gratify his personal
-rancour, inflicted the torture of war upon his country.
-
-Lord Stratford de Redcliffe reached Constantinople on the 5th of April,
-1853. There he found that Prince Menschikoff, at the head of a menacing
-mission, had arrived before him on the 28th of February. Menschikoff
-began operations by refusing to treat with Fuad Effendi, the Foreign
-Minister. Fuad resigned in favour of Rifaat Pasha. The tone of the
-Russian envoy then alarmed the Grand Vizier, who sought advice from
-Colonel Rose,[111] British Chargé d’Affaires. Colonel Rose immediately
-begged Admiral Dundas to bring the Mediterranean squadron to the mouth
-of the Dardanelles, but the Admiral refused to sail without instructions
-from the Cabinet, and the Cabinet disapproved of Rose’s action. France,
-however, thought that this act indicated an intention on the part of
-England to forestall her, and despatched the Toulon squadron to Salamis,
-without waiting to hear whether Colonel Rose’s action had been
-sanctioned by his Government.[112] The presence of the French fleet so
-near the scene of an acrid controversy between France and Russia, would
-have tended to neutralise the conciliatory diplomacy of England, even if
-Lord Stratford de Redcliffe had honestly meant to work in the interests
-of peace.
-
-Lord Stratford, when he arrived at Constantinople, found the Sublime
-Porte in a panic. Though Russia had assured the English Government that
-no question then remained open between her, France, and Turkey, except
-that of the Holy Places, Menschikoff had demanded from the Porte a
-treaty, the negotiation of which, he said, must be kept secret from the
-Powers, acknowledging the right of Russia to a protectorate over all
-Greek Christians in Turkey. Ultimately he offered to accept a Note; but
-the objection to the concession in any such shape, was that it virtually
-transferred to the Russian Czar the allegiance of 12,000,000 of the
-Sultan’s subjects. Lord Stratford de Redcliffe advised the Porte to
-begin by settling the question of the Holy Places, which was the _fons
-et origo_ of the dispute. That question was quickly settled, and then
-Menschikoff promptly and peremptorily pressed the new claim of Russia to
-a protectorate over the Greek Church in Turkey. On the 5th of May he
-sent an ultimatum to the Porte demanding its surrender on this point
-within five days. On Lord Stratford’s advice the Porte refused to
-surrender, and Prince Menschikoff and his suite left Constantinople in
-wrath.[113] At this crisis the voice of Nicholas was for war; but that
-of Nesselrode, his able and tranquil Minister, was for peace. As a
-compromise the Czar therefore determined that the Danubian
-Principalities should be occupied by his troops, and held till Turkey
-guaranteed to Russia “the rights and privileges of all kinds which have
-been granted by the Sultan to his Greek subjects.”[114] On the 31st of
-May Nesselrode wrote to Reschid Pasha that Russian troops would cross
-the Pruth, and on the 2nd of June Admiral Dundas was ordered to proceed
-with the Mediterranean squadron to Besika Bay. The French fleet was
-ordered to go there also, and the allied squadrons made their appearance
-in Turkish waters about the same time.[115] The quarrel up till now had
-been one between France and Russia. It was thus suddenly transformed
-into one between France and England on the one side and Russia on the
-other. On the 2nd of July Prince Gortschakoff entered the
-Principalities; and then Austria, which had selfishly held aloof, became
-nervous as to the control of the Danube, and manifested a desire to act
-with the Western Powers. Turkey was advised not to treat Russian
-aggression on the Principalities as a _casus belli_, and the Porte met
-it with a protest, though it was very nearly forced by its fanatical
-Moslem subjects to declare war. In England the Government was condemned
-for its extreme reticence in Parliament as to the turn affairs were
-taking; and up to this point the Cabinet certainly committed three
-blunders. In the first place, they permitted Lord Stratford to encourage
-the Porte to resist Russia, without having come to a clear and definite
-determination to support that resistance by force, if Russia proved
-unbending. Secondly, they relied too much on Count Nesselrode’s smooth,
-pacific assurances after they knew, or ought to have known, from Prince
-Menschikoff’s proposal of a secret treaty to the Porte, and from the
-warlike demonstration on the Moldavian frontier,[116] that these
-assurances were illusory. Thirdly, they did not meet the proposal for a
-secret treaty and the demonstration on the frontier by ordering Dundas
-to Besika Bay, and they met the occupation of the Principalities by
-sending Dundas, not to the Black Sea, but only to Besika Bay. Lord
-Aberdeen’s apologists allege that the latter step would have caused
-Russia to occupy Constantinople. That is a feeble defence, for
-subsequent events showed that Russia could not even mobilise enough
-troops to hold the Principalities against the Turks. The English
-Government did enough to irritate the Czar, and though they did not do
-enough to check him, they did too much to enable them to extricate
-themselves with honour from the quarrel.
-
-[Illustration: TOWN HALL, VIENNA.]
-
-Something, however, had to be done for the Porte, after it had, at the
-bidding of England and France, refrained from defending the
-Principalities, which were in its dominions. A Conference of the Powers
-was therefore assembled at Vienna, on the 24th of June, to arrive at a
-pacific solution of the difficulty, and on the 31st they adopted the
-Vienna Note, which has become famous in European history. It was sent to
-Russia and Turkey for acceptance as a settlement which, in the opinion
-of Europe, would be equally honourable and fair to both. The Czar
-accepted it promptly on the 10th of August. Lord Stratford de Redcliffe,
-in his official capacity, advised Turkey to accept it; but he played his
-Government false, by plainly indicating his personal objections to it.
-The Porte acted on his private advice, and refused to accept the Note
-unless it were modified. Turkey thus dashed all hopes of peace by
-repudiating the advice of the Powers, and, by thus putting herself in
-the wrong, she put Russia in the right.
-
-[Illustration: PRINCE MENSCHIKOFF.]
-
-Here Lord Aberdeen and his colleagues committed another blunder. On
-balancing the gain against the loss to Turkey which was likely to accrue
-from concessions that would prevent war, they might fairly enough have
-told the Porte that, if it rejected the Vienna Note, it would be left to
-struggle with Russia single-handed. Austria, however, followed by
-France, England, and Prussia, asked the Czar to accept the modifications
-of Turkey. The Czar refused to do this, and instructed Count Nesselrode
-to give his reasons for refusing, whereupon Austria and Prussia veered
-round, and again recommended the Porte to accept the original Note.
-England and France, on the contrary, alleging that Count Nesselrode’s
-despatches proved that the Czar attached a different meaning to the Note
-from that which they attributed to it, declined to join Austria and
-Prussia in pressing Turkey to accept it. The European concert was
-destroyed, and it was the European concert which alone rendered war
-impossible.[117] Unfortunately, on this occasion, the Queen, wary and
-ingenious as she has shown herself during other crises in checking the
-“drift” of Cabinets towards war, fell too easily under the influence of
-Lord Aberdeen, for whom personally she ever entertained the warmest
-regard. He sent Nesselrode’s despatch to her, but he prepossessed her
-mind by pointing out to her first, that Nesselrode’s reasons for
-refusing to accept the Turkish modifications of the Vienna Note, showed
-that Russia put a different interpretation on it from that which its
-framers meant it to bear; and secondly, that it would be dishonourable
-to ask the Porte to accept it in the face of this fact. Her Majesty,
-easily touched by such an appeal, wrote from Balmoral a strong letter to
-Lord Aberdeen supporting his view with much ability. “It is evident,”
-she said, “that Russia has hitherto attempted to deceive us, in
-pretending that she did not aim at the acquisition of any _new_ right,
-but required only a satisfaction of honour, and an acknowledgment of the
-rights she already possessed by treaty--and that she does intend, and
-for the first time lays bare that intention, to acquire new rights of
-interference.” The Queen then made a suggestion which was carried out.
-It was that England should lay the whole case before Europe, declaring
-that the Russian demands were inadmissible, and “that the continuance of
-the occupation of the Principalities, in order to extort these demands,
-constitutes an unwarrantable aggression upon Turkey, and infraction of
-the public law of Europe.”[118] As matters stood, such an intimation to
-the fiery Czar was virtually a challenge to mortal combat.
-
-Those who hold the destinies of great nations in their hands are now
-chary of committing themselves to war for the sake of honour or the
-public law of Europe. The subterfuges by which Russia disorganised
-Bulgaria in 1886, and got rid of Prince Alexander, whose anti-Russian
-proclivities had been encouraged by England, touched British honour more
-closely than the “explicative Note” of Count Nesselrode. Yet England,
-guided solely by her interests, did not make Russian interference with
-Bulgaria in 1886, a _casus belli_. A greater statesman than Aberdeen in
-1853, also eliminated all considerations of “honour” from his policy,
-and looked solely to the material interest of his country. Prussia was
-scoffed at by Prince Albert as “a reed shaken by the wind.” But Prussia
-not only refused to join the Western Powers against Russia, but deterred
-Austria from joining them. And why? Because Herr von Bismarck had enough
-influence with the King to convince him that the interest of Prussia did
-not lie in strengthening the Western Powers, or in offending Russia,
-whose benevolent neutrality might one day be valuable to his country.
-Why, he argued, should Prussia waste her strength in helping France and
-Austria to weaken Russia, without the prospect of winning for Prussia “a
-prize worthy of us”? He was “appalled” by the notion that “we may plunge
-into a sea of trouble and danger on behalf of Austria, for whose sins
-the King displays as much tolerance as I only hope God in Heaven will
-one day show to mine.” The “interest of Prussia,” he said, after the
-Crimean war was over, “is my only rule of action, and had there ever
-been any prospect of our promoting this interest by taking part in the
-war, I should certainly never have been one of its opponents.”[119] Lord
-Salisbury, on the 9th of November, 1886, speaking at the Guildhall, has
-in our time said that England has no interest to resist Russian
-aggression in European Turkey, where Austria has none. Tested by that
-principle the policy of the Cabinet and the Crown in 1853 was
-chivalrous, but indefensible. Yet if the Sovereign and her Ministers
-erred, what is to be said of the Nation? It was simply mad for war with
-Russia, and the section of the Cabinet headed by Palmerston and Russell
-vied with the Tories in inflaming the war-fever of the hour. Aberdeen
-was vilified as a Russian agent--because he was desirous of maintaining
-peace. Prince Albert was attacked with equal scurrility as a tool of the
-Czar, because he was not a Russophobe, and because he did not conceal
-his opinion that the Turkish Government was brutal, fanatical, and
-ignorant.
-
-Had Turkey accepted the Vienna Note, had the Powers not asked Russia to
-accept the Turkish amendments to it, had Nesselrode in refusing to
-accept these refrained from giving reasons for his refusal, peace would
-have been preserved. It is, therefore, necessary to examine the points
-that were at issue when the Vienna Note was rejected by Turkey. This is
-to be done by comparing together Menschikoff’s original Note with the
-Vienna Note, and the Turkish modification of it. Menschikoff started by
-assuming that Russia and Turkey “being mutually desirous of maintaining
-the stability of the orthodox Greco-Russian religion, professed by the
-majority of their Christian subjects, and of guaranteeing that religion
-against all molestation for the future,” should agree (1) that “no
-change shall be made as regards the rights, privileges, and immunities
-which have been enjoyed or are possessed _ab antiquo_ by the Orthodox
-Greek Churches, pious institutions, and clergy, in the dominions of the
-Sublime Ottoman Porte, which is pleased to secure the same to them in
-perpetuity on the strict basis of the _status quo_ now existing. (2) The
-rights and advantages conceded by the Ottoman Government, or which shall
-hereafter be conceded, to the other Christian rites by treaties,
-conventions, or special arrangements, shall be considered as belonging
-also to the Orthodox Church.”[120] The Vienna Note differed but slightly
-from this--and it may be well to put it side by side with the Turkish
-modifications--reproducing only the controversial passages.
-
-VIENNA NOTE.
-
-“If the Emperors of Russia have at all times
-evinced their active solicitude for the [_maintenance
-of the immunities and privileges of the
-Orthodox Greek Church in the Ottoman Empire,
-the Sultans have never refused to confirm
-them_] by solemn acts testifying their ancient
-and constant benevolence towards their Christian
-subjects.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The undersigned has, in consequence, received
-orders to declare by the present Note that the
-Government of his Majesty the Sultan will remain
-faithful to [_the letter and to the spirit of
-the Treaties of Kainardji and Adrianople relative
-to the protection of the Christian religion,
-and_] that his Majesty considers himself bound
-in honour to cause to be observed for ever, and
-to preserve from all prejudice either now or
-hereafter, the enjoyment of the spiritual privileges
-which have been granted by his Majesty’s
-august ancestors to the orthodox Greek Eastern
-Church, which are maintained and confirmed
-by him; and, moreover, in a spirit of exalted
-equity, to cause the Greek rite to share in the
-advantages granted [_to the other Christian rites
-by convention or special arrangement_].”
-
-
-Turkish Modifications.
-
-orthodox Greek worship and Church (le culte et
-l’Église orthodoxe Grecque), the Sultans have
-never ceased to provide for the maintenance of
-the privileges and immunities which at different
-times they have spontaneously granted to that
-religion and to that Church in the Ottoman
-Empire, and to confirm them
-
-the stipulations of the Treaty of Kainardji,
-confirmed by that of Adrianople, relative to the
-protection by the Sublime Porte of the Christian
-religion, and he is, moreover, charged to make
-known
-
-or which might be granted to the other Christian
-communities, Ottoman subjects.
-
-Were the points of difference between the Vienna Note and that Note as
-modified by the Porte worth fighting for?
-
-It is inconceivable that any English Minister or diplomatist having even
-a cursory acquaintance with Turkish history could agree with the Porte
-in affirming that the Ottoman Sultans had “never ceased to provide for”
-the maintenance of the privileges of their Christian subjects. “Never
-honestly attempted to provide for” would have been the truer statement
-of the fact. So the _first_ modification of the Porte may be summarily
-dismissed. As to the _second_, the Turks averred that it was necessary
-(1) because the Vienna Note extended the scope of the Treaties of
-Kainardji and Adrianople, and (2) because it gave the Czar new powers of
-interfering between the Sultan and his subjects. The 7th and 14th
-Articles of these Treaties, when studied, show that the Porte[121]
-
-[Illustration: THE MOSQUE OF SELIM II. AT ADRIANOPLE.]
-
-was clearly wrong on one point. The Sultan, said the Porte, will in
-future recognise the stipulations relative to protection given _by the
-Porte_ alone; but the Treaty had also stipulations relative to
-protection which was to be given by Russia. The Czar was therefore not
-unreasonable in suspecting that the Turks were trying, by their
-amendment of the Vienna Note, to cancel some of his rights under the
-Treaty of Kainardji. The other point at issue must be decided with
-reference to history. It is plain that Menschikoff’s Note, from its
-terms and from the tone of the Envoy who presented it as an ultimatum,
-might fairly be considered offensive to Turkey, and that she, therefore,
-had plausible reasons for rejecting it. It might be so construed as to
-extend to the whole Empire the Russian right of special protection,
-which the Treaty of Kainardji limited to a single Christian temple, and
-that of Adrianople restricted to two Principalities. On the other hand,
-the Porte, by saying that the Sultan would in future “remain faithful to
-the stipulations of the Treaty of Kainardji, confirmed by that of
-Adrianople,” was justly suspected of wriggling out of other stipulations
-in the latter Treaty, which were not in the former, and which made the
-Czar the special guardian of Christian rights in the Principalities. But
-holding in view the history of Turkish misrule and oppression, together
-with Lord Stratford de Redcliffe’s denunciations of the bad faith of the
-Turkish Government in keeping its promises of reform, it is impossible
-to blame the Czar for rejecting the Turkish amendment. That amendment
-consisted simply in cutting out of the Vienna Note the all-important
-words, “letter and spirit.” The Czar denied that Turkey had been
-faithful to the letter of existing treaties guaranteeing Christian
-privileges. All Europe admitted that she had not been faithful to the
-spirit of them, and that if, under Russian pressure, she ever kept the
-word of promise to the ear, she usually broke it to the hope. Turkey,
-when asked to pledge herself to be true to the spirit as well as the
-letter of her obligations, was, therefore, trifling with Europe in
-refusing to commit herself to a pledge that would have bound her by both
-the letter and spirit of her engagements. Here again, it seems, judgment
-must go against Turkey. The object of her third amendment was quite
-clear. The stipulation of the Vienna Note that privileges given to any
-Christian Church should be also enjoyed by all Greek Christians in
-Turkey, was a sort of “most favoured nation clause.” It made the
-contract keep all sects automatically on the same level. The Porte,
-however, by its amendment, promised Russia to give Greek Christians, not
-the privileges it gave to all other Christians, but only to other
-Christians who were Turkish subjects. No doubt the Vienna Note would
-have given Russia a right of complaint against Turkey in the case of
-Greek Christians, who were refused privileges granted to (1) Greek
-Christians, (2) Roman Catholics, (3) Protestants, and (4) Armenians who
-were not Turkish subjects. But these were few in number, and the affair
-of the Holy Places showed that this right of complaint could be pressed
-by Russia to some purpose, whether conferred by treaty or not. It almost
-seemed as if the third amendment of the Porte were designed to bar
-Russia from similar acts of intervention; in other words, to put her in
-a worse position than that which she held without any fresh compact
-whatever. Strangely enough, the one strong objection which Turkey had a
-right to make to the Vienna Note--namely, that it did not make the
-evacuation of the Principalities a condition precedent of the
-settlement--was not strongly pressed by Europe.
-
-One argument, and one only, was urged with even the shadow of
-plausibility by England. It was that the Czar might claim, under the
-Vienna Note, a protectorate over the Greek Christians in Turkey, which
-would transfer to him the allegiance of nearly all the Sultan’s European
-subjects. As the Vienna Note gave the Czar nothing but what he could
-claim according to “the letter and to the spirit” of two existing
-treaties, it is difficult to understand how the English Government could
-advance such an argument, unless, indeed, they meant to affirm that it
-was futile to ask Turkey to abide by “the spirit” of any of her pledges.
-But if the contention of the English Cabinet is to be taken as true,
-what must we say of the wisdom with which the world is governed? The
-four Ambassadors, the four Cabinets, and the four Sovereigns of the
-European Powers who had the clearest interest in preserving the
-independence of Turkey drew up, studied, debated, and revised again and
-again every word and phrase of a Joint Note which they declared could be
-honourably and justly accepted by the Sublime Porte. When Turkey
-rejected it, these very same Ambassadors, Cabinets, and Sovereigns
-suddenly turned round and said that they had unwittingly so worded their
-Note that it threatened with ruin the empire which they meant it to
-save! And of these Powers two--England and France--entered on a
-profitless and calamitous war, because their Ambassadors, Ministers of
-State, and Sovereigns did not understand the meaning of their own words
-in a solemn diplomatic instrument! It is upon this hypothesis--at once
-so grotesque and incredible--that Lord Aberdeen’s Government justified
-itself in advising Turkey to reject the Vienna Note, and in making war
-on Russia because the Czar adhered to it after he had accepted it at the
-request of Europe.
-
-England, it has been said, following the lead of Austria, encouraged the
-Porte to resist, and pressed Russia to accept the Turkish modification
-of the Note. It has been shown how, when Russia refused to do this,
-Austria, with whom Prussia acted, suddenly wheeled round and pressed the
-original Note on Turkey. England, however, had made herself sufficiently
-ridiculous in first recommending Turkey to accept the Note, and in then
-supporting her in rejecting it. Lord Aberdeen’s Government accordingly
-refused to recommend the Note again to Turkey, and the Government of
-France took the same course. The concert of the Powers which thus alone
-rendered peace possible was broken, and neither England nor France
-seemed to have made any serious effort to repair it. On the contrary,
-they not only approved of Lord Stratford’s conduct in summoning two
-ships of war from Besika Bay to Constantinople, but in September,
-yielding to Palmerston,[122] they put the whole fleet at his disposal.
-It was contrary to the Treaty of 1841 for the Porte to admit war-ships
-to the Bosphorus in time of peace. To send the English fleet to
-Constantinople was therefore a declaration on the part of England that
-Turkey was at war with Russia. Turkey formally declared war on Russia on
-the 5th, and the British Fleet entered the Bosphorus on the 30th of
-October. To order our Fleet to defend the Turks in the Euxine if they
-were attacked by Russia was a perilous step to take. Yet it is curious
-to observe that the Queen was the only high personage engaged in this
-transaction who, in the midst of the popular war frenzy, foresaw the
-peril of it. Even her habit of deference to Lord Aberdeen, which
-unfortunately led her to sanction without demur the blunders which have
-now been recorded, could not induce her to approve of this last and, as
-will be seen, most fatal error. Her trenchant criticism of it,
-unanswered and unanswerable to this day, is to be found in a letter
-which she wrote to the Prime Minister, in which she said:--“It appears
-to the Queen that we have taken on ourselves, in conjunction with
-
-[Illustration: THE DUKE OF NEWCASTLE.]
-
-France, all the risks of an European war, without having bound Turkey to
-any conditions with respect to provoking it. The 120 fanatical Turks
-constituting the Divan at Constantinople are left sole judges of the
-line of policy to be pursued, and made cognisant at the same time of the
-fact that England and France have bound themselves to defend the Turkish
-territory. This is entrusting them with a power which Parliament would
-be jealous of confiding even to the hands of the British Crown. It may
-be a question whether England ought to go to war for the so-called
-Turkish independence, but there can be none that, if she does so, she
-ought to be the sole judge of what constitutes a breach of that
-independence, and have the fullest power to prevent by negotiation the
-breaking out of the war.”[123] Had the Queen subjected
-
-[Illustration: DESTRUCTION OF THE TURKISH FLEET AT SINOPE. (_See_ p.
-562.)]
-
-every act of the Cabinet from the day on which Menschikoff arrived at
-Constantinople, to the same kind of pitiless logical analysis, even the
-Coalition Cabinet would have found it difficult to blunder into war.
-There was also another calm but acute observer of events who could not
-be diverted from his devotion to tangible British interests by
-passionate outbursts of popular _chauvinism_, and who saw at a glance
-the risks the Government were running. In a letter to Baron Stockmar,
-dated the 27th of November, Prince Albert says:--
-
-“Six weeks ago Palmerston and Lord John carried a resolution that we
-should give notice that an attack on the Turkish fleet by that of Russia
-would be met by the fleets of England and France. Now the Turkish
-steam-ships are to cross over from the Asiatic coast to the Crimea, and
-to pass before Sebastopol! This can only be meant to insult the Russian
-fleet and entice it to come out, in order to make it possible for Lord
-Stratford to bring our fleet into collision with that of Russia,
-according to his former instructions, and so make an European war
-certain.”[124]
-
-Just before the allied fleets were sent to defend Turkey in the Black
-Sea the Porte ordered Omar Pasha to demand the evacuation of Moldavia
-within fifteen days, and, failing compliance, to attack the Russians at
-once. The Russians held their ground, standing on the defensive, and the
-Turks crossed the Danube, inflicting on them defeats that, of course,
-deeply wounded the pride of the Czar. He therefore ordered the Russian
-squadron at Sebastopol to retaliate in the Euxine. On the 30th of
-November it discovered a Turkish fleet at Sinope, which, the Turks
-declared, was bound for Batoum. The Russian admiral, however, believed
-it was on its way to the Circassian coast, for the purpose of stirring
-up an insurrection against Russia in the Caucasus. Instead of watching
-it or blockading it, as he might have done, he attacked and destroyed
-it.
-
-This catastrophe, of course, brought England nearer to war. A fierce cry
-of wrath went up from the English people. Their fleet had been sent to
-defend Turkey against Russia, yet it had tamely allowed Russia to
-perpetrate “the massacre of Sinope.” Russia knew that England stood
-pledged to protect Turkey from attack in the Euxine. Sinope was,
-therefore, a direct challenge to England, and it must be promptly taken
-up. The foresight of Prince Albert was thus amply justified. The
-Government had stupidly sent to the Black Sea a fleet strong enough to
-provoke Russia, but not strong enough to protect Turkey, and
-insinuations of treason were freely made. “The defeat of Sinope,” wrote
-the Prince, “upon our own element--the sea--has made the people furious;
-it is ascribed to Aberdeen having been bought over by Russia.” Nor was
-Aberdeen the only one who suffered. Prince Albert was scurrilously
-attacked by Tories and Radicals of the baser sort, and, almost in as
-many words, accused of being a Russian spy, whose influence with the
-Queen was paralysing her Government. But if the English Government
-blundered foolishly in sending the British fleet to the Black Sea with
-orders to protect Turkey, without first making sure that Turkey would
-not provoke attack, or that our fleet was strong enough to defend her,
-Russia blundered, not foolishly, but criminally, in attacking the Turks
-at Sinope. Mr. Spencer Walpole says:--“Though the attack on Sinope may
-be justified, its imprudence cannot be excused.”[125] But surely if it
-cannot be excused it is idle to “justify” it. The Czar was warned that
-England and France would defend Turkey if the latter was assailed in the
-Euxine. An attack on Turkey at Sinope, in spite of that warning, he must
-have known would be taken by the English and French people as a
-defiance, which would so madden them, that the war party in France and
-England must forthwith control the situation. Therefore, to say it was
-an “imprudence” is to say that, in the circumstances, it was a crime
-against civilisation. As will be seen later on, it provoked France and
-England to order their fleets to patrol the Black Sea, and require every
-Russian ship they met to put back into Sebastopol, so that a second
-Sinope might be prevented.
-
-During most of this anxious time it is hardly necessary to say that the
-domestic life of the Queen was one of wearing excitement. At the outset
-of the diplomatic disputes in which her Government entangled the country
-it seems that she paid rather less attention than usual to foreign
-affairs. Palmerston was no longer at the Foreign Office, and in Lord
-Aberdeen, who was at the head of the Government, the Queen put the most
-implicit confidence. She had formed a habit of regarding him as the
-_beau idéal_ of a “safe” Minister, and thus, when she sat down every
-morning to read her official correspondence, her Majesty approached all
-the projects of her Government, if not with a decided bias in favour of
-them, at any rate without that wholesome prepossession of suspicion,
-that rendered her a keen and searching critic of the Foreign Policy of
-the country when it was under the direction of Lord Palmerston. It was
-not till late in the autumn that the Queen’s correspondence, so far as
-it has been made public, shows a disposition on her part to resume the
-tone of independent, outspoken, but confidential criticism, that so
-often checked the vagaries of Lord John Russell’s Cabinet. The Queen, in
-fact, put too much confidence in the sagacity of the Coalition
-Government. The Coalition Government, conscious that, so long as
-Aberdeen could be persuaded to endorse their doings, they would not be
-very jealously scrutinised by the Crown, entered with a light heart on
-the most dangerous course of diplomacy. The Queen, the Prime Minister,
-the Cabinet, and the Czar all set out with the most sincere and
-unbounded confidence in each other. In little more than twelve months
-they were accordingly in almost irreconcilable controversy.
-
-[Illustration: THE THRONE ROOM, WINDSOR CASTLE.]
-
-After the Coalition Ministry was formed, what the Queen dreaded most was
-that it might break up over the question of Parliamentary Reform, or
-over some dispute as to the Premiership, in the event of Lord Aberdeen
-resigning office. Aberdeen was old and somewhat infirm, and there can be
-little doubt that he would have resigned soon after the Coalition was
-organised had not the Eastern Question risen to tie him to his post.
-Lord John Russell had some notion that he would be Aberdeen’s successor,
-and it was his fixed idea that his scheme for reforming Parliament would
-not have a fair chance, unless it were launched by him with all the
-prestige of the Premier’s advocacy in its favour. Some members of the
-Cabinet did not desire that this scheme should be launched at all;
-others, like Palmerston, were determined that it should not be launched,
-and that Lord John should not be Premier. A few weeks after the Ministry
-was constituted Lord John resigned the seals of the Foreign Office to
-Lord Clarendon, becoming a Minister without an office, but retaining the
-leadership of the House of Commons. The Queen warned him that he would
-grow discontented with
-
-[Illustration: SEBASTOPOL.]
-
-this position, but her warning was unheeded; and yet Lord John soon had
-reason to regret that he did not lay it to heart. After the Session
-ended he began to give Aberdeen broad hints that it would be well for
-him to retire, and to indicate that he himself might have to secede, if
-these hints were not acted on. His secession would have broken up the
-Coalition, which, Aberdeen knew, the Sovereign had set her heart on
-keeping together. Hence, every effort was made to conciliate Lord John
-Russell, and, as he soon became, next to Palmerston, the most zealous
-member of the War Party in the Cabinet, he was therefore able to exert a
-baneful influence on the Foreign Policy of the Ministry. This was,
-indeed, one reason why that policy perpetually alternated between energy
-and apathy. Still, the Cabinet kept together till Russell’s Reform
-scheme was thrust upon it. Then, on the 15th of December, the world was
-startled to find that Palmerston had resigned. This event, occurring as
-it did immediately after the massacre of Sinope, created a dreadful
-sensation in the country. The Press declared that Palmerston had been
-turned out because of the Eastern Question. He was the victim of a Court
-intrigue. It was whispered that Prince Albert, as a spy of Russia, had
-persuaded the Queen to get rid of a high-spirited Minister because he
-was eager to avenge against Russia the insult offered to England at
-Sinope. The Prince, it was said, had been detected betraying the secrets
-of the Government to foreign Courts. One day it was actually reported
-that he had been committed to the Tower on a charge of high treason, and
-a gaping crowd collected to see him locked up as a traitor. This clamour
-was raised by the Palmerstonian clique, and it gave infinite pain to the
-Queen. She knew as well as Lord Palmerston and his friends that these
-attacks were based on a tissue of falsehoods, for, as a matter of fact,
-Lord Palmerston had resigned simply on the question of Reform. His idea
-was that Lord Lansdowne, who also disliked Reform, would resign along
-with him, and that the public outcry would be so great that the Ministry
-must be shattered. The outcry _was_ great, but it was too obviously that
-of a personal _claque_; and Palmerston, astounded to find that the
-nation did not regard his retirement as an irreparable calamity,
-immediately begged the Cabinet to let him come back again. This they
-did, having, however, forced him to swallow ignominiously his objections
-to Lord John Russell’s Reform Bill. Then the Palmerstonian newspapers
-suddenly dropped their attacks on the Queen and Prince Albert, though
-the Tory organs kept them up in the true old crusted Protectionist
-style. “The best of the joke,” writes the Prince to Stockmar, “is that
-because he [Palmerston] went out the Opposition journals extolled him to
-the skies in order to damage the Ministry, and now the Ministerial
-journals have to do so in order to justify the reconciliation.”
-According to Prince Albert, it was the Duke of Newcastle and the
-Peelites who induced the Cabinet to let the black sheep that had gone
-astray, return to the fold of the Coalition.[126]
-
-Till the Eastern Question assumed a grave aspect towards the end of the
-year, the Court seems to have busied itself chiefly about non-political
-affairs. The Queen, who shared her husband’s artistic tastes,
-encouraged him in early spring to form a splendid collection of copies
-of all Raphael’s known works, a fine series of original drawings by that
-master in Windsor being the nucleus of this interesting collection. It
-was alas! left to her Majesty to complete it, after the death of her
-husband made her the sole sad heir of that and many other cherished
-projects which they had planned together.
-
-Curiously enough, about this time the art treasures of Windsor were very
-nearly destroyed. A disastrous fire broke out in the Castle on the 19th
-of March in one of the apartments on the floor over the dining-room on
-its north side. It burnt outwards, but limited itself to the upper
-portions of the Prince of Wales’s Tower. It would have destroyed the
-plate-rooms and the priceless collection known as the Jewelled Armoury,
-which contained, by the way, the jewelled peacock of Tippoo Sahib among
-its trophies, adjoining the Octagon-room. The Queen and Prince Albert
-were not in the Castle when the fire was discovered, but they, with the
-officials of the household, were soon on the spot. The scene was one of
-excitement, without confusion. The firemen worked with a will, but the
-bustle was greatest among the servants and others, who undertook to
-dismantle the rooms whose costly treasures were in danger. The fire
-began at ten on Saturday night, and was put out at four o’clock on
-Sunday morning. The Queen, it seems, was much agitated at first, but she
-and her ladies soon regained their composure, and watched the
-conflagration from the drawing-room all through the night.[127]
-
-On the 7th of April another Prince was born to the Royal pair, and on
-the 18th the Queen was able to write to her uncle, the King of the
-Belgians, informing him of the event, and of her intention of naming her
-child after him. “It” [Leopold], she says, “is a name which is the
-dearest to me after Albert, and one which recalls the almost only happy
-days of my sad childhood.” The Prince’s other names were to be George,
-Duncan, and Albert--George after the King of Hanover, and Duncan, so the
-Queen said, as “a compliment to dear Scotland.” The compliment paid to
-that country in subsequently conferring on this Prince the title of Duke
-of Albany was a fateful one for him. It is an unlucky title, and Prince
-Leopold was not exempt from the evil fortune of most of those who have
-worn it. On the 23rd of April the Court removed to Osborne, and on the
-27th of May the Queen reluctantly returned to London for the season,
-greatly reinvigorated by her holiday.
-
-One of the events of the London season of 1853 was the establishment of
-an experimental military camp at Chobham for the purpose of practising
-sham-fighting. The camp took the place in the season of ’53, that had
-been held by the Great Exhibition in ’51, and young men of rank who were
-braving the perils of mimic warfare on the Sussex ridges were the idols
-of the hour. On
-
-[Illustration: FIRE IN THE PRINCE OF WALES’S TOWER, WINDSOR CASTLE.
-(_See_ p. 567.)]
-
-the 21st of June serious operations began in the presence of the Queen.
-She rode to the ground on a superb black charger, accompanied by Prince
-Albert, the King of Hanover, and the Duke of Coburg, the scene as she
-passed along the lines being most impressive. The moving incidents of
-the field, the noise of the firing, the shifting panorama of colour,
-delighted the fashionable crowds who followed her Majesty to what Mr.
-Disraeli would have called an arena “bright with flashing valour.” On
-the 14th of July the camp was broken up, and other contingents took the
-places of the regiments which had formed it. They, however, attempted a
-movement of real difficulty in endeavouring to effect the passage of the
-Thames at Runnymede, where the river is deep and the current rapid.
-Artillery on Cooper’s Hill played on the pontoon bridge murderously, in
-spite of which, however, it is stated in newspaper records of the day,
-that several regiments contrived to pass over safely. But the horses
-that dragged the second gun taken across, took fright, and one of them
-pulled the rest, with gun and gunners, into the water. The men were
-saved. The four leading horses, however, met with a strange death. They
-rose to the surface, and, with eyes and nostrils dilated with terror,
-beat the water in vain, for the gun, of course, held them
-
-[Illustration: THE QUEEN AT THE CAMP AT CHOBHAM.]
-
-with the wheelers in the river. Yet such was the strength which terror
-imparted to them, that they dragged not only the gun but the wheelers
-also, close to the bank before they succumbed.
-
-On the 28th of June Prince Albert, who had been “roughing it” with the
-Guards in camp, returned to town complaining of a slight cold. The
-Prince of Wales had measles at the time, and, to the surprise of
-everybody, Prince Albert, the Queen, all the Royal children except the
-two youngest, the Crown Prince of Hanover, the Duke and Duchess of
-Coburg, were smitten,[128] Prince Albert suffering more severely than
-any of the others. This illness prevented the Queen and her husband from
-visiting the camp till the 6th of August. On the 28th it broke up.
-
-[Illustration: RUNNYMEDE.]
-
-Two of the Czar’s daughters had come over on a visit to the Queen, with
-an autograph letter from their father recommending them to her Majesty’s
-protection. Care was of course taken to make them acquainted with the
-intense anti-Russian feeling which pervaded England, and they seem to
-have been utterly amazed to find that hardly any body put the slightest
-faith in their father’s word. They were invited to accompany the Queen
-to see the great naval review at Spithead, which took place on the 11th
-of August--a superb demonstration of the strength of England on the
-high seas. Twenty-five stately ships of war--six steam-ships of the
-line, three sailing-ships, and sixteen steam-frigates and
-sloops--composed the squadron that took part in this magnificent
-spectacle. The fleet carried 1,076 guns, 10,000 men, and was moved by
-steam equivalent to the power nominally of 9,680 horses, but really of
-double that amount--in other words, by more horse-power than the cavalry
-of the British army could muster at the time. The smallest of its guns
-was as large as the largest carried by Nelson’s ships at Trafalgar,
-whilst the largest threw a solid shot of 104 lbs. The review was an
-event that stirred to its inmost depths the pride of England, because,
-for the first time, a mighty fleet propelled by steam was manœuvred
-under the eye of the Sovereign, as if it were engaged in actual battle.
-The occasion was rendered unique by the presence at the review of the
-House of Commons--in fact, the House, on the day of the review, could
-not form a quorum till half-past eleven o’clock at night.[129]
-
-About 10 o’clock in the morning, the Queen, her husband, her family, and
-her Russian and German guests, bore down in the Royal yacht on Admiral
-Cochrane’s flagship, the _Duke of Wellington_. Having remained on board
-her for some little time, they returned to the yacht, and then, led by
-the Queen in the _Victoria and Albert_, this invincible Armada put out
-to sea in two divisions. The weather was exceptionally fine, and most
-majestic was the progress of the fleet as it steamed, at the rate of
-eleven miles an hour, down to the Nab, where it formed line with an ease
-and precision of movement that astonished all beholders. Then “the
-enemy,” under Admiral Fanshawe, were sighted, and a memorable sham fight
-began amidst cyclopean thunders of artillery. When it was over, each
-ship made for port at racing speed, the winner being the _Agamemnon_.
-The effect of it all, not only on the Queen’s guests but on the country,
-was duly reported by Prince Albert to Stockmar, who replied, “I am well
-pleased that the ladies (the Russian princesses) should have been
-present at the manœuvres of the fleet. For what the eyes see that does
-the heart believe, and with what that is full of the mouth will overflow
-in letters to St. Petersburg.”[130] At this time the political barometer
-at Court was pointing to “fair,” and the Queen and Prince Albert were
-congratulating each other that the acceptance of the Vienna Note by
-Russia, would settle honourably the Russo-Turkish dispute. Though the
-evacuation of the Principalities was not insisted on in that Note as it
-ought to have been, the Queen and her husband alike regarded it as a
-_sine quâ non_, and never doubted that Russia would withdraw her army of
-occupation.[131]
-
-At the end of August the Queen determined to visit Dublin on her way to
-Balmoral; and on the 29th she and her family landed at Kingstown
-Harbour.[132] Thence they proceeded to the Irish capital, where in their
-progress to the Vice-regal Lodge they met with an enthusiastic reception
-that recalled pleasant memories of their last tour. In the evening the
-city was illuminated in honour of its Royal guests. On the 30th they
-visited the Exhibition of Irish Industry, which had been organised at
-the sole expense of Mr. Dargan, a public-spirited citizen, whose simple,
-manly bearing so charmed the Queen that she says in one of her letters,
-“I would have made him a baronet but he was anxious it should not be
-done.” Nor was she less delighted with the products of native industry,
-which she inspected most carefully, and which she says convinced her
-that the display would be of vast use in encouraging the spirit of the
-people, by showing them what excellent work they could turn out by their
-own efforts. Though the Queen met with wretched weather, yet she records
-her delight with her visit--“a pleasant, gay, interesting time” she
-calls it--and speaks gratefully of the extreme kindness shown to her by
-all classes of the people. On the 3rd of September she left Kingstown,
-and on the 6th was enjoying the bracing air of Balmoral once more.
-
-It was here, on the evening of the 12th, that she heard that the Vienna
-Note was rejected by the Turks, and that the Eastern question was again
-simmering in the fatal cauldron of diplomatic incapacity. From that day
-her Majesty’s great aim was to work, like Lord Aberdeen, for peace; but
-there was an end to holiday repose at Balmoral. Foreign affairs became
-more and more unsettled, and on the 6th of October Stockmar was implored
-to come over and give the Queen and her husband the benefit of his
-advice. Sir James Graham was staying with them at the time, and his
-depressed spirits reacted on the Royal family. To refuse to protect the
-Sultan the Queen saw would so rouse public opinion that the Coalition
-Ministry, which she was so anxious to support, must fall. To declare war
-on Russia, Prince Albert assured her, would with equal certainty
-ultimately destroy that Ministry. One thing only was clear to them.
-Aberdeen must abandon all idea of resigning in favour of Lord John
-Russell, and, despite age and infirmity, must remain at the head of
-affairs till the war-cloud passed away. On the 14th of October the Queen
-accordingly returned to Osborne, painfully anxious lest the concessions
-which Lord Aberdeen had made to Palmerston and Russell as leaders of the
-War Party, and on which she commented caustically in her letter of the
-11th of October to the Prime Minister, would bring the country still
-nearer to war. What were we to go to war for? That was the question
-which troubled the Queen. She could understand that in some dire
-extremity it might be right to exact the most terrible of sacrifices
-from her people, to keep the Russians out of Constantinople, and prevent
-the balance of power from being upset to the detriment of England. That
-was an intelligible war
-
-[Illustration: SPITHEAD.]
-
-for the tangible interest of England and the civilised Powers. But such
-a war was a very different affair from the kind of war for which
-Palmerston clamoured--a war for the maintenance of the complete
-integrity of the Ottoman Empire. If waged, it must surely not be so
-waged that it would end by putting the oppressed Christians in Turkey
-once again in the absolute power of such a cruel dominion as that of the
-Porte. To this conclusion her Majesty had been forced by her close study
-of Lord Stratford de Redcliffe’s own despatches, describing the brutal
-treatment to which the Christians in Turkey were even at that time
-subjected. But then, of what use was it to suggest these ideas to the
-Cabinet, even though Lord Aberdeen supported them? When Prince Albert,
-at the Queen’s request, put them into the form of a Memorandum,
-Palmerston wrote a flippant reply to it only too closely in harmony with
-the popular frenzy of the time, the gist of the answer being that it was
-the duty of England to make war for Turkey and for Turkey alone, quite
-irrespective of any considerations affecting her treatment of her
-Christian subjects. To ask Turkey for concessions to civilisation, he
-argued, somewhat inconclusively, meant that we must connive at her
-expulsion from Europe. As for all the stories of Turkish fanaticism
-that had frightened the Queen, Lord Palmerston scoffingly described them
-as “fables invented at Vienna and St. Petersburg.”[133]
-
-[Illustration: BALMORAL CASTLE FROM THE ROAD.]
-
-The Czar’s Manifesto of the 1st of November still further excited the
-War Party, and it was followed by a letter to the Queen, written by his
-own hand, begging her Majesty to decide between him and her Government
-in the dispute which had arisen from his attempt to apply the principles
-of the Treaty of Kainardji to the new situation which French pretensions
-in Syria had created in Turkey. To this the Queen replied with dignified
-courtesy, saying that, after repeatedly reading and studying the 7th
-Article of that Treaty, she could not fairly say that the Czar’s
-interpretation of it was correct, and adding that the continued
-occupation of the Principalities must lead to events “which I should
-deplore, in common with your Majesty.”[134] The year closed with the
-ferocious attacks of a certain portion of the Press on Prince Albert,
-and as for the future, it was dark with the signs and omens of impending
-war.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX.
-
-WAR.
-
- The War Fever in 1854--Attacks on Prince Albert--Aberdeen’s
- Correspondence with the Queen--The Queen’s Opinion of the
- Country--“Loyal, but a little mad”--Stockmar on the
- Constitution--Prince Albert’s Position at Court--The Privileges of
- a Reigning Queen’s Husband--Debates on the Prince’s Position--The
- Peace and War Parties--Mr. Cobden’s Influence--A new Vienna Note--A
- Challenge to Russia--The Russian Ambassador leaves London--Recall
- of Sir H. Seymour from St. Petersburg--Russian Intrigues with the
- German Powers--The Czar’s Counter-Propositions--His Sarcastic
- Letter to Napoleon III.--An Austrian Compromise--Lord Clarendon’s
- _Ultimatum_ to Russia--The Czar’s Reply--Declaration of War--Omar
- Pasha’s Victories in the Principalities--The Siege of
- Silistria--Evacuation of the Principalities--The Rising in
- Greece--The Allies at the Piræus--The Allies occupy
- Gallipoli--Another English Blunder--Invasion of the Crimea--The
- Duke of Newcastle and a Sleepy Cabinet--Lord Raglan’s Opinion on
- the War--The Landing of the Allies at Eupatoria--Battle of the
- Alma--Death of Marshal St. Arnaud--Russian Fleet Sunk at
- Sebastopol--At Balaclava--The Siege of Sebastopol--Battles of
- Balaclava and Inkermann--Mismanagement of the War--Public
- Indignation against the Government--Mr. Roebuck’s Motion--Fall of
- the Coalition Ministry.
-
-
-No writer has described more effectively than Mr. Cobden the sudden
-change that hurried the country into the military alliance with France
-against Russia which was made operative in 1854. Suppose, he said, an
-invalid had been ordered in the spring of 1853 to go to Australia and
-back for the benefit of his health. When he left home he must have noted
-that “the Militia was preparing for duty; the coasts and dockyards were
-being fortified; the Navy, Army, and Artillery were all in course of
-augmentation; inspectors of artillery and cavalry were reported to be
-busy on the Southern coast; deputations from railway companies, it was
-said, had been waiting on the Admiralty and Ordnance to explain how
-rapidly the commissariat and military stores could be transported from
-the Tower to Dover or Portsmouth; and the latest paragraph of news from
-the Continent was that our neighbours on the other side of the Channel
-were practising the embarkation and disembarkation of troops by night.
-He left home amidst all these alarms and preparations for a French
-invasion. But he returns, and, supposing he has not been hearing or
-giving heed to tidings from Europe, in what condition does he find his
-country? He steps on shore at Liverpool, and the first newspaper he sees
-informs him that the English and French fleets are lying side by side in
-Besika Bay. An impending naval engagement between the two Powers is
-naturally the idea that first occurs to him; but, glancing at the
-leading article of the journal, he learns that England and France have
-entered on an alliance, and that they are on the eve of commencing a
-sanguinary struggle against Russia.”[135] He would have also found the
-Tory organs of public opinion vieing with the demagogic Press in
-denouncing the Queen’s husband as a traitor to his wife and as a servile
-spy of Russia; from which, if he had been a shrewd man, he would have
-inferred that the Queen had been again guilty of the atrocious crime of
-differing from Lord Palmerston, and that Prince Albert had been
-criticising rather too plainly his bellicose Foreign Policy.
-
-During the first few weeks of 1854 society, indeed, could talk of little
-else than the “treason” of Prince Albert. The Queen’s vexation found
-frequent expression in letters to Lord Aberdeen, and that amiable
-Minister did what he could to comfort her. The Prince, however, treated
-his slanderers with well-simulated contempt, but, in spite of that,
-their injustice stung him to the quick, and he suffered much both in
-health and spirits. Yet nothing could be done in his defence till
-Parliament met, and the Queen was, therefore, fain to believe that the
-country, as she says in a letter to Stockmar, was “as _loyal_ as ever,
-only a little mad.” Long and ponderous essays from Stockmar on the
-Constitutional prerogatives of the Crown, and the political functions of
-Prince Albert, as her Majesty’s private secretary, did little to dispel
-the gloom that settled over the Court. The fact is that Stockmar
-slightly erred in imagining that the hostility to the Prince was really
-due to wrong ideas on these interesting points. As Prince Albert bluntly
-put it, one main element in the agitation against him was the hatred of
-the old High Tory Party towards him, in the first place, because of his
-friendship with Peel, and, secondly, because of his success with the
-Great Exhibition.[136] The grumblers of the military clubs, too, joined
-in the cry against his Royal Highness because, when Adjutant-General
-Browne resigned, after quarrelling with Lord Hardinge, the
-Commander-in-Chief, about the weight of the soldier’s knapsack, the
-Prince was supposed to have taken Lord Hardinge’s side. The masses, too,
-had never seriously thought out the question of the position which an
-able man who was husband of a reigning Queen was certain, through the
-mere dictates of nature, to take in the counsels of the Sovereign. It
-struck them like a galvanic shock when they discovered that for fourteen
-years the Prince had been actively helping to govern them, whilst the
-omniscient flunkeys of the Press were almost daily smothering him with
-adulation for his “wise abstinence from politics.” Having stupidly
-deceived themselves as to the precise influence which the Prince
-wielded, they were in the right state of mind to be deceived by the
-Prince’s enemies as to the influence which he did not wield, and which
-he never sought to wield. These reasons, and not the dubiety of the
-British Constitution as to the political rights of the husband of an
-English Queen, gave rise to much of the foolish clamour of the hour.
-
-It need hardly be said that when Parliament met on the 31st of January,
-the leaders of both parties in both Houses summarily disposed of the
-falsehoods which had been uttered to the discredit of the Court. The
-Debates on the Address on this occasion are of high historical and
-Constitutional importance, because they defined with great precision the
-position of the consort of a queen regnant in the British Constitution,
-establishing beyond doubt his right to assist the Sovereign with advice
-in all matters of State. The address of Lord Campbell may be usefully
-referred to as giving the legal view of the question; but the speeches
-which delighted the Queen most were those of Lord John Russell, who, she
-says, in a letter to Stockmar, “did it admirably,” and “dear, excellent
-Lord Aberdeen, who has taken it _terribly to heart_.” It was, however,
-Lord Campbell’s address which gave most satisfaction to Prince Albert.
-The common-sense view of the question obviously was, that if the husband
-of a queen regnant in England embarrassed her Majesty’s responsible
-Ministers by unconstitutional interference, the fault must be theirs and
-not his. The Constitution places in their hands the formidable weapon of
-resignation, and resignation in such circumstances simply means that
-government is rendered impossible till the unconstitutional interference
-which is objected to is stopped.
-
-Nobody has stated with greater correctness the political situation of
-the country at the beginning of 1854 than Sir George Cornewall Lewis.
-“If,” said he, in a letter to Sir Edmund Head, “war is averted, there
-will be a Reform Bill, which is likely to lead to an early Dissolution.
-If war arrives, the Reform Bill and all other similar measures likely to
-produce party struggles and divisions must be postponed.”[137] The
-Tories had, therefore, one strong temptation to encourage the War Party.
-Those Whigs who, like Lord Palmerston, dreaded Reform, were in like
-case, except Lord John Russell, who, with a Reform Bill on the anvil,
-was foolish enough to share with Palmerston the leadership of the War
-Party in the Cabinet. As the war would be one against Russia, the
-mainstay of despotism in Europe, the Radicals, mindful of how the
-revolution was stamped out in Hungary, were for once on the side of war.
-Nobody, in fact, had any genuine desire for peace save the Queen, Prince
-Albert, and the Peelites, who desired “peace with honour,” and the
-Cobdenites, who seemed to desire “peace at any price.” The Peace Party
-was strong in brains and common-sense, but weak in numbers. The
-strength
-
-[Illustration: THE OUTER CLOISTERS AND ANNE BOLEYN’S WINDOW, WINDSOR
-CASTLE.]
-
-of the War Party lay in its numbers, and it would be absurd to assert
-that, with leaders like Derby, Disraeli, Palmerston, and Russell, it
-lacked intellectual ability. As usual, numbers won the day, and an
-abnormal alliance of “the classes and masses” rendered the Peace
-Party--sadly weakened in moral authority by the Moravian fanaticism of
-the Cobdenites--utterly impotent. Mr. Cobden cherished the illusion that
-his influence had strengthened the Peace Party. Yet, with the exception
-of Lord Palmerston, Lord John Russell, Lord Derby, and Lord Lyndhurst,
-no public men did more to make peace impossible than Mr. Cobden and Mr.
-Bright, the tone of whose pacific speeches acted on the pugnacious
-temper of the country as soothingly as a sting on an open and irritable
-wound.[138]
-
-As might be expected, the Eastern policy of Ministers was fiercely
-attacked in both Houses of Parliament. But to understand the point of
-these attacks and the relation of the Queen to them, one must explain
-what was done after Sinope drove England into a frenzy of anger only
-comparable with that of the Danes when Nelson destroyed their fleet at
-Copenhagen.
-
-To rightly appraise the criminal blunder of Russia at Sinope, it is
-necessary to remember that when that “massacre” occurred, the European
-Powers had agreed on a new Note embodying what they considered an
-honourable settlement of the dispute between Russia and Turkey. That was
-the Note of the 5th of December, and Lord Stratford de Redcliffe, under
-orders from Lord Clarendon, persuaded the Porte to accept it. This was a
-great step towards peace, for all that remained was to induce the Czar
-to be equally reasonable. But on the very day (the 13th of January,
-1854) when the Powers, in concert at Vienna, decided to press this
-settlement on Russia, Sir Hamilton Seymour was instructed by Lord
-Clarendon to intimate to Count Nesselrode at St. Petersburg that England
-and France had lifted the gage of battle flung to them at Sinope. Russia
-was informed that the English and French fleets had sailed for the Black
-Sea, charged to “require” every Russian ship they met to put back to
-port. This irritated the Czar, who professed to regard it as “a flagrant
-act of hostility.”[139] Yet the Czar, or rather Nesselrode--who, like
-Lord Aberdeen, was braving infinite obloquy on account of his pacific
-proclivities--was willing to condone the act, if England would only
-state formally that she would impose on Turkish ships the same
-restrictions she imposed on those of Russia. Lord Clarendon, in his
-despatch, dated the 31st of January, did not make this statement, and
-accordingly, on the 4th of February, the Russian Ambassador in London
-announced that he and his retinue must return at once to St. Petersburg.
-On the 7th of February Lord Clarendon ordered the British Ambassador at
-the Court of the Czar to return to England; the French Government took
-the same course, and thus the rupture between Russia and the Western
-Powers became complete. It was in such circumstances hopeless to expect
-that the Note of the 5th of December, which had been accepted by the
-Porte, and which the Four Powers agreed to recommend to Russia on the
-very day that the despatch of the allied fleets to the Euxine was
-notified to Count Nesselrode (the 13th of January), would be accepted by
-the Czar. Indeed, but for Nesselrode, it would have been ignored with
-contempt.[140] Russia, however, temporised. Taking advantage of the
-false step of England and France in sending their fleets to the Euxine
-without consulting Austria and Prussia, Russia artfully attempted to
-detach the German States from the European Concert. Having failed in
-this, the Russian Government sent two replies to the Protocol of the
-13th of January, transmitting the settlement which the Powers had agreed
-upon, and which the Porte had accepted.
-
-The proposal of the Powers provided, amongst other things, for (1) the
-evacuation of the Principalities as soon as possible; (2) the renewal of
-the ancient treaties; (3) a formal guarantee by Turkey to all her
-non-Mussulman subjects of their spiritual privileges, which should
-likewise be communicated to all the Powers, including Russia,
-“accompanied with suitable assurances” to each of them; (4) a pledge
-from the Porte to reform its system of administration; and (5) the
-customary promise on the part of the Sultan to uphold the old rights and
-immunities granted to his Christian subjects by existing treaties.
-Russia rejected these proposals, and committed the blunder of extending
-her demands in her first series of counter-propositions.[141] But
-subsequently she submitted a second series of propositions, in which she
-withdrew the stipulations as to political refugees, and her ungenerous
-demand that the Porte should negotiate terms of peace at St. Petersburg,
-or at the Russian headquarters in Moldavia. The Powers decided that the
-Russian settlement could not be recommended to Turkey, their main
-objection being, that while their terms embodied a recognition of the
-principle that the Turkish concessions and guarantees were given to
-Europe as well as to Russia, the Russian terms proceeded on the
-assumption that they were given to Russia alone. The Czar here was in
-the wrong. In the war on the Danube the Turks had been victorious. He
-insisted, however, that they should sue for peace, as if they were
-prostrate in defeat. On the other hand, the Four Powers proposed terms
-which did not imply that victory or defeat rested with either
-belligerent. The only defence that can be made for the obstinacy of the
-Emperor Nicholas in thus refusing to cross the golden bridge of
-honourable retreat built for him by the Powers is, that the War Party in
-Russia was as rabid as the War Party in England. “The Emperor,” wrote
-Sir H. Seymour to Lord Clarendon on the 2nd of January, “is infinitely
-more moderate than the immense bulk of his subjects,” who denounced
-Nesselrode “as an alien, a traitor, and a man bought by English
-gold”--precisely the language which the same kind of people in England
-applied to Lord Aberdeen. In fact, the Czar himself was rapidly losing
-his popularity and authority because of the deference he was showing to
-the Powers, and it is probable that if he had made further concessions
-he would have been assassinated. But inasmuch as Nicholas himself, in
-spite of the advice of his three ablest servants,[142] had roused the
-fanaticism and fury of his subjects by his policy, even this defence,
-though it explains, does not justify his conduct.
-
-[Illustration: RUSSIAN REPULSE AT SILISTRIA.]
-
-[Illustration: LORD RAGLAN.]
-
-Yet, by a strange stroke of fortune, war between Russia and the Western
-Powers was still avoided. War with Russia was hateful to the French
-people--almost as hateful as a military alliance with Turkey. But the
-Emperor Napoleon III., for dynastic reasons, was committed to such a
-war, and on the 29th of January he accordingly wrote a pacific letter to
-the Czar couched in language certain to provoke his wrath. Nicholas
-answered it with infinite _hauteur_, two contemptuous sentences in his
-reply stinging the Bonapartists into rage.[143] France now had her War
-Party rampant, and this did not improve the outlook. Still, one last
-effort was made in the cause of peace. On the 22nd of February the
-Austrian Minister, Count Buol, told the French Ambassador at Vienna
-that if England and France would only fix “a delay”[144] for the
-evacuation of the Principalities, and agree to keep the peace till that
-term ran out, Austria would join them in sending Russia a summons to
-retire across the Pruth. It was tolerably certain that what Austria did,
-Prussia would do, and here again the European Concert was united in
-putting irresistible diplomatic pressure on Russia. Lord Clarendon,
-hearing of this, very naturally asked the German Powers how they would
-act if the joint summons were ignored by the Czar. Clarendon seems to
-have taken it for granted that they would in that case join England in
-going to war, for, without waiting for their reply, he sent to St.
-Petersburg on the 27th of February an ultimatum to Russia, demanding the
-evacuation of the Principalities under threat of war. When the replies
-from the German Powers arrived on the 28th of February, Lord Clarendon
-found that Austria merely promised to support England in sending the
-summons, but not to support her in any action she might take in the
-event of its being ignored; whereas Prussia, though she thought the
-summons a good thing to send, was not quite sure if she would join the
-other Powers in sending it. Thus the English Government, by Lord
-Clarendon’s impetuous indiscretion, again broke up the European Concert;
-but now under circumstances of supreme peril, for he had positively
-committed England to enforce alone against Russia, a proposal which not
-only originated with Austria, but in the enforcement of which the
-interest of Austria, menaced by a Russian occupation of Moldavia, was
-obviously greater than that of either England or France. France joined
-England in this foolish step, and the German States, well pleased to see
-the Western Powers fighting their battles, and relieved from
-responsibility by Lord Clarendon’s precipitate action on the 27th of
-February, astutely kept out of the fray. The Czar instructed Nesselrode
-to inform Consul Michele at St. Petersburg on the 18th of March that he
-did not think fit to reply to Lord Clarendon’s ultimatum,[145] and thus,
-with France as an ally, England went into the war--for the evacuation of
-the Principalities.
-
-The case of the Tory Opposition in Parliament against the Government was
-now unanswerable. Their leaders had systematically blamed the Government
-for not warning Russia at the outset that the invasion of the
-Principalities would be a _casus belli_. Had that been done, Russia
-might have held her hand, whereas it was not done till retreat for
-Russia meant humiliation.
-
-But, strange as it may seem, the English Government had still one more
-blunder open to them. The Turks, under Omar Pasha, had not only held the
-line of the Danube against Russia, but they had won important victories.
-In May, 1854, the Russians, under Paskiewitch, attacked Silistria; but
-the Turks, animated by the heroism and admirably served by the skill of
-some English officers, beat off the enemy, and on the 22nd of June the
-Russians raised the siege. Two weeks afterwards Gortschakoff was
-repulsed at Giurgevo, and the Russians were soon driven back across the
-Pruth.
-
-The evacuation of the Principalities, to bring about which England had
-gone to war, was thus achieved. The one blunder which was now left for
-England to commit was to ignore this fact and refrain from taking
-advantage of it. And this was precisely what England did. Yielding to
-the popular passion of the hour,[146] the Government found a new object
-to fight for, namely, the destruction of Russia as an enemy to Mankind.
-And yet, with this amazing fact on record, there are still people on the
-Continent who aver that England is a practical nation, which never
-fights for an idea!
-
-War was declared by England against Russia on the 28th of March, and by
-France on the 27th, the military alliance between the two Powers being
-signed on the 12th. Lord Raglan had been appointed to command the
-British army, whilst Marshal St. Arnaud headed that of France, and the
-British troops had departed for the seat of war on the 20th of February,
-amidst scenes of great excitement and popular enthusiasm, which
-naturally inflamed the bellicose feeling of the metropolis. On the 30th
-of March the French occupied Gallipoli, in European Turkey, a little
-above the point where the Dardanelles expand into the Propontis or Sea
-of Marmora. The English detachments began to arrive on the 5th of April.
-The allies threw fortified lines across the peninsula, so that if Russia
-had driven back the Turks from the Danube and, crossing the Balkans to
-Adrianople, had made a dash for Constantinople, as in 1829, the Turks
-would have been paralysed by the allied forces on their right flank. But
-the pride of England as a maritime Power had to be gratified, and, as
-the ice was breaking in the Baltic, it was decided to order a great
-fleet to reduce Cronstadt and let the Czar hear the voice of England
-thundering from her cannon at the very gates of his capital. Sir Charles
-Napier, the Admiral appointed to command the magnificent Armada at
-Spithead, was entertained at an absurd Reform Club banquet on the 7th of
-March. There he, Lord Palmerston, and Sir James Graham, delivered
-themselves of flippant, vaunting orations, which Mr. Bright, in the
-House of Commons, denounced as “discreditable to the grave and
-responsible statesmen of a Christian nation.”[147] Very different was
-the feeling of the Queen when, on the 11th of March, she reviewed the
-stately procession of war-ships at Spithead, as they steamed past her
-yacht, while she waved her handkerchief to the Admiral and crew of the
-colossal _Duke of Wellington_, which brought up the rear. Before leaving
-town she wrote to Lord Aberdeen, “We are just starting to see the fleet,
-which is to sail at once for its important destination. It will be a
-solemn moment.[148] Many a heart will be very heavy, and many a prayer,
-including our own, will be offered up for its safety and glory.”[149] On
-the 12th of April Napier sailed from Kiöge Bay and completely blockaded
-the Gulf of Finland. Russia was thus paralysed when she evacuated the
-Principalities. Omar Pasha kept her at bay on the other side of the
-Pruth. Napier locked up her fleet and shipping in the Baltic. The allied
-armies covered Constantinople. The allied fleets swept the Euxine. The
-“material guarantees” which she had seized for the purpose of forcing
-her terms on Turkey were wrested from her hands, and as war abrogates
-all treaties, she had even lost the shadow of a claim to exercise her
-old rights of protection over the Sultan’s Christian subjects. Russia
-was now at the mercy of the Western Powers, and had they simply remained
-passive, she would soon have been compelled to sue for peace on their
-terms. But the War Party in England, disappointed that this supreme
-advantage had been gained without gilding British arms with glory,
-scoffed at the idea of settling the original dispute between Russia and
-Turkey on these terms. The British Government accordingly resolved, not
-merely to bring Russia to reason, but to humiliate her and punish her in
-such a manner that her power in South-Eastern Europe would be utterly
-broken. As it was this determination which led to the calamitous
-invasion of the Crimea, it may be well to trace the diplomatic history
-of such an astounding blunder.
-
-On the 9th of April, after war had been declared, the four
-Powers--England, France, Austria, and Prussia--signed a Protocol at
-Vienna which bound them (1) to remain united in maintaining the
-integrity of Turkey, and in safeguarding, under the guarantee of Europe,
-the liberties of her Christian inhabitants by every means compatible
-with the independence of the Sultan; (2) to enter into no arrangement
-with Russia or any other Power which might be inconsistent with this
-object without first of all discussing it in concert. On the 20th of
-April Austria and Prussia concluded an offensive and defensive alliance.
-In separate Notes they summoned Russia to evacuate the Principalities.
-On the 29th of July, when Omar Pasha was just about to drive the
-Russians back to their territory, Count Nesselrode replied to Austria
-stating that the Czar accepted the principles of the Protocol of the 9th
-of April. But before evacuating the Principalities, he requested the
-Cabinet of Vienna to give
-
-[Illustration: THE QUEEN WAVING FAREWELL TO THE “DUKE OF WELLINGTON”
-FLAG-SHIP.]
-
-him some guarantee that hostilities would cease.[150] Austria was
-willing to persuade England and France to agree to the condition which
-the Czar thus made, a condition _sine quâ non_ of evacuation, but Count
-Buol Schauenstein instructed the Austrian ambassador at St. Petersburg
-to warn Nesselrode that if the Maritime Powers remained obdurate,
-Austria must still insist on the withdrawal of Russia from Moldavia and
-Wallachia. Prussia, however, refused to take part in a Conference which
-Austria suggested might advantageously be held to consider the Russian
-terms. King Frederick William and Manteuffel thought that in offering to
-evacuate the Principalities, Russia had made a sufficient concession to
-the interests of Germany. But Lord Clarendon was of a different
-opinion.[151] England, he saw, would no longer be content with the mere
-evacuation of the Principalities, which was the sole object of the war.
-Imitating the initial blunder of the Czar, he insisted on getting a
-“material guarantee” against any future molestation of Turkey. The
-exclusive right of Russia to protect Moldavia and Wallachia must, he
-said, be abolished, and instead of it a European Protectorate
-established. Russia must also cease to control the chief mouth of the
-Danube. The ill-defined relations of Russia to the Christian subjects of
-the Porte, embodied in the Treaty of 1841, must be defined in the
-interests of the balance of power in Europe, and the independence of
-Turkey. Russia must finally renounce her claim to exercise any
-individual or official right of protecting Turkish subjects, no matter
-what their religion might be. The position of Russia as a naval Power in
-the Black Sea must also be modified.[152] The Czar rejected these
-terms[153]--indeed, if he had accepted them when as yet he had not
-suffered any crushing defeat from the Western Powers, his life would not
-have been worth many days’ purchase. Austria and Turkey concluded a
-Treaty on the 14th of June, in virtue of which Austria was to occupy the
-Principalities on behalf of the Sultan. On the 23rd of August the
-Austrian army entered Wallachia, thus setting the Turks free to
-co-operate with the Allies for the defence of Constantinople. But at
-this point the war passed from the defensive to the offensive stage, and
-it will therefore be convenient to trace the movement of opinion in
-England which powerfully influenced the change in our plans.
-
-The attacks on Prince Albert created an unusual interest in the opening
-of Parliament on the 30th of January, 1854. When the Queen passed in her
-State procession from her palace to the House of Lords, the route was
-lined by a seething crowd of enthusiasts, who cheered her wildly as she
-went by. She was evidently more popular than even the Turkish
-Ambassador, who was the idol of West-End mobs in these mad, foolish, and
-to us, the rising generation, far-off days. The Speech from the Throne
-referred somewhat hopefully to the diplomatic negotiations which were
-then going on between the Powers. But it contained an ominous intimation
-that her Majesty thought it necessary to increase the strength of the
-army and navy, “with the view of supporting her representations, and of
-more effectually contributing to the restoration of peace.” She
-announced a comprehensive programme of domestic legislation, comprising
-a Reform Bill, with Bills to remodel Parliamentary Oaths, to reform the
-methods of selection for the Civil Service, to change the law of removal
-and settlement, and to renovate the tribunal for trying disputed
-Parliamentary Elections. If Ministers imagined that they would thus
-divert attention from the Eastern Question they were mistaken. In both
-Houses the Opposition attacked the Speech bitterly. They denied that the
-Government had used its best efforts to preserve peace, because its
-policy was a tangle of vacillation and inconsistency. They complained
-that the part played by England had been shrouded in secrecy and
-mystery, so that the country had to look to foreign sources for such
-scraps of information as had come to it. Ministers had shown such lack
-of energy that the Emperor of Russia had been led to regard them as his
-instruments, or, if that were not the case, as men who had not the
-courage to vindicate British honour by British arms. Were we at war with
-either or both of the belligerent Powers--Russia or Turkey--or were we
-not? If not, why send our fleet to the Black Sea to enforce against
-Russia a compulsory armistice? If we were, why was war not waged boldly
-and with vigour? Was it not foolish to dissipate the energies of the
-country in Reform controversies when it might any day find itself forced
-to make war in real earnest? The Vienna Note was denounced as a betrayal
-of Turkey, and the aggressive policy of Russia was unsparingly
-condemned. The Ministerial defence was weak and spiritless.
-
-After the Russian Ambassador left London the Government was pressed to
-divulge what it knew of Count Orloff’s suspicious mission to
-Vienna,[154] as to which it was wondrously secretive; and various
-debates sprang up, notably one in the House of Commons on the 17th of
-February, which was raised by Mr. Layard on the official papers that had
-been published. To remove the impression produced by adverse criticism,
-Ministers seemed to think that the more bellicose they made their
-speeches the better.[155] “We mean to fight, so do not weaken the hands
-of the Government unless you are prepared to take its place”--this was
-the gist of the Ministerial rhetoric. As to their policy of protracted
-negotiation, Ministers argued, reasonably enough, that forbearance in
-the circumstances could not be a crime. Mr. Hume and Mr. Roebuck took
-this view, and, on the whole, the debates, together with the Blue-books,
-may be said to have won for the Government a favourable verdict from the
-country. Mr. Cobden, however, had the audacity to challenge this verdict
-and to oppose, on what to the present generation seem sensible grounds,
-the whole policy of the war. His long speeches and pamphlets on this
-subject can be summed up in three sentences. Either we were going to
-fight Russia for the sake of Turkey, or for the sake of protecting the
-liberties of Europe from the encroachment of the Russian autocrat. If we
-were fighting for the sake of Turkey, we were fighting in a cause that
-we ought to be ashamed of. If we
-
-[Illustration: MARSHAL ST. ARNAUD.]
-
-were fighting to protect European civilisation from Russia, we ought to
-let the Powers nearest to the source of danger--Austria and
-Germany--begin first. This argument was indeed the only one that had the
-least effect on the House. Members were, however, so completely
-frightened by the clamour of London Society and the London Press, that
-even those who agreed with Cobden did not dare to say so.[156] His
-simple but lucid exposition of the Turkish system of Government which we
-were asked to maintain, had unexpectedly disturbed the minds, not only
-of the Nonconformists, but of many good Churchmen
-
-[Illustration: FORTS ALEXANDER AND PETER THE GREAT, CRONSTADT.]
-
-also. It was, perhaps, slightly emphasised by the taunt of the Czar in
-his Manifesto of the 9th of February to the effect that England and
-France were fighting for Islam against Russia, who was striving to
-protect Christianity. The War Party feared that there might be a
-reaction against them, and accordingly they very cleverly induced Lord
-Shaftesbury, on the 10th of March, to answer this portion of the
-Manifesto, and not only to prove that the Grand Turk did more than the
-Czar to advance the progress of Christianity, but also to defend the
-righteousness of making an alliance with any Power, heathen though it
-might be, to maintain “the cause of right, justice, and order, against
-the aggressions even of professing Christians.” Of this speech Lord
-Shaftesbury says in his Diary that nothing pleased him more than the
-statement of Lord Clarendon that the debate which he originated “was
-most opportune.”[157] From a Ministerial point of view it was opportune.
-Mr. Morley complains that the Nonconformists, who “have so seldom been
-found fighting on the wrong side,” were now so seriously divided that
-they did nothing to help Mr. Cobden to resist the warlike policy of the
-Government.[158] Their neutrality explains why Clarendon was so effusive
-in his congratulation to the Peer whose influence over this section of
-the community was supreme.
-
-But the whole question soon passed out of the region of debate. On the
-27th of March, the Queen’s message proclaiming war--though oddly enough
-the word war is not mentioned in it--was read to both Houses of
-Parliament; and on the 31st a loyal address agreeing to it was duly
-moved and carried, after a debate which was worthier of such an occasion
-than many others that had preceded it. The Opposition leaders seem to
-have been sobered by the solemnity of the moment, and all parties
-practically supported the Government with the helpless unanimity of
-despair. In the Upper House, Lord Grey alone uttered a strong protest
-against the war. In the House of Commons, Mr. Bright and the Marquis of
-Granby were the only speakers who were for peace. The violent
-Russophobists found in Mr. Layard an energetic champion. He condemned
-the Government, first, because it had not coerced Russia immediately
-after the massacre of Sinope, and secondly, because even now Ministers
-did not specifically declare that the object of the war was to lock up
-Russia within well-defined limits, so as to cripple her for ever. The
-Tory leaders were more cautious. They naturally made capital out of the
-Secret Correspondence,[159] already referred to (pp. 546-7). They had
-little difficulty in convicting the Government of misleading the Czar as
-to their rooted objection to his Turkish policy. Lord John Russell had
-not rejected the Russian proposals with the sternness of one who had
-serious hostility to them. He had, indeed, admitted the very claim which
-he and his colleagues were now about to rebut by war.[160] A “hybrid
-policy of credulity and connivance,” as Mr. Disraeli once called it,
-could have no other result than that of tempting the Czar to advance
-pretensions which he could not withdraw without prejudicing his Imperial
-position, and it is strange that this aspect of the affair was dealt
-with somewhat leniently by the critics and enemies of the Ministry. The
-questions that seemed to be of supreme interest to both Houses were
-really two--What was the object of the war? Where were our allies? To
-the one question the answer was vague. To the other the reply was
-neither frank nor candid. Lord Clarendon said that the object of the war
-was “to check and repel the unjust aggression of Russia”--which, as
-things stood, meant to force her out of the Danubian Principalities.
-But, he added, to ask what was the object of the war was to ask on what
-terms peace would be made?--a question the answer to which must depend
-on chances nobody could forecast. As for allies, it was easy to say that
-France was with us. The difficulty was to say what the German Powers
-would do. Ministers felt that Cobden had pierced their armour when, in
-the adjourned debate on Mr. Layard’s motion (20th Feb.), he asked
-whether it would not be sensible to let those Powers who were nearest
-Russia--and must therefore suffer first from her aggression--begin the
-fighting. Parliament must therefore be cajoled into a belief that
-Austria and Prussia would join us. Both Houses knew that though Austria
-and Prussia had concurred with England and France in recommending Russia
-to evacuate the Principalities, they had not pledged themselves to
-co-operate with us in war. Still, said Lord John Russell, when Austria
-was asked what she would do in the event of war breaking out, “the
-answer was at the time satisfactory,” and if Prussia had only fallen in
-with her views, he would have had a most satisfactory statement to make
-to the House. Though Prussian views seemed to Lord John “too narrow,
-taking in German interests alone,” he (Lord John) trusted that a short
-time would bring Prussia “to the conclusion that the disturbance of the
-balance of Power and the aggrandisement of Russia were matters of
-concern to Prussia as well as to other Powers.”
-
-Lord John Russell unscrupulously deceived the House of Commons and the
-country on both points. The whole course of the negotiations had shown
-first, that Prussia considered the Czar’s final concessions sufficient,
-and, secondly, that Austria, though regretting that Russia did not do
-more to mollify Lord Clarendon, refused to admit that a declaration of
-war was necessary for that purpose. Lord John Russell’s statement as to
-Prussia was not only untrue, but the dates of the official despatches
-prove that he and his colleagues must have known it to be untrue.[161]
-When it was made in the House of Commons by him, and virtually in the
-same form in the House of Lords by Lord Clarendon, neither Austria nor
-Prussia had given any direct answer whatever to the question as to what
-they would do if war broke out. The Prussian Minister, indeed, said he
-did not think that Prussia would join the Powers in such a
-
-[Illustration: OMAR PASHA.]
-
-war.[162] But a still grosser deception was the delusive assurance that
-Prussia would yet come to our assistance. The Government knew too well
-that the views of Prussia were such as to absolutely destroy this hope.
-The King of Prussia looked upon war against Russia on the issue raised
-as a crime, and he had written an autograph letter to the Queen, a fact
-which was concealed from Parliament, saying so in the plainest words. He
-reminded her of what it is to be feared the Queen, like most of her
-countrymen, did not then sufficiently realise--the agonies of a great
-war such as that of 1813-15--agonies that he had seen, but which, alas!
-her Majesty and the new generation had only read about. Yet that was a
-war worth the horrors of its sacrifices. Was this one now impending
-worth similar sacrifices?
-
-[Illustration: MAP OF THE CRIMEA.]
-
-Hardly, argued the King, for even England had at last become ashamed of
-the cause she had taken up--that of the Turk, and her endeavour now was
-to persuade herself and the world that it was for another cause--the
-equilibrium of Europe, menaced by the preponderance of Russia--that she
-was about to draw the sword. “The preponderance of Russia,” he writes in
-this letter, “is to be broken down! Well! I, her neighbour, have never
-felt this preponderance, and have never yielded to it.” It was war for
-an idea, and, adds the King with intense earnestness, “Suffer me to ask,
-‘Does God’s law justify war for an idea?’” He implores the Queen to
-reconsider the Russian proposals in a friendly spirit, sifting what is
-really objectionable from them, and pledges himself that if a golden
-bridge is built to save the Czar’s honour, the Czar will cross it. But
-one word the King craves leave to speak plainly to the Queen: “For
-Prussia and myself,” he writes, “_I am resolved to maintain a position
-of complete neutrality_; and to this I add, with proud elation, _my
-people_ and myself are of one mind. They _require_ absolute neutrality
-from me. They say (and I say), ‘What have we to do with the Turk?’
-Whether he stand or fall in no way concerns the industrious Rhinelanders
-and the husbandmen of the Riesengeberg and Bernstein.” Russia, he
-admits, might have perhaps pressed hard on the Turk. However, “it was
-the Turk, not we, who suffered, and the Turk has plenty of good
-friends, but the Emperor is a noble gentleman, and has done us no harm.
-Your Majesty will allow that this North German sound practical sense is
-difficult to gainsay.” Yet it was with such a letter in their possession
-that the Government led the country to believe, first, that Austria, who
-could not possibly move without Prussia, would join us in the war; and,
-second, that Prussia would also draw her sword for a cause which she
-declared we ourselves were even then ashamed of!
-
-On the 17th of March, 1854, the Queen, nettled by the rough practical
-“North German sense” in this letter from the King of Prussia,
-endeavoured to answer it--her draft being submitted to Lord Clarendon
-and Lord Aberdeen for approval. Her answer, according to Sir Theodore
-Martin, indicates a “firm hand” and “admirable tact.”[163] To the
-political student of the present day it indicates neither the one nor
-the other. There was no tact in scoffing at the King’s “North German
-sound practical sense” by saying, “Had such language fallen from the
-King of Hanover or of Saxony, I would have understood it,” and there was
-more weakness and sentimentality than firmness and statecraft in the
-hand that added, “But up to the present hour I have regarded Prussia as
-one of the five great Powers which, since the Peace of 1815, have been
-the guarantors of treaties, the guardians of civilisation, the champions
-of right, and ultimate arbitrators of the nations; and I have for my
-part felt the holy duty to which they were thus divinely called, being
-at the same time perfectly alive to the obligations, serious as they
-are, and fraught with danger, which it imposes. Renounce these
-obligations, my dear brother, and in doing so you renounce for Prussia
-the status she has hitherto held.”[164] If the example thus set by
-Prussia--that of making the interests of the Prussian people the supreme
-object of her policy--should find imitators, the Queen contended,
-“European civilisation is abandoned as a plaything to the winds; right
-will no longer find a champion, nor the oppressed an umpire to appeal
-to.”
-
-Such was the reply which the Queen made to what Sir Theodore Martin
-calls “the amiable but most mischievous weakness” that pervaded the
-letter from the King of Prussia. Such was the appeal which she made to
-what Sir Theodore calls “a sentiment higher than the short-sighted and
-selfish policy which it announced.” The King’s letter was perhaps
-amiable--but it was not weak. Its policy was perhaps selfish--a
-Sovereign who draws or sheathes the sword, save from motives of national
-selfishness, is guilty of a crime against his people--but it was not
-shortsighted. As Mr. Lowe, in his biography of Prince Bismarck, says,
-“Every one is now agreed, in the words of Leopold von Ranke, that his
-(the King of Prussia’s) neutrality during the Crimean War was the
-condition precedent of the great achievements which afterwards made
-Germany one.”[165] Prussia, in fact, was at this moment master of the
-situation; and it is amazing that the Queen, through her German
-connections, did not know it. Herr von Bismarck had been sent on a
-secret mission to the minor German States. His intrigues had rendered it
-certain that if Austria joined the Western Powers in war, Prussia would
-step into her place as the dominant power in Germany.[166] In fact, but
-one excuse is given for the grave error of the English Court in not
-seizing the opportunity offered by the letter of the King of Prussia for
-building the “golden bridge” over which his Majesty pledged his word the
-Czar would even then have gladly retreated. The Queen’s reason in her
-reply was that the resources of diplomacy--its Protocols, Notes,
-Conventions, &c., &c.--had been exhausted, and that “the ink that has
-gone to the penning of them might well be called a second Black
-Sea.”[167] A sanguine and proud young Princess must not be too harshly
-judged by History for a light jest, even on such a momentous issue. In a
-few brief months it was wiped out with her tears and her people’s blood.
-Moreover, her Majesty, as will be seen later, did not forget the hard
-stern lesson read to her by this “war for an idea,” when she saved
-England from a similar calamity in the dispute between Germany and
-Denmark over the Duchies.
-
-Only one thing now vexed the hearts of the War Party. The Address in
-answer to the Queen’s Message announcing war was carried. But the debate
-did not definitely commit the Government to a war for the purpose of
-breaking the power of Russia.
-
-There was, however, an insurrection in the Greek provinces of Turkey,
-which gave promise of bloodshed, for early in March Nesselrode had
-authorised the agents of Russia to support the insurgents. King Otho of
-Greece gave them unofficial support. The atrocious cruelty of the
-Turkish Bashi-bazouks, according to one party, had caused the rising,
-whilst another party held that it was due to Russian intrigue. Doubtless
-it was due to both causes, more especially as it was the hope of getting
-rid of the torture of Turkish misrule, that led the Greeks to listen
-eagerly to the Russian intriguers. The insurrection was easily strangled
-by the Allies who occupied the Piræus on the 25th of May; but one of its
-incidents was the expulsion of the Greeks from Constantinople. Now, as
-the Greeks in those days carried on nearly all the trade of Turkey,
-dealing with Manchester and Glasgow to the extent of £3,000,000 a year,
-a strong attack might have been made against the Ministry. They could
-have been taunted with going to war for British interests in support of
-the Turks, who were destroying our trading agencies in Turkey. Mr.
-Cobden saw this point clearly, and though he put it before the House of
-Commons, he spoilt it by foolishly arguing, on sentimental grounds, that
-we ought not to support an act as barbarous as the Edict of Nantes. Lord
-John Russell won an easy victory over him by virtually ignoring the
-question of English commercial interests, and showing that there was no
-parallel between the expulsion of Frenchmen from France on account of
-their religious opinions, and the expulsion from Turkey of the subjects
-of a foreign Prince who was fomenting rebellion. As for the atrocities
-of the Turks, the House of Commons was, of course, told that they were
-the natural results of Russian ambition, “for which there was scarcely
-one apologist but Mr. Cobden!”
-
-[Illustration: THE BARRACKS HOSPITAL, SCUTARI.]
-
-In the meantime the war had to be financed, and the country reconciled
-to increased taxation. Mr. Gladstone’s ordinary, as distinguished from
-his War Budget, was introduced on the 6th of March, when his position
-was this.
-
-[Illustration: ODESSA.]
-
-He had collected £54,025,000 of revenue, or £1,035,000 in excess of what
-he had counted on. He had spent £51,171,000, which, in spite of military
-operations, was less by £1,012,000 than he had estimated. His balance in
-hand from the past year was £2,854,000. For the coming year his
-estimates must necessarily be increased by additional military
-outlay,[168] which would bring up his estimated expenditure to
-£56,189,000. As the revenue he could depend upon from existing taxes was
-only £53,349,000, he had therefore a deficit of £2,840,000. Had there
-been no need to increase his estimates,[169] he might have had a surplus
-of £1,166,000 for the remission of taxation. As things stood, how was
-the deficit to be met? Not by a loan, answered Mr. Gladstone, because no
-nation had mortgaged its industry to such a frightful extent as England,
-whose National Debt of £750,000,000 exceeded that of all countries in
-the world put together. Without pledging themselves to pay all future
-war charges out of the revenue of each year, Mr. Gladstone said it was
-as yet possible for the House of Commons “to put a stout heart upon the
-matter, and to determine that so long as these burdens are bearable, and
-so long as the supplies necessary for the service of the year can be
-raised within the year, so long we will not resort to the system of
-loans.” The expenses of a war, he observed, “are the moral check which
-it has pleased the Almighty to impose upon the ambition and the lust of
-conquest that are inherent in nations.” He therefore proposed to
-increase the Income Tax by one-half, but to collect the whole of the
-increase in the first six months of 1854; in other words, he doubled the
-tax in the first half year. He was assailed on two grounds. The Tories
-protested against the doctrine of meeting war expenditure out of current
-revenue, and they taunted him with the failure of his scheme for the
-conversion of the debt,[170] which, they pretended, had been disastrous.
-“The next Party conflict,” wrote Prince Albert in a letter to Stockmar
-on the 18th of April, “will be upon finance. Gladstone wants to pay for
-the war out of the current revenue, so long as he does not require more
-than ten millions sterling above the ordinary expenditure, and to
-increase the taxes for the purpose. The Opposition are for
-borrowing--that is, increasing the debt--and do not wish to impose in
-the meantime any further burdens on themselves. The former course is
-manly, statesmanlike, and honest; the latter is convenient, cowardly,
-perhaps popular. We shall see.”[171] This is a masterly summary of the
-great financial controversy that raged throughout the Session of 1854.
-It leaves nothing more to be said save this, that when Mr. Gladstone
-explained his second or War Budget (8th of May), after war had been
-declared, his eloquence carried the country in favour of his policy. He
-obtained his war expenditure by doubling the Income Tax and increasing
-the duty on spirits and malt, and he pointed to the rapidly-growing
-trade of the nation as a proof that it ought not to adopt the course
-which Pitt found ruinous,[172] and which Prince Albert so justly
-described as “convenient and cowardly.”
-
-Perhaps the first Budget in February had slightly sobered the
-country--at all events, the 26th of April was set apart for a day of
-Fast, Humiliation, and Prayer. Over this a slight controversy had broken
-out. The Queen was a little offended that Lord Aberdeen had announced,
-without consulting her, in the House of Lords, on the 31st of March,
-that such a Fast would be proclaimed. She thought Fasts of Humiliation
-were resorted to too often, and that it was hypocritical to publicly
-confess in the stereotyped form that “the great sinfulness of the nation
-had brought about this war.” Therefore she desired that the Fast should
-be called a Day of Prayer and Supplication, and urged Lord Aberdeen “to
-inculcate the Queen’s wishes into the Archbishop’s mind, that there be
-no Jewish imprecations against our enemies.” Her desire was to adapt the
-prayer in the Church Service, “To be used before a Fight at Sea,” to the
-occasion.[173] According to Mr. Greville, bankers in the City pointed
-out that if the word “Fast” were omitted, Bills would be payable on that
-day and not on the day before, as Masterman’s Act provides in such
-cases. The Queen was, therefore, persuaded by Lord Aberdeen to proclaim
-“a Day of Solemn _Fast_, _Humiliation_, and Prayer, to be kept on the
-26th.” It was observed solemnly in the United Kingdom, India, and the
-Colonies, by British subjects of all races and creeds.
-
-When it was found that the object for which the war was undertaken--the
-evacuation of the Principalities--had been effected by the retreat of
-the Russians across the Pruth on the 28th of July, there was some fear
-lest the taxpayers, who were painfully digesting Mr. Gladstone’s War
-Budget, might consider enough had been done to bring Russia to reason.
-Russia, it has been shown, was now in such a position that her
-surrender, under the passive pressure of the Powers, was inevitable, so
-as a matter-of-fact enough _had_ been done. But the growth of this
-feeling had to be stopped, for the War Party insisted that Russia must
-be rendered incapable of again disturbing Europe. It was a curious
-revival of a policy, the practicability of which Napoleon I. had ruined
-himself to illustrate. Yet on the 19th of June Lord Lyndhurst invited
-the House of Lords to preside at its resurrection. The long, virulent,
-and passionate harangue by which he endeavoured to excite the hatred of
-England against Russia, his indictment of her as an enemy of the human
-race, his appeals for her destruction in the sacred interests of liberty
-and civilisation, drew forth cheer after cheer even from that frigid
-Assembly of patricians. It produced a prodigious effect on the country,
-and forthwith Englishmen worked themselves up into a belief that unless
-a mortal blow were dealt at Russia, Europe would be overrun by Cossacks,
-and every honest man in England would be buried alive in Siberia. Lord
-Aberdeen ventured to protest against Lyndhurst’s extravagant and
-scurrilous abuse of the Czar, and to remind the Peers that in 1829, when
-Turkey was at his mercy, he had not seized Turkish territory, but had
-been content with the Treaty of Adrianople. For this Aberdeen was
-denounced as a tool of Russia, who desired to patch up a hasty and
-dishonourable peace.
-
-[Illustration: HEIGHTS OF THE ALMA.]
-
-[Illustration: SIR JOHN BURGOYNE.]
-
-Mr. Layard, on the 23rd of June, gave notice of motion in the House of
-Commons, “that, in the opinion of this House, the language held by the
-First Minister of the Crown was calculated to raise grave doubts in the
-public mind as to the objects and results of the present war, and to
-lessen the prospect of a durable peace.” Even the Queen wrote to the
-aged statesman a letter scolding him because he had annoyed the public
-by “an impartial examination of the Emperor of Russia’s conduct.” She
-admired Aberdeen’s courage and honesty, but expressed a hope--in the
-circumstances her “hope” was a command--that in any explanation of his
-unlucky speech “he will not undertake the ungrateful and injurious task
-of vindicating the Emperor of Russia from any of the exaggerated charges
-brought against him and his policy, at a time when there is enough in
-that policy to make us fight with all our might against it.”[174] What
-Aberdeen said was that he objected to Russian aggression on Turkey, but
-as for Russian aggression on Europe, he did not fear it in the least.
-There was nothing in that to cause offence, except to those who,
-suddenly finding that Russian aggression on Turkey had been repelled by
-Omar Pasha, supported by the hostile demonstrations of the Western
-Powers, were now at a loss to discover another form of Russian
-encroachment, real or imaginary, to repel. There must therefore, cried
-Lyndhurst and the War Party, be no talk of peace till the Russian fleet
-in the Black Sea was destroyed, and the walls of Sebastopol razed to the
-ground. “For the future,” exclaimed Lord Derby, “it was impossible to
-permit the Black Sea to be a Russian lake, or that the Danube should be
-a Russian ditch, choked with mud and filth.”[175] A great army had been
-sent to Turkey; but the fighting and the glory had fallen to Omar Pasha
-on the Danube. As Lord Hardwicke said, in the debate in the House of
-Lords on a Vote of Credit (24th of July), “if the present campaign
-closed without some great deed of arms equal to the power and dignity of
-this country, Her Majesty’s Government would lie under a heavy
-responsibility.”
-
-Lord John Russell, in defending this Vote of Credit in the House of
-Commons, said that the Government had now three objects in view besides
-the evacuation of the Principalities: (1) to place Turkey under the
-protection of the European Powers, to whom, and not to Russia alone, she
-should be asked for the future to guarantee the privileges of her
-Christian subjects; (2) to deprive Russia of her special right of
-protecting the Principalities under the Treaty of Adrianople; (3) to
-reduce the power of Russia in the Black Sea, so that she should not be
-able to menace Turkey. In connection with this third aim, Lord John
-threw out a sinister allusion to the destruction of Sebastopol, which
-Mr. Disraeli protested he heard with “consternation,” and which Lord
-John vainly endeavoured to explain away. The German Powers objected as
-much to the occupation of Russian territory by England or Turkey, as to
-the occupation of Turkish territory by Russia. Lord John Russell had,
-therefore, emulated Lyndhurst in his eagerness to give Austria and
-Prussia a pretext for refusing England and France their co-operation.
-
-It was in truth easy to whet the fashionable appetite for adventure and
-glory. The country sulked over the inaction of the British fleet in the
-Baltic and the army at Varna. Yet the fleet under Napier, though it
-failed to make good the foolish vaunting of its commander when he
-started, did some useful work. It found the frowning fortifications of
-Cronstadt impregnable,[176] but at all events it shut up the Russian
-navy in their harbours, and swept their commerce from the sea. Captain
-Hall’s daring reconnoissance of Hango Bay in the month of May, elicited
-a tribute of admiration from the Grand Duke Constantine himself. Admiral
-Plumridge destroyed Bomarsund, a fortress built to dominate the Gulf of
-Bothnia. But in the Pacific the Allies were decidedly less successful in
-August in their attack on Petropaulovski. The English Admiral, Price,
-had committed suicide, and was succeeded by Sir F. Nicholson. On the 4th
-of September an attempt was made to take the place in the rear, but
-owing to the treachery of two guides, our men were misled and repulsed.
-They were driven over a precipice 70 feet high which lay between them
-and the shore, many of them being killed, and still more being wounded
-in taking a headlong leap for their lives.
-
-In the Black Sea the record was more brilliant. The first shot fired in
-the war was at Odessa, which was bombarded for ten hours on the 22nd of
-April, in revenge for an outrage committed by the Russians, who fired on
-a flag of truce. This was followed by a challenge to the Russian fleet
-in Sebastopol, which was not accepted. On the 12th of May the _Tiger_
-ran aground off Odessa, and had to strike her flag. Her crew were made
-prisoners, but treated with the utmost kindness and courtesy by the
-Russians. The captain (Gifford) died of his wounds on the 19th of June,
-and the lieutenant (Royer) was sent to St. Petersburg by order of the
-Czar, who at once set him free. Captain Parker, on the 8th of July,
-destroyed the Russian works at the Sulina mouth of the Danube.
-
-In May there were 20,000 French on the European and 10,000 British
-troops on the Asiatic side of the Danube. Gallipoli was fortified, and
-works thrown up in order to check the Russians had they crossed the
-Danube. Constantinople was also fortified, and then the Allies
-concentrated at Varna, ready, if need be, to carry war into the enemy’s
-territory. They were encamped at a spot which was saturated with the
-germs of malaria, and which was chosen with a reckless disregard of
-sanitary considerations. During June and July malaria, dysentery, and
-cholera decimated their ranks. They sat brooding listlessly in the
-shadow of death all through that fatal summer, chafing, as did their
-countrymen at home, over their inglorious fortune. Cardigan’s
-reconnoissance of the country up to Trajan’s Wall on the confines of the
-Dobrudscha alone broke the monotony of their existence, and on his
-return they were cheered by his news of the disastrous retreat of the
-Russians on Bessarabia. On the 26th of August a Council of War was held
-at Varna, and the rumour that the army was to be led to the invasion of
-the Crimea flew through the disheartened camp like tidings of great joy.
-It has been shown by what steps the English Government was lured on to
-this fatal decision. Yet it is due to Lord Aberdeen’s Cabinet to say,
-that it was not at first unanimous as to the expediency of widening the
-area of conflict, and attempting to break the power of Russia, “by
-razing Sebastopol to the ground.” Mr. Kinglake[177] has stated that this
-enterprise was sanctioned at a Cabinet meeting held on June 28 in Lord
-John Russell’s house (Pembroke Lodge). Mr. Kinglake, at a loss to
-explain to posterity how a number of intelligent men could have approved
-an act of such stupendous folly, has invented an ingenious theory. The
-Duke of Newcastle, as Secretary of State for War, subsequently blamed
-Lord Raglan for mismanaging the campaign. But Mr. Kinglake has
-constituted himself Lord Raglan’s champion, and he accordingly
-endeavours to lay as much blame as possible on the Duke. The Duke came
-to the meeting, says Mr. Kinglake, with a ponderous despatch, which he
-proposed, with the approval of his colleagues, to send to Lord Raglan
-ordering him to invade the Crimea. As he went on reading it, one
-Minister after another fell asleep. When he finished, they awoke, and
-sanctioned the Duke’s instructions without knowing what they were. It is
-unfortunately not possible to save the reputation of the Aberdeen
-Ministry by making drowsiness an excuse for blundering. Sir George
-Cornewall Lewis, in one of his letters,[178] gives the flattest
-contradiction to Mr. Kinglake’s amusing fable, and so does Sir Theodore
-Martin.
-
-[Illustration: PEMBROKE LODGE, RICHMOND.]
-
-[Illustration: CODRINGTON’S BRIGADE (23RD ROYAL WELSH FUSILIERS) AT THE
-ALMA.]
-
-An eccentric Member of the House of Commons, Mr. H. Drummond, in one of
-the debates on the War, said that there was a division of labour in the
-operations, for whilst we found the money, the French Emperor found the
-brains. The project of wounding Russia in a vital point by invading the
-Crimea, was originated by the French Emperor, who possibly thought his
-illustrious uncle’s experiment at Moscow needed no verification. The
-French Emperor’s plan was submitted to the Queen on the 14th of March as
-one approved of by Lord Raglan, Lord de Ros, Lord Clarendon, and the
-Duke of Newcastle. It was dropped because some sensible person suggested
-that it would be hardly safe to leave Constantinople, then covered by
-the allied troops, at the mercy of the Russians. But after
-Constantinople was fortified against attack, the mischievous idea was
-revived. On the 28th of June it was embodied in the draft despatch
-containing the instructions to Lord Raglan, which was sanctioned by
-that fatigued Cabinet, the Members of which, according to Mr. Kinglake,
-fell asleep. One other fact may be cited against Mr. Kinglake. The plan
-was opposed by certain Members of the Ministry who, though they thought
-something should be done to limit Russia’s opportunities of interfering
-with Turkey in future, felt sure that an invasion of the Crimea must end
-in failure. They complained that nobody knew what could be done with the
-Crimea even if it were taken, or how the Russians could be stopped from
-rebuilding Sebastopol, except by another war, after it was destroyed.
-But why has there ever been any controversy over the point at all?
-Simply because the project was such a mad one, that everybody who had
-anything to do with it, has been anxious to blame somebody else for
-originating it. The Ministry and their apologists declared that they
-left the whole affair to the discretion of Lord Raglan. He was only
-instructed to invade the Crimea if as a soldier he thought an invasion
-practicable. Lord Raglan and his friends declared that he had no
-discretion in the matter, and that the instructions of the Cabinet
-amounted to an order from the Secretary of State for War, which he as
-the General in command had no option but to obey. Lord Aberdeen’s
-account of the matter to the Queen was that, “although the expedition to
-the Crimea was pressed very warmly” on Lord Raglan, “the final decision
-was left to the judgment and discretion” of Raglan and St. Arnaud,
-“after they should have communicated with Omar Pasha.” Sir George
-Cornewall Lewis, in the letter already quoted, says he does not think
-that the Cabinet could have given Raglan a wider discretion, because
-they would have probably thought they were throwing too much
-responsibility on him. But the obvious truth is that, as the Cabinet and
-the General had approved of the plan in March, they were alike
-responsible for it, and that if it had not been disastrous to their
-reputations, they would have each claimed credit for it.[179] Mr.
-Kinglake says that St. Arnaud was also opposed to the invasion of the
-Crimea, but it was his Imperial Master’s plan, and he had to adopt it
-against his better judgment. Possibly, Raglan’s doubts, confided to Sir
-G. Brown at Varna, sprang from conferences with St. Arnaud.[180]
-
-The order to invade was dated the 28th of June, and two months were
-spent in preparing for the expedition. At the last moment it was found
-that there was no means of embarking and disembarking the cavalry and
-artillery. This difficulty was cleverly overcome by Mr. Roberts, a
-master in the navy. “Roberts did more for us than anybody,” said Lord
-Raglan to Admiral Lyons. He set the Turkish caïques in rows, and built
-great pontoons on them buoyant enough to support the enormous weight of
-horses and guns.[181] On the 13th of September the expedition sighted
-the shores of the Crimea. The allied troops skilfully disembarked
-without loss or confusion at the Old Fort, a spot twenty miles south of
-Eupatoria. Twenty thousand French and twenty thousand English soldiers,
-with a powerful artillery, were thus thrown upon a hostile coast in
-perfect marching order in one single day. On the 19th of September they
-moved southwards, and got touch of the Russians under Prince
-Menschikoff. These were 40,000 strong, and they held a fortified
-position on the heights of the Alma, a little river which flowed between
-them and the Allies. On the morning of the 20th the battle began. St.
-Arnaud was to attack, and if possible turn the Russian left. When that
-had been done, the English were to dash at the right wing of the
-Russians. St. Arnaud was farther away from his objective point than our
-men, and before he completed his manœuvre, he seems to have asked Lord
-Raglan to advance. Abandoning the original plan of the battle, Raglan
-moved forward on the swarming masses of Russians in front of him, and
-drove them from their position. In this contest one sees nothing
-admirable save the rough masculine vigour of the English attack, and the
-skill with which the battle was planned by St. Arnaud. Lord Raglan’s
-conduct was likened by the Secretary of State to that of the Duke of
-Wellington. As a matter of fact, at the outset he seems to have plunged
-into the river with his Staff, dashed on into the enemy’s lines, till he
-found himself on the extreme left of the French, without any control
-over his army. It was really led into action by his Generals of
-Divisions, who, till after the crisis of the battle was over, seemed
-scarcely conscious of the existence of their Commander-in-Chief.[182]
-The French attack was dashing, but somehow it did not succeed
-quickly.[183] As for the Russians, they were clumsily handled.
-Menschikoff chose a good position--so good that he staked his field
-defence of Sebastopol on it. But he manœuvred in massive columns, so
-that his front did not nearly cover all his ground. He seemed nervously
-anxious to meet attacks in detail, hurrying regiments from point to
-point wherever he thought his troops were being hard pressed, to the
-utter confusion of his formation. His subordinates were so stupid that
-they did not even think of bringing their strongest arm, the cavalry,
-into action.
-
-[Illustration: GENERAL CANROBERT.]
-
-Curiously enough at this point, the expedition, owing to Menschikoff’s
-bungling, had success within its grasp. The defence of Sebastopol was
-staked upon the army of the Alma. The stronghold lay at the mercy of the
-Allies after that army was routed, and could have been taken next
-morning by a _coup de main_. Raglan, to do him justice, was eager to
-press on, but St. Arnaud held him back. The Allies then spent three days
-in burying the dead, and by that time the Russians had considerably
-strengthened their fortifications. Raglan again urged that the city
-should be attacked, but, as St. Arnaud was unwilling to risk an
-assault, it was agreed that the invaders should march round to the south
-of the citadel, and attack it from that aspect. On the 29th St. Arnaud,
-whose health and brain had been long failing him, died, and Canrobert,
-an equally sluggish soldier, succeeded to his command. Whilst the Allies
-were, at Raglan’s instigation, marching round to the south of
-Sebastopol, they were for a whole day exposed to a flank attack from the
-enemy, which, had it been delivered, would have simply cut them to
-pieces. Menschikoff’s incapacity saved them from this disaster, and on
-the 28th of September the Russians, who had been looking for an attack
-from the north, to their surprise found their feeble works on the south
-at the mercy of their enemies. Some of the divisional commanders, like
-Cathcart and Campbell, were eager for storming the place at once, and,
-had they done so, they could have captured it with hardly any
-appreciable loss. Sir John Burgoyne--then supposed to be infallible as a
-military engineer--and General Canrobert thought the risks too great,
-and said that the army must wait till the siege-train was brought up.
-Raglan yielded to Canrobert’s hesitancy and Burgoyne’s ignorance.
-
-[Illustration: ENTRANCE TO BALACLAVA HARBOUR.]
-
-The Russians, who expected every moment to see the enemy swarming over
-their walls, must have looked on the unintelligible paralysis of the
-Allies as an intervention of Providence on their behalf. Oddly enough,
-when Raglan was making his flank march from north to south, Menschikoff,
-instead of springing on him and destroying his army, was marching with
-equal stupidity from the south to the north.[184] Here the allied attack
-was looked for; here all available troops were hurried. Nachimoff, who
-remained on the south bank of the harbour, had just 3,000 troops to hold
-indefensible works against an army of 40,000 men. He behaved with high
-spirit; he sank his ships so as to block the channel. Admiral Korniloff
-hastened from the north side to his aid and took command, and filled the
-troops with his own determination to hold out to the last, no matter how
-heavy were the odds against them. Colonel Todleben--whose master mind
-was about to revolutionise the art of fortification--accompanied him,
-and these two perfectly dauntless men, profiting by the blunder of
-Canrobert and Burgoyne, simply wrecked the expedition of the Allies. The
-time spent in waiting for the siege-train was precisely what Todleben
-prayed for.
-
-Inspirited by Korniloff’s enthusiasm, and guided by Todleben’s genius,
-the Russians toiled like galley-slaves to strengthen their
-fortifications. Korniloff succeeded in inducing Menschikoff to march
-25,000 troops into the town, so that on the 17th of October, when the
-siege-train of the Allies had arrived, Sebastopol, which had been at
-their mercy on the 25th of September, was virtually impregnable. On the
-17th of October an attempt was made to demolish the earthworks of the
-enemy by a general bombardment, after which it was the intention of the
-Allies to dash forward and storm the southern half of the town.[185] The
-English batteries did not fail, for they seriously damaged the Redan
-Fort of the enemy. Nachimoff’s sacrifice of the sunken fleet, however,
-prevented our ships from getting far enough up the harbour to assist our
-land force, and though the sea batteries were open to attack, shoal
-water prevented our ships from getting close enough to them to do them
-much harm.[186] The failure of the bombardment was followed up by a
-series of attacks on the position of the Allies, the results of which
-may now be summarised. The great flank march from north to south had
-left every road from Russia open to the enemy. Reinforcements swarmed
-into the Crimea, even from the Russian Army of the Danube, which was
-liberated when the Austrians occupied the Principalities. The English
-army at the end of October numbered 25,000. The French had 40,000 in the
-field. But 120,000 combatants had rallied to the standards of Prince
-Menschikoff. They held not a fortress but a great entrenched camp,
-defended by impregnable works on which, says Lord Raglan, plaintively,
-in one of his despatches, “an apparently unlimited number of heavy guns,
-amply provided with gunners and ammunition, are mounted.” Now, it is a
-rule of warfare that the besieging force should be five times as strong
-as the besieged. No general with a grain of prudence will attempt to lay
-siege to a stronghold unless his force is three times as strong as that
-of the garrison, and unless he has an army of observation besides to
-protect him from molestation. Before Sebastopol the besiegers were only
-half as strong as the besieged, and they had no covering force whatever.
-Like the Athenians at Syracuse, the besiegers had become the besieged.
-If Lord Raglan did not complete the parallel by sacrificing his army to
-an eclipse of the moon, he did his best to emulate that historic
-achievement by sacrificing it to the flank march from the Belbeck to
-Balaclava.[187]
-
-In these circumstances the Russians promptly adopted offensive tactics.
-Menschikoff ordered Liprandi to march round to the rear of the British
-position and attack Balaclava, from which we drew our supplies, and on
-the 25th of October the Russians suddenly drove the Turks from the
-redoubts that formed one of our chief defences. This gave him the
-northern half of the Balaclava valley. The British cavalry were
-withdrawn from the southern half westwards behind redoubts, which were
-still in our hands, and the road to Balaclava, with all our shipping and
-our stores, was clear. Yet not quite clear. Sir Colin Campbell and the
-93rd Highlanders were in the way, and his consummate skill and their
-stubborn valour saved our base of operations. At a glance Campbell saw
-that Liprandi meant to annihilate the Scots, by hurling against them
-overwhelming masses of cavalry covered by artillery. To such an onset a
-single regiment in square formation could obviously offer no effective
-resistance whatever. In an instant Campbell conceived the novel and
-daring project of receiving the Russian cavalry in line.[188] Such a
-
-[Illustration: SIR COLIN CAMPBELL.]
-
-manœuvre could be possible only where a commander and his troops had
-implicit confidence in each other, and where officers and men, instinct
-with barbaric strength and courage, went forth to battle under the iron
-discipline of civilised warfare. In grim silence the Scots obeyed the
-stern, curt orders of their leader, and formed the famous “thin red line
-tipped with steel,” on the solidity of which, for a moment, the fate of
-the army depended. Their flanks were covered by the Turks who had fled
-from the redoubts. A hundred sick men, who crawled from the hospital to
-rally round their chief, were formed under Lieutenant-Colonel Daveney as
-“supports.” The Russian commander, with great ability, modified his plan
-of attack and struck swiftly not only at the centre, but strongly at
-Campbell’s right flank, where the Turks were posted. The dense masses of
-cavalry first reeled and then broke up when they came within the central
-zone of fire, but the Turks fled, leaving the “thin red line” uncovered
-on the right. The Russians, feeling that the game was now in their
-hands, charged again, confident that they could roll up the line at this
-unprotected spot. Campbell was, however, equally alert. When the Turks
-ran away he ordered his grenadier company to wheel to the right. It went
-swiftly and silently round, with automatic precision, like a door on a
-hinge, and met the
-
-[Illustration: BALACLAVA--“THE THIN RED LINE.”
-
-(_After the painting by Robert Gibb, R.S.A., in the possession of
-Archibald Ramsden, Esq., Leeds._)]
-
-Russian squadrons with a scorching storm of fire, that sent them flying
-in confusion from the field. “During the rest of the day,” said Sir
-Colin Campbell, with a touch of grim humour in his despatch, “the troops
-under my command received no further molestation from the Russians.” A
-still more formidable body of Russian horse, however, had swooped down
-on our Heavy Cavalry (Brigadier-General Scarlett). The Scots Greys and
-Enniskilling Dragoons sprang forward to meet them, tore through the
-first and second lines of the enemy, and, supported by the Dragoon
-Guards, broke up their heavy masses in utter rout. At this moment Lord
-Raglan ordered Lord Lucan, who was in command of the cavalry, to advance
-his Light Brigade and prevent the Russians from carrying away some of
-the guns which the Turks had abandoned in the redoubts. When the order
-was carried to Lucan by Captain Nolan, Raglan’s aide-de-camp, the
-Russians had recovered from their reverses and had completely re-formed
-on their own ground. Raglan’s order, therefore, had come to mean that
-Lucan was to hurl his slender Light Cavalry Brigade, utterly devoid of
-supports, against a great army holding a strong position, flanked and
-covered on all sides by murderous artillery. For a moment he hesitated,
-appalled by the hideous madness of the order. A taunt from Nolan stung
-him to the quick, and he spoke the word that sent Cardigan into the
-“valley of death” with the far-famed Six Hundred.
-
- “Long shall the tale be told,
- Yea, when our babes are old”--
-
-how they rode onward--through the smoke and fire that belched forth from
-the iron throats of the Russian cannon--how they clove their way through
-the Russian masses and cut down the gunners at their guns--how they cut
-their way back, “stormed at with shot and shell,” a broken remnant of
-wounded and dismounted troopers, who had to report that they had failed
-to do that which even the demigods of ancient legend would not have been
-reckless enough to attempt. Nolan was killed at the very first
-onset--whilst riding far in advance cheering on the Brigade.[189] “It
-was magnificent, but it was not war” was the comment of the French
-General Bosquet, on this horrible sacrifice--a sacrifice so horrible
-that, when it was over, even the Russians ceased firing and stood
-motionless and awe-stricken, gazing at the sickening scene. They claim
-Balaclava as a victory. Certainly they took more than half the field
-from us; but on the other hand, thanks to the obstinate tenacity of the
-93rd Highlanders, we repelled their attack on our base of operations,
-which was, of course, their objective point.[190]
-
-After this fight the Russians concentrated an overwhelming force and
-planned an attack on our position at Inkermann. Its weakest point, in
-spite of the warnings of Lieutenant-General Sir De Lacy Evans, had been
-left badly protected, and on the 5th of November the Russians surprised
-our pickets. Having driven them in they fell on our Second Division, who
-had barely time to stand to their arms when they found themselves
-struggling with overwhelming masses of the enemy. Pennefather was in
-command, for, unfortunately, De Lacy Evans was disabled. Instead of
-retiring in order and attempting to ward off the attack by artillery,
-Pennefather hurried up little mobs of troops to his outposts, and there
-waged a dreadful hand to hand fight against an army ten times as strong
-as his own. It was “a soldiers’ battle” that raged through the morning
-on these misty heights--a confused _melée_, in which officers lost their
-men, and men lost their officers--in which, when ammunition failed, the
-English troops fought with bayonets; when these broke or bent, with
-stones; and when these failed, with clenched fists. Column after column
-of Russians was hurled at our little force--but without avail. No man
-could be moved from his position till he was shot or cut down, and the
-indomitable courage of the Duke of Cambridge and his Guards--for his
-Royal Highness, though he lacked skill and knowledge, never lacked
-pluck--held the Russians in check so long, that the French had time to
-come to the rescue. Then the enemy beat a retreat. We retook the
-positions we had lost, and once again demonstrated that the English
-infantry were without a rival in the world. The Russian plans were so
-laid, that it was a mathematical certainty our army must be driven into
-the sea. Two sons of the Czar had been invited to witness this
-catastrophe. And, in spite of the splendid fighting qualities of our
-men, the catastrophe must have happened, had it not been for two
-blunders which the Russians committed. In the first place, Menschikoff,
-who seems to have been even a stupider person than Raglan or Burgoyne,
-attacked in massive columns. This so reduced his fighting front that our
-weak detachments formed in line decimated them with their fire, and when
-our artillery came into action every shot and every shell also told on
-them with deadly effect. The Russian sortie from Sebastopol, moreover,
-was mismanaged. The commander lost his way in the mist, and instead of
-falling on us, he found himself entangled with the French far away on
-our left, so that he gave no real aid to the main attack.
-
-The Russians lost 12,000 men in this battle, the French lost 1,800, and
-the British lost 2,600. It was therefore clear that the siege must be
-raised, or that the Allies must enter on a winter campaign. Up till now
-the troops had suffered very little hardship; but, alas! when winter set
-in they were doomed to cruel suffering. A terrific storm on the 14th of
-November blew
-
-[Illustration: VALLEY OF INKERMANN.]
-
-down their tents and destroyed twenty-one vessels in Balaclava Bay laden
-with supplies. It rendered the valley from Balaclava to the camp--a
-distance of nine miles--almost impassable. Two-thirds of the transport
-horses died, and there was hardly any forage obtainable for the
-remainder. Cholera--the germs of which had been carried to the Crimea
-from Varna--raged in our lines, and those who escaped it fell victims to
-scurvy, dysentery, or fever. “Between the beginning of November,” writes
-Mr. Spencer Walpole, “and the end of February, 8,898 British troops
-perished in hospital. At the last of these dates 13,608 men were still
-in hospital.”[191] The state of the hospitals was so bad that men died
-there more quickly than on the field. Part of the ghastly tale of
-mismanagement had been told by Mr. W. H. Russell, the special
-correspondent of the _Times_, when Parliament met on the 12th of
-December, and empowered the Queen to raise a foreign legion and utilise
-the Militia for foreign service--measures forced on the Ministry by
-Prince Albert. But soon after it separated the cry of distress from the
-Crimea grew too loud to be stifled. When it rang through England the
-people turned on the Government in furious anger, and called them to
-account for their gross mismanagement of the war. The Duke of Newcastle,
-being Secretary of State for War, was blamed because he was alleged to
-be incompetent. Aberdeen was blamed because it was said he was at heart
-a Russian. The scurrilous charges against Prince Albert were revived,
-and he was accused of impeding the operations of our army by his
-treacherous interference. As a matter of fact, these charges were all
-untrue. Prince Albert, Aberdeen, and Newcastle were the three men who
-alone had courage to face the situation, when they suddenly discovered
-that the military system of England had failed them, and that the
-military machine which they inherited from Wellington had broken down.
-They had toiled long and wearily to mend it when the distinguished
-persons who afterwards attacked them were away enjoying their holidays.
-But when Parliament reassembled on the 23rd of January, 1855, the
-gathering storm broke on the head of the Government. Mr. Roebuck gave
-notice of a motion for the appointment of a committee to inquire into
-the mismanagement of the war; Lord John Russell deserted his colleagues
-and resigned. The Ministry, who resisted Mr. Roebuck’s motion, were
-beaten, on a division, by 305 votes to 148, and the Coalition Government
-resigned on the 31st of January, 1855. The army was starving, with
-abundance of supplies within its reach, through the sheer stupidity of
-those whose duty it was to feed it. Its camp was a hospital, and its
-hospitals were pest-houses. The nation was utterly humiliated. As for
-the War Party, which was really responsible for the invasion of the
-Crimea, it naturally destroyed the Ministry which had stooped to be the
-instrument of its braggart passions and its ignorant policy.
-
-[Illustration: THE STORM OFF BALACLAVA.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXI.
-
-PARTY GOVERNMENT AND WAR.
-
- Stratford de Redcliffe Cooling Down--Tory Distrust of the French
- Alliance--The Queen’s Kindness to Lord Aberdeen--The Emperor
- Napoleon and Prince Albert--The Prince Visits France--The Queen at
- Balmoral--Her Feelings towards the Prince of Prussia--The Queen
- holds a Council of War--She Demands Reinforcements for Lord
- Raglan--Napoleon’s Alarm--Prince Albert’s Plan for an Army of
- Reserve--The Queen on the Austrian Proposals--Her Anxiety about the
- Troops--Raglan’s Meagre Despatches--The Queen and Miss
- Nightingale--At Work for the Soldiers--Extorting Information from
- Lord Raglan--Ministerial Changes--Lord John Russell’s
- Selfishness--A Miserly Whig Duke--The Queen’s Disgust at Russell’s
- Treachery--Resignation of Russell--Fall of the Coalition--The Queen
- and the Crisis--She holds out the Olive Branch to
- Palmerston--Palmerston’s Cabinet--Quarrel between Mr. Disraeli and
- Lord Derby--The Sebastopol Committee--Mr. Roebuck and Prince
- Albert--The Vienna Conference and the Death of Czar Nicholas--The
- Austrian Compromise--Parties and the War--Russell’s Humiliation--He
- Resigns in Disgrace--The Queen quashes the Peace Negotiations--A
- Royal Blunder--The Queen tries to Gag the Peelites--Aberdeen
- Browbeaten by the Court--Canrobert’s Resignation--Crimean
- Successes--Failure of the Attack on the Redan--Death of Raglan.
-
-
-During the Parliamentary Session of 1854, it was very plainly shown that
-Government by Party is not the best kind of Government for carrying on
-diplomacy or warfare. The Opposition in the House of Commons, instead of
-checking the drift of the Cabinet towards war, seemed ever bent on
-hounding them on. They hardly ever gave a vote save for the purpose of
-discrediting and weakening the Ministry. It is, therefore, not unfair to
-infer that they rejoiced in the prospect of war, because they foresaw
-that its hazards and its chances might lead to the destruction of the
-Government. The temper of the Tories at this time was admirably
-illustrated by Mr. Disraeli. When a motion was brought before the House
-of Commons by Mr. Chambers early in February, 1854, to investigate the
-claims of an English company at Madeira against Portugal, Lord
-Malmesbury writes of the Ministerial defeat as follows: “I fear Disraeli
-voted against the Government, as it is his policy to join with anybody
-to defeat them.”[192] With such a spirit of faction animating the
-Opposition, it was hardly possible for the Ministry to steer a steady
-course in the stormy sea of diplomatic intrigue on which it had
-embarked. Yet it is but right to say that there were some patriotic
-Tories who objected very strongly to the tactics and strategy of their
-Party. John Wilson Croker was so firmly opposed to the policy of the
-war, and the entangling alliance with the French Emperor,[193] that he
-severed his connection with the _Quarterly Review_ on this account.
-Croker’s belief was that France was an unsafe ally, that the French had
-manufactured the quarrel with Russia and inveigled us into it; that our
-Government knowing, from the Secret Memorandum of 1844, what the Czar’s
-views were, should have urged Turkey to resist the intimidation of
-France at the outset. We should have warned her of the peril she stood
-in from Russia, whilst at the same time we warned Russia that, though we
-had no objection to induce Turkey to do her justice, we could not
-sanction the partition of the Ottoman Empire. This course, says Mr.
-Croker, in a remarkable letter to Lord Lyndhurst, “would have placed the
-matter on its real grounds--that is, a struggle between France and
-Russia, in which we should have been spectators, and eventually
-mediators, but not parties, till some pretensions contrary to the
-permanent balance of power should be raised by any of the
-belligerents.”[194] Lyndhurst himself began towards the end of the year
-to doubt whether our alliance with the French was not as dangerous as
-Russian pretensions. Very few members of the House of Commons, however,
-shared these doubts. The House, in fact, rapidly became unmanageable,
-and, as Lord Malmesbury says in his “Memoirs” would support nothing but
-the war. Bill after Bill had to be withdrawn by Aberdeen’s Government,
-so that its legislative achievements can be briefly recorded. During the
-first Session of the year the Oxford University Bill was passed. It
-substituted for an incompetent governing oligarchy a Council of eminent
-and talented men, and gave the Colleges great powers for
-self-improvement. Mercantile laws were consolidated into one Act. Usury
-laws were abolished. The principle of allowing traders to form Joint
-Stock Companies under limited liability of partnership was affirmed by
-the House of Commons, and the old system of granting such undertakings
-charters from the Board of Trade, finally condemned. Lord John Russell’s
-Reform Bill was one of the measures which were introduced, debated, and
-withdrawn. It had produced a second crisis in the Cabinet in early
-spring, which was overcome by Lord Aberdeen’s mediation between Lord
-John and Lord Palmerston. This episode seriously disturbed the Queen’s
-peace of mind, and in one of her letters she expresses her deep
-gratitude to the Prime Minister for his devotion to her. Nothing,
-indeed, is more touching than the references to the aged statesman with
-which the Queen’s letters are filled at this period. She is found
-frequently devising plans for the purpose of lightening the burden of
-care that was crushing his spirits. On the 1st of May, Prince Arthur’s
-birthday, she writes as follows:--“Though the Queen cannot send Lord
-Aberdeen a card for a child’s ball, perhaps he may not disdain coming
-for a short time to see a number of happy little people, including some
-of his grandchildren, enjoying themselves.” In September, again, she
-writes to him from Balmoral, peremptorily insisting on his leaving
-London and proceeding to Scotland at once to recruit his health. At
-Haddo, she says, he will be near her, and, she adds, “Lord Aberdeen
-knows that his health is not his own alone, but that
-
-[Illustration: MR. ROEBUCK (1858).]
-
-she (the Queen) and the country have as much interest in it as he and
-his own family.”[195] In midsummer she gave him her best support and
-sympathy when the Peelites and the Whigs almost openly quarrelled, and
-attacks on the Prime Minister were freely indulged in by his own
-supporters. “Aberdeen,” writes Prince Albert in July to Stockmar, “is a
-standing reproach in their eyes, because he cannot share the enthusiasm
-while it is his part to lead it. Nevertheless he does his duty and keeps
-the whole thing together, and is the only guarantee that the war will
-not degenerate into crack-brained, fruitless absurdities”--such as the
-re-organisation of Poland, the seizure of Finland, a mad project of
-certain Tories like Lyndhurst, and the annexation of the Crimea. Before
-Parliament met in January, 1855, the Queen was indeed so keenly sensible
-of the injustice of the attacks on Lord Aberdeen, that she insisted on
-his accepting the Order of the Garter as a public testimony of her
-confidence in his administration, and of “her personal feelings of
-regard and friendship” for himself. The end of the London season, when
-the Court came to the capital to prorogue Parliament, was gloomy.
-Cholera was spreading fast through the town, and even the world of
-fashion had to offer up its tale of victims.[196] The Queen was
-therefore fain to hurry back to Osborne as quickly as possible; and, on
-the 29th of August, she writes to the King of the Belgians that she is
-reconciling herself to the prospect of a long parting from her husband,
-who was about to visit Napoleon III.
-
-[Illustration: BUCKINGHAM PALACE, FROM ST. JAMES’S PARK.]
-
-Prince Albert’s visit to France was planned by the Emperor Napoleon for
-the purpose of raising his status in the eyes of his people, whose
-cultured and aristocratic classes looked askance at his upstart court
-and his mushroom nobility. First of all, he sounded Lord Cowley on the
-subject. The Queen thought that such a visit might render the French
-alliance more trustworthy than she was disposed to consider it, and the
-Prince soon let Lord Cowley know he would visit France whenever he was
-invited. Napoleon III. accordingly, on the 3rd of July, asked the Prince
-to come and inspect the summer camp of 100,000 troops which was to be
-formed between St. Omer and Boulogne, and the Prince promised to go. He
-sailed from Osborne on the 3rd of September, carrying an autograph
-letter from the Queen to the Emperor, who met his guest on the quay at
-Boulogne on the 4th. On the 8th he returned to Osborne, on the whole
-well pleased with his visit.
-
-The 15th of September found the Court at Balmoral; indeed, it was there
-that the Queen received most of the stirring news that made English
-hearts beat fast during these anxious months when the Crimean struggle
-was begun. She was greatly cheered by the successful landing of the
-troops near Eupatoria, and her pride when the tidings of the victory of
-the Alma arrived, is frankly and ingenuously expressed in her
-correspondence.
-
-On the 11th of October the Court returned to Windsor, the Queen visiting
-Edinburgh, Hull, and Grimsby on the way. It was at Edinburgh that she
-first heard of the abandonment of the attack on the northern front of
-Sebastopol, and of Raglan’s foolish “flank march” to the south side of
-the town. Prussian diplomacy had at this time again irritated both the
-Queen and her husband, for when Austria was once more pressed to take
-the field with us, Prussia held her back by threatening to withdraw from
-the offensive and defensive alliance which had been signed between the
-two countries. Prince Albert remonstrated with the Crown
-Prince--afterwards Emperor of Germany--but in vain. The conduct of
-Prussia was especially provoking to the Queen, because she even then saw
-certain signs which indicated that the son of the Crown Prince would
-probably be soon a successful suitor for her eldest daughter’s hand. Her
-Majesty next induced her uncle, King Leopold, to remonstrate with the
-King of Prussia. Prussia was warned that France would seize the left
-bank of the Rhine, and that England would abet her. Herr Von Bismarck,
-who made it his business to thwart King Leopold’s schemes, met this
-threat by pointing out that whoever held the Rhine was master of
-Belgium--a trifling circumstance which the Queen and Prince Albert seem
-to have overlooked, when they persuaded King Leopold to press Prussia
-into the service of the Allies.
-
-When October brought the first hints of bad news from the Crimea, the
-heart of the Queen grew heavy with anxiety. She now knew, by advices
-from Raglan, that he had not enough troops for the task that was imposed
-on him. The country was growing restive over the sluggishness of the
-attack. The Queen and Prince Albert therefore implored Lord Aberdeen to
-consider how reinforcements were to be sent out. On the 11th of November
-her Majesty asked the Prime Minister to visit her at Windsor, and, with
-the Duke of Newcastle, talk over a project of the Prince’s for raising
-the Militia by ballot and sending them abroad, and for organising a
-legion of foreign mercenaries. The Queen desired this step to be taken
-at once, assuring her Ministers that they would have no difficulty in
-getting a Bill of Indemnity from Parliament; but her suggestion was
-overruled. And yet at this time Raglan was begging the Secretary for
-War to send out 10,000 troops without delay! Meanwhile Napoleon III. was
-alarmed to find that the English army was vanishing before Canrobert’s
-eyes. Hence he offered to send out every French soldier he could muster,
-if England would only find the transports. Sir James Graham found them,
-and they carried, not only French troops to the Crimea, but all the
-lavish stores of food and comforts which never reached those for whom
-they were supplied. The terrible loss of life at Inkermann again
-prompted the Queen to press on the Duke of Newcastle the necessity for
-reinforcing our shattered army. Prince Albert was equally urgent in his
-importunity, and on the 1st of December he was successful in persuading
-the Cabinet to adopt his plan for forming an Army of Reserve at Malta.
-
-Meantime, diplomacy was again appealed to for the purpose of ending the
-war. “If Austria did her duty,” writes the Queen when as yet the tidings
-of carnage were fresh in her mind, “she might have prevented much of
-this bloodshed. Instead of this, her Generals do nothing but juggle the
-Turks of the Principalities, and the Government shuffles about, making
-advances and then retreating. We shall see now if she is sincere in her
-last propositions.”[197] These were that certain demands should be made
-by her on Russia. If Russia rejected them, then Austria would be willing
-to join us in the war. But, on the other hand, if Russia accepted the
-Austrian proposals, England and France must agree to make peace. What
-then, asked Austria, were the terms which France and England would
-insist on having? Prince Albert was asked by Lord Clarendon to suggest
-an answer. The Prince replied very sensibly that he should not ask for
-anything beyond the “Four Points” on which Austria was prepared to
-insist, though it might be well, he said, to define their somewhat
-elastic terms. These points were the substitution of a European for a
-Russian Protectorate over the Principalities; the freedom of navigation
-on the Danube; the revision of the Treaty of 1841 so as to destroy the
-preponderance of Russia in the Black Sea; a guarantee from the Sultan to
-the Great Powers confirming the liberties and privileges of his
-Christian subjects, instead of a guarantee from the Sultan to Russia
-alone. The Queen greatly approved of the Ministerial Despatch which was
-drawn up on the lines of Prince Albert’s advice, and in a letter to Lord
-Clarendon she gave him sound reasons for her belief that Austria was
-acting honestly in the transaction, and not, as Lord Clarendon
-suspected, seeking to evade her moral responsibilities.
-
-But it was the condition of the army itself during the winter of 1854 in
-the Crimea, rather than the diplomacy of the struggle that disturbed
-most grievously the mind of the Queen. Official Despatches, especially
-those of Lord Raglan, were culpably silent on the subject. Private
-letters, however, from officers and men, teemed with complaints, and
-officers in the Guards kept the Court well informed about the actual
-state of things. Early in October, the _Times_ newspaper generously
-opened a subscription for the benefit of the army, and sent Mr.
-Macdonald to the Crimea to administer it. The services which this
-gentleman rendered to the troops will never be forgotten. He seemed to
-make his pence go as far as other men’s pounds, and to his skilful
-administration may be traced many most important reforms which were
-adopted by the Government in their methods of issuing rations to the
-army. The Queen was now of opinion that the time had come for appealing
-to the generosity of the people on behalf of the sufferers from the war.
-On the 13th of October a Royal Commission was issued, headed by Prince
-Albert, to establish the Patriotic Fund for the relief of the families
-of those who had perished in the Crimea. A staff of hospital nurses was
-organised under Miss Florence Nightingale--a lady whose good deeds and
-kindly offices to the sick and wounded at Scutari have given her
-imperishable fame. On the 5th of November she reached the scene of her
-labours--as the wounded men were being brought in from Balaclava--and
-the hospital which had been a foul and disorderly pest-house, was soon
-rendered a wholesome and serviceable sanatorium. It was Mr. Sidney
-Herbert who requested Miss Nightingale to undertake this work, and he
-was bitterly condemned at the time for sanctioning such an innovation as
-the introduction of a volunteer staff of thirty-seven lady nurses into a
-military hospital.[198] Nor was the Queen contented merely to help all
-these good works by her counsel, sympathy, and support. With her own
-hands she, her daughters, and the ladies of her Household knitted
-woollen comforters, socks, and mittens, and plied their needles as
-busily as the most toilworn seamstresses in the East-end, making
-under-clothing for the soldiers. Their example was quickly followed by
-every lady of leisure in the three kingdoms. Prince Albert sent fur
-coats to his brother officers in the Guards, and bountiful supplies of
-tobacco for the men. He devised a series of forms in order to extract,
-or rather extort, full information from Lord Raglan and his subordinates
-as to the condition of the troops, and it was not till his system of
-tabulated returns was adopted that the Government had the data necessary
-for devising measures of relief for the miseries of the army. On the
-first day of the year 1855, the Queen, in sending her congratulations to
-Lord Raglan, speaks in touching language of the grief which a long
-stream of Crimean reports have caused her. She urges vehemently that
-every effort be made to save her troops from privation. She even goes
-into particulars, and speaks sharply about the blunder which led to
-green coffee beans instead of ground coffee being served out--a blunder
-that was one of the notorious scandals of the time.[199]
-
-[Illustration: MISS NIGHTINGALE AND THE NURSES IN THE BARRACKS HOSPITAL
-AT SCUTARI.]
-
-One curious change in the organisation of the Ministry took place in
-1854, which, however, does not seem to have greatly concerned the Court.
-The Secretaryship of State for War had hitherto been an appendage of the
-Colonial Office. It was now made a separate Secretaryship, and, in an
-unfortunate moment for himself, the Duke of Newcastle elected to take
-the appointment, letting Sir George Grey become Secretary of State for
-the Colonies. Mr. Sidney Herbert remained as “Secretary _at_ War”--a
-Parliamentary secretary representing the War Office in the House of
-Commons,[200] Lord John Russell becoming President of the Council.[201]
-Lord John, however, who seems to have been the fly in the ointment pot
-of the Coalition, soon began to find fault with the readjustment of
-offices. In November he told Lord Aberdeen that the War Office ought to
-be put in stronger hands than those of the Duke of Newcastle. This
-suggestion, described afterwards by Mr. Disraeli as “a profligate
-intrigue” worthy of the “Memoirs” of Bubb Doddington, gave offence to
-the Queen. It seemed to her a treacherous attempt to disintegrate the
-Cabinet, and she did not conceal her sympathy with the statesman thus
-attacked. The Duke, however, generously offered to sacrifice himself so
-that Lord John Russell might not have a pretext for embarrassing the
-Crown by breaking up the Government at a critical moment; but the
-Cabinet would not permit the Duke to be sacrificed. Even Palmerston, to
-do him justice, repudiated the idea, and so Lord John again threatened
-to resign. Aberdeen met this threat by persuading the Queen to overcome
-her personal aversion to Palmerston, and obtaining her leave to appoint
-him Leader of the House of Commons, in the event of Lord John Russell
-deserting his post.
-
-Lord John, now finding that he had made a mistake, succumbed on the 16th
-of December; and so the scandal was hushed up. The Queen, however, felt
-ill at ease, for, by this time, she knew that the Ministry had no
-stability, and that Lord John would soon again give his colleagues more
-serious trouble. But he remained in the Cabinet fully cognisant of
-everything that was done by the War Department, and never expressing the
-least disapproval of its management till Parliament met in January,
-1855. Then, when Mr. Roebuck gave notice of his motion for inquiring
-into the conduct of the war, Lord John, without the slightest warning,
-resigned, saying that as he agreed with Mr. Roebuck he did not see how
-the motion could be resisted. The Duke of Newcastle again offered to
-retire in favour of Lord Palmerston, if haply Lord John Russell could be
-thereby induced to withdraw his resignation. But again, his colleagues
-refused to sacrifice him, and so they all offered to resign. This was a
-cruel blow to the Queen. She protested that there was no precedent for a
-Ministry resigning in the midst of a war till they were dismissed. She
-implored Lord Aberdeen not to desert her at a moment when the very worst
-possible effect would be produced by the spectacle of the nation
-struggling through war without a Government. The Cabinet accordingly
-determined to face Mr. Roebuck’s motion; but when he carried it against
-them, as has already been recorded, they were compelled to retire from
-office. Then the Queen had to meet one of the most perplexing and
-anxious Ministerial crises of her reign. Lord Derby was appealed to. But
-he found he could only obtain “independent support” from Lord
-Palmerston, Mr. Sidney Herbert, Mr. Gladstone, and Lord Aberdeen’s
-friends--which, he observed cynically, was “support which could never be
-depended on.” He did not seem to have much faith in his own colleagues,
-and he consequently declined to form a Ministry. But he sympathised with
-the Queen in her vexation at the turn which events had taken--quoting to
-her a remark of Walewski’s--“What influence can a country like England
-pretend to have without an army and without a Government?” Lord
-Lansdowne was next consulted. He was willing to form a Cabinet, but then
-he was old and broken in health. He could not possibly serve for more
-than a few months, and obviously his enforced retirement would again
-cast everything into confusion. Lord John Russell, of course, had long
-been under the hallucination that he could form an Administration
-without the aid of the Peelites. His cantankerous treachery to his
-colleagues, and his unscrupulous pertinacity in disintegrating the
-Coalition Cabinet in circumstances most damaging to the country,
-rendered him objectionable to the Queen. But still acting on Lansdowne’s
-advice, she determined to let him try, so that the mortification of
-failure might perchance dispel his delusion that he had still a name to
-conjure with as a Party leader. He tried, and, of course, failed
-ignominiously. No man trusted him or cared to serve under or with him.
-The Queen, however, in her letter to Lord John, very shrewdly and
-gracefully held out the olive branch to Palmerston by saying that it
-would give her great pleasure if he would join the new Government.
-Palmerston, feeling that the crisis was one which also called for
-sacrifices on his part, offered to serve even under Lord John as
-Secretary for War, if he could thereby extricate the Crown from its
-difficulties. But he deemed it imperative that Lord Clarendon should
-join the Ministry, and this Lord Clarendon stoutly refused to do. His
-colleagues, he said, had all been loyal to him, and he would not serve
-under a man who, from the time he entered the late Ministry, had
-persistently embarrassed it, and intrigued for its destruction. Lord
-John found that he had attempted the impossible, and on the 4th of
-February the country was still without a Government, to the infinite
-damage
-
-[Illustration: HENRY VIII.’S GATEWAY, WINDSOR CASTLE.]
-
-of its prestige in the eyes of foreign nations. The Czar rejoiced grimly
-at our embarrassments. The French Emperor began to doubt whether a
-stable alliance could be formed with a nation whose organic institutions
-were so unstable. The Queen accordingly put an end to Russell’s
-intrigues, which had wrought all this mischief, in a very summary
-manner. Lord Palmerston’s public-spirited behaviour in the crisis had
-obliterated all recollection of his faults in the past. Her Majesty
-therefore called on Palmerston to organise a Government. The Whigs who
-had served in the Coalition Cabinet agreed to serve under him. The
-Peelites would have done so, but they declined because of their deep
-personal regard for Aberdeen and Newcastle, who, they declared, had
-been most unjustly and spitefully attacked by the majority that had
-destroyed the Coalition Government.[202] Aberdeen and Newcastle,
-however, remonstrated with them, and the result was that Mr. Gladstone,
-Mr. Sidney Herbert, and the Duke of Argyle consented to take office
-under Palmerston. When Lord Palmerston informed the Queen of this fact
-she felt that for a time her troubles were over, that again she was
-indebted to the disinterested devotion of Lord Aberdeen for a happy
-release from her difficulties. Palmerston himself also expressed his
-gratitude to Aberdeen in strong and cordial terms.[203]
-
-[Illustration: REFRESHMENT ROOM, HOUSE OF LORDS.]
-
-The new Cabinet was really the old one. Only Russell, Aberdeen, and
-Newcastle were out of it, and Lord Panmure--a blustering person who was
-clever enough to make the world believe that to be noisy was to be
-energetic--was Secretary of State for War. This seemed rather to
-disconcert the factious place-hunters. “The Whigs at Brooks’s,” wrote
-Lady Palmerston to her son-in-law,[204] “were all up in arms at the
-Government not being formed on more Liberal principles, or rather with
-more of the Whig Party. They are disappointed at the Peelites joining,
-and at under people of that party keeping their places, so that, in a
-manner, there are hardly any places to fill up. They press, therefore,
-very much for a Whig in the Duchy of Lancaster, so as to make the
-Peelite division in a greater minority.” But the anger of the Tories
-could scarcely be kept within bounds. They argued that, as Aberdeen and
-Newcastle had not been evicted from office till after they had pretty
-nearly succeeded in setting the War Department in order, their
-successors would not only have a comparatively easy task, but would also
-win all the glory and prestige of finishing a victorious war. Lord Derby
-had missed a golden opportunity by refusing to form a Ministry; nay, he
-had done something that was still more damaging to them. In his
-explanation to the House of Lords he admitted that he could not govern
-without the aid of the Peelites. This implied that, having tried his
-colleagues in the work of administration, he had so little confidence in
-their capacity, that he did not dare to trust to them alone. “Disraeli,”
-writes Lord Malmesbury, “is in a state of disgust beyond all control. He
-told me he had spoken his mind to Lord Derby, and told him some very
-disagreeable truths.”[205] No sooner had the new Cabinet been formed
-than it was seen that another effort would be made to break it up. What
-was to be done with Mr. Roebuck’s Committee of Investigation? It was
-somewhat unconstitutional to vest it with the functions of the
-Executive, and Palmerston, on the 16th of February, appealed to the
-House not to appoint the Committee, or at least to suspend its judgment
-till the new Ministry had time to reform the War Department. Mr. Roebuck
-denied that the Ministry was really a new one, and insisted on the
-appointment of the Committee. The Peelites objected to the Committee as
-a dangerous and unconstitutional precedent. Palmerston agreed with them,
-but, like the majority of the Cabinet, he felt that to resist was to
-court another defeat in the House of Commons; and so he decided to
-yield. Sir James Graham, Mr. Sidney Herbert, and Mr. Gladstone
-accordingly tendered their resignations, and in a fortnight after it was
-formed the new Ministry was wrecked. On the 28th Sir George Cornewall
-Lewis took Mr. Gladstone’s place as Chancellor of the Exchequer, Lord
-John Russell re-entered the Cabinet as Colonial Secretary, and Sir C.
-Wood succeeded Sir J. Graham as First Lord of the Admiralty. “Things
-have gone mad here, the political world is quite crazy, and the Court is
-the only institution which does not lose its tranquil bearing”--thus
-wrote Prince Albert to the Dowager-Duchess of Coburg in the midst of the
-agitation caused by the second Ministerial crisis of 1855.
-
-Meantime much had been done by Lord Aberdeen, the Duke of Newcastle, and
-Prince Albert, to improve the condition of the army at the seat of war.
-The railway from Balaclava to the camp was being pushed on rapidly;
-reinforcements were pouring in steadily. On the 13th of March Sir J.
-Burgoyne writes that “the men are beginning to look tolerably hearty and
-cheerful again.” A Sanitary Commission, organised by Lord Shaftesbury,
-had been despatched to aid the medical staff, and there was little for
-the new Ministers to do but to follow the path which Aberdeen and
-Newcastle had, by their toil and self-sacrifice during the recess,
-smoothed for them. The Queen, like the Peelites, was of opinion that the
-Roebuck Commission could do very little good, and, by diverting the
-attention of the officials from the work in hand, might do a great deal
-of harm. It was the expression of an angry desire to punish somebody,
-and, as Prince Albert said, it could not hope to find the right person,
-“because he does not exist.”[206] If any one was to blame, it was the
-Duke of Wellington, who had left the country with a loose aggregate of
-battalions which was in no true sense an organised army--without leaders
-trained and practised in the duties of general officers; without a
-reserve, a general staff, field commissariat, ambulance, or baggage
-corps; without training in the combined use of infantry, cavalry, and
-artillery, with their various systems of supply and transport; in fact,
-without any effective instrument whatever for waging war at a distance
-from England. In vain did the Committee endeavour to fix the blame for
-the disasters in the Crimea on somebody. Mr. Roebuck soon found that an
-examination of the Duke of Newcastle would rather tend to clear than to
-damage his reputation, and then the inevitable scapegoat was sought in
-the Queen’s husband. When Mr. Roebuck consulted the Duke privately on
-the subject, his Grace told him that the only really valuable advice he
-and Lord Aberdeen got was from Prince Albert. He added that the Queen’s
-health had suffered dreadfully from her anxiety about the troops, and
-that it was therefore absurd to imagine that the Prince had been
-conspiring to wreck the expedition. The Sebastopol Committee was a
-failure. It did not succeed in saddling any one with a definite
-responsibility for the sufferings of the army; nay, the Chairman (Mr.
-Roebuck), in speaking to a resolution censuring the Aberdeen Ministry
-for their management of the war, freed the Duke of Newcastle, Mr. Sidney
-Herbert, and Sir J. Graham, the heads of the incriminated Departments,
-from blame.[207] The only severe censure was that passed on Lord Raglan
-for continuing Mr. Ward as purveyor for the hospital at Scutari after he
-had been pronounced unfit for his post.
-
-[Illustration: MR. SIDNEY HERBERT (AFTERWARDS LORD HERBERT OF LEA).]
-
-It had been agreed, partly on the advice of the Queen, to enter a new
-Conference at Vienna for the purpose of patching up a peace. To get rid
-of Lord John Russell, he was sent there by Lord Palmerston as the
-representative of England; and it was whilst he was on his way that he
-was offered and accepted the Colonial Secretaryship, vacated by the
-resignation of Mr. Sidney Herbert.[208] The basis of the Conference was
-the protocol containing the “Four Points” which had been accepted in
-principle by Russia on the 16th of
-
-[Illustration: THE WINTER PALACE, ST. PETERSBURG.]
-
-November, 1854, though Nesselrode in his despatch of 26th August to
-Prince Gortschakoff, the Russian Ambassador at Vienna, had rejected
-them. On the 2nd of March, the chief figure in the tragic drama of the
-war passed suddenly from the scene. The failure of his plans in the
-Crimea had broken the imperious spirit and proud heart of the Czar, and
-he died with words of thanks to his army on his lips. “Tell my dear
-Fritz” (the King of Prussia), he said to the Czarina with his last
-breath, “to continue the friend of Russia, and faithful to the last
-words of papa”--faithful, that is, to the principles of the Holy
-Alliance. The old monarchies and the old conservatism of Europe thus
-lost their most powerful champion, and a seventh part of the globe found
-a new master. The Emperor Nicholas was succeeded by his son, Alexander
-II., who immediately proclaimed his intention of following out loyally
-the policy which his father had inherited with his crown. On the 10th of
-March, Nesselrode intimated to the Russian Agents abroad that the young
-Czar would enter the Vienna Conference “in a sincere spirit of concord.”
-And as it was only possible to secure the neutrality of Austria by
-keeping alive negotiations for peace, Russia had a powerful motive for
-continuing them. But at the meetings of the Conference Prince
-Gortschakoff refused to accept the plan for giving effect to the Third
-Point. It proposed to destroy Russian preponderance in the Black Sea, by
-binding her and Turkey never to have there more than “four ships, four
-frigates, with a proportionate number of light vessels and of unarmoured
-vessels exclusively adapted to the transport of troops.” Russia, as an
-alternative, suggested that ships of war of all nations might have free
-access through the Dardanelles or Bosphorus to the Black Sea, or, if it
-were preferred, that the Sultan might admit the vessels of the Western
-Powers, or of Russia, in such numbers as he pleased. This would, of
-course, enable the Western Powers to check Russian preponderance. But it
-would also involve the right of Russia to send ships to the
-Mediterranean. To that the Western Powers would not consent, and so the
-Conference was at an end. At this stage Count Buol suggested a
-compromise. Why not, he asked, solve the difficulty by applying the
-principle of counterpoise? One way of doing that obviously would be to
-establish an actual equilibrium between the Black Sea fleets of Turkey
-and Russia--the Sultan having the right to open the straits to the ships
-of his allies if threatened with attack. M. de Drouyn Lhuys and Lord
-John Russell did not consider that their instructions permitted them to
-accept this compromise. But they both privately expressed their personal
-approval of it, and promised to urge the Governments of France and
-England to assent to it. The French Emperor and the British Cabinet
-rejected it. M. Drouyn de Lhuys accordingly resigned office--whereas
-Lord John Russell remained in the Cabinet. But he had the amazing
-indiscretion after this to advocate the prosecution of the war in an
-extravagant speech,[209] whereupon the Austrian Government revealed the
-fact that at Vienna he had said peace might be honourably made on the
-basis of Count Buol’s compromise. No English Minister in our time has
-ever placed himself in a more humiliating position. Not a word could be
-said in his defence. All he himself could say was that he was afraid he
-might embarrass his colleagues if he retired, or if he let it be known
-that he thought they were carrying on war, when peace might honourably
-be concluded. The outcry against his dishonesty was so loud, that he
-resigned as soon as Sir E. B. Lytton gave notice of a motion in the
-House of Commons condemning his conduct.
-
-The failure of the Conference gave rise to heated debates in Parliament,
-in which the Government was attacked by a curious combination of
-Parties. The House of Lords with singular want of patriotism and dignity
-encouraged Lyndhurst to vilipend Prussia and sneer at Austria, at the
-very moment when it was vital to our diplomatic success to conciliate
-these Powers. His violent speeches prove that, despite his eloquence, he
-lacked the one quality necessary to justify his interference in any
-debate on Foreign Affairs. He was utterly incapable of appreciating the
-difference between the interests of England and France, and those of
-Austria in the negotiations--the difference between the interests and
-the prepossessions of actual and contingent belligerents. But all this
-criticism of the Conference, even from the point of view taken by
-rhetorical mischief-makers like Lyndhurst, failed to lay bare the one
-blunder in strategy which the Plenipotentiaries had perpetrated.[210]
-The House of Commons, it must be allowed, came out of the debates more
-creditably than had been expected. The Tories, led by Mr. Disraeli,
-seemed to keep their heads cool, and scrupulously refrained from
-clamouring for war because Russia had rejected the Third Point. They
-refused to support the Radicals, who were for moving an Address to the
-Crown virtually binding the Government to accept the Austrian proposals.
-But they condemned the Ministers for the ambiguity of their policy in
-reference to these proposals, and brought forward a motion assuring the
-Crown that the House would support the Executive to the utmost in
-prosecuting war till peace was obtained. The combative Whigs would have
-committed Parliament to a declaration that the reduction of the naval
-power of Russia in the Black Sea, was the essential condition of peace.
-In the end, a motion, which was the Tory proposal with the implied
-censure on the Ministry cut out, was carried. But all through the
-debate, Peelites, Tories, and Radicals condemned the suggestion to limit
-the naval power of Russia by Treaty. And they were right, for, as Mr.
-Gladstone is reported to have said in conversation, it was a proposal
-“to slap Russia on the face without tying her hands.” It was, in fact,
-an attempt to inflict on Russia a perpetual indignity without reducing
-her real power, which was not naval but military. Mr. Disraeli and Lord
-Robert Cecil--afterwards Lord Salisbury--considered it an impolitic
-scheme for the humiliation of Russia, and the ablest debaters pointed
-out that it was one which Russia would ever be tempted to violate,
-whilst the Powers had now no check on her save that of chronic war. Yet
-it was for the sake of forcing this indignity on Russia, who had now
-yielded every demand we made when we invaded the Crimea, that the war
-was prolonged! From this moment, it is not too much to say, that the war
-was no longer a hateful but an unavoidable incident of State policy. It
-was the consummation of a hideous crime against humanity, for which Lord
-Palmerston and his colleagues were directly responsible.[211]
-
-[Illustration: GRAND RECEPTION ROOM, WINDSOR CASTLE]
-
-When Lord John Russell excused himself for first recommending the
-Austrian compromise, and then backing out of his opinion and advocating
-war, he said mysteriously that something had come to his knowledge which
-altered his views. It was suggested at the time by Mr. Disraeli that
-Lord John was overawed by the objections of the Emperor of the French to
-the compromise. Even had that been the case, it would not have justified
-him in remaining in the Cabinet, seeing that the Emperor’s Minister, who
-was in
-
-[Illustration: THE HUNDRED STEPS, WINDSOR CASTLE.]
-
-like case, had resigned rather than hold himself responsible for an
-indefensible war. It is, however, possible to account for Lord John’s
-conduct more easily by attributing it to sycophancy than to treachery,
-for it is a regrettable fact that when the Austrian project was laid
-before the Queen by Lord Clarendon, she used all her influence to quash
-it. She wrote to him a curt note saying:--“How Lord John Russell and M.
-Drouyn can recommend such proposals to our acceptance is beyond her (the
-Queen’s) comprehension.” Then she encloses a brief memorandum from
-Prince Albert, in which he says:--“To limit the Russian naval power to
-that existing in 1853 would therefore be simply to perpetuate and
-legalise the preponderance of Russia in the Black Sea, a proposal which
-can neither be made nor accepted as a development of the Third
-Point.”[212] It is unfortunate that such clear thinkers as the Queen and
-her husband did not observe that what Austria fixed was merely the
-maximum and not the minimum limit, that by mutual agreement Russia and
-Turkey might cut down their ships from six to one if they chose, and
-that even the maximum could be always counterbalanced by Turkey. Yet
-Prince Albert would insist that a proposal which automatically
-established an equilibrium was one to perpetuate a preponderance! It is
-only fair to the memory of the late Emperor of the French to say that,
-according to Sir Theodore Martin’s admissions, the first strong and
-contemptuous rejection of the Austrian compromise came from the Queen;
-that when Napoleon III. first considered the matter he hesitated before
-endorsing the views which Palmerston and his colleagues meekly accepted
-from the Court. What renders the policy of the Court--or rather of Baron
-Stockmar, who inspired it--at this stage unintelligible is, that a month
-afterwards it actually pressed upon the Cabinet a proposal for
-organising a great League of the Powers to defend Turkey diplomatically
-against Russia. This proposal was made on the ground that it was
-impossible to inflict on Russia such losses as would force her to submit
-to humiliating terms.[213]
-
-Nor was this the only instance which can be adduced of mistaken
-interference on the part of the Court. When Palmerston succeeded in
-forming his Government, he pledged himself to follow out the foreign
-policy of Lord Aberdeen. Aberdeen’s friends had publicly declared that
-the terms which we sought to impose on Russia were needlessly
-humiliating, and that in the Austrian compromise there was an ample
-basis for a fair settlement, and a good reason for continuing
-negotiations at Vienna. It was a matter of notoriety that Aberdeen
-himself shared these views, and there were many who complained
-querulously that if they had not destroyed his Ministry, the Vienna
-Conference would not have been abortive. In these circumstances Prince
-Albert, knowing Aberdeen’s devotion to the Queen, wrote to him
-complaining especially about Mr. Gladstone’s speech on Mr. Disraeli’s
-motion of the 24th of May. For the rejection of that motion had not
-ended the controversy. Sir F. Baring’s amendment, which was finally
-carried, was coming up for discussion on the 4th of June, and the Court
-evidently did not desire a repetition of speeches containing
-unanswerable arguments against abandoning negotiations for peace.[214]
-Aberdeen, in fact, is summoned in this letter to the Palace to be
-lectured. He is warned that the conduct of his party has displeased the
-Queen, and he is warned in a tone only to be justified by the close
-relations of personal friendship, which bound him to the Court, and the
-Court to him.
-
-The Queen and Prince Albert, however, utterly failed to gag the Peelites
-in the debate, or browbeat them into approving of the continuance of a
-bloody and wasteful war, when an honourable peace could be obtained by
-patient diplomacy. To his honour it must be stated that Sir James
-Graham,[215] Lord Aberdeen’s representative in the House of Commons,
-delivered a speech which was even much more damaging and convincing than
-Mr. Gladstone’s. Nobody attempted to answer it except Mr. Roebuck. His
-tirade of invective sprang from a delusion that Graham was willing to be
-satisfied with paltry concessions as the result of a great war. As he
-afterwards confessed, he was completely misled by the ferocity with
-which Lord John Russell in this debate condemned as worthless the very
-settlement which he had vainly urged his colleagues to accept as
-satisfactory. In truth, there is some reason to suspect that the
-harassing toil of winter, the prolonged and exhausting anxieties of a
-sad and pitiless war, had temporarily blunted Prince Albert’s keen
-perceptions. Had this not been the case he would hardly have delivered
-at the Trinity House banquet in June, the famous speech in which he said
-that “Constitutional Government is under a heavy trial”--as if the
-failure of obsolete leaders in the field, or the stupid bigotries and
-moral cowardice of place-hunters in council, proved that Constitutional
-Government was a dubious experiment. At a moment when the Queen’s
-personal interference with the Foreign Policy of her Government, usually
-so wise, prudent, and beneficial, had led to bad results, it was
-maladroit on the part of Prince Albert to gird at Constitutional
-Government. Very little reflection should have served to show the Court
-that it was only under the Muscovite autocracy that blunders in war and
-statecraft, _more_ ghastly even than our own, could possibly be
-perpetrated.
-
-When the Conference at Vienna closed, Austria, as might have been
-foreseen, refused to join England in carrying on the war. On the other
-hand, the King of Sardinia had, on 26th January, entered into a military
-convention with the Allies, and, in return for their guarantee of his
-territory, engaged to send an army of 15,000 men to the Crimea.
-
-The war in 1855 was carried on under more favourable conditions than in
-the previous year. Reinforcements were sent out quickly. The
-commissariat, sanitary, and transport services were put into effective
-working order. On the 17th of February, the Turks under Omar Pasha
-gallantly repelled a Russian attack on Eupatoria--a feat which revived
-the drooping spirits of the Allies, and restored confidence in the
-fighting power of the Osmanli. The news of this defeat was peculiarly
-humiliating to the Czar, whose contempt for the Turk was unbounded, and
-his bitter vexation at being beaten by a despised enemy, perhaps had
-some effect in undermining the vitality of his iron constitution. The
-bombardment of Sebastopol began again in April--but, though the allied
-trenches were pushed closer and closer to the fortress, no serious
-impression was made on it. The English troops were eager for action, but
-Canrobert’s weakness and irresolution held Lord Raglan back.[216]
-
-On the 19th of May Canrobert resigned in favour of Pélissier--a soldier
-with a name stained by barbarous atrocities in Africa, but still a man
-of energy and determination. In a moment of happy inspiration it was
-determined to intercept the supplies which the enemy was drawing from
-his Circassian provinces; and on the 22nd of May an expedition of 3,800
-English, 7,500 French, and 5,000 Turks, under Sir George Brown and
-General d’Autemarre, left for Cape Takli at the south-west extremity of
-the Straits of Kertch. It arrived there on the 24th. The Russians
-evacuated Kertch on the 25th, destroying before they left vast
-quantities of food and forage. The troops penetrated as far as Yenikale,
-and Captain Lyons, with his little fleet of steamers, advancing up the
-Sea of Azov, destroyed not only many ships but a large amount of stores.
-This expedition was cleverly planned, and it destroyed supplies
-sufficient for an army of 100,000 men for four months. It returned on
-the 12th of June. Writing to Stockmar on the 17th of June Prince Albert
-says, “At the seat of war everything is going on well.... Pélissier is a
-_trouvaille_, energetic, and determined. Oddly enough, they are in Paris
-(I mean Louis Napoleon is) very much dissatisfied since our successes,
-‘low’ about our prospects, anxious, &c. I am at a loss to know why.” The
-fact is, that the war was more unpopular in France than ever, since the
-rejection of the Austrian compromise at Vienna, and the Emperor’s
-proposal to go out to the Crimea, and command in person alarmed Persigny
-and the Bonapartists as to the safety of the Imperial _régime_. Failure
-meant ruin, and failure was on the cards.[217] Yet, on the 7th of June,
-the Allies had met with a brilliant success. The French stormed the
-Mamelon, and the English the Gravel Pits--an outwork in front of the
-Redan. But the two formidable works--the Malakoff and Redan--were yet to
-be taken, and in an evil moment Lord Raglan was persuaded by Pélissier
-to sanction a combined attack on these strong-holds. The ablest
-practical soldiers in the British camp declared that the Redan could not
-be taken by direct assault, though it must fall if the Malakoff were
-captured. Raglan was of that opinion himself. But he yielded to his
-French colleague, and the result of the combined attack on both places
-was a painful failure. French and English were alike repulsed, and the
-loss of life which this blunder caused was sickening to contemplate.
-“Cries of ‘Murder!’” writes Mr. Russell, the _Times_ correspondent,
-“from the lips of expiring officers have been echoed through the camp,
-but they have now died away in silence, or in the noise of active
-argument and discussion.”[218] Heartbroken by this defeat, Lord Raglan
-took to his bed and died on the 28th of June.
-
-[Illustration: VIEW IN THE CRIMEA: THE PALACE WORONZOW, ALUPKA.]
-
-The shock of Raglan’s death silenced at the time all just criticism on
-his career. The most that can be said for him is said by Lord Malmesbury
-in his “Memoirs of an Ex-Minister.” “I knew him well,” he writes, “and
-cannot recollect a finer character. He was the Duke’s right-hand man
-through the Peninsular war, and was greatly esteemed by him. Handsome
-and high-bred in person, and charming in society, he was one of the most
-popular of its members. He was remarkable for his coolness under fire,
-and St. Arnaud, in his famous despatch after the battle of the Alma,
-says of him: ‘Il avait toujours ce même calme qui ne le quitte jamais.’”
-It is, alas! not given to every man to wield the Arthurian brand
-Excalibur, and whatever he may have been in the Peninsula under
-Wellington, in the Crimea, Raglan was almost as incompetent as St.
-Arnaud, Canrobert, and Menschikoff. His blunders were as follows: (1),
-According to Sir T. Martin, he approved of the invasion of the Crimea in
-utter ignorance of the ground, when the campaign was proposed by the
-French Emperor.[219] (2), He consented to invade the Crimea _after_ he
-had discovered that it was a mad project, and when the discretionary
-clause in his instructions from the Duke of Newcastle gave him an
-opportunity of remonstrating with the Cabinet. (3), He invaded the
-Crimea without an organised Transport Corps. (4), His blunders at the
-Alma, Balaclava, and Inkermann have been already noted. (5), Till
-pressure was put on him by Prince Albert, he concealed the miserable
-state of the army from the Government. (6), By neglecting to make a road
-between Balaclava and his camp he brought all the miseries of the winter
-of ’54-’55 on his troops. (7), By attacking the Redan when he knew quite
-well it was impossible to capture it, he doomed his troops to useless
-and avoidable slaughter. No defence has been made for him except on the
-last two counts of the heavy indictment against him. He did not make a
-road from Balaclava to the camp, says Mr. Kinglake, because he had not
-enough men at his disposal. This is an explanation rather than a
-defence. His first duty as a general was to connect his camp with his
-base. If he was unable to do that, he ought to have abandoned his
-position. But is not Mr. Kinglake’s defence just a little absurd, taken
-in connection with the Homeric episodes of the war? Had anybody enough
-men to do anything great or valuable in the Crimea? Campbell had not
-enough men to turn the tide of battle, in our favour at the Alma. But he
-did it. He had not enough men to save our base at Balaclava--but he
-saved it. Scarlett and Cardigan had not enough men to break through the
-Russian columns in “the Valley of Death”--but they broke through them.
-The Duke of Cambridge had not enough men to hold his ground at
-Inkermann--but he and his Guards held it, till it was positively soaked
-and saturated with their blood. Mr. Kinglake’s advocacy, indeed,
-provokes one to say that scarcity of men never kept Lord Raglan back
-from any enterprise, when, as at Balaclava and the Redan, the only
-attainable end was the purposeless butchery of his battalions. The
-feeble attack on the Redan has been justified on the ground that, as
-Pélissier was determined to assault the Malakoff, and was certain to be
-beaten, he was equally certain to attribute his defeat to the timidity
-of the English, unless they co-operated with him. It is, however, the
-business of an English general to win battles for his country--not to
-lose them in deference to the childish petulance of a foreign colleague.
-At the same time, it must be admitted that Raglan was greatly
-embarrassed from the first by his French coadjutors, and it is because
-some of his errors sprang from enforced concessions to their views, that
-these have been omitted from the present catalogue of his blunders. The
-truth is, that Lord Raglan was really a diplomatist, and his diplomatic
-ability was essential to the consolidation of our military alliance with
-France in the field. That was the sole justification for his appointment
-as Commander-in-Chief. His personal courage--rivalling that of
-antiquity, said St. Arnaud--was the only soldierly quality he possessed.
-“He was a very perfect gentle knight,” too sweetly graceful for the rude
-ravishment of war, or the weary travail of a siege. His generosity of
-heart, his charm of manner, his exquisite tact, his serene temper, his
-chivalrous sense of honour, his high and courtly bearing, rendered him
-worthy of
-
- “The goodliest fellowship of famous knights,
- Whereof this world holds record”--
-
-though not worthy to hold the post to which he was appointed in the
-Crimea. But if he was not a great general, he was a great gentleman; and
-so, when he passed away, the hand of censure fell very lightly on his
-career.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXII.
-
-ROYALTY AND THE WAR.
-
- Financing the War--The Queen’s Opinion of War Loans--A Dreadful
- Winter--Distress in the Country--The “Devil” in Devonshire--Bread
- Riots--War Loans and a War Budget--The Queen and the Wounded
- Soldiers--Her Condemnation of “the Hulks”--Presentation of War
- Medals in Hyde Park--Visit of the Emperor and Empress of the
- French--A Plot to Capture the Queen--Councils of War at
- Windsor--The Grand Chapter of the Order of the Garter--Imperial
- Compliments--Napoleon III. in the City--At the Opera--The Queen’s
- Birthday Gift to the Emperor--Scarlet Fever at Osborne--Prorogation
- of Parliament--A Court Intrigue with Dom Pedro of Portugal--The
- Queen Visits Paris--Her Reception at St. Cloud--The Ball at the
- Hôtel de Ville--Staring at the “Koh-i-noor”--At the Tomb of the
- Great Emperor--Prince Bismarck’s Introduction to the Queen--Home
- again--Lord Clarendon on the Queen’s Visit to Paris--How the Prince
- of Wales Enjoyed himself--At Balmoral--The Bonfire on Craig
- Gowan--Sebastopol Rejoicings--“A Witches’ Dance supported by
- Whisky”--Courtship of the Princess Royal--Prince Frederick William
- of Prussia--His Proposal of Marriage--Attacks of the _Times_--Visit
- of Victor Emmanuel--His Reputation in Paris--Memorial of the
- Grenadier Guards--Fresh Charges against Prince Albert--His
- Vindication of the Crimean Officers.
-
-
-Early in 1855 her Majesty became anxious, not to say nervous, as to the
-plans that were to be adopted for financing the war. Her personal
-prepossessions were all in favour of Mr. Gladstone’s policy--which was
-that of meeting expenditure out of current revenue. But then the cost of
-the campaign was now so enormous that it was impossible to increase
-taxation so as to cover it. The winter had been severe. Though the end
-of December and the first thirteen days of January had been like summer,
-during the night of the 13th, says Sir F. Hastings Doyle, “the wind
-shifted suddenly to the N.N.E., and a savage frost came on which lasted
-at least two months without intermission or abatement.”[220] Outdoor
-workers found themselves without employment. Gangs of hungry-eyed
-labouring men began to parade the streets of London, levying black-mail
-on well-to-do householders. Ultimately mobs of roughs attacked and
-plundered the bakers’ and chandlers’ shops in the East End on the 21st
-and 22nd of February, and in Liverpool, where some 15,000 riverside
-labourers were out of work, terrible scenes of riot and outrage were
-enacted. It was a time when the abstraction of capital from the country
-by raising a war loan would be a slight evil, compared with that which
-might follow from the imposition of heavy war taxes on a discontented
-and suffering industrial population. It was therefore decided that the
-cost of the war should be met by a loan.
-
-Sir George Cornewall Lewis brought forward his Budget on the 30th of
-April. He could estimate for a prospective revenue of £63,000,000. This,
-however, still left him with a deficit of £23,000,000, which he raised
-(1), by a Three per Cent. Loan of £16,000,000; (2), by an addition to
-taxation which brought in £4,000,000; (3), by raising £3,000,000 on
-Exchequer Bills. “The additional taxes,” Sir George Lewis wrote to his
-friend Sir E. Head, “were, however, assented to without resistance by
-the House, who feared a larger addition to the Income Tax, and thought
-that if they objected to my proposition, taxes which they disliked still
-more would be substituted.” As for the loan, the Money Market, he says,
-“was in a state favourable for such an operation; for at present there
-is an abundance of money, but a want of profitable investment for the
-purpose of trade.”[221] The loan of £2,000,000 to Sardinia was
-sanctioned without much demur, but the loan of £5,000,000 to Turkey was
-violently objected to--especially by the Tories and Cobdenites. It was
-raised under the joint guarantee of France and England--an arrangement
-which many people thought might create disputes between the guarantors.
-Lord Palmerston, in fact, only carried the loan through by a vote of 135
-to 132. Lord Aberdeen’s followers opposed the transaction, and their
-opposition was resented by the Queen, who had already concluded and
-ratified the arrangement with the French Emperor for guaranteeing the
-loan.
-
-[Illustration: THE WOUNDED SOLDIER’S TOAST--“THE QUEEN!”]
-
-In other respects, however, the relations of the Court to the war were
-less open to criticism. It has already been stated how her Majesty
-toiled with her own hands to aid those who were striving to mitigate the
-sufferings of the army during the Crimean winter. She wrote a letter to
-the Commander-in-Chief on the subject that touched the heart of every
-soldier in camp or hospital. Mr. Augustus Stafford, in the debate on Mr.
-Roebuck’s motion in the House of Commons (26th of January), thrilled his
-audience by telling them how he saw a wounded man, after hearing the
-letter read, propose the Queen’s health in a draught of bark and
-quinine. Mr. Stafford said to him it was a bitter cup for a loyal toast;
-to which the man replied, with a smile, “Yes, and but for these words of
-the Queen I could not have got it down.” Nor was her Majesty less
-assiduous in her attention to the wounded, when their haggard and
-mournful contingents began to return. On the 3rd of March she went down
-to Chatham with her husband and her two eldest sons to inspect the
-Military Hospital at Fort Pitt and Brompton. The wounded men who could
-crawl from their beds were drawn up on the lawn, each bearing a card
-with a description of his name, services, and wounds. Along this gaunt
-array the Queen passed, sad-eyed and thoughtful, speaking a few kind and
-cheering words to the sufferers whose wounds or services especially
-attracted her notice. Contemporary reports of course stated that the
-Sovereign was well pleased with the manner in which those poor men were
-treated. But two days afterwards she sent a sharp letter to Lord
-Panmure, which showed that she had been using her eyes to good purpose
-during her inspection. He must, she says, have some really serviceable
-military hospitals built for the sick without delay. The poor men at
-Fort Pitt were well treated; but, she complains, “the buildings are
-bad--the wards more like prisons than hospitals, with the windows so
-high that no one can look out of them--and the most of the wards are
-small, with hardly space to walk between the beds.” Her criticisms on
-the dining arrangements are trenchant; and then she goes on to argue
-that though Lord Panmure’s plan of building hulks may do very well at
-first, it will not do for any length of time. “A hulk,” she contends,
-“is a very gloomy place, and these poor men require their spirits to be
-cheered, as much as to have their physical sufferings attended to. The
-Queen is particularly anxious on this subject, which is, she may truly
-say, constantly in her thoughts, as, indeed, is everything connected
-with her beloved troops, who have fought so bravely and borne so
-heroically all their sufferings and privations.”[222]
-
-“I myself,” said Queen Elizabeth to her troops at Tilbury, “will be your
-general and your judge, and the rewarder of every one of your virtues in
-the field.” If Queen Victoria has never either in statecraft or power
-attained the position held by that leonine woman, she did not fail to
-emulate her in her devotion to the gallant men who bled and died for
-England in the desolate Chersonese. The Queen’s visit to the hospital at
-Chatham, and her reception there by the soldiers, prompted her to take
-the unusual course of suggesting to Lord Clarendon, on the 22nd of
-March, that she should with her own hands present war medals to the
-officers and men who were at home disabled or on leave. On the 18th of
-May a Royal daïs was accordingly put up in the centre of the Horse
-Guards parade ground, with barriers enclosing from the crowd of
-spectators, a space for the heroes of the ceremony. At eleven o’clock
-the Queen, Prince Albert, and their family appeared, and at a signal the
-soldiers who were to be decorated stood before her. They passed along in
-single file, each handing a card recording his name and services to an
-officer, who delivered it to the Queen. She then presented each hero
-with his medal, saying a kindly word to every man as he went by. It was
-a strange and impressive spectacle. Gaunt, pallid forms, maimed and
-
-[Illustration: THE QUEEN DISTRIBUTING THE CRIMEAN MEDAL AT THE
-HORSEGUARDS PARADE GROUND.]
-
-mutilated, hobbled along on crutches--or staggered forward, aided by
-walking-sticks--and for officers and men alike the Queen had words of
-sympathy that drew tears from many an eye. From the highest Prince of
-the blood--the Duke of Cambridge was the first to step forward for his
-medal--to the humblest private, writes the Queen to King Leopold, “all
-received the same distinction for the bravest conduct in the severest
-actions, and the rough hands of the brave and honest private soldier
-came for the first time in contact with that of their Sovereign and
-their Queen. Noble fellows! I feel as if they were my own children; my
-heart beats for them as for my nearest and dearest.”[223] Captain
-Currie, of the 14th, was so feeble that he almost failed to reach the
-daïs on his crutches, and his condition profoundly touched the heart of
-the Queen. Captain Sayer, of the 23rd Fusiliers, could not be lifted out
-of his chair, so the Queen bent over him gracefully and pinned his medal
-to his breast, with a few words of comfort and hope. Colonel Sir T.
-Troubridge, of the 7th Fusiliers, who, when he had both his feet shot
-away at Inkermann, refused to leave his command till the battle was won,
-was also unable to leave his chair. When the Queen gave him his medal
-she whispered in his ear that she would reward his courage by making him
-one of her own aides-de-camp, whereupon he answered, “I am now amply
-repaid for everything.” It was a scene which moved the hearts of all who
-took part in it, with the exception, perhaps, of the brusque and
-churlish Secretary of State for War. Lord Malmesbury says, “After the
-ceremony, Lady Seymour, whom I met, told me that Mrs. Norton, talking
-about it to Lord Panmure, asked, ‘Was the Queen touched?’ ‘Bless my
-soul, no!’ was the reply. ‘She had a brass railing in front of her, and
-no one could touch her.’ Mrs. Norton then said, ‘I mean was she moved?’
-‘Moved!’ answered Lord Panmure, ‘she had no occasion to move.’ Mrs.
-Norton then gave it up in despair.”[224]
-
-When the Emperor of the French first hinted at his intention of going to
-the Crimea, the idea frightened everybody. His own _entourage_, knowing
-his ignorance of the art of war, and convinced that defeat meant ruin
-for him and for them, were in despair. The Queen, too, was alarmed,
-because she foresaw infinite danger from the scheme. The Emperor would
-naturally desire to take supreme command of both armies, whereas the
-English people would not permit British troops to serve under a foreign
-sovereign, whose antecedents were doubtful, and whose friendship was
-uncertain. The French and English Governments therefore privately
-suggested to the Queen that she should now invite the Emperor and
-Empress to pay their promised visit to England, hoping that the Queen’s
-influence might be used for the purpose of preventing him from
-proceeding to the seat of war.[225] The invitation was accepted, and
-the rooms in Windsor which had been occupied by the Czar Nicholas and
-King Louis Philippe were set apart for the Imperial guests.
-
-[Illustration: WINDSOR CASTLE FROM THE BROCAS.]
-
-At noon on the 16th of April, after some mishaps in the dense fog which
-shrouded the Channel, the Imperial yacht reached the Admiralty Pier at
-Dover, where Prince Albert was waiting to receive his guests. The Prince
-went on board, shook hands with the Emperor, and then going down to the
-cabin reappeared with the Empress on his arm. They landed amidst
-complimentary salvoes of artillery from the castle, the salutes of the
-military, and the ringing cheers of the crowd. The Royal party then
-proceeded to London, and when they arrived at the Bricklayers’ Arms
-Station, they found dense masses of people assembled to welcome them.
-Their route lay along the line of streets leading to the Great Western
-station, where they took train for Windsor. Lord Malmesbury writes in
-his Diary, “Lady Ossulton, Lady Manners, my wife and I went to Lord
-Carrington’s house in Whitehall to see the Emperor of the French pass.
-The weather was beautiful and bright, the streets were choked with
-people. The _cortège_ made its appearance at 6.15 p.m.; there were but
-six open carriages, four of them escorted by a squadron of Life Guards,
-and a good many outriders in scarlet liveries. They passed very slowly
-at a walk
-
-[Illustration: THE QUEEN INVESTING THE EMPEROR OF THE FRENCH WITH THE
-ORDER OF THE GARTER.]
-
-and were enthusiastically cheered the whole way from the South Eastern
-to the Great Western terminus.... On going up St. James’s Street, the
-Emperor was seen to point out to the Empress the house where he formerly
-lived in King Street. This was at once understood by the crowd, who
-cheered louder than ever. On passing the Horse Guards the Emperor stood
-up in his carriage and saluted the colours, and was of course immensely
-cheered.”[226] At Windsor the excitement was intense, and the Queen was
-on tiptoe of expectation. Referring to the arrival of the visitors, she
-writes, “I cannot say what indescribable emotions filled me--how much
-all seemed like a wonderful dream. These great meetings of sovereigns,
-surrounded by very exciting accompaniments, are always very
-agitating.”[227] Her Majesty advanced and the Emperor kissed her hand.
-She saluted him once on each cheek, and then, as she says, “embraced the
-very gentle, very graceful, and evidently very nervous Empress.” The
-Duke of Cambridge and the Prince of Leiningen and the Royal children
-were presented--“Vicky (now Princess Imperial of Germany) with very
-alarmed eyes making very low curtesies.” In the Throne Room other
-presentations followed. At dinner, however, the Emperor put the Queen
-quite at her ease. He assumed the soft, low voice and the melancholy
-manner of the hero of some romance of mystery. They talked about the
-war--the Queen gently dissuading him from going to the Crimea, he
-mournfully expressing his apprehension of disasters unless he went out,
-and complaining of the blunders of the generals. Next morning (the 17th)
-the subject was renewed during a long walk after breakfast. This time
-the Empress was eager in pressing the Emperor to proceed to Sebastopol,
-where, she said with truth, he was perhaps safer than in Paris. In the
-afternoon the Royal Family and their Imperial guests reviewed the
-Household troops, surrounded by gay crowds, full of effusive enthusiasm
-for our Allies. At dinner they discussed the manifold iniquities of
-Austria, and mourned over her decadence, because she would not fight to
-vindicate a plan for reducing the Russian navy in the Black Sea to six
-ships instead of eight. At night there was a ball in the Waterloo
-Room--an odd place in which to find the granddaughter of George III.
-dancing with the nephew of Napoleon I. The sombre memories of the hall,
-however, did not prevent the Queen’s guest from dancing, as she herself
-records, “with great dignity and spirit.” Next morning (the 18th) at
-breakfast the Emperor received a telegram announcing the death of M.
-Ducos, the Minister of Marine,[228] and at eleven o’clock a grand
-Council of War was held in the Emperor’s rooms, at which those present
-were Prince Albert, Lords Palmerston, Panmure, Hardinge, and Cowley,
-Sir Charles Wood, Sir John Burgoyne, Count Walewski, and Marshal
-Vaillant. “Something should be done somewhere, and by somebody in the
-Crimea,” seems to have been the resolution to which the council came.
-Though unanimous in urging the Emperor not to go there, it failed to
-convince him that he ought to stay at home. In the afternoon Prince
-Albert, when out walking with the Emperor, submitted a plan of his own
-for reorganising the Allied Forces, which the Emperor approved. It was
-sent on to Palmerston, Panmure, Hardinge, and Burgoyne, and they
-resolved to draw up a memorandum on the subject for the next Conference.
-
-The Council of War of the 18th sat on from 11 till 2 p.m., and at 4 p.m.
-a Grand Chapter of the Order of the Garter was held in the Throne
-Room--the Emperor being invested with the insignia of the Order--in all
-the pomp and circumstance of Royal State. The Queen sat at the head of
-the table with a vacant chair on her right hand; Garter King-at-Arms
-summoned each Knight in the order of his creation, beginning with the
-Marquis of Exeter and ending with Lord Aberdeen. The Prelate of the
-Order read the new statute dispensing with existing statutes in favour
-of the Emperor of the French, who was then introduced by Prince Albert
-and the Duke of Cambridge. The Queen and the assembled Knights stood up
-to receive the Emperor, who passed on and sat in the chair on the
-Queen’s right hand. Her Majesty having proclaimed the Emperor’s
-election, the King-at-Arms presented the Garter to the Queen, who,
-assisted by her husband, buckled it on the Emperor’s left leg, after
-which she placed the riband over his Majesty’s left shoulder, the
-Chancellor of the Order pronouncing the admonition. The accolade was
-then presented to the new Knight, and the ceremony was over. “It is one
-bond the more,” said the Emperor as he walked with the Queen to his
-apartments--“I have given my oath of fidelity to your Majesty and to
-your country.” But all the world knows, neither bond nor oath was strong
-enough to prevent him from subsequently intriguing with Russia against
-England, when the Congress of Paris met to settle the questions raised
-by the sudden termination of the Crimean War. Yet, the Imperial
-flatteries served the purpose of the moment, for the Queen wrote, “These
-words are very valuable from a man like him, who is not profuse in
-phrases, and who is very steady of purpose.”[229] After dinner her
-Majesty seems to have been chiefly amused by Marshal Vaillant’s
-confidential conversation with her, in which he manifested great terror
-lest the Emperor would take command of the Army in the Crimea. In the
-evening there was an orchestral concert. “The Queen, Emperor, and
-Empress,” writes Lord Malmesbury, “with the Royal Family, their suites,
-and those invited to the banquet, entered soon after ten, and seated
-themselves without speaking to any one. As soon as music was over the
-company passed before the Queen and Emperor.... The Queen had arranged
-everything herself, made out the lists of invitations for both parties
-at Windsor, and the concert for to-morrow at Buckingham Palace. Very
-few, except Cabinet Ministers, are asked twice. Even Lady Breadalbane,
-who is one of the Court, was invited only for the evening party last
-night, and had to sleep at a pastrycook’s, there being no room at the
-Castle.”[230]
-
-[Illustration: THE WATERLOO ROOM, WINDSOR CASTLE.]
-
-Next day (the 19th) the Emperor and Empress had to visit the City, and
-hosts and guests seemed alike sad and nervous when the Royal party set
-forth. There was just a chance that some sufferer from the crime of
-December, 1851, might wreak his vengeance on the perpetrator of it. The
-Lord Mayor and Corporation, however, gave their guests a splendid
-reception. London decked itself forth with loyal bunting. Crowds cheered
-the Emperor and Empress on their way, and the town rang with “_Partant
-pour la Syrie_,” which dismal air Cockneydom in those days preferred to
-the “Marseillaise,” as the symbol of the French alliance, and, perhaps,
-also as being less trying to the nerves of its guest.[231] The
-Corporation gave their Imperial visitor a sumptuous banquet. With
-characteristic delicacy of taste they served him with sherry, which
-
-[Illustration: THE ROYAL AND IMPERIAL VISIT TO THE CRYSTAL PALACE: THE
-PROCESSION DOWN THE NAVE.]
-
-they produced proudly, because it was from the famous butt that had been
-bought for £600 by Napoleon I. in his palmy days. In the evening the
-Imperial visitors went with the Queen to the opera, where _Fidelio_ was
-played. “We literally drove through a sea of human beings,” writes the
-Queen, “cheering and pressing near the carriage.”[232] When the Royal
-party appeared after the first act was over, the audience in Her
-Majesty’s Theatre rose and hailed them with deafening cheers, the Queen
-leading the Emperor and Prince Albert the Empress forward, so as to
-emphasise the fact that they were especially the objects of this
-demonstrative greeting.[233] Next day, the 20th of April, was the
-Emperor’s birthday. When the Queen congratulated him in the morning it
-seems he looked confused, because for the moment he had forgotten all
-about the event. He, however, kissed her hand gratefully when she
-presented him with her gift--a little pencil-case--and was much touched
-with the other present he received--“two violets, the flower of the
-Bonapartes--from Prince Arthur.”[234] Amidst great crowds cheering most
-enthusiastically the Royal party drove to the Crystal Palace. They went
-through the building in perfect privacy, and then walked on to the
-balcony to see the fountains play. But when they returned to luncheon
-they found that quite a crowd of sightseers had been admitted, and were
-lining the avenue of the nave. It was a trying moment. The rows of
-spectators through which the Royal party had to walk were almost
-touching them, and Emperor and Empress both dreaded assassination. The
-Queen, nervous as she was, courageously took the Emperor’s arm, feeling
-sure her presence would protect him; and so the day passed without any
-unpleasantness. In the evening there was another meeting of the Grand
-Council of War, the Queen being present. Again the Council failed to
-decide on a plan of operations. But it was admitted that they could come
-to an agreement as to the stake to be played for in the game of war, and
-this agreement, under seven heads, was drawn up by Prince Albert, and
-signed by Marshal Vaillant and Lord Panmure.[235] Next day (the 21st)
-the guests left amidst tender farewells on both sides. At Lady
-Malmesbury’s dinner-party that day, Lord Adolphus Fitzclarence told the
-company that the leave-taking was very affecting. “Everybody cried--even
-the _suite_. The Queen’s children began, as the Empress had been very
-kind to them, and they were sorry to lose them, and this set off the
-Maids of Honour.”[236] The Emperor’s last words to the Queen were, “I
-believe that having spent my birthday with your Majesty will bring me
-good luck, that and the little pencil-case you gave me.”[237] The Queen
-wrote in her Diary, “I am glad to have known this extraordinary man,
-whom it is certainly impossible not to like when you live with him, and
-not even to a considerable extent to admire.... I believe him to be
-capable of kindness, affection, friendship, and gratitude.” Prince
-Albert’s admiration, on the other hand, was not quite so unqualified,
-and the Queen notes that he preferred the Empress to the Emperor. When
-the Emperor returned to Paris he found that his reception in England had
-done much to increase his _prestige_. But he also discovered that he
-must abandon his intention of going to the Crimea. On the 25th of April
-he communicated this welcome news to the Queen in a letter abounding
-with engaging expressions of gratitude, for her kindness and hospitality
-to him and his Imperial consort.
-
-On the 28th of June Prince Albert writes to Stockmar saying, “Uncle
-Leopold comes on Tuesday with Philippe and Carlo, and by the end of the
-week we purpose to get away from the thoroughly used-up air of London.
-The political folly and the levity of parties and the press, amidst the
-terrible mass of business, makes our head reel.”[238] When these
-visitors reached Osborne they found the Queen depressed and sorrowful.
-Scarlet fever had attacked the Princes Arthur and Leopold and the
-Princess Louise, and her Majesty was naturally afraid lest her young
-Belgian relatives might be smitten also. Fortunately this peril was
-avoided, and the Queen, encouraged by the approaching prorogation of
-Parliament, gradually regained her cheerfulness. She had suffered from
-intense anxiety during the Session, and it was with a deep sense of
-relief that she found herself able to prorogue both Houses by Commission
-on the 14th of August. The Speech from the Throne dwelt on the
-advantages derived from cementing the French alliance. The Legislature
-was also congratulated on having passed several useful measures--amongst
-which those establishing local self-government in the metropolis,
-sanctioning the formation of Limited Liability Companies, and abolishing
-the stamp duty on newspapers, may be mentioned.
-
-The allusion to the French alliance was made with skill and tact. “You
-will come to Paris this summer,” said the Emperor to the Queen when he
-was bidding her farewell at Windsor. “Yes,” she replied, “if my public
-duties do not prevent me.” These duties it was now obvious would in no
-way prevent her, and it was therefore determined that the Queen and her
-husband should spend eight days with the Emperor and Empress. The visit
-was to begin on the 18th of August, and before that day came round the
-British fleet in the Baltic and the allied armies in the Crimea had won
-some slight successes, which rendered the war a little less unpopular
-than it had been in France. Still, despite the victory at Tchernaya, it
-was unpopular. France, according to Frenchmen, was spending blood and
-treasure for English interests. The alliance between the two countries
-was giving England the time and experience needed to improve her
-defective military system--leaving her in relation to France stronger
-than ever. As for the political parties--Legitimists, Orleanists, and
-Democrats--they looked on the Queen’s visit with hostility, because it
-was meant to strengthen the hands of a usurper, whom they all hated. The
-visit therefore was not made under auspicious circumstances. Just before
-the Queen started on this journey the King of Portugal arrived at
-Osborne, and on the 4th of August the Prince tells Stockmar how they had
-to lodge him on their yacht, to keep him out of danger from scarlet
-fever--the two eldest children in the Royal Family having alone escaped
-the malady. Many visits were interchanged, however, between the King and
-the Queen and Prince Albert. The Queen, indeed, at the request of her
-Ministers, had agreed to persuade King Pedro to join us in the war, a
-proposal which he, however, very sensibly rejected.[239]
-
-It was in the early dawn of Saturday, the 18th of August, that the Queen
-and Prince Albert, accompanied by the Prince of Wales and the Princess
-Royal, embarked at Osborne, and, escorted by a steam squadron, proceeded
-to Boulogne, where they arrived at one o’clock in the afternoon. Salutes
-of cannon from the heights, volleys of musketry from the troops, and
-enthusiastic cheers from the people greeted the visitors. When the Royal
-yacht came to the pier the Emperor hastened on board, saluted the Queen,
-kissing her hand and both cheeks, and then shook hands with Prince
-Albert, the Prince of Wales, and the Princess Royal. The Queen and her
-family drove to the station, the Emperor and Marshal Magnan riding on
-each side of her carriage. They took train to Paris, where they were
-cordially received. From the terminus of the Strasbourg Railway to the
-Palace of St. Cloud the houses were all in festal array, and 200,000
-National Guards formed a double line for five miles along the route.
-This brilliant display was somewhat lost on the Queen, for her arrival
-was delayed till seven in the evening. She, however, had the pleasure of
-seeing Paris under the flare of illumination, and when she approached
-the Arc de Triomphe her escort carried blazing torches, which gave a
-strange picturesque effect to the scene. She was welcomed to the Palace
-of St. Cloud, which had been set apart for her, by the Empress and the
-ladies and high officers of the household; and Prince Albert describes
-their reception by the people as “splendid” and “enthusiastic.” The
-Queen says in her Diary, “I felt bewildered but enchanted--everything is
-so beautiful.” Sunday, the 19th, was devoted to a quiet morning drive
-with the Emperor, who was in high spirits over the Crimean news, and to
-church-going--service being held in one of the rooms of the palace by
-the chaplain to the British Embassy. Then there was a charming drive in
-the afternoon to Neuilly, and later on a dinner-party, at which
-Canrobert appeared, almost fresh from the Crimean trenches. He sat next
-the Queen, and was surprised to find that she was nearly as well
-acquainted with the details of the war as he was himself. On Monday, the
-20th, the Emperor escorted his guests to breakfast--“the coffee quite
-excellent, and all the cookery very plain and very good,” writes the
-Queen, and served “on a small round table as we have at home.” A visit
-to the Exhibition of Fine Arts, luncheon at the Elysée, a long drive
-through the chief streets of Paris, and a theatrical performance in the
-evening (at the Palace) of the _Demoiselles de St. Cyr_, formed the
-programme. Tuesday, the 21st, was dedicated to a visit to the Palace of
-Versailles and the Trianon, associated with mournful memories of Marie
-Antoinette and the ladies of her court, who used to retire at times to
-this retreat to play at Arcadian simplicity. In the evening, after
-dinner, the Queen and her hosts went to the Opera, where her Majesty’s
-reception was most cordial and gratifying. The notabilities of Parisian
-society were there, and they were all charmed with the easy, cheerful,
-high-spirited bearing of the Queen. On Wednesday, the 22nd, she visited
-the Exhibition of Industry, remarking that the English exhibits of china
-were the most striking. Then she drove to
-
-[Illustration: THE QUEEN AT THE FÊTE IN THE FOREST OF ST. GERMAIN.]
-
-the Tuileries, and accepted an invitation from the Préfet and the
-Municipality of Paris to a ball at the Hôtel de Ville. The Queen, Prince
-Albert, the Prince of Wales, and Princess Royal next drove through Paris
-_incognito_, and in the evening were entertained at a great dinner, at
-which eighty guests were present. At this dinner the Queen and the
-Emperor talked long and earnestly over the Anglo-French alliance--he
-telling her that Drouyn de Lhuys had suggestively reminded him how Louis
-Philippe became unpopular because of his alliance with England; the
-Queen retorting that it was not Louis Philippe’s friendship with
-England, but his insincerity and treachery, which caused his fall. On
-Thursday, the 24th, the Louvre was visited, and in the evening the Queen
-attended the ball at the Hôtel de Ville--the opening quadrille being
-danced by her Majesty, the Emperor, Prince Albert, the Princess
-Mathilde, Prince Napoleon, Lady Cowley, Prince Aldebert of Bavaria, and
-Mdle. Haussmann, daughter of the Prefect of the Seine. The scene was
-brilliant beyond conception. It was a triumph of decorative art having,
-as the Queen said, “all the effect of the Arabian Nights.” Picturesque
-Arabs from Algeria at one part of the proceedings came forward and did
-homage to the Emperor and his guests, staring admiringly at the
-Koh-i-noor which the Queen wore in her diadem. The Royal party made the
-tour of the rooms, tarrying for a little in the _Salle du Trône_, where
-Robespierre was wounded and Louis Philippe proclaimed; and where the
-Emperor gallantly said to the Queen, “This occasion will banish from us
-all sad remembrances.” On Friday, the 24th, the Queen visited a second
-time the Palais d’Industrie, lunched at the École Militaire, and
-witnessed a review of the troops. Their smart uniforms, her Majesty
-writes, “are infinitely better made and cut than those of our soldiers,
-which provokes me much.” After this the Queen drove to the Hôtel des
-Invalides, to visit the tomb of the first Emperor. As she stood before
-the coffin leaning on the Emperor’s arm, by a strange coincidence, while
-the organ of the church was pealing forth the solemn strains of the
-English National Anthem, a dreadful thunder storm broke overhead. At
-dinner the Emperor and Queen that day entertained each other with
-complaints about the incapacity of their generals in the Crimea, and in
-the evening another visit, but not in State, was paid to the Opera. On
-Saturday, the 24th, the Queen attended a hunt in the forest of St.
-Germain, where she was received by the local _curé_ and a bevy of
-village maidens, one of whom broke down in the middle of her
-complimentary address to the visitors, though when the _curé_ prompted
-her, greatly to the Queen’s amusement, she went on glibly to the end. In
-the evening there was a grand State Ball at Versailles, the Empress, as
-she appeared at the head of the grand staircase, says the Queen,
-“looking like a fairy queen or nymph,” and surprising even the Emperor
-into exclaiming, “_Comme tu es belle!_” (“How lovely you are!”) After a
-splendid display of fireworks there was dancing, and many distinguished
-guests were presented to the Queen, amongst others Count Bismarck, then
-Prussian Minister to Frankfort. But he did not make himself agreeable to
-her Majesty, for when she expressed her admiration for Paris as a
-beautiful city, he replied, “Yes, even more beautiful than St.
-Petersburg”--a very significant indication of his strong pro-Russian
-sympathies. On Sunday, the 26th, Prince Albert’s birthday was quietly
-celebrated, and the Queen and Emperor had some serious talk over the
-persecution of her friends--the Orleans Princes and Princesses--in the
-course of which she very frankly and honestly explained to the Emperor
-the precise nature of her relations to them. Monday, the 27th, was
-devoted to leave-takings and the journey home. At Boulogne there was an
-inspection of troops and the camps of Hensault and Ambleteuse were
-visited, and late at night the Queen steamed away in her yacht from
-Boulogne Harbour. “_Adieu, Madame, au revoir_,” to which I replied, “_Je
-l’espère bien_”--these, according to the Queen, were the parting words
-which passed between her and her Imperial host. By half-past eight next
-morning her Majesty reached Osborne, finding her younger sons waiting on
-the beach to welcome her home.
-
-The Queen was deeply impressed, she says, with the Emperor’s quietness,
-gentleness, and simplicity of manner. She felt encouraged to confide in
-him without reserve, and was greatly charmed by his kindness and
-attention to her children, and his admiration for Prince Albert. The
-Prince, however, did not quite share the Queen’s enthusiasm for their
-host, though he admitted that the Emperor had great powers of
-fascination when he chose to exert them. Lord Clarendon, who was
-Minister in attendance on her Majesty, told Mr. Greville that during
-this visit “the Queen was delighted with everything, and especially with
-the Emperor himself, who, with perfect knowledge of women, had taken the
-surest way to ingratiate himself with her. This it seems he began when
-he was in England, and followed it up at Paris. After her visit the
-Queen talked it all over with Clarendon, and said ‘it is very odd; but
-the Emperor knows everything I have done, and where I have been ever
-since I was twelve years old; he even recollects how I was dressed, and
-a thousand little details it is extraordinary he should be acquainted
-with.’ She has never before been on such a social footing with anybody,
-and he has approached her with the familiarity of their equal positions,
-and with all the experience and knowledge of womankind he has acquired
-during his long life, passed in the world and in mixing in every sort of
-society. She seemed to have played her part throughout with great
-propriety and success. Old Jérôme[240] did not choose to make his
-appearance till just at the last moment, because he insisted on being
-treated as a king, and having the title of ‘Majesté’ given him--a
-pretension Clarendon would not hear of her yielding to.... Clarendon
-said nothing could exceed the delight of the Queen at her visit to
-Paris, at her reception, at all she saw, and that she was charmed with
-the Emperor. They became so intimate, and she on such friendly terms
-with him, that she talked to him with the utmost frankness, and even
-discussed with him the most delicate of all subjects--the confiscation
-of the Orleans property, telling him her opinion upon it. He did not
-avoid the subject, and gave her the reasons why he thought himself
-obliged to take that course; that he knew all this wealth was employed
-in fomenting intrigues against his government, which was so new that it
-was necessary to take all precautions to avert such dangers. She replied
-that even if this were so, he might have contented himself with
-sequestrating the property and restoring it when he was satisfied that
-all danger on that score was at an end. I asked Clarendon what he
-thought of the Emperor himself, and he said that he liked him and that
-he was very pleasing, but he was struck with his being so indolent and
-so excessively ignorant. The Prince of Wales was put by the Queen under
-Clarendon’s charge, who was desired to tell him what to do in public,
-when to bow to the people, and whom to speak to. He said that the
-Princess Royal was charming, with excellent manners and full of
-intelligence. Both the children were delighted with their _séjour_, and
-very sorry to come away. When the visit was drawing to a close, the
-Prince said to the Empress that he and his sister were both very
-reluctant to leave Paris, and asked if she could not get leave for them
-to stay there a little longer. The Empress said she was afraid this
-would not be possible, as the Queen and Prince Albert would not be able
-to do without them; to which the boy replied, ‘Not do without us! don’t
-fancy that, for there are six more of us at home, and they don’t want
-_us_.’”[241]
-
-[Illustration: MAP OF CRATHIE AND BRAEMAR.]
-
-Writing to the Dowager Duchess of Coburg from Osborne, on the 30th of
-August, Prince Albert says--“We purpose making an escape on the 5th
-(September) to our mountain home, Balmoral. We are sorely in want of the
-moral rest, and the bodily exercise.” Balmoral was reached on the 7th,
-and “the new house,” though not finished, was found to be quite
-habitable, and “very comfortable.” The Queen was charmed with its
-appearance, and the home-like welcome she received from her dependants,
-an old shoe being thrown after her for luck when she entered the Hall.
-And truly it brought luck--for in two days afterwards Deeside was ruddy
-with the blaze of the bonfire which was lit on Craig Gowan heights to
-celebrate the fall of Sebastopol. The bonfire had been prepared the year
-before, when the false news of the fall of Sebastopol had arrived, and
-the wind had blown it down on Inkermann Day (5th of November). It was
-again built up, and on the evening of the 10th, writes Prince Albert to
-Stockmar, “it illuminated all the peaks round about, and the whole
-scattered population of the valleys understood the sign, and made for
-the mountain, where we performed towards midnight a veritable Witches’
-Dance, supported by whisky.”[242]
-
-In the same letter the Prince writes, “Prince Fritz William comes here
-to-morrow evening. I have received a very friendly letter from the
-Princess of Prussia.” This, says Sir Theodore Martin, made Stockmar’s
-heart beat fast. He was the recognised matrimonial agent of the House of
-Coburg, and one of his cherished projects was to arrange a marriage
-between the young and handsome heir of the Prince of Prussia and the
-Princess Royal, who, of all the Queen’s children, was in an especial
-degree his favourite. The young Prussian Prince was indeed the only
-possible suitor in Europe whose prospects rendered him worthy to mate
-with a daughter of England. The Queen felt that the day would come when
-he would be Heir-Apparent not to the Crown of Prussia, but to the
-Imperial Throne of the German Empire. His family was one of the
-wealthiest in Europe. His father, afterwards the German Emperor, was a
-very dear and valued friend of the Queen and her husband, and the young
-Prince Fritz himself had all those qualities of mind and heart which
-Prince Albert desired to see in the husband of his eldest child. But the
-affair was one of some delicacy, because the Queen abhorred the idea of
-what she called “a political marriage;” indeed, as she was on somewhat
-unfriendly terms with the King of Prussia, and as Prussia was hated and
-despised by the English people at the time, the alliance was, from a
-political point of view, far from desirable. Her Majesty, moreover, had
-no intention of sanctioning any engagement which might be objectionable
-to her daughter, and the ultimate decision, therefore, lay with the
-Princess herself, who at the time knew nothing of the hopes or fears
-that centred round her. The gossip of Society had connected her name
-with that of Prince Frederick William. But on the Queen’s return from
-France at the end of August Prince Albert told Lord Clarendon there was
-no truth in these rumours.[243] On the 20th of September the Prince laid
-his proposal of marriage before the Queen and her husband, and they
-accepted it so far as they were concerned, but asked him not to speak to
-the Princess on the subject till after her confirmation. The Princess
-was only sixteen years of age at the time, and the Queen was of opinion
-that there should be no thought of marriage till the following spring,
-when her daughter would have passed her seventeenth birthday. On the
-23rd Prince Albert writes to Stockmar, telling him that “Victoria is
-greatly excited. Still, all goes smoothly and prudently,” and that the
-young Prince is “really in love” with the little lady, “who does her
-best to please him.” The Crown Prince and Princess of Prussia, he says,
-“are in raptures at the turn the affair has taken.” But when a handsome
-young Prince is “really in love” with a charming young Princess who
-“does her best to please him,” and they are both living in the free,
-unrestrained intercourse of English family life in a romantic Highland
-retreat, it is hardly practicable to prevent them from coming to an
-understanding. The Prussian Prince seems to have appealed successfully
-to the Queen’s good nature, and he soon obtained leave to make his
-proposal to the Princess before his visit came to an end. “During our
-ride up Craig-na-ban,” writes the Queen, in “The Leaves from a Journal,”
-“he (Prince Fritz) picked up a piece of white heather (the emblem of
-good luck), which he gave to her (the Princess Royal), and this enabled
-him to make an allusion to his hopes and wishes as they rode down Glen
-Girnoch.” The lady consented, and the happy pair were betrothed. “The
-young people,” writes Prince Albert to Stockmar, on the 2nd of October,
-“are passionately in love with each other, and the integrity,
-guilelessness, and disinterestedness of the Prince are quite touching.”
-
-“Our Fritz,” as the Prince was affectionately called, was no idle youth
-of fashion. He was already Colonel of the 1st Foot Guards, and a
-thorough soldier.[244] In every branch of the Army he had gone through a
-hard apprenticeship, as may be seen from the peremptory instructions
-which had been issued when he was ordered to serve with Colonel von
-Griesheim’s Dragoons. He had to master every elementary detail of drill
-and organisation, and his knowledge was tested by stern judges.[245]
-Col. von Griesheim gives the following account of an interview he had
-with Prince Fritz’s mother in the autumn of 1854:--“Prince Frederick
-William,” he says, “was then twenty-three. He was a young man of notably
-amiable manners. I received orders to wait upon his mother the Princess
-at the Palace, when she told me that she wished to speak to me as the
-new Commander of the Regiment, and I must do her the justice to say that
-she did not allow her motherly love for a son, or her anxiety to secure
-his personal comforts, to stand in the way of his duty. On the contrary,
-she begged me that I would in no way unduly spare the Prince, but insist
-on his learning his profession in every branch, so that he might be in a
-position to judge what was the real amount of labour which a military
-life entailed. She also desired that in non-military matters no special
-external respect might be shown him, expressing, at the same time, her
-confidence that neither I nor my brother-officers would abuse the
-relationship in which we were placed. She was sure I should not forget
-that it was the training of our future king that was entrusted to me,
-and that I should recognise the obligation of setting things in their
-true light, that a true judgment might be formed concerning them. The
-Princess was proceeding to talk over a number of incidental matters
-when, quite unaccompanied, the Prince of Prussia came into the room. He
-looked surprised, and said, ‘Ah! I see the new Commander is receiving
-the orders of the dear mamma.’ He laughed good-humouredly, and holding
-out his hand with the cordiality peculiar to him, added that I did not
-need any instruction from him, and that the length of time he had known
-me was a guarantee that the Prince was in good hands. Turning to his
-wife he smiled, and said in an undertone, “I trained Griesheim, and now
-he shall train our son.’”[246]
-
-Prince Frederick William had thoroughly fulfilled the hopes of his
-parents and his tutor, and he was precisely the type of man likely to
-win favour in Prince Albert’s eyes. It was, therefore, with supreme
-disgust that the Queen and her husband discovered an attempt would be
-made to prejudice public opinion against the marriage. The engagement
-was not to be announced till after Easter. And yet the _Times_ began to
-attack the Queen, Prince Albert, and the Prussian Court, for bringing
-about such an alliance. The country was told that the Princess Royal was
-being sacrificed to “a paltry German dynasty,” and Prince Fritz was
-jeered at as a poor creature, who would have to pick up a livelihood in
-the Russian service, and “pass these years which flattering anticipation
-now destines to a Crown, in ignominious attendance as a General Officer
-on the levee of his Imperial master, having lost even the privilege of
-his birth, which is conceded to no German in Russia.” Malignity as well
-as ignorance inspired this abuse, for it was at that time the cue of a
-certain section of polite society to hold Prince Albert up to odium on
-every possible occasion as a tool of the despotic European Courts. As a
-matter of fact, the young Prince’s sympathies were with the Opposition
-rather than with the Government in Prussia, and he was in the habit of
-seeking Prince Albert’s advice as to how he should steer his course in
-the stormy sea of Prussian politics. Very sound and wise guidance did
-the Prince get from his future father-in-law, who viewed with delight
-and hopefulness his assiduous efforts to fit himself for his high
-destiny. “In another way,” he writes to the young Prince, “Vicky is also
-busy; she has learned much in various directions.... She now comes to me
-every evening from six to seven, when I put her through a kind of
-general catechising, and, in order to give precision to her ideas, I
-make her work out certain subjects by herself, and bring me the results
-to be revised. Thus she is now engaged in writing a short compendium of
-Roman history.”[247]
-
-[Illustration: THE WOOING OF THE PRINCESS ROYAL.]
-
-On the 30th of November the King of Sardinia, accompanied by Count
-Cavour, arrived in London to visit the Queen and Prince Albert. A
-rough, frank, good-humoured cavalry officer, passionately devoted to
-field sports, and fired with an ardent love of Italy and a bitter hatred
-of all foes of Italian Unity--such was our ally, Victor Emmanuel. He had
-been preceded by his social reputation in Paris, which was, in truth,
-such as to make the Queen somewhat nervous. Lord Malmesbury, writing in
-his Diary on the 29th of November, says, “The King of Sardinia, who is
-here (Paris), is as vulgar and coarse as possible.”[248]
-
-[Illustration: COUNT CAVOUR.]
-
-However, his Majesty was received with much kindness by the English
-people, and on the day after his arrival the Queen and Prince took him
-to see Woolwich Arsenal and the Hospitals, only too well filled with
-wounded Crimean soldiers. The Artillery Parade on the Common was viewed
-by the King with great delight. On Monday, the 3rd of December, Prince
-Albert accompanied his Royal guest to Spithead, where they inspected
-the fleet and went over the old _Victory_, and a new ship of war, to be
-named after his Majesty. On Tuesday, the 4th, Victor Emmanuel visited
-the City of London in State, where he met with an effusive welcome, that
-greatly impressed him. The reply to the Address presented to him by the
-Corporation, which was delivered by the King--though “writ in choice
-Italian” for him by his crafty mentor, Cavour--pledging him to support
-us to the last in our struggle with Russia if the peace negotiations
-then going on failed, vastly increased his popularity. Next day he was
-invested by the Queen with the Order of the Garter, and on Thursday he
-left at five o’clock in the morning for Boulogne. It was bitterly cold
-and bleak, yet, to the surprise of Cavour, the Queen was up betimes to
-bid her guest farewell, with all the cordiality of a true English
-hostess. Many good stories, most of which will not bear repetition here,
-were told of this visit. “I was presented,” writes Lord Malmesbury on
-the 5th of December, “to the King of Sardinia by Prince Albert, who told
-him that I was an ‘_Ancien Ministre d’Affaires Etrangères_.’ ‘_A quelle
-époque?_’ answered the King. I said, ‘In 1852, under Lord Derby’s
-Government.’ The King replied, ‘_Que faites-vous à présent?_’ To which
-the Prince said, ‘_II fait de l’opposition, car il faut toujours faire
-quelque chose dans ce pays_.’ ‘_Ah_,’ replied the King, ‘_donc vous êtes
-opposé à mon voyage en Angleterre, et à mon alliance_.’”[249] Lord
-Clarendon, says Mr. Greville, “gave me an account of his conversations
-both with the King and Cavour. He thinks well of the King, and that he
-is intelligent, and he has a very high opinion indeed of Cavour, and was
-especially struck with his knowledge of England, and our institutions
-and constitutional history. I was much amused after all the praises that
-have been lavished on Sardinia for the noble part she has played, and
-for taking up arms in so _unselfish_ a manner, that she has, after all,
-a keen view to her own interests, and wants some solid pudding as well
-as so much empty praise.” In fact, Sardinia wanted some territorial
-advantage, which, of course, in view of our relations with Austria at
-the time, England could not obtain for her. Hence Victor Emmanuel
-complained that after spending 40,000,000 francs on the war, he had
-nothing to show his people for it.[250] “The King and his people,”
-writes Mr. Greville, “are far better satisfied with their reception here
-than in France, where, under much external civility, there was very
-little cordiality, the Emperor’s intimate relations with Austria
-rendering him little inclined towards the Piedmontese. Here the Queen
-was wonderfully cordial and attentive. She got up at five in the morning
-to see him depart. His Majesty appears to be frightful in person, but a
-great, strong, burly, athletic man, brusque in his manners, unrefined in
-his conversation, very loose in his conduct, and eccentric in his
-habits. When he was at Paris his talk in society amused or terrified
-everybody, but here he seems to have been more guarded. It was amusing
-to see all the religious societies hastening with their addresses to
-him, totally forgetting that he is the most dissolute fellow in the
-world; but the fact of his being excommunicated by the Pope and his
-waging war with the ecclesiastical power in his own country covers every
-sin against morality, and he is a great hero with the Low Church people
-and Exeter Hall. My brother-in-law said he looked at Windsor more like a
-chief of the Heruli or Longobardi than a modern Italian prince, and the
-Duchess of Sutherland said that of all the Knights of the Garter she had
-seen, he was the only one who seemed as if he would have the best of it
-with the Dragon.”[251] If Clarendon expressed to Mr. Greville great
-admiration for the Sardinian Monarch, he must have been of a singularly
-forgiving disposition. For Lord Malmesbury says that when Prince Albert
-presented Lord Clarendon to his Majesty as the Secretary of State for
-Foreign Affairs, Victor Emmanuel remarked, “_J’ai entendu parler de
-vous_,” adding, “_C’est fini_,” which, says Lord Malmesbury, in plain
-English meant--“Be off. I’ve nothing more to say to you.”[252]
-
-On the 6th of October, 1854, the Queen had issued a Royal Warrant for
-regulating promotion and retirement in the army, which now caused her
-much vexation. The warrant enabled lieutenant-colonels, after three
-years’ service, to become by right full colonels. This privilege was
-confined to line regiments, and the officers of the Guards accordingly
-sent a memorial to the Crown begging that it should be extended to them
-also. Prince Albert, as Colonel of the Grenadiers, had signed their
-petition, and in the middle of December the _Times_ attacked him with
-great acrimony for pampering the Guards, and charged him with using his
-influence over the Queen for purposes of military jobbery. The old
-story, accusing the Prince of interfering with the army and of having
-intrigued to become Commander-in-Chief, was vamped up again. It has
-already been seen that these accusations were absolutely false, and the
-impossibility of contradicting them publicly gave her Majesty great
-pain. She knew nothing about the Guards’ memorial, and all the Prince
-knew about it was that he had signed it as a matter of formality,
-because it was only through him as their colonel, that the officers of
-his regiment could, according to the regulations, forward any petition
-to the Government. The memorial was dealt with by the Secretary of
-State, Lord Panmure, who, as a matter of fact, did _not_ grant its
-prayer. That the Prince sometimes interfered with military
-administration was quite true. When the War Department broke down he
-toiled hard to help the Duke of Newcastle to set it on its legs again.
-When the Queen began to fret over the meagreness of Raglan’s despatches,
-he showed the Department how to draw up a series of forms that would
-compel Raglan to keep the Secretary of State fully aware from day to
-day of the state of the Crimean army. When the Prince of Prussia wrote
-to him warning him that the conduct of the English officers in the
-Crimea, who were supposed to be deserting their posts “on urgent private
-affairs,” was bringing disgrace on the name of England, Prince Albert
-did what ought to have been done by Lord Panmure, when the story was
-promulgated in the press--that is to say, he sifted the facts, and gave
-the lie direct to the slanderous fable.[253] To these attacks the Prince
-had become indifferent; but they irritated the Queen, who resented their
-injustice, and chafed against her powerlessness to give them public
-denial.
-
-[Illustration: BALACLAVA: AT PEACE.
-
-(_From a Drawing made Twenty-Five Years after the Crimean War._)]
-
-[Illustration: CATHCART’S HILL, CRIMEA.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIII.
-
-THE END OF THE WAR.
-
- Lord Raglan’s Successor--“Take Care of Dowb”--Lord Panmure’s
- Nepotism--The Crisis of the War--Gortschakoff’s Last Struggle--The
- Battle of the Tchernaya River--France and the War--A Despondent
- Court--Divided Counsels among the Allies--The Bridge of Rafts--The
- Grand Bombardment--French Attack on the Malakoff--British Attack on
- the Redan--Why the Attack Failed--The “Hero of the
- Redan”--Pélissier’s Message to Simpson--Appeal to Sir Colin
- Campbell--Evacuation of the Redan--Fall of Sebastopol--Retreat of
- the Russians to the North Town--Paralysis of the Victors--The
- Queen’s Anger--Her Remonstrances with Lord Panmure--A New
- Commander-in-Chief--Taking Care of “Dowb”--Codrington Chosen--The
- Wintry Crimean Watch--Diplomatic Humiliation of Palmerston--France
- Negotiates Secretly Terms of Peace with Austria--Palmerston’s
- Indignant Remonstrances--The Queen Objects to Prosecute the War
- Alone--The Surrender of Palmerston--He Abandons the Turks--An
- Unpopular Peace--The Tories Offer to Support the Peace--The Queen
- and the Parliament of 1856.
-
-
-When Lord Raglan died, General Simpson, who had been his chief of the
-staff, was appointed to succeed him. It is enough to say that Simpson
-was infinitely less capable than his predecessor; but, on the other
-hand, he was a good-natured, pliable man, not likely to be troublesome
-to the authorities at home. Mr. Alfred Varley, the eminent electrician,
-told Colonel Hope, V.C., that when Lord Panmure’s despatch appointing
-General Simpson to the chief command was received, the message ended
-with the mysterious order--“Take care of Dowb.” Mr. Varley, who was on
-duty, thinking “Dowb” was some unknown Russian general who had been
-suddenly discovered by Lord Panmure, requested that the message should
-be repeated. It turned out, however, that “Dowb” was merely an
-abbreviation of Dowbigging, and that Dowbigging was one of Lord
-Panmure’s relatives, whom he, as a Minister, pledged to suppress the
-nepotism that had ruined the army, thus authoritatively recommended to
-the good offices of the new Commander-in-Chief.[254] “Take care of
-Dowb,” from that day till now, has indeed been the shibboleth of jobbery
-and corruption in all branches of the Queen’s service. Thus, though the
-crisis of the war had now come, it was only too obvious that little
-could be expected from an army led by a feeble and subservient general,
-and directed from home by an “administrative reformer” of Lord Panmure’s
-type.
-
-On the 21st of July, General Simpson reported that his trenches were
-within two hundred yards of the Redan, which had been greatly
-strengthened since the last assault, and that they could not be pushed
-farther. The loss of life in the trenches was so enormous, that the
-assault could not be long delayed--and yet, till Pélissier took the
-Malakoff, it was madness to attack the Redan. On the other hand,
-overwhelming reinforcements were being poured in from Russia, and, on
-the 16th of August, Prince Gortschakoff made a bold attempt to raise the
-siege. He crossed the Tchernaya river, and attacked the French and
-Sardinians, but was hurled back with great loss. This came as glad
-tidings to the Queen, who had heard with apprehension that the French
-were beginning to cry out against the war, and that they were
-complaining that France was simply a tool in the hands of England. The
-victory of the Tchernaya and the Queen’s visit to Paris silenced these
-murmurs for a time. Prince Albert, however, was still despondent, for no
-progress was made after this battle; and his letters from the Crimea
-warned him that another winter campaign would yet have to be undertaken.
-
-The months of July and August produced in England a fresh crop of
-censures in the newspapers. It was even suggested that, by way of
-counteracting divided counsels among the allies, the siege should be
-entirely left to the French, while the English, Sardinians, and Turks
-should sally forth and attack the Russian army of observation in the
-field. In September, the beginnings of a bridge of rafts between the
-north and south sides of Sebastopol were seen, and, on the 5th of
-September, the grand bombardment, preliminary to the assault on the
-Malakoff and Redan, commenced--the French opening four miles of
-cannonade at a given signal. A terrific hail of shot and shell was
-almost continuously poured upon the hapless city till the 8th, when the
-moment for the assault arrived. Pélissier was to hoist the tricolour on
-the Malakoff when it was taken, and that was to be the signal for the
-British attack on the Redan. For many hours a savage contest raged
-round and on the Malakoff, but in the end the French captured the
-stronghold. The British storming force of 1,000 men, with small covering
-and ladder parties, then rushed forward to the outworks of the Redan. In
-crossing the space of two hundred yards that intervened between their
-trenches and the fortress, they were swept by a terrific fire, under
-which they fell like swathes of corn before the reaper. The troops--for
-the most part weedy young recruits--soon became demoralised, and many of
-them had actually to be kicked into action by their sergeants. Somehow
-they forced their way over the ramparts--a confused undisciplined mob in
-a pitiful state of disorganisation. One figure alone stands out in this
-scene of murky strife in heroic grandeur--that of Colonel Windham. He
-strove with furious energy to rally the scattered remnants of regiments
-which were mixed up with each other, and to hurl them against the inner
-breastwork. But as at the Alma, there were no supports at hand, and
-Windham sent messenger after messenger imploring Codrington to hurry
-them on. His entreaties were unheeded, partly because some of the
-messengers were shot, partly because Codrington, like most of the
-English generals in the Crimea, did not seem to consider that slender
-storming parties needed strong and instant support. At last Windham,
-enraged at the useless and sickening slaughter of his men, determined to
-go himself and force his chief to send the stormers succour. “Let it be
-known,” he said to Captain Crealock, “in case I am killed, why I went
-away.” He passed through the zone of fire in safety, reached Codrington,
-and, whilst vainly arguing with him, he saw that the day was lost. The
-subalterns and sergeants he had left behind--for most of the superior
-officers were killed or wounded--could no longer hold the men to their
-deadly work. First one, then another, and then a small group, were seen
-to creep through the gaps in the Redan. Then a mad rush of
-terror-stricken soldiers, yelling and shrieking in panic, proclaimed
-that Windham’s mission was useless, and that the fight was over. As for
-the Commander-in-Chief, where was he all the time? Cowering in a safe
-corner of the trenches, where he could see little of the fight! There
-Pélissier’s messenger found him when he came to ask if he would not
-immediately assail the Redan again. “The trenches were,” according to
-Simpson’s despatch, “subsequently to this attack, so crowded with
-troops, that I was unable to organise a second assault.”
-
-General Simpson might as well have doomed his men to sudden death as
-send such a slender column as had been repulsed, to storm the Redan.
-This, then, is the sum of the matter. The first assault failed because
-the stormers were too few; the second was not attempted, lest they might
-have been too many! Ultimately, Simpson did what he ought to have done
-in the first instance; that is to say, he fell back on Sir Colin
-Campbell and the Scottish Brigade.[255] But when his Highland scouts
-went to reconnoitre during the night, they found the place deserted. The
-losses on our side were frightful, especially in officers and sergeants.
-Of the 2,447 stormers who were killed and wounded, 1,435 belonged to the
-Light Division; in fact, owing to Simpson’s imbecility in sending a mere
-handful of men to the attack, and Codrington’s inexcusable neglect to
-hurry on supports, we sacrificed more men in failing to carry the Redan,
-than Wellington lost when he captured Badajoz.[256] During the night the
-Russians set fire to the town. Crossing the bridge of rafts, the enemy
-fled to the northern side of the harbour, leaving us in possession, not
-of Sebastopol, but, as Gortschakoff said, of a heap of blood-stained
-ruins.
-
-[Illustration: FRENCH ATTACK ON THE MALAKOFF.]
-
-On Sunday, the 9th of September, the news that Sebastopol had fallen
-was proclaimed through England. And so the siege that had gone on for
-the best part of a year, which had involved the construction of seventy
-miles of trenches, and the expenditure of 1,500,000 shells, came to an
-end--gloriously for the French with victory at the Malakoff,
-ingloriously for England with ignominious defeat at the Redan. On the
-29th of September, the Russians were repulsed at Kars; but on the 28th
-of November, the neglected and famine-stricken garrison, whose heroic
-defence under General Fenwick Williams was one of the most brilliant
-episodes of the war, had to surrender. The occupation of Kinburn and the
-bombardment of Sweaborg were the only successes won by us at sea.
-
-[Illustration: GENERAL TODLEBEN.]
-
-When Sebastopol fell, it was not the Russians but Generals Simpson and
-Pélissier who were paralysed by the catastrophe. The Allies, in fact,
-seemed to sit helplessly looking on, and gave the enemy time to render
-his position on the north side of the city almost impregnable. Thus once
-more the besiegers became the besieged, and found themselves in even a
-more perilous position than that which they held before the fall of the
-city. The Queen was greatly distressed to hear that all our sacrifices
-had been in vain, and that Simpson and Pélissier were even more
-incompetent than Raglan and Canrobert.[257] At last her Majesty’s
-impatience could no longer be controlled, nor her irritation concealed.
-On the 2nd of October she wrote to Lord Panmure saying, “there may be
-good reasons why the army should not move, but we have only one.... When
-General Simpson telegraphed before that he must wait to know the
-intentions and plans of the Russians, the Queen was tempted to advise a
-reference to St. Petersburg for them.” And the intensely provoking thing
-was that if the Allies had only threatened a landing between Eupatoria
-and Sebastopol after the fall of the city, the Russians would have been
-compelled to evacuate the Crimea.[258]
-
-Naturally the Queen began to press the War Office to appoint a new
-Commander-in-Chief, and then Ministers began to “take care of Dowb.”
-There was but one great military reputation not made--for it had been
-made long before--but somewhat enhanced in the Crimea. It was that of
-Sir Colin Campbell, the only leader on whom even a shred of the mantle
-of Wellington or Moore had fallen. The soldiers had confidence in no
-other; in fact, he was the only divisional commander in the army who had
-a native genius for war. But he had no “interest,” and had he been
-appointed, his iron will and stubborn character would have soon asserted
-themselves over the foolish counsels of Pélissier. A strong, competent
-man without “interest” was in Lord Panmure’s eyes an objectionable
-person. So he looked elsewhere for a successor to General Simpson.
-Happening accidentally to hear from Mr. Greville of Colonel Windham’s
-exploit at the Redan, Panmure suddenly resolved to appoint him
-Commander-in-Chief. Mr. Greville was naturally amazed at this proposal,
-and suggested that it would be better to try Windham first with a
-Division before they put him over the heads of his seniors. Simpson,
-however, was eager to come home; time pressed, and Campbell, having no
-connection with “Dowb,” was of course impossible. As for Codrington, his
-failure and bungling at the Redan ought to have rendered him impossible
-also, but on the other hand he was not quite so incompetent as Simpson,
-and he had “interest.” Finally, Prince Albert’s advice was taken, and
-thus Codrington, as the candidate who “divided the authorities least,”
-was appointed to the chief command. But the troops were divided into two
-_corps d’armée_, the command of which was offered to the two senior
-generals over whose heads Codrington had been passed. One of these, Sir
-Colin Campbell, in bitterness of heart returned to England, firmly
-determined to quit a service, which had rewarded half a century of
-brilliant achievement with contemptuous neglect. The Queen, however,
-came to hear of this, and touched with some twinge of remorse, sent for
-the old man, and in the course of an interview with him persuaded him to
-alter his intentions. She spoke to him of her anxiety as to the fate of
-the army, and as a personal favour to herself, requested him to go back
-to the Crimea. The rough, war-worn veteran in an instant forgot the
-wrongs of a lifetime. Tears glistened in his eyes, as he assured the
-Queen, in the broad provincial _patois_, which he always spoke when
-under the excitement of battle or deep emotion, that he would return
-immediately, and as for his rank--well, “if the Queen wished it, Colin
-Campbell was ready for her sake to serve under a corporal.” To the
-credit of her Majesty it must be remembered that this was the last time
-Campbell was neglected. If it took him forty-six years’ hard, thankless
-toil to rise to a Lieutenant-Colonelcy, in eight years he became a Field
-Marshal.
-
-But besides keeping an idle wintry watch on the plateau before
-Sebastopol, there was no work in store for the army in the Crimea. The
-victories won by the sword were now about to be neutralised by the pen,
-and for Lord Palmerston the supreme moment of humiliation and failure
-was close at hand. The corner-stone of his foreign policy, it will be
-remembered, was the French alliance. If that proved to be unstable, the
-policy itself was _ab initio_ a fatal blunder. And the French alliance
-broke down at the critical moment when England, full of confidence in
-her reorganised army, expected that the war would be prosecuted till her
-disgraceful defeats at the Redan were triumphantly avenged. France, as
-has been repeatedly said, was sick of the war--a fact which Palmerston
-never had the moral courage to face. The war had now served the
-Emperor’s purpose, for the victory of the Malakoff had glorified the
-dynasty. Napoleon III., therefore, resolved to desert his ally, and in
-October Palmerston learnt with dismay that 100,000 French troops were to
-be immediately withdrawn from the Crimea.[259] What was still more
-serious, as Prince Albert says in a letter to Stockmar, the French were
-now demanding territorial compensation either in Poland, Italy, or the
-left bank of the Rhine. This last demand was particularly alarming to
-the Queen, who, in the spring, had warned Clarendon of its probable
-consequences. “The first Frenchman,” she says, in her letter of the 15th
-of April, “who should hostilely approach the Rhine, would set the whole
-of Germany on fire.” But in November, Palmerston’s policy compelled
-Englishmen to drink the cup of humiliation to the lees. Napoleon III.,
-ignoring England, secretly negotiated with Austria the terms of peace
-which were to be offered to Russia, and these were then transmitted to
-the British Government, by Count Walewski, with an intimation that
-England must accept them as they stood. Palmerston, angry at being thus
-duped and slighted, sent a violent remonstrance to France, declaring
-that England would carry on the war alone rather than accept such
-terms.[260] The Emperor himself, however, wrote to the Queen advising
-her to give way, and explaining why he could not consent to extort any
-further sacrifices from France, for what he contemptuously called “the
-microscopical advantages” which were the objects of Lord Palmerston’s
-policy. The Queen in her reply says, “I make, then, full allowance for
-your Majesty’s personal difficulties, and refuse to listen to any
-wounded feelings of _amour propre_ which my Government might be supposed
-to entertain at a complete understanding having been come to with
-Austria--an understanding which has resulted in an arrangement being
-placed cut and dry before us, for our mere acceptance, putting us in the
-disagreeable position of either having to accept what we have not even
-been allowed fully to understand (and which, so far as Austria is
-concerned, has been negotiated under influences dictated by motives, and
-in a spirit which we are without the means of estimating), or to take
-the responsibility of breaking up this arrangement, of losing the
-alliance which is offered to us, and which is so much wanted,[261] and
-even of estranging the friendly feeling of the ally who advocates the
-arrangement itself.”[262] One member of the Cabinet, Sir George
-Cornewall Lewis, doubtless expressed the feeling of all his colleagues
-when he told Mr. Greville that they felt they had no alternative but to
-submit with a good grace. To this, says Mr. Greville, he “added an
-expression of his disgust at the pitiful figure we cut in the affair,
-being obliged to obey the commands of Louis Napoleon, and after our
-insolence, swagger, and bravado, to submit to terms of peace which we
-had just rejected; all which humiliation, he justly said, was the
-consequence of our plunging into war without any reason, and in defiance
-of all prudence and sound policy.” He might have added that it was the
-inevitable result of plunging into war with a treacherous ally, on whose
-fidelity Palmerston was senseless enough to stake the fortunes of the
-Empire, and the sceptre of his Sovereign. The Queen personally
-considered the terms which were thus thrust on England far from
-adequate; still she set her face against Palmerston’s first proposal to
-continue the war for the sake of winning prospective victories. After
-some trivial modifications the
-
-[Illustration: THE THRONE ROOM, ST. JAMES’S PALACE. (_From a Photograph
-by H. N. King._)]
-
-Franco-Austrian conditions were accepted by the British Government,
-transmitted by Austria to Russia, and accepted by her on the 16th of
-January, 1856. “Think,” said Sir George Lewis to Mr. Greville, “that
-this is a war carried on for the independence of Turkey, and we, the
-allies, are bound to Turkey by mutual obligations not to make peace but
-by common consent and concurrence. Well, we have sent an offer of peace
-to Russia, of which the following are among the terms: We propose that
-Turkey, who possesses one-half of the Black Sea Coast, shall have no
-ships, no ports, no arsenals in that sea; and then there are conditions
-about the Christians who are the subjects of Turkey, and others about
-the mouths of the Danube, to which part of the Turkish dominions are
-contiguous. Now in all these stipulations so intimately concerning
-Turkey, for whose independence we are fighting, Turkey is not allowed to
-have any voice whatever, nor has she ever been allowed to be made
-acquainted with what is going on except through the newspapers, where
-the Turkish Ministers may have read what is passing, like other people.
-When the French and Austrian terms were discussed in the Cabinet, at the
-end of the discussion some one modestly asked whether it would not be
-proper to communicate to Musurus (the Turkish Ambassador in London) what
-was in agitation, and what had been agreed upon, to which Clarendon said
-he saw no necessity for it whatever.”[263] But Palmerston by this time
-had abandoned the Turks--indeed, he now became quite moderate, not to
-say humble in his tone--permitting Clarendon to adopt or reject his
-suggestions as he chose. This sudden docility naturally improved his
-position at Court. “Palmerston,” writes Mr. Greville, “is now on very
-good terms with the Queen, which is, though he does not know it, greatly
-attributable to Clarendon’s constant endeavours to reconcile her to him,
-always telling her everything likely to ingratiate Palmerston with her,
-and showing her any notes or letters of his calculated to please
-her.”[264]
-
-The Prime Minister and his colleagues it seems were surprised that
-Russia assented so readily to the terms of peace, and were for a time
-nervous as to the verdict of the English people. “All peaces are
-unpopular,” wrote Sir George Lewis to Sir Edmund Head, “and all peaces,
-it seems to me, are beneficial, even to the country which is supposed to
-be the loser. How greatly England prospered after the peace of 1782, and
-France after the peace of 1815! I suppose that this peace, if it takes
-place, will be no exception to the general rule.”[265] Fortunately, the
-Court supported the Ministry in acting with the other Powers, and Mr.
-Disraeli and Lord Stanley privately informed the Cabinet, that they
-would accept any peace which was sanctioned by the Crown. Thus the Queen
-and her Ministers were enabled to meet the Parliament of 1856 with some
-measure of confidence.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIV.
-
-PEACE AND PARLIAMENT.
-
- Opening of Parliament--A Cold Speech from the Throne--Moderation of
- Militant Toryism--Mr. Disraeli’s Cynical Strategy--The Betrayal of
- Kars--The Life Peerage Controversy--Baron Parke’s Nickname--More
- Attacks on Prince Albert--Court Favouritism among Men of
- Science--The Congress of Paris--How France Betrayed
- England--Walewski’s Intrigues with Orloff--Mr. Greville’s Pictures
- of French Official Life--Snubbing Bonapartist Statesmen--Peace
- Proclaimed--Popular Rejoicings--A Memento of the Congress--The
- Terms of Peace--The Tripartite Treaty--The Queen’s Opinion of the
- Settlement--Parliamentary Criticism on the Treaty of
- Paris--Stagnation of Public Life in England--The Queen’s “Happy
- Family” Dinner Party--A little “Tiff” with America--The Restoration
- of H.M.S. _Resolute_--The Budget--Palmerston’s Tortuous Italian
- Policy--The Failure of his Domestic Policy--The Confirmation of the
- Princess Royal--Robbery of the Royal Nursery Plate--Prince Alfred’s
- Tutor--Reviews of Crimean Troops--Debates on the Purchase
- System--Lord Hardinge’s Tragic Death--The Duke of Cambridge as
- Commander-in-Chief--Miss Nightingale’s Visit to
- Balmoral--Coronation of the Czar--Russian Chicanery at Paris--A Bad
- Map and a False Frontier--Quarrel between Prussia and
- Switzerland--Quarrel between England and the Sicilies--Death of the
- Queen’s Half-Brother--Settlement of the Dispute with Russia--“The
- Dodge that Saved us.”
-
-
-Parliament was opened by the Queen in person on the 31st of January,
-1856, vast crowds flocking to Westminster for the purpose of testifying
-their interest in the negotiations for peace. The Royal speech was a
-brief and business-like summary of the events that had led up to these
-negotiations, and it announced measures for assimilating the mercantile
-law of England and Scotland, simplifying the law of partnership, and
-reforming the system of levying dues on merchant shipping. Complaint was
-made that the references to the achievements of the army were cold and
-unsympathetic, as if the speech were that, not of a Sovereign, but of a
-Minister, and Lord Derby was perhaps right in saying that had her
-Majesty been left to the promptings of her heart, her Address would not
-have been open to this objection. Those who had observed the warm
-womanly sympathy she had shown to the wounded soldiers, or who had
-witnessed her agitation when she decorated the maimed Crimean heroes,
-knew well that had she been free to speak as she felt, she would have
-uttered eloquent words of thanks and praise to cheer the troops still
-keeping watch and ward in the Crimea.
-
-The general feeling expressed in both Houses of Parliament was that, if
-we had determined to prosecute the war till Russia sued for peace, we
-should certainly have obtained more honourable terms than those which
-had been now accepted by us. But Mr. Disraeli wisely curbed the
-bellicose spirit of his party, and declared that to continue the war
-merely for the sake of adding lustre to our arms, would bring us no
-honour. From being vindicators of public law we should in that case sink
-to the level of “the gladiators of history.” Policy as well as prudence
-forced moderation on militant Toryism. Mr. Disraeli in a letter to Lord
-Malmesbury, written on the 30th of November, 1855, says,
-
-[Illustration: VIEW IN THE CRIMEA: JALTA.]
-
-“it seems to me that a Party that has shrunk from the responsibility of
-conducting a war, would never be able to carry on an Opposition against
-a Minister for having concluded an unsatisfactory peace, however bad the
-terms.”[266] Lord Derby’s determination to refuse office when Lord
-Aberdeen fell from power, therefore doomed the Opposition to meek
-inactivity. “We are off the rail of politics,” said Mr. Disraeli in the
-letter just quoted, “and must continue so as long as the war lasts.”
-Hence one can have no difficulty in agreeing with Sir Theodore Martin
-when he asserts, that “it was only to be expected of a statesman like
-Mr. Disraeli, that he should refrain from embarrassing by a word the
-Ministers on whom devolved the difficult duty of protecting the national
-interests and honour, in negotiating terms of peace.”[267] There was no
-division on the Address. But Lord Derby attacked the Government for the
-abandonment of Kars, in deference, he insinuated, to the wishes
-
-[Illustration: MISS NIGHTINGALE.]
-
-of the French Emperor, who feared that the war in Asia Minor would
-dangerously enhance British prestige in that region. On the 28th of
-April Mr. Whiteside also raised a debate on the subject in the House of
-Commons, but the Tory party was so unwilling to follow its leaders, that
-Lord Derby regretted the matter had ever been stirred. The discussion
-merely established the facts that Lord Stratford had cruelly neglected
-to press General Williams’ appeals for reinforcements on the Porte, that
-the Government had culpably neglected to give Williams the money
-(£100,000) which would have provisioned Kars. But as the fortress was to
-be restored to the Turks, and as General Williams was to be consoled
-with a baronetcy, the House of Commons thought the matter had better
-drop, and Mr. Whiteside’s motion was lost by a majority of 303 to 176.
-Much more serious was the defeat inflicted on the Government on another
-subject which deeply interested the Queen--that of Baron Parke’s life
-peerage.
-
-Writing on the 9th of January, 1856, in his Diary, Lord Campbell says,
-“Bethell, the Solicitor-General, has made Baron Parke a peer. The
-judicial business of the House of Lords could not go on another session
-as it did last. Pemberton Leigh was first offered a peerage, and I wish
-much that he had accepted it, but he positively refused to be
-_pitchforked_. I don’t know that anything less exceptional could be done
-than applying next to Baron Surrebutter.”[268] At the Lord Chancellor’s
-levee on the first day of Hilary Term, Lord Campbell asked him if there
-was any truth in the story that Parke’s peerage was to be for life. On
-hearing that it was, Lord Campbell replied, “Then sorry am I to say that
-I must make a row about it.” At first he thought that the grant of a
-life peerage was not illegal--for Coke asserted its legality--but merely
-unconstitutional. When, however, Lord Campbell studied the precedents,
-he became convinced that “no life peerage had been granted to any man
-for more than 400 years, and that there was no authenticated instance of
-a peer ever having sat and voted in the House of Lords having in him a
-life peerage only--the life peerages relied upon being superinduced on
-pre-existing peerages, _e.g._, De Vere, Earl of Oxford (a title which
-had been in his family since the Conquest), was created by Richard II.
-Marquis of Dublin for life.” Lord Campbell goes on to say, “My eyes were
-opened. The power of the Crown to give a right to vote in the House must
-depend on the exercise of the power; and no one _had_ voted in right of
-a peerage for life more than _of a peerage granted during the pleasure
-of the King_--for the granting of which there was at least one
-precedent.”[269]
-
-When Sir Theodore Martin says that “the right of the Crown to create a
-life peerage with a right to sit in Parliament” was “scarcely disputed
-in the discussions which arose,” his anxiety to exaggerate the Queen’s
-prerogative has led him into a grave error. As Lord Campbell says, “It
-was not necessary to resort to the doctrine of desuetude,” for “the
-non-exercise of a prerogative, ever since the Constitution was settled,
-afforded a strong inference that it had never lawfully existed.” The
-fact is that the arguments in favour of recognising the right of the
-Crown to create a peer for life, with the right of voting in the House
-of Lords, would have been equally good for creating a peer with a
-similar right, during the Sovereign’s pleasure. A peer who could at any
-moment be deprived of his rank and senatorial privileges would, of
-course, either be a creature of the Court or the minion of the Minister.
-Lord Lyndhurst, therefore, had little difficulty in carrying a motion
-referring Baron Parke’s Letters Patent to a Committee of Privileges,
-which reported against the right asserted by the Crown. The Government
-yielded, and Sir James Parke was finally created an hereditary peer in
-the ordinary way, under the title of Lord Wensleydale.
-
-The rebuff was annoying to the Queen; all the more that it led to a
-fresh series of attacks on Prince Albert. He was accused of having
-attempted to extend the Queen’s prerogative with the ulterior object of
-packing the House of Lords with certain scientific men who were supposed
-to be Court favourites.[270] In his “Memoirs,” according to Mr.
-Greville, General Grey “told his brother, the Earl, that his Royal
-Highness knew nothing of the matter till after it had been settled.” The
-truth is that nobody was cognisant of the affair except the Lord
-Chancellor, Lord Granville, and Lord Palmerston. Mr. Greville says,
-“George Lewis told me that the life peerage had never been brought
-before the Cabinet, and he knew nothing of it till he saw it in the
-_Gazette_,”[271] which illustrates the thoughtless manner in which Lord
-Palmerston allowed himself to be committed to a step, that roused public
-jealousy against the Crown and the Court. Lord Malmesbury also states,
-that when Lord Derby was dining one day with the Queen, she told him
-that if she had had any idea that the question would have created such a
-disturbance, she would never have dreamt of granting Parke his life
-peerage.[272]
-
-Fortunately the negotiations for peace were now proceeding apace at
-Paris. The Queen had written a letter to the French Emperor, which Lord
-Clarendon had delivered to him, earnestly insisting on the necessity of
-unity of action between France and England at the Congress of the
-Powers. The Emperor told Lord Clarendon it was “a charming letter;” but
-in spite of his flattering account of it, the influence of France from
-first to last was turned against England in the discussions between the
-plenipotentiaries. Possibly this was due to the constitutional indolence
-and weakness of the Emperor, who permitted Walewski to manage matters
-his own way, and as for Walewski, he betrayed Lord Clarendon at every
-opportunity. Napoleon III. was really in the hands of his _entourage_,
-and they were to a great extent in the hands of Russia.[273] Lord
-Cowley, indeed, informed Mr. Greville that Walewski privately made known
-to Orloff, the Russian plenipotentiary, not only the points he must
-yield, but those as to which he might safely defy Lord Clarendon with
-the open or secret support of France.
-
-“The signing of the Treaty of Peace with Russia,” writes Lord
-Malmesbury
-
-[Illustration: THE EMPEROR OF AUSTRIA.]
-
-on the 30th of March, “was announced by the firing of cannon from the
-Tower and Horse Guards. Numbers collected in the streets, but no
-enthusiasm was shown.”[274] In fact, when the terms became known there
-was much popular disappointment, and the _Sun_ newspaper actually
-appeared in deep mourning over our national humiliation. On the next
-morning a great crowd assembled in front of the Mansion House. At ten
-o’clock the Lord Mayor, attended by the Sheriffs, the Sword-bearer,
-Mace-bearer, and City Marshal, advanced to the stone balcony, and amidst
-loud cheers read a despatch from the Home Secretary informing him that
-the Treaty was signed. At noon the Lord Mayor proceeded in state to the
-Royal Exchange, where a great number of ladies had mingled with the
-crowd, and read the despatch again.
-
-[Illustration: THE CONFERENCE OF PARIS, 1856.]
-
-And what were the terms of peace? The Powers admitted Turkey to
-participate in all the advantages of the public law of Europe, and they
-agreed that in any future dispute with the Porte, the matter must be
-submitted to arbitration before force was used by either side. The
-Sultan was bound by the Treaty to communicate to the Powers a firman
-improving the condition of his Christian subjects, but this instrument,
-it was stipulated, gave the Powers no collective or individual right to
-interfere between Turkey and her Christian subjects. The Black Sea was
-neutralised--_i.e._, all ships of war were excluded from it, and the
-establishment of arsenals on its coasts was prohibited. But the Euxine
-was declared free to the trading vessels of all nations, and the Powers
-were at liberty to keep a few armed ships of light draught for police
-duty on the neutralised sea. The navigation of the Danube was declared
-free. Russia ceded Bessarabia to Turkey. The privileges and immunities
-of Wallachia, Moldavia, and Servia were guaranteed, but the Sultan was
-permitted to garrison the latter province. Russia and Turkey were bound
-to restore to each other the conquests they had respectively made in
-Asia. On the invitation of France the Congress was asked to consider the
-position of Greece, the Roman States, and the two Sicilies. It was also
-asked to condemn the licence of the Belgian Press, and to formulate new
-rules for maritime warfare. These discussions came to naught, but it was
-agreed by the “Declarations of Paris” that privateering should be
-abolished; that, with the exception of contraband, an enemy’s goods must
-be free from capture under a neutral flag, a neutral’s goods being also
-respected under an enemy’s flag; and that “paper blockades” should not
-be recognised, _i.e._, a blockade to be effective must in future be
-maintained by a force strong enough to cut off access to the coasts of
-an enemy.[275] It will be observed that there was nothing in this
-instrument to provide means for punishing Russia if she broke it. Hence,
-on the 15th of April, France, Austria, and England signed what was
-called the Tripartite Treaty, binding each other jointly or severally to
-go to war against any Power that violated the Treaty of Paris. This
-compact was treated like a dead letter when Russia attacked Turkey in
-1877. “The peace,” said Prince Albert in a letter to Stockmar, “is not
-such as we could have wished, still infinitely to be preferred to the
-prosecution of the war, with the present complication of general
-policy.” That was in truth the verdict of the country. Comparing the
-terms with those which we might have obtained at Vienna in 1855, it was
-a humiliating settlement for England, in no way justifying the
-continuance of the war after the battle of Inkermann. Comparing them
-with the terms which the Czar might have obtained before the invasion of
-the Crimea, the settlement was humiliating to Russia.
-
-In Parliament the debates on the Treaty were on the whole favourable to
-the Government. Complaint was, however, made that no effective steps had
-been taken to protect Turkey from Russian aggression in Asia Minor; that
-the Circassians had been abandoned; that Lord Clarendon in the Congress
-had not protested with enough warmth against the attacks made on the
-Belgian Press; that no definite provision had been made to prevent
-Russia from building war-ships at Nicolaieff; that the government of
-the Principalities had been left an open question; and that by the
-Declarations rights of search at sea, which were extremely useful to a
-naval power during war, were surrendered. It is true that, by agreeing
-to abolish privateering, England sacrificed what may be called her right
-of fighting with naval volunteers; and it seems as if the American
-doctrine--namely, that to the merchant whose ships are plundered, it
-matters little whether the mischief is done by a man-of-war or a
-privateer--is sensible. On the other hand, it was obvious that England
-could not carry on a naval war for a year on the principle that free
-ships did not make free goods, without coming into collision with every
-neutral State in the world. But to all objections there was, of course,
-one answer. No better terms could be got unless England was prepared to
-carry on the war alone. Yet, as a matter of fact, Russia had suffered so
-severely during the winter, that it is probable she might have been more
-complaisant at Paris, had Lord Clarendon been firmer, and had Napoleon
-III. not perfidiously played into her hands.
-
-The solitary result of the Crimean War, says Mr. Spencer Walpole, was to
-“set back the clock for some fourteen years.”[276] Still he seems to
-think that it “was perhaps worth some sacrifice, to prove that England
-was still ready to strike a blow for a weak neighbour whom she believed
-to be oppressed.” This would have been a gain had it added to English
-prestige. But the war really diminished that prestige. M. De
-Tocqueville, after returning from a Continental tour, said to the late
-Mr. Senior, “I heard universal and unqualified praise of the heroic
-courage of your soldiers, but at the same time I found spread abroad the
-persuasion that the importance of England had been overrated as a
-military power properly so called--a power which consists in
-administering as much as in fighting, and, above all, that it was
-impossible (and this had never before been believed) for her to raise
-large armies, even under the most pressing circumstances. I never heard
-anything like it since my childhood. You are supposed to be entirely
-dependent on us.... A year ago we probably overrated your military
-power. I believe that now we most mischievously underrate it. A year ago
-nothing alarmed us more than a whisper of the chance of a war with
-England. We talk of one now with great composure. We believe that it
-would not be difficult to throw 100,000 men upon your shores, and we
-believe that half that number would walk over England or Ireland.”[277]
-
-After peace had been proclaimed, public life in England stagnated for a
-time, and party rancour temporarily disappeared. Ministers and
-Ex-Ministers met in society on the friendliest terms, and Lord
-Malmesbury describes a dinner party which the Queen gave on the 7th of
-May in honour of Baron Brunnow, at which the leaders of both factions
-were present--“the happy family I call them,” says the Queen in a letter
-to King Leopold. “Lord John Russell was there,” says Lord Malmesbury,
-“and very civil to me, as when I arrived he crossed the room to come to
-speak to me--a thing he never did before. He began by saying ‘You gave
-it them well last night,’[278] and seemed quite delighted at the
-Government being bullied.... I had to take Lady Clarendon to dinner. She
-was at first very cross, but I ended by laughing her out of her bad
-humour.”[279] A slight ripple on the calm waters was due to the
-suspension of diplomatic relations with the United States. In raising
-recruits under the Foreign Enlistment Act, it seems some overzealous
-British agents had given the American Government not unreasonable cause
-to complain that we were violating their law during the war. The dispute
-became acute, when the British Minister to the United States was
-requested to leave Washington--but the quarrel was not a serious one.
-“The Americans,” Prince Albert informs Stockmar on the 16th June, “have
-sent away our Minister, but accompanied the act with such assurances of
-friendship and affection, and of their perfect readiness to adjust all
-points of difference in conformity with our wishes, that it will be
-difficult to give theirs his _congé_ in return.” As a matter of fact the
-British Government apologised, and on the 16th of March, 1857, Lord
-Napier was received at Washington as Mr. Crampton’s successor. In truth
-there was no real ill-feeling at all between the two nations--and of
-this a curious proof was given at the end of the year. H.M.S. _Resolute_
-which had been attached to the last Arctic expedition had been abandoned
-in the ice. Some American explorers found her adrift and took her to the
-United States. There she was re-fitted at the expense of the Government,
-and sent back to England as a present to the Queen. When _Resolute_ made
-her appearance at Cowes, the Queen insisted on going in person, on the
-16th of December, to receive the gift. Her courteous reception of the
-American officers touched them deeply, and Lord Clarendon informed her
-Majesty that Mr. Dallas, the American Minister, told him, his countrymen
-were quite overwhelmed with the kindness which they had everywhere
-received.
-
-Lord Palmerston’s unwearied attention to business, and his popularity
-after peace had been proclaimed, almost silenced criticism on his
-domestic policy. It had been supposed that the Budget would tempt the
-Opposition to attack him, because the Chancellor of the Exchequer had a
-dismal story to tell when the House of Commons met after Whitsuntide.
-The expenditure for the past year had come to £88,428,355, or
-£22,723,854 in excess of the revenue. In fact, during the three years
-ending with 1856 the war had cost England
-
-[Illustration: VISIT OF THE QUEEN AND PRINCE ALBERT TO THE “RESOLUTE.”]
-
-£77,588,000. After making the most cautious estimates, Sir George
-Cornewall Lewis said that for the coming year, on the basis of existing
-taxation, his expected revenue would fall short of his anticipated
-expenditure by £7,000,000. As no new taxes were to be levied, he was
-compelled to find the money by borrowing, and, of course, no remission
-of taxation could in such circumstances be looked for. The House
-sanctioned the scheme of the Chancellor of the Exchequer, but he was
-warned that in future reduced estimates would be demanded.
-
-More than one attempt was made by Mr. Disraeli to assail the Italian
-policy of Lord Palmerston. That policy was somewhat tortuous, for whilst
-the English Foreign Office was perpetually encouraging Sardinia to
-protest against the Austrian occupation of North Italy, England had,
-with Austria and France, become a party to the Tripartite Treaty
-guaranteeing the execution of the Treaty of Paris. Mr. Disraeli argued
-that it was inconsistent to stir up Sardinia and the discontented
-populations of Italy against Austria, at a time when we had by the
-Tripartite Treaty virtually bound ourselves in a close alliance with the
-Austrian Empire. The tyrannical Government of Sicily also elicited
-remonstrances from England, against which Russia protested, on the
-ground that we had no right to interfere between King “Bomba” and his
-subjects. But no enthusiasm was roused on these subjects--in fact, the
-country did not desire a change of Government at the time, and every
-effort to weaken the Ministry was therefore futile. Yet the home policy
-of the Ministry was a signal failure. They succeeded in assimilating the
-mercantile law of England and Scotland; but their first Bill to amend
-the law of partnership was abandoned in March. A second one was
-introduced, and abandoned in July. A Bill for the amendment of the Poor
-Law met the same fate. The Bill to regulate lunatic asylums in Ireland,
-and a Bill to relieve merchant vessels of tolls and dues were also
-abandoned. Ministers were equally unfortunate with their Divorce Bill,
-and with their Bills to establish jurisdiction over wills, and to check
-the criminal appropriation of trust property. Their Church Discipline
-Bill was rejected by the Lords. The Bills to reconstruct the Irish Court
-of Chancery and the Insolvency Court were dropped.[280] The Jury Bill,
-Juvenile Offenders Bill, and Dublin Police Bill were also given up. The
-Civil Servants’ Superannuation Bill, the London Municipal Reform Bill,
-the Bill for the local management of the metropolis, a burial Bill, a
-vaccination Bill, a Bill dealing with the Queen’s College in Ireland,
-and a Scotch education Bill were all abandoned. A Bill enabling two
-Bishops to retire on handsome terms was passed, though the arrangement
-was denounced as simoniacal, and the County Police Bill also became law.
-But the legislative failures of the Government showed that it had no
-firm hold over the House of Commons, and that its position was safe,
-merely because the nation was not in a mood for change so soon after
-its energies had been exhausted in a costly and inglorious war.
-Moreover, Parties were still disorganised. Lord John Russell’s isolation
-and the position of the Peelites being disturbing factors in the
-situation. Mr. Gladstone and Mr. Disraeli, however, began to draw nearer
-and nearer to each other, Lord Stanley being regarded as the connecting
-link between them, and some of the Whigs, a little alarmed at the
-prospect of a hostile coalition, began to hint that Palmerston would be
-wise to attract the Peelites back to his standard. The fact is, the war
-left the country profoundly disgusted with Party government. Sir James
-Graham told Mr. Greville that hitherto the party system had been
-efficient for government, because patronage had been “the great
-instrument for keeping parties together.” Peel, however, broke up the
-old party system in 1846, and now, said Sir James Graham, “between the
-Press, the public opinion which the Press had made, and the views of
-certain people in Parliament, of whom Gladstone is the most eminent and
-strenuous, patronage was either destroyed or going rapidly to
-destruction.”[281] To some extent the Queen shared these views, but in
-the event of any mishap leading to Palmerston’s resignation, the idea of
-the Court was to organise a coalition under Clarendon. Parliament was
-prorogued on the 29th of July.
-
-Outside politics the life of the Queen during 1856 was not very
-eventful. On the 20th of March the confirmation of the Princess Royal
-brought together an interesting family gathering at the private chapel
-at Windsor. Prince Albert led the princess in, and was followed by the
-Queen and King Leopold of Belgium. The officers of State, and of the
-household, and most of the members of the Royal Family, were present,
-and the Bishop of Oxford, Lord High Almoner, read the preface, the
-Archbishop of Canterbury performing the ceremony. Several guests were
-present, and in describing the event to Stockmar the Prince dwells with
-some pride on the fact that the Princess came through the ordeal of Dean
-Wellesley’s preliminary examination a few days before with great
-success.[282] The choice of the Navy as Prince Alfred’s profession had
-now been made, and in April the Queen and Prince Albert, after much
-anxious thought, selected a tutor for their son. He is described by the
-Prince in one of his letters as “a distinguished and most amiable young
-officer of Engineers ... one Lieutenant Cowell, who was Adjutant of Sir
-Harry Jones at Bomarsund and before Sebastopol.... He is only
-twenty-three, and has had a high scientific training. By this a great
-load has been taken off my heart.”[283]
-
-[Illustration: PORTSMOUTH.]
-
-During the spring of the year the wounded from the Crimea had been
-pouring in. In February the Queen presented Miss Florence Nightingale
-with a jewel, somewhat resembling the badge of an Order of Knighthood,
-for her services at Scutari. On the 16th of April her Majesty went to
-Chatham with her husband to visit these victims of the war. She passed
-through the wards much affected by the sight of some of the more ghastly
-wounds, speaking kind and comforting words of sympathy to those who had
-suffered most severely. The Camp at Aldershot was also visited on the
-18th of April, and 14,000 troops were reviewed, her Majesty riding along
-the line whilst the men presented arms. Next morning was a field day,
-and the Queen appeared on the ground on horseback, wearing a
-Field-Marshal’s uniform, with the Star of the Garter over a dark-blue
-riding-habit. On the 23rd of April the splendid fleet
-
-[Illustration: SIR DE LACY EVANS.]
-
-at Spithead was reviewed. The spectacle was one of surpassing
-magnificence, and upwards of 100,000 persons witnessed it, crowding
-every spot from which a view could be obtained between Fort Monckton and
-Southsea Castle. The Solent was alive with yachts and craft of all
-kinds, decked with bunting, which fluttered gaily in the light breeze.
-The Queen’s yacht left Portsmouth Harbour at noon, steamed down and
-returned through the double line of war-ships. As the yacht rounded the
-_Royal George_ and _Duke of Wellington_ they opened a Royal salute, and
-their yards were suddenly manned, as if by magic, with seamen, each
-trying to cheer louder than his comrade. This manœuvre was repeated in
-succession by every ship in the fleet, and the effect was imposing and
-impressive. A mimic attack on Southsea Castle followed, and at night
-the whole fleet was suddenly and simultaneously illuminated with blue
-lights from yards and portholes.
-
-“Our army,” Prince Albert wrote, in April, “has begun to return, and it
-will require redoubled exertions to keep up its organisation.” In fact,
-already an active party in the Cabinet had begun to demand heavy
-retrenchment on military expenditure. The Queen had long been convinced
-that hurried retrenchments led to wasteful panic expenditure, and was
-very much concerned when she heard what was being mooted in the
-Ministry. Hence she wrote to Lord Palmerston expressing her strong
-feeling that retrenchment should be moderate and gradual. “To the
-miserable reductions of the last thirty years,” she says, “is entirely
-owing our state of helplessness when the war began;” and surely, she
-urged, Ministers were not going to forget the lesson taught by our
-sufferings in the Crimea. What, however, was most seriously wanted was a
-new military system which would properly utilise the money already voted
-for the army, and prevent it from being jobbed into the hands of
-incompetent persons with powerful family interest. Sir De Lacy Evans, on
-the 4th of March, made an effort to persuade the House of Commons to
-abolish the purchase system, which he described as “a stain upon the
-service and a dishonour to England,” and Lord Goderich warmly advocated
-the application of some effective tests of competence to candidates for
-commissions. But though everybody sympathised with Evans, nobody would
-help him to carry out his ideas. In the abstract, said Lord Palmerston,
-purchase was bad. No one would propose such a system if we were
-establishing an army for the first time. It existed only in the British
-army, but, then, it did exist, and it had existed so long that it was
-hard to get rid of it without injustice to individuals,[284] and great
-expenditure in compensation. Yet the highest estimate made of the value
-of commissions did not exceed £8,000,000--less than half the sum voted
-every year by the House of Commons for the troops; and even that sum
-would have had to be paid, not at once, but over a long series of years,
-under any scheme, to release an army which had been pawned to its
-officers. Prince Albert, in conjunction with Lord Hardinge, drew up a
-plan for a new military organisation, which, however, did not touch
-questions of patronage or promotion. On the 19th of May the Queen laid
-the foundation stone of the great military hospital at Netley, the first
-of the kind in England, and an institution which we owe entirely to her
-Majesty. “Loving my dear, brave army as I do,” she writes to King
-Leopold, “and having seen so many of my poor sick and wounded soldiers,
-I shall watch over this work with maternal anxiety,”[285] A visit from
-Prince Frederick William of Prussia brought sunshine into the Royal
-household, and gladdened the heart of the Queen’s eldest daughter, who
-was supremely happy at once again meeting her betrothed. It was during
-this visit that the Princess met with an accident, on the 25th of June,
-that might have ended fatally. She was sitting at her table in
-Buckingham Palace, reading a letter, when the sleeve of her dress caught
-fire from a candle. Luckily Miss Hildyard and Miss Anderson (who were in
-the room at the time) promptly rolled the Princess in the hearthrug and
-extinguished the flames, though her arm was severely burnt from below
-the elbow to the shoulder.
-
-On the 8th of July the Queen again went to Aldershot to review a great
-body of Crimean troops, the Royal party including the King of the
-Belgians and Prince Oscar of Sweden. Unfortunately the weather somewhat
-marred the grandeur of the spectacle, but it became fair enough ere the
-day was done to admit of the regiments forming in three sides of a
-square round the Queen’s carriage. Then the officers who had been under
-fire, with four men from each company and troop, stepped forward, and
-her Majesty, rising, addressed them a few words of welcome and thanks.
-She told them to say to their comrades that she had herself watched
-anxiously over their difficulties and hardships, and mourned with deep
-sorrow for the brave men who had fallen in their country’s cause. When
-she ceased to speak, the cry of “God save the Queen” burst forth from
-every lip. The air was black with helmets, bearskins, and shakoes, which
-the men tossed up with delight. Flashing sabres were waving and glancing
-along the lines, and on every hillside crowds caught up the cheering
-that rose from the serried and glittering ranks of the army. Unhappily
-the day was saddened by a strange and melancholy occurrence. Lord
-Hardinge was seized with a fit whilst talking to the Queen. “He fell
-forward,” says Prince Albert, “upon the table before which he was
-standing. I assisted him to the nearest sofa, where he at once resumed
-what he was saying with the greatest clearness and calmness, merely
-apologising that he had made such a disturbance. When he was moved to
-London it was found his right side was paralysed.” Next day the Guards
-and Highlanders arrived, and were received by the Queen and enthusiastic
-crowds in the Park. “They marched past in fours,” writes Lord
-Malmesbury, “preceded by their colonels on horseback and their bands, in
-heavy marching order. Certainly they looked as if they had done work;
-their uniforms were shabby, many having almost lost all colour, their
-bearskins quite brown, and they themselves, poor fellows, though they
-seemed happy, and were laughing as they marched along, were very thin
-and worn.”[286] Lord Hardinge’s career was now closed. On the 9th of
-July he resigned, and on the 24th of September he died. On the 12th of
-July the Cabinet accordingly advised the Queen to appoint her cousin,
-the Duke of Cambridge, Commander-in-Chief, in succession to Lord
-Hardinge, and her Majesty was gratified to find that the arrangement was
-one which was highly popular with the troops. Thus the intention of
-Wellington was fulfilled, and the army again passed under the direct
-command of a Prince of the Blood Royal.
-
-The Prince and Princess of Prussia paid a visit to England in August,
-arriving on the 10th and leaving on the 29th, by which time the Court
-had retired to Osborne. On the 30th, after spending two days in
-Edinburgh, the Queen and her family arrived at Balmoral. “We found the
-house finished,” writes the Queen in her Diary, “as well as the offices,
-and the poor old house gone!”[287] It was a stormy, tempestuous holiday,
-but the Queen made the best of it. On the 21st of September Sir James
-Clark introduced Miss Florence Nightingale to the Queen, who was greatly
-charmed with her, and with whom her Majesty held grave consultations as
-to the reforms that were needed in military hospitals. The coronation of
-the Czar at Moscow, on the 7th of September, was attended by Lord
-Granville as the Queen’s representative, and when his reports reached
-Balmoral, Prince Albert, in a letter to Stockmar, said that they
-regarded these as “an apotheosis and homage paid to the vanquished, and
-which cannot fail to inspire both worshipper and worshipped with
-dangerous illusions in regard to the real state of things.”
-
-The Queen was now getting alarmed as to the carrying out of the Treaty
-of Peace. She saw Russia making strenuous efforts to separate France and
-England. Instead of restoring Kars to the Turks, the Russians demolished
-the fortifications, and prolonged their military occupation of the
-country in defiance of the Treaty of Paris. They tried to filch Serpent
-Island at the mouth of the Danube, under the pretext that it was inside
-the new line of their frontier. They sought to push their new frontier
-as far south as Lake Jalpuk, because the Powers, misled by a faulty map,
-had permitted them to retain the Moldavian town of Bolgrad.[288] In each
-case the Emperor of the French was inclined to support the Russian
-claim. The British fleet was therefore ordered to occupy the Black Sea
-till the deadlock was ended, and when Chreptovitch, the new Russian
-ambassador, threatened to leave England because this step had been
-taken, Lord Palmerston coolly told him “the sooner he did so the
-better,” if he did not mean to give England satisfaction.[289]
-
-The King of Prussia now began to press the Queen to interfere in a
-quarrel between him and the Swiss Republic. Neuenburg or Neufchâtel, by
-dynastic inheritance, had come into the possession of Frederick I. in
-1707. In 1806 it was ceded to Napoleon, who gave it to Berthier, the
-most diplomatic of his generals. After the Great Peace it was granted an
-oligarchic constitution,
-
-[Illustration: VIEW IN BERNE.]
-
-and received as a Canton into the Swiss Confederation, but its vassalage
-to the House of Hohenzollern was formally acknowledged. In 1848 the
-Republican citizens of Neuenburg broke the bond that tied them to the
-Prussian crown, and though the Protocol of London of the 24th May, 1852,
-recognised the Prussian claim to the Province, the Province ignored the
-Protocol of London. In the autumn of 1856 the Prussian party in
-Neuenburg attacked the Republicans, but the Swiss Federal troops
-ruthlessly suppressed the rising, and not only killed twelve royalists,
-but had the audacity to throw a hundred others into prison, simply
-because they were loyal to their feudal lord. The King of Prussia
-objected to their being put on trial, and demanded their surrender, but
-it was a far cry from Berlin to Berne, and the stubborn Switzers paid no
-heed to his demands. Napoleon III. menaced them in vain. Austria, always
-pleased to see Prussia humbled in Germany, threw obstacles in the way of
-Prussian troops marching through the territory of the Confederation to
-coerce Switzerland, and Napoleon did not dare to outrage French opinion
-by letting them march through Alsace-Lorraine. In England, Palmerston
-smiled grimly over the embarrassment of Russia’s most faithful ally. He
-said to the Hanoverian Minister in London when Prussia was threatening
-coercion, “the Prussians will incur much expense, and in January
-Switzerland will condemn the captives and then amnesty them; _donc la
-farce sera finie, et la Prusse y sera pour les frais_.”[290]
-
-Nor was this the only anxiety at Court. King “Bomba’s” misgovernment in
-southern Italy, and his brutal treatment of persons arbitrarily arrested
-on suspicion of disloyalty, were provoking revolution. An outbreak in
-the south must lead to a rising in the north, which in turn must involve
-France and Sardinia in war with Austria. England and France, finding
-their remonstrances disregarded by the Neapolitan Government, withdrew
-their legations from Naples in October, and ordered the fleet to make a
-demonstration in the bay. This step was sanctioned by the Queen not
-without some misgiving, because to suspend diplomatic relations with a
-State because its internal government is not to our liking, was to
-establish a dangerous diplomatic precedent. It evoked from Russia a
-cutting remonstrance, which, however, Lord Palmerston had to accept as
-best he could.
-
-On the 19th of October the Court returned to Windsor, and on the 17th of
-November, Stockmar, in response to a pressing appeal to come and advise
-the Queen in the midst of her growing difficulties, paid her what was
-destined to be his last visit. He found her heavily stricken with grief
-because of the death of her half-brother, Prince Leiningen, on the 13th.
-“We three,” (the Prince, the Princess Hohenlohe, and the Queen), she
-writes to King Leopold, “were very fond of each other, and never felt or
-fancied that we were not real _Geschwister_ (children of the same
-parents). We knew but _one_ parent--_our_ mother.”[291] The last day of
-the year brought with it one consolation. The Conference in Paris had
-settled our dispute with Russia, and a map was signed by the
-plenipotentiaries which met the requirements of the Czar, without giving
-Russia strategical advantages which she had tried to obtain.[292]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXV.
-
-TWO LITTLE WARS AND A “PENAL DISSOLUTION.”
-
- The Queen’s New Year Greeting to Napoleon III.--A
- Gladstone-Disraeli Coalition--A “Scene” in the Carlton Club--Mr.
- Disraeli’s Attack on Lord Palmerston’s Foreign Policy--The Queen
- Consents to Reduce the Income Tax--A Fallacious Budget, with
- Imaginary Remissions--The Persian War--General Outram’s
- Victories--Unpopularity of the War--Making War without Consulting
- Parliament--The Rupture with China--A “Prancing Proconsul”--The
- Bombardment of Canton--Defeat of Lord Palmerston, and his Appeal to
- the Country--A Penal Dissolution--Abortive Coalition between the
- Peelites and Tories--Mr. Gladstone and the Intriguers--Split in the
- Peelite Party--Palmerston’s Victory at the Polls--The Rout of the
- Manchester School--The Lesson of the Election--Opening of the New
- Parliament--The Work of the Session--Mr. Gladstone’s Obstruction of
- the Divorce Bill--The Settlement of the Neufchâtel Difficulty--The
- Question of the Principalities--Visit of the French Emperor to the
- Queen.
-
-
-Writing on New Year’s Day in 1857, Lord Malmesbury says in his Diary,
-“The Conference opened yesterday on the questions of Bolgrad and the
-Isle of Serpents, which the Russians falsely claim as being included in
-the Treaty of Peace. The Swiss are making energetic preparations for
-resisting the threatened invasion of Neufchâtel by Prussia; whilst
-England and France are using their utmost exertions to prevent a war.
-England has declared war against Persia, and Admiral Seymour has
-bombarded Canton to avenge an insult offered to our flag.”[293] The
-Queen, in a letter conveying her greetings to the Emperor of the French,
-also observes, mournfully, that “the New Year again begins amid the din
-of warlike preparation;” and there was undoubtedly a feeling of
-disappointment in England that the Peace of Paris had not brought peace
-to the world. Yet the general condition of the country was prosperous.
-Crime, however--especially fraud and murder--had increased shockingly,
-and severe moralists in Pall Mall went about predicting that Parliament
-must now devote a Session to social legislation--especially penal
-legislation--so as to purge a corrupt people of its wickedness. But the
-corrupt people, much to the Queen’s regret, was of quite another
-opinion--and so were the political factions. The constituencies were
-beginning to murmur against taxation. Now that war was over, they
-demanded sweeping reductions in the income and other taxes, which
-involved the diminution of the army and navy to such slender dimensions,
-that her Majesty felt certain they would be as unfit to cope with a
-sudden emergency as they were when the Crimea was invaded. As for the
-factions, they were determined to turn out the Government, which they
-knew existed solely on the credit Palmerston had obtained by carrying on
-war when the nation wanted it, and ending it when the nation was getting
-sick of the struggle. The Queen was hostile to any abrupt change of
-Government at a time when she could see no means of replacing
-Palmerston’s Cabinet by a stronger one, and she viewed with
-disapprobation the subterranean intrigues which were going on between
-the Tories and the Peelites. That Mr. Gladstone and Mr. Disraeli were
-attempting, through the medium of Lord Stanley, to form a Coalition, was
-known at the Court; nay, it was even said that Mr. Gladstone was to take
-the leadership of the Tory Party in the House of Commons. Sir William
-Jolliffe, the Tory Whip, when pressed on the point in December, 1856,
-told Mr. George Byng that this was “not true at present; that he could
-not say what might or might not happen hereafter, but that he (Mr.
-Gladstone) could not be accepted as a leader, and must, in any case,
-first serve in the ranks.” Only a short time before that some of the
-younger members of the Party had visited the drawing-room of the Carlton
-Club with the amiable intention of throwing Mr. Gladstone out of the
-window. That they had now modified their repugnance to him indicates how
-keen their hunger for office had grown. But that the Tory Party was
-disorganised through Mr. Disraeli’s unpopularity, and also because Lord
-Palmerston’s policy, though Liberal abroad, was really too Conservative
-at home to be successfully attacked, is clear from a letter which Lord
-Derby wrote to Lord Malmesbury on the prosperity of the Conservatives at
-the close of 1856.[294]
-
-Parliament was opened on the 3rd of February, 1857, and the Queen’s
-Speech naturally referred to the wars and rumours of war that filled the
-air. Law Reform and the Bank Act were the only subjects of domestic
-interest dwelt upon. Mr. Gladstone and Mr. Sidney Herbert now appeared
-almost anxious to join Lord Derby; and the Tories, on their part, were
-quite prepared to support Mr. Gladstone in demanding that the Income Tax
-be reduced to 5d. in the current year, and abolished altogether in 1860,
-as had been agreed on in 1853.[295] Mr. Disraeli’s attack, on the other
-hand, was directed against the Foreign Policy of the Government. He
-complained that at the very time Lord Clarendon was encouraging the
-hopes of Count Cavour and of Italy at the Congress of Paris, France had
-signed a Secret Treaty guaranteeing to Austria her Italian provinces,
-and had signed it by the advice of England. Lord Palmerston denied the
-existence of this Secret Treaty. But he admitted that in 1854, when
-there was some hope that Austria would take part in the war, an
-agreement was made to the effect that should Russia raise an
-insurrection in North Italy, France would help Austria to put it down,
-if Austrian armies were actually co-operating with the Allies against
-Russia. In the Upper House, Lord Aberdeen voted for the amendment to the
-Address with many of the Tories--a somewhat unusual thing for an
-ex-Premier to do--and this, along with Mr. Gladstone’s cordial support
-of Mr. Disraeli, was taken to be a sign that the Peelites desired to
-coalesce with the Opposition. Lord John Russell, who was a kind of
-political Ishmaelite, also spoke bitterly about the abortive
-demonstration of the fleet at Naples, which had drawn upon us insulting
-remonstrances, and had not coerced King Ferdinand into good behaviour.
-On the 17th of February Mr. Disraeli compelled Lord Palmerston to admit
-that “a military convention,” if not a Secret Treaty, between France and
-Austria _had_ been signed, but only as a temporary arrangement. When,
-however, Mr. Disraeli persisted in saying it was a Secret Treaty, and
-that on the face of it there was no limit to the period of its
-operation, Palmerston lost his temper, a circumstance so extraordinary
-that it convinced the House he had been again caught tripping.
-
-[Illustration: OLD WINDSOR LOCK.
-
-(_From a Photograph by Taunt and Co., Oxford._)]
-
-After many harassing consultations, the Queen felt that it was
-impossible for the Cabinet to resist the growing agitation against the
-Income Tax. The coalition between Mr. Gladstone and Mr. Disraeli was too
-ominous to be disregarded; and so, on the 10th of February, she wrote to
-King Leopold, “We think we shall be able to reduce the Income Tax and
-yet maintain an efficient navy, and the _organisation_ of the army,
-which is even more important than the number of the men.”[296] When Sir
-George Cornewall Lewis brought in his Budget on the 13th of February, it
-was found that he reduced the Income Tax from 1s. 4d. to 7d. in the
-pound; but of course this was still 2d. above the peace limit fixed in
-1853. The complaint of the Opposition was that the Government imposed
-that 2d. merely to promote what Mr. Disraeli called the “turbulent and
-aggressive policy” abroad by which Lord Palmerston diverted the
-attention of the country from its own affairs at home.[297] Mr.
-Gladstone attacked the Budget all along the line. Sir George Lewis, he
-said, pretended to remit £11,000,000 of taxation. But of that sum
-£4,470,000 were war taxes, which necessarily dropped when war was over,
-and though Sir George brought the tea duty down from 1s. 9d. to 1s. 7d.
-on the lb., and on sugar from 20s. per cwt. to 18s. 4d., that still
-raised from tea and sugar £1,400,000 more than the old peace duties drew
-from them. The real remission, then, was not £11,000,000, but
-£3,184,000. The faults of the Budget were obviously two. It virtually
-ignored the pledge of the Government in 1853 to abolish the Income Tax
-in 1860. Instead of cutting down expenditure so as to render it possible
-to keep that pledge, it increased expenditure above the peace limit, so
-as to make it impossible to surrender the Income Tax.[298] The accepted
-financial policy of the country had been to grant an Income Tax during
-peace solely to enable the Government to remit taxes on articles of
-popular consumption. It was granted merely to give an elastic revenue
-time to recover from sudden remissions of indirect taxation. Sir George
-Lewis, however, still kept the tax above the peace limit, and his small
-reductions on the tea and sugar duties left them standing above the
-peace limit also. Moreover, he maintained his expenditure on a scale
-which created deficits that rendered the continuance of the Income Tax,
-without compensating remissions of indirect taxes, inevitable. In fact,
-Sir George Lewis may be said to have introduced the vicious principle of
-modern finance, by which a temporary Income Tax is insidiously converted
-into a permanent one, and by which, under cover of extraordinary
-disbursement during a war, the country is left after peace is declared
-with a residue of that outlay clinging to the estimates, as ordinary and
-permanent annual expenditure. The Budget, however, was carried through
-in a slightly modified form, but the sudden dissolution of Parliament in
-March compelled Sir George Lewis to levy his new taxes not on a
-descending scale for three years, but for the ensuing year only. With a
-view to the popular vote to which Lord Palmerston was about to appeal,
-Sir George then surrendered 2d. of the tea duty, which brought it down
-to 1s. 5d. on the pound. But he made no adequate provision for the
-Persian war, or the war with China. His alteration of the tea duty of
-course rendered his surplus a myth, and his Budget, with an inflated
-expenditure, went forth, as Mr. Gladstone complained, with a deficiency
-of ways and means. In fact, on the eve of an appeal to the
-constituencies, a prudish Chancellor of the Exchequer “went to the
-country” with a profligate electioneering Budget.
-
-Mention has been already made of a “little war” that was being waged
-with Persia. It had sprung out of the irrepressible desire of the Shah
-to hold Herat, and from the traditional belief of the Foreign Office
-that when Herat was in Persian hands, “the key of India” was in the
-pockets of the Czar.[299] In 1851 Persia had promised that she would not
-meddle with Herat if the Afghans did not attempt to seize it. But the
-Governor of Candahar advanced on the coveted city, whose ruler appealed
-to Persia for protection. The Indian Government admitted that there was
-no danger to India in Persia responding to this appeal. The Foreign
-Office, however, suspended diplomatic relations with the Court of
-Teheran.[300] Persia then agreed to retire from Herat when the Afghans
-withdrew, and negotiations went on in a dilatory fashion till the
-Crimean War broke out, when the Czar urged Persia to resist and become
-his ally. The Shah’s Prime Minister held his Imperial master back, and
-Mr. Thomson, a typical representative of the Foreign Office in Persia,
-by way of further conciliating the friendly Premier, appointed as First
-Secretary of the British Legation, a disreputable person who had been
-dismissed from the Persian service, and whose family were among the most
-active enemies of the anti-Russian Minister. The Minister refused to
-receive this individual--Meerza Hashim by name. By way of compensating
-him Mr. Murray, who succeeded Mr. Thomson, appointed him British agent
-at Shiraz, a place where we had no right to have an agent at all, but
-where, by the courtesy of the Persian Government, we had been allowed to
-have one.[301] The Persian Premier then threatened to arrest Meerza
-Hashim. As a matter of fact, he arrested his wife, and maliciously
-insinuated in a despatch, when Mr. Murray demanded her release, that he
-had compromised himself with the lady. Murray accordingly struck his
-flag and demanded an apology, whereupon Persia issued a manifesto
-declaring that the Afghans were advancing on Herat, and threatening to
-seize that fortress. In July, 1856, a British force was ordered to
-proceed from Bombay to occupy the island of Karrack and the city of
-Bushire. By this time the Crimean War was over, and Persia could get no
-aid from her Russian ally. A Persian ambassador therefore was sent to
-Paris to negotiate for peace, but he broke his journey at Constantinople
-to arrange the terms with Stratford de Redcliffe. Whilst there, news
-came that Persia had captured Herat. Stratford demanded its evacuation,
-and the dismissal of the Prime Minister. This latter demand the Persian
-Envoy rejected. The English Government therefore went on with the war.
-It was, however, declared by the Indian Government that war was waged
-for the recovery of Herat, which Persia had offered to evacuate, whereas
-the British Government, in their declaration, stated that their object
-was the dismissal of the Persian Premier,[302] who had foiled the
-attempt of Russia to drag the Shah into the Crimean War. The Expedition,
-led by General Outram, occupied Karrack and captured Bushire. But these
-victories did not really determine the issue. In England the war had
-become unpopular. Palmerston had begun it, and carried it on without
-consulting the House of Commons, by the simple expedient of using the
-revenues of India to meet its expenses. This was a source of supplies
-which the House, of course, could not control. At the beginning of the
-Session it was currently rumoured that the Government would soon be
-called to account for a proceeding which the Representative Chamber was
-bound to view with jealousy and suspicion.
-
-These mutterings of hostility alarmed Palmerston, for he had already
-determined to dissolve Parliament and appeal to the country against the
-condemnation which the House of Commons had passed on his policy in
-China. Whilst, as yet, the full bearing of his Persian policy was
-imperfectly understood by the constituencies, he hastened to make peace,
-and Persia, after her defeats, was not disposed to be obstinate. But the
-Shah refused to dismiss his Prime Minister, and Palmerston was
-accordingly fain to withdraw his demand, and be content with an apology
-for the imputations which had been cast on Mr. Murray’s character. Such
-was the inglorious end of a war which is one of the least creditable
-events in Lord Palmerston’s career. As might be expected, when the
-General Election was over, and the new Parliament met, Ministers were
-fiercely attacked for declaring and prosecuting the war
-unconstitutionally without consulting the House of Commons. The country
-was now fully alive to the danger that lurked in such a monstrous
-extension of the Queen’s prerogative as would permit her to use the
-revenues of India, which the House of Commons could not control, for
-carrying on war outside the Indian Empire. The only real control which
-the people have over the Crown is their power to stop supplies for the
-army. The Persian War, however, proved that the Crown could draw
-supplies and troops from India, without any Parliamentary sanction
-whatever. Palmerston’s policy had thus put into the hands of the Queen
-a deadlier weapon of despotism than either the Tudors or the Stuarts had
-dared to wield. But the attack, damaging as it was, failed to upset the
-Ministry; though the House, in 1858, at Mr. Gladstone’s suggestion,
-forced the Government to accept a clause in the India Bill which
-disallowed such pretensions on the part of the Crown.[303]
-
-But at the beginning of the Session of 1857 it was not Persia but China
-that really engrossed the attention of the country. A dispute between
-Sir John Bowring, Governor of Hong Kong, and the Chinese authorities at
-Canton, raised an issue which made it easy for the Peelites to unite
-with the Tories, and the Cobdenites with both.
-
-[Illustration: SIR JOHN BOWRING.]
-
-The Chinese War of 1857 occupies an unique place in the events of the
-Victorian epoch, because it was a war which was provoked by a member of
-the Peace Society. In October, 1856, the Chinese authorities arrested
-twelve Chinamen on board a native lorcha called the _Arrow_, on a charge
-of piracy. The British Consul, asserting that the _Arrow_ was a British
-ship, contended very properly that the accused should have been demanded
-from him. Nine of the Chinamen were released. Sir John Bowring thereupon
-insisted on the release of the other three, and an apology within
-forty-eight hours, on pain of immediate reprisals. The three men were
-released; but the Chinese Governor courteously refused to apologise,
-because, he said, as the _Arrow_ was _not_ a British ship, no wrong had
-been done to the British flag. This was literally true, for Sir J.
-Bowring, as everybody now admits, was utterly mistaken as to the
-nationality of the lorcha. The courtesy of the Chinese in surrendering
-the prisoners in deference to an illegal demand, which Bowring had
-couched in terms of offensive arrogance, was rewarded next day by the
-bombardment of the luckless commercial city of Canton--a barbarous act
-which could be justified by the laws neither of God nor of man. In fact,
-“a prancing pro-Consul,” to use a famous phrase of Sir William
-Harcourt’s, had virtually usurped the prerogative of the Crown, and
-levied war on a foreign Government on his own responsibility. Instead of
-recalling Bowring and the British Consul, Lord Palmerston, without
-giving the matter much thought, identified himself with their
-proceedings, though many Members of his Cabinet, notably Lord Granville
-and Mr. Labouchere, who afterwards were forced to defend Bowring in
-Parliament, personally disapproved of his conduct.[304] But Ministers
-virtually abandoned the case of the _Arrow_ when the controversy grew
-hot. “As usual,” writes Mr. Morley, “they shifted the ground from the
-particular to the general; if the Chinese were right about the _Arrow_
-they were wrong about something else; if legality did not exactly
-justify violence, it was at any rate required by policy; Orientals
-mistake justice for fear; and so on through the string of well-worn
-sophisms, which are always pursued in connection with such
-affairs.”[305] The real truth, as the Tory leaders said in the debates
-in both Houses of Parliament, was that Bowring’s vanity had been hurt
-because the Chinese had refused to receive him in Canton. When he sent
-Admiral Sir M. Seymour to bombard the port he tacked on to his original
-ultimatum a demand that foreigners should be freely admitted to the
-city, on the ground that this privilege, though ceded by the Treaty of
-1846, had never been granted. Admitting that his interpretation of this
-disputed point in the Treaty was correct, neither he nor Lord Palmerston
-had any right to force that interpretation on China by war. Their duty
-was to have acted in concert with the Governments of France and the
-United States, who were equally interested in the question, and in this
-way to exhaust the resources of diplomacy, before appealing to the
-arbitrament of the sword. Every Member of both Houses of Parliament who
-was not an infatuated partisan of Lord Palmerston’s took this view of
-the case; and when Mr. Cobden, on the 26th of February, brought forward
-a motion condemning the policy of the Government, he carried it, after a
-debate which lasted many nights, by a majority of sixteen.[306] In the
-House of Lords the Government repelled the attack, on the 27th of
-February, by a majority of thirty-six; and had the division been taken
-on the same night in the Commons, the majority, after Cobden’s and
-Russell’s speeches, would have been so enormous that Palmerston would
-hardly have dared to ask the Queen to dissolve Parliament. But he
-adroitly delayed matters, held a meeting of his Party, harangued them,
-and threatened them with a dissolution, and so, by the 4th of March,
-when the division was taken, the majority against him dwindled to
-sixteen. On the 5th of March, Ministers announced that Parliament would
-be dissolved and the sense of the country taken on the issue. The
-antipathy of the Queen to “penal dissolutions,” indeed, to any
-dissolution of Parliament, if it can be avoided, was overcome by Lord
-Palmerston representing that the majority against him was exceedingly
-small--that it was made up of a coalition of factions, whose leaders,
-agreeing only on one point, could not possibly form a stable Government.
-On the other hand, from a General Election a Government of some kind
-would be evolved with a solid working majority, an advantage of supreme
-importance in the eyes of the Sovereign.
-
-Then the game of intrigue began. Lord Malmesbury was sent to Mr. Sidney
-Herbert to negotiate an alliance between the Tories and the Peelites,
-his proposal being, says Lord Malmesbury, “that we should not take a
-hostile part towards each other’s candidates.” By this arrangement it
-was supposed that no personal enmities would be made, and the difficulty
-of organising an actual coalition, if such should be deemed necessary,
-would therefore be minimised.[307] Mr. Herbert rejected these overtures,
-because the Peelites had become so much divided in opinion and so weak
-in influence, that his desire was to see them dispersed. Lord Malmesbury
-then sounded Mr. Gladstone at the Carlton Club. “He had,” writes his
-lordship, “seen Sidney Herbert, who told him of our interview, and
-Gladstone said he quite disagreed with his views, and had told him
-so.... His leanings are apparently towards us, but he was quite of my
-opinion that no sort of agreement should be made beyond the one I had
-proposed.”[308] In fact, Mr. Gladstone and Mr. Herbert had very nearly
-quarrelled over the matter. Writing to Sir George Lewis on the 16th of
-March, the late Mr. A. Hayward says, “Gladstone and S. Herbert have come
-to an explanation which has ended very like the lovers’ separation in
-Little’s poems:--
-
- ‘You may down _that_ pathway rove,
- While I shall take my way through _this_.’
-
-Sidney Herbert takes the Liberal and Gladstone the Derbyite turn. I know
-no one who will follow Gladstone’s lead in the matter, except, perhaps,
-Lord A. Harvey.”[309]
-
-As a rule in England, the Minister who dissolves Parliament and appeals
-to the country is beaten. The General Election of 1857 was a startling
-exception to that rule. For Palmerston it was a complete victory. For
-his opponents it was not a defeat--but a rout. Cobden, Bright, Gibson,
-Fox, and Miall were rejected by the very men whose fortunes they had
-made by their Free Trade policy. As Mr. Morley says, “nothing had been
-seen like it since the disappearance of the Peace Whigs in 1812, when
-Brougham, Tierney, Lamb, and Horner all lost their seats.”[310] The
-Peelites suffered almost as cruelly. The Conservative ranks were sadly
-thinned, for twenty-four counties were won by the Ministry; in fact, the
-_Times_ declared, that the Tories would “never again, as a party, become
-candidates for office.”[311] The “Manchester School” lost its
-supporters, (1), because it had got the reputation of factiously
-opposing all Governments; (2), because the manufacturers, enriched by
-Free Trade, had ceased to be Radical; and (3), because they thought that
-when Palmerston forced Bowring into Canton at the point of the bayonet,
-cotton goods would go in with him. The Peelites were beaten (1), because
-they were divided among themselves; and (2), because they were a small
-faction, and in a General Election a small faction generally is crushed
-in the collision between the great parties. The Tories lost adherents
-(1), because the farmers resented their support of an amendment moved by
-their natural enemy, Mr. Cobden; and (2), because rumours were spread
-abroad by Lord Palmerston’s agents that they were about to coalesce with
-Mr. Gladstone, who represented the principles of “the traitor Peel.”
-Lord Palmerston triumphed (1), because his only Liberal rival, Lord John
-Russell, had alienated the country by his tortuous disloyalty to two
-Ministries, and incurred the hatred of the Dissenters by his defence of
-Church Rates; (2), because his personal popularity, after bringing the
-wars with Russia and Persia to an end, was unbounded; and (3), because
-he and his satellites poured forth speeches, inflated with cheap and
-vulgar “patriotic” claptrap, to such an extent that even Mr. Greville
-says in his “Memoirs” that he was “disgusted at the enormous and
-shameful lying with which the country is deluged.”[312] England,
-moreover, was involved in a war with China, and after all Palmerston was
-the only political leader who had proved that he could carry on a war
-with least discredit to the country.[313] The election was, therefore,
-a personal one. Constituents did not scrutinise closely the principles
-or capacity of candidates, so long as they promised to support Lord
-Palmerston,[314] and so numbers of Parliamentary Reformers crept
-unnoticed into the House. But in such cases the loyalty of a majority
-lasts no longer than the popularity of the leader. Let him make one
-false step that forfeits popularity, and then his supporters desert him,
-disinterring what they call their “principles” from buried election
-addresses to justify their “new departure.”
-
-[Illustration: CHINESE LORCHAS IN THE CANTON RIVER.]
-
-It was unfortunate that neither the Queen nor Prince Albert recognised
-this fact, and that they both imagined that Palmerston’s
-principles--which, in domestic policy, were reactionary and
-illiberal--were as popular as Palmerston himself. The only true and just
-criticism of this historic Election, which sent 189 new Members to the
-House of Commons, and for a time broke the old parties to pieces, was
-passed by the Duke of Newcastle. Writing to Mr. Hayward on the 10th of
-April, he says:--“I come to the conclusion that Palmerston will be
-disappointed with his new Parliament. The gain to _Liberal opinion_ is
-very great, and the Derby party is for the present smashed; but in these
-gains are to be found Palmerston’s disadvantages. Nobody _can_ fear the
-alternative of a Derby Ministry, and if Palmerston _rises_ to the
-occasion he will soon find his popularity gone and his Government in
-danger. It is all nonsense to suppose that the China vote has really
-influenced the decision of the country; but there is a question which
-alone Palmerston cares about (and that in an _adverse_ sense), which has
-gained ground everywhere, and is now established as the question of the
-day--Reform of Parliament; and I have no belief in a _good_ measure
-coming from unwilling men; and _how_ unwilling are the influential men
-in the present Cabinet my former association with them pretty well
-informs me.”[315]
-
-From this Election the history of the Queen’s reign enters on a fresh
-phase. Underlying every party intrigue and combination there is
-henceforth to be detected an irrepressible though concealed antagonism
-between the Parliamentary Reformers and their opponents. In England, it
-is a curious fact that political parties always exhaust their ingenuity
-in veiling the real issue between them. When a Government is punished by
-dismissal, it is not dismissed for the blunder it has committed, but
-because it has done, or refused to do, something else, which is hardly
-hinted at in public, but which has offended a powerful body of its
-supporters. Palmerston was a Minister whose ardent, impetuous
-temperament, and confidence in his own dexterity, rendered him prone to
-commit blunders. A Minister of that type can go on blundering with
-impunity so long as he is supposed to be trustworthy on the one great
-question which lies closest to the hearts of that section of his
-supporters, who are prepared to sacrifice him for their cause. But
-whenever they discover that he is not to be trusted, they take advantage
-of his first mistake to combine with his enemies and overthrow him. In
-the new Parliament of 1857, it was therefore clear that Palmerston’s
-personal ascendency would last till the party of Parliamentary Reform
-discovered that they had absolutely nothing to expect from him, save
-open or concealed hostility. It was because the Queen did not grasp this
-fact that she was startled to find, a few months after Parliament met,
-how rapidly Palmerston’s popularity was waning. Prince Albert also,
-strangely enough, mistook the verdict of the country in 1857, as being
-one cast solely against “the peace-at-any-price people.”[316]
-
-On the 7th of May the House of Commons began the business of the new
-Session. On that day the Lord Chancellor read the Queen’s Speech, which,
-contrary to general expectation, did not contain any reference to
-Parliamentary Reform. It was, says Lord Malmesbury, “the lamest
-production, even for a Queen’s Speech, I ever read.”[317] However, it
-gave a soothing account of foreign affairs, and intimated not only that
-the main stipulations of the Treaty of Paris had been carried out, and
-that the Neufchâtel difficulty was in a fair way of being settled, but
-it announced the signature of a Treaty of Peace with Persia. The only
-subject for regret in our foreign relations was, of course, the war with
-China. The legislative programme was meagre in the extreme, for the only
-important Bills promised were, one relating to the jurisdiction of the
-Ecclesiastical Courts over wills and divorce, and another to check
-fraudulent breaches of trust. The Address was carried with very little
-debate, the Radicals being satisfied to let the question of
-Parliamentary Reform sleep, because Lord Palmerston promised that during
-the recess the Cabinet would give the subject serious consideration. It
-was, in truth, a dull and uneventful Session.
-
-But a slight fillip of interest was imparted to it by the revival of the
-old controversy as to the admission of Jews to Parliament. The election
-of Baron Rothschild as one of the Members for the City of London
-compelled the Government to deal with the matter, and Lord Palmerston
-brought forward a Bill, on the 15th of May, to alter the law relating to
-Parliamentary Oaths, and remove from the statute book one of the last
-relics of mediæval bigotry. Although it was bitterly opposed by many
-Tories, such as Sir F. Thesiger and Mr. Whiteside, the Bill passed the
-House of Commons, but only to be thrown out by the House of Lords. Lord
-John Russell then tried to solve the problem by bringing in a Bill to
-extend the operation of the Act, 1 and 2 Vict. cap. 106, giving a
-discretion as to the forms on which certain oaths are administered. But
-while this Bill was in progress it was proposed to free the Jews from
-their Parliamentary disabilities by applying to their case the
-provisions of the Act 5 and 6 William IV. cap. 62. This Act was passed
-to enable a solemn declaration to be substituted for an oath in certain
-instances. The only question was whether the Act could be stretched so
-as to include the oath imposed on Members of Parliament. On Lord John
-Russell’s motion a Select Committee was appointed to inquire if the Act
-applied to Parliamentary Oaths, but in due time they reported that it
-did not. This virtually ended the controversy for the Session, and Lord
-John Russell could only give notice that he would renew the agitation
-next year.
-
-Undoubtedly the legal and social reforms proposed by the Government in
-1857 were those which created most excitement in the country. The
-Ecclesiastical Courts had been long threatened with extinction, and at
-last the Government dealt them a fatal blow. Bills were introduced in
-May transferring to purely secular tribunals their Testamentary
-Jurisdiction and the greater part of their control over the Marriage
-Laws, and though the establishment of the new Court of Probate was not
-much opposed, the Divorce Bill was fiercely debated. Members who were
-under sacerdotal influence attacked this measure with
-
-[Illustration: THE CASCADE: VIRGINIA WATER.]
-
-the utmost ferocity. Indeed, it was not opposed, but factiously
-obstructed, clause by clause and line by line, Mr. Gladstone being the
-most energetic of its opponents.[318] It was, however, passed, and
-undoubtedly the Government won some credit in the country by the
-pertinacity with which they piloted this embarrassing measure through
-both Houses of Parliament. “I am very glad,” writes Lord Campbell, in
-his Journal, “that the Divorce Bill finally passed the Commons framed
-almost exactly according to the recommendations of the commission over
-which I had the honour to preside, preserving the law as it has
-practically subsisted for two hundred years: that a husband who has
-conducted himself properly may obtain a dissolution of the marriage for
-the adultery of the wife, and that a wife may obtain a dissolution of
-the marriage for the adultery of the husband, attended by incest, or any
-aggravation which renders it impossible for the connubial union to
-continue; the
-
-[Illustration: PLAN OF WINDSOR CASTLE.]
-
-law being now to be administered by a regular judicial tribunal, instead
-of the injured parties being obliged to petition the Legislature for
-private Acts of Parliament to dissolve the marriage. We are assailed on
-the one hand by those who hold that, according to divine law, marriage
-cannot be dissolved even for adultery, and on the other by those who
-think that for this purpose no distinction should be made between the
-sexes,[319] and that in all cases the wife should be entitled to a
-divorce on proof of any breach of the marriage vow by the husband. But I
-think the true principle is, that the marriage ought only to be
-dissolved when it is impossible for the injured party to _condone_, and
-that Divine Providence has constituted an essential difference in this
-respect between the adultery of the husband and the adultery of the
-wife. I would rather run the risk of cases of great hardship occurring,
-when it would seem desirable that women should be released from the
-tyranny of profligate and brutal husbands, than give too great a
-facility to divorce, which has a tendency most demoralising.”[320]
-
-Another measure of sound reform, with which Lord Campbell honourably
-associated his name, gave rise to a curious incident, towards the end of
-the Session, in the House of Commons. “Since I returned from circuit,”
-says Lord Campbell, in his Diary, “my chief business has been to watch
-the progress through the House of Commons of my Bill for checking the
-trade in obscene publications by allowing them to be seized in the
-_depôts_ of the dealers. Brougham had hardly ventured to oppose the Bill
-as it passed through the Lords, but afterwards he wrote a violent
-article against it in the _Law Magazine_, and he put up Roebuck to
-assail it in the House of Commons. The Bill, being in Committee
-yesterday (July 12th), I showed myself in the Peers’ Gallery to watch
-its fate, and that I might be consulted, if necessary, during the
-debate. Roebuck contented himself with reading a letter which he had
-received from Brougham, pointing out the danger of country justices
-perverting the Bill for the punishment of poachers; and it went through
-the Committee with the amendments which I had suggested and assented to.
-The Speaker then sent me a message by the Chancellor of the Exchequer
-complaining that I had appeared in the House _to overawe their
-deliberations_, like Cardinal Wolsey and Charles I., and that it would
-become his duty to protest against such an unconstitutional
-proceeding.”[321]
-
-Brief mention must also be made of the Fraudulent Trusts Bill, as one
-of the Ministerial achievements during the Session of 1857. Several
-glaring cases of embezzlement on the part of trustees had recently
-occurred, and yet it was found that the existing criminal law could not
-reach the guilty parties. Sir Alexander Cockburn, before his elevation
-to the Bench, had promised to deal with this scandal, and now his
-successor, Sir Richard Bethell, afterwards Lord Westbury, fulfilled that
-promise. The object of his Bill was simply to make trustees of
-settlements, directors of companies, and other persons invested with a
-fiduciary character, criminally responsible for frauds, or for the
-misappropriation of the funds entrusted to their care. The Bill passed
-both Houses. The only serious opposition it met with was from Lord St.
-Leonards, who dreaded lest its severity might deter honest and
-substantial men from serving as trustees.
-
-These were among the chief results of the brief but useful Session of
-1857, which was prorogued on the 28th of August. Up to midsummer the
-House of Commons dozed through halcyon days, only too well pleased to do
-the bidding of its master. Lord John Russell was meek, Mr. Gladstone was
-an absentee, the Tories were discouraged, and the Radicals were docile.
-To go to a division at this time on any question was to rush to
-ignominious defeat. But about the middle of July the House began to show
-signs of a quickened life. The debates on the Persian War roused the
-combatant spirit of the Opposition; Mr. Gladstone reappeared, as
-Ministers knew to their cost when the Divorce Bill was obstructed; and
-it was remarked that even Palmerston’s most subservient followers no
-longer hesitated to cheer Mr. Roebuck or Mr. Disraeli, when they made an
-exceptionally clever attack on the Ministry. In August the shadow of the
-Indian Mutiny darkened the prospects of the Government, and when
-Parliament was prorogued there was some ill-concealed grumbling among
-the captious critics of the Court, because the Queen went to Scotland at
-a time when the British Empire in India was in dire peril. But on the
-whole, Palmerston’s _prestige_ was not materially impaired. His domestic
-programme, modest as it was, had been successfully carried out.
-Moreover, for the first time in his career, his relations with the Court
-had been put on a satisfactory footing. On this point Mr. Greville
-records an interesting conversation with Lord Clarendon, who told him
-that the Queen had treated Palmerston during the Session with unreserved
-confidence. Palmerston, on the other hand, found it expedient to treat
-the Queen with a deference and attention which had produced a favourable
-change in her sentiments towards him. Mr. Greville says, “Clarendon told
-me that Palmerston had lately been ailing in a way to cause some
-uneasiness.... Clarendon talked one day to the Queen about Palmerston’s
-health, concerning which she expressed her anxiety, when Clarendon said
-she might indeed be anxious, for it was of the greatest importance to
-her, and if anything happened to him he did not know where she could
-look for a successor to him, that she had often expressed her great
-desire to have a _strong_ Government, and that she had now got one,
-Palmerston being a strong Minister. She admitted the truth of it.
-Clarendon said he was always very earnest with her to bestow her whole
-confidence on Palmerston, and not even to talk to others on any subjects
-which properly belonged to him, and he had more than once (when,
-according to her custom, she began to talk to him on certain things),
-said to her, ‘Madam, that concerns Lord Palmerston, and I think your
-Majesty had better reserve it for your communications with him.’ He
-referred to the wonderful change in his own relations to Palmerston,
-that seven or eight years ago Palmerston was full of hatred and
-suspicion of him, and now they were the best of friends, with mutual
-confidence and goodwill, and lately, when he was talking to Palmerston
-of the satisfactory state of his relations to the Queen, and of the
-utility it was to his government that it should be so, Palmerston said,
-‘And it is likewise a very good thing that she has such boundless
-confidence in her Secretary for Foreign Affairs, when after all there is
-nothing she cares about so much.’”[322]
-
-And yet it cannot be said that in foreign affairs Lord Palmerston had
-won any conspicuous triumph for British diplomacy. The dispute with
-Persia did not end gloriously for England. It is true that the
-controversy over Neufchâtel, in which the Queen, owing to her close
-relations with the Royal Family of Prussia, was deeply interested,
-terminated happily.[323] But on the other hand, the vexed question of
-the Danubian Principalities was still open, and it was almost certain
-that it would lead to the diplomatic humiliation of England.
-
-The future government of the two Principalities was left by the Congress
-of Paris to be settled by the Treaty Powers. Russia desired their union
-under a Native prince. France and Sardinia desired their union under a
-foreign prince, fearing that a Native ruler would soon become a mere
-satrap of the Czar. Turkey and Austria desired to keep the
-Principalities separate, and this view was warmly supported by Lord
-Palmerston and Lord Clarendon. At the Congress of Paris, France had
-insidiously suggested to Austria that she should take the
-Principalities, the object being to justify new territorial arrangements
-on the Rhine in French interests. After that proposal was rejected, the
-French Emperor drew closer and closer to Russia; but when the General
-Election gave Palmerston a solid majority, Russia became effusively
-civil to England. When, however, England persisted in acting with
-Austria and the Porte, thereby resisting territorial changes, which
-could only be made
-
-[Illustration: THE DUKE OF CAMBRIDGE.
-
-(_From a Photograph by Bassano._)]
-
-at the expense of Austrian and Turkish interests,[324] the French
-Emperor took umbrage at our diplomacy. But Persigny’s influence was
-successfully exerted to hold him true to the Anglo-French alliance,
-Persigny’s chief argument being that a war with England would so
-convulse France that, in the general confusion, the Bonapartist dynasty
-might disappear. Napoleon III., therefore, determined to pay the Queen a
-private visit, and, though her Majesty was not anxious to receive him,
-she consented to do so, in the hope and belief that personal
-communications between the two sovereigns might serve some useful
-purpose.
-
-When this visit was paid, in August, the controversy over the
-Principalities had become very serious. The Moldavian elections had
-returned a majority of Separatists, and the French complained that this
-result was due to the influence of English agents over the
-constituencies. France, Russia, and Sardinia, in fact, threatened to
-suspend diplomatic relations with Turkey unless the elections were
-annulled. The Eastern Question, in short, had once more been re-opened,
-and Europe was thus brought to the brink of war. The French Emperor, the
-Queen, and Prince Albert freely interchanged their ideas on the question
-at Osborne, whilst at the same time the French and English
-Ministers--namely, Persigny, Walewski, Palmerston, and
-Clarendon--carried on a series of conferences. The grievance of the
-Emperor was that, though Turkey had promised France to annul the
-elections, at the last moment she had, at the instigation of Lord
-Stratford de Redcliffe, broken her promise. The Porte had admitted that
-they were thus in the wrong, but had excused their conduct by saying
-that they acted under pressure from England and the English Ambassador.
-The annulment of the elections was now with France a point of honour;
-and as Persigny had failed to bring Palmerston and Clarendon to reason
-on the point, his Majesty had resolved to appeal to the Queen. The Queen
-and her husband seem to have met the Emperor’s arguments with Lord
-Stratford’s counter-statement, but in vain. The end of their conference
-was a victory for France on the main point at issue. Lord Stratford was
-to be ordered to reverse his course, and to call on the Porte to annul
-the elections. “Lord Palmerston,” writes Lord Malmesbury on the 14th of
-August, “has given way on the question of the Principalities, so the
-Emperor has gained his point by his visit to Osborne. The dispute arose
-on the question of the union of the Principalities, which France,
-Russia, Prussia, and Sardinia supported. England, Austria, and Turkey
-opposed the union; and the elections in Moldavia having been in favour
-of England, the French, Russians, &c., accused the English Government of
-having influenced them unfairly, and demanded that they should be
-annulled. The Porte refused this, upon which the Ambassadors of France,
-Prussia, and Sardinia struck their flags. The Emperor Napoleon, instead
-of wasting time in useless correspondence, came over himself, and the
-question was settled at once. I do not pretend to judge whether
-Palmerston was right or wrong, but his defeat must have cost him a
-bitter pang. Louis Napoleon’s Ministers have been completely won over by
-the Russians, especially Walewski.”[325] The Queen was certainly of a
-different opinion. She thought that Palmerston had succeeded in
-effecting a compromise, and not a capitulation. Prince Albert was also
-distinctly under the impression that whilst England surrendered on the
-question of the elections, France had surrendered on the question of
-uniting the Principalities. A Memorandum was drawn up on 9th of August,
-embodying some arrangement of this sort, but Walewski refused to sign
-it, upon the ground, says Sir T. Martin, “that the Emperor’s Government
-desired to keep the satisfaction to be obtained from the Porte and the
-arrangement subsequently to be made respecting the Principalities
-distinct from each other, and, also because, were he to sign the
-Memorandum, it would appear that France had made a concession on the
-latter point for the purpose of inducing the Sultan to agree on the
-former.” He also appears to have stated that it was not necessary to
-sign the document, because “amongst men of honour writing was
-unnecessary.” In May, 1858, at the second Congress of Paris, it was
-discovered that writing in this case was extremely necessary. When the
-British Plenipotentiaries contended that the French Emperor had yielded
-on the point of the union of the Principalities, His Majesty denied that
-he had done anything of the sort. The only concession he ever made,
-according to his account, was that he would not insist on their being
-ruled over by a foreign prince--a detail of secondary consequence. It
-seems also to have been admitted on our side that we had agreed to
-recognise the administrative union of the provinces, so that the
-misunderstanding may have arisen out of a quibble over the terms
-“administrative” and “political” union.
-
-During this visit, Lord Malmesbury tells us that extraordinary
-precautions were taken by the Queen for the Emperor’s protection.
-“Eighty detectives were sent down from London, besides French police.
-The strictest guard was kept round the Palace and over the island.
-Besides this, a number of men-of-war’s boats guarded the shore, and did
-not allow a single boat to approach.”[326] From a memorandum of their
-conversations which Prince Albert drew up, it is obvious that the
-settlement of the question of the Principalities was not the sole object
-of Napoleon’s journey to Osborne. He broached a great many insidious
-proposals for a redistribution of European territory, also for a
-revision of the Treaties of 1815, but they were all coldly and
-sceptically received. He even suggested a wild scheme for converting the
-Mediterranean into an European lake. “Spain might have Morocco, Sardinia
-a part of Tripoli, England Egypt, Austria a part of Syria--_et que sais
-je_,” writes Prince Albert, in describing this suggestion;[327] the
-first step being a friendly understanding with England on the subject.
-As his Majesty had told the Prince he was soon to have an interview with
-the Russian Czar, it need hardly be said that no encouragement was given
-by the Queen to these extraordinary projects. In truth, neither the
-Queen nor her Ministers were at this moment in a mood for entering on an
-adventurous foreign policy. The Indian Empire had been shaken to its
-centre by the revolt of the Bengal Army, a revolt known in history as
-the great Indian Mutiny, and the causes of which must now be traced.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVI.
-
-THE INDIAN MUTINY.
-
- The Centenary of Plassey--Rumours of Rebellion--Causes of the
- Mutiny--The Annexation of Oudh--Lord Dalhousie’s Indian Policy--Its
- Disturbing Effect on the Minds of the Natives--The Royal Family of
- Delhi--The Hindoo “Sumbut”--The Discontent of the Bengal Army--The
- Grievances of the Sepoy--The Greased Cartridges--The Mystery of the
- “Chupatties”--Mutiny of the Garrison at Meerut--The March to
- Delhi--Sir Henry Lawrence at Lucknow--The Tragedy of
- Cawnpore--Death of the Commander-in-Chief--Who took Delhi?--Sir
- John Lawrence in the Punjab--The Saviour of India--Lord Canning at
- Calcutta--First Relief of Lucknow--Despatch of Sir Colin
- Campbell--Second Relief of Lucknow--Savage Fighting at the
- Secunder-baugh--The Queen’s Letter to Sir Colin Campbell--His
- Retreat to Cawnpore--His Management of the Campaign--Windham’s
- Defeat at the Pandoo River--Sir Colin Campbell’s Victory over the
- Gwalior Army.
-
-
-With the exception of the Sicilian Vespers, no revolt ever smote a great
-Empire so unexpectedly as the Indian Mutiny. Gaily was the centenary of
-Plassey celebrated at a banquet in London on the 23rd of June, though
-the sultry air of India was even then laden with rumours of a
-wide-spreading rebellion. A few casual allusions to these reports were
-made in both Houses of Parliament, but July brought with it the rush of
-rising waters in the dull ears of the nation, when news of the
-atrocities of Meerut and the rebel march on Delhi startled the country
-from its apathy.
-
-To the end of time historians will probably differ as to what it was
-that caused the Indian Mutiny. Some have laid stress on considerations
-of general policy. Others have attributed the catastrophe to special
-acts of administration. The acts of administration were, however, but
-the sparks that exploded the forces of revolution, which had been slowly
-accumulating in the country. To understand the origin of the Indian
-Mutiny one must understand the administration of Lord Dalhousie, and
-fairly estimate the last acts of his viceregal career. Of these none had
-a more serious effect on the minds of the Native Courts than the
-annexation of Oudh. Inasmuch as Dalhousie was personally a strong
-opponent of annexation, the presumption is that the step, objectionable
-as it seems, was inevitable. Oudh was misgoverned by a vicious but
-feeble-minded Prince, and the people were tortured not only by his
-besotted tyranny, but by the exactions of a corrupt aristocracy. At the
-same time, the Kings of Oudh had long been trusty allies of the East
-India Company, who had borrowed money from them, protected them against
-their mutinous subjects, and used their territory as a recruiting ground
-for the Sepoy army. One-half of Oudh had been given to the Company, by
-the Treaty of 1801, on condition that a British army should be
-maintained in the country for the support of the reigning dynasty.
-Attempts had been made--notably by Lord
-
-[Illustration: THE BARRACKS AT MEERUT.]
-
-Auckland--to evade this obligation, but they were made in vain. After
-the first Sikh war, Lord Hardinge had warned the King of Oudh that the
-Company could no longer tolerate misrule in his territory, and
-Dalhousie, in 1848, had sent Colonel Sleeman to reconstruct, if
-possible, its internal administration. The task was a hopeless one, and
-in 1851 Sleeman reported[328] that there was no choice but to assume the
-whole government of the kingdom. Dalhousie shrank from taking this step,
-and in 1854, when Sleeman resigned, Sir James Outram was appointed as
-his successor, and asked to report on the whole case. Outram, though a
-firm anti-annexationist, confirmed Sleeman’s statements. He admitted
-that the duty imposed on the Indian Government by the Treaty of 1801
-rendered it necessary to have recourse to extreme measures. As a warm
-advocate for maintaining Native States so long as they had any vitality,
-it was, said Outram, painful and distressing to him to confess that in
-continuing to uphold the sovereign power of an effete and incapable
-dynasty we were inflicting infinite misery on 5,000,000 of people.[329]
-Unfortunately, the Treaty of 1801 had stipulated that all improvements
-in the administration of Oudh must be carried out by Native officers
-under British advice. It was impossible, therefore, to transfer the
-administration of Oudh to the servants of the Company, and equally
-impossible to expect reforms from the servants of the King. Lord
-Dalhousie’s notion was that the Treaty of 1801 should be
-“denounced”--that the King should be told he must either sign a fresh
-one, handing over the administration of his country to the Indian
-Government, or forego the protection of the British force, which stood
-between him and a revolution. Dalhousie ignored the fact that the
-withdrawal of our troops from Oudh logically involved the retrocession
-of that half of the kingdom which was given to us as payment for their
-services, and yet there can be little doubt that had his demand been
-pressed, the King of Oudh would have yielded. Dalhousie’s advisers
-differed in their views, and in the end the Court of Directors settled
-the matter by ordering the Governor-General to annex the country,
-depriving the King of revenues, rank, power, and authority, and
-allotting a suitable pension to him and his successors.[330] Dalhousie’s
-plan, on the other hand, was to assume the administration, but not to
-extinguish the dynasty of Oudh, and it was with reluctance that he
-carried out the policy of his masters. The country was annexed by Sir
-James Outram on the 7th of February, 1856, the King’s private property
-being confiscated and sold. These are the essential facts of the case,
-and it is easy to pass judgment on them. No Treaty conferred on the
-Company the shadow of a right to do more than secure for the people of
-Oudh good government. As it was quite possible to do that without
-destroying and degrading the dynasty, the seizure of Oudh was simply an
-act of rapine.[331] As the Kings of Oudh had been noted all over India
-for their staunch loyalty to the English in India, every Native prince
-regarded the annexation of Oudh as a menace to his throne. At every
-Native Court it was whispered that to be loyal to England was simply to
-invite ruin. Thus the last act of Dalhousie’s viceregal reign sowed the
-seeds of suspicion, distrust, and even hatred in the hearts of the
-Native dynasties.
-
-But the whole policy of this great and vigorous ruler, by a curious
-irony of fate, had steadily prepared the minds of the Indian races for a
-revolution. Dalhousie had covered India with railways, canals, roads,
-and telegraphs. He had introduced a cheap postal system by which a
-letter from Peshawur to Cape Comorin, or from Assam to Kurrachee, was
-carried for three farthings--one-sixteenth of the old charge. He had
-reformed the Civil Service, he had improved education and prison
-discipline, he had passed laws that went to the root of family life,
-such as those permitting Hindoo widows to marry again, and relieving
-persons who changed their religion from forfeiture. As for his wars and
-his annexations, he had the “tyrant plea, necessity.” When leaving
-Calcutta he said mournfully, and with a trace of misgiving, as he looked
-back on his brilliant achievements, “I have played out my part, and
-while I feel that in my case the principal act in the drama of my life
-is ended, I shall be content if the curtain should now drop on my public
-career.” But the great work done by Dalhousie had not been done without
-friction between the paramount power and its subjects and vassals. It
-was, indeed, thought in England that Dalhousie handed India over to Lord
-Canning in a state of profound tranquillity. Yet, looking deeper than
-the surface, says an able writer on Indian history, “there were latent
-causes of uneasiness which largely pervaded the minds of the Native
-classes of all ranks and creeds.”[332] Dalhousie’s system of progressive
-education was detested by Hindoo and Moslem alike, because it undermined
-the whole fabric of their faith. The Moslem youth, it is true, did not
-frequent the English schools. But young Hindoos flocked to them with an
-eager thirst for knowledge, and they went to the missionary seminaries,
-where Christianity was taught, quite as freely as to State schools,
-where its teaching was prohibited. In their homes, they spoke of what
-they were taught to their parents, who regarded the whole system of
-English education as a diabolical device for corrupting the faith and
-morals of their children. This suspicion was strengthened and confirmed
-by the aggressive proselytism of the missionaries, to whose zeal one of
-the soundest and best informed of Native civilians has directly traced
-the origin of the Mutiny. The entire scheme of Dalhousie’s policy was
-based on the assumption that the Natives would greet with loyalty and
-gratitude the new era of progress that he ushered in. On the contrary,
-as Colonel Meadows Taylor says, “the material progress of India was
-unintelligible to the Natives in general. A few intelligent and educated
-persons might understand the use and scope of railways, telegraphs,
-steam-vessels, and recognise in them the direction of a great Government
-for the benefit of the people; but the ancient listless conservativism
-of the population at large was disturbed by them. ‘The English,’ it was
-said, ‘never did such things before, why do they do so now? These are
-but new devices for the domination of their will, and are aimed at the
-destruction of our national faith, caste, and customs. What was it all
-to come to? Was India to be like England? The earlier Company’s servants
-were simple but wise men, and we respected them; we understood them and
-they us; but the present men are not like them; we do not know them, nor
-they us.’ No one cared, perhaps, very much for such sentiments, and
-few--very few--English heard them; but they will not have been forgotten
-by those who did.”[333] The Directors of the East India Company had,
-prior to Dalhousie’s time, rigidly enforced on their servants a policy
-of benevolent neutrality to the religious beliefs and social prejudices
-of India. The government of the Company in its best days might have been
-bad. But it was successful because it was, on the whole, popular, and it
-was popular because it was intensely conservative. Ardent progressive
-officials were repressed, whereas under Dalhousie their passion for
-innovation had free scope and disastrous encouragement.
-
-Nor was Oudh the only centre of Court intrigues against the British
-_raj_. The question of settling the position of the Royal Family of
-Delhi, the last representatives of the old Emperors of India, had been
-much debated in Dalhousie’s reign. When Lord Canning went to India, in
-1856, it was again taken up, and a final decision given on the points
-raised. The heir-apparent, Prince Fukhr-ood-deen, who had agreed to
-evacuate the Palace, died on the 10th of July, 1856, and it was supposed
-he had been poisoned. The Queen, Zeenut Mahál, immediately began to
-intrigue for the purpose of procuring the recognition of her son as
-heir-apparent, and the King of Delhi petitioned the Government of India
-to this effect. But the petition could not have been granted without a
-breach of the Mohammedan law, and so Mirza Korash, the next in legal
-succession to Fukhr-ood-deen, was recognised as heir to the throne. But
-whereas, in the case of Fukhr-ood-deen, the recognition of the
-Government was the result of a compact or bargain between independent
-authorities, in the case of Mirza Korash it took the form of an Imperial
-decree, conferring rank and dignity on a vassal prince. The Royal Family
-of Delhi resented the whole arrangement. “Remembering the old relations
-between the Company and the Empire, the immense benefits originally
-conferred on them, and the admitted position of the Company as servants
-of the State, it was,” writes Colonel Taylor, “only natural they should
-now be accused of perfidy. The efforts and intrigues of the spirited
-Queen and several of the princes were now redoubled, locally as well as
-in foreign quarters; and India, especially the North-West Provinces,
-became filled with the most alarming rumours.”[334]
-
-Along with these there spread extraordinary tales of the decaying power
-of England--tales which fawning courtiers poured into the willing ears
-of Native princes, and with which embittered malcontents regaled the
-Native servants of the Company. The sudden collapse of Palmerston’s
-militant policy in the Crimea and in Persia convinced every enemy of
-England in India that the omens were propitious for a revolt against
-English rule. It was also an untoward coincidence that the year 1857-58
-was the Hindoo “Sumbut” 1914, and the centenary of Plassey. But when
-that crowning victory was won, the astrologers had declared that the
-_raj_, or rule, of the Company would last only for a century. Astrology
-so dominates Indian life, that the people have a trick of fulfilling, by
-their unconscious action, the prophecies of their soothsayers; and he
-who predicts a successful insurrection on a given date has himself
-furnished one of the strongest encouragements for its organisation. The
-Sumbut 1914, therefore, could not arrive without suggesting to the
-Indian mind that an opportunity for throwing off the yoke of England had
-come. One of the stereotyped ceremonies of New Year’s Day is the public
-recital of the almanack for the year in every Indian village. Hence, in
-1857, every Hindoo villager was solemnly warned that wise men, who, a
-century ago, held infallible commune with the stars, foretold that in
-this fateful year the British _raj_ must end.
-
-[Illustration: SIR JAMES OUTRAM.]
-
-Unfortunately, the base on which the empire of the Company had rested
-for a century was at this critical period extremely insecure. India was
-won and India was held, not by English, but by Native soldiers. The
-British Empire was, therefore, built up on the fidelity of the Sepoy,
-and the Sepoy had become dissatisfied with his masters, especially in
-Bengal.[335] The army of Bengal had not only been prone to mutiny, but
-Napier had denounced its lack of discipline, and there were fewer
-Europeans in it in proportion to Natives, than in the armies of Bombay
-or Madras.[336] The Crimean War had drained the life-blood from the
-British battalions in Bengal; and whereas six English regiments were
-usually stationed between Calcutta and Allahabad, when Lord Dalhousie
-left the country there were only two. Obviously, if the Sepoy was not to
-be trusted, the whole fabric of empire in India was in such
-circumstances resting on a rotten foundation, and although officers of
-experience refused to doubt the loyalty of their men, the spirit of
-mutiny was most certainly abroad in the Bengal army. The Sepoy had
-grievances, and the Government had not sense enough to redress them.
-These grievances were two in number. (1), When a Sepoy in the old days
-marched to the conquest of a province he got increased pay and
-allowances; but in recent times, when the province was annexed, it was
-considered British territory, and the pay and allowances of the
-Company’s mercenary forces were reduced to the scale of home service.
-Conquests, therefore, while they imposed more work on the army,
-practically reduced its pay. (2), Another cause of discontent was the
-“General Service Order” of 1856. The Sepoy was originally enlisted for
-service in India only. He could not be sent across the sea; in fact,
-only low caste men dared cross “the black water.” During the first
-Burmese War the Sepoys had to be marched round the Indian frontier to
-the enemy’s territory; and when the second Burmese War broke out, the
-38th Native Infantry refused to embark for Rangoon. Of course, though
-they should not have been asked to go without having been previously
-“sounded” on the subject, refusal in their case was tantamount to
-mutiny. Dalhousie could not, however, legally punish them, so he sent
-them to Dacca, where they were decimated, not by courtmartials, but by
-cholera. Thus the Sepoy argued that he must in future choose between his
-caste or a pestilential station, if he refused to serve across the sea.
-But while the Sepoys were brooding over this dilemma in 1856, the
-Governor-General promulgated the “General Service Order” to the effect
-that no more Sepoys should be enlisted who would not take an oath to
-cross the sea if called on to do so, and veteran officers, who had grown
-grey in the Company’s service predicted that this Order would make
-mischief in the army. And so it did. To the Sepoy, his service under the
-Company was a source of pride, profit, and even of valuable civil
-privileges.[337] To him it was as great a grievance to issue an Order of
-this sort, as it would be to the English aristocracy to attach
-conditions to military service, which should render it impossible for a
-gentleman to hold the Queen’s Commission. The individual Sepoy, no
-doubt, was not touched by the Order. But then his sons and grandsons,
-whom he expected to become Sepoys, were. The army was thus closed to
-every Native, unless they were prepared to submit to loss of caste. In
-fact, a lucrative profession was, by Lord Canning’s Order, made the
-monopoly of low-caste natives. Unfortunately, too, most of the recruits
-were drawn from Oudh, the annexation of which had been a scandal, and
-which was swarming with disbanded soldiers, who had been in the personal
-service of the deposed King.
-
-Thus we had, in 1857, the following conditions prevailing in India: (1),
-A popular belief was current in every village that the last year of the
-British _raj_ had come; (2), The Native Courts were suspicious that the
-annexation of Oudh was an indication of the fate that was in store for
-them; (3), The high-caste Natives, whether in the army or in civil life,
-were suspicious that the Government desired to defile their caste, and
-sap the foundations of their religion.[338] The country was therefore in
-such an inflammable condition that the first spark that fell on it would
-produce an explosion. By an extraordinary act of stupidity the
-Government not only struck this spark, but fanned it into flame.
-
-The Crimean War caused the British Army to substitute the rifle for the
-old smooth-bore musket popularly called “Brown Bess.” In 1856 it was
-determined to serve out Enfield rifles to the Indian Army, and in doing
-this no heed was paid to Sepoy prejudices. The cartridge of the new
-weapon could not be rammed home unless it were previously greased. But,
-then, no Hindoo can touch the fat of ox or cow without loss of caste,
-which is worse than loss of life, and no Moslem can touch pigs’ fat
-without moral defilement. Yet no steps were taken to exclude these
-substances from the grease for the Indian cartridges! A rumour
-accordingly flew round the bazaars that in order to attack Hindoo and
-Moslem alike the two objectionable fats had been mixed in the grease.
-This story was traced to a curious source. One day a low-caste man at
-Dumdum, near Calcutta, asked a Sepoy to give him a draught of water from
-his _lotah_. The Sepoy refused, loftily observing that the vessel would
-be polluted if a low-caste man touched it with his lips. The Lascar
-replied, with a sneer, that the Sepoy would soon lose his own caste, for
-the Government were making cartridges greased with defiling fats, which
-he would have to bite in loading his rifle. The Sepoy, horror-stricken
-at this tale, told it to his comrades. It flew from mouth to mouth, and
-soon the Native Army of Bengal lay under the blight of a hideous
-panic--every man going about his duty haunted by a dread of
-soul-destroying defilement.[339] The men, half-crazy with fear, met of
-nights to concert measures for their protection, and at Barrackpore
-incendiary fires broke out. General Hearsey, who was in command, warned
-the Government of what was going on, and orders were given that
-ungreased cartridges should be issued--the men lubricating them with
-whatever substance they chose to apply.[340] But no sooner had one
-suspicion been banished from the Sepoy mind than another took its place.
-A glazed paper was used for the ungreased cartridges, whereupon a new
-rumour flew round to the effect that the glaze was produced by fat.
-General Hearsey harangued his men, assuring them on his honour that
-their suspicions were wrong, and they seemed satisfied; though, as
-events showed, they were by no means satisfied.
-
-A detachment of the 34th was sent from Barrackpore to Berhampore. They
-carried the tale about the glazed paper with them, and communicated the
-fresh panic to the 19th Native Infantry at that station. The day after
-the men of the 34th arrived the 19th Regiment had blank cartridges
-served to them, which by some mistake had been made out of two different
-kinds of paper. The men at once suspected that the new defiling
-cartridges had been mixed with the old ones, so that their caste might
-be destroyed, and they refused to take their percussion caps. Colonel
-Mitchell, instead of reasoning with his Sepoys as Hearsey had done, flew
-into a paroxysm of passion--which simply confirmed their suspicions.
-Mitchell, in fact, mistook fear for mutiny, and it was in vain that the
-Native officers, who of course knew the real state of the case, implored
-him to keep his temper with his men. That night the 19th mutinied.
-Mitchell had no European troops, but he closed round the mutineers with
-two other Native regiments--cavalry and artillery--and then, sending for
-the Native officers of the 19th, stormed at them in impotent fury. They
-assured him that their men were only in a panic, and that if the cavalry
-and artillery were withdrawn they would return to duty. The cavalry and
-artillery were withdrawn, and the 19th went back to its quarters loyally
-enough.
-
-Though Mitchell’s indiscretion drove the 19th into revolt, it had
-unquestionably revolted. Lord Canning, therefore, was bound to punish
-it, and he decided that the regiment must be disarmed and disbanded. But
-he had no British troops to spare for this purpose. He accordingly had
-to wait from the end of February till the end of March for the arrival
-of an English regiment from Burmah to disarm the 19th, who were marched
-down to Barrackpore to be broken up. On the 29th of March, two days
-before the disbandment of the 19th Native Infantry, Private Mungul Pandy
-of the 34th, in a fit of drunken fanaticism, attempted to get up a
-mutiny among his comrades. He shot the horse of the Adjutant, Lieutenant
-Baugh, who was cut down in trying to seize him. Only one man of the
-quarter-guard responded to the order to arrest the mutineer, who was
-finally captured, tried, and hanged on the 22nd of April. Evil
-communications had passed between the 19th and the 34th, and it was
-found that, though the Sikhs and Moslems in the regiment were loyal, the
-Hindoos were mutinous to a man. Yet nothing was done to punish the 34th.
-The discharged men of the 19th, however, carried the story of their
-wrongs to their homes in Oudh and Bundelkund, and soon it came to be
-believed that not only were the cartridges greased, but, in order to
-produce a general pollution of the Natives, which would destroy all
-caste, “that the public wells, and the flour, and ghee (a clarified
-butter sold in the bazaars), had been defiled by ground bone-dust and
-the fat of cows and pigs, while the salt had been sprinkled with cows’
-and hogs’ blood.”[341] Viceregal proclamations were issued to
-contradict these rumours and reassure the people, but in vain. The
-North-West Provinces had now become smitten with the terror which
-hovered over India, and the Commander-in-Chief suggested that the
-_depôt_ at Umballa might be broken up before the rifle practice began at
-the annual training. Lord Canning, believing that his proclamations had
-lulled the rising storm, refused to sanction this step. Fires next broke
-out at Umballa, as at Barrackpore--the officers alleging that Sepoys,
-who were as yet “undefiled,” set fire to the huts of those who had
-accepted the defiling cartridges, and that the latter retaliated. Oudh
-soon became affected, and in May Sir Henry Lawrence had to disarm the
-7th Irregular Native Infantry at Lucknow.
-
-[Illustration: CAWNPORE.]
-
-In the North-West Provinces the famous “chupatties” began to make their
-appearance. They consisted of small baked cakes, and they were passed on
-from hand to hand, from hamlet to hamlet, spreading a strange
-excitement wherever they went. The circulation of the “chupatties” was
-evidently a signal of some sort, and yet, though Native society was
-shaking with revolutionary tremors, nothing happened. At last an event
-occurred which precipitated a general catastrophe. At Meerut eighty-five
-men of the 3rd Native Cavalry had been tried and doomed to ten years’
-hard labour on the roads for refusing to bite their cartridges. They
-were paraded and punished before the other Native regiments, who seem to
-have been irritated, rather than overawed. Next day (10th May), the 3rd
-Cavalry forced the gates of the gaol and released their comrades. The
-men of the 20th and 11th Regiments flew to arms, shot every European
-they met, set fire to their huts, and marched on to Delhi. Why, it will
-be asked, was this revolt not quelled, seeing that a strong English
-force was stationed at Meerut? The outbreak, it is true, occurred during
-church hours on a Sunday; but even this hardly explains why General
-Hewitt, who was in command, permitted the mutineers to pursue their
-march to the city of the Mogul Emperors. There they proceeded, as if by
-concert, to the King, who espoused their cause. The people of the city
-rose and massacred the Europeans. The Native regiments in Delhi--the
-38th, 54th, and 74th--joined the mutineers one by one, and though the
-arsenal was held for a time by Lieutenant Willoughby, with Lieutenants
-Raynor and Forrest, and six other Englishmen, they blew it up when it
-was no longer tenable. The Mutiny was now a war of liberation. It had a
-King for a rallying-point, and an Imperial city for a capital.
-
-The North-West had by this time fallen from the feeble hands of Colvin
-into the grasp of the rebels. In Gwalior the British Resident, by his
-personal ascendency, held Scindia to his loyalty, though Scindia’s army
-revolted. But for George Lawrence, Rajpootana would have been lost. As
-for Oudh, there the struggle was becoming tragic. On the eve of the
-insurrection this province, seething with sedition, was put under the
-rule of Sir Henry Lawrence. Lucknow, with 700,000 inhabitants, was a
-hotbed of treason, and the success of the mutineers at Meerut agitated
-them profoundly. At the end of May the Sepoys in Lucknow rose and
-marched away to Delhi, leaving Lawrence with a handful of Europeans to
-hold a rebellious city. Cawnpore is forty miles south of Lucknow, and
-there General Wheeler and another devoted band were similarly situated.
-On the night of the 21st of May, Wheeler and the English
-population--about a thousand souls--withdrew into a kind of temporary
-fortress which he had created, and which he defended by some 210 men. At
-Cawnpore, in May, 1857, there was residing a young Mahratta noble, Nana
-Sahib by name, whose popular manners had rendered him a favourite in the
-English community. He had been the adopted heir of the last Peishwa of
-Berari, and his grievance against the Government was that Dalhousie
-refused to let him enjoy the pension guaranteed to the Peishwa and his
-successors. Nana Sahib had spent a season in London to press his claims,
-and had been most hospitably received. His agent, Azin Oolla Khan, had
-returned to India after visiting the Crimea, and bearing to his master
-tales which were partially true, of the defeats and humiliations which
-England had suffered during her war with Russia. Nana Sahib had been
-busy with plots against the English _raj_ for many years, and his agents
-were ubiquitous. In Oudh they had been especially active, for they had
-taken every advantage of the mistakes of an over-zealous
-Commissioner--Mr. Coverley Jackson--to fan the flame of discontent in
-that province. Yet Wheeler trusted the Nana Sahib so implicitly that he
-put the treasury of Cawnpore in the charge of his personal retinue lest
-his own Native troops might fail him. On the 4th of June General
-Wheeler’s Sepoys revolted, joined Nana Sahib’s retinue in plundering the
-treasury, and then, laden with spoil, set out for Delhi. But the Nana’s
-idea was to win empire for himself rather than for a degenerate
-descendant of the Mogul dynasty. He therefore persuaded the rebels to
-return, and besiege the English garrison at Cawnpore. On the twentieth
-day of the siege he sent one of his prisoners, an old lady named
-Greenway, to General Wheeler, offering the beleaguered English a safe
-conduct to Allahabad if they would surrender. The offer was accepted. On
-the 27th of June the survivors--men, women, and children, about 450 in
-all--marched to the boats which had been prepared for them. As soon as
-they had embarked Nana Sahib treacherously opened fire on them, and
-converted an exodus into a massacre. One hundred and twenty-two captives
-were taken, and imprisoned in a house till the 15th of July, when they
-were butchered. Next morning their bodies, some still quivering with
-life, were thrown into a well. When tidings of this ghastly crime
-reached Europe, the nation was for a moment horror-stricken, but only
-for a moment. A cry of rage broke forth from the British people, and the
-Government hastened to send avenging reinforcements to the East. They
-could not, however, arrive in time to save Cawnpore, and when it fell,
-the rebels closed round Henry Lawrence at Lucknow. Two days after the
-siege began a stray shot mortally wounded him, and, after thirty-six
-hours of intense agony, one of the noblest hearts in India had ceased to
-beat for ever.
-
-“It is evident,” said the Queen, in a letter to Lord Palmerston,
-commenting on these events, “from a comparison of the news with the map,
-that whereas hitherto the seat of the mutiny was Oudh, Delhi, and the
-Upper Ganges, to which localities all troops have been despatched, it
-has now broken out in their rear, cutting them off from the base of
-operations, viz., Calcutta, and that it has reached the gates of the
-seat of Government itself.” The North-West and Oudh were, in fact, lost.
-In the former province, a Mogul King held sway at Delhi, whilst Colvin
-was clinging to Agra with feeble hands. In Oudh, Nana Sahib, the viper
-of the insurrection, was installed at Cawnpore; whilst a small band of
-Englishmen, bewailing the loss of their heroic leader, stood desperately
-at bay at Lucknow. In six months, the Empire which had been created in a
-century, was shattered and in ruins. Yet the English clung to these
-ruins with the tenacity of despair, and what they had lost they were
-determined to re-conquer. Fortunately, they had in India what they
-lacked in the Crimea, two leaders who were alike competent to translate
-a high resolve into prompt action. These were Lawrence at Lahore, and
-Canning at Calcutta.
-
-When the Mutiny first broke out General Anson was Commander-in-Chief of
-the Forces in India. It was said that he was a mere amateur soldier, and
-that in Simla he had accordingly found a congenial Capua. Family
-interest had sent him at one bound from the Turf some years before to
-the command of one of the Presidency armies. When the
-Commandership-in-Chief of the Indian Armies fell vacant, family interest
-had again secured the post for him. Had he been a man of capacity and
-energy the Mutiny would have been stamped out when it was feebly
-sporadic. After it became what Canning called “epidemic,” the task of
-repression was harder. Whether Anson would have risen to the level of
-his responsibilities the world will never know now, because he died in a
-fortnight after he began to grapple with the crisis.[342] His slender
-force was then taken in hand by Sir H. Barnard, who pressed on to the
-South, and who reached Alipore on the 5th of June, where he effected a
-junction with Sir Archdale Wilson, who had marched from Meerut. On the
-8th Barnard drove the rebels from their entrenchments at Budlee Serái,
-four miles north of Delhi, where he repeated Raglan’s experiment in the
-Crimea--that of besieging a fortress, whose garrison was really
-besieging him. On the 5th of July Barnard died, to be succeeded by Reed,
-who in turn was succeeded by Wilson on the 17th of July. All four were
-sluggish generals, and it was well that John Lawrence, at Lahore, acted
-on them like a goad. Englishmen will not readily forget his famous
-telegram to Anson in May when he heard that the General was about to
-entrench himself at Umballa--“Clubs are trumps--not spades?” A vain
-controversy has arisen as to who can claim credit for the capture of
-Delhi; whether it was due to Wilson’s slow but cautious tactics, or to
-the engineering skill of Taylor, or the demoniac energy of Nicholson, or
-the dashing enterprise of Chamberlain, who brought succours from the
-Punjab. The man who really took the rebel stronghold was not a soldier
-but a civilian, for it was John Lawrence, at Lahore, and not any of the
-generals before Delhi, who was the bulwark of the war.[343]
-
-When the Mutiny broke out the Punjab was--by the prompt action of
-Lawrence’s subordinates who disarmed sulking troops, and stamped out the
-germs of mutiny whenever and wherever they were visible--saved and
-secured.
-
-[Illustration: LORD LAWRENCE.]
-
-After this Delhi seemed to him to be the very keystone of the
-insurrection. To take it there was no risk too great to run--no hazard
-too perilous to undergo.[344] Though his own position at Lahore was
-dangerous enough, he threw himself on the people, and staked everything
-on the fidelity of the Sikhs. He summoned the old gunners of the Khálsa
-from their fields. The low-caste “Muzbis” he converted into sappers. The
-fierce chieftains, who had fought against us in ’48 and ’49, together
-with their followers, he hurried on to the rebel city, thereby stripping
-his province of local leaders who might have organised a rising. “From,
-the Punjab arsenals,” says one of Lawrence’s critics, “the siege-trains
-were equipped; from the Punjab districts vast amounts of carriage were
-gathered and despatched systematically with their loads to Delhi; from
-the Punjab treasuries the sinews of war were furnished. Men were raised
-by tens of thousands to replace the Sepoys--raised, indeed, in such
-numbers that--as constantly comes out in Lawrence’s correspondence--the
-dread was for a long time never absent from his mind lest this might be
-overdone, and new danger might arise from the Punjabis becoming
-conscious of their strength.”[345] What wonder, then, that in England as
-in India, where it was admitted that the fall of Delhi broke the neck of
-the insurrection, all men who knew the circumstances of the case, who
-knew how he had to stimulate laggards,[346] strengthen faint hearts,
-overcome jealousies, sweep away obstructions--“all greeted Sir John
-Lawrence by acclamation as the man who had done more than any single man
-to save the Indian Empire”?[347] And justly. For had the great and
-warlike Sikh nation, in the midst of which Lawrence stood like a lion at
-bay, risen against the British _raj_, “all would have been lost save
-honour.” He saw, in fact, that the Khálsa banner must be carried into
-our own lines, otherwise it would be swept into the lines of the enemy;
-and it was this inspiration of genius that really saved India. Delhi
-fell before the attacks of the reinforced army, after six days’
-fighting, on the 20th of September, and on the 21st the Mogul king was
-captured by Captain Hodson (“Hodson of Hodson’s Horse”), who next day
-shot, with his own hand, his two sons, and hung up their bodies in the
-most public place in the city.[348]
-
-The fall of Delhi was not the end, but the beginning of the end, of the
-Mutiny. Oudh had to be recovered, and if it be said that Lawrence
-captured Delhi, it is but right to say that Canning wrested Oudh from
-the grasp of the insurgents. His position in Calcutta was an
-embarrassing one. A terrible panic had paralysed those round him. Though
-they seemed able to do nothing but clamour for vengeance and for
-blood;[349] yet in the whirlwind of their passion Canning stood
-“steadfast as a pillar in a storm.” He was one of those who at such a
-moment “attain the wise indifference of the wise” to everything save the
-paramount demands of practical duty. He sent to Bombay, Madras, and
-Ceylon for reinforcements. He intercepted at Singapore the force that
-was on its way to China to support Lord Elgin, who had been sent to
-supersede Sir John Bowring,[350] and he armed Henry and John Lawrence
-with absolute power in Oudh and the Punjab. On the 23rd of May, Neill
-brought to Calcutta the first of the reinforcements from Madras.
-Havelock followed with two regiments from Persia, superseding Neill; and
-after him came Outram, who was to supersede Havelock and succeed Henry
-Lawrence as Chief Commissioner in Oudh. Outram, however, refused to
-deprive Havelock of the honour of relieving Lucknow, and accompanied him
-merely in his civil capacity. On the 17th, Havelock forced his way to
-the scene of the massacre at Cawnpore, where the sickening relics of
-Nana Sahib’s crime were still visible. Onwards his Army of Vengeance
-swept with hungry hearts to Lucknow, which they entered on the 25th of
-September, after a great variety of perilous adventure. When the
-imprisoned garrison, who had long been listening with strained ears for
-the beat of the English drums, met their rescuers, the scene was
-inexpressibly touching. The Highlanders, usually the most stolid and
-least emotional of our troops, had become dangerously excited after they
-entered Cawnpore; and, in the engagements on the march to Lucknow, they
-had fought, contrary to their wont, more like savages than civilised
-men. But when they marched into Lucknow their hearts softened. Oblivious
-of discipline and decorum, they rushed from their ranks, shaking hands
-with the ladies, lifting up the little children in their brawny arms,
-and passing them along from hand to hand, to be pressed to rough and
-bearded lips. Outram now took over the supreme command; but, finding
-himself again surrounded by the enemy in overwhelming numbers, he
-decided not to withdraw from the city. Lucknow had therefore to be
-relieved again.
-
-The death of Anson, and the startling development of the insurrection in
-midsummer, together with the pressing appeals of the Queen, roused the
-Cabinet to action. They sent out reinforcements, and on the 11th of July
-decided to appoint Sir Colin Campbell as Anson’s successor. When asked
-by Lord Panmure when he could start, Campbell answered, laconically,
-“To-morrow;” and, as a matter of fact, with little more than the kit of
-a common soldier, the veteran did start next night.[351] On the 17th of
-August he arrived at Calcutta, and toiled without ceasing to organise an
-army. The greatest military historian of our time has said that Campbell
-had a genuine and natural love for war, and he was one of those whose
-hearts beat stronger in the hour of battle than at any other moment of
-their lives. But he loved victory better than combat; and when he
-fought, he fought to win. Hence the extraordinary pains he took with his
-preparations, and the time he spent, or, as some of his panic-stricken
-critics in Calcutta said, wasted, in making arrangements which would
-virtually guarantee success. It was not till the 27th of
-
-[Illustration: SCENE AT THE FIRST RELIEF OF LUCKNOW.]
-
-October that he left Calcutta. On the 9th of November he got to
-Cawnpore; and then by a brilliant forced march on the 12th he reached
-the Alumbaugh--a summer palace of the kings of Oudh--from which he was
-able to signal his arrival to Outram. A gallant civilian--Mr.
-Kavanagh--contrived, in disguise, to make his way from Lucknow through
-the enemy’s lines to the relieving force, and told the story of Outram’s
-defence, an achievement, as Lord Canning said, without a parallel in
-history, save Numantia and Saragossa. On the 14th Sir Colin Campbell
-moved on the city. On the 16th he attacked the chief stronghold of the
-rebels--the Secunder-baugh. The 93rd Highlanders and a regiment of Sikhs
-forced their way in through a narrow breach, and then, finding that the
-Sepoy garrison could not escape, they massacred them. The Highlanders
-here fought with uncontrollable ferocity, neither asking nor giving
-quarter. “_Cawnpore_, you----!” was the cry of rage with which each man
-drove his bayonet home into the heart of his foe; and, excited by their
-example, the Sikhs strove only too successfully to emulate the barbarity
-of their Scottish comrades. For three terrible hours did the men of the
-93rd satiate their passion for vengeance; and when they emerged from the
-place with tartans soaked in blood, they left it packed high and close
-with corpses--hardly a single rebel escaping to tell the tale. On the
-17th of November Campbell had fought his way to the Residency, and
-Lucknow was rescued a second time.
-
-The victory was hailed in England with pride and delight. The Queen sent
-a letter to Sir Colin Campbell, congratulating him. “The Queen,” she
-writes, “has had many proofs already of Sir Colin Campbell’s devotion to
-his Sovereign and his country, and he has now greatly added to that debt
-of gratitude which both owe him. But Sir Colin must bear one reproof
-from his Queen, and that is, that he exposes himself too much. His life
-is most precious, and she entreats that he will neither put himself
-where his noble spirit would urge him to be--foremost in danger--nor
-fatigue himself so as to injure his health.”[352] Her Majesty’s caution
-was hardly needed. Sir Colin Campbell was a general who never exposed
-himself or his troops to unnecessary danger. But when necessary, he
-would spend his own and their blood as recklessly as if it were water.
-It has been noticed that his brilliant victories in India were all won
-with little loss of life.[353] The explanation is that his plans were
-just the opposite of those pursued in the Crimea--that is to say, he
-never wasted his men in futile assaults, or hurled them against
-fortifications bristling with cannon, till his own artillery--an arm in
-which he was always strong--had demoralised the enemy.
-
-Having removed the women, children, sick, and wounded, Campbell retraced
-his steps to attack the rebel army concentrated at Cawnpore--his heart
-saddened, and the lustre of his triumph dimmed by the death of the
-heroic Havelock. At Cawnpore, General Windham, who commanded the rear
-guard, had foolishly allowed himself to be outflanked by Tantia Topee, a
-commander of great skill and courage. Windham’s blunder not only gave
-the enemy possession of Cawnpore, but put the whole English force, whose
-communications were thus threatened, in the greatest peril. Campbell, by
-forced marches, came to the rescue on the 29th of November. Having sent
-on his convoy to Calcutta, he attacked the rebels, under Nana Sahib and
-Tantia Topee, on the 5th of December; and, on the 7th, there was not a
-vestige of the 25,000 insurgents composing the Gwalior army to be seen
-for miles round Cawnpore.[354] As the year 1857 closed, it was felt that
-the worst of the crisis in India was over.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVII.
-
-THE ROYAL MARRIAGE.
-
- Birth of Princess Beatrice--Death of the Duchess of Gloucester--A
- Royal Romance--Franco-Russian Intrigues--The Art Treasures
- Exhibition at Manchester--Announcement of the Marriage of the
- Princess Royal--Prince Albert’s Views on Royal Grants--The
- Controversy on the Grant to the Princess Royal--Visit of the Grand
- Duke Constantine--The Christening of Princess Beatrice--Prince
- Albert’s Title as Prince Consort Legalised--The First Distribution
- of the Victoria Cross--Opposition to the Order--The Queen’s Visit
- to Manchester--Departure of the Prince of Wales to Germany--The
- Queen and the Indian Mutiny--Her Controversy with Lord
- Palmerston--Sudden Death of the Duchess of Nemours--The Marriage of
- the Princess Royal--The Scene in the Chapel--On the Balcony of
- Buckingham Palace--The Illuminations in London--The Bride and
- Bridegroom at Windsor--The Last Adieus--The Departure of the Bride
- and Bridegroom to Germany.
-
-
-It was when the country was passing through the crisis of Palmerston’s
-“penal dissolution” that a Princess was added to the Royal circle--soon
-to be diminished by the migration of her eldest sister to a home of her
-own in a foreign land. The little Princess was born on the 14th of
-April, and in a letter to King Leopold the Queen says: “She is to be
-called Beatrice, a fine old name borne by three of the Plantagenet
-Princesses, and her other names will be Mary (after poor Aunt Mary),
-Victoria (after Mama and Vicky, who, with Fritz Wilhelm, are to be the
-sponsors) and Feodore.”[355] On the 19th Prince Albert tells his
-stepmother that the Queen was already able to leave her room, and her
-recovery, therefore, could not have been retarded by the political
-excitement and agitation of the times.
-
-As the month ended, however, sorrow fell on the Royal household. On the
-30th of April the Duchess of Gloucester died--the “Aunt Gloucester” to
-whom the Queen and her husband in their letters make so many
-affectionate references. This Princess was the last child of George
-III., and of all his family the best beloved. The story of her life was
-in itself a romance, the pathos of which accounts for the Queen’s
-frequent allusions to her nobility and unselfishness of character.
-During her girlhood at Windsor the Princess Mary, as she was called, won
-the hearts of the people by her quiet, unobtrusive philanthropic work
-among the poor. She and her cousin, the Duke of Gloucester, fell in love
-with each other, but when he attained the age of twenty-one their
-romance was cruelly and abruptly ended. The Princess Charlotte was born,
-and it was decreed that the Duke of Gloucester must remain single, so
-that he might marry her if no eligible foreign prince claimed her hand.
-The Princess Mary and the Duke of Gloucester waited in suspense for
-twenty weary years--for she refused to encourage any other suitor. In
-1814 a rift appeared in this cloud that overhung their lives. The Prince
-of Orange, it was said, was about to wed the Princess Charlotte, and
-the ladies of the Court noticed how the pining Princess Mary suddenly
-began to look bright and happy. But the projected alliance with the
-Prince of Orange was abandoned, and the Princess Mary began to droop
-again. A few months, however, put an end to the long probation of the
-Royal lovers. Leopold of Coburg married the Princess Charlotte, and
-Court gossips chronicle the fact that when she came down the steps of
-Carlton House after the ceremony, the Princess Mary rushed forward and
-fell weeping into her arms. She was married to the Duke of Gloucester in
-1816, and it may be noticed that they refused to ask Parliament for any
-increase of income. During their lives they had devoted themselves to
-benevolent work, and had not only learned the value of money, but how to
-make their means serve their wants. Their married life was so arranged
-that they not only lived on their private incomes, but won a great and
-well-merited reputation for their wide and generous charity. The sweet
-and gentle nature of the Duchess, to which the strange story of her life
-imparted an additional charm, had ever a strong fascination for the
-Queen.
-
-The triumph of Palmerston at the General Election had an immediate
-effect upon those Franco-Russian intrigues for the settlement of the
-Danubian Principalities which had given the Queen some uneasiness. The
-approaching visit of the Grand Duke Constantine to Paris had been
-commented on severely by the English press, and the Emperor of the
-French, in writing to the Queen to congratulate her on the birth of the
-Princess Beatrice, attempted to explain away the significance of the
-visit. Lord Clarendon suggested that Prince Albert should reply to this
-letter, telling the Emperor quite frankly why England was jealous of the
-advances of Russia to France. An alliance between France and England,
-said the Prince in his letter, could have no basis save the mutual
-desire to develop as much as possible Art, Science, Letters,
-Commerce--in a word, everything that is meant by Civilisation. But as
-for an alliance with Russia, on what basis could that be raised? What
-interest had Russia in Progress? What was there in common between modern
-France and modern Russia? A Franco-Russian alliance, therefore, could
-have no foundation but that of political interest--and hence the
-prospect of it alarmed the free States of Europe.
-
-Prince Albert’s reception at Manchester, where he opened the great Art
-Treasures Exhibition on the 5th of May, delighted the Queen. But of all
-the incidents of his tour, perhaps none pleased her more than the manner
-in which his speech at the unveiling of her statue in the Peel Park of
-that city was criticised by the public. In his address he alluded to the
-devotion of the people to their Queen, and spoke of it as the outcome of
-their attachment to the Sovereign “as the representative of the
-institutions of the country.” The phrase struck the popular fancy, and
-to the Queen it seemed the formula of her position and her life. Two
-days later the Court removed to Osborne, where the Queen gradually
-recovered from the depression of spirits under which she had sunk after
-the death of the Duchess of Gloucester.
-
-On the 16th of May the Prussian _Official Gazette_ announced the
-forthcoming marriage of the Princess Royal and Prince Frederick William,
-and on the 19th the same announcement was made to Parliament by a Royal
-Message. In this Message the Queen expressed her confidence that the
-nation would make a suitable provision for her eldest daughter, and it
-is worth recording that at the outset the Cabinet were a little
-uncertain as to the reception which such a Message would meet with.
-Perhaps that was why Lord Palmerston, in moving the Address in reply to
-it, took pains to tell Parliament that, quite apart from the personal
-interest which Englishmen felt in this affair, it held out political
-prospects “not undeserving the attention of the House.” Family alliances
-tended, he argued, to mitigate the asperities which from time to time
-spring from diversities of national interests. “Therefore,” he added, “I
-trust that this marriage may also be considered as holding out an
-increased prospect of goodwill and of cordiality among the Great Powers
-of Europe.”
-
-But in those days the Representatives of the people, were more jealous
-guardians of the public purse than they are now, and on both sides of
-the House there was a strong feeling against increasing public
-expenditure. The competition then was in economy--not as now in profuse
-extravagance. There were three views current on the subject. One was
-that of Prince Albert, who thought that the time had come when
-Parliament should settle finally what provision ought to be made for
-members of the Royal Family on their marriage, so as to avoid the
-necessity of frequent eleemosynary appeals to Parliament. He held, and
-as it now seems rightly, that the feeling of the country at the time ran
-in favour of treating the Queen’s children generously. In one of his
-letters to Baron Stockmar he says, “Seeing how marked was the desire to
-keep questions relating to the Royal Family aloof from the pressure of
-party conflict, and to have them settled, I believe it would have been
-an easy matter to have carried through the future endowments of them
-all, according to the Chancellor of the Exchequer’s and Palmerston’s
-original plan, which was subsequently dropped by the Cabinet.”[356] Then
-there was the Ministerial view, which was that the Princess should be
-voted a dowry and an annuity; and the Radical view, which was that the
-nation should not be burdened with an annuity, but that whatever was
-voted to the lady should be a lump sum, so that when the vote was passed
-the Princess would cease to be a yearly charge on the country she was
-leaving. Mr. Roebuck gave expression to this last view, even before the
-Chancellor of the Exchequer laid his proposal before the House--which
-was that the annuity should be £8,000, and the marriage portion £40,000.
-The majority of the House, however, desired to come to a unanimous vote
-on the subject, and they laughed at Sir George Lewis’s grave citations
-from Blackstone and his precedents from the reign of George II. Still
-more
-
-[Illustration: THE HASTINGS CHANTRY, ST. GEORGE’S CHAPEL, WINDSOR.]
-
-heartily did they laugh when he explained how the Queen had recently
-been forced to bear very large expenses of a public nature, alluding
-particularly to the visit to the Emperor Napoleon--“a visit,” said Sir
-George, solemnly, “which was purely for public and State purposes, and
-not for her individual pleasure.”[357] No doubt the visits of George IV.
-to Hanover, Ireland, and Scotland were paid for by the State. But it was
-as ridiculous to cite such a bad precedent as that, as to go back for
-others to the reign of George III., when Parliament at different times
-voted a total sum of £3,297,000 to pay the debts of the Royal Family.
-The truth is, that the Sovereign cannot be held exempt from the ordinary
-liabilities of exalted rank and station. Every person who accepts a high
-public office is in the habit, now and then, of drawing on his private
-income to enable him to discharge his public duties with greater
-efficiency--in fact, this liability is simply one of the incidents of
-great estate in every aristocratic country. But, unfortunately, the
-Queen had on her accession surrendered her Crown revenues to Parliament
-for a fixed annuity, on the more or less formal understanding that
-Parliament would provide for her children when they settled in life. So
-that the House of Commons felt there was really no choice in the matter,
-save to vote the grant, and if possible, out of respect for the Queen,
-vote it unanimously. Mr. Roebuck withdrew his opposition, but on the
-report of the vote in Supply, Mr. Coningham, Member for Brighton,
-entered a protest against the principle of voting annuities to the Royal
-Family, and moved the reduction of the vote in this instance from £8,000
-to £6,000 a year. The motion was lost by 328 to 14. Mr. Maguire and Sir
-J. Trelawny, supported by Mr. Coningham, then argued that the annuity
-was enough, and moved that there be no dowry granted. They were beaten
-by a vote of 361 to 18, and here the matter ended. “We have,” writes
-Prince Albert to Stockmar, “established a good precedent, not merely for
-the grant itself, but for the way and manner in which such grants should
-be dealt with.”[358] This opinion he would perhaps have recast had he
-lived to see the painful position in which the Royal Family have again
-and again been placed by repeated applications of the precedent.
-
-Just before the Court left Osborne, the Grand Duke Constantine paid the
-Queen his long expected visit. He arrived on the 30th and left next
-night, after going with her Majesty to see the fleet at Spithead. His
-visit was not quite a pleasant one for the Queen and Lord Palmerston.
-The Grand Duke, to their surprise, spoke with almost cynical candour of
-the Crimean War; indeed, it was not till his visit that the Queen had
-brought home to her effectually the murderous mistakes of that campaign.
-He told her about Menschikoff’s blundering, and showed her how
-Sebastopol was at the mercy of the Allies after the Battle of the Alma,
-because there were only two battalions in the city; and further indulged
-in many cheering reminiscences of a similar sort, especially in
-reference to the attacks on the Redan. But as he had just come from
-Paris, one wonders if he told his English hosts how it was that the
-Emperor discovered that the Malakoff was the weak point in the defences
-of the town.[359] On the 3rd of June the Court returned to Windsor, and
-the Queen went to Ascot Races, and admired the beautiful mare, Blink
-Bonny, which was brought out for her inspection.[360] The first Handel
-Festival at the Crystal Palace, however, provided a stronger attraction
-than Ascot for the Queen and her husband, and her visit to it is
-described in glowing terms by contemporary chroniclers. It was the
-precursor of these great festivals which have since become world-famous,
-and on the 17th, when the Queen was present, _Judas Maccabæus_ was given
-by 2,500 performers.
-
-The christening of the Princess Beatrice took place in the private
-chapel of Buckingham Palace on the 16th of June, and among the visitors
-and guests the Archduke Maximilian of Austria was one of the most
-prominent. He had become betrothed to the Princess Charlotte of Belgium,
-a young and beautiful princess, to whom the Queen was deeply attached.
-It was a love match, but the lives of the young people, radiant at the
-outset with sunshine, were darkened at the end by the gloom of an awful
-tragedy. In an evil moment the Archduke permitted the French Emperor to
-lure him into his wild project for establishing a Transatlantic-Latin
-Empire as a counterpoise to the Anglo-Saxon Republic of the West. He was
-crowned Emperor of Mexico in 1863, and deposed and shot by order of the
-President of the Mexican Republic in 1867. His unhappy consort passed
-the rest of her existence in the living death of insanity.
-
-On the 25th of June the Queen conferred on her husband, by Royal Letters
-Patent, the title of Prince Consort, which, however, had already been
-given to him by the people, who never called him anything else. Still it
-had been a popular, not a legal title, and Prince Albert could claim no
-other precedence than what was accorded to him by courtesy. Moreover,
-when he went abroad, although he held a kingly position in England, he
-ranked merely as a younger Prince of Saxe-Coburg Gotha, and foreigners
-raised difficulties about the precedence that should be given to him. “I
-should have preferred its being done by Act of Parliament,” wrote the
-Queen to King Leopold, in reference to the legalising of the new title,
-“and so it may still be at some future period; but it was thought better
-on the whole to do it now in this simple way”--namely, by Letters
-Patent.
-
-On the 26th, her Majesty presided over one of the most interesting
-functions of her reign--the first distribution of the Victoria Cross, or
-Cross of Valour, to the men who had earned it by personal prowess in
-war. It is a curious fact that till this period no English sovereign
-ever decorated an Englishman for being brave. Courage in England is so
-common and cheap, said Mr. Bright once, that it can be bought easily for
-less than a shilling a day. Nay, there were some generals, like Colin
-Campbell, who objected strongly to decorations being conferred for
-valour--because, as Campbell said, you might as well decorate a woman
-for being chaste as an English soldier for being brave.[361] But contact
-with the French Army had altered the old-fashioned English ideas on the
-subject,
-
-[Illustration: THE VICTORIA CROSS.]
-
-and the spectacle of private soldiers in the Crimea wearing the Legion
-of Honour on their breasts had created a feeling in favour of some kind
-of decoration which would be open to all ranks of the army. The Order of
-the Bath could not be granted for mere bravery--it was granted for
-bravery combined with exceptional skill and talent. But then, as the
-private soldier had no chance of displaying any quality in war save
-courage, it was obvious that the new Order must seek a basis in
-individual heroism alone. The Queen, struck by the episodical incidents
-of the Crimean War, was strongly of opinion in 1856 that exceptional
-deeds of personal valour should have more distinctive recognition than
-the war medal which every man received, however slight might have been
-his share in the campaign. In that year, therefore, she instituted, by
-the Royal Warrant of January 29th, 1856, the Order of the Victoria
-Cross. The decoration was to be given to soldiers or sailors who had
-performed some signal act of valour or devotion to their country in face
-of the enemy--and a small pension of £10 a year was to be attached to
-the Cross. It was not until late in 1857 that a list of persons
-qualified for admission to the Order could be drawn up, and when it was
-submitted to the Queen she resolved to decorate them with her own hands.
-Public interest in the ceremony on the 26th of June was intense. At an
-early hour crowds of well-dressed sightseers swarmed into Hyde Park,
-where a vast amphitheatre of seats, capable of accommodating 12,000
-persons had been erected. In the centre stood a simple table, on which
-were laid the bronze Maltese crosses--their red and blue ribbons being
-the only patches of colour that caught the eye. In front, a body of
-4,000 troops, consisting of the _corps d’élite_ of the army--Guards,
-Highlanders, Royal Marines, the Rifle Brigade, Enniskillens, and
-Hussars, Artillery and Engineers--was drawn up. Between them and the
-Royal Pavilion stood the small group of heroes--sixty-two in number--who
-were to be decorated. At 10 a.m. the Queen, the Prince Consort, Prince
-Frederick William of Prussia, and a brilliant train, rode into the Park.
-The Queen, mounted on a gallant and spirited roan, and wearing a scarlet
-jacket, black skirt, and plumed hat, rode up to the table, but did not
-dismount. One by one each hero was summoned to her presence, and bending
-from her saddle, her Majesty
-
-[Illustration: THE QUEEN DISTRIBUTING THE VICTORIA CROSSES IN HYDE
-PARK.]
-
-pinned the Cross on his breast with her own hands, whilst the Prince
-Consort saluted him with grave and respectful courtesy. As each soldier
-or sailor was decorated, the vast concourse of spectators cheered and
-clapped their hands--whether he were an officer whose breast was already
-glittering with stars and orders, or a humble private or Jack Tar whose
-rough tunic carried no more resplendent embellishment than the ordinary
-war medal. But of all the cheers none were heartier than those which
-were given for a man who, when called out, stepped forward arrayed in
-what was then the grotesque and pacific garb of an ordinary policeman.
-
-The Art Treasures Exhibition at Manchester, which had been opened in May
-by the Prince Consort, had become amazingly popular. It was the first of
-its kind seen in England, and the great difficulty which its organisers
-had to overcome was the reluctance of private collectors to lend works
-of art for exhibition. But for the Queen and Prince Albert it is
-probable this obstacle would never have been surmounted,[362] and hence
-it was but natural that her Majesty should desire to visit the
-collection. Her reception at Manchester, on the 30th of June, was
-enthusiastic, a crowd of a million people welcoming her, as she said
-herself, with “kind and friendly faces.” The display of Prussian flags,
-and the complimentary allusions to her husband and to her eldest
-daughter’s approaching marriage, appear to have touched her deeply. At
-the Exhibition, her Majesty knighted the Mayor, as she observes, “with
-Sir Harry Smith’s sword, which had been in four general actions,” and on
-the 2nd of July she left for Buckingham Palace, where she gave a great
-musical party in the evening. The next event of importance in the
-home-life of the Queen was the departure of the Prince of Wales to
-Königswinter, where it had been arranged he was to carry on his studies.
-He left in high spirits, and with the Queen’s anxious adieus, on the
-26th of July, accompanied by young Mr. Frederick Stanley--now Lord
-Stanley of Preston--General Grey, Sir H. Ponsonby, and his tutors. Mr.
-Gladstone’s son, Mr. C. Wood, son of Lord Halifax, and the present Lord
-Cadogan, were also selected by the Queen and Prince Consort to join him
-as companions in his studies.
-
-From this time till the tide of war in India turned in our favour, the
-Queen’s attention seems to have been absorbed by the crisis in our
-Eastern Empire. Her political work was apparently concentrated in a
-persistent effort to induce the Cabinet not only to hurry out
-reinforcements, but to replace them by increasing the establishment at
-home up to the full limit voted by Parliament, and for which estimates
-had been taken. Lord Palmerston, on the other hand, in his light and
-airy way, refused to regard the Mutiny as serious, and persisted in
-sending out reinforcements in driblets, and then replacing them by
-driblets of recruits. The Queen very sensibly contended that the force
-absorbed by the Indian demand should “be replaced to its full extent and
-in the same kind,” whereas the Cabinet was replacing whole battalions by
-“handfuls of recruits added to the remaining ones.” It was in vain that
-the Minister met her with the usual stock platitudes--that neither the
-money nor the men could be got. The Queen replied that her project would
-actually be more economical than the confused and unmethodical devices
-of Palmerston and Panmure. The East India Company would find the money
-for the reinforcements, which could be applied to the creation of new
-battalions. But these could in turn absorb the old half-pay officers
-reduced from the War Establishment, who would then cease to be a burden
-on the Exchequer. As to the argument that the men could not be got, the
-Queen wrote to Lord Palmerston, “This is an hypothesis, and not an
-argument. Try, and you will see. If you do not succeed, and the measure
-is necessary, you will have to adopt means to make it succeed. If you
-conjure up the difficulties yourself you cannot, of course, succeed.”
-One fact may be mentioned as curiously illustrating the shallowness of
-understanding and feebleness of grasp with which Palmerston approached
-any great question of State to which Foreign Office _formulæ_ could not
-be applied. He, or some one at his instigation, seems to have tried to
-frighten the Queen by warning her that the East India Company would
-object to keep up such a large addition to her army in India. The Queen,
-however, saw what Palmerston could not see--that the first shot fired in
-the rebellion had virtually eliminated the Company as a dominating
-factor in the Indian problem. “The Queen,” she writes to Palmerston,
-“thinks it next to impossible that the European force could again be
-decreased in India. After the present fearful experience the Company
-could only send back (home) Queen’s regiments, in order to raise new
-European ones of their own. This they cannot do without the Queen’s
-sanction, and she must at once make her most solemn protest against such
-a measure. It would be dangerous and unconstitutional to allow private
-individuals to raise an army of Queen’s subjects larger than her own in
-any part of the British dominions.” And at the close of the Memorandum,
-which she haughtily desires Palmerston to communicate to his colleagues,
-the tone becomes sharper as she sums up the net result of the bungling
-military policy of the Cabinet. “The present situation of the Queen’s
-army,” she writes, “is a pitiable one. The Queen has just seen, in the
-camp at Aldershot, regiments which, after eighteen years’ foreign
-service in most trying climates, had come back to England to be sent
-out, after seven months, to the Crimea. Having passed through this
-destructive campaign, they had not been home for a year before they are
-to go to India for perhaps twenty years! This is most cruel and unfair
-to the gallant men who devote their services to the country, and the
-Government is in duty and humanity bound to alleviate their
-position.”[363]
-
-In August a flying visit to Cherbourg in her yacht convinced the Queen
-that the growing strength of this port as a place of arms was dangerous
-to England, and on her return she called the attention of the Cabinet to
-what she had seen, and demanded reports as to the precise state of the
-defences on the South coast of England. As usual, nobody could find the
-required information, and when it was obtained Lord Clarendon told the
-Prince Consort that nobody could read such an account of our
-shortcomings without immediately desiring to remedy them. September saw
-the Court at Balmoral, where the Queen’s holiday was sadly overcast by
-the Indian reports which came pouring in. As the Prince Consort said, in
-one of his letters to Stockmar, they were “tortured by the events in
-India, which are truly frightful!” The French Emperor’s courteous offer
-to pass our reinforcements through France brought some cheerfulness to
-the anxious Sovereign, not diminished by the friendly offer of two
-regiments from Belgium--which was, however, rejected by Lord Palmerston,
-who had sense enough to see that if England was to win at all she must,
-as he said, “win off her own bat.”
-
-On the 16th of October the Court returned to Windsor, the Queen having
-spent a night at Haddo House, where she went to visit her venerable
-friend, Lord Aberdeen. The sudden death of the Duchess of Nemours, first
-cousin of the Queen and Prince Consort, and wife of the second son of
-Louis Philippe, now threw the Court into mourning. “We were like
-sisters,” wrote Her Majesty to King Leopold, “bore the same name,
-married the same year, our children are the same age; there was, in
-short, a similarity between us, which, since 1839, united us closely and
-tenderly. Now one of us is gone--passed as a rose, full-blown and
-faded--from this earth to eternity, there to rest in peace and
-joy.”[364] The commercial crisis of November caused Parliament to be
-summoned before the year closed, and December was spent in making
-preparations for the marriage of the Princess Royal.
-
-When the 19th of January, 1858, came round Buckingham Palace was full of
-guests--the King of the Belgians and his sons, the Prince and Princess
-of Prussia and their suites, being among the number. It was a brilliant
-scene of bustle and excitement, covers for eighty or ninety guests being
-laid daily at dinner. Four dramatic representations were given by
-command at Her Majesty’s Theatre, where, writes the Queen, “We made a
-wonderful row of royalties, I sitting between dear uncle and the Prince
-of Prussia,” and where the audience cheered the young couple who were to
-be so soon united with a cordiality that brought tears to their parents’
-eyes. Balls, dinners, musical parties, celebrated the coming event at
-the Palace, till the 24th, which is recorded in the Queen’s Diary as
-“poor dear Vicky’s last unmarried day ... an eventful one, reminding me
-of my own.” Charming in its simplicity is the Queen’s description of the
-family delight over the wedding gifts; and the tearful “Good-night” of
-the 24th between the Princess and her parents is too sacred a subject
-for more than passing allusion. On the 25th, the eventful day of the
-wedding, the Queen writes, “I felt as if I were being married over again
-myself, only much more nervous, for I had not that blessed feeling which
-I had then, which raises and supports one, of giving myself up for life
-to him whom I loved and worshipped--then and for ever.” But the sun
-shone with happy omen as the morning advanced, and the wedding party,
-amidst cheering crowds, proceeded to the Chapel Royal at St. James’s
-Palace.
-
-[Illustration: THE CRIMSON DRAWING-ROOM, WINDSOR CASTLE.]
-
-This interesting building had been put to strange uses in its time. It
-had been in turn a Roman Catholic chapel, a Protestant chapel, a
-guard-room, and a store-room, before it ended as a chapel reserved for
-Royal nuptials. Within its walls Queen Anne had married good-natured
-George of Denmark, and George III. the shrew of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. It
-was the scene of the wedding of the ill-fated Caroline of Brunswick and
-the “First Gentleman of Europe,” who, it may be remembered, had to be
-fortified with brandy ere he could undergo the ceremony. Here, also,
-William IV. wedded the amiable and gentle Queen Adelaide, and his
-successor plighted her troth to the husband of her heart. But not even
-on that occasion was the chapel the scene of a more brilliant pageant
-than when it witnessed the nuptials of the Princess Royal of England and
-the son of the Prince of Prussia. The dingy edifice, which Holbein’s
-admirers revere as a triumph of his genius, was now no longer dingy.
-Hangings of crimson silk, gleaming with gold fringe and tassels, gilded
-columns and scroll work, gold headings, and emblazoned shields and
-ciphers, dispelled the customary gloom from the building. The altar,
-too, was sumptuously equipped with quaint “services” of gold plate,
-illustrative of the Augustan age of English Art.
-
-The marriage procession was formed at Buckingham Palace. It consisted of
-more than twenty carriages, the first detachment of which conveyed the
-Princes and magnates of the House of Prussia. At a short interval the
-bridegroom and his suite followed; then the Queen and her family. When
-it arrived at St. James’s Palace the procession was received by the
-great officers of State, who conducted it to the chapel through the
-splendid apartments, rich in sombre decorations of Queen Anne’s reign.
-
-The Prince Consort and King Leopold were radiant in the bravery of Field
-Marshals’ uniforms, “the three girls,” writes the Queen, with quick
-feminine memory for the details of such an occasion, “in pink satin
-trimmed with Newport lace, Alice with a wreath, and the two others only
-with bouquets in their hair of cornflowers and marguerites; next the
-four boys in Highland dress.” As for the eight bridesmaids, they “looked
-charming in white tulle, with wreaths and bouquets of pink roses and
-white heather;” and “Mama” (the Duchess of Kent) “looking so handsome,”
-says the Queen, “in violet velvet trimmed with ermine and white silk and
-violet,” with “the Cambridges” and all the foreign Princes and
-Princesses, made up a brilliant party. The wedding procession was, in
-fact, formed in the Closet--the room in the Chapel which on Court days
-is reserved for the Royal Family and the families of Peers, “just as at
-_my_ marriage,” writes the Queen, “only how small the _old_ Royal Family
-has become!” Lord Palmerston carried the Sword of State “with easy grace
-and dignity,” says the _Morning Post_,[365] “with a ponderous
-solemnity,” says the _Times_, in their respective accounts of the scene,
-and the Queen, with the “two little boys” on each side, and followed by
-her three daughters, walked after Lord Palmerston and the two elder
-Princes. Amidst
-
-[Illustration: MARRIAGE OF THE PRINCESS ROYAL. (_See p. 751._)]
-
-beating drums and blaring trumpets, the procession entered the Chapel,
-the appearance of the Queen crowned with a glittering diadem, being
-greeted with a profound and reverential obeisance by the wedding guests
-as she swept on to her chair of State on the left of the altar. The
-entrance of the bride with her father and King Leopold sent a flutter of
-excitement through the throng. When the Princess appeared her face
-seemed pale, even in contrast with her snowy robe of rich moire antique.
-She passed the Queen with a deep bow, and as her eyes met those of the
-bridegroom, her cheeks suddenly flushed to deepest crimson. “My last
-fear of being overcome,” writes the Queen, “vanished on seeing Vicky’s
-quiet, calm, and composed manner.” The whole scene indeed recalled her
-own marriage, and her eyes glistened with tears as the sweet memories of
-her happy and busy life flitted through her mind. The ceremony was
-performed by the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Bishops of London,
-Oxford, and Chester. The Archbishop was “very nervous,” however--much
-more so than either bride or bridegroom, and the Queen records that he
-omitted some of the passages in the Service. When the ceremony was over,
-tender and affectionate congratulations passed between the married pair
-and their relations. The bride and her mother fell weeping into each
-other’s arms, and for a minute or so their agitation was manifestly
-beyond their control. The bridegroom then kissed the bride, who,
-escaping from his embrace, threw herself into the arms of her father,
-whom she kissed again and again. The Princess of Prussia embraced her
-son and kissed the Queen most affectionately; but the most touching
-greeting of all was that which passed between the bridegroom and his
-father, who seemed quite unnerved with emotion. The Prince clasped his
-father passionately to his heart, and then, as if recovering
-self-control, suddenly knelt down and reverently kissed his hand. These
-congratulations were repeated when the register was signed by all the
-Princesses and Princes present, including the Maharajah Duleep Sing.
-Through cheering crowds bride and bridegroom and the splendid train of
-wedding guests proceeded to Buckingham Palace, where the wedded pair and
-their parents appeared on the balcony and bowed their thanks to the
-kindly people who stood huzzaing outside. Then came the breakfast and
-the parting, which is “such sweet sorrow” to mother and daughter on such
-occasions. The married couple drove to Windsor, and at the railway
-station were met by the Eton boys, who dragged their carriage all the
-way to the Castle. London was one blaze of illuminations that night, and
-the rejoicings at the Palace closed with a State concert. Nothing
-pleased the Queen more than the demeanour of the populace. Their
-demonstrations of loyalty were purely spontaneous and utterly
-unaffected. So much was this the case that the foreign guests were
-amazed to find that the Government offices were the only buildings which
-were not illuminated; in fact, their gloomy darkness alone rendered the
-general illumination of London a little less brilliant than that which
-celebrated the Proclamation of Peace with Russia.
-
-On the 27th of January the Court removed to Windsor, where Prince
-Frederick William was invested with the Order of the Garter, and a
-dinner-party followed, at which the Duke of Buccleuch gratified the
-Princess with his reports of the enthusiastic loyalty of the crowds in
-London, among whom he had moved about _incognito_ on the night of the
-wedding ceremony. Next day the whole family returned to London, and in
-the evening went to see Sheridan’s _Rivals_ and the _Spitalfields
-Weaver_ at Her Majesty’s Theatre, the Queen being greatly amused, as she
-herself records, by the drolleries of Wright, the low comedian, in the
-latter piece. On the 30th loyal addresses from the City of London and
-all the great towns came pouring in, and what the Prince Consort calls
-“a monster Drawing-Room” was held. On Monday the 1st of February the
-Queen writes in her Diary, “The last day of our dear child being with
-us, which is incredible, and makes me at times feel sick at heart,”[366]
-and when the next day came round the Queen’s fortitude failed her.
-Mother and daughter sat weeping in each other’s arms, and when the
-“dreadful time,” as the Queen calls it, arrived, and they had to go down
-into the Hall, filled with weeping friends and sad-eyed servants, the
-scene was touching in the extreme. “Poor dear child,” writes the Queen,
-“I clasped her in my arms and blessed her, and knew not what to say. I
-kissed good Fritz, and pressed his hand again and again. He was unable
-to speak, and the tears were in his eyes.” But the final parting could
-be postponed no longer, and the Queen returned to her room in sorrow.
-Instead of driving from Buckingham Palace to the Bricklayers’ Arms
-Station by the shortest route, the Prince and Princess drove along the
-Strand, Fleet Street, Cheapside, and London Bridge. The houses and shops
-were profusely decked with flags, though the decorations were got ready
-in a hurry. The day was bitterly cold, and snow fell fast. Yet the
-inclement weather did not deter vast crowds from turning out to bid the
-newly-married pair “Good speed.” When the Prince Consort, who had
-accompanied his daughter and son-in-law part of the way, returned home,
-the Queen’s grief broke out again. Even the sight of “the darling baby”
-(Princess Beatrice) saddened her, for, as she writes, “Dear Vicky loved
-her so much, and only yesterday played with her.” As for the Prince
-Consort, he told the Princess, in one of his letters, that the void she
-had left was not in his heart only, but in his daily life. In fact,
-nothing save the cordial and brilliant reception which welcomed her in
-Germany could have consoled him for the loss of a daughter whom he
-proudly described to her husband as one who “had a man’s head and a
-child’s heart.”
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] Morley’s Life of Cobden.
-
-[2] Greville’s Journal, Vol. III. p. 290.
-
-[3] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I. p. 243.
-
-[4] Letter from the Queen to Lord Melbourne, cited by Sir T. Martin in
-the Life of the Prince Consort.
-
-[5] This is not quite accurate. The details were arranged by Lord
-Clarendon; the plan, or original idea, of the visit was the Queen’s.
-
-[6] Greville’s Journal of the Reign of Queen Victoria, Vol. III., p.
-295.
-
-[7] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort.
-
-[8] “This faithful and trusty valet nursed his dear master most
-devotedly through his sad illness in December, 1861, and is now always
-with me as my personal groom of the chambers or valet. I gave him a
-house near Windsor Castle, where he resides when the Court are there.
-He is a native of Coburg. His father has been for fifty years Förster
-at Fülbach, close to Coburg.”--_Footnote by the Queen._
-
-[9] “Who was very active and efficient. He is now a page.”--_Footnote
-by the Queen._
-
-[10] Greville’s Journal of the Reign of Queen Victoria, Vol. III., pp.
-296, 297.
-
-[11] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort.
-
-[12] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XXXVIII.
-
-[13] Greville’s Journal of the Reign of Queen Victoria, Vol. III. p.
-335.
-
-[14] Memorials of an Ex-Minister, by Lord Malmesbury, Vol. I. p. 261.
-
-[15] This, of course, applies only to States within the European comity
-of nations. Semi-barbaric Asiatic or African States--_e.g._, Turkey
-and Tunis--by special treaties or “capitulations,” surrendered to
-England extra-territorial jurisdiction over cases in which her subjects
-resident in their territories were concerned.
-
-[16] The details of this intrigue, it is understood, were recorded by
-Mr. Greville, but the publication of them was withheld by the editor of
-his “Journal,” for reasons which may easily be guessed. The whole story
-will probably not be told during the lifetime of the Queen.
-
-[17] Had the Bill passed, Lord Clarendon would have been Irish
-Secretary.
-
-[18] See a curious letter of Croker’s in the third volume of “The
-Croker Papers.”
-
-[19] He was beaten only by a majority of 3.
-
-[20] See the Queen’s letter to King Leopold, cited in Martin’s Life of
-the Prince Consort, Ch. XXXIX.
-
-[21] It is commonly called “the Queen’s Reading Lamp,” but it may be
-said that Sir Theodore Martin is not quite correct in assuming that
-this type of lamp was introduced into England by Prince Albert. A
-similar lamp was in use in Cambridge long before the Prince came to
-this country, and was known as the “Cambridge Reading Lamp.”
-
-[22] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XXXI.
-
-[23] _Punch_, Vol. XVIII., p. 229.
-
-[24] Mr. Cobden always said that such a protest would have deterred
-Russia from stamping out Hungarian liberty.
-
-[25] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort.
-
-[26] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort.
-
-[27] “One of our keepers since 1851. An excellent, intelligent man,
-much liked by the Prince. He, like many others, spit blood after
-running the race up that steep hill in the short space of time, and he
-has never been so strong since. The running up-hill has in consequence
-been discontinued. He lives in a cottage at the back of Craig Gowan
-(commanding a beautiful view) called Robrech, which the Prince built
-for him.”--_Note by the Queen in “Leaves from a Journal.”_
-
-[28] The allusion here is to the Ritualists or Puseyites, or
-Tractarians, as they were called then.
-
-[29] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort.
-
-[30] Morley’s Life of Cobden.
-
-[31] Morley’s Life of Cobden.
-
-[32] It is but right to say that Mr. Herries was now over seventy years
-of age, and had been virtually shelved for twenty years.
-
-[33] According to Mr. Greville, it was Mr. Thomas Baring.
-
-[34] Letters of the Right Hon. Sir George Cornewall Lewis, Bart., to
-various friends, edited by the Rev. Sir Gilbert Frankland Lewis, Bart.,
-p. 240.
-
-[35] Mr. Disraeli did not support the Tory opposition to the Jews.
-
-[36] Greville’s Journal of the Reign of Queen Victoria, Vol. III., p.
-407.
-
-[37] The Editor of the _Times_.
-
-[38] Greville’s Journal of the Reign of Queen Victoria, Vol. III., p.
-415.
-
-[39] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XLII.
-
-[40] Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught.
-
-[41] Quoted by Sir Theodore Martin in his Life of the Prince Consort,
-Chap. XLII.
-
-[42] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I. pp. 284 and 288.
-
-[43] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XLIII.
-
-[44] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XLIV.
-
-[45] _See_ p. 479.
-
-[46] These were Morny (a natural son of the Prince-President’s mother,
-the Queen Hortense, by Count Flahault), Persigny, Fleury, Maupas,
-Marshal Mangan, and probably Rouher.
-
-[47] Correspondence and Conversations of Alexis de Tocqueville with
-Nassau William Senior, edited by W. C. M. Simpson, Vol. II., p. 5.
-
-[48] De Tocqueville’s Conversations and Correspondence with Nassau W.
-Senior, Vol. II., p. 6.
-
-[49] Greville’s Journal of the Reign of Queen Victoria, Vol. III., p.
-447.
-
-[50] Lord Malmesbury’s Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I., p. 309.
-
-[51] The corresponding office in our day is Secretary of State for
-India.
-
-[52] Letters of the Right Hon. Sir George Cornewall Lewis, Bart., to
-various persons, edited by the Rev. Sir Gilbert Frankland Lewis, Bart.,
-p. 251.
-
-[53] Mr. Greville’s Journal of the Reign of Queen Victoria, Vol. III.,
-p. 448.
-
-[54] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I., p. 332.
-
-[55] On coming into office, Lord Derby announced that it was the
-mission of his Government to “oppose some barrier against the
-democratic influence that is continually encroaching, which would throw
-power nominally into the hands of the masses, but practically into the
-hands of the demagogues who lead them.”
-
-[56] This was the occasion, not the cause. The Americans and the French
-were beginning to show themselves in the Eastern seas. According to Mr.
-Arnold, it was because they were casting covetous eyes on the Delta
-of the Irawaddy that Lord Dalhousie determined to forestall them by
-annexing that region. _See_ Arnold’s Administration of Lord Dalhousie,
-Vol. II., p. 14; Papers of the House of Lords, 1856, No. 161.
-
-[57] Lord Derby and Mr. Herries admitted that Lambert acted without
-instructions. Hansard, Vol. CXX., p. 656; Memoirs of Herries, Vol.
-II., p. 250; Parl. Papers relating to Burmah, 1852. Cobden also
-accused Fishbourne of provoking the Governor. _See_ Cobden’s Political
-Writings, Vol. II., p. 57.
-
-[58] Life and Correspondence of Lord Palmerston, by the Right Hon.
-Evelyn Ashley, Vol. II., p. 247.
-
-[59] Morley’s Life of Cobden, Chap. XX.
-
-[60] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XLVI.
-
-[61] Morley’s Life of Cobden, Chap. XXI.
-
-[62] Spencer Walpole’s History of England. London: Longmans, Green, and
-Co. 1886. Vol. V., p. 43.
-
-[63] Reminiscences and Opinions of Sir Francis Hastings Doyle, Bart.
-London: Longmans, Green, and Co. 1886. Pages 321-330.
-
-[64] Hansard, Vol. CXXIII., p. 351.
-
-[65] _Ibid._, p. 411.
-
-[66] Letters of the Right Hon. Sir George Cornewall Lewis, Bart., to
-Various Persons, p. 259.
-
-[67] T. P. O’Connor’s Life of Lord Beaconsfield, p. 441; Hickman’s
-Beaconsfield, p. 183.
-
-[68] Hansard, Vol. CXXIII., p. 1693.
-
-[69] It is worth while to recall this fact. After the resignation
-of Mr. Gladstone in 1886, when the Tory Party attempted to form a
-Coalition Ministry under Lord Hartington as Premier, and Lord Salisbury
-as Foreign Secretary, the project was defended on the plea, that
-just as the Whigs in 1852 bought up a small but powerful faction of
-Peelites, by giving their leader the Premiership, so should the Tories
-in 1886 buy up the small but powerful section of Liberal “Unionists” by
-putting Lord Hartington at the head of affairs. The argument, it will
-be seen, was based on a complete ignorance of party history and of the
-ideas and policy of the Court in 1852, because it was for other reasons
-altogether that Lord Aberdeen was elevated to the Premiership.
-
-[70] It was partly by Macaulay’s persuasion that Lord John permitted
-himself to be embalmed in history as the fourth Prime Minister of the
-century who, after serving as Premier, accepted an inferior rank.
-The other three were Sidmouth, Goderich, and Wellington. “Russell’s
-example,” says Mr. Spencer Walpole, “indicates that a man who has once
-served in the highest place had better refuse all subordinate offices.”
-Cf. Walpole’s History of England, Vol. V., p. 61; and Trevelyan’s Life
-of Macaulay, Vol. II., Chap. XIII.
-
-[71] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXVII.
-
-[72] Letters of the late Sir G. C. Lewis, Bart., p. 260.
-
-[73] Lord Malmesbury, who was at Balmoral at the time, is the authority
-for this statement. _Vide_ Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I., p. 377.
-
-[74] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XLVI.
-
-[75] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I, p. 347.
-
-[76] “Persigny,” writes Lord Malmesbury, “whose real name was Fialin,
-was one of those adventurers who looked forward with confidence to the
-success of Louis Napoleon’s fatalism and dreams of ambition, and proved
-it by the most absolute devotion, and, I must add, personal affection
-for his master, whom he always accompanied through his failures and
-imprisonments. Faithful to the Emperor, the Emperor was faithful to
-him, and loaded him with honours. He was a courageous and impetuous
-man, and his hot temper was against him as ambassador.”--Memoirs of an
-Ex-Minister, Vol. I., p. 300.
-
-[77] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I., p. 310.
-
-[78] Morley’s Life of Cobden, Chap. XXI.
-
-[79] On hearing of the _coup d’état_, the Queen, _without waiting
-for Ministerial advice_, personally directed the Cabinet to follow a
-policy of strict neutrality. Lord John Russell replied: “Your Majesty’s
-directions respecting the state of affairs in Paris shall be followed.”
-Note that the relations of the Crown and the Minister were identical in
-this case with those which obtained under the Tudor Sovereigns. It is a
-curious instance of a policy being _initiated_ by specific “directions”
-from the Queen in an age when, according to constitutional practice,
-the functions of the Crown are supposed to be limited to suggestion,
-criticism, and sanction.
-
-[80] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XLVII.
-
-[81] English Ambassador at Paris.
-
-[82] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I., p. 379.
-
-[83] This person wielded an influence that few people suspected at the
-time. For example, in September, 1852, Lord Malmesbury, then Foreign
-Secretary, set a gang of police spies to watch the outraged victims of
-the _coup d’état_ in London. Having put together all the information
-he could get, he illustrated the spirited foreign policy of the day
-by sending his private secretary and relative, Mr. George Harris,
-to convey this information secretly to Charles Louis Bonaparte. But
-that potentate did not deign to give Mr. Harris an interview. For
-three days he was kept dancing attendance, and at last by a private
-letter of introduction to an aide-de-camp of the President’s, he got
-access to Canrobert, Tascher, and Roquet, who loftily told him that
-in a week’s time perhaps he might have an audience. “Then,” writes
-Mr. Harris to Lord Malmesbury, “I returned to Paris, and called on
-Mrs. Howard, toadied and flattered her, stating that I was in a great
-hurry to get back to London, and only wanted to see his Highness the
-President for two minutes. She sent off an orderly at once, and before
-night, I received an invitation from Louis Napoleon to accompany him
-out shooting to say my say, at 5.30, and dine afterwards.”--Memoirs
-of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I., p. 346. That the Foreign Minister of
-England should act the part of a Bonapartist spy, is curious. That his
-relative and private secretary should have accepted the mission of a
-subordinate _mouchard_, and, in carrying it out, should have “toadied
-and flattered” a Parisian _cocotte_ to get an audience from the
-Prince-President, gives one a quaint glimpse of diplomatic manners and
-customs in 1852.
-
-[84] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I., p. 379.
-
-[85] The Imperial marriage took place--the civil ceremony on the 29th,
-and the religious ceremony on the 30th of January, 1853.
-
-[86] Compare with such comments a passage in a letter written by
-Mr. Nassau Senior, to M. de Tocqueville. “Mrs. Grote tells me that
-you rather complain that the English papers approve the marriage,
-a marriage which you all disapprove. The fact is that we like the
-marriage because you dislike it. We are, above all things, desirous
-that the present tyranny should end as quickly as possible. It can
-end only by the general alienation of the French people from the
-tyrant; and every fault that he commits delights us, because it is a
-step towards his fall.”--Correspondence and Conversations of Alexis
-de Tocqueville, Vol. II., p. 34. Cf. also Palmerston’s opinion from
-another point of view. Ashley’s Life of Lord Palmerston, Vol. II., p. 7.
-
-[87] Mr. Disraeli reckoned the revenue of 1852 at £51,625,000.
-It actually reached £53,089,000. He set down the expenditure at
-£51,164,000, whereas it came only to £50,782,000.
-
-[88] Dowell’s History of Taxation, Vol. II., p. 322; Smith’s Wealth of
-Nations, Vol. III., p. 337.
-
-[89] These bore interest at £1 10s. per cent., but were in future to
-bear interest at £2 15s. up to 1864, and £2 10s. up to 1891.
-
-[90] Walpole’s History of England, Vol. V., p. 68.
-
-[91] Students of financial history may be referred to Hansard, Vol.
-CXXL, p. 11, for Mr. Disraeli’s first Budget, and to Hansard, Vol.
-CXXV., pp. 818, 1355, 1399, and 1423, for Mr. Gladstone’s. Cf, also
-Report of the Commissioners of Inland Revenue, 1870.
-
-[92] This was the principle which Mr. Fox and the “old Whigs” advocated.
-
-[93] Walpole’s History of England, Vol. V., p. 45.
-
-[94] Walpole’s History of England, Vol. V., p. 49.
-
-[95] For facts bearing on this point, see Fawcett’s Manual of Political
-Economy, p. 490.
-
-[96] In 1847 the Mint coined £5,000,000, in 1850 £11,000,000, and in
-1858 only £1,200,000.
-
-[97] Wheat which in June, 1853, stood at 45s. a quarter, on the 25th of
-November went up to 72s. 9d. The 4-lb. loaf rose from 10½d. to 1s.
-Annual Register, Vol. XCV., p. 165.
-
-[98] “You know,” said the Emperor on the 14th of January, to Sir
-Hamilton Seymour, “the dreams and plans in which the Empress Catherine
-was in the habit of indulging: these were handed down to our time; but,
-while I inherited immense territorial possessions, I did not inherit
-those visions--those intentions if you like to call them so.” And again
-on the 22nd of February, “I will not tolerate the permanent occupation
-of Constantinople by the Russians; having said this, I will say that
-it never shall be held by the English, or French, or any other great
-nation.” Secret Correspondence between Sir G. H. Seymour, British
-Chargé d’Affaires at St. Petersburg, and Her Majesty’s Government.
-Eastern Papers, Part V.
-
-[99] Secret Correspondence, Eastern Papers, Part V., p. 204.
-
-[100] Diplomatic Study of the Crimean War, from Russian Official
-Sources, Vol. I., p. 115.
-
-[101] Consult on this subject Mr. Nassau Senior’s article in _North
-British Quarterly Review_ for February, 1851, on “The State of the
-Continent.”
-
-[102] Louis Philippe, it must be stated in justice to Napoleon III.,
-also claimed for the Latin Church the right of repairing the dome of
-the Holy Sepulchre in the Latin instead of the Byzantine form, a claim
-which was indescribably offensive to the Greek priests.--_North British
-Quarterly Review_, February, 1851.
-
-[103] Dip. Stud. Crimean War, Vol. I., p. 134.
-
-[104] Spencer Walpole’s History of England, Vol. V., p. 79.
-
-[105] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XI.
-
-[106] Russian Ambassador in London.
-
-[107] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I., pp. 402, 403.
-
-[108] Mr. Disraeli’s Speech at Manchester, April 3, 1872.
-
-[109] See Count Nesselrode’s Memorandum embodying the views which,
-according to the Czar, were agreed on in the conversations he held
-with the Tory Ministers in 1844.--Eastern Papers, 1854, Part VI.
-This document, probably the one referred to by Lord Malmesbury, was
-transmitted to England on the Czar’s return to St. Petersburg, and
-deposited unchallenged in the secret archives of the Foreign Office.
-
-[110] Eastern Papers, 1852, Part VI. pp. 10, 11.
-
-[111] Afterwards Lord Strathnairn.
-
-[112] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I., pp. 387-389. It is right to
-state the fact as communicated to Lord Malmesbury by the French Emperor
-in conversation, because Mr. Walpole rather unfairly asserts that the
-Emperor of the French saw in Rose’s fear “a fresh excuse for embroiling
-France.”--Walpole’s History of England, Vol. V., p. 84.
-
-[113] Russia argued that she might fairly exercise the same kind of
-protectorate that France had always asserted over Roman Catholics and
-England over Protestants in Turkey. Against this it was urged that
-there was a difference in degree between the two cases which amounted
-to a difference in kind, for, whereas the Catholic and Protestant
-subjects of the Sultan were only a few thousands, his Greek subjects
-were 12,000,000.
-
-[114] Official Note of the Porte to the Powers, 28th of May.
-
-[115] On the 1st of June Menschikoff’s Note of the 18th of May,
-intimating his withdrawal from Constantinople and threatening Turkey
-with coercion, arrived in London.
-
-[116] It would have been also more candid at this juncture to have
-warned Russia that England would object to any actual invasion of
-the Principalities, before the resources of European diplomacy were
-exhausted.
-
-[117] When these events had passed into history, Earl Russell, in his
-Recollections and Suggestions, said that, if he had been Premier in
-1853, he would have insisted on Turkey accepting the Vienna Note. He
-was not Premier, but he was one of the leaders of the War Party in the
-Cabinet which supported Turkey in rejecting it. Lord Russell was, in
-fact, not the only statesman of the period who grew “wise after the
-event.”
-
-[118] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XLVIII.
-
-[119] Prince Bismarck: an Historical Biography by Charles Lowe, M.A.,
-Vol. I., p. 205.
-
-[120] Eastern Papers, Part I., p. 169.
-
-[121] In the 7th Article of the Treaty of Kainardji it is provided
-that “_The Sublime Porte promises to protect constantly the Christian
-religion and its Churches_, and also it allows the Ministers of the
-Imperial Court of Russia to make on all occasions representations as
-well in favour of the new Church at Constantinople, of which mention
-will be made in the 14th Article, as in favour of those who officiate
-therein.” The 14th Article provides that “it is permitted to the High
-Court of Russia, in addition to the chapel built in the house of the
-Minister, to construct in the Galata quarter, in the street called Bey
-Oglu, a public church of the Greek rite, which shall be always under
-the protection of the Ministers of that Empire, and shielded from all
-obstruction and all damage.” The first words in italics appear to give
-Russia the same general kind of pledge to protect the Greek Christians
-in Turkey, the insertion of which in the Vienna Note was supposed to
-vitiate it. The issue, however, was so close that diplomacy ought to
-have prevented the disputants from coming to blows.
-
-[122] Ashley’s Life of Palmerston, Vol. II., p. 276.
-
-[123] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XLIX. Compare this
-with Lord Salisbury’s statement at the Guildhall banquet on the 9th of
-November, 1886, that England’s Eastern policy is to pledge herself to
-fight on the side of Austria, when Austria thinks fit to go to war. By
-substituting “Austria” for “Turkey” in the first two sentences of this
-important State Paper of the Queen’s, very interesting deductions might
-be drawn by students of Constitutional history.
-
-[124] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XLIX.
-
-[125] Walpole’s History of England, Vol. V., p. 99.
-
-[126] Lord Malmesbury says that it was Mr. Gladstone and Lord Aberdeen
-who begged Palmerston to come back.--Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol.
-I., p. 418. But Prince Albert’s statement is the truer one, though
-it is not so palatable to those writers who have for a quarter of a
-century devoted themselves to the heroic idealisation of Palmerston’s
-character and career, and who at one time tried to persuade themselves
-that, as a condition of his return, he forced the Ministry to send
-a fleet to avenge Sinope. In the middle of September, however,
-Palmerston and Russell had already persuaded the Cabinet to warn
-Russia that any attack on the Turkish fleet would be met by the fleets
-of England and France. Palmerston resigned, however, on the 15th of
-December. Moreover, it has not been noticed by Palmerstonian partisans
-that Prince Albert’s statement is curiously confirmed by Sir George
-Cornewall Lewis. Writing to Sir E. Head on the 4th of January, 1854,
-he says:--“Since I last wrote to you there has been the strange
-escapade of Palmerston. He disliked the Reform Bill, partly as being
-too extensive to suit his taste. He therefore resigned solely upon this
-measure; but he probably expected that a threat of resignation would
-bring his colleagues to terms, and was surprised at being taken at his
-word. When he went out he found that the country took his resignation
-very coolly, and that he was so much courted by the Derbyites that he
-could not avoid becoming their leader in the House of Commons in the
-next Session. He could not hope to occupy a neutral place, and so,
-finding that his position was a bad one--that it was too late in life
-for him to set about forming a new party--he changed his mind, and
-intimated to the Government that he wished to return.”--Letters of the
-Right Hon. Sir George Cornewall Lewis, Bart., p. 275.
-
-[127] Letter of Prince Albert to the Dowager-Duchess of Coburg, in
-Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XLVII.
-
-[128] Medical men may be interested to know that the Duke and Duchess
-transmitted it unconsciously “to the Duke of Brabant and Count of
-Flanders, whom they met on their way back to Coburg, and before they
-were aware they had taken the seeds of the illness from England with
-them.”--Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort.
-
-[129] Contrast this with the habits of the House in the time of Charles
-I., when it met at eight in the morning and rose at noon; and in Sir
-Robert Walpole’s time, when the mere suggestion of a Member that
-“candles be brought in” was regarded as phenomenal.
-
-[130] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort. See also a reference to
-the Grand Duchess Olga’s “Mission” in Lord Malmesbury’s Memoirs of an
-Ex-Minister, Vol. I., p. 404.
-
-[131] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XLVIII.
-
-[132] _Annual Register_ for 1853.
-
-[133] Ashley’s Life of Lord Palmerston, Vol. II., p. 13. For Lord
-Aberdeen’s answer to Palmerston’s bellicose special pleading, see
-Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XLVIII.
-
-[134] This letter, dated the 14th of November, was not sent till it had
-been submitted to Lord Aberdeen and Lord Clarendon for their approval.
-The precedent should be noted, because, as Sir Hamilton Seymour told
-Count Nesselrode at the time, “these correspondences between sovereigns
-are not regular, according to our Constitutional notions.” At the same
-time, when personally addressed by a foreign sovereign, the Crown
-cannot, as a matter of courtesy, reply through a Minister of State. The
-course taken by the Queen in this instance is obviously the prudent one.
-
-[135] Cobden’s Collected Writings, Vol. II., p. 269.
-
-[136] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. L.
-
-[137] Letters of Sir G. C. Lewis, p. 276.
-
-[138] It is only just to the memory of Mr. Cobden to state that towards
-the end of his career some suspicion of the truth crept into his
-mind. Speaking on the American Civil War, he said:--“From the moment
-the first shot is fired or the first blow struck in a dispute, then
-farewell to all reason and argument; you might as well reason with mad
-dogs as with men when they have begun to spill each other’s blood in
-mortal combat. I was so convinced of the fact during the Crimean War;
-I was so convinced of the utter uselessness of raising one’s voice
-in opposition to War when it has once begun, that I made up my mind
-that so long as I was in political life, should a war again break out
-between England and a great Power, I would never open my mouth upon
-the subject from the time the first gun was fired till the peace was
-made.”--Cobden’s Speeches, Vol. II., p. 314. See also Mr. John Morley’s
-masterly defence of the Cobdenites in 1854, in his Life of Cobden,
-Chap. XXII.
-
-[139] Count Nesselrode’s Despatch to the Russian Ambassador in England,
-dated the 16th of January, 1854.
-
-[140] See Sir H. Seymour’s Despatch to Lord Clarendon, dated the 30th
-of January, 1854.
-
-[141] Amongst other things, she demanded that some fresh arrangement
-should be made as to the right of asylum granted to political refugees
-in Turkey. This obviously pointed at Turkey’s refusal to surrender the
-Hungarian patriots after the Revolution of 1848 was suppressed; and,
-knowing the opinion of England on the subject, it was absurd to add
-such stipulations to new preliminaries of peace.
-
-[142] Nesselrode, Orloff, and Kisseleff.
-
-[143] “Russia, as I can guarantee, will prove herself in 1854 _what she
-was in 1812_.... My conditions are known at Vienna.”
-
-[144] Observe _not_ “a day,” as Kinglake has it.
-
-[145] “L’Empereur ne juge pas convenable de donner aucune réponse à la
-lettre de Lord Clarendon.”--Eastern Papers. Consul Michele’s Despatch
-to Lord Clarendon, dated St. Petersburg, 19th March, 1854.
-
-[146] Mr. Kinglake blames the London Press, especially the _Times_,
-for manufacturing this passion. Mr. Cobden took much the same view.
-Educated people who were rich, but ignorant of geography and military
-history, however, all clamoured for war. “I have had the satisfaction
-of seeing the rascally Czar defeated by the unassisted Turks, and
-obliged to cross the Pruth. Now for Sebastopol!” Thus wrote Lord
-Campbell in his Journal on the 14th of August.--See Mrs. Hardcastle’s
-Life of John, Lord Campbell, Vol. II., p. 326.
-
-[147] “In proposing success to the guest of the evening, he
-(Palmerston) made a speech in that vein of forced jocularity with
-which elderly gentlemen give the toast of the bridegroom at a wedding
-breakfast.”--Morley’s Life of Cobden, Chap. XXII.
-
-[148] Compare this with almost the identical expression in Mr. Bright’s
-speech in the House of Commons of the 13th of March, for delivering
-which Lord Palmerston jeered at him as “the honourable and _reverend_
-gentleman.”
-
-[149] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LII.
-
-[150] “For if the hostilities continue, if the Powers, released from
-all apprehension in Turkey, should be free either to pursue us on
-the evacuated territory, or to employ all their disposable forces in
-invading our European or Asiatic dominions, with a view to impose on
-us conditions which could not be accepted, it is evident that the
-demand made by Austria was that we should weaken ourselves morally and
-materially by a sacrifice wholly useless.”--Count Nesselrode’s Despatch
-to Count Buol Schauenstein of 29th of July, 1854.
-
-[151] See Lord Clarendon’s Despatch to the Earl of Westmoreland, dated
-the 22nd of July, 1854.
-
-[152] France explained this by demanding in the official _Moniteur_
-that the fleet of Russia in the Black Sea should be reduced in strength.
-
-[153] Diplomatic Study of the Crimean War, Vol. II., p. 18.
-
-[154] Orloff was sent by the Czar to extract from Austria a pledge
-of absolute neutrality. The Austrian Emperor asked if the Czar would
-promise not to cross the Danube or seize territory, and if he would
-evacuate the Principalities when war was over. Orloff said “No.” The
-Emperor then replied that Austria would preserve perfect freedom of
-action. Baron de Bulberg failed at Berlin to extract a similar pledge
-from Prussia.--Despatch of Lord Westmoreland to Lord Clarendon, dated
-8th February, 1854. Eastern Papers.
-
-[155] “Ministers are preparing for war; the quarrel has now become
-an European quarrel and must have an European settlement. We ask for
-20,000 more men for the army and navy; we propose to add £21,000,000 to
-our expenditure, and is _this_ an occasion on which you should potter
-over Blue-books?”--Sir James Graham’s speech, in reply to Mr. Layard,
-in the House of Commons on the 17th of February, 1854.
-
-[156] Writing to Mrs. Cobden about this speech, Cobden says, “No
-enthusiasm of course; that I did not expect; but there was a feeling
-of interest throughout the House which is not bumptious or warlike to
-the extent I expected, and not disposed to be insolent to the ‘peace
-party.’ In fact, I find many men in the Tory Party agreeing with me.
-After I spoke, Molesworth took me aside and said he and Gladstone
-thought I never spoke better.”--Morley’s Life of Cobden, Chap. XXII. If
-the men who agreed with him privately had been bold enough to say so in
-public, there would have been no invasion of the Crimea.
-
-[157] Life and Work of the Seventh Earl of Shaftesbury, K.G., by
-Edwin Hodder, Vol. II., p. 465. Cassell and Co. (Limited). Palmerston
-was chief of the War Party in the Cabinet. Lady Palmerston was Lord
-Shaftesbury’s mother-in-law.
-
-[158] Morley’s Life of Cobden, Chap. XXII.
-
-[159] The history of its publication is as follows: On the 13th of
-March Lord Derby drew the attention of the Peers (1) to “An Official
-Answer of the Emperor of Russia to a speech of Lord John Russell in
-the House of Commons,” published in the _St. Petersburg Journal_,
-wherein it was alleged that the English Cabinet had been frankly told
-at the outset what course the Czar desired to pursue in Turkey; (2)
-to statements in the _Times_ to the effect that though an indignant
-refusal had been Lord John’s answer, yet the Czar had in 1844 attempted
-to gain over the Government of the day to his designs. Lord Derby
-called for the production of this Secret Correspondence, and as
-Russia, by her official reference to it, had virtually challenged its
-publication, it was in due course laid before both Houses of Parliament.
-
-[160] The English case against Russia was that the Czar persisted in
-asserting an exceptional right of protecting the Greek Christians in
-Turkey under existing treaties. In Lord John Russell’s despatch of 9th
-of February, 1853, in which he expressed a disapproval of the Czar’s
-overtures to Sir Hamilton Seymour, he counselled forbearance, and then
-said: “To these cautions Her Majesty’s Government wish to add that, in
-their view, it is essential that the Sultan should be advised to treat
-his Christian subjects in conformity with the principles of equity
-and religious freedom, which prevail generally among the enlightened
-nations of Europe. The more the Turkish Government adopts the rules of
-impartial law and equal administration, the less will the Emperor of
-Russia find it necessary to apply that _exceptional protection_ which
-His Imperial Majesty has found so burdensome and inconvenient, _though
-no doubt prescribed by duty and sanctioned by Treaty_.”
-
-[161] See _ante_, p. 582.
-
-[162] Eastern Papers, Part VII., contain proofs of the deception
-perpetrated by the Coalition Government on Parliament as to the extent
-to which England might depend on the German States for support.
-
-[163] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LIII.
-
-[164] An appeal to fear rarely influences German statesmen. In 1868,
-during the debate in the Customs Parliament at Berlin, the Separatist
-Party objected to the discussion of national politics, lest, as one of
-them said, they might provoke an attack from France. Bismarck’s retort
-was that “an appeal to fear had never yet found an echo in German
-hearts.”--Lowe’s Life of Bismarck, Vol. I., p. 458.
-
-[165] Lowe’s Life of Bismarck, Vol. I., p. 206 (Cassell and Co.).
-
-[166] It is due to Lord Clarendon to say that in a letter to Prince
-Albert (26th March) he expresses a shrewd suspicion of this danger.
-But the Prince, whose authority on the secret diplomacy of Germany
-no Cabinet Minister, except, perhaps, Palmerston, ever dared to
-question, promptly silenced his suspicions. On the 27th the Prince
-wrote to Clarendon, saying, “I don’t think that Austria has anything
-to fear from Prussia or Germany if she were to take an active part in
-the war against us.” That the Queen and her husband were mistaken or
-misinformed is proved by Mr. Lowe in his Life of Prince Bismarck, Vol.
-I., pp. 200, 202, and 203.
-
-[167] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LIII.
-
-[168] He allowed for a force of 25,000 men at £50 a head, or a total of
-£1,250,000.
-
-[169] Other estimates besides those for 25,000 men had to be provided
-for, _e.g._, extraordinary expenditure on the Navy, Ordnance, and
-Commissariat Departments. In fact, the mere prospect of war had thus
-added, not £1,250,000, but £4,307,000 to the estimates of the coming
-year in the ordinary Budget _before_ war was declared.
-
-[170] Their real objection was that the conversion scheme caused Mr.
-Gladstone to take £8,000,000 from his Exchequer balances, which,
-however, had been kept perniciously high. Had this money been in hand,
-of course there would have been less need to levy a war tax. The
-conversion scheme had resulted in a small loss from changes in the
-Money Market, due to rumours of war and a bad harvest.
-
-[171] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LIII.
-
-[172] Pitt was first called “the Heaven-born Minister” by the
-loan-mongers of the City, because he tried to make war on loans instead
-of taxes. In 1792 he had a war deficit of £4,500,000 to meet. He raised
-a 4 per cent. loan in the City, for which they made him pay £4 3s. 4d.
-per cent.; in 1794 he borrowed £11,000,000 at £4 10s. 9d.; in 1795,
-£18,000,000 at £4 15s. 8d.; in 1796, £25,000,000 at £4 13s. 5d.; in
-1797, £32,500,000 at £5 14s. 10d.; in 1798, £17,000,000 at £6 4s. 9d.,
-and he had to give the usurers bonuses, commissions, and inducements
-to subscribe, which compelled him to add £34,000,000 of capital to the
-National Debt to get this £17,000,000. His system added £250,000,000
-to our National Debt, for which the nation never really got a penny.
-In 1797 Pitt, however, saw that the country must soon be drained of
-its resources by the loan-mongers, and he made convulsive efforts to
-escape from their clutches. He began to raise taxes to meet his war
-expenditure and pay the principal and interest of his debts. He first
-tried to raise £7,000,000, and only got £4,000,000 by assessed taxes.
-In 1798 he returned to the charge, and increased the Income Tax by 40
-per cent. That year the revenue was £23,100,000. In 1806, when he died,
-he had raised it by successive turns of the screw to £50,900,000. In
-1807 an addition of 10 per cent. to the Income Tax raised the revenue
-to £59,300,000. Up to 1816 it fluctuated between £60,000,000 and
-£70,000,000, but between 1806 and 1816 the war charges and the interest
-on the Debt were all paid out of current revenue. In fact, after 1797
-it is clear Pitt and his successors resolved to exact any sacrifices
-from the people, rather than float war loans in the City.
-
-[173] Lord Shaftesbury, in a letter to Lord Aberdeen, dated 22nd of
-February, says that a conversation he held with the Prime Minister
-on the subject had “terrified” him. “It implied,” writes Lord
-Shaftesbury, “that the country had entered on a war which you could
-so little justify to your own conscience as to be unwilling, nay,
-almost unable, to advise the ordinance of public prayer for success
-on the undertaking. Why, then, have we begun it? You asked whether
-‘the English nation would be brought to pray for the Turks?’ Surely,
-if they are brought to fight for them, they would be induced to pray
-for them in a just quarrel.”--Life and Work of Lord Shaftesbury, by
-Edwin Hodder, Vol. II., p. 466 (Cassell and Co.). See also Greville
-Memoirs--Third Part (Longmans), 1887.
-
-[174] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LIV.
-
-[175] Russia held the Sulina mouth of the Danube by the Treaty of
-Adrianople, and, though she took toll of passing ships, had neglected
-the channel, greatly to the hindrance of navigation.
-
-[176] Dundonald would have been appointed instead of Napier, had it not
-been that he insisted on destroying Cronstadt by an “infernal” machine
-which he had invented. Greville Memoirs--Third Part, p. 136 (Longmans),
-1887.
-
-[177] Kinglake’s History of the Invasion of the Crimea, Vol. II., p.
-249 and p. 407.
-
-[178] “His (Mr. Kinglake’s) attempt to throw all the credit or blame of
-the expedition to Sebastopol upon the Duke of Newcastle is a complete
-delusion. His story about the sleepy Cabinet may be partially true,
-but the plan of the expedition had been discussed by the Cabinet
-at repeated sittings, and the despatch in question only embodied a
-foregone conclusion.”--Letters of Sir George Cornewall Lewis, p. 426.
-Sir George Lewis was Lord Clarendon’s brother-in-law, and Editor of the
-_Edinburgh Review_. His letters, and the articles in the _Edinburgh_
-on public affairs at this time, are of high authority. See also a very
-conclusive answer to Mr. Kinglake by Sir Theodore Martin in a Note in
-his Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LIV.
-
-[179] In a letter to Sir Edmund Head (29th December, 1854), the
-common-sense view of the case is pithily put by Sir George Cornewall
-Lewis as follows: “The fact is that the Government were urged into
-the Sebastopol adventure by popular clamour; that they undertook it
-with an imperfect knowledge of the difficulties of the enterprise;
-and that the military men anticipated that if the army could once be
-landed the place would speedily fall. This delusion was shared by all
-the world in September, and even October last; but now events have
-dispelled the illusion, the people forget their own mistake, and visit
-its consequences on the head of the War Minister.”--Sir G. C. Lewis’
-Letters, p. 288.
-
-[180] Mr. Kinglake gives an entertaining description of a conversation
-between General Sir George Brown and Lord Raglan over the Ministerial
-order. Brown told his chief that they were all so ignorant about the
-Crimea that it was foolish to invade it; but that he had better obey,
-for refusal would only lead to his dismissal.
-
-[181] But for Mr. Roberts the expedition must have been abandoned till
-the following spring. His services were contemptuously ignored, and he
-died heart-broken by the bitter ingratitude of the Government. He was
-an able officer--but without “interest.”
-
-[182] The attack on the central redoubt by Sir G. Brown’s Light
-Division was a confused rush by an armed mob. It failed because the
-Duke of Cambridge, who led the First Division, did not bring up his
-supports. But for the remonstrance of Sir Colin Campbell, one of his
-Brigadiers, he would even have made his Guards ignominiously retire and
-re-form at a critical moment in the advance, which would have spread
-panic, and lost the battle. De Lacy Evans and Campbell were the only
-commanders in this fight who seemed capable of handling troops in a
-workmanlike manner. Colonels Hood of the Grenadiers, and Ainslie of the
-93rd Highlanders, also displayed skill.
-
-[183] It is a melancholy satisfaction that the French Prince Napoleon
-proved himself to be as incapable as the English Royal Duke. He lost
-a regiment of his Zouaves who, getting tired of him, went away into
-the fray on their own account. One of Brown’s Brigadiers (Buller) also
-lost himself, and spent most of the day with his men in hollow square,
-waiting to receive imaginary cavalry.
-
-[184] It is an amusing fact that Raglan’s van actually came on
-Menschikoff’s rear, as the lines of march intersected, and that neither
-General had the faintest idea of what the other was about.
-
-[185] It may be pointed out that the works on the north side of the
-town, where the citadel was, commanded those on the south side.
-Raglan’s vaunted flank march had left the Russian garrison in the North
-Town open and safe communication with their base, and their army of
-observation in the field. He had given them ample time to make affluent
-use of this advantage. It was, therefore, a moral certainty that if we
-had taken the South Town after the bombardment of the 17th our position
-would not have been tenable. Though Cathcart and Campbell would have
-walked into it easily had they been allowed on the 25th of September,
-the failure of the bombardment of the 17th of October was thus probably
-a fortunate occurrence.
-
-[186] The ships were also dreadfully _underhanded_--4,000 of their
-fighting force being on shore with the army.
-
-[187] It may not be quite fair to blame Lord Raglan too much for
-this ridiculous manœuvre. At one time his partizans claimed for him
-the honour of planning it. But Prince Albert ascribed it to Sir John
-Burgoyne, and so did many others. Burgoyne’s own correspondence seems
-to show that the Prince was right. (Lieutenant-Colonel Wrottesley’s
-“Life and Correspondence of Sir John Burgoyne,” Vol. II., pp. 95-164.)
-
-[188] Receiving heavy masses of cavalry in this fashion was but a
-development of another piece of tactics which Campbell always used
-“contrary to the regulations.” That was advancing in line--as at the
-Alma--firing on dense masses of infantry all the time. This he learnt
-from Sir J. Cameron, colonel of the 6th Regiment, in the Peninsula.
-Oddly enough Cameron’s son commanded the Black Watch under Campbell in
-the Crimea, and he, too, had, “contrary to regulations,” taught his
-father’s tactics to his men. Colonel Hood, of the Grenadiers, had a
-glimmering of this idea at the Alma. But he did not venture to advance
-in line firing until the enemy’s column was demoralised. The Scottish
-Regiments used the manœuvre for the purpose of demoralising the enemy.
-But it should never be used except by troops of coarse nerve-fibre, in
-perfect training, and whom their leader can hold in hand as in a vice.
-
-[189] The responsibility for this fearful butchery has been cast on
-Lord Lucan. He certainly lacked moral courage in obeying an order
-which nobody but a maniac would, in the circumstances, have issued.
-But Nolan’s insinuation that Lucan was afraid to attack forced the
-general’s hand. Nolan was a brave man, with a crazy fad as to the
-capacity of English cavalry to go anywhere and do anything. He
-had written a book to show that they could--and he was bitterly
-disappointed because the campaign had not been conducted so as to
-illustrate by practical experiments the soundness of his views. He took
-it on himself to ride in advance of the Brigade, with which he had
-nothing to do, and excite the men by voice and gesture, as if their own
-officers, who were personally responsible for their lives, were not fit
-to lead them. This would indicate that he was one of those meddlesome
-_aides-de-camp_, whose interference with operations in the field
-renders them the pest of British armies.
-
-[190] The success of the Heavy Brigade was due to Scarlett attacking
-in line, when, to his surprise, he found he was riding with a slender
-force against enormous masses of Russian cavalry, and to the Russians
-perpetrating the atrocious blunder of halting to receive the fierce
-onset of the Scottish and Irish horsemen. Only a third of the Light
-Brigade were rescued from the “valley of death,” and they owe their
-lives to a brilliant and impetuous charge which a fiery squadron of
-French _Chasseurs d’Afrique_ made on a Russian battery, that was
-cutting our troopers to pieces during their retreat.
-
-[191] History of England, Vol. V., p. 125.
-
-[192] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I., p. 424.
-
-[193] Stratford de Redcliffe was now for peace, because he found the
-war substituting French for Russian influence at Constantinople, and
-of the two he preferred the latter.--Greville Memoirs, Third Part
-(Longmans), 1887.
-
-[194] The Croker Papers, Vol. III., p. 320. Lyndhurst, long after
-delivering his ferocious speech demanding that Sebastopol should be
-razed to the ground, had written to Croker for advice. “The political
-world is in a most complicated state,” says Lyndhurst in this letter,
-“and I feel quite at sea.”
-
-[195] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LVII.
-
-[196] One of the most appalling cases was the death of Lord Jocelyn in
-Lady Palmerston’s drawing-room.
-
-[197] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LVIII.
-
-[198] Mr. Herbert’s policy was amply vindicated. The experiment
-succeeded so well that Miss Stanley, sister of the late Dean Stanley,
-was sent out afterwards with forty-seven nurses to reinforce Miss
-Nightingale’s staff.
-
-[199] See a lively correspondence between Sir J. Graham and John Wilson
-Croker on this subject. Graham showed that the Admiralty was not to
-blame, but urged in excuse of “the poor idiot,” as Croker called him,
-who blundered at Balaclava, that “this was the first time coffee had
-ever been issued to a British army on foreign service.”--Croker Papers,
-Vol. III., p. 328.
-
-[200] Financial Secretary to the War Office is now the name of this
-post.
-
-[201] This change was brought about by Russell rudely turning out Lord
-Granville to make room for himself, and dismissing Mr. Strutt from
-the Duchy of Lancaster to make room for Lord Granville. Strutt got a
-Peerage as Lord Belper. Russell threatened to break up the Ministry if
-he did not get the Presidency of the Council, although there was no
-precedent--except a doubtful one in Henry VIII.’s reign--for appointing
-a commoner to the office. The Duke of Bedford told Mr. Greville that
-Lord John, being poor, was now determined to get an office carrying
-a high salary. The Duke had met his expenses, but was growing more
-miserly every day his colossal fortune was accumulating, and, says Mr.
-Greville, “he falls in very readily with his brother’s notion of taking
-an office for the sake of its emoluments.”--Greville Memoirs--Third
-Part, Vol. I., p. 148 (Longmans), 1887.
-
-[202] “Whatever may be the qualities of different Ministers, I am
-the bond by which they are united together. That once destroyed, the
-whole fabric falls.”--Letter of Lord Aberdeen to John Wilson Croker,
-explaining why the factions concentrated their hostility on him
-personally.--The Croker Papers, Vol. III., p. 348.
-
-[203] Evelyn Ashley’s Life of Palmerston, Vol. II., p. 80.
-
-[204] Palmerston wanted Lord Shaftesbury to be Chancellor of the
-Duchy. He had to withdraw his offer of the post, and in this letter
-Lady Palmerston explains why.--Life and Work of the Seventh Earl of
-Shaftesbury, K.G., by Edwin Hodder, Vol. II., p. 493 (Cassell and Co.).
-
-[205] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 8.
-
-[206] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXI.
-
-[207] The opposition of the Peelites to the Committee on grounds of
-high policy and constitutional legality was soon justified. “Lord
-Stanley,” says Lord Malmesbury on the 3rd of March, “writes that Louis
-Napoleon objects strongly to the Committee of Inquiry into the War, and
-says if it takes place, though his army will still act on the same side
-as ours, it can no longer do so along with it. He is evidently alarmed
-at the laches of his own Ministers and generals being shown up to
-Europe and endangering his position.”--Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol.
-II., p. 11. Little wonder that the investigation was “incomplete” and
-“inconclusive.”
-
-[208] Mr. Sidney Herbert succeeded Sir George Grey in this office when
-Palmerston reorganised the Coalition. Mr. Herbert went out with the
-Peelites a fortnight after the new Ministry was formed.
-
-[209] Hansard, Vol. CXXXVIII., 1075.
-
-[210] This was, of course, discussing and coming to a unanimous
-agreement with Russia at the very outset on the Second Point--the
-navigation of the Danube. This was the point in which Austria had had
-a vital interest. If it had been kept open to the last, she might have
-been more zealous in overcoming the difficulties as to the Third Point
-which wrecked the Conference.
-
-[211] The proof of this is as follows: (1) The Turks would have taken
-the Austrian compromise, which, by the way, was the development of
-a suggestion made by the French Envoy, as the basis of a feasible
-plan for giving effect to the Third Point. (2) Lord John Russell--the
-most violent and bellicose of the anti-Russian Ministers--was in
-favour of it. (3) The position of Russia in the matter was officially
-misrepresented to the English people. Russia said her defeats were not
-such as to justify her as a Great Power in letting the Allies _force_
-on her a reduction of her Black Sea fleet. But she had no objection
-to any plan limiting her preponderance if it sprang from mutual
-negotiation between her and Turkey--acting as principals on an _equal
-footing_--to establish, by _mutual consent_ a naval equilibrium in the
-Black Sea. (4) She did not absolutely exclude the idea of reducing her
-fleet as was falsely stated, not only in the English press, but in
-Parliament. Article 2 of Count Buol’s compromise provided that Turkey
-and Russia should “propose by common agreement to the Conference the
-effective _equality_ of the naval forces which the two coast Powers
-will keep up in the Black Sea, and which shall _not exceed the actual
-number of Russian ships afloat in that Sea_.” (See Annual Register,
-Vol. XCVII., pp. 214-217.) The use of the word “exceed” shows that
-the Article provided a _maximum_ limit--not a minimum. It was simply
-foolish to argue, as representatives of the Government did, that
-negotiations for peace had to be abandoned because Russia refused to
-accept a practical and reasonable plan for preventing her from having
-more ships than Turkey in the Black Sea. The statement of facts on this
-subject by Sir T. Martin in Chap. LXIII. of his Life of the Prince
-Consort is as misleading as Mr. Spencer Walpole’s account of the
-Austrian Compromise (History of England, Vol. V., p. 135). Mr. Walpole
-says that Count Buol’s proposal was one “under which any addition to
-the Russian Fleet might be followed by the admission of a corresponding
-number of war vessels of the Allies into the Euxine.” This is not a
-correct summary of Article 2 of the Compromise.
-
-[212] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXIII.
-
-[213] “If,” writes Prince Albert in a Memorandum dated 3rd of May,
-1855, “Austria, Prussia, and Germany will give the diplomatic guarantee
-for the future which I have here detailed, we shall consider this an
-equivalent for the material guarantee sought for in the limitation
-of the Russian Fleet.”--Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap.
-LXIII. But the odd thing to note is, that the Prince was one of those
-responsible, not perhaps for suspending, but for finally breaking
-up the Conference of Vienna, that had already adopted the principle
-of his plan. He and the Queen ignored the fact that it was already
-embodied in the Memorandum agreed to by the Conference, for giving
-effect to Ali Pasha’s project for more completely connecting Turkey
-with “the European equilibrium.” The Queen first coerced--for her
-note to Clarendon was a coercive instrument--Palmerston to abandon
-negotiations in Conference, because Russia would not submit to a
-humiliating material guarantee. Then Prince Albert suggests as a
-substitute for that a diplomatic guarantee, which Russia had already
-accepted, and which was a far less effective protection to Turkey than
-the Austrian compromise which the Queen imperiously condemned. The only
-original point in the Prince’s plan is the inclusion of Prussia. She
-had been excluded from the Conference in deference to the prejudices
-of those who hated peace negotiations, and who declared that she was a
-mendacious slave of the Czar.
-
-[214] And yet on the day before the Prince wrote to Aberdeen he
-says, in a letter to Stockmar:--“The Vienna Conferences, which it
-would have been better to have left open, must now be closed, if
-only to _get the Ministry rest in Parliament_. Oh, Oxenstiern! Oh,
-Oxenstiern!”--Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXIV.
-
-[215] Mr. Sidney Herbert was another Peelite who resisted Prince
-Albert’s intimidation.
-
-[216] Canrobert’s neglect to seize the Mamelon Hill before the Russians
-crept into it on the 9th of March and fortified it, was one of the
-fatal blunders that protracted the siege.
-
-[217] Lord Malmesbury records a conversation in his Diary with Persigny
-on this point. “Persigny strongly for peace, and says France is all for
-it.... He says, if the Emperor is to go to the Crimea, there must be
-peace at any price to prevent it. If not, the war ought to go on; but
-if the French army is lost then there will be a revolution.”--Memoirs
-of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 16.
-
-[218] The War, by W. H. Russell, p. 498. London: Routledge and Co.,
-1855.
-
-[219] Napoleon III. was abjectly ignorant of military geography. At
-the council of 1854, said Persigny to Lord Malmesbury, his Majesty
-“announced the attack on Baltic.” Persigny asked if he meant Cronstadt.
-“No, of course not, it would require 100,000 men, _cavalry_ included,”
-said the Emperor, loftily. “But,” replied Persigny, “Cronstadt is an
-island.” “No, it is not,” said the Emperor, as he went for a map.
-Everything, said Persigny, was done with the same ignorance and
-carelessness. Yet it was a campaign--devised by this charlatan against
-the opinion of his best officers, that Lord Raglan, according to Sir T.
-Martin, approved! See Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 15.
-
-[220] Reminiscences and opinions of Sir F. H. Doyle (Longmans, 1886),
-p. 414. There was a terrible snow storm in Devonshire this year. It was
-made memorable by the footmarks of some creature which nobody could
-identify. These created a sort of panic in the West of England, for the
-people thought that the devil was abroad among them.
-
-[221] Letters of Sir George Cornewall Lewis, p. 295. His additional
-taxes were, (1), 3s. per cwt. on sugar; (2), 1d. per pound on coffee,
-raising the duty from 3d. to 4d.; (3), 3d. per pound on tea, raising
-the duty from 1s. 6d. to 1s 9d.; (4), equalisation of duty on Scotch
-and English spirits, bringing the former from 6s. to 7s. 10d. per
-gallon; (5), increase of duty on Irish spirits from 4s. to 6s; (6),
-increase of 2d. on Income Tax, raising it from 1s. 2d. to 1s. 4d. in
-the £.
-
-[222] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXI. It was this
-letter that ultimately led to the founding of Netley Hospital.
-
-[223] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXIII.
-
-[224] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 24.
-
-[225] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 12. Martin’s Life of the
-Prince Consort, Chap. LXII.
-
-[226] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 18. See also _Times_,
-17th of April, 1855.
-
-[227] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXII.
-
-[228] Ducos was personally hostile to England, though he pretended to
-be in favour of the alliance. Lord Malmesbury says that he and General
-Changarnier were the authors of a plan in 1851 for a piratical descent
-on the Isle of Wight, and for seizing the Queen’s person at Osborne.
-See Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I., pp. 360 and 396. General
-Cavaignac also thought at the time such a plan to be feasible in the
-event of a war with England.
-
-[229] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXII.
-
-[230] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 19.
-
-[231] It was said to be composed by his mother, Queen Hortense.
-
-[232] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXII.
-
-[233] Vast numbers had been unable to find seats--in fact, as much
-as £100 was given for a box. When the curtain rose, crowds of ladies
-and gentlemen in evening dress were seen packed closely together
-at the back of the stage behind the artists--a curious revival of
-the old practice, in virtue of which persons of quality and rank
-frequented this part of the house in preference to any other. Jenny Ney
-played “Leonora.” It was her first performance on the English stage.
-Tamberlik, Formes, Tagliafico, and Luchesi took the male parts.
-
-[234] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXII.
-
-[235] No account of the Memorandum is given by Sir T. Martin, and
-probably it was a ceremonial rather than a serious document.
-
-[236] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 20.
-
-[237] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXII.
-
-[238] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXV.
-
-[239] This resort to the dreaded instruments of “personal Government”
-and “Court intrigue” by Palmerston was adopted after diplomatic means
-had failed. Mr. Greville, in the Third Part of his “Journal,” gives an
-amusing description of how we touted for a Portuguese alliance in these
-days.
-
-[240] It is not generally known that “Old Jérôme” really caused
-the Emperor to abandon his intention of going to the Crimea. Every
-argument pressed by his Ministers and the Queen failed to shake his
-determination. Part of his plan was to make Jérôme not Regent, but
-Chief of the Council of Ministers in his absence. The Ministers
-artfully persuaded Jérôme, who was a vain man, to refuse this office
-unless he were vested with the same despotic power as the Emperor.
-This frightened the Emperor, and he immediately gave up his Crimean
-expedition. See a conversation between Lord Cowley and Mr. Greville in
-the Greville Memoirs, Third Part, Vol. I., p. 263 (Longmans), 1887.
-
-[241] Greville Memoirs, Third Part, Vol. I, pp. 283-286.
-
-[242] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXVII.
-
-[243] They crossed over from France on the 28th of August. Mr. Greville
-says, “While they were in the yacht crossing over, Prince Albert
-had told him (Clarendon) that there was not a word of truth in the
-prevailing report and belief that the young Prince of Prussia and the
-Princess Royal are _fiancés_, that nothing had ever passed between
-the parents on the subject, and that the union never would take place
-unless the children should become attached to each other.”--Greville
-Memoirs, Third Part, Vol. I., p. 287. On the 13th of September,
-however, Prince Albert writes to Stockmar, saying, “I have received a
-very friendly letter from the Princess of Prussia.” In this letter the
-Princess (now Empress of Germany) intimated the fact that her son came
-with the consent of his parents and the King of Prussia to sue for the
-hand of the Princess Royal.
-
-[244] The Crown Prince of Germany--A Diary. London (Sampson Low), 1886.
-
-[245] “The Officer in command is directed to arrange times so that
-the Prince may have ample opportunities of becoming acquainted with
-such various matters as horseshoeing, fencing, vaulting, limbering
-and unlimbering guns, and stable work, as well as the routine of
-lessons and singing in the schools.”--Extract from Von Griesheim’s
-Instructions. The Crown Prince of Germany--A Diary, p. 24.
-
-[246] The Crown Prince of Germany--A Diary, p. 28.
-
-[247] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXVIII.
-
-[248] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 37.
-
-[249] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 38.
-
-[250] It is now known that Cavour suggested that Austria might be asked
-to retire from that part of Papal territory which she occupied.
-
-[251] Greville Memoirs, Third Part, p. 303.
-
-[252] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol II., p. 38.
-
-[253] “Exclusive of officers who have come back by reason of wounds,
-sickness, or promotion to the depôt battalions, only thirty-three out
-of an army of 52,000 men have come home on private affairs.”--Letter
-of Prince Albert to the Prince of Prussia. Martin’s Life of the Prince
-Consort, Chap. LXIX.
-
-[254] See a curious letter on this subject from Colonel Hope, V.C., in
-the _Daily Chronicle_ of 14th September, 1886, and a note appended to
-it from the pen of the Editor of that newspaper.
-
-[255] Simpson was bitterly blamed for not asking Campbell’s Division
-of Guards and Highlanders, who were picked and seasoned soldiers, to
-assault in the first instance. Campbell, however, though he often
-exacted cruel sacrifices from his men, was parsimonious of blood, and
-it was said in the camp that he refused to attack till he had time to
-make the necessary preparations. Then he observed, grimly, he would
-not “attack, but ‘tak’ he Redan.” Codrington seems to have imagined
-that there was no need for all this caution. He attacked, but did
-not take, the fortress; in fact, to take it on his plan was an utter
-impossibility.
-
-[256] That was partly due to the fact that our trenches were 200 yards
-from the Redan. This space was enfiladed by a murderous fire when
-crossed by the stormers. The French, 20,000 strong, were only 20 yards
-from the Malakoff. Simpson’s excuse for hastening the attack instead of
-pushing the trenches closer was that every day the French were losing
-200 and we 60 men in the trenches.
-
-[257] The Duke of Newcastle, who had gone to the seat of war to examine
-affairs on the spot, in a letter to Clarendon, says that Simpson seemed
-“never to be doing but always mooning. He has no plan, no opinion, no
-hope but from the chapter of accidents.” He thought Pélissier just
-as incompetent. “I believe,” he adds, “Pélissier’s officers have no
-confidence in him, and I know his soldiers dislike him.” Martin’s Life
-of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXVII. The Sardinian De La Marmora was the
-only one of the Allied Commanders-in-Chief who had any marked ability.
-
-[258] So the Russians afterwards said. This plan was proposed by Sir E.
-Lyons, but Pélissier laughed scornfully in his face when he suggested
-it, and poor Simpson, as usual, concurred with Pélissier.
-
-[259] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXVIII.
-
-[260] Evelyn Ashley’s Life of Lord Palmerston, Vol. II., p. 322.
-
-[261] The excuse for the Franco-Austrian intrigue was that the
-rejection of the terms by Russia bound Austria to join France and
-England in going on with the war. But of course Austria had taken
-pains to find out what terms Russia would accept before she gave her
-pledge, so that she never had the remotest intention of fighting on
-our side. As for the terms they were, as Mr. Greville puts it, but a
-second edition of the proposals which we had rejected at the Vienna
-Conference. There was, says Mr. Greville, this difference: “while on
-the last occasion the Emperor knocked under to us and reluctantly
-agreed to go on with the war, he is now determined to go on with it no
-longer, and requires that we should defer to his wishes.”--Greville
-Memoirs, Third Part, Vol. I., p. 297.
-
-[262] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXVIII.
-
-[263] Greville Memoirs, Third Part, Vol. I., p. 310.
-
-[264] Greville Memoirs, Third Part, Vol. I., p. 315.
-
-[265] Sir G. C. Lewis’s Letters, p. 309.
-
-[266] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 37.
-
-[267] Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXX. Sir Theodore, when he
-penned this, had not seen Mr. Disraeli’s cynical letter to Lord
-Malmesbury, otherwise he would probably not have added “such generosity
-among statesmen may always be counted on as a matter of course.”
-
-[268] This was a nickname which Serjeant Hayes had stuck to Parke
-on account of his prejudice in favour of fossilised forms and
-precedents.--Life of Lord Campbell, Vol. II., p. 388.
-
-[269] Life of Lord Campbell, Vol. II., p. 340.
-
-[270] Mr. Babbage, Dr. Lyon Playfair, and Sir R. Murchison, it was
-said, were to be the first batch of life scientific peers.
-
-[271] Greville Memoirs, Third Part, Vol. II., p. 51.
-
-[272] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 43.
-
-[273] Mr. Greville, writing on March 9, says, “Called on Achille Fould,
-who introduced me to Magne, Minister of Finance, said to be a great
-rogue. Everything here is intrigue and jobbery, and I am told there is
-a sort of gang, of which Morny is the chief, who all combine for their
-own purpose and advantage: Morny, Fould, Magne, and Rouher, Minister of
-Commerce. They now want to get out Billault, Minister of the Interior,
-whom they cannot entirely manage, and that minister is necessary to
-them on account of the railways, which are under his management.”
-Greville Memoirs, Third Part, Vol. II., p. 31. At a party at Lord
-Holland’s house in Paris, where a great many aristocratic ladies were
-present, Mr. Greville says that when MM. de Flahault and Morny were
-announced, “the women all jumped up like a covey of partridges and
-walked out of the room, without taking any notice of the men.”
-
-[274] The Treaty of Paris was signed on Sunday, March 30. Each of the
-fourteen plenipotentiaries originally intended to keep the pen with
-which he signed it as a _memento_ of the occasion. They, however,
-yielded to the request of the Empress Eugenie, who begged that only one
-pen should be used, which should be retained by her as a souvenir. Only
-one was accordingly used. It was a quill plucked from an eagle’s wing,
-and richly mounted with gold and jewels.
-
-[275] In 1870 the neutrality of the Black Sea was abandoned--Russia
-having declared she would no longer respect the Treaty on that point.
-After the last Russo-Turkish war, Russia took back Bessarabia. The
-“Declarations,” in fact, are the only portions of the Treaty that
-remain in force.
-
-[276] History of England, Vol. V., p. 143.
-
-[277] Correspondence of A. de Tocqueville with Mr. Nassau Senior, Vol.
-II., pp. 99, 101.
-
-[278] This refers to Lord Malmesbury’s attack in the House of Lords on
-the Treaty of Peace.
-
-[279] Continuing a year after this, Lord Malmesbury records his
-impressions of a conversation with Lady Ely on the famous “happy
-family” dinner of 1856. He says, “It looks as if her Majesty made up
-the dinner of these discordant materials for fun, and, from the same
-_malice_, made me take Lady Clarendon to dinner, as it was only two
-days after I had attacked Lord Clarendon in the House of Lords, and
-Lady Clarendon would not speak to me at first, but I ended by making
-her laugh. The Queen, who was opposite, was highly amused, and could
-hardly help laughing when Lady Clarendon at first would not answer
-me.”--Memoirs of an ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 67.
-
-[280] Nobody regretted this, for they created a host of highly-paid
-place-holders. Mr. Disraeli declared that these measures were at first
-supposed to be an ingenious means of compensating Ireland for the
-failure of the Tipperary Bank.
-
-[281] Greville Memoirs, Third Part. Vol. II., pp. 42-45.
-
-[282] A few days before this event, on the 10th inst., the Royal
-Nursery was robbed. The Royal Household is, of course, under the
-control of the Lord Steward. One of his sub-departments is called “The
-Silver Pantry,” which has three yeomen, one groom, and six assistants
-attached to it. Yet, when the nursery plate had to be sent to Windsor,
-these gorgeous functionaries, with their staff of porters, horses,
-grooms, and carts, could not condescend to convey it. It was trusted
-to a common carrier, who unhappily, when on his way, stopped at a
-public-house for refreshments. He and his men were “only absent for
-five minutes,” but in that time a light spring cart had driven up to
-the carrier’s waggon, and when it drove away, the box containing the
-Royal nursery plate had vanished. The plate chest was found in Bonner’s
-Fields containing everything but the bullion. The knife-blades and
-packing, which latter consisted of women’s dresses, were found, but the
-plate was never traced.
-
-[283] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXII.
-
-[284] De Lacy Evans’ proposal was referred to a mixed Commission of
-civilians and military men.
-
-[285] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXII.
-
-[286] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 49.
-
-[287] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXII.
-
-[288] When the frontier was drawn, Count Orloff said to Lord Clarendon
-that he should take it as a favour if he would draw it a little
-farther south so as to include Bolgrad, which was the capital of some
-Russian military colonies in which the Czar was greatly interested.
-This was done as a matter of courtesy to the Czar, Orloff pointing to
-the position of Bolgrad on the map--a French map--and showing that
-it was such a long way from Lake Jalpuk, that the concession did not
-give Russia access to a Moldavian lake on which she might, perchance,
-one day build a threatening flotilla. After the Treaty was signed,
-it turned out that the place marked as Bolgrad on the French map was
-really Tabak, and that Bolgrad was actually far to the south of it, on
-the northern shore of Lake Jalpuk. The Russians therefore, insisting
-on the letter of the Treaty, claimed Bolgrad, on the left shore of the
-lake, leaving the right shore to Moldavia.
-
-[289] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 50.
-
-[290] Lowe’s Bismarck, Vol. I., p. 218.
-
-[291] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXIII.
-
-[292] The French Emperor was pledged to support Russia against us. But
-after his return from Biarritz, he found political parties were using
-his disagreement with England to weaken the Anglo-French alliance, and
-discredit his foreign policy. The secret history of the transaction,
-however, was not creditable to Palmerstonian diplomacy. Lord Malmesbury
-writes on the 21st of November, “Persigny told me Walewski is in
-disgrace. The difficulty about Bolgrad and the Isle of Serpents arises
-from the Emperor having been entrapped into a promise by the Russians;
-but Persigny has suggested a solution, which has been accepted by the
-Emperor and our Government, namely, a Congress, which is to assemble,
-into which Sardinia is to be admitted, _on condition of voting against
-Russia_. Austria goes with England, and Prussia is of course excluded.
-This gives England a majority, and the Emperor an excuse for giving
-way.”--Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II, p. 53. Lord Clarendon, had,
-up till the beginning of December, refused to submit the dispute to a
-Congress, for the point which Russia raised about Bolgrad was simply
-a point of obvious chicanery which it was beneath the dignity of
-England to debate. Lord Palmerston and he yielded, however, and, as Mr.
-Greville says scornfully, by “this dodge saved us.”--Greville Memoirs,
-Third Part, Vol. II., p. 68.
-
-[293] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 55.
-
-[294] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 58. See also Greville
-Memoirs, Third Part, Vol. II., p. 69.
-
-[295] The Duke of Beaufort and eighty Members of the Lower House,
-however, threatened to leave the Party if places in a Tory Government
-were given to the Peelites.--Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 57.
-
-[296] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXV.
-
-[297] On the estimate of expenditure and revenue for 1856-1857 there
-was a deficit of £10,000,000. To meet this Sir George Lewis had
-borrowed £7,499,000, and he had raised £1,000,000 in Exchequer Bills.
-The total receipts from all sources, said Sir George Lewis in his
-Statement (_Annual Register_, Vol. XCIX., p. 29), would, when the
-financial year closed, be £79,384,000, and the expenditure £78,000,000,
-leaving a surplus of £1,384,000. This was a wrong calculation. The net
-income of the year was £75,569,575, or, after deductions, £72,963,151,
-showing a deficit on the expenditure of the year of £3,254,604. For
-the coming year, 1857-1858, Sir George estimated his expenditure at
-£63,224,000, to which £2,000,000 had to be added for the service of war
-loans. The revenue he estimated at £66,365,000; so that he expected a
-surplus of £891,000.
-
-[298] Quite apart from the cost of the Crimean War, Mr. Gladstone
-showed that £6,000,000 had been added to the _ordinary_ expenditure of
-the country during the four years ending 1856-1857.
-
-[299] Of course, Lord Beaconsfield before he died educated the Foreign
-Office up to the truth, which is, that “the key of India” is held
-in London--and that the defensible gates of India are those on our
-frontier which we can protect by our arms. But the amazing thing is
-that when the Foreign Office _did_ believe that Herat was the “key of
-India,” they never would let it be held by a Power which, like Persia,
-was strong enough to keep it safe with British help. Persia was the
-natural ally of England against Russia. But every effort of the Indian
-Government to conciliate Persia has been thwarted by the Foreign
-Office. Since we abandoned her for the sake of the Russian alliance
-against Napoleon I., the English Foreign Office has exhausted the
-resources of its diplomacy in betraying, browbeating, and irritating
-her. And yet it is a fact, that without the goodwill of Persia,
-which enabled Russia to draw supplies from “the golden province of
-Khorassan,” Russia could never have marched from the Caspian to the
-gates of Merv.
-
-[300] Correspondence respecting relations with Persia, Parliamentary
-Papers, 1857, pp. 21-39.
-
-[301] This story of diplomatic blundering is told in the speeches of
-Mr. Layard and Lord Palmerston. Hansard, Vol. CXL., pp. 1717-1722.
-
-[302] Papers respecting Persia, p. 211.
-
-[303] India under Lord Canning, by the Duke of Argyll, p. 72. See also
-21 and 22 Vict., c. 106, Section 55. Lord Beaconsfield made another
-attempt to evade this section by bringing Indian troops to Malta during
-the Russo-Turkish War in 1877.
-
-[304] Greville Memoirs, Third Part, Vol. II., p. 93.
-
-[305] Life of Cobden, Chap. XXIV.
-
-[306] The vote was 247 for, and 263 against, the Ministry. See Cobden’s
-Speeches, Vol. II., pp. 121-156, for his indictment.
-
-[307] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 63. Mr. Greville declares
-that Lord Derby and Mr. Disraeli had “made up their minds to coalesce
-with Gladstone and the Peelites on the first opportunity.”--Greville
-Memoirs, Third Part. Vol. II., p. 93. Lord Malmesbury says that at
-a private meeting of the Tory Party on the 4th of March, Lord Derby
-denied that he had coalesced with Mr. Gladstone, but refused to be
-dictated to by any member of the party as to “the course he should
-pursue with regard to any political personages whatever,” a declaration
-which was loudly cheered. The general opinion was that such a
-coalition, though the Tory leaders favoured it, would have split up the
-Tory Party.
-
-[308] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 64. Note that the
-attitude of the Peelites to the Tory Party curiously resembled that of
-the Liberal Unionists in 1887.
-
-[309] Correspondence of Abraham Hayward, Q.C., from 1814 to 1844.
-Edited by Henry E. Carlisle. 2 Vols. London, Murray, 1886.
-
-[310] Life of Cobden, Chap. XXIV.
-
-[311] Annual Summary of the _Times_ for 1857. On the 24th of February,
-1858, the Tories formed, Lord Derby’s second Government.
-
-[312] Greville Memoirs, Third Part, Vol. II., p. 99.
-
-[313] Lord Derby had shrunk from carrying on the Crimean War when Lord
-Aberdeen resigned.
-
-[314] Even new Tory candidates, when they saw how the current of public
-opinion was setting, began to beg support by saying that if they had
-been in the House when the China vote was taken, they would have voted
-for Lord Palmerston.--See Greville Memoirs, Vol. II., p. 100.
-
-[315] Correspondence of Abraham Hayward, Q.C., Vol. I., pp. 312, 313.
-
-[316] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXV. On the 5th of
-March, 1858, he writes to Stockmar:--“Lord Palmerston’s sudden decline
-in popularity was a remarkable phenomenon.”--Martin’s Life of the
-Prince Consort, Chap. LXXXIV.
-
-[317] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 70.
-
-[318] This was one of the first recorded cases of “obstruction” in the
-modern sense of the word. Mr. Parnell used, at one time, to justify
-his tactics by citing as a precedent Mr. Gladstone’s opposition to the
-Divorce Bill.
-
-[319] That no such distinction should be made is the view which seems
-to be gaining ground now. The French Chamber adopted it in their
-Divorce Bill of 1886, and it has been adopted in the law of Scotland,
-where, as in France, paramours are not permitted to marry after divorce
-is granted. In England the marriage of paramours, outside the forbidden
-degrees of affinity and consanguinity, strongly condemned by Bishop
-Wilberforce in the debates on the Divorce Bill, is permissible. Though,
-as a concession to Wilberforce and his followers, it was enacted that a
-clergyman might refuse to perform the ceremony, the concession did not
-satisfy anybody.--See Life of Wilberforce, Vol. II., pp. 343-347.
-
-[320] Life of Lord Campbell, Vol. II., p. 351.
-
-[321] Life of Lord Campbell, Vol. II., p. 353.
-
-[322] Greville Memoirs, Third Part, Vol. II., p. 3.
-
-[323] This dispute was settled by a Conference which met at Paris
-on 5th March, 1857, France, Austria, England, and Russia being
-represented, Prussia and Switzerland being occasionally admitted with
-a consultative voice. Frederick William IV. resigned all his rights
-to Neufchâtel for a pecuniary indemnity, which he generously refused
-afterwards to take, and the royalist prisoners were set free. The
-severance of this province was as great an advantage to Prussia, as the
-separation of Hanover was to England.
-
-[324] France and Sardinia would have made an Austrian occupation of
-the Principalities ground for demanding, by way of compensation, the
-retirement of Austria from Northern Italy.
-
-[325] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., pp. 78, 79.
-
-[326] Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 78.
-
-[327] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXIX.
-
-[328] Sleeman’s Tour in Oudh, Vol. II., p. 353.
-
-[329] Oudh Blue Book, p. 46.
-
-[330] Oudh Blue Book, p. 235.
-
-[331] If we go behind the facts and pretexts of the official case we
-can easily discern better though unstated reasons for the annexation of
-Oudh. After the annexation of Scinde and the conquest of the Punjab,
-Oudh was left protruding into British territory, so as to cut it into
-two parts. Oudh was in our way, and it was therefore taken.
-
-[332] The History of India, by Meadows Taylor, p. 710.
-
-[333] Curiously Mr. Cobden was among the few Englishmen who both
-knew and cared. In a letter to Mr. Bright, dated the 24th of August,
-1857, he says, “From the moment that I had satisfied myself that a
-feeling of alienation was constantly increasing with both Natives and
-the English--we had some striking evidence to this effect before our
-Committee in 1853--I made up my mind that it must end in trouble sooner
-or later.”--Morley’s Life of Cobden, Chap. XXV.
-
-[334] Meadows Taylor’s History of India, p. 713.
-
-[335] India under Lord Dalhousie, by the Duke of Argyll, pp. 57-60.
-Sir J. Kaye says that the Indian army consisted, in round numbers, of
-300,000 men, of whom 40,000 were Europeans.--Kaye’s Sepoy War, Vol. I.,
-p. 341. When Lord Canning reached India the Native army, as a matter of
-fact, consisted of 233,000, the Europeans of 45,000 men.
-
-[336] Now we maintain in India one English to every two Native
-soldiers. Dalhousie maintained one English to every five Native
-soldiers.
-
-[337] See on this curious subject Kaye’s Sepoy War, Vol. I., and
-Appendix, p. 619.
-
-[338] “The Mutiny would perhaps never have occurred if British
-officers, turning themselves into missionaries, had not fostered
-the notion that the Company was anxious to convert its subjects to
-Christianity.”--Walpole’s History of England, Vol. V., p. 430.
-
-[339] Holmes’ Indian Mutiny, p. 82. India under Lord Canning, by the
-Duke of Argyll, p. 77.
-
-[340] Parliamentary Papers. Mutinies in the East Indies, p. 1 _et seq._
-
-[341] Meadows Taylor’s History of India, p. 720.
-
-[342] Anson first heard of the outbreak at Simla, on the 12th of May.
-He was at Umballa on the 15th. On the 27th he died of cholera at
-Kurnaul.
-
-[343] Lawrence himself says modestly, in a letter to Lord Dalhousie
-(June 14th, 1858): “To Nicholson, Alec Taylor, of the Engineers, and
-Neville Chamberlain, the real merit of our success is due.” But this
-does some injustice to Colonel Baird Smith, who was Taylor’s chief, and
-who deserves credit for forcing Wilson on to attack the city.
-
-[344] Life of Lord Lawrence, by R. Bosworth Smith, M.A., Vol. II., p.
-30.
-
-[345] _Quarterly Review_ for April, 1883.
-
-[346] “Whilst the siege was in progress, Wilson had, “more than
-once,” says Nicholson, in one of his letters to Lawrence, spoken of
-withdrawing the guns. Nicholson, who was the Roland and Hotspur of
-the war, and Lawrence’s trustiest lieutenant, says of Wilson, “Had
-he carried out his threat I was quite prepared to have appealed to
-the army to set him aside and elect a successor.” Three days after
-penning that letter this fiery Bersekir fell mortally wounded, leading
-the stormers of the Cashmere Bastion. Wilson, feeling it difficult to
-maintain the occupation of the city, wanted to withdraw. When this was
-communicated to Nicholson, he turned on his death-bed, convulsed with
-passion, and exclaimed, “Thank God, I have yet strength enough to shoot
-that man!”
-
-[347] Life of Lord Lawrence, by R. Bosworth Smith, M.A., Vol. II., p.
-225.
-
-[348] The king died in prison three months afterwards. Hodson’s defence
-was that he feared a rescue.
-
-[349] Lord Canning himself has described their conduct--especially
-that of the terror-stricken officers, “with swords by their sides”--as
-“disgraceful.”--Life of Sir H. Lawrence, p. 575.
-
-[350] Elgin’s patriotism and generosity in surrendering these
-troops were justly extolled by Sir William Peel, the leader of the
-Naval Brigade, who said that the Chinese Expedition really relieved
-Lucknow.--Walrond’s Letters and Journals of Lord Elgin, p. 188.
-
-[351] Shadwell’s Life of Lord Clyde, Vol. I., p. 405.
-
-[352] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXXII.
-
-[353] At Lucknow, after four days’ hard fighting, he had only 122
-killed and 414 wounded.
-
-[354] Campbell’s retreat from Lucknow to Cawnpore was managed
-with consummate address. But it was censured. The defence of it
-is this:--(1), He had to relieve himself from the encumbrance of
-the women, children, sick, and wounded; (2), He had to save his
-communications, which Windham’s defeat at the Pandoo River had put at
-Tantia Topee’s mercy; (3), He could easily come back and take Lucknow;
-and (4), he was anxious to make an immediate impression on Rohilkund.
-
-[355] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXV. Feodore was the
-name of the Queen’s half-sister.
-
-[356] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXVI.
-
-[357] As to precedents, the eldest daughter of George II. received
-a dowry of £80,000, and an annuity of £5,000. But when the Princess
-Royal, daughter of George III., married, she was voted a dowry of
-£80,000 without any annuity. The Irish Parliament had to vote her an
-annuity of £5,000.
-
-[358] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXVI.
-
-[359] In the “Journal de Goncourt: Mémoires des la Vie Littéraire,”
-published in 1877, the secret history of the Emperor’s instructions
-to Pélissier is told. The Prussian Military Attaché at St. Petersburg
-sent to the King of Prussia, through MM. de Gerlach and Niebuhr, the
-secret details of the campaign. Manteufel, the King’s Foreign Minister,
-desirous of possessing this information which the King kept to himself,
-bribed certain persons who had access to these letters to copy them.
-Then the French hearing of the matter bribed Manteufel’s agents to let
-them have copies also. In this way Napoleon III. discovered that the
-Malakoff was the one vulnerable point in the defences, although the
-repulse of the 18th of June made most people think it was invulnerable.
-
-[360] This year the great race at Ascot--that for the Gold Cup, which,
-by the way, was of silver--was won by Lord Zetland’s “Skirmisher.”
-
-[361] A story used to be told of one Scottish regiment that got into
-sad disgrace because of the contempt with which they treated the Cross
-of Valour. A goodly number of Crosses were allotted to it, for it had
-won exceptional distinction. The superior officers, on being asked to
-nominate recipients, said, “Oh, hand the thing over to the subalterns.”
-The subalterns said, “The sergeants would probably like to have the
-decorations at their disposal.” The sergeants said, “Oh, it would be
-best to let the men get them,” and the men, with grim humour, selected
-as bravest of the brave, two pioneers, whose duty it had been to go
-round with the “greybeards” when the regiment was in action, and serve
-out the regulation ration of whisky or rum, as the case might be. Was
-this the reason why no member of the Scottish Brigade figures in the
-_Annual Register’s_ list of Victoria Crosses given in 1857?
-
-[362] The Queen promptly ordered the Royal Collections to be put at the
-disposal of the Exhibition. The Prince Consort suggested a plan for
-appealing to private collectors which had the desired effect. He said
-that collectors of rank would not shrink from refusing to lend works of
-Art when it was widely known that their refusal might mar a national
-purpose; and he advised the appeal to be based on the fact that though
-England invested more money in Art than any other country, she had done
-less than any other for Art education, which such an exhibition might
-easily be made to promote. He even sent them a practical proposal for
-drawing up a catalogue that would powerfully appeal to the sympathies
-of collectors, and to his suggestions the success of the undertaking
-was largely due.
-
-[363] It may not be amiss to say that this stinging Memorandum was the
-Queen’s reply to a frivolous communication from Lord Palmerston. In it
-he met her growing remonstrances by saying that “measures are sometimes
-best calculated to succeed which follow each other step by step.” He
-further added, rather impudently, that “Viscount Palmerston may perhaps
-be permitted to take the liberty of saying that it is fortunate for
-those from whose opinions your Majesty differs, that your Majesty is
-not in the House of Commons, for they would have had to encounter
-a formidable antagonist in argument.”--Martin’s Life of the Prince
-Consort, Chap. LXXVIII.
-
-[364] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXXI.
-
-[365] The _Post_ was “inspired” by Lady Palmerston at this period.
-
-[366] Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXXII.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-vol. 2 of 4, by Robert Wilson
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-The Life and Times of Queen Victoria; vol. 2 of 4, by Robert Wilson.</title>
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Life and Times of Queen Victoria; vol.
-2 of 4, by Robert Wilson
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Life and Times of Queen Victoria; vol. 2 of 4
-
-Author: Robert Wilson
-
-Release Date: September 25, 2020 [EBook #63290]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE AND TIMES OF QUEEN ***
-
-
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-Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images available at The Internet Archive)
-
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-</pre>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="figcenter">
-<a href="images/cover.jpg">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" height="550" alt="[Image of
-the book's cover unavailable.]" /></a>
-</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary=""
-style="border: 2px black solid;margin:auto auto;max-width:50%;
-padding:1%;">
-<tr><td>
-<p class="c"><a href="#CONTENTS">Contents.</a></p>
-<p class="c"><a href="#LIST_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS">List of Illustrations</a><br /> <span class="nonvis">(In certain versions of this etext [in certain browsers]
-clicking on the image will bring up a larger version.)</span></p>
-<p class="c">(etext transcriber's note)</p></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_001" id="ill_001"></a></p>
-<a href="images/frontispiece_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/frontispiece.jpg" height="550" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>H.R.H. <small>THE</small> PRINCE OF WALES.</p>
-<p>(<i>From a Photograph by Mr. A. Bassano, London.</i>)</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_i" id="page_i">{i}</a></span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<h1>
-<small><small>THE</small></small><br />
-<br />
-LIFE AND TIMES<br />
-<br />
-<small><small>OF</small></small><br />
-<br />
-<span class="redd">QUEEN VICTORIA.</span></h1>
-
-<p class="c"><small>BY</small><br />
-ROBERT WILSON.<br />
-<br />
-&mdash;&mdash;<br />
-Illustrated.<br />
-&mdash;&mdash;<br />
-<br />
-VOL. II.<br />
-<br /><br />
-<a href="images/ill_pg_001-b_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_001-b_sml.jpg" width="141" height="124" alt="colophon" /></a>
-<br /><br />
-<br />
-<span class="redd">C A S S E L L &nbsp; &amp; &nbsp; C O M P A N Y, <span class="smcap">Limited</span>:</span><br />
-<br /><i>LONDON, PARIS &amp; MELBOURNE</i>.<br />
-<br /><small>
-[ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.]</small><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_ii" id="page_ii">{ii}</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_iii" id="page_iii">{iii}</a></span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-
-<tr><th><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI.</a>
-<br /><br /><span class="subhd">COLONIAL HOME RULE AND FINANCIAL REFORM.</span></th></tr>
-
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rt"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd">Mr. Roebuck and Emigration&mdash;Self-Government and the Colonies&mdash;Unsympathetic Whig Policy&mdash;Radicals
-and the Colonial Office&mdash;The Peelites and Hudson’s Bay Company&mdash;Financial Reform&mdash;Mr. Cobden
-at Variance with Mr. Bright&mdash;Combined Agitators&mdash;The Demand for Retrenchment&mdash;Trade and the
-Flag&mdash;Tories and Taxes&mdash;A <i>reductio ad absurdum</i>&mdash;A Raid on a Surplus&mdash;International Arbitration&mdash;Parliamentary
-Reform&mdash;Parliament and the Jews&mdash;The Tories oppose the Alteration of the Parliamentary
-Oath&mdash;Episcopal Prejudice&mdash;Tory Obstructionists&mdash;An Ordnance Department Scandal&mdash;Mr.
-Delane’s Attacks on Lord Palmerston in the <i>Times</i>&mdash;The Queen Remonstrates against Lord Palmerston’s
-Recklessness&mdash;An Anti-Palmerstonian Cabal&mdash;Lady Palmerston’s Intrigues&mdash;Lord Brougham
-Betrays the Cabal&mdash;Palmerston’s Victory&mdash;Rome and France&mdash;The Second War&mdash;The Disaster of Chillianwalla&mdash;Indignation
-of the Country&mdash;Lord Gough’s Recall&mdash;Napier to the Rescue&mdash;The East India
-Directors Oppose Napier’s Appointment&mdash;The Convict War at the Cape&mdash;Boycotting the Governor</td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_385">385</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><th><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII.</a>
-<br /><br /><span class="subhd">FAMILY CARES AND ROYAL DUTIES.</span></th></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd">Education of the Prince of Wales&mdash;Selection of Mr. Birch as Tutor&mdash;The Queen’s Jealousy of her Parental
-Authority&mdash;Her Letter to Melbourne on the Management of her Nursery&mdash;Her Ideas on Education&mdash;Prince
-Albert’s Plans for the Education of the Prince of Wales&mdash;Stockmar’s Advice&mdash;The Visit to
-Ireland&mdash;The Queen at Waterford&mdash;“Rebel Cork” <i>en fête</i>&mdash;The Visit to Dublin&mdash;Viceregal Festivities&mdash;The
-Visit to the National Model Schools&mdash;Shiel’s Speech&mdash;The Queen and the Duke of Leinster&mdash;Farewell
-at Kingstown&mdash;The Queen Dips the Royal Ensign&mdash;Loyal Ulster&mdash;The Visit to the Linen
-Hall&mdash;Lord Clarendon on the Queen’s Visit&mdash;A Cruise on the Clyde&mdash;Home in Balmoral&mdash;The Queen’s
-“Bothie”&mdash;The Queen’s University of Ireland&mdash;First Plans for the Great Exhibition&mdash;Opening of the
-London Coal Exchange&mdash;The Queen’s Barge&mdash;Death of Queen Adelaide</td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_403">403</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><th><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII.</a>
-<br /><br /><span class="subhd">CLOUDS IN THE EAST AND ELSEWHERE.</span></th></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd">Political Wreckage&mdash;Force triumphs over Opinion&mdash;The State of France&mdash;Election of Prince Charles Louis
-Bonaparte as Prince-President&mdash;The Sad Plight of Italy&mdash;Palmerston’s Anti-Austrian Policy&mdash;Defeat
-of Piedmont&mdash;The Fall of Venice&mdash;Fall of the Roman Republic&mdash;A Cromwellian Struggle in Prussia&mdash;The
-Queen’s Partisanship&mdash;Her Prussian Sympathies&mdash;The Hungarian Refugees in Turkey&mdash;A Diplomatic
-Conflict with Russia&mdash;Opening of Parliament&mdash;Mr. Disraeli and Local Taxation&mdash;Parliamentary
-Reform&mdash;The Jonahs of the Cabinet&mdash;The Dispute with Greece&mdash;Don Pacifico’s Case&mdash;Coercion of
-Greece&mdash;Lord Palmerston meekly accepts an Insult from Russia&mdash;French Intervention&mdash;A Diplomatic
-Conflict in France&mdash;Recall of the French Ambassador&mdash;False Statements in Parliament&mdash;The Queen’s
-Indignation&mdash;The Don Pacifico Debate&mdash;The <i>Civis Romanus sum</i> Doctrine&mdash;Palmerston’s Victory&mdash;The
-West African Slave Trade</td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_420">420</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><th><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV.</a>
-<br /><br /><span class="subhd">SOME EPOCH-MARKING LEGISLATION.</span></th></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd">The Colonies and Party Government&mdash;The Movement for Autonomy&mdash;Lord John Russell’s Colonial Bill&mdash;Tory
-Opposition to Colonial Federation&mdash;Mr. Adderley’s Plan&mdash;Mr. Gladstone’s Scheme for Colonial
-Church Courts&mdash;The Colonial Bills Mangled in the House of Lords&mdash;More English Doles for Ireland&mdash;An
-Irish Reform Bill&mdash;Lord John Russell Proposes to Abolish the Lord-Lieutenancy&mdash;The Queen’s
-Irish Policy&mdash;Her offer to Establish a Royal Residence in Ireland&mdash;The Bungled Budget&mdash;The Demand
-for Retrenchment&mdash;The Tories Insist on a Reduction of Official Salaries&mdash;Lord John Russell’s Commission
-on Establishments&mdash;The Queen and the Church&mdash;The Ecclesiastical Appeals Bill&mdash;The “Gorham
-Case”&mdash;Death of Peel&mdash;The Queen’s Sorrow&mdash;A Nation in Mourning&mdash;Peel’s Character and Career&mdash;The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_iv" id="page_iv">{iv}</a></span>Queen’s Alarm about Prince Albert’s Health&mdash;The Queen at Work&mdash;The Queen’s Reading-Lamp</td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_438">438</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><th><a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV.</a>
-<br /><br /><span class="subhd">FALL OF THE WHIG CABINET.</span></th></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd">Debates on “No Popery”&mdash;Mutiny of the Irish Brigade&mdash;Defeat of Lord John Russell&mdash;Lord Stanley
-“sent for”&mdash;Timid Tories&mdash;Lord Stanley’s Interviews with the Queen&mdash;A Statesman’s “Domestic
-Duties”&mdash;Is Coalition Possible?&mdash;The Queen’s Mistake&mdash;The Duke of Wellington’s Advice&mdash;Return of
-the Whigs to Office&mdash;The Queen’s Aversions&mdash;The “No Popery” Bill Reduced to a Nullity&mdash;Another
-Bungled Budget&mdash;The Income Tax Controversy&mdash;The Pillar of Free Trade&mdash;The Window Tax and
-the House Duty&mdash;The Radicals and the Slave Trade&mdash;King “Bomba” and Mr. Gladstone&mdash;Cobden on
-General Disarmament&mdash;Palmerston in a Millennial Mood&mdash;The Whig-Peelite Intrigue&mdash;The Queen and
-the Kossuth Demonstrations&mdash;Another Quarrel with Palmerston&mdash;A Merry Council of State</td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_463">463</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><th><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI.</a>
-<br /><br /><span class="subhd">THE FESTIVAL OF PEACE AND THE <i>COUP D’ÉTAT</i>.</span></th></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd">The World’s Fair&mdash;Carping Critics&mdash;Churlish Ambassadors Rebuked by the Queen&mdash;Opening of the Great
-Exhibition&mdash;A Touching Sight&mdash;The Queen’s Comments on “<i>soi-disant</i> Fashionables”&mdash;The Duke
-of Wellington’s Nosegay&mdash;Prince Albert among the Missionaries&mdash;The Queen’s Letter to Lord John
-Russell&mdash;Her Pride in her Husband&mdash;The London Season&mdash;The Duke of Brunswick’s Balloon “Victoria”&mdash;Bloomerism&mdash;The
-Queen at Macready’s Farewell Benefit&mdash;The Queen’s Costume Ball&mdash;The Spanish
-Beauty&mdash;An Ugly “Lion”&mdash;The Queen at the Guildhall Ball&mdash;Grotesque Civic Festivities&mdash;Royal
-Visits to Liverpool and Manchester&mdash;A Well-Dressed Mayor&mdash;The Queen on the “Sommerophone”&mdash;The
-<i>Coup d’État</i>&mdash;The Assassins of Liberty&mdash;The Appeal to France&mdash;The Queen’s Last Quarrel with
-Palmerston&mdash;Palmerston’s Fall&mdash;Outcry against the Queen&mdash;A “Presuming” Muscovite&mdash;The Queen’s
-Vindication</td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_480">480</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><th><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII.</a>
-<br /><br /><span class="subhd">A YEAR OF EXCITEMENT AND PANIC.</span></th></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd">Cassandras in the Service Clubs&mdash;The Tories and the Queen’s Speech&mdash;Lord John Russell’s Triumph&mdash;The
-Militia Bill&mdash;Defeat of the Russell Ministry&mdash;Fall of the Whig Cabinet&mdash;Palmerston’s “Tit for
-Tat”&mdash;A Protectionist Government&mdash;Novices in Office&mdash;A Cabinet of Affairs&mdash;Mr. Disraeli’s Budget&mdash;Lord
-John Russell’s Fatal Blunder&mdash;The Second Burmese War&mdash;Dalhousie’s Designs on Burmah&mdash;How
-the Quarrel Grew&mdash;Lambert’s Indiscretion&mdash;The Attack on Rangoon&mdash;Fall of the Citadel&mdash;Annexation&mdash;Desultory
-Warfare&mdash;Dissolution of Parliament&mdash;The General Election&mdash;Equipoise of
-Parties&mdash;Factions and Free Trade&mdash;Palmerston’s Forecasts&mdash;Forcing the Hand of the Ministry&mdash;Death
-of the Duke of Wellington&mdash;The Queen’s Grief&mdash;The Nation in Mourning&mdash;The Lying-in-State&mdash;Shocking
-Scenes&mdash;The Funeral Pageant&mdash;The Ceremony in St. Paul’s&mdash;A Veteran in Tears&mdash;The Laureate’s
-Votive Wreath&mdash;Review of the Duke’s Character</td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_496">496</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><th><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII">CHAPTER XXVIII.</a>
-<br /><br /><span class="subhd">THE LAST YEAR OF “THE GREAT PEACE.”</span></th></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd">Abortive Attacks on the Ministry&mdash;Mr. Disraeli’s First Budget&mdash;Fall of the Tory Cabinet&mdash;The Queen
-and Lord Aberdeen&mdash;Organising the Coalition&mdash;A Ministry of “All the Talents”&mdash;The Queen and
-South Kensington&mdash;A Miser’s Legacy to the Queen&mdash;Sport at Balmoral&mdash;Proclamation of the Second
-Empire&mdash;The “Battle of the Numeral”&mdash;The Queen Initiates a Policy&mdash;Personal Government in the
-Victorian Age&mdash;A Servile Minister&mdash;Lord Malmesbury’s Spies&mdash;Napoleon III. and “Mrs. Howard”&mdash;Creole
-Card-Parties at Kensington&mdash;Napoleon III. Proposes to Marry the Queen’s Niece&mdash;Lord John
-Russell’s Education Scheme&mdash;Mr. Gladstone’s First Budget&mdash;The India Bill&mdash;Transportation of
-Convicts to Australia Stopped&mdash;The Gold Fever in Australia&mdash;The Rush to the Diggings&mdash;The First
-Gold Ships in the Thames&mdash;Gold Discoveries and Free Trade&mdash;Chagrin of the Protectionists&mdash;The
-Rise in Prices&mdash;Practical Success of Peel’s Fiscal Policy&mdash;Strikes and Dear Bread&mdash;End of the
-Great Peace</td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_515">515</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><th><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIX">CHAPTER XXIX.</a>
-<br /><br /><span class="subhd">DRIFTING TO WAR.</span></th></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd">Origin of the Crimean War&mdash;Russia and “the Sick Man”&mdash;Coercing Turkey&mdash;The Dispute about the Holy
-Places&mdash;A Monkish Quarrel&mdash;Contradictory Concessions&mdash;The Czar and the Tory Ministry of 1844&mdash;The
-Secret Compact with Peel, Wellington, and Aberdeen&mdash;Nesselrode’s Secret Memorandum&mdash;The
-Czar and Sir Hamilton Seymour&mdash;Lord John Russell’s Admissions&mdash;The Czar’s Bewilderment&mdash;Lord
-Stratford de Redcliffe&mdash;The Marplot at Constantinople&mdash;A Hectoring Russian Envoy&mdash;The Allied
-Fleets at Besika Bay&mdash;The Conference of Vienna&mdash;The Vienna Note&mdash;The Turkish Modifications&mdash;The
-Case for England&mdash;The British Fleet in the Euxine&mdash;A Caustic Letter of the Queen to Lord
-Aberdeen&mdash;Prince Albert’s Warnings&mdash;The Massacre of Sinope&mdash;Internal Feuds in the Cabinet&mdash;Lord
-John Russell’s Intrigues&mdash;Palmerston’s Resignation and Return&mdash;The Fire at Windsor&mdash;Birth
-of Prince Leopold&mdash;The Camp at Chobham&mdash;The Czar’s Daughters&mdash;Naval Review at Spithead&mdash;Royal
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_v" id="page_v">{v}</a></span>Visit to Ireland</td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_540">540</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><th><a href="#CHAPTER_XXX">CHAPTER XXX.</a>
-<br /><br /><span class="subhd">WAR.</span></th></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd">The War Fever in 1854&mdash;Attacks on Prince Albert&mdash;Aberdeen’s Correspondence with the Queen&mdash;The
-Queen’s Opinion of the Country&mdash;“Loyal, but a little mad”&mdash;Stockmar on the Constitution&mdash;Prince
-Albert’s Position at Court&mdash;The Privileges of a Reigning Queen’s Husband&mdash;Debates on the Prince’s
-Position&mdash;The Peace and War Parties&mdash;Mr. Cobden’s Influence&mdash;A new Vienna Note&mdash;A Challenge to
-Russia&mdash;The Russian Ambassador leaves London&mdash;Recall of Sir H. Seymour from St. Petersburg&mdash;Russian
-Intrigues with the German Powers&mdash;The Czar’s Counter-Propositions&mdash;His Sarcastic Letter
-to Napoleon III.&mdash;An Austrian Compromise&mdash;Lord Clarendon’s <i>Ultimatum</i> to Russia&mdash;The Czar’s
-Reply&mdash;Declaration of War&mdash;Omar Pasha’s Victories in the Principalities&mdash;The Siege of Silistria&mdash;Evacuation
-of the Principalities&mdash;The Rising in Greece&mdash;The Allies at the Piræus&mdash;The Allies occupy
-Gallipoli&mdash;Another English Blunder&mdash;Invasion of the Crimea&mdash;The Duke of Newcastle and a Sleepy
-Cabinet&mdash;Lord Raglan’s Opinion on the War&mdash;The Landing of the Allies at Eupatoria&mdash;Battle of the
-Alma&mdash;Russian Fleet Sunk at Sebastopol&mdash;At Balaclava&mdash;Death of Marshal St. Arnaud&mdash;The Siege of
-Sebastopol&mdash;Battles of Balaclava and Inkermann&mdash;Mismanagement of the War&mdash;Public Indignation
-against the Government&mdash;Mr. Roebuck’s Motion&mdash;Fall of the Coalition Ministry</td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_574">574</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><th><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXI">CHAPTER XXXI.</a>
-<br /><br /><span class="subhd">PARTY GOVERNMENT AND WAR.</span></th></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd">Stratford de Redcliffe Cooling Down&mdash;Tory Distrust of the French Alliance&mdash;The Queen’s Kindness to
-Lord Aberdeen&mdash;The Emperor Napoleon and Prince Albert&mdash;The Prince Visits France&mdash;The Queen at
-Balmoral&mdash;Her Feelings towards the Prince of Prussia&mdash;The Queen holds a Council of War&mdash;She Demands
-Reinforcements for Lord Raglan&mdash;Napoleon’s Alarm&mdash;Prince Albert’s Plan for an Army of
-Reserve&mdash;The Queen on the Austrian Proposals&mdash;Her Anxiety about the Troops&mdash;Raglan’s Meagre
-Despatches&mdash;The Queen and Miss Nightingale&mdash;At Work for the Soldiers&mdash;Extorting Information from
-Lord Raglan&mdash;Ministerial Changes&mdash;Lord John Russell’s Selfishness&mdash;A Miserly Whig Duke&mdash;The
-Queen’s Disgust at Russell’s Treachery&mdash;Resignation of Russell&mdash;Fall of the Coalition&mdash;The Queen
-and the Crisis&mdash;She holds out the Olive Branch to Palmerston&mdash;Palmerston’s Cabinet&mdash;Quarrel between
-Mr. Disraeli and Lord Derby&mdash;The Sebastopol Committee&mdash;Mr. Roebuck and Prince Albert&mdash;The
-Vienna Conference and the Death of Czar Nicholas&mdash;The Austrian Compromise&mdash;Parties and the
-War&mdash;Russell’s Humiliation&mdash;He Resigns in Disgrace&mdash;The Queen Quashes the Peace Negotiations&mdash;A
-Royal Blunder&mdash;The Queen tries to Gag the Peelites&mdash;Aberdeen Browbeaten by the Court&mdash;Canrobert’s
-Resignation&mdash;Crimean Successes&mdash;Failure of the Attack on the Redan&mdash;Death of Raglan</td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_618">618</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><th><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXII">CHAPTER XXXII.</a>
-<br /><br /><span class="subhd">ROYALTY AND THE WAR.</span></th></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd">Financing the War&mdash;The Queen’s Opinion of War Loans&mdash;A Dreadful Winter&mdash;Distress in the Country&mdash;The
-“Devil” in Devonshire&mdash;Bread Riots&mdash;War Loans and a War Budget&mdash;The Queen and the Wounded
-Soldiers&mdash;Her Condemnation of “the Hulks”&mdash;Presentation of War Medals in Hyde Park&mdash;Visit of the
-Emperor and Empress of the French&mdash;A Plot to Capture the Queen&mdash;Councils of War at Windsor&mdash;The
-Grand Chapter of the Order of the Garter&mdash;Imperial Compliments&mdash;Napoleon III. in the City&mdash;At
-the Opera&mdash;The Queen’s Birthday Gift to the Emperor&mdash;Scarlet Fever at Osborne&mdash;Prorogation of
-Parliament&mdash;A Court Intrigue with Dom Pedro of Portugal&mdash;The Queen Visits Paris&mdash;Her Reception
-at St. Cloud&mdash;The Ball at the Hôtel de Ville&mdash;Staring at the “Koh-i-noor”&mdash;At the Tomb of the Great
-Emperor&mdash;Prince Bismarck’s Introduction to the Queen&mdash;Home again&mdash;Lord Clarendon on the Queen’s
-Visit to Paris&mdash;How the Prince of Wales Enjoyed himself&mdash;At Balmoral&mdash;The Bonfire on Craig Gowan&mdash;Sebastopol
-Rejoicings&mdash;“A Witches’ Dance supported by Whisky”&mdash;Courtship of the Princess
-Royal&mdash;Prince Frederick William of Prussia&mdash;His Proposal of Marriage&mdash;Attacks of the <i>Times</i>&mdash;Visit
-of Victor Emmanuel&mdash;His Reputation in Paris&mdash;Memorial of the Grenadier Guards&mdash;Fresh Charges
-against Prince Albert&mdash;His Vindication of the Crimean Officers</td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_643">643</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><th><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIII">CHAPTER XXXIII.</a>
-<br /><br /><span class="subhd">THE END OF THE WAR.</span></th></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd">Lord Raglan’s Successor&mdash;“Take Care of Dowb”&mdash;Lord Panmure’s Nepotism&mdash;The Crisis of the War&mdash;Gortschakoff’s
-Last Struggle&mdash;The Battle of the Tchernaya River&mdash;France and the War&mdash;A Despondent
-Court&mdash;Divided Counsels among the Allies&mdash;The Bridge of Rafts&mdash;The Grand Bombardment&mdash;French
-Attack on the Malakoff&mdash;British Attack on the Redan&mdash;Why the Attack Failed&mdash;The “Hero
-of the Redan”&mdash;Pélissier’s Message to Simpson&mdash;Appeal to Sir Colin Campbell&mdash;Evacuation of the Redan&mdash;Fall
-of Sebastopol&mdash;Retreat of the Russians to the North Town&mdash;Paralysis of the Victors&mdash;The
-Queen’s Anger&mdash;Her Remonstrances with Lord Panmure&mdash;A New Commander-in-Chief&mdash;Taking Care
-of “Dowb”&mdash;Codrington Chosen&mdash;The Wintry Crimean Watch&mdash;Diplomatic Humiliation of Palmerston&mdash;France
-Negotiates Secretly Terms of Peace with Austria&mdash;Palmerston’s Indignant Remonstrances&mdash;The
-Queen Objects to Prosecute the War Alone&mdash;The Surrender of Palmerston&mdash;He Abandons the
-Turks&mdash;An Unpopular Peace&mdash;The Tories Offer to Support the Peace&mdash;The Queen and the Parliament
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_vi" id="page_vi">{vi}</a></span>of 1856</td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_669">669</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><th><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIV">CHAPTER XXXIV.</a>
-<br /><br /><span class="subhd">PEACE AND PARLIAMENT.</span></th></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd">Opening of Parliament&mdash;A Cold Speech from the Throne&mdash;Moderation of Militant Toryism&mdash;Mr. Disraeli’s
-Cynical Strategy&mdash;The Betrayal of Kars&mdash;The Life Peerage Controversy&mdash;Baron Parke’s Nickname&mdash;More
-Attacks on Prince Albert&mdash;Court Favouritism among Men of Science&mdash;The Congress of Paris&mdash;How
-France Betrayed England&mdash;Walewski’s Intrigues with Orloff&mdash;Mr. Greville’s Pictures of French
-Official Life&mdash;Snubbing Bonapartist Statesmen&mdash;Peace Proclaimed&mdash;Popular Rejoicings&mdash;A Memento
-of the Congress&mdash;The Terms of Peace&mdash;The Tripartite Treaty&mdash;The Queen’s Opinion of the Settlement&mdash;Parliamentary
-Criticism on the Treaty of Paris&mdash;Stagnation of Public Life in England&mdash;The Queen’s
-“Happy Family” Dinner Party&mdash;A little “Tiff” with America&mdash;The Restoration of H.M.S. <i>Resolute</i>&mdash;The
-Budget&mdash;Palmerston’s Tortuous Italian Policy&mdash;The Failure of his Domestic Policy&mdash;The Confirmation
-of the Princess Royal&mdash;Robbery of the Royal Nursery Plate&mdash;Prince Alfred’s Tutor&mdash;Reviews
-of Crimean Troops&mdash;Debates on the Purchase System&mdash;Lord Hardinge’s Tragic Death&mdash;The Duke of
-Cambridge as Commander-in-Chief&mdash;Miss Nightingale’s Visit to Balmoral&mdash;Coronation of the Czar&mdash;Russian
-Chicanery at Paris&mdash;A Bad Map and a False Frontier&mdash;Quarrel between Prussia and Switzerland&mdash;Quarrel
-between England and the Sicilies&mdash;Death of the Queen’s Half-Brother&mdash;Settlement of
-the Dispute with Russia&mdash;“The Dodge that Saved us”</td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_679">679</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><th><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXV">CHAPTER XXXV.</a>
-<br /><br /><span class="subhd">TWO LITTLE WARS AND A “PENAL DISSOLUTION.”</span></th></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd">The Queen’s New Year Greeting to Napoleon III.&mdash;A Gladstone-Disraeli Coalition&mdash;A Scene in the
-Carlton Club&mdash;Mr. Disraeli’s Attack on Lord Palmerston’s Foreign Policy&mdash;The Queen Consents to
-Reduce the Income Tax&mdash;A Fallacious Budget, with Imaginary Remissions&mdash;The Persian War&mdash;General
-Outram’s Victories&mdash;Unpopularity of the War&mdash;Making War without Consulting Parliament&mdash;The
-Rupture with China&mdash;A “Prancing Proconsul”&mdash;The Bombardment of Canton&mdash;Defeat of Lord
-Palmerston, and his Appeal to the Country&mdash;A Penal Dissolution&mdash;Abortive Coalition between the
-Peelites and Tories&mdash;Mr. Gladstone and the Intriguers&mdash;Split in the Peelite Party&mdash;Palmerston’s Victory
-at the Polls&mdash;The Rout of the Manchester School&mdash;The Lesson of the Election&mdash;Opening of the New
-Parliament&mdash;The Work of the Session&mdash;Mr. Gladstone’s Obstruction of the Divorce Bill&mdash;The Settlement
-of the Neufchâtel Difficulty&mdash;The Question of the Principalities&mdash;Visit of the French Emperor
-to the Queen</td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_699">699</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><th><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVI">CHAPTER XXXVI.</a>
-<br /><br /><span class="subhd">THE INDIAN MUTINY.</span></th></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd">The Centenary of Plassey&mdash;Rumours of Rebellion&mdash;Causes of the Mutiny&mdash;The Annexation of Oudh&mdash;Lord
-Dalhousie’s Indian Policy&mdash;Its Disturbing Effect on the Minds of the Natives&mdash;The Royal Family of
-Delhi&mdash;The Hindoo “Sumbut”&mdash;The Discontent of the Bengal Army&mdash;The Grievances of the Sepoy&mdash;The
-Greased Cartridges&mdash;The Mystery of the “Chupatties”&mdash;Mutiny of the Garrison at Meerut&mdash;The March
-to Delhi&mdash;Sir Henry Lawrence at Lucknow&mdash;The Tragedy of Cawnpore&mdash;Death of the Commander-in-Chief&mdash;Who
-took Delhi?&mdash;Sir John Lawrence in the Punjab&mdash;The Saviour of India&mdash;Lord Canning at
-Calcutta&mdash;First Relief of Lucknow&mdash;Despatch of Sir Colin Campbell&mdash;Second Relief of Lucknow&mdash;Savage
-Fighting at the Secunder-baugh&mdash;The Queen’s Letter to Sir Colin Campbell&mdash;His Retreat to Cawnpore&mdash;His
-Management of the Campaign&mdash;Windham’s Defeat at the Pandoo River&mdash;Sir Colin Campbell’s
-Victory over the Gwalior Army</td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_720">720</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><th><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVII">CHAPTER XXXVII.</a>
-<br /><br /><span class="subhd">THE ROYAL MARRIAGE.</span></th></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd">Birth of Princess Beatrice&mdash;Death of the Duchess of Gloucester&mdash;A Royal Romance&mdash;Franco-Russian
-Intrigues&mdash;The Art Treasures Exhibition at Manchester&mdash;Announcement of the Marriage of the Princess
-Royal&mdash;Prince Albert’s Views on Royal Grants&mdash;The Controversy on the Grant to the Princess Royal&mdash;Visit
-of the Grand Duke Constantine&mdash;The Christening of Princess Beatrice&mdash;Prince Albert’s Title as
-Prince Consort Legalised&mdash;The First Distribution of the Victoria Cross&mdash;Opposition to the Order&mdash;The
-Queen’s Visit to Manchester&mdash;Departure of the Prince of Wales to Germany&mdash;The Queen and the Indian
-Mutiny&mdash;Her Controversy with Lord Palmerston&mdash;Sudden Death of the Duchess of Nemours&mdash;The
-Marriage of the Princess Royal&mdash;The Scene in the Chapel&mdash;On the Balcony of Buckingham Palace&mdash;The
-Illuminations in London&mdash;The Bride and Bridegroom at Windsor&mdash;The Last Adieus&mdash;The Departure of
-the Bride and Bridegroom to Germany</td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_738">738</a></td></tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_vii" id="page_vii">{vii}</a></span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<h2><a name="LIST_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS" id="LIST_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS"></a>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rt"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_001">The Prince of Wales (<i>From a Photograph by Mr. A. Bassano, London</i>)</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#ill_001"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_002">The Western Suburbs of Victoria, Vancouver</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_385">385</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_003">St. George’s Chapel, Windsor</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_388">388</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_004">John Bright (1857)</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_389">389</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_005">Royal Palace, Naples</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_392">392</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_006">Lady Palmerston</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_393">393</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_007">Sir Charles Napier</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_396">396</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_008">The Battle of Gujerat</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_397">397</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_009">The British Troops Entering Multan</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_400">400</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_010">Sir Harry Smith</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_401">401</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_011">Victoria Castle, Killiney&mdash;Bray Head in the distance</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_404">404</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_012">Royal Visit to Ireland: the Queen Leaving Kingstown</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_405">405</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_013">Visit of the Queen and Prince Albert to the Linen , Belfast</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_409">409</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_014">Castleton of Braemar</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_412">412</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_015">At Balmoral: a Morning Call</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_413">413</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_016">The Royal Barge</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_416">416</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_017">Opening of the London Coal Exchange&mdash;Arrival of Royal Procession at the Custom-House Quay</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_417">417</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_018">The Chamber of Representatives, Brussels</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_420">420</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_019">Louis Kossuth (1850)</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_421">421</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_020">The White Drawing-Room, Windsor Castle</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_424">424</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_021">The Piræus, Athens</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_425">425</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_022">Grand Entrance, Westminster Palace</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_429">429</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_023">Mr. (afterwards Sir Alexander) Cockburn</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_432">432</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_024">Cape Town</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_433">433</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_025">Mr. Gladstone (1855)</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_436">436</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_026">Windsor Castle: View from the Quadrangle</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_437">437</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_027">View in Phœnix Park, Dublin</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_440">440</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_028">Mr. Horsman</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_441">441</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_029">The Funeral of Sir Robert Peel: the Tenantry Assembling at the Lodge, Drayton Manor</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_444">444</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_030">The Funeral of Sir Robert Peel: the Ceremony in Drayton Bassett Church</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_445">445</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_031">Meeting of the Ladies’ Committee at Stafford House in Aid of the Great Exhibition</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_449">449</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_032">Cambridge House, Piccadilly (1854)</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_452">452</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_033">The Queen and Prince Arthur (<i>After Winterhalter</i>, 1850) </a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_452"><i>To face</i> 452</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_034">Pate’s Assault on the Queen</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_453">453</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_035">Lord John Russell (1850)</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_456">456</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_036">The Royal Apartments, Holyrood Palace</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_461">461</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_037">St. Stephen’s Crypt, Westminster Palace</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_464">464</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_038">Mr. Locke King</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_465">465</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_039">The Green Drawing-Room, Windsor Castle</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_468">468</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_040">Sir George Cornewall Lewis</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_469">469</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_041">The Caffre War: Natives Attacking a Convoy</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_472">472</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_042">Group of Dyaks</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_473">473</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_043">Lord Carlisle</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_476">476</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_044">The Great Exhibition, Hyde Park</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_477">477</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_045">Sir Joseph Paxton</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_481">481</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_046">Opening of the Great Exhibition, Hyde Park<br />
-(<i>After the Picture by Eugène Lamé</i>) </a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_482"><i>To face</i> 482</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_047">St. George’s Hall, Liverpool</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_484">484</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_048">The Royal Visit to Worsley Hall: the State Barge on the Bridgwater Canal</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_485">485</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_049">The Queen’s Arrival in Peel Park: Children of the Manchester and Salford Schools Singing the National Anthem</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_489">489</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_050">The Coup d’État: Lancers Charging the Crowd in the Boulevards of Paris</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_492">492</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_051">Prince Charles Louis Napoleon</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_493">493</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_052">Diana Fountain, Bushey Park</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_496">496</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_053">Harnessing the Black Horses at the Royal Mews, Buckingham Palace (<i>After the Painting by Charles Lutyens. In the Possession of the Earl of Bradford</i>)</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_497">497</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_054">Sidney Herbert (<i>After the Statue by Foley</i>)</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_500">500</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_055">St. Albans, from Verulam</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_501">501</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_056">View near Rangoon</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_504">504</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_057">Major Fraser’s Storming Party Carrying the Stockade in Front of Rangoon</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_505">505</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_058">Walmer Castle</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_508">508</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_059">The Duke of Wellington (<i>After the Portrait by Count D’Orsay</i>)</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_509">509</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_060">The Wellington Monument in St. Paul’s Cathedral, completed in 1878 (<i>By Alfred Stevens</i>)</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_513">513</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_061">North Terrace and Wykeham Tower, Windsor Castle</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_516">516</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_062">The Duke of Argyle</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_517">517</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_063">View in Braemar</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_520">520</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_064">The Queen’s Visit to the Britannia Tubular Bridge</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_521">521</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_065">Queen Victoria (<i>After the Equestrian Portrait by Count D’Orsay</i>) </a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_521"><i>To face</i>521</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_066">Notre Dame, Paris (West Front)</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_524">524</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_067">Comte de Montalembert</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_525">525</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_068">Mdlle. Eugenia de Montijo, afterwards Empress of the French</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_529">529</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_069">Prince Jeróme Bonaparte</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_532">532</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_070">Sketch in the Outer Cloisters, Windsor Castle</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_533">533</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_071">The Conveying of Australian Gold from the East India Docks to the Bank of England (<i>After the Engraving in the “Illustrated London News”</i>)</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_537">537</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_072">Study of a Child (<i>After an Etching by the Queen</i>)</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_539">539</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_073">Off the Coast of Asia Minor (Turkey in Asia)</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_540">540</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_074">Bazaar in Constantinople</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_541">541</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_075">Convent of the Nativity, Bethlehem</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_544">544</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_076">Interior of the Chapel of the Nativity, Bethlehem</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_545">545</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_077">The Nicolai Bridge across the Neva, St. Petersburg</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_548">548</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_078">Lord Stratford de Redcliffe (<i>From a Photograph by Messrs. Boning and Small</i>)</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_549">549</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_079">Town Hall, Vienna</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_552">552</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_080">Prince Menschikoff</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_553">553</a>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_viii" id="page_viii">{viii}</a></span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_081">The Mosque of Selim II. at Adrianople</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_557">557</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_082">The Duke of Newcastle</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_560">560</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_083">Destruction of the Turkish Fleet at Sinope</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_561">561</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_084">The Throne Room, Windsor Castle</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_564">564</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_085">Sebastopol</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_565">565</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_086">Fire in the Prince of Wales’s Tower, Windsor Castle</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_568">568</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_087">The Queen at the Camp at Chobham </a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_568"><i>To face</i> 568</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_088">Runnymede</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_569">569</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_089">Spithead</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_572">572</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_090">Balmoral Castle from the Road</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_573">573</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_091">The Outer Cloisters and Anne Boleyn’s Window, Windsor Castle</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_577">577</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_092">Russian Repulse at Silistria</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_580">580</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_093">Lord Raglan</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_581">581</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_094">The Queen Waving Farewell to the <i>Duke of Wellington</i> Flag-ship</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_585">585</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_095">Marshal St. Arnaud</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_588">588</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_096">Forts Alexander and Peter the Great, Cronstadt</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_589">589</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_097">Omar Pasha</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_592">592</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_098">Map of the Crimea</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_593">593</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_099">The Barracks Hospital, Scutari</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_596">596</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_100">Odessa</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_597">597</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_101">Heights of the Alma</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_600">600</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_102">Sir John Burgoyne</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_601">601</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_103">Pembroke Lodge, Richmond</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_604">604</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_104">Codrington’s Brigade (23rd Royal Welsh Fusileers) at the Alma</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_605">605</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_105">General Canrobert</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_608">608</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_106">Entrance to Balaclava Harbour</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_609">609</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_107">Sir Colin Campbell</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_612">612</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_108">Balaclava&mdash;“The Thin Red Line” (<i>After the Painting by Robert Gibb, R.S.A. In the Possession of Archibald Ramsden, Esq., Leeds</i>)</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_613">613</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_109">Valley of Inkermann</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_616">616</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_110">The Storm off Balaclava</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_617">617</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_111">Mr. Roebuck (1858)</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_620">620</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_112">Buckingham Palace, from St. James’s Park</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_621">621</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_113">Miss Nightingale and the Nurses in the Barracks Hospital at Scutari</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_625">625</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_114">Henry VIII.’s Gateway, Windsor Castle</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_628">628</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_115">Refreshment Room, House of Lords</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_629">629</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_116">Mr. Sidney Herbert (afterwards Lord Herbert of Lea)</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_632">632</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_117">The Winter Palace, St. Petersburg</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_633">633</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_118">Grand Reception Room, Windsor Castle</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_636">636</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_119">The Hundred Steps, Windsor Castle</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_637">637</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_120">View in the Crimea: The Palace Woronzow, Alupka</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_641">641</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_121">The Wounded Soldier’s Toast&mdash;“The Queen!”</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_645">645</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_122">The Queen Distributing the Crimean Medal at the Horseguards Parade Ground </a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_647"><i>To face</i> 647</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_123">Windsor Castle from the Brocas</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_648">648</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_124">The Queen Investing the Emperor of the French with the Order of the Garter</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_649">649</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_125">The Waterloo Room, Windsor Castle</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_652">652</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_126">The Royal and Imperial Visit to the Crystal Palace: the Procession down the Nave</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_653">653</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_127">The Queen at the Fête in the Forest of St. Germain</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_657">657</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_128">Map of Crathie and Braemar</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_660">660</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_129">The Wooing of the Princess Royal</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_664">664</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_130">Count Cavour</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_665">665</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_131">Balaclava: at Peace (<i>From a Drawing made Twenty-five Years after the Crimean War</i>)</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_668">668</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_132">Cathcart’s Hill, Crimea</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_669">669</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_133">French Attack on the Malakoff</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_672">672</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_134">General Todleben</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_673">673</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_135">The Throne Room, St James’s Palace (<i>From a Photograph by H. N. King</i>)</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_677">677</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_136">View in the Crimea: Jalta</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_680">680</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_137">Miss Nightingale</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_681">681</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_138">The Emperor of Austria</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_684">684</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_139">The Conference of Paris, 1856</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_685">685</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_140">Visit of the Queen and Prince Albert to the<br />
-<i>Resolute</i></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_689">689</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_141">Portsmouth</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_692">692</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_142">Sir De Lacy Evans</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_693">693</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_143">View in Berne</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_697">697</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_144">Old Windsor Lock (<i>From a Photograph by Taunt and Co., Oxford</i>)</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_701">701</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_145">Sir John Bowring</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_705">705</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_146">Chinese Lorchas in the Canton River</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_709">709</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_147">The Cascade: Virginia Water</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_712">712</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_148">Plan of Windsor Castle</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_713">713</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_149">The Duke of Cambridge (<i>From a Photograph by Bassano</i>)</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_717">717</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_150">The Barracks at Meerut</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_721">721</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_151">Sir James Outram</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_725">725</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_152">Cawnpore</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_729">729</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_153">Lord Lawrence</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_733">733</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_154">Scene at the First Relief of Lucknow</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_736">736</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_155">The Hastings Chantry, St George’s Chapel, Windsor</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_741">741</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_156">The Victoria Cross</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_744">744</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_157">The Queen Distributing the Victoria Crosses in Hyde Park</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_745">745</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_158">The Crimson Drawing-Room, Windsor Castle</a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_749">749</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top" class="pdd"><a href="#ill_159">Marriage of the Princess Royal (<i>After the Picture by John Philip, R.A.</i>) </a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_751"><i>To face</i> 751</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_385" id="page_385">{385}</a></span>&nbsp; </p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_002" id="ill_002"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_385.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_385.jpg" height="230" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE WESTERN SUBURBS OF VICTORIA, VANCOUVER ISLAND.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXI" id="CHAPTER_XXI"></a>CHAPTER XXI.<br /><br />
-<small>COLONIAL HOME RULE AND FINANCIAL REFORM.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>Mr. Roebuck and Emigration&mdash;Self-Government and the
-Colonies&mdash;Unsympathetic Whig Policy&mdash;Radicals and the Colonial
-Office&mdash;The Peelites and Hudson’s Bay Company&mdash;Financial
-Reform&mdash;Mr. Cobden at Variance with Mr. Bright&mdash;Combined
-Agitators&mdash;The Demand for Retrenchment&mdash;Trade and the Flag&mdash;Tories
-and Taxes&mdash;A <i>reductio ad absurdum</i>&mdash;A Raid on a
-Surplus&mdash;International Arbitration&mdash;Parliamentary
-Reform&mdash;Parliament and the Jews&mdash;The Tories oppose the Alteration
-of the Parliamentary Oath&mdash;Episcopal Prejudice&mdash;Tory
-Obstructionists&mdash;An Ordnance Department Scandal&mdash;Mr. Delane’s
-Attacks on Lord Palmerston in the <i>Times</i>&mdash;The Queen Remonstrates
-against Lord Palmerston’s Recklessness&mdash;An Anti-Palmerstonian
-Cabal&mdash;Lady Palmerston’s Intrigues&mdash;Lord Brougham Betrays the
-Cabal&mdash;Palmerston’s Victory&mdash;Rome and France&mdash;The Second War&mdash;The
-Disaster of Chillianwalla&mdash;Indignation of the Country&mdash;Lord Gough’s
-Recall&mdash;Napier to the Rescue&mdash;The East India Directors Oppose
-Napier’s Appointment&mdash;The Convict War at the Cape&mdash;Boycotting the
-Governor.</p></div>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="smcap">Another</span> notable event in the Colonial history of 1849 was the
-introduction by Mr. Roebuck, on the 14th of May, of a Bill for the
-better government of the Colonies. The debate on this measure brought
-vividly before the minds of thoughtful men the folly upon which our
-step-motherly treatment of the Colonies was based. “Emigration by
-itself,” exclaimed Mr. Roebuck, “is misery;” and yet the idea of
-colonisation which prevailed at the Colonial Office was simply to
-transport as many people as possible to distant wilds, utterly
-regardless of their ultimate fate. Why should we not introduce something
-like system, asked Mr. Roebuck, into our Colonial policy, and recognise
-the fact that it was now not tribute, but trade that we might expect to
-get<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_386" id="page_386">{386}</a></span> from them? His proposal was to have one plan for settling a colony,
-another for organising it when settled, and a third for groups of
-colonies in confederation or union. His panacea for all Colonial ills
-was to get rid of “red tape” at the Colonial Office and to give the
-Colonies Home Rule. The difficulties, said Mr. Hawes, as representing
-Lord Grey and the Colonial Office, in the way of granting Home Rule to
-North-American Colonies would be insuperable; besides, England had far
-too many Colonies already, so that it was of little use to bring forward
-schemes for settling new ones! Whigs like Lord John Russell condemned a
-policy which tended to substitute a fixed Parliamentary rule for the
-discretion of a responsible Minister, and contended that physical
-impediments rendered the union of Canada into one Dominion impossible.
-Mr. Gladstone, however, warmly supported Mr. Roebuck’s policy. Even then
-the leaven of the Home Ruler was working in his mind. Mr. Roebuck was
-beaten by 116 to 73. But this did not put a stop to these Colonial
-debates.</p>
-
-<p>On the 26th of June Sir William Molesworth moved an Address to the Queen
-begging for a Commission to inquire into the Administration of the
-Colonies, more especially with a view to lessen the cost of their
-government, and to give free scope to individual enterprise in
-colonising. He startled the House by quoting figures which showed that,
-in fifteen years, “a series of remarkable events in the Colonies” had
-cost England the modest sum of eighty millions sterling. It could not
-have cost more to settle 4,000,000 able and energetic emigrants in
-Australia alone; and yet in the whole Colonial Empire in 1849, it
-appears there were not more than 1,000,000 persons of British or Irish
-descent. Charles Buller some years before had condemned the Colonial
-Office for its arbitrary character, its indifference to local feeling,
-and its ignorance of local wants, its procrastination and vacillation,
-its secrecy and irresponsibility, its servitude to parties and cliques,
-its injustice, and its disorder. In this debate Lord Grey’s
-Administration was held to aptly illustrate all these vices; and yet
-Lord Grey had become Colonial Minister because he stood pledged to cure
-them. Lord Grey’s idea of Colonial government seemed to be either to
-rule the Colony with a high hand from London, or, if it had some
-semblance of representative institutions, to govern it by means of a
-violent Party minority in the popular Chamber, co-operating with a
-majority of the Council nominated by the Crown. Self-government for
-Colonies that were fit for it, and intelligent government for those that
-were not, were Sir William Molesworth’s remedies. A strong plea for
-reducing the extravagant outlay on official salaries and useless
-military expenditure was pressed; and protests against convict
-emigration, which, together with our misgovernment, drove honest English
-Colonists to the United States, were entered. Mr. Hume and Mr.
-Gladstone, on behalf of the Radicals and Peelites, gave a general
-support to the motion; but the indefatigable Mr. Hawes came smilingly to
-the defence of Lord Grey with his stereotyped “<i>Non possumus</i>,” and Lord
-John Russell declared that the scope of the reference to the Commission
-was too<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_387" id="page_387">{387}</a></span> vast and wide for practical purposes. His novel argument was
-that to attempt to define the limits of Imperial and local questions
-must end in bitter disputes between the Colonies and the mother country.
-Undeterred by the failure of the Radicals to force a rational Colonial
-policy on the Whigs, the Peelites next took up the matter, and on the
-19th of June Lord Lincoln moved an Address to the Crown expressing the
-opinion that the Hudson’s Bay Company, to which Vancouver Island had
-been granted by Royal Charter, was ill-adapted for ruling or developing
-the resources of a colony founded on principles of political and
-commercial freedom, and generally challenging the validity of the grant.
-One would have thought that it needed little argument to demonstrate the
-unwisdom of founding a colony to be ruled by an absentee proprietary,
-earning its revenues by a trading monopoly. The history of the United
-States was full of examples of this species of folly, and both Lord
-Lincoln and Mr. Hume argued their case with the greatest ability. But
-they spoke to no purpose, for just as Mr. Hume was warming to his work
-the House was counted out! In these days, when the air is full of
-schemes for Imperial Federation, and Home Rule, it is interesting to
-note how, in 1849, the battle of Colonial Reform was fought by a
-combination of Conservative Peelites and “stalwart” Radicals, against
-the Whigs, who were jealously opposed to all extensions of Colonial
-autonomy.</p>
-
-<p>After Colonial policy, and not long after it in point of interest, came
-Finance. The erratic schemes of the Chancellor of the Exchequer in the
-preceding year, together with the distress which afflicted the country,
-had made everybody dissatisfied with the financial policy of the
-Government. The Protectionists were always at hand to suggest that the
-pressure of taxation was due to Free Trade. The Free Traders were never
-weary of retorting that it was due to extravagant expenditure, and could
-be remedied by retrenchment. Mr. Cobden and Mr. Bright thus felt that
-their mission in life did not end with the Repeal of the Corn Laws. If
-they were to keep the ground they had taken, it seemed to them they must
-start an agitation to reduce public expenditure. Mr. Bright rather
-favoured the notion of agitating for an extension of the Franchise, on
-the supposition that, if more taxpayers had votes, Government, in
-deference to their prejudices, would be chary of augmenting public
-burdens. Ultimately, however, they agreed to combine the two
-agitations,<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> and work with each other as before. The popular feeling
-in favour of economy was first manifested by the formation of Financial
-Reform Associations in the large towns&mdash;that of Liverpool being
-especially energetic&mdash;and they were soon busy discussing a practical
-plan, which emanated from the fertile brain of Cobden, for the remission
-of the Malt Tax and other public burdens. Cobden’s scheme was simply to
-effect retrenchment by going back to the scale of expenditure that was
-deemed adequate in 1835, and in this way he proposed to reduce taxation
-by about £10,000,000 sterling. Quite a flutter of excitement ran through
-the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_388" id="page_388">{388}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_003" id="ill_003"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_388.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_388.jpg" width="329" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>ST. GEORGE’S CHAPEL, WINDSOR.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>House of Commons when, on the 26th of February, he brought his plan
-under its notice. He contended that military expenditure had caused the
-increase of £10,000,000, which he desired to reduce. Therefore he moved
-that the expenditure under this head be diminished with all practicable
-speed. The insular position of England was itself a sure defence against
-her enemies.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_389" id="page_389">{389}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_004" id="ill_004"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_389.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_389.jpg" height="334" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>JOHN BRIGHT (1857).</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Provided she did not interfere recklessly with foreign nations, she had
-less to fear in 1849 than in 1835. Why, then, should the military and
-naval expenditure of 1835 be exceeded? Vast sums of money, too, were
-spent on the Colonies. Here also a reduction might be effected, for the
-English taxpayer got no more food from the Colonies than the foreign one
-did. At this period it was evident that Mr. Cobden had not put to the
-test the sound maxim that “trade follows the flag.” The answer of the
-Chancellor of the Exchequer was that in 1835, to the expenditure of
-which Mr. Cobden wanted to revert, no adequate provision had been made
-for the true wants of the country; and that, since then, many things had
-happened to increase expenditure unavoidably. The introduction of steam
-into the Navy was an illustration of these changes. Moreover, the
-Government had reduced expenditure by about a million and a<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_390" id="page_390">{390}</a></span> half
-sterling&mdash;and that was surely a pledge of their earnestness as financial
-reformers.</p>
-
-<p>The Tories put Mr. Herries forward to attack both parties. He blamed
-Ministers for encouraging the financial reformers, and denounced Mr.
-Cobden for the violence of his speeches out of doors on the subject. The
-policy of the Tories was to demand that expenditure should not be
-lessened, whilst there was ground for anxiety as to foreign affairs. One
-of their arguments was an odd one. It was that, as the revenue was still
-maintained in spite of the repeal of vast sums of taxation, there was no
-ground for pretending that retrenchment was necessary because the people
-felt that taxation was pressing hard on them. They did not seem to see
-that this was either an argument in favour of raising revenue without
-imposing any taxes at all&mdash;which was a <i>reductio ad absurdum</i>&mdash;or an
-argument to show that reductions of taxation still left Government with
-enough money in hand to defend the interests of the country, which was
-virtually an admission that Mr. Cobden’s plan, if tried, could do no
-harm. The Free Traders made a bid for the rural vote by arguing that, if
-the landed interest wanted the relief which the Protectionists promised
-them, they ought to vote for the reduction in expenditure, which would
-enable Parliament to grant that relief. Mr. Cobden’s first scheme of
-Financial Reform was rejected by a vote of 275 to 78. But this did not
-allay the uneasiness of the public, who began to fret over the
-extraordinary delay that took place in the production of the Budget. It
-was not till the 29th of June that Sir Charles Wood made his financial
-statement to the House. It was not a cheering one. The expenditure,
-which was £53,287,110, had exceeded the Ministerial estimate by
-£1,219,379, and it exceeded the revenue of the year by £269,378. Of
-course, by excluding unexpected outlays on Irish distress, Canadian
-emigration, &amp;c., a more favourable state of accounts could be shown;
-but, as the excluded money had been spent, there was really no reason
-for ignoring it. For the coming year his estimated expenditure, he said,
-would be £52,157,696, and his estimated receipts would yield, he hoped,
-a surplus over that of £94,304. Sir Charles Wood’s strongest points were
-that every effort would be made to keep current expenditure within
-current income, and that instead of using small surpluses to remit small
-sums of taxation, they would be kept as the nucleus of large surpluses,
-for the reduction of large amounts of taxation. The Radicals and
-Financial Reformers were not satisfied with Sir Charles Wood’s long list
-of objectionable taxes that had been removed. In spite of all that,
-expenditure increased&mdash;and what was worse, there was a steady increase
-in permanent burdens on the revenue, in the shape of charges for the
-Public Debt. Mr. Hume demanded that Excise be done away with, and that
-the example of Sir James Graham, who reduced the expenses of the
-Admiralty by £1,200,000, be followed. Mr. Milner Gibson attacked the
-paper duty, the newspaper stamp duty, and the tax on advertisements, as
-taxes on knowledge; and he cited<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_391" id="page_391">{391}</a></span> the petition of the Messrs. Chambers
-of Edinburgh, who declared that the paper duty had stopped the
-continuance of a work for the humbler classes which they were bringing
-out, and of which there had been a sale of 80,000 copies. Everybody
-wanted some special duty repealed, either that on hops, bricks, soap,
-beer, malt, tea, or timber. The Budget was felt to be unsatisfactory,
-for, as Mr. Cobden said, it made the two ends barely meet. At the close
-of the Session (20th of July) Mr. Herries supplemented this discussion
-by starting another question&mdash;that of raising some portion of the
-supplies of the State by a fixed duty on corn. The Protectionists argued
-that Sir Charles Wood’s estimates were too sanguine, and that more taxes
-must be imposed on the people, unless a small duty were put on foreign
-corn. This was not to be a protective duty, but one merely for revenue
-purposes, and as such surely it was justifiable. It would be only a tax
-on food in name; in fact, the defence of the proposal was like the Irish
-vagrant’s apology for the existence of her baby&mdash;“Please, sir, it’s only
-a very little one.” Of course the Free Traders sprang upon Mr. Herries
-with great glee. The Tories were going round the country promising the
-farmers Protection. But when they came to the House of Commons all they
-ventured to ask for was a small fixed duty on corn, which was to be
-levied not for protective but for revenue purposes. The position was an
-awkward one for Mr. Herries. Either his small fixed duty did or did not
-raise the price of corn. If it did, he was deceiving the House of
-Commons. If it did not, he was deceiving his clients among the farmers.
-His move was obviously one for putting heart into a desponding faction.</p>
-
-<p>It has been said that Mr. Cobden and Mr. Bright had come to the
-conclusion that, side by side with the agitation for retrenchment, there
-should be pressed forward that for Parliamentary Reform. Accordingly,
-Mr. Hume introduced his motion for Parliamentary Reform in the House of
-Commons on the 4th of June, demanding Household Suffrage, Vote by
-Ballot, Triennial Parliaments, and something approaching to equal
-electoral districts. The opposition of the Whigs, who argued that reform
-was unnecessary because many good measures had been passed by
-Parliament, and that to extend the franchise would endanger the
-Monarchy, induced the House to reject the motion by a vote of 268 to 82.</p>
-
-<p>But a topic far more interesting to the Queen, whose speciality is
-Foreign Policy, was brought under the notice of the House of Commons by
-Mr. Cobden a few days after Mr. Hume’s motion was disposed of. He
-suggested a plan whereby wars might cease, and civilised nations might
-compose their quarrels by Arbitration. On the 12th of June Cobden moved
-an Address to the Crown, praying that Foreign Powers might be invited to
-concur in treaties binding them to accept Arbitration in settling their
-disputes with each other. The Government did not openly resist the
-motion. They got rid of it by putting up Lord Palmerston to move the
-“previous question;” but the tone<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_392" id="page_392">{392}</a></span> of the debate showed that, though the
-House was dubious about the practicability of Mr. Cobden’s plan, it had
-been profoundly impressed with his reasoning.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_005" id="ill_005"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_392.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_392.jpg" width="325" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>ROYAL PALACE, NAPLES.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Whigs, embarrassed by the refusal of Jewish Members to take the
-Parliamentary Oath, next introduced a Bill expunging from the form of
-the oath the words “on the true faith of a Christian.” The only bitter
-opponents of the measure were the Tories, for most of the Peelites, like
-Mr. Gladstone, supported it. The Commons passed the measure readily
-enough; but in the House of Lords the hostility of the Episcopal Bench
-was fatal to it. Another measure was sacrificed to the ecclesiasticism
-which was then prevalent in Parliament. That was the Bill to legalise
-marriage with a Deceased Wife’s Sister, which Mr. Stuart Wortley
-introduced on the 3rd of May, and the most vehement opponents of which
-were Mr. Goulburn, Mr. Gladstone, and Sir R. Inglis. Mr. Wortley carried
-the Second Reading without much difficulty; but when Mr. Goulburn
-threatened to use the forms of the House to obstruct the further
-progress of the measure, it was withdrawn.</p>
-
-<p>Foreign affairs originated some acrimonious debates in both Houses
-during the Session. On the 6th of March a question was put by Lord
-Stanley to<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_393" id="page_393">{393}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_006" id="ill_006"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_393.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_393.jpg" width="264" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>LADY PALMERSTON.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Lord Lansdowne asking if it were true that a Government contractor had
-been allowed to withdraw arms from a Government store, and supply them
-to the insurgents in Sicily. Lord Lansdowne could not deny that the
-allegation was true; and the incident not only caused a great deal of
-excitement in the country, but it was one that gave much pain to the
-Queen, who naturally saw in it the reckless hand of Lord Palmerston. The
-secret history of the affair was this: Mr. Delane, the editor of the
-<i>Times</i>, happened to meet a Mr. Hood&mdash;an Army contractor&mdash;accidentally.
-In conversation Mr. Hood incidently mentioned to Mr. Delane that when
-certain Sicilian agents applied to him for stores, he explained that he
-had none on hand, having supplied all he possessed to the Government.
-But he observed that if he could persuade the Government to let him have
-these back, he would hand them over to the Sicilian insurrectionary
-agents, replacing the Government stores in due<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_394" id="page_394">{394}</a></span> time. The contractor
-applied to the Ordnance Department, stating that his application had a
-political, as well as a commercial, object. The Department, therefore,
-referred the matter to Lord Palmerston, who sanctioned the transaction.
-The <i>Times</i> immediately published this story, and its attacks on Lord
-Palmerston for having insulted Austria, and connived at insurrection in
-Sicily, annoyed the Queen so seriously that Lord John Russell compelled
-Lord Palmerston to apologise to the King of Naples, for whom he
-cherished a supreme contempt. But when the scandal grew clamant, Mr.
-Bankes opened up an attack in the House of Commons on Lord Palmerston.
-He, however, mixed up with it a great deal of general criticism on the
-policy of the Government in Italy, and gave Lord Palmerston an
-opportunity of winning an easy victory by posing as a friend of freedom,
-and a martyr to the doctrine of nationalities. Lord Palmerston, writes
-Mr. Greville, delivered, in reply to his antagonist, “a slashing,
-impudent speech, full of sarcasm, jokes, and claptrap, the whole
-eminently successful. He quizzed Bankes unmercifully, he expressed
-ultra-Liberal sentiments to please the Radicals, and he gathered shouts,
-laughter, and applause as he dashed and rattled along.”</p>
-
-<p>On the 22nd of March Lord Aberdeen headed another abortive attack on the
-Foreign Policy of the Government. He complained that whereas Lord
-Palmerston had been active in menacing Austria if she meddled with
-Sardinia, he had spoken smooth things to Sardinia&mdash;never going further
-than warning her that if she broke existing treaties, she would be doing
-a dangerous thing. Aberdeen’s attack was regarded as a semi-official
-expression of the ideas of the Sovereign on Lord Palmerston’s policy;
-and it came to this, that Palmerston had made England an object of
-aversion in every capital in Europe, by interfering between Governments
-and their subjects, in a manner which brought on him the animosity of
-both. He had been arrogant to the despots, and, whilst he had encouraged
-the rebels, he had tamely abandoned them, whenever it became irksome to
-defend them. In this debate the Foreign Office was convicted of having
-suppressed an important despatch relating to Austro-Sardinian affairs in
-the papers laid before Parliament. The truth is that the Cabinet did not
-know what was and what was not included in the papers that Lord
-Palmerston chose to publish; and Lord Palmerston sometimes did not even
-give his colleagues enough information to enable them to answer
-questions. One example of this is worth recording, because it directly
-affected the Queen. In May, Lord Lansdowne, in reply to a question of
-Lord Beaumont, told the House of Lords that “no communication whatever
-had been made by the Austrian Government to ours relative to their
-intervention in Italy.” But Collosedo, the Austrian Minister, had five
-days before that gone to Lord Palmerston and communicated to him, by
-order of the Austrian Government, their objects in interfering in Italy.
-Palmerston kept his colleagues in utter ignorance of this interview; and
-when the truth leaked out, Lord Lansdowne had to set himself right the
-best way he could. As<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_395" id="page_395">{395}</a></span> for Palmerston, when he was challenged with
-deceiving his colleagues, and suppressing the fact that this Austrian
-communication had been made to him, he replied impudently that “he had
-quite forgotten it.” His needlessly violent anti-Austrian policy,
-coupled with delinquencies of this kind, was intensely annoying to the
-Queen. Writing under the date of June 3rd, Mr. Greville, in his Journal,
-says, “The Duke of Bedford told me a few days ago that the Queen had
-been again remonstrating about Palmerston more strongly than ever. This
-was in reference to the suppressed Austrian despatch which made such a
-noise. She then sent for Lord John Russell, and told him she could not
-stand it any longer, and he must make some arrangements to get rid of
-Lord Palmerston. This communication was just as fruitless as all her
-preceding ones. I don’t know what Lord John said&mdash;he certainly did not
-pacify her; but, as usual, there it ended. But the consequences of her
-not being able to get any satisfaction from her Minister have been that
-she has poured her feelings and her wrongs into the more sympathetic
-ears of her late Ministers, and I believe that the Queen has told Peel
-everything&mdash;all her own feelings and wishes, and all that passes on the
-subject.”</p>
-
-<p>In these circumstances an anti-Palmerstonian cabal was naturally formed.
-Lord Aberdeen, a devoted friend of the Queen, attempted to organise a
-movement for driving Palmerston from office; but the great obstacle was
-Peel. Nothing could induce him to upset the Ministry which was pledged
-to procure a fair trial for Free Trade. The Court Party, however,
-suggested that, if censured, Palmerston might resign and his colleagues
-stay in; or that they might all resign, and then, when it was shown that
-no other Government could be formed, and that the Peelites could render
-the formation of another Ministry impossible, Lord John Russell and his
-colleagues might come back to power, without Lord Palmerston. The scheme
-failed; but, as Mr. Greville says, the curious thing to note about it is
-“the <i>carte du pays</i> it exhibits,” and the remarkable and most improper
-position which Palmerston occupied <i>vis-à-vis</i> the Queen and his own
-colleagues. “I know not,” writes Mr. Greville, “where to look for a
-parallel to such a mass of anomalies&mdash;the Queen turning from her own
-Prime Minister to confide in the one who was supplanted by him; a
-Minister talking over quietly and confidentially with an outsider by
-what circumstances and what agency his colleague, the Minister for
-Foreign Affairs, might be excluded from the Government; the Queen
-abhorring her Minister, and unable to rid herself of him; John Russell,
-fascinated and subjugated by the ascendency of Palmerston, submitting to
-everything from him, and supporting him right and wrong, the others not
-concealing from those they are in the habit of confiding in their
-disapprobation of the conduct and policy of their colleague, while they
-are all the time supporting the latter and excusing the former, and
-putting themselves under the obligation of identifying themselves with
-his proceedings, and standing or falling with them.”<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_396" id="page_396">{396}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_007" id="ill_007"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_396.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_396.jpg" width="257" height="339" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>SIR CHARLES NAPIER.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Ultimately, however, a confederacy was formed between Lords Aberdeen,
-Stanley, and Brougham to oust Lord Palmerston during the last days of
-the Session, and the Queen, like every other prudent politician in the
-country, who had been alarmed by Palmerston’s restlessness, rejoiced in
-the prospect of getting rid of him. Unfortunately, the only Peer of the
-three who was in earnest in this business was Lord Aberdeen; and yet,
-when the 20th of July, the day for the attack, drew nigh, it was certain
-that the Government would be defeated. Palmerston then played his trump
-card. Lady Palmerston wrote a letter to Brougham, who was to lead the
-attack, conveying to him some mysterious threat, and he promptly
-betrayed his associates. “He made a miserable speech,” writes Mr.
-Greville, “which enraged his colleagues and all the opponents of the
-Government, who swore<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_397" id="page_397">{397}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_008" id="ill_008"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_397.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_397.jpg" width="537" height="376" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE BATTLE OF GUJERAT.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_398" id="page_398">{398}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>(and it was true) that he had sold them.” Brougham’s speech, however,
-contained one good point which deserved to live. It was in it that he
-condemned the interference, not only of our regular diplomatic body in
-the affairs of the Mediterranean Powers, but also the interference of
-“that mongrel sort of monster&mdash;half nautical, half political&mdash;diplomatic
-vice-admirals, speculative ship-captains, observers of rebellion, and
-sympathisers therewith.” The Government were in a minority in the House,
-but they contrived to get a majority of twelve by proxies, in obtaining
-which Lady Palmerston had displayed marvellous address. Thus was the
-great game of faction played at the expense of the people in the early
-years of the Queen’s reign. Not that the people cared much about the
-matter, for it was only those who were behind the scenes who could
-fairly appreciate what Lord Palmerston’s spirited policy really meant.
-It was Radical, but it was reckless; and not only the Queen, but every
-well-informed statesman&mdash;including Liberals like Mr. Cobden and Mr.
-Bright&mdash;simply lived in daily terror, lest the Foreign Secretary might
-suddenly involve the country in a wanton and purposeless European war.</p>
-
-<p>Another important debate was raised by Lord Beaumont, on the 14th of
-May, on French intervention in Rome. The States of the Church had long
-been preparing for a revolt against Papal misgovernment. Pius IX.
-therefore determined to modify the policy of his predecessors, and a
-hapless scheme for satisfying the democracy, by appointing lay
-councillors to work with or check a priestly government was tried&mdash;the
-Pope refusing to bate one jot or tittle of his temporal authority. The
-lay councillors could only meet and debate. They could not initiate
-reforms. No sooner had this constitution been granted than the
-revolution swept over Italy, and the Romans demanded the same
-concessions as had been extorted by the Neapolitans. Concessions were
-given with the intention that they should be withdrawn. Rossi&mdash;once
-French ambassador at Rome&mdash;was made Prime Minister, and to extricate the
-country from financial embarrassment, he proposed to mortgage the
-property of the Church. He was, however, assassinated when entering the
-Capitol; and then the Cardinals began to retract the concessions which
-had been made to Liberalism. The people rose, insisting that the Pope
-should protect the Constitution, and assuring him of their fidelity. He
-then fled to Gaeta. Attempts to reconcile the Pontiff and his people
-failed. The Roman Republic was proclaimed, and peace established, when
-suddenly France interfered to restore his Holiness. It was to prevent
-France from having a pretext for interfering in Italy that Lord Minto’s
-mission was undertaken, and thus another failure had to be debited to
-Lord Palmerston’s foreign policy. Naturally Lords Aberdeen and Brougham
-taunted the Government with the failure of the Minto mission. But taunts
-were powerless to extort from Ministers a statement of their relation to
-the French expedition. In the House of Commons, however, those who
-objected to French interference with the Roman people succeeded in
-obtaining from<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_399" id="page_399">{399}</a></span> Lord Palmerston an expression of disapproval of the
-course which France had taken; but that was all.</p>
-
-<p>Far and away the most important foreign debate of the Session was that
-which Mr. Osborne raised on the Austro-Hungarian question in July.
-Hungary had been crushed by the aid which Russia, unrebuked or
-unrestrained by the shadow of a protest from Palmerston, had given her
-Austrian masters; and the Liberal Party, always jealous of Austria as
-the representative of Absolutist ideas, were wrathful accordingly. But
-the discussion had no practical result. It was merely marked by a
-declaration from Lord Palmerston, which came too late to be useful, to
-the effect that the heart and soul of the country were enlisted on the
-side of Hungary.</p>
-
-<p>For Englishmen no debate was graver than the one on the state of the
-nation, which Mr. Disraeli raised at the end of the Session. He
-attributed the distress in the country to Free Trade, and he attacked
-every branch of Ministerial policy. But the weak point of his brilliant
-harangue was that it meant nothing, for not only was he unable to take
-over the Government himself, but he had no practical proposal to make,
-save his insinuated suggestion to restore Protection. Sir Robert Peel’s
-speech, however, carried the House in favour of the Government. It was a
-complete vindication of his fiscal policy, and its conclusion was
-memorable, because in it he traced our immunity from revolutionary
-excesses to his abandonment of taxes on food in 1846.</p>
-
-<p>Early in the year the Queen was disturbed by evil tidings from India.
-Hard fighting was reported from the banks of the Chenab. The Sikhs, it
-was true, were in retreat; but our victory was a barren one, as we
-captured neither prisoners, guns, nor standards, and sacrificed two of
-our Generals (Cureton and Havelock), who fell at the head of their
-regiments. In losing Cureton, her Majesty lost the finest cavalry
-officer in her service. The fact was that, though we had conquered, we
-had not subdued the Sikhs at the end of our first war with them. In
-April, 1848, a Sikh chief murdered two British officers at Multan. This
-was followed by a general outbreak, which was met on the whole
-successfully by the desperate efforts of Lieutenant Edwardes and a mere
-handful of men. Multan was besieged in June, 1848; but 5,000 of our Sikh
-auxiliaries deserted to the enemy, and our army had to retreat. We had
-not enough troops in the Punjab to control the rising, and our
-auxiliaries under the Maharajah were not trustworthy. On the other hand,
-the rebel chief Shere Sing, at the beginning of 1849, had 40,000 men
-under his orders, and once again British supremacy in India was
-trembling in the balance. On the 5th of March, however, still worse news
-came to London. Lord Gough, with inconceivable recklessness, had, on the
-14th of January, attacked the enemy in a strong position at
-Chillianwalla with a small British force worn out by fatigue. The
-conditions of the combat ensured disaster. Our troops, it is true, took
-the Sikh positions, but during<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_400" id="page_400">{400}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_009" id="ill_009"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_400.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_400.jpg" width="274" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE BRITISH TROOPS ENTERING MULTAN.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">the night had to abandon them. The loss of life on our side was
-enormous, and Lord Gough, though he fought like a hero in the thickest
-of the <i>mêlée</i>, was not to be found at a critical moment to give orders.
-The news of this disaster was received with universal indignation. The
-Government attempted to allay public feeling by appointing Sir William
-Gomm to succeed Lord Gough; but as Sir William was believed to be
-equally incompetent, a demand for Sir Charles Napier’s appointment
-became clamant. “We dined,” writes Lord Malmesbury, in his Diary on the
-4th of March, “with the Colchesters, and were introduced to Sir Charles
-Napier. He is a little<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_401" id="page_401">{401}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_010" id="ill_010"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_401.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_401.jpg" width="293" height="374" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>SIR HARRY SMITH.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">man, with grey hair brushed back from his face, with an immense hooked,
-pointed nose, small eyes, and wears spectacles, very like the
-conventional face of a Jew. He is appointed to retrieve our affairs in
-India, and when the Duke of Wellington named him to the post he at first
-hesitated, until the Duke told him if he did not go he would go
-himself.”<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> Why did Napier hesitate? Because, it seems, the Directors
-of the East India Company not only objected to his appointment, but
-threatened to prevent him from having a seat on the Council, an insult
-which Napier<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_402" id="page_402">{402}</a></span> could hardly brook. “You have no idea of the difficulties
-I have had in dealing with these men,” said Sir John Cam Hobhouse, then
-President of the Indian Board of Control, to Mr. Greville. “I have
-brought the Government, the Duke of Wellington, <i>and the Queen</i> all to
-bear upon them, and all in vain.” Mr. Greville advised Hobhouse to bring
-another power&mdash;that of the House of Commons&mdash;to bear on the Company. In
-other words, he advised the Government to go down boldly and inform
-Parliament that they had appointed Napier, and if the Directors of the
-Company refused to pay his salary as a Member of Council, to ask the
-House to vote it. The Cabinet appointed Napier, and the Directors
-acquiesced, fearing to face the responsibility of thwarting the
-Government in doing what the Queen and the country desired.</p>
-
-<p>But before Gough could be recalled, he redeemed the disaster of
-Chillianwalla at Gujerat. The news of this successful battle, which was
-fought on the 21st of February, reached the Queen on the 1st of April.
-It meant that the crisis in India was over, and it lifted from her mind
-the burden of a supreme anxiety. Multan, too, had fallen, and finally
-the East India Company, admitting at last that it was impossible to
-protect their frontier from attack, annexed the Punjab on the 29th of
-March, 1849, thus closing the history of the Sikhs as an independent
-nation. England had found in them the most fearless and formidable of
-enemies. Since the annexation of their country, they have been the
-staunchest and the most loyal of the Queen’s Indian subjects.</p>
-
-<p>One serious colonial dispute must be noticed, for it led to an early
-experiment in “boycotting.” Lord Grey, on the 4th of September, 1848, by
-an Order in Council, had turned the Cape of Good Hope into a convict
-settlement. The colonists resented this act with the hottest
-indignation. Angry meetings were held at Cape Town; and the Governor,
-Sir Harry Smith, was violently blamed because he refused to take on
-himself the responsibility of suspending the “injurious and degrading
-measure.” When the first convict ship, the <i>Neptune</i>, arrived in Simon’s
-Bay on the 19th of September, the church bells in Cape Town were tolled
-in half-minute time. The Municipality demanded that the vessel be sent
-back. The populace, in mass meetings, adopted what they called “the
-Pledge”&mdash;an obligation to “drop connection with any person who may
-assist convicted felons.” In fact, the process which in Ireland has
-recently been termed “boycotting” was resorted to, and supplies were
-refused to the army, navy, and all Government establishments. The law
-was impotent in face of such opposition, and very soon the Governor, Sir
-Harry Smith, was compelled to bake his own bread even in his own house.
-The colonists finally triumphed. The Order in Council was withdrawn, so
-far as it referred to the Cape, and the <i>Neptune</i> left, without having
-landed a single convict. The episode is one of the earliest instances on
-record of the successful application of “boycotting” to defeat an
-unpopular policy.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_403" id="page_403">{403}</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXII" id="CHAPTER_XXII"></a>CHAPTER XXII.<br /><br />
-<small>FAMILY CARES AND ROYAL DUTIES.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>Education of the Prince of Wales&mdash;Selection of Mr. Birch as
-Tutor&mdash;The Queen’s Jealousy of her Parental Authority&mdash;Her Letter
-to Melbourne on the Management of her Nursery&mdash;Her Ideas on
-Education&mdash;Prince Albert’s Plans for the Education of the Prince of
-Wales&mdash;Stockmar’s Advice&mdash;The Visit to Ireland&mdash;The Queen at
-Waterford&mdash;“Rebel Cork” <i>en fête</i>&mdash;The Visit to Dublin&mdash;Viceregal
-Festivities&mdash;The Visit to the National Model Schools&mdash;Shiel’s
-Speech&mdash;The Queen and the Duke of Leinster&mdash;Farewell at
-Kingstown&mdash;The Queen Dips the Royal Ensign&mdash;Loyal Ulster&mdash;The Visit
-to the Linen Hall&mdash;Lord Clarendon on the Queen’s Visit&mdash;A Cruise on
-the Clyde&mdash;Home in Balmoral&mdash;The Queen’s “Bothie”&mdash;The Queen’s
-University of Ireland&mdash;First Plans for the Great
-Exhibition&mdash;Opening of the London Coal Exchange&mdash;The Queen’s
-Barge&mdash;Death of Queen Adelaide.</p></div>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="smcap">In</span> April, 1849, Prince Albert is found writing a letter to the Dowager
-Duchess of Gotha announcing a very important event in the Queen’s
-family. “The children,” he says, “grow more than well. Bertie (the
-Prince of Wales) will be given over in a few weeks into the hands of a
-tutor, whom we have found in a Mr. Birch, a young, good-looking, amiable
-man.” Mr. Birch, subsequently Rector of Prestwich, near Manchester, was
-eminently qualified for the grave and delicate duty for which the Queen
-selected him. He had taken high honours at Cambridge, and had been not
-only Captain of the School, but had also served as an under-master at
-Eton. Yet Mr. Birch can hardly be credited with the Scheme of Education
-adopted in the Royal Family. That had been arranged by the Queen
-herself, in consultation with her consort and Baron Stockmar. Her fixed
-idea was that the heart as well as the head must be trained, and that
-not only must the education of her children be truly moral, but it must
-be essentially English. She resolved to discover the kind of tutor whom
-she could trust, and then, having found him, to trust him implicitly.</p>
-
-<p>The Queen, it may here be said, has ever set an example to women of
-exalted rank and station by reason of the undeviating support she has
-given to those who undertook the education of her children. But in doing
-this her Majesty has been most jealous in asserting her parental rights,
-and punctilious in recognising the high responsibilities which they
-involve. As far back as 1842, in a very pretty letter to Lord Melbourne,
-she asked him for advice about the reorganisation of her nursery, and a
-question came up as to the choice of the lady who should superintend it.
-The Queen, accepting the fact that her public duties prevented her from
-personally managing the education of her family as completely as she
-might have wished, fully admitted that it was necessary to appoint a
-lady of high rank and culture for that purpose. But then arose the
-difficulty of satisfying her Majesty’s desire to retain in her own hands
-the completest headship of her family. A governess of high rank really
-competent to do the work as the Queen meant that it should be done<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_404" id="page_404">{404}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_011" id="ill_011"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_404.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_404.jpg" width="294" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>VICTORIA CASTLE, KILLINEY&mdash;BRAY HEAD IN THE DISTANCE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">might choose to consider herself as an official responsible to the
-country first, and to the parents of the Royal children afterwards.
-Against such an idea the Queen most resolutely set her face. “I feel,”
-her Majesty writes, on behalf of herself and her husband, that “she (the
-Royal governess) ought to be responsible only to <i>us</i>, and <i>we</i> to the
-country and nation.”<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> It was in pursuance of this idea that her
-Majesty made great sacrifices to keep her children as closely as
-possible in contact with her. Many curious memoranda from her pen exist,
-and through them all there runs the same thought&mdash;simplicity and
-domesticity must be the leading characteristics of the training of the
-Royal family. For example, whenever it was possible, the Queen insisted
-on retaining in her own hands the <i>religious</i> education of her family,
-and it is now known that she did this from a dread lest their minds
-might at the most plastic period of life receive a sectarian bias. High
-Anglicanism was then militant, and many intrigues were set on foot by
-its professors to effect a lodgment in the Palace. The education of the
-Princess Royal, afterwards Princess Imperial of Germany, was almost
-entirely supervised and directed by the Queen herself, and with results
-much appreciated in Germany, where, through her tact, culture, high
-character, and strong common sense, her Imperial Highness has won for
-herself a position of unique political and social influence. The
-education of the Prince of Wales, however, now came more directly under
-the hands of Prince Albert; and one point of the highest importance to
-decide was whether it should be conservative or<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_405" id="page_405">{405}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_012" id="ill_012"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_405.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_405.jpg" height="346" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>ROYAL VISIT TO IRELAND: THE QUEEN LEAVING KINGSTOWN.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_406" id="page_406">{406}</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="nind">liberal in its character. Prince Albert decided that it must be liberal
-in this sense, that it should prepare the Heir Apparent for taking his
-position in a changeful state of society, whose institutions were, to a
-great extent, in a transition stage. Every effort was to be made to
-prevent him from getting into his mind a notion that existing
-institutions were <i>sacrosanct</i>, and that resistance to all change was a
-sacred and patriotic duty. The history of George III. had evidently not
-been studied in vain. “The proper duty of Sovereigns in this country,”
-wrote Stockmar to Prince Albert, “is not to take the lead in change, but
-to act as a balance-wheel on the movements of the social body.” Above
-all, it was determined that the education of the young Prince must be at
-bottom English, and not foreign. Furnished with these principles to
-guide him, and with general instructions to make the basis of the young
-Prince’s training as broad and comprehensive as possible&mdash;to make it
-scientific as well as classical&mdash;Mr. Birch essayed his arduous task,
-aided not a little by shrewd advice from Bishop Wilberforce and Sir
-James Clark, the Queen’s favourite physician.</p>
-
-<p>The sweetest days of summer were clouded for the Queen in 1849 by
-painful memories of the shock she received on the 19th of May. On that
-day an Irishman named Hamilton, with a morbid craving for notoriety,
-tried to shoot her when she was driving with her children in her
-carriage down Constitution Hill. Her Majesty, with great tact, engaged
-the attention of her little ones by conversation, and with a sign
-directed her coachman to drive on as if nothing had happened, so that
-her husband, who was riding in advance, knew nothing of the affair&mdash;not
-even of the attempt of the mob to “lynch” Hamilton. His pistol was
-loaded with blank cartridge, but in spite of that he was sentenced to
-seven years’ transportation.</p>
-
-<p>It has been said that Ireland, exhausted by the abortive rebellion of
-1848, had been settling down into sullen tranquillity. There were many
-signs visible of a better feeling towards the Government in the country.
-The Queen accordingly suggested that it might be well to take advantage
-of the improving condition of things, and pay a Royal visit to Ireland.
-Her Majesty, however, primarily desired that the Irish people should
-benefit, and not be burdened, by the presence of Royalty. She therefore
-expressed a wish that the visit should not be made in such a form as to
-put the country, which had suffered so much from distress, to any great
-expense. Prince Albert, ever practical, suggested that in that case the
-best way of carrying out the Queen’s idea was to make this visit a
-simple yachting cruise. The Queen, he said, might call at the ports of
-Cork, Waterford, Wexford, Dublin, and Belfast on her annual journey to
-the North of Scotland, and perchance touch at Glasgow, thereby
-compensating it for the loss of the Royal visit in 1847. Lord Clarendon
-fully endorsed the views of the Queen and her husband in a letter to
-Lord John Russell. “Everything,” he wrote, “tends to secure for the
-Queen an enthusiastic reception, and the one drawback, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_407" id="page_407">{407}</a></span> is the
-general distress of all classes, has its advantage, for it will enable
-the Queen to do what is kind and considerate to those who are
-suffering.”</p>
-
-<p>On the 27th of June the official intimation that the Queen was to visit
-Ireland was received by the Irish people with every manifestation of
-delight. If there were some who, rebels at heart, sympathised little
-with the tone of popular feeling, they concealed their aversion. The sex
-of the Sovereign indeed ensured her a courteous reception, from a nation
-proud of its gallantry, and justly renowned for the warmth of its
-hospitality. It was then finally decided that the visit should be made
-when Parliament rose. On the 27th of August the Queen, Prince Albert,
-and their four eldest children accordingly embarked for Ireland. “It is
-done!” writes the amiable and somewhat effusive Lady Lyttelton, who
-watched the squadron from the windows of Osborne, till it faded from her
-eyes. “England’s fate is afloat ... and <i>we</i> are left lamenting.” There
-was, however, no serious cause for anxiety. When the Royal squadron
-steamed into the Cove of Cork, in the golden light of a summer sunset,
-the air was soon gleaming with rockets, and bonfires, kindled by the
-excitable and kindly peasantry, blazed on every height in welcome of
-their Queen. The next morning, the 3rd of August, brought a happy omen.
-The day was dull and grey, but no sooner did the Queen set her foot on
-land at the Cove&mdash;since called Queenstown in honour of the event&mdash;than a
-sudden sunburst lit up the scene with dazzling radiance. The Royal party
-in the <i>Fairy</i> steamed up “the pleasant waters of the river Lee,” and
-all along the route crowds of loyal people lined the banks, cheering the
-Queen and her family as she passed along. In Cork itself&mdash;“rebel
-Cork”&mdash;there was no sign of disaffection. Nothing could be warmer or
-more cordial than the welcome accorded to her Majesty, who was touched
-by the hearty gaiety and good humour of her excitable hosts. A true
-kindly Celtic welcome, such as any Sovereign might have envied, made her
-experiences of Cork sunny memories for many long years afterwards. The
-extreme beauty of the women seems, however, to have produced an equally
-deep impression on her Majesty, who refers to this point in her diary of
-the visit.</p>
-
-<p>On the 4th of August the Royal party proceeded to Waterford, which they
-reached in the afternoon. Curiously enough, one of the ships in their
-squadron of escort had actually been stationed there two years
-previously, to overawe the rebellious people. Now all these dark and
-bitter memories seemed to have passed away. Waterford vied with Cork in
-its loyal demonstration, and the feeling of regret was universal that
-the Royal party did not land and go through the town. Prince Albert and
-his two sons, however, steamed up to the city from the anchorage
-opposite Duncannon fort, ten miles from the town. Next came the visit to
-Dublin&mdash;never to be forgotten in the annals of the Irish capital.</p>
-
-<p>It was on the 5th of August, as the sun was going down, that the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_408" id="page_408">{408}</a></span> Royal
-squadron reached Kingstown&mdash;threading its way with some difficulty
-through the craft, gay with joyful bunting, that crowded the sea. The
-Queen was greatly struck by the picturesque appearance of the place, and
-when she and the Prince landed next morning, amidst a salute from the
-men-of-war in the harbour, her reception was a revelation even to those
-who had anticipated that she would be lovingly greeted. Never was there
-such cheering&mdash;especially from the ladies, whose hearts were captivated
-by the Royal children. If, said one old lady, the Queen would only
-consent to call one of the young princes Patrick, all Ireland would die
-for her. The Royal party soon arrived at the Viceregal Lodge, in the
-Phœnix Park, and the routefrom Sandymount Station was again lined by
-crowds of enthusiastic and loyal sightseers. It was noted that even the
-poorest houses were gay with flowers. “It was a most wonderful and
-striking spectacle,” says the Queen, in her notes of her visit&mdash;“such
-masses of human beings, so enthusiastic, so excited, and yet perfect
-order maintained.” All that was worth seeing in Dublin was seen, and the
-people were charmed with the simple, gracious bearing of her Majesty,
-and the ease and freedom with which she went among them. A memorable
-visit was made by the Queen to the National Model Schools, where she and
-the Prince were introduced by Archbishop Whateley to the venerable
-Archbishop Murray, a picturesque and patriarchal Catholic prelate, whose
-saintly life and generous liberal ideas had previously attracted the
-attention of Prince Albert. His Grace had indeed risked much by
-protecting these schools against the attacks of some of the bigots of
-his church, and the Queen was powerfully impressed with the excellence
-of the system of instruction given at them. Speaking of this interesting
-episode in the House of Commons, Richard Lalor Shiel&mdash;the last of the
-great Irish rhetoricians&mdash;said, “Amongst the most remarkable incidents
-that occurred when the Queen was in Ireland was her visit to the schools
-of the National Board of Education, which took place (by accident, of
-course) before she visited the College of the Holy and Undivided
-Trinity. It was a fine spectacle to see the consort, so worthy of her,
-attended by the representatives of the Presbyterian Church, by the
-Protestant Archbishop of Dublin, and by the Catholic Archbishop of
-Dublin&mdash;with those venerable ecclesiastics at her side, differing in
-creed, but united by the common brotherhood of Christianity in the
-performance of one of the noblest duties which their common Christianity
-prescribed; it was a fine thing to see the Sovereign of a great empire
-surrounded by groups of those little children who gazed on her with
-affectionate amazement, while she returned their looks with fondness
-almost maternal; and, better than all, it was noble and thrilling,
-indeed, to see the emotions by which that great lady was moved when her
-heart beat with a high and holy aspiration that she might live to see
-the benefits of education carried out in their full and perfect
-development.” There was a levée, of course, at which four thousand
-persons attended to pay their<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_409" id="page_409">{409}</a></span> respects to their Sovereign. There was a
-brilliant review of the troops in the Phœnix Park, followed by visits to
-the Royal Irish Academy, the College of Surgeons, and the Royal Dublin
-Society, at whose cattle-shows Prince Albert was a frequent competitor.
-His speech, in reply to an Address from the Society, attracted much
-attention at the time, on account of his sound advice on the economic
-condition of Ireland, and the grateful thanks which he gave to the Irish
-people for their marks of warm attachment to the Queen and her family.
-The Prince was one of the first rural economists to impress on the
-chiefs of the Society the necessity for anticipating impending changes
-in agriculture. He advised them to stimulate to the utmost
-stock-breeding in Ireland.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_013" id="ill_013"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_409.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_409.jpg" width="365" height="267" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>VISIT OF THE QUEEN AND PRINCE ALBERT TO THE LINEN HALL,
-BELFAST.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>A visit paid by the Queen to Carton appears to have made a strong
-impression on her. Carton is the seat of the Duke of Leinster, and his
-delicate attentions to her and her family, and his skill in planning a
-pleasant excursion for them, elicits from her pen the remark in her
-“Diary” that his Grace was “one of the kindest and best of men.” The
-Royal leave-taking at Kingstown was quite an affecting ceremony. The
-crowd at the pier was denser than it had ever been within living memory,
-and its shouts rent the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_410" id="page_410">{410}</a></span> air. When the Queen heard how her kind hosts
-were bidding her Godspeed, she immediately climbed up on the paddle-box
-and stood waving her handkerchief in token of her appreciation of their
-loyalty. She directed the ship’s engines to be slowed, so that the
-vessel might glide slowly past the pier. By a felicitous inspiration she
-ordered the Royal Standard to be dipped three times, in honour of the
-people on the shore, and as a mark of her grateful appreciation of their
-affection.</p>
-
-<p>Loyal Ulster was next visited, and, as might have been expected, the
-reception of the Queen in this busy hive of industry was exceptionally
-effusive, even for Ireland. Belfast was <i>en fête</i> when the Royal
-visitors landed, and old folk still speak of the scene on the quay as
-marking a red letter day in their lives. Bunting was streaming
-everywhere in the air. Dense crowds cheering and shouting, and waving
-hats and handkerchiefs, occupied every coign of vantage, and though the
-Queen had only four hours to spend in the city, she contrived, under
-competent guidance, to see many of the more interesting places and
-institutions which illustrate the strong character of the mixed race
-whose energy, ability, pertinacity, and industry have made Ulster, with
-her unkindly soil and climate, the richest province in Ireland. Ulster
-commands the bulk of the linen trade of the world, and, naturally, the
-institutions and factories connected with that industry arrested the
-Queen’s attention during her flying visit to the commercial capital of
-Ireland. An alarming gale detained her the next day in Belfast Lough,
-but after it blew over the Royal party steamed away to the Scottish
-shore.</p>
-
-<p>The Royal visit to Ireland had two good results. It brought home to the
-minds of the Irish people the fact that their country, and their
-interests, were of great personal concern to the Queen and her husband.
-It demonstrated to the rest of the United Kingdom the fact that the
-personal attachment of the Irish people to the Monarchy was as strong as
-could be desired, and that if they were rebels at heart it was not the
-Queen, but the Viceregal Bureaucracy in Dublin Castle, who had soured
-their blood. Everybody who had observed the effect of the Queen’s
-progress through Ireland was charmed with the success of the expedition.
-“I saw Lord Lansdowne last night,” writes Mr. Greville in his Journal
-(14th August), “just returned from Ireland, having had an escape on the
-railroad, for the train ran off the rails. He said nothing could surpass
-the success of the Queen’s visit in every respect; every circumstance
-favourable, no drawbacks or mistakes, all persons and parties pleased,
-much owing to the tact of Lord Clarendon, and the care he had bestowed
-on all the arrangements and details, which made it all go off so
-admirably. The Queen herself was delighted, and appears to have played
-her part uncommonly well. Clarendon, of course, was overjoyed at the
-complete success of what was his own plan,<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_411" id="page_411">{411}</a></span> satisfied with the
-graciousness and attention of the Court to him. In the beginning, and
-while the details were in preparation, he was considerably disgusted at
-the petty difficulties that were made, but he is satisfied now. Lord
-Lansdowne says the departure was quite affecting, and he could not see
-it without being moved; and he thinks beyond doubt that this visit will
-produce permanent good effects in Ireland.”<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> Clarendon himself was
-evidently more than delighted with the effect of the Royal visit. He
-informed Sir George Grey that he believed “there was not an Irishman in
-Dublin who did not consider that the Queen had paid him a personal
-compliment by mounting the paddle-box of her steamer as she was leaving,
-and ordering the Royal Standard to be dipped in acknowledgment of the
-affectionate adieus which came from the crowds on the shore.”<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> But the
-odd thing was that the members of the seditious clubs who had threatened
-to create disturbances when the Queen’s visit was first mooted, caught
-the prevailing contagion of loyalty, and professed to be among the most
-affectionate of her subjects. Still, Clarendon was far too astute a
-statesman to imagine that a Royal visit would smooth away all the
-difficulties of his position and administration as Viceroy. It could
-not, as he acknowledges in another letter to Sir George Grey, “remove
-evils which are the growth of ages.” At the same time, it indirectly
-helped the country by bringing some money into it. Royalty can always
-beneficially direct the expenditure of Fashion, and after the Queen had
-by her example shown that there was no danger to be dreaded in visiting
-Ireland, rich English tourists began to go over there holiday-making,
-greatly to the advantage of the people. But when all this was apparent
-to the Queen’s advisers, it seems strange that they did not then deem it
-their duty to devise a plan for strengthening the golden link of the
-Crown between England and Ireland. If one brief Royal visit produced
-such an excellent effect, why did they not propose another? If it were
-impossible to provide for the residence for the Queen regularly during a
-portion of the year in Ireland, it might have been possible for the
-Royal Family to arrange that in their annual visit to Balmoral they
-should cruise northwards along the Irish coast, and gladden some of the
-Irish towns and provinces with their presence.</p>
-
-<p>Ugly weather followed the Royal squadron from Belfast Lough to the
-Clyde, but a singularly brilliant reception at Glasgow compensated the
-Queen for any discomforts she may have endured on the voyage. The visit
-to “the second city of the Empire,” as its inhabitants love to call it,
-was all too brief, for the Festival of St. Grouse had been celebrated
-two days before, and Prince Albert was eagerly desirous of pressing on
-to the moors. On the evening of the 14th of August&mdash;the day of the
-reception at Glasgow&mdash;he wrote to Stockmar a hurried note, deploring the
-“vile passage” on the 12th from Belfast to Loch Ryan, and saying how
-much he had been impressed by<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_412" id="page_412">{412}</a></span> their procession, through five to six
-hundred thousand human beings all cheering wildly in the streets of
-Glasgow.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_014" id="ill_014"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_412.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_412.jpg" height="192" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>CASTLETON OF BRAEMAR.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>On the 15th of August they were at Balmoral, the Queen recording in her
-“Diary” that it seemed like a dream to her after all the excitement of
-their tour to be in “our dear Highland home again.” For a brief time her
-Majesty was able to enjoy a real holiday. She was not much worried by
-politics&mdash;which have been, after all, the chief business of her life.
-The seclusion, and the dry, bracing air of Balmoral, acted like tonics
-on her mind and spirits. In a letter which he wrote to Stockmar on his
-thirtieth birthday, which was gaily celebrated in the family circle at
-Balmoral, Prince Albert said, “Victoria is happy and cheerful, and
-enjoys a love and homage in this country, of which in the summer’s tour
-we have received the most striking proofs. The children are well and
-grow apace. The Highlands are glorious, and the game abundant.” One of
-the pleasantest of surprises was prepared for the Queen a fortnight
-after her arrival. It was an excursion to a small mountain cabin, or
-“bothie” as the Highlanders call it, to which she had taken a fancy at
-Alt-na-Giuthasach. In “Leaves from the Journal of Our Life in the
-Highlands,” the Queen gives the following description of her
-expedition:&mdash;“We arrived at our little ‘bothie’ at two o’clock, and were
-amazed at the transformation. There are two huts, and to the one in
-which we live a wooden addition has been made. We have a charming little
-dining-room, sitting-room, bedroom, and dressing-room, all <i>en suite</i>;
-and there is a little room where Caroline Dawson (the Maid of Honour)
-sleeps, one for her maid, and a little pantry. In the other house, which
-is only a few yards<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_413" id="page_413">{413}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_015" id="ill_015"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_413.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_413.jpg" width="355" height="518" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>AT BALMORAL: A MORNING CALL.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_414" id="page_414">{414}</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="nind">distant, is the kitchen, where the people generally sit, a small room
-where the servants dine, and another, which is a sort of store-room, and
-a loft above in which the men sleep. Margaret French (my maid),
-Caroline’s maid, Löhlein<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> (Albert’s valet), a cook, Shackle<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> (a
-footman), and Macdonald are the only people with us in the house, old
-John Gordon and his wife excepted. Our rooms are delightfully papered,
-the ceilings as well as walls, and very nicely furnished. We lunched as
-soon as we arrived, and at three walked down (about twenty minutes’
-walk) to the loch called ‘Muich’; which some say means ‘darkness’ or
-‘sorrow.’ Here we found a large boat, into which we all got, and
-Macdonald, Duncan, Grant, and Coutts rowed; old John Gordon and two
-others going in another boat with the net.”</p>
-
-<p>But neither the Queen nor Prince Albert was of a mind that their Irish
-visit should be a fruitless one, and soon their busy brains were
-brooding over schemes for Ireland which marked their interest in her
-affairs. The “Godless” Colleges, which had been founded by Sir Robert
-Peel, were to be opened in October. They were three in number&mdash;one in
-Belfast, one in Cork, and one in Galway, and their education was to be
-secular and untheological. But each College gave facilities for
-conducting the spiritual training of the students under “Deans”
-appointed by the various sects and churches. The Queen and her husband
-had many conversations with men of light and leading of all parties in
-Ireland, as to the organisation of these Colleges, and the Prince, as a
-practical educationist, soon hit the blot in it. Who was to confer the
-degrees? Were the Colleges to do so? Or were they to be united by the
-common federating bond of a University, whose officials should guide the
-examinations, and form the policy that would best advance, not the
-interests of one College, but the interests of all? Her Majesty and the
-Prince, when they were in Ireland, came to the conclusion that unless
-the Colleges were affiliated under a University, they would soon
-degenerate into sectarian seminaries. But, before taking active steps in
-the matter, they laid their opinions before Sir Robert Peel. He at once
-concurred in the Prince’s views; and Lord Clarendon, who had at first
-felt doubtful about their soundness, ultimately accepted them also. Thus
-it came to pass that the Queen’s Colleges were federated under the
-Queen’s University of Ireland, and that a general desire was manifested
-that Prince Albert should be the first Chancellor. This office he
-declined to accept, mainly in the interest of the Queen. The Colleges
-and the University, he feared, might one day become the battle-grounds
-of faction, and it would then be very distressing for her Majesty to
-find her husband entangled in the political<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_415" id="page_415">{415}</a></span> blood-feuds of Ireland.
-Subsequent events proved that these anticipations were correct. Lord
-Clarendon ultimately accepted the Chancellorship of the Queen’s
-University of Ireland.</p>
-
-<p>At this time, as has been stated, the present Castle at Balmoral was not
-built. Balmoral, in fact, was simply the modest family residence of a
-Highland laird, and by no means well fitted for the establishment of the
-Court. However, the business of the Court and the State could not be
-neglected on that account, and Ministers and officials showed great zeal
-and consideration in assisting her Majesty to the utmost of their power
-in transacting it in such a remote corner of her Empire. In Mr.
-Greville’s Journal we have a curious entry (15th September) bearing on
-this point, and illustrating the holiday life of the Queen in the
-Highlands at that time. “On Monday, the 3rd,” writes Mr. Greville, “on
-returning from Hillingdon, I found a summons from John Russell to be at
-Balmoral on Wednesday, the 5th, at half-past two, for a Council, to
-order a prayer for relief against the cholera.... I started on Wednesday
-morning at half-past six, and arrived at Balmoral exactly at half-past
-two. It is a beautiful road from Perth to Balmoral, particularly from
-Blairgowrie to the Spittal of Glenshee, and thence to Braemar. Much as I
-dislike Courts and all that appertains to them, I am glad to have made
-this expedition, and to have seen the Queen and Prince in their Highland
-retreat, where they certainly appear to great advantage. The place is
-very pretty; the house very small. They live there without any state
-whatever; they live not merely like private gentlefolks, but like very
-small gentlefolks&mdash;small house, small rooms, small establishment. There
-are no soldiers, and the whole guard of the Sovereign and Royal Family
-is a single policeman, who walks about the grounds to keep off
-impertinent intruders or improper characters. Their attendants consisted
-of Lady Douro and Miss Dawson, Lady and Maid of Honour; George Anson and
-Gordon; Birch, the Prince of Wales’s tutor; and Miss Hildyard, the
-governess of the children. They live with the greatest simplicity and
-ease. The Prince shoots every morning, returns to luncheon, and then
-they walk and drive. The Queen is running in and out of the house all
-day long, and often goes about alone, walks into cottages, and sits and
-chats with the old women. I never before was in society with the Prince
-or had any conversation with him. On Thursday morning John Russell and I
-were sitting together after breakfast, when he came in and sat down with
-us, and we conversed for about three-quarters of an hour. I was greatly
-struck with him. I saw at once (what I had always heard) that he is very
-intelligent and highly cultivated; and, moreover, that he has a
-thoughtful mind, and thinks of subjects worth thinking about. He seemed
-very much at his ease, very gay, pleasant, and without the least
-stiffness or air of dignity. After luncheon we went to the Highland
-gathering at Braemar&mdash;the Queen, the Prince, four children, and two
-ladies in one pony-carriage, John Russell, Mr. Birch, Miss Hildyard,
-and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_416" id="page_416">{416}</a></span> I in another; Anson and Gordon on the box; one groom, no more. The
-gathering was at the old castle at Braemar, and a pretty sight enough.
-We returned as we came, and then everybody strolled about till dinner.
-We were only nine people, and it was all very easy and really
-agreeable&mdash;the Queen in very good humour, and talkative; the Prince
-still more so, and talking very well; no form, and everybody seemed at
-their ease. In the evening we withdrew to the only room there is besides
-the dining-room, which serves for billiards, library (hardly any books
-in it), and drawing-room. The Queen and Prince and her ladies, and
-Gordon, soon went back to the dining-room, where they had a Highland
-dancing-master, who gave them lessons in reels. We (John Russell and I)
-were not admitted to this exercise, so we played at billiards. In
-process of time they came back, when there was a little talk, and soon
-after they went to bed.”<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_016" id="ill_016"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_416.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_416.jpg" width="258" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE ROYAL BARGE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_417" id="page_417">{417}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_017" id="ill_017"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_417.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_417.jpg" width="327" height="261" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>OPENING OF THE LONDON COAL EXCHANGE&mdash;ARRIVAL OF THE ROYAL
-PROCESSION AT THE CUSTOM-HOUSE QUAY. (<i>See p. 418.</i>)</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Shortly before the holiday at Balmoral ended, the Queen and Prince
-Albert were a little mortified to find that one of their projects, or
-rather one of the Prince’s projects, was going awry. This was the
-preliminary movement which was intended to lead up to the organisation
-of a great International Industrial Exhibition. The idea of holding such
-an exhibition had occurred to the Prince in July, 1849. It seems to have
-been suggested to him by the great Frankfort Fairs of the sixteenth
-century. His Royal Highness had also noticed that one or two small
-pioneer exhibitions held by the Society of Arts, had produced good
-effects in improving the quality of English products. He argued that an
-exhibition on an international scale would produce still greater
-effects, not only on our manufactures, but on those of the world. It
-would be a tournament of Peace, in which the Captains of Industry would
-be the competitors in the lists.</p>
-
-<p>On the 30th of July, 1849, the Prince held a conference at Buckingham
-Palace with four confidential persons&mdash;Mr. Henry Cole, Mr. Francis
-Fuller, Mr. Scott Russell, and Mr. Thomas Cubitt, and they resolved to
-hold the exhibition if possible, not in the quadrangle of Somerset
-House, as the Government had suggested, but in Hyde Park itself. They
-also arranged to<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_418" id="page_418">{418}</a></span> take steps to test the feeling of the industrial
-districts on the subject before going further. But in all this
-preliminary work of “sounding” influential persons, the Prince had given
-peremptory orders that his name should not be publicly mentioned.
-Unfortunately, Mr. Cole, with Hibernian effusiveness, had been tempted
-to disobey these orders at a meeting in Dublin, much to the annoyance of
-the Queen and her husband. “Praising me at meetings,” wrote his Royal
-Highness to Colonel Phipps, “looks as if I were to be advertised and
-used as a means of drawing a full house, &amp;c.”&mdash;and if there was anything
-which was unspeakably offensive to the Queen, it was the use of her or
-her husband’s name for purposes of puffery.</p>
-
-<p>A few days after this disagreeable little episode (27th September) the
-Queen and her family left Balmoral for Osborne. They broke their journey
-at Howick, where they spent a night with Lord Grey, and in a few days
-after that they received tidings which filled their hearts with the
-utmost sorrow. The ever-faithful Anson, the Prince’s first Secretary,
-died, and the Queen’s household was filled with the deepest regret. The
-Queen herself wrote a touching letter to King Leopold, which shows how
-her heart bled for the widow of her most zealous servant; and Lady
-Lyttelton, writing on the 9th of November, says: “Every face shows how
-much has been felt; the Prince and Queen in floods of tears, and quite
-shut up.” All through the record of the Queen’s life, indeed, we find
-evidence of the cordial relations which bound her to those who served
-her. Their zeal indeed has been great, but it has been more than
-equalled by her sympathetic appreciation of it.</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Phipps succeeded Mr. Anson as Privy Purse, and Colonel
-(afterwards General) Grey as the Prince’s Secretary.</p>
-
-<p>When the gloom of winter began to spread over London, the loyal citizens
-were sadly distressed to learn that a projected Royal visit to the city
-would be robbed of more than half its <i>éclat</i>. The Queen had promised to
-come and open the New Coal Exchange on the 30th of October. But alas,
-her Majesty had sickened with the chicken-pox, and the ceremony was
-performed by Prince Albert alone. Yet the Londoners were not without
-compensation. This visit to the City was memorable because of the first
-public appearance in a pageant of State, of the Prince of Wales, and the
-Princess Royal. The spectacle revived picturesque memories of “the
-spacious times of Great Elizabeth,” for the Royal party proceeded to
-London by the silent highway of the river. Twenty-seven brawny watermen
-rowed the Queen’s Barge from Westminster Stairs to the City, and,
-strange to say, for once the fog and murky atmosphere of London in early
-winter cleared away, and the ceremony took place in the sunshine, under
-a sky of Italian brilliancy. The crowds covered every possible corner
-where human beings could cluster. The long lines of shipping on each
-bank of the Pool were bright with bunting, and black with swarming
-sightseers. The cheering was overpowering when the fair-haired young
-Prince was seen in the barge, and both the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_419" id="page_419">{419}</a></span> Royal children, though they
-went through the ordeal quietly and prettily, were obviously a little
-frightened and nervous. “The Prince,” wrote Lady Lyttelton to Mrs.
-Gladstone, “was perfect in taste and manner, putting the Prince of Wales
-forward without affectation, and very dignified and kind himself.” The
-procession on the water was gorgeous in the extreme. State liveries were
-blazing everywhere. Civic costumes of feudal times kindled many ancient
-memories; and the Lord Mayor’s barge, which led the way, was a miracle
-of garish splendour. Lady Lyttelton says that what struck her most was
-not only the cheering, but the affectionate expression on the faces of
-the people when they craned forward to get a glimpse of the little
-Prince and Princess. But of one civic speaker and his speech in the
-Rotunda her ladyship says it “was most pompous; and he is ridiculous in
-voice and manner. And his immense size, and cloak, and wig, and great
-voice addressing the Prince of Wales about his being the ‘pledge and
-promise of a long race of kings,’ looked quite absurd. Poor Princey did
-not seem at all to guess what he meant.” The Queen was rather
-sad-hearted at missing this first public reception of her children,
-which was the occasion of such an outburst of popular enthusiasm, loyal
-huzzas, and joy-bells ringing all over London town, not to mention
-thunderous salutations from the Tower guns&mdash;“enough,” says Lady
-Lyttelton, “to drive one mad.”</p>
-
-<p>On the 2nd of December the Royal home was turned into a house of
-mourning. On that day the good Dowager-Queen Adelaide passed away from
-among the small but appreciative circle of friends and relatives who
-admired and loved her. The Queen’s grief was deep and sincere. “Though
-we daily expected this sad event,” writes her Majesty to King Leopold,
-“yet it came so suddenly when it did come, as if she had never been ill,
-and I can hardly realise the truth now.... She was truly motherly in her
-kindness to us and our children, and it always made her happy to be with
-us and to see us!”<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a></p>
-
-<p>Queen Adelaide, it may be here noted, was one of the earliest of funeral
-reformers. Struck by the wastefulness and the bad taste of funereal
-pageants, she left what the Queen calls “the most affecting directions”
-for her burial, ordering that it should be conducted with the utmost
-simplicity and privacy&mdash;the only exceptional arrangement being that she
-desired her coffin to be borne by seamen, in homage to the memory of her
-husband, William IV., the Sailor-King. A simple-hearted, kindly,
-Christian lady, whose hands were ever swift in doing good&mdash;such is a
-brief abstract of the life and character of the Dowager-Queen Adelaide.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_420" id="page_420">{420}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_018" id="ill_018"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_420.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_420.jpg" width="321" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE CHAMBER OF REPRESENTATIVES, BRUSSELS.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXIII"></a>CHAPTER XXIII.<br /><br />
-<small>CLOUDS IN THE EAST AND ELSEWHERE.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>Political Wreckage&mdash;Force triumphs over Opinion&mdash;The State of
-France&mdash;Election of Prince Charles Louis Bonaparte as
-Prince-President&mdash;The Sad Plight of Italy&mdash;Palmerston’s
-Anti-Austrian Policy&mdash;Defeat of Piedmont&mdash;The Fall of Venice&mdash;Fall
-of the Roman Republic&mdash;A Cromwellian Struggle in Prussia&mdash;The
-Queen’s Partisanship&mdash;Her Prussian Sympathies&mdash;The Hungarian
-Refugees in Turkey&mdash;A Diplomatic Conflict with Russia&mdash;Opening of
-Parliament&mdash;Mr. Disraeli and Local Taxation&mdash;Parliamentary
-Reform&mdash;The Jonahs of the Cabinet&mdash;The Dispute with Greece&mdash;Don
-Pacifico’s case&mdash;Coercion of Greece&mdash;Lord Palmerston meekly accepts
-an Insult from Russia&mdash;French Intervention&mdash;A Diplomatic Conflict
-in France&mdash;Recall of the French Ambassador&mdash;False Statements in
-Parliament&mdash;The Queen’s Indignation&mdash;The Don Pacifico Debate&mdash;The
-<i>Civis Romanus sum</i> Doctrine&mdash;Palmerston’s Victory&mdash;The West
-African Slave Trade.</p></div>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="smcap">When</span> the year 1850 opened the counter-revolution had been accomplished.
-Much political and social wreckage disfigured the Continent, but the
-tempest which had produced it was over. What remained was an uneasy
-after-swell agitating the restless ocean of discontent. Force had, in
-fact, triumphed over opinion, and Europe was at last tranquil.</p>
-
-<p>In France, after Louis Philippe fell, the country was left a prey to
-four factions or parties. One demanded an absolute monarchy; another
-demanded a parliamentary monarchy; a third demanded a military empire,
-based on universal suffrage; a fourth demanded a republic. The partisans
-of the republic triumphed in the first instance. But it fell, a victim
-to the voracity of its own children. The Government of Lamartine was
-poetic and Utopian,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_421" id="page_421">{421}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_019" id="ill_019"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_421.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_421.jpg" width="263" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>LOUIS KOSSUTH (1850).</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">and its experiment of creating national workshops in which the workers
-were to be paid by the State, was not only fantastic but fatal. The
-State found it had no work to give. It found it had no money to spend in
-wages; and the artisans of the national establishments were accordingly
-advised to join the army. This disastrous adventure in Socialism was
-followed by another insurrection in Paris&mdash;in which, by the way, the
-Archbishop of Paris and thousands of less eminent persons were slain.
-What Prince Bismarck would call the “psychological moment” for the
-interposition of a clever adventurer with a suggestion of compromise had
-manifestly arrived. Accordingly, the advent of Prince Charles Louis
-Bonaparte was hailed with a sense of relief by all parties&mdash;wearied to
-despair by the futile conflicts of factions. Although M. Grévy vainly
-endeavoured by a motion in the Chamber to procure the proscription of
-the Prince, his Highness was elected President of the Republic<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_422" id="page_422">{422}</a></span> on the
-10th of December, 1848, by five and a half million out of seven and a
-half million votes. He took the oath to preserve the Republic, without
-compunction. But when the year 1850 opened, he was busily plotting for
-its destruction, and manufacturing failure for its institutions.</p>
-
-<p>The plight of Italy was a sad one. Austria had successfully met the
-attempt to seize her Italian provinces. She had crushed Piedmont so
-completely that, in 1849, there was danger lest she might be tempted to
-invade that State, and thus provoke the interference of Republican
-France. Lord Palmerston accordingly endeavoured to mediate between
-Austria and Piedmont. The idea of mediation was chimerical, for Austria,
-having made heavy sacrifices to hold her Cisalpine territories, and
-having succeeded in doing so by force, could hardly be expected to
-accept with equanimity Lord Palmerston’s favourite dogma, that the
-Italian provinces of Austria were to her not a source of strength, but
-of weakness. Austria repudiated all proposals for a conference of
-mediation, unless they were limited to discuss what Piedmont owed her as
-an indemnity, and the guarantees which could be given against
-Piedmontese turbulence. Diplomacy had well-nigh exhausted its resources
-in endeavouring to bring Austria to submit the points at issue to a
-Congress at Brussels, when the whole situation was suddenly changed.
-Joseph Mazzini and his school, convinced that Austria was checked by
-France and England, overthrew the Governments of Florence and Rome,
-which were under Austrian tutelage. Revolution headed by a monarch had
-failed. Its victory, argued Mazzini, under Republican leadership, would
-be a signal triumph for the Republican idea. The success of Mazzini and
-his followers led to the formation of a violent anti-Austrian Ministry
-in Piedmont.</p>
-
-<p>But again Austria triumphed. Piedmont was crushed at Novara on the 23rd
-of March, 1849. Venice was on the eve of surrender, and when the Pope,
-who had fled to Gaeta, appealed to the Catholic Powers for aid, Austria
-was thus quite free to help him. The prospect of Austria bringing
-Central as well as North Italy under her sway alarmed France, and
-accordingly the Republican Government in Paris sent an army under
-Oudinot, which suppressed the Republican Government at Rome. The Grand
-Duke of Tuscany was restored, the revolution in the Sicilies quenched in
-blood, and the dream of Italian independence dissipated. Nor was this
-the only triumph of Absolutism under Austria. The revolution in Hungary
-was suppressed, but not till Russia came to the assistance of Austria.</p>
-
-<p>In Prussia, too, the monarchy, after a Cromwellian struggle with a
-factious Parliament, had completely restored its authority, and to
-Prussia the smaller German States now began to turn for leadership in
-consolidating themselves into a German Empire. Unhappily the King of
-Prussia failed to respond to this feeling when Austria was struggling
-with the revolution in Italy. At the beginning of 1850 he accordingly
-found the feeling in favour of unifying Germany opposed by three great
-Powers&mdash;France, Russia, and Austria, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_423" id="page_423">{423}</a></span> last, indeed, claiming, on
-behalf of the Archduke John, to be the executive head and heir of the
-defunct German Confederation of 1815. By the Constitution of Kremsir,
-Austria had consolidated her possessions&mdash;German, Magyar, Sclavonic, and
-Italian&mdash;into one federal State, and, in a sense, she had thereby
-withdrawn from the German Confederation. Her policy of obstructing
-consolidation in disintegrated Germany was therefore alike ungenerous
-and unjust.</p>
-
-<p>Through this maze of difficulty the Queen and Prince Albert steered a
-clear course. They were both partisans&mdash;one might say strong and zealous
-partisans&mdash;of Teutonic consolidation under Prussia. Austria, they held,
-had played for her own hand, and, by adopting Schwarzenberg’s policy of
-consolidating her dominions in purely Austrian interests, she had
-abandoned her claim to guide the destinies of the smaller German States,
-in purely German interests. But, however strongly the Queen felt on this
-point, her influence was used to moderate the extravagant anti-Austrian
-antipathies of Lord Palmerston, and it largely contributed to keep the
-country out of war. At last, however, a cloud rose in the East which
-threatened us with calamity.</p>
-
-<p>When Austria, by summoning to her aid the armed hordes of Russia,
-stamped out the movement for Hungarian independence, several Hungarian
-and Polish patriots&mdash;Kossuth, Ban, and others&mdash;fled to Turkey. Austria
-and Russia demanded their extradition. The Sultan refused to surrender
-the refugees, and De Titoff and Stürmer, Russian and Austrian
-ambassadors, suspended diplomatic relations with the Porte. The Sultan
-appealed to Britain and France against this outrageous violation of the
-unity of nations. Britain remonstrated in firm but courteous language,
-and Austria and Russia both withdrew their demands, but not before the
-British fleet had moved within the forbidden limits of the Dardanelles,
-in anticipation of a refusal. Lord Palmerston’s apology for thus
-violating the treaty of 1841 was that the fleet had been driven into
-forbidden waters by “stress of weather.” As there was notoriously no
-“stress of weather,” this explanation merely irritated the Czar, and
-planted in his heart the germ of that fierce hatred of England, which
-culminated in the Crimean War.</p>
-
-<p>Parliament was opened on the 31st of January, 1850, by Commission, and,
-as had been anticipated, the Protectionists made, not an attack, but
-rather a reconnoissance in force against the Government. During the
-recess they had gone through the country painting the darkest pictures
-of the condition of England. According to their speeches, one would have
-imagined that another famine had smitten the nation; and for all this
-pessimism there was but one justification. No doubt everybody who
-depended on the soil for a livelihood was suffering from distress.
-Prices had fallen, and farmers had not taken kindly to the new order of
-things. But the masses of the people, especially in industrial centres,
-were enjoying greater comfort than ever. The revenue was showing signs
-of buoyancy; the foreign trade of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_424" id="page_424">{424}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_020" id="ill_020"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_424.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_424.jpg" width="337" height="249" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE WHITE DRAWING-ROOM, WINDSOR CASTLE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">country had increased, and pauperism had diminished. All these cheering
-facts were concealed from the public by the Conservative agitators, who
-concentrated attention on one point&mdash;the admitted and deplorable
-distress of the landed interest. The real desire of the Tory party at
-this time was to turn out the Government and restore Protection. The
-Duke of Richmond’s indiscreet speech on the Address in the House of
-Lords proves that. But, conscious of the difficulty of suddenly
-upsetting the fiscal system which was based on Free Trade, they
-concealed their real purpose. Mr. Disraeli therefore supported a
-Protectionist amendment to the Address in reply to the Queen’s Speech,
-on the ground that the landed interests were entitled to a certain
-amount of relief from public burdens, in compensation for the loss of
-Protection. On the 19th of February, Mr. Disraeli had to show his hand.
-He then moved for a committee to revise the Poor Law so as to mitigate
-distress among the agricultural class. This debate is worth noticing,
-because it may be said to have definitely originated the perennial
-movement for local taxation reform, which is always an object of
-enthusiasm to what may be called the country party, when out of office.
-Mr. Disraeli’s idea was to transfer from local rates to the Imperial
-Treasury (1), Poor Law establishment charges; (2), rates which had
-nothing to do with the relief of the poor, and were only raised by<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_425" id="page_425">{425}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_021" id="ill_021"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_425.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_425.jpg" height="255" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE PIRÆUS, ATHENS.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Poor Law machinery as a matter of convenience&mdash;such as rates for
-registration of births, deaths, and marriages, for getting up jury
-lists, and the like; and (3), the rate for supporting the casual poor.
-His case was not decided on its merits. Members did not look to what was
-in the motion, but to what was behind it, namely, the restoration of
-Protection, or an increase in Income Tax to provide funds for the relief
-of local burdens. Sir James Graham’s frank admission, as a landlord,
-that relief in the rate would be swallowed by an increase in the rents,
-and that it was the landlord and not the tenant who would profit,
-determined many, who did not deny the abstract justice of Mr. Disraeli’s
-contention, to vote against him. The sensational incident in the debate
-was the speech of Mr. Gladstone, who supported Mr. Disraeli against his
-own leaders. In fact, he replied to Sir James Graham. Despite the
-support of Peel, the Government, instead of having a majority of forty,
-as they expected, were saved from defeat only by a majority of twenty.
-From that day till now a clever debater, by a skilful motion in favour
-of relief of local taxation, has always been able to weaken the majority
-of the strongest of Ministries. Local taxation is the vulnerable point
-of Governments, and it is the one subject with which they all seem
-afraid to deal in a bold and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_426" id="page_426">{426}</a></span> comprehensive spirit. All they do is to
-denounce the evil in Opposition, and palliate its existence when in
-Power.</p>
-
-<p>The agitation for Parliamentary Reform had increased. Some of the
-Peelites, notably Sir J. Graham, had warned Lord John Russell that they
-were in favour of an extension of the franchise, and Lord John himself
-had abandoned the doctrine of finality. Mr. Hume, therefore, brought
-forward his annual motion on the 28th of February, hinting plainly that
-he would have no objection to extend its scope so as to include female
-franchise, and the substitution of an elective for a hereditary House of
-Lords. It was quite certain that Lord John Russell was by this time of
-opinion that some safe concessions might be made to the Radicals.
-Several of his colleagues, however&mdash;<i>e.g.</i>, Mr. Labouchere&mdash;were of a
-different opinion, and it is accordingly right to say that those who
-denounced Lord John’s “apostasy,” when he opposed Mr. Hume, were
-somewhat unfair. Had the Prime Minister produced a Reform Bill this
-Session, every question which it might be possible to deal with would
-have been put aside. But as he was not likely to carry his own
-colleagues with him in advocating reform, not only would this sacrifice
-have been made in vain, but a Government which, in the existing state of
-parties, was indispensable to the nation, would have fallen. Mr. Hume
-was beaten by a vote of 242 against 96, though the Prime Minister’s
-argument against him was rather a plea for delay, than a defiant “<i>Non
-possumus</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>Writing on the 10th of February, Mr. Greville says in his Journal, “The
-brightness of the Ministerial prospect was very soon clouded over, and
-last week their disasters began. There was first of all the Greek
-affair, and then the case of the Ceylon witnesses&mdash;matters affecting
-Lord Palmerston and Lord Grey”&mdash;the Jonahs of the Cabinet. “The Greek
-case,” continues Mr. Greville, “will probably be settled, thanks to
-French mediation, but it was a bad and discreditable affair, and has
-done more harm to Palmerston than any of his greater enormities. The
-other Ministers are extremely annoyed at it, and at the sensation it has
-produced.” The Greek case was briefly this: Mr. Finlay, a British
-subject in Athens, alleged that King Otho had enclosed a bit of his land
-in the Royal Garden, and demanded compensation. The King offered him the
-same compensation that had been accepted as fair by other owners of
-enclosed land in Mr. Finlay’s position. This Mr. Finlay refused, and he
-demanded £1,500 for the land which, it was admitted, he had bought for
-£10. Don Pacifico, a Portuguese Jew from Gibraltar, sought damages for
-the pillage of his house by the Athenian mob. He claimed £31,534. The
-value of his furniture was shown to be £2,181. The balance was supposed
-to represent the value of documents proving that he had a claim on the
-Portuguese Government for £27,000. Mr. Finlay and Don Pacifico had not
-raised their claims in the ordinary law courts, and to the amazement of
-everybody, Lord Palmerston proposed to employ the mailed might of
-England to collect their bad debts. He peremptorily ordered the Greek
-Government to<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_427" id="page_427">{427}</a></span> pay these exaggerated claims, on pain of inflicting on
-Greece a blockade and reprisals within twenty-four hours. On the 18th of
-January, Admiral Parker, with the Mediterranean Fleet, blockaded the
-Piræus&mdash;for, contrary to Lord Palmerston’s expectations, Greece refused
-to comply with his demands. The Greek Government appealed for protection
-to France and Russia&mdash;whose Governments being with that of Britain joint
-guarantors for the independence of Greece, were justly annoyed that
-their good offices had not been invoked by Lord Palmerston. Count
-Nesselrode, burning to avenge the defeat of the Czar over the question
-of the Hungarian refugees in Turkey, sent a remonstrance to Lord
-Palmerston, which was couched in the language of bitter contempt and
-studied insolence. The French Government, on the other hand, pretending
-that our agent in Athens had blundered, courteously offered to extricate
-Lord Palmerston from his difficulties by using the influence of France,
-to compose the dispute with Greece. On the 12th of February Lord
-Palmerston ordered the British Envoy to inform Admiral Parker that he
-must suspend coercive operations. It was not till the 2nd of March that
-these instructions arrived, and in the interval the Admiral had been
-vigorously coercing the Greeks. France was naturally irritated at this
-untoward incident, all the more that Lord Palmerston’s explanation of
-the delay was deemed unsatisfactory. Ultimately, the matter was settled
-on Greece agreeing to pay Mr. Wyse, the British Minister, £8,500 to be
-distributed by him as he thought just among the claimants&mdash;the value of
-Don Pacifico’s lost vouchers against the Portuguese Government to be
-determined by arbitration.</p>
-
-<p>This compromise, however, was made by negotiation in London. A French
-steamer conveyed the purport of it to Mr. Wyse, the British Envoy at
-Athens, on the 24th of April. He, however, said that he had no
-instructions from his Government to countermand his original orders,
-which were to renew coercion if the French Envoy at Athens could not
-induce the Greeks to submit. Coercion was therefore again applied, and
-the Greek Government on the 27th submitted to Mr. Wyse’s demands. These
-were more onerous in some respects than the terms agreed on by the
-London Convention, and Lord Palmerston persisted in adhering to the
-Athenian arrangement. M. Gros at Athens, finding he could not persuade
-Mr. Wyse to act on the London Convention, had on the 21st of April
-officially intimated that his action as mediator was ended. This, argued
-Lord Palmerston coolly, left the British Envoy&mdash;in the absence of
-instructions from England&mdash;free to renew coercion, and to enter into the
-Athenian arrangement. Palmerston, in other words, claimed the right to
-take advantage of his own delay, in notifying to Mr. Wyse the result of
-the London Convention, to refuse to act on the finding of that
-Convention. It is but fair to say that the Queen was quite as indignant
-as the Government of France, at Lord Palmerston’s rude and provocative
-conduct. Lord John Russell intimated to her the fact that the French
-Government had met the affront with which Lord Palmerston had rewarded
-their efforts to extricate him from the effect<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_428" id="page_428">{428}</a></span> of his own blunder, by
-recalling M. Drouyn de Lhuys. Her Majesty promptly directed her husband,
-who acted as her confidential secretary, to send the Prime Minister one
-of those curt, cutting notes, which invariably indicate her displeasure.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“<span class="smcap">My dear Lord John</span>,&mdash;Both the Queen and myself are exceedingly
-sorry at the news your letter contained. We are not surprised,
-however, that Lord Palmerston’s mode of doing business should not
-be borne by the susceptible French Government with the same good
-humour and forbearance as by his colleagues.</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">“Ever yours truly,</span><br />
-“<span class="smcap">Albert</span>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“Buckingham Palace, 15th May, 1850.”<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>The view which the Queen took was the fair and common-sense one, namely,
-that we should act on the London Convention. The Convention of London
-which we made with France gave us certain terms. By an accident, for
-which Palmerston was responsible, Mr. Wyse at Athens had extorted better
-ones for us at Athens. It was not high policy, but sharp practice; it
-was not in the spirit of enlightened diplomacy, but in the spirit of the
-meanest attorneydom, that any claim to benefit by the “accident” which
-had given better terms to us at Athens than at London, was pressed by
-Lord Palmerston.</p>
-
-<p>But the Queen’s troubles did not end here. Her birthday was celebrated
-on the 15th of May, and the absence of the French and Russian
-Ambassadors from the usual Foreign Office dinner on that occasion,
-naturally roused suspicion. It was not known that the French
-representative had been recalled, and that France and England were in
-open diplomatic conflict. What was the meaning of the absence of these
-ambassadors? asked Society at the great rout at Devonshire House on the
-night of the 19th. Questions to this effect were put to Ministers in
-both Houses. Lord Lansdowne said that the departure of M. Drouyn de
-Lhuys was purely accidental; and Lord Palmerston had the effrontery to
-declare, in reply to Mr. Milner Gibson, that M. de Lhuys had merely gone
-to Paris as a medium of communication between the two Governments. But
-the <i>Times</i> reported in due course that General de la Hitte, Minister of
-War, had intimated from the tribune of the French Assembly that, because
-Lord Palmerston’s explanations in regard to points at issue between the
-two Governments were not such as France had a right to expect, “the
-President had ordered General de la Hitte to recall their Ambassador
-from London.” Nothing could exceed the mortification of the Queen when
-she was informed of the almost simultaneous publication of these
-contradictory official statements. Her detestation of equivocal and
-shuffling Ministerial explanations has long passed into a proverb. Her
-Majesty’s theory, in fact, is that the Minister is for the time the
-trustee of the honour of the Crown, and that, especially in foreign
-countries, where the relation between the British Sovereign and her
-Ministers is ill understood, the Crown is held personally responsible
-for what the Minister says, in all matters affecting<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_429" id="page_429">{429}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_022" id="ill_022"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_429.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_429.jpg" width="353" height="518" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>GRAND ENTRANCE, WESTMINSTER PALACE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_430" id="page_430">{430}</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="nind">the external relations of the kingdom. In plain English, the Queen has
-always held that if a Minister tells a lie in Parliament, nine people
-out of ten on the Continent will suspect that she has ordered or induced
-him to tell it. Hence her indignation on reading Lord Palmerston’s reply
-to Mr. Milner Gibson’s question was tinged with a feeling of personal
-humiliation and shame. Public opinion was similarly excited when the
-newspapers were studied, and fuller questions were immediately put to
-Lord Lansdowne and Lord John Russell. They gave evasive and
-prevaricating answers, attempting to explain away the French
-Ambassador’s letter of recall, much to the disgust of all parties in
-Parliament. The tide of anger rose higher every day that the scandal was
-discussed. Lord John Russell told his brother, the Duke of Bedford, that
-Ministers must defend Palmerston on this occasion, but, after the
-dispute came to an end, he would have Palmerston dismissed from the
-Foreign Office. “He is,” writes Mr. Greville on the 19th of May, “to see
-the Queen on Tuesday, who will of course be boiling over with
-indignation;” for by this time Baron Brunnow, the Russian Ambassador,
-had warned Lord John that he, too, must ask to be relieved from his
-post, as “it was impossible for him to stay here to be on bad terms with
-Palmerston.”</p>
-
-<p>The question has often been asked, Why did English statesmen get up in
-both Houses of Parliament and tell a series of falsehoods which they
-knew must be discovered in forty-eight hours by official refutation from
-France? The fact is, Lord Palmerston had deceived his colleagues. He
-assured them that M. de Lhuys had taken back to Paris explanations so
-conciliatory, that his letter of recall would be quietly cancelled.
-Assured by Palmerston that he had made the cancelling of the recall a
-certainty, Lord Lansdowne and Lord John Russell assumed that the letter
-of recall was suppressed, and they both answered as if it never had
-existed. On the 25th of May, Mr. Greville writes:&mdash;“The morning before
-yesterday the Duke of Bedford came here again. He had seen Lord John
-since, and heard what passed with the Queen. She was full of this
-affair, and again urged all her objections to Lord Palmerston. This time
-she found Lord John better disposed than heretofore, and he is certainly
-revolving in his mind how the thing can be done. He does not by any
-means contemplate going out himself, or breaking up the Government. What
-he looks to is this, that the Queen should take the initiative, and urge
-Palmerston’s removal from the Foreign Office. She is quite ready to do
-this as soon as she is assured of her wishes being attended to.”<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a></p>
-
-<p>Lord John Russell screwed up his courage to the point of contemplating
-the removal of Lord Palmerston from the Foreign Office to some other
-department of State, he himself undertaking the duties of Foreign
-Secretary along with those of the Premiership. Such a combination is
-never a wise one. Even in recent times, when Lord Salisbury attempted to
-unite in his own person the two offices, the strain was found to be
-greater than his strength could bear; and in the case<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_431" id="page_431">{431}</a></span> of Lord John,
-whose health was at this time capricious and precarious, it was perhaps
-as well that at the eleventh hour he shrank from proposing the change to
-Lord Palmerston. Lord John has been accused of lack of courage in
-connection with this affair. The truth is, that a perverted chivalry
-prompted him to stand by Lord Palmerston. The Greek affair was hardly
-defensible. But it was bruited about that the Opposition, under cover of
-condemning Lord Palmerston in that special case, meant to direct a
-severe attack on the foreign policy of the Government as a whole. Lord
-Palmerston’s colleagues had, however, permitted themselves not only to
-be identified with that policy, but had thought fit to defend every
-blunder he had made in carrying it out. Lord John Russell, then, cannot
-be blamed for considering that to desert the Foreign Secretary on the
-Greek Question, would have been tantamount to making him the scapegoat
-of the Cabinet. Hence, in spite of the Queen’s strong feeling in the
-matter, it was agreed that Palmerston should not be “thrown over.”</p>
-
-<p>After much fencing between the leaders of the two parties, the first of
-the attacks, which led to a series of debates almost unparalleled in our
-history as displays of sustained Parliamentary eloquence, was made in
-the House of Lords on the 17th of June. Lord Stanley moved a vote of
-censure on the Ministry for their coercive measures in Greece,
-affirming, however, the general proposition that it was the right and
-duty of the Government to secure to British subjects in foreign States,
-the full protection of the laws of those States. The scene was a
-memorable one. The House was crowded in every part, and the conflict
-began with an amusing farce. The Peeress’s Gallery was crammed to
-overflowing, and when Lady Melbourne and Lady Newport, under Lord
-Brougham’s escort, went to their places, they found them filled, and
-were ignominiously turned away. Brougham, however, espied Bunsen, the
-Prussian Minister, in the gallery, and requested him to retire to his
-proper seat in the Ambassadors’ quarter, but he refused. Then Brougham
-went down to his own place, and avenged himself on Bunsen by calling the
-attention of their lordships to the fact that there was “a stranger in
-the Peeress’s Gallery,” adding, “if he does not come down, I shall move
-your lordships to enforce the order of the House. It is the more
-intolerable as he has a place assigned to him in another part, and he is
-now keeping the room of <i>two Peeresses</i>.” As Bunsen was notoriously a
-fat, overgrown man, Brougham’s malicious personality was received with
-shouts of laughter. But it had no effect on the stolid Prussian, who
-kept his seat till Sir Augustus Clifford, Usher of the Black Rod, made
-him retire.<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a></p>
-
-<p>The issue before the House was simple enough. (1), Lord Palmerston had
-agreed with M. Drouyn de Lhuys that if the terms which M. Gros, the
-French Envoy at Athens, proposed on behalf of Greece were rejected by
-Mr. Wyse, the British Envoy, coercion should not be again applied
-without special orders from Britain. But if M. Gros threw up his office
-of mediator because the Greeks declined to let him offer fair terms,
-then of course Mr. Wyse was to<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_432" id="page_432">{432}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_023" id="ill_023"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_432.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_432.jpg" height="328" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>MR. (AFTERWARDS SIR ALEXANDER) COCKBURN.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">resort to coercion without further instructions. (2), M. Drouyn de Lhuys
-and Lord Palmerston in London agreed on a settlement, the terms of which
-were less onerous than those demanded by Mr. Wyse. (3), Though this was
-informally communicated by the French to Mr. Wyse, he rejected the terms
-which M. Gros offered on behalf of Greece, contending that he had no
-instructions from Lord Palmerston as to the adoption of any other
-course. (4), M. Gros then dropped the negotiations. Mr. Wyse, again
-arguing that he was without instructions, ordered coercion to be
-applied, upon which the Greek Government yielded. The pith of the
-dispute centred in one point. Did Palmerston or did he not send Mr. Wyse
-instructions as to the arrangement made in London with M. Drouyn de
-Lhuys? The French said that their Envoy abandoned negotiations because
-Mr. Wyse was unreasonable. Lord Palmerston contended that Mr. Wyse was
-of opinion that M. Gros had dropped mediation because the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_433" id="page_433">{433}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_024" id="ill_024"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_433.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_433.jpg" width="517" height="346" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>CAPE TOWN.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_434" id="page_434">{434}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Greeks were unreasonable, and that therefore, in terms of the
-arrangement made in London, Mr. Wyse was justified in resorting to
-coercion without further instructions. Mr. Wyse may have been mistaken
-in supposing that M. Gros retired from the negotiations in the
-circumstances which, according to the London Convention, would have
-justified a resort to coercion without further reference to Lord
-Palmerston. If that were the case, the Government had a good defence;
-for it would have been unfair to censure them for Mr. Wyse’s blunder.
-But was it the case? How could Mr. Wyse have blundered in interpreting
-the conditions of the London Convention, if no instructions in
-accordance with that Convention had been sent to him? The complaint was
-that the Foreign Secretary had neglected to send these instructions, and
-a close and careful examination of Palmerston’s own Blue-book, fails to
-bring to light the slightest proof that they ever were sent. Therefore
-it was clear (1), that England had broken a binding diplomatic compact
-with France, and (2), that this breach of faith had enabled Mr. Wyse at
-Athens to extort by force from a small, weak Power more onerous terms
-than the English Government had agreed with France to accept in London.
-The House of Lords took this view of the matter, and when the debate
-ended, in the grey dawn of a summer’s morning, it was found on division
-that there was a majority of 37 against the Government.</p>
-
-<p>Some members of the Cabinet were for resignation. Many friends of the
-Government thought that Palmerston should personally offer the Queen his
-resignation, begging her not to accept that of his colleagues if they
-tendered theirs. But the Foreign Secretary made no offer to resign, and
-at first the Cabinet resolved to take no more notice of the vote of
-censure in the Upper House. Ultimately, they found that they must notice
-it, and as their Foreign Policy as a whole was impugned, they decided
-not to abandon the Foreign Secretary. On the 20th of June, Lord John
-Russell explained why he would not resign. He gave two reasons&mdash;one good
-and the other bad,&mdash;the first being one of which the Queen approved. It
-was that a change of Government, in consequence of a resolution of the
-House of Lords, would be unconstitutional, because, in his opinion, it
-might be dangerous even to the House of Lords to lay upon it the
-responsibility of controlling her Majesty’s Executive. Two precedents,
-one a hundred years old, and one taken from 1833, when the Peers, on the
-motion of the Duke of Wellington, censured Lord Grey’s Foreign Policy in
-Portugal, were ingeniously cited by Lord John Russell in support of this
-constitutional doctrine. But his second reason was characteristically
-Palmerstonian. He said that the House of Lords had laid it down, that it
-was the duty of the British Government to see that British subjects in
-Foreign States got full protection from the laws of those States. That
-was a <i>limitation</i> of duty which Lord John Russell refused to recognise,
-because, said he, a Foreign State might make bad laws, and it would be
-the duty of England to prevent her subjects from being injured by those
-laws. No principle is more clearly established in international law than
-this&mdash;that a Sovereign State has an absolute right to dictate the terms
-on which<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_435" id="page_435">{435}</a></span> any alien shall abide on its soil.<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> If the alien does not
-like the law of the Foreign State, he has no business to call on his own
-countrymen to defend him by force of arms in refusing to obey it, seeing
-that it was not at their request or in their interest, but of his own
-free will, and in pursuit of his own fortune, he went to live or traffic
-abroad. In fact, to lay it down that England might levy war on any
-country, whose laws Englishmen residing in that country considered
-inequitable, was tantamount to proclaiming her <i>hostis humani generis</i>.
-Yet such was the doctrine which the House of Commons, in spite of the
-protests of the Tories, of Radicals like Mr. Cobden and Mr. Bright, and
-Peelites like Sir Robert Peel and Mr. Gladstone, cheerfully accepted
-from the Whigs at this period. The only thing that can be said in its
-defence is that it is a doctrine which the House has never dared to
-apply to a stronger Power than Greece&mdash;never to a Power like Russia,
-which deports English Jews, nor like Germany, which deports English
-residents, personally obnoxious to Prince Bismarck, in the most
-arbitrary manner. It is doubtful if it would even dare to apply it to an
-autonomous colony like Victoria, had her Government refused, as was
-threatened, to permit the Irish informer, James Carey, to reside within
-her frontier.</p>
-
-<p>Having decided to defy the House of Lords, the Government hit on an
-ingenious plan for neutralising the vote of censure. They put up Mr.
-Roebuck on the 21st of June to move a vote of confidence in them not
-touching the Greek dispute, but approving generally of their Foreign
-Policy as one likely “to preserve untarnished the honour and dignity of
-this country.” The debate, which lasted five days, was a veritable
-tournament of Titans. On both sides speeches were made that touch the
-highest point to which Parliamentary eloquence can reach. Mr. Cockburn,
-afterwards Lord Chief Justice, delivered an oration by which, at one
-bound, he leapt into the first rank of British orators. Peel delivered
-the last speech he was fated to make in the great assembly, on which for
-years he had played with the easy mastery of a musician on his favourite
-instrument. Palmerston himself spoke for four hours and a quarter with
-more than his usual dash and intrepidity, and with surprising moderation
-and good taste&mdash;basing his case virtually on the application of the
-<i>civis Romanus sum</i> doctrine to British Foreign Policy. This was the
-point in it which Mr. Gladstone demolished in a passionate protest, that
-may be said to have become classical. But in the end the Government
-triumphed by a majority of 46! Yet, on the face of the facts, they had
-absolutely no case. Why, then, were they victorious? For many reasons.
-In the then divided state of parties, the Government was felt to be the
-only possible Government. Palmerston, by adroitly spreading the report
-that the attack on<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_436" id="page_436">{436}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_025" id="ill_025"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_436.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_436.jpg" height="369" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>MR. GLADSTONE (1855).</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">him was really fomented by the agents of the despotic Powers, whose
-policy he had persistently opposed, won strong support from the
-Radicals. The Whigs felt that as the Foreign Policy of the Government as
-a whole was attacked, they were bound to defend the Ministry, quite
-irrespective of Palmerston’s possibly objectionable method of carrying
-out that policy. Moreover, it was undoubtedly a weak point in the
-tactics of the Opposition, that they did not venture to submit in the
-House of Commons, the motion of censure which they had carried in the
-House of Lords. But though Lord Palmerston’s triumph was complete, the
-Queen continued to be dissatisfied<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_437" id="page_437">{437}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_026" id="ill_026"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_437.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_437.jpg" width="247" height="353" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>WINDSOR CASTLE: VIEW FROM THE QUADRANGLE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">with his reckless manner of managing the Foreign Office. Pressure was
-put on him by the concurrence of Lord John Russell, the Duke of Bedford,
-Lord Lansdowne, and Lord Clarendon to take another department, which,
-however, he refused to do. For the time&mdash;confident in his popularity&mdash;he
-was able to hold his position, but ere a year had elapsed her Majesty’s
-warnings were fulfilled, and Lord John was simply compelled to force him
-to retire.<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> It must be here told how this whole controversy ended.
-Before the debate closed, it was announced that we had accepted, with
-some trifling modifications<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_438" id="page_438">{438}</a></span> in detail, the French proposals made on
-behalf of Greece. The demands of the claimants in support of whom we had
-been brought to the brink of war with France, were finally assessed at
-£10,000&mdash;about one-thirtieth part of the sum they originally asked!</p>
-
-<p>No other question of Foreign Policy agitated the House of Commons in
-1850, save Mr. Hutt’s proposal to withdraw the British war-ships engaged
-in suppressing the West African slave trade. The cost of the squadron
-had made its maintenance unpopular even with Liberals, and when Lord
-John Russell threatened to stake the existence of his Ministry on it,
-the Queen was distressed to learn that there was every prospect of his
-being defeated, at a time when a change of Government would have
-produced the utmost confusion. A meeting of the Liberal Party was
-convened by the Prime Minister at Downing Street, and pressure, which
-they hardly dared to resist, induced the malcontents to support the
-Government. Mr. Hutt’s motion was lost, many Ministerialists, however,
-complaining bitterly that the Prime Minister had concussed them into
-voting against their convictions.</p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXIV"></a>CHAPTER XXIV.<br /><br />
-<small>SOME EPOCH-MARKING LEGISLATION.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>The Colonies and Party Government&mdash;The Movement for Autonomy&mdash;Lord
-John Russell’s Colonial Bill&mdash;Tory Opposition to Colonial
-Federation&mdash;Mr. Adderley’s Plan&mdash;Mr. Gladstone’s Scheme for
-Colonial Church Courts&mdash;The Colonial Bills Mangled in the House of
-Lords&mdash;More English Doles for Ireland&mdash;An Irish Reform Bill&mdash;Lord
-John Russell Proposes to Abolish the Lord Lieutenancy&mdash;The Queen’s
-Irish Policy&mdash;Her offer to Establish a Royal Residence in
-Ireland&mdash;The Bungled Budget&mdash;The Demand for Retrenchment&mdash;The
-Tories Insist on a Reduction of Official Salaries&mdash;Lord John
-Russell’s Commission on Establishments&mdash;The Queen and the
-Church&mdash;The Ecclesiastical Appeals Bill&mdash;The “Gorham Case”&mdash;Death
-of Peel&mdash;The Queen’s Sorrow&mdash;A Nation in Mourning&mdash;Peel’s Character
-and Career&mdash;The Queen’s Alarm about Prince Albert’s Health&mdash;The
-Queen at Work&mdash;The Queen’s Reading-Lamp.</p></div>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="smcap">Far</span> more interesting, however, was the Colonial legislation of the
-Government in 1850, which indeed might be termed epoch-marking. The
-Queen had at the opening of the Session indicated in her Speech from the
-Throne that a measure extending Constitutional government to the
-Colonies would be introduced. It was known that she was personally of
-opinion that the Colonies were giving promise of a growth so rapid, that
-it would be impossible for any length of time to hold them in the
-leading-strings of the Colonial Office. The incessant attacks which had
-been made on Lord Grey in Parliament and in the Press merely served to
-confirm the Queen in this opinion. It was, therefore, with great
-satisfaction that she discovered that men of light and leading on both
-sides of the House of Commons were so far agreed on the subject, that it
-was deemed practicable by Lord John Russell to minimise the friction
-between the Colonies and the Colonial Office, by conceding to the
-Colonists<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_439" id="page_439">{439}</a></span> large powers of representative self-government. Lord John
-Russell explained the scheme which embodied these ideas on the 8th of
-February. To the Cape Colony he granted two Chambers. The first was
-representative, and elected under a property qualification. The second,
-or Legislative Council, was to be elected by persons with a higher
-property qualification, who had been named by the Crown or municipal
-bodies for magisterial and municipal offices as individuals of weight
-and influence. For Australia he proposed a system under which there
-should be only one Legislative Council, two-thirds elected by the
-people, and one-third named by the Governor, on the pattern of the
-system adopted by New South Wales, but with power to the Colonists to
-change to the bi-cameral or two-Chamber system if they preferred it.
-Provision was made for constituting, on petition of any two Colonies, a
-Federal Assembly representing all the Colonial Legislatures, to frame a
-common tariff, or initiate a common policy for dealing with waste lands.
-It was in introducing this great scheme that Lord John Russell said
-that, whilst reserving questions of military defence, the central idea
-of his Colonial policy was this: political freedom can be best promoted
-in the Colonies by acting on the general rule, that while the Imperial
-Government must be their representative in all foreign relations, it
-will interfere in their domestic affairs no further than may be
-manifestly necessary to prevent a conflict in the State itself.</p>
-
-<p>By finally and formally establishing this principle, the Government of
-the Queen did all that was humanly possible to repair the wrong done to
-England and the English people by her grandfather, George III., who
-flung away, not a crown, as did James II., but a virgin continent, to
-gratify an absolutist prejudice.</p>
-
-<p>The Bill passed the House of Commons, though the scheme was open to
-objection. Had it not been open to objection, it would have been a
-perfect Bill, “that faultless monster,” to adapt Pope’s line, “which the
-world ne’er saw.” On the whole, however, it was wonderfully well
-received. Its opponents objected mainly to the adoption of the
-uni-cameral instead of the bi-cameral system, namely, that of governing
-by one instead of by two Legislative Assemblies. Why, it was asked,
-should Australia be limited to one Legislative Assembly when the Cape
-was permitted to have two? Another objection was to the introduction of
-a Federative Assembly, which was opposed bitterly as a novelty even by
-Tory politicians like Mr. Disraeli, who in after-years strongly
-advocated Imperial Federation. Another more valid objection urged by
-Radicals like Sir W. Molesworth, was that the scheme gave the Colonial
-Office too much power. There was good sense in his contention, supported
-by Tories like Mr. Adderley (afterwards Lord Norton), that the Colonial
-Parliament should not only be vested with all legislative powers which
-were <i>not</i> Imperial, but that this should be done by mentioning the
-powers that <i>were</i> Imperial, and leaving everything not mentioned in
-that category, to be considered as Colonial. This point gave rise to an
-able and thoughtful debate on the report of the Bill after it emerged
-from<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_440" id="page_440">{440}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_027" id="ill_027"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_440.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_440.jpg" width="330" height="291" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>VIEW IN PHŒNIX PARK, DUBLIN.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Committee, in which it may be interesting to state that Mr. Gladstone
-delivered a speech in support of the Tory-Radical opposition, which may
-be said to contain the germs of the principle on which his Irish Home
-Rule Bill of 1886 was based. On the other hand, to Mr. Gladstone must be
-credited the oddest and most ridiculous of all the amendments to the
-measure. His ecclesiasticism induced him to propose that in every Colony
-the Church of England be authorised to form a synod independent of the
-Imperial or Colonial Government, and empowered to make laws binding on
-Anglican Colonists. The idea of empowering the Anglican Church courts in
-our free Colonies to make regulations, quite independently of the Crown
-or the Colony, which were to be not only binding <i>in foro conscientiæ</i>,
-but were also to have the force of law, in Royal and Colonial courts,
-was not only mediæval, but monstrous. Yet it was only rejected by 187 to
-182. Perhaps this accounted for what was by far the most trenchant
-speech made in opposition to the Bill, that of the Bishop of Oxford in
-the House of Lords, though even he did not venture to reject the
-measure, his proposal being merely to refer<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_441" id="page_441">{441}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_028" id="ill_028"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_441.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_441.jpg" width="255" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>MR. HORSMAN.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">it to a Committee. It was a speech that would have defeated the
-Government, but for Lord Grey’s conciliatory offer to go on with the
-Bill even if the House struck out the clause enabling Colonial
-Legislatures to alter their constitution, and the clause enabling the
-Colonists to form a Federative Assembly. This won for the Government a
-majority of 13. As the clause sanctioning a Federative Assembly was
-carried in the Lords, against the bitter opposition of the Tories, only
-by a majority of one, it was eventually abandoned. They further marred
-the Bill by conferring exceptional political privileges on wealthy
-squatters, and by prohibiting any Legislative Chamber from eliminating
-its non-elective element. The interesting thing to notice is how the
-Tory Party of the day completely stamped out the germ of that Imperial
-policy of Colonial confedera<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_442" id="page_442">{442}</a></span>tion which Lord John Russell and Lord Grey
-so wisely strove to plant. As “amended” by the Lords, the Bill passed
-into law, much to the satisfaction of the Queen, who, when she
-sanctioned the measure, felt sure that a vigilant personal
-superintendence of the details of Colonial, as well as foreign affairs,
-would not thereafter be added to the already arduous duties and
-anxieties of the Sovereign.</p>
-
-<p>Ireland, as usual, was this Session the object or victim of an
-eleemosynary financial policy. She had hanging over her, in the shape of
-relief loans made during ten years, an unliquidated debt of £4,483,000.
-Besides that, some of the Poor Law Unions were so burdened with debt
-contracted for local purposes&mdash;frequently purposes of jobbery&mdash;that they
-needed help. Lord John Russell therefore proposed to consolidate the
-unliquidated local debts since 1839, and, subject to existing conditions
-of interest, extend the period of repayment to forty years. For the
-immediate relief of bankrupt and semi-bankrupt Unions he proposed
-another advance from the Treasury of £300,000. The justification for
-these loans, which were sanctioned, was that the Irish landowners could
-not pay the interest on the local debt, in addition to the existing
-poor-rates.</p>
-
-<p>Ireland having been decimated by famine and emigration, it was
-considered that it would not be unsafe to lower her elective franchise
-to one of £8 of annual rateable value, more especially as such a
-proposal tended to conciliate, without concession, the Radical agitators
-for Parliamentary reform in England. It did not, however, conciliate Mr.
-Hume, who caustically reminded Sir William Somerville, the Chief
-Secretary for Ireland, when he introduced the Irish Franchise Bill, that
-it put the franchise on a narrower basis than that of Cape Colony, and
-contended that Irishmen should at least be treated as generously as
-Hottentots. The Bill enacted that instead of each voter being compelled
-to claim registration, local authorities should make up lists of voters,
-subject to the usual objections&mdash;in other words, that the rate-book
-should be a self-acting register. The Tories failed in their attack on
-the Bill in the House of Commons; but in the Lords they succeeded in
-raising the qualification to £15, and in altering the registration
-clause so that new voters must each claim to be registered before they
-were put on the voters’ roll. The two Houses ultimately accepted a
-compromise. The Government agreed to increase the qualification from £8
-to £12, and the Tories agreed to abandon their alteration of the
-registration clauses.</p>
-
-<p>On the 18th of May, Lord John Russell brought in a memorable Bill to
-abolish the office of Lord-Lieutenant&mdash;an office the maintenance of
-which has undoubtedly given an Imperial sanction to the Separatist
-principle in Ireland. The idea of the Whigs was that the Lord-Lieutenant
-was an anachronism. The Minister representing Ireland in the House of
-Commons, though popularly called Secretary for Ireland, is really and
-legally only Chief Secretary to the Lord-Lieutenant. Sometimes he sits
-in the Cabinet when the Lord-Lieutenant does not, and then he is his
-master’s superior. The Lord-Lieutenant, argued<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_443" id="page_443">{443}</a></span> Lord John, had all the
-responsibility, but never the freedom of action of a Minister of the
-Crown, and the abolition of his office would facilitate that blending of
-the Irish and Imperial administrations, which would go far to destroy
-the Separatist feeling in Ireland. The Queen was very much inclined to
-favour this step, and for a curious reason. Her Irish tour had impressed
-her with the fact that her social influence in Ireland might be turned
-to good account in winning the hearts of a chivalrous and generous
-people, thereby converting the golden link of the Crown into a healing
-institution of conciliation. But it was somewhat embarrassing to all
-parties for the Sovereign to reside regularly in a country, in which the
-official head of the State was her own Viceroy. Were the Viceroyalty
-abolished, the Queen promised Lord John Russell that she would from time
-to time visit Ireland in State, and keep up the Viceregal Lodge in
-Phœnix Park as a Royal Palace. As for the business of Ireland, it would,
-according to Lord John, be best carried on by a fourth Secretary of
-State. The Tories opposed the Bill, because they contended that Lord
-Clarendon’s success in governing Ireland proved that the Viceroyalty was
-useful, and because the creation of a fourth Secretary of State was
-objectionable, for it would necessitate an expensive administrative
-establishment, and perchance lead to conflicts of authority between the
-Irish Secretary and the Home Secretary. The Irish members were divided
-in opinion. Some supported and some opposed the Bill, because it might
-tend to stimulate Nationalism. Others supported and opposed it for
-precisely the opposite reason. A third section, as to whose sincerity
-there could be no doubt, opposed it because it would spoil the trade of
-Dublin. The general feeling of the country was expressed by Peel, who
-said he was willing that the experiment should be made, though he said
-so with hesitancy, but he was also desirous, if it were possible, to see
-the Irish Administration merged in the Home Office, and not conducted by
-a fourth Secretary of State.<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> The measure was read a second time by a
-vote of 295 to 70, but introduced as it was when the country was in a
-fever of excitement over Lord Palmerston’s foreign quarrels, the country
-took little interest in it, and it was not pressed further.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Clarendon having in October, 1849, dismissed from the Commission of
-the Peers, Lord Roden and other Orange magistrates who had been privy to
-a fray at Dolly’s Brae in the preceding July, their case was brought
-before the House of Lords this Session by Lord Stanley, on the 12th of
-July. Stanley delivered a bitter attack on Lord Clarendon, but when he
-made it clear that he did not propose to do anything more than move for
-papers and correspondence relating to the affair, it was obvious that he
-had forced on a debate merely to gratify his Orange supporters. Lord
-Clarendon defended himself successfully, and convinced everybody that he
-had simply done his duty as an impartial administrator.</p>
-
-<p>The financial condition of the country was so favourable that Sir C.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_444" id="page_444">{444}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_029" id="ill_029"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_444.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_444.jpg" height="245" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE FUNERAL OF SIR ROBERT PEEL: THE TENANTRY ASSEMBLING
-AT THE LODGE, DRAYTON MANOR.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Wood, in his Budget Speech of 15th March, said there was a surplus at
-his disposal of £2,225,000. His estimates for the coming year, on the
-basis of existing taxation and anticipated expenditure, led him to
-expect a surplus of £1,500,000. Therefore, there was room for some
-remission of taxes. The first charge on a surplus, he held ought to be
-for the reduction of the National Debt&mdash;and for that purpose he set
-aside half his hoped-for surplus. As to the rest, he proposed to exhaust
-it: first, in reducing the Stamp Duties on the Transfer of Land, and on
-mortgages under £1,000, and in converting the Stamp Duty on leases into
-a uniform one of ½ per cent.; and secondly, in ameliorating the lot of
-the badly-housed labouring classes by repealing the tax on bricks.
-Though the Budget was ridiculed by the economists, Sir C. Wood’s
-proposals were agreed to, with the exception of the alteration in the
-Stamp Duties. It was argued successfully that though the new scale of
-Stamp Duties would reduce the revenue derived from small sums, they
-would increase, out of all proportion to this reduction, the revenue
-from large sums, so that under the pretext of reducing, Sir Charles Wood
-was actually increasing his revenue. Never was there such haggling and
-bungling. Nobody seemed to understand a scheme which was complex in
-detail, and explained by a Minister who was indistinct in his
-articulation and confused in exposition.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_445" id="page_445">{445}</a></span> Sir Charles Wood had more than
-once to withdraw his proposals, and substitute others, but finally he
-accepted a reduction of ½ instead of 1 per cent. on legal conveyances,
-and 1/8 instead of ½ per cent. on mortgages. The result showed that
-his opponents were right, and that he was utterly wrong in his
-calculations of the effect his reductions would have on the revenue of
-the year.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_030" id="ill_030"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_445.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_445.jpg" width="337" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE FUNERAL OF SIR ROBERT PEEL: THE CEREMONY IN DRAYTON
-BASSETT CHURCH.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The demand for retrenchment which had been originally raised by the
-Radicals, was now emphasised by the Protectionists. Following the
-example of some of their party in the Colonies, they saw in an attack on
-the cost of establishments, a means of annoying a Free Trade Government,
-and perchance of relieving the rural taxpayers, who undoubtedly were
-suffering by the loss of Protection. Mr. Henley accordingly first
-appeared with a motion to reduce official salaries. Whereupon Lord John
-Russell intervened with a motion for a Select Committee to inquire into
-the subject. Mr. Disraeli opposed to this an amendment to the effect
-that the House had enough information, and that the Government ought not
-to shirk the responsibility of initiating, without delay, every
-practicable reduction in the cost of establishments. His party followed
-him faithfully, though some, like John Wilson Croker, condemned his
-tactics and his speech as “Jacobinical.”<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> Mr. Hume also supported
-him, but Mr.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_446" id="page_446">{446}</a></span> Bright thought that if a Committee recommended reductions,
-they would be more patiently borne by the victims than if they were
-enforced by the Government. Mr. Horsman outdid Mr. Disraeli and Mr.
-Hume, for he demanded that ecclesiastical establishments should also
-come within the purview of the Committee: Lord John, however, carried
-his motion. Mr. Cobden then brought forward resolutions in favour of a
-general reduction of expenditure, contending that it would be possible
-to save £10,000,000 by cutting down expenditure to the standard of 1835.
-The Radical financial reformers declared that their object was to reduce
-taxation that pressed on Labour and impeded production, and that the
-best way of doing that was to curtail expenditure on the Army and Navy,
-which were in excess of the strength necessary for National Defence,
-provided the Foreign Office pursued a policy of non-intervention. Whigs
-and Tories united in defeating Mr. Cobden. Mr. Henry Drummond next, on
-behalf of the Protectionist Tories, moved that adequate means be adopted
-to reduce taxation, and thereby increase the wage-fund of the country.
-His plan was to cut down all official salaries, and revise all burdens
-that checked the growth of raw produce. The motion was disposed of by
-carrying the “previous question,” because, though some Radicals like Mr.
-Hume and Mr. Bright voted for it, most people saw in it a Protectionist
-“trap.” Lord Duncan very nearly on a subsequent occasion repealed the
-Window Tax,<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> but Mr. Milner Gibson failed in his attack on the Paper
-Duty, as did Mr. Cayley in his effort to repeal the Malt Tax.</p>
-
-<p>After much determined opposition from the Tories, with whom Mr.
-Gladstone acted on this occasion, the Government succeeded in carrying
-the appointment of a Royal Commission to inquire into the condition of
-the Universities&mdash;a proposal which had the warm support of the Queen and
-Prince Albert, in consequence of which some foolish people went about
-saying that there was a conspiracy on foot to Germanise the academic
-system of England.</p>
-
-<p>The Bishop of London’s Ecclesiastical Appeals Bill, which was introduced
-into the House of Lords on the 3rd of June, touched on matters regarding
-which the Queen has always been sensitive&mdash;the relation of the Church to
-the prerogative of the Crown. The principle of the Bill was that
-ecclesiastical appeals should be tried, not before the Judicial
-Committee of the Privy Council as representing the Queen, but before an
-assemblage of Bishops, whose decision should be binding, not merely on
-the Judicial Committee, but on the Queen also. This, of course,
-destroyed her supremacy over the Established Church of England, a
-prerogative of the Crown which has always been tenaciously guarded. The
-Bill was rejected. And here it may be well to record what it was that
-led to its introduction. It was introduced to tranquillise the High
-Churchmen and Tractarians, who were smarting over the decision of the
-famous “Gorham case.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Gorham had been presented by the Crown to the benefice of Bramford
-Speke in August, 1847. When the Bishop examined him, he found that he
-was<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_447" id="page_447">{447}</a></span> an extreme Low Churchman, and that he denied that spiritual
-regeneration was conferred by the sacrament of Baptism; also that his
-views on other matters, such as predestination and election, were those
-of the narrowest Presbyterian Calvinists. The Bishop of Exeter refused
-to institute Mr. Gorham, and, after much litigation, the case was
-appealed by him from the Court of Arches to the Judicial Committee, who
-decided that Mr. Gorham’s views were not incompatible with the
-Thirty-nine Articles. The Judicial Committee on this occasion consisted
-of the Archbishops of Canterbury and York and the Bishop of London.
-Associated with them were the Master of the Rolls (Lord Langdale), the
-Lord Chief Justice (Lord Campbell), Mr. Baron Parke, Vice-Chancellor,
-Sir J. Knight Bruce, Dr. Lushington, and the Right Hon. Pemberton Leigh.
-The complaint of the Churchmen was that the ruling of a Bishop and an
-ecclesiastical court on a disputed point of doctrine was not only
-considered, but actually reversed by a secular tribunal the large
-majority of whose members were laymen, and the clerical members of which
-could not vote, but merely gave their opinion to the lay members who
-formed the Judicial Committee. Churchmen passionately resented these
-proceedings, and the excitement they raised was fierce and
-uncontrollable. The Gorham Appeal Case was the badge of the Church’s
-servitude to the State. The Bishop of London’s Bill was an attempt to
-remove that badge by constituting a purely ecclesiastical tribunal to
-try all ecclesiastical appeals, thereby avoiding the necessity for
-submitting them to lay judges.</p>
-
-<p>When the Queen prorogued Parliament the shadow of mourning was over both
-Houses. Sir Robert Peel had died suddenly on the 2nd of July. Returning
-on horseback from a visit to Buckingham Palace on the 29th of June, he
-met Miss Ellice, one of Lady Dover’s daughters, on Constitution Hill. As
-he bowed to her, his horse shied at the Green Park railings, and threw
-him. His fifth rib was broken, and its jagged end pierced the lung with
-a mortal wound. He lingered in great agony for three days, and it is
-hardly possible to describe the extraordinary sensation his accident and
-illness produced throughout the country. Party animosities vanished, and
-the nation with one voice joined the Queen in the expressions of sorrow
-which came from her when she said, “The country mourns over him as over
-a father.”<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a></p>
-
-<p>Peel’s character will, for this generation, be an enigma. Look at one
-aspect of it, and it seems as the character of a patriot of the pure
-Roman type, who flourished in the days “when none were for a Party, and
-all were for the State.” Look at another aspect of it, and it seems as
-if it were permeated by the conscious insincerity of the unscrupulous
-political intriguer, whose stock-in-trade was Party principle, which he
-bought and sold for power in the Parliamentary market. One thing is
-clear. His abandonment of Protection could not possibly have been due to
-a love of office. He knew too well when he determined to repeal the Corn
-Laws, that he doomed himself to political ostracism. Two things seem to
-account for Peel’s difficulties with his partisans. He saw clearly, but
-he did not<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_448" id="page_448">{448}</a></span> see far. He used his influence as a political leader to
-become a Minister, but the Minister of the Queen, and not the Minister
-of his Party. Long before Catholic Emancipation triumphed he ought to
-have seen that its triumph was inevitable, and the same may be said of
-the repeal of the Corn Laws. When he suddenly awoke to the fact that in
-the one case war, and in the other famine was impending, he reversed his
-policy, but he had to change front so quickly that he had not time to
-“educate his Party.” On both occasions he had to choose between his
-Party and the nation. On neither did he shrink from making his choice as
-a patriot, even at the cost of his reputation as a far-seeing statesman,
-or a faithful Party leader. Mr. Disraeli said he was not the greatest
-statesman, but the greatest Member of Parliament England ever produced.
-That was a just estimate of his magical power of mastering and managing
-the House of Commons. But it did no justice to his genius for
-administration, his vast and accurate knowledge of affairs, and latterly
-the serene judicial temper of mind, in which he dealt with the most
-agitating and perplexing political problems. Coldness, secretiveness,
-and egotism were the only flaws in a character, which otherwise almost
-realised the loftiest ideal of British patriotism.</p>
-
-<p>At the beginning of 1850 the Queen became grievously alarmed about the
-health of Prince Albert. The toil and anxieties of politics during the
-years of revolution and counter-revolution had sadly worn his nervous
-system. In addition to his work as confidential private secretary to the
-Queen, his own occupations, which have been noticed from time to time in
-these pages, had grown more numerous and varied each year. As Mr.
-Gladstone once observed of Mr. Ayrton, “he was a cormorant for work.” As
-Sir Theodore Martin says, “Ministers and diplomatists found him at every
-interview possessed of an encyclopædic range of information, extending
-even to the minutest details.” The Court at this time was a rich
-treasure-store of information regarding the inner history of Courts and
-Embassies on the Continent, on which our diplomatists were grateful to
-draw for aid and suggestions, when appointed to difficult and delicate
-missions. “But to the claims of politics,” writes Sir Theodore Martin,
-“had to be added those which science, art, and questions of social
-improvement were constantly forcing upon the Prince’s attention.... He
-was habitually an early riser. Even in winter he would be up by seven,
-and dispose of a great deal of work before breakfast, by the light of
-the green German lamp, the original of which he had brought over with
-him, and which has since become so familiar an object in our English
-homes.<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> The Queen shared his early habits; but before her Majesty
-joined him in the sitting-room, where their writing-tables stood always
-side by side, much had, as a rule, been prepared for her
-consideration&mdash;much done to lighten the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_449" id="page_449">{449}</a></span> pressure of those labours, both
-of head and hands, which are inseparable from the discharge of the
-Sovereign’s duties.”<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> These labours ultimately produced insomnia or
-sleeplessness, and at the beginning of the year the Queen, writing from
-Windsor to Baron Stockmar, alludes to a suggestion from their doctor
-that his Royal Highness should take a trip to Brussels, and adds:&mdash;“For
-the sake of his health, which, I assure you, is the cause of my shaken
-nerves, I could quite bear this sacrifice. He <i>must</i> be set right before
-we go to London, or God knows how ill he may get.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_031" id="ill_031"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_449.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_449.jpg" height="265" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>MEETING OF THE LADIES’ COMMITTEE AT STAFFORD HOUSE IN AID
-OF THE GREAT EXHIBITION.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Queen’s affectionate desires could not be gratified. The business of
-organising the Great Exhibition of 1851 proved more engrossing than had
-been anticipated, not merely because the idea at the bottom of it was
-her husband’s, but because he was found to be the only man in England
-who thoroughly understood the scheme. As Lord Granville, in a letter to
-Prince Albert’s secretary, remarked, his Royal Highness seemed to be
-almost the only person who had considered the subject as a whole and in
-details. “The whole thing,” said Lord Granville, “would fall to pieces
-if he left it to itself.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_450" id="page_450">{450}</a></span>”</p>
-
-<p>On the 21st of February a brilliant meeting in support of the
-undertaking was held at Willis’s Rooms, which was attended by the
-diplomatic representatives of the leading nations. This was followed up
-by a grand banquet at the Mansion House, which was attended by the great
-dignitaries of State, the Foreign Ambassadors, the Royal Commissioners
-for the Exhibition, and the heads of the county and municipal
-magistracy. After the Royal Commission had been appointed, the questions
-of site, space, and finance were those which pressed for settlement, and
-without doubt the last gave the Queen the utmost anxiety. The public,
-she saw, must be induced to support the scheme, and meetings be
-organised for the purpose of making its advantages known. Prince
-Albert’s speech at this banquet, however, struck the key-note of all the
-subsequent advocacy which the Exhibition received. The age, said he, was
-advancing towards the realisation of a unity of mankind, to be attained
-as the result and product, and not by the destruction, of national
-characteristics. Science, by abridging distance, was increasing the
-communicability of ideas. The principle of the division of labour was
-gradually being applied everywhere, giving rise to specialism, but
-specialism practised in publicity, and under the stimulus of competition
-and capital. Thus was Man winning new powers in fulfilling his mission
-in the world&mdash;the discovery of Natural Laws and the conquest of Nature
-by compliance with them. The central idea of this Exhibition of 1851 was
-to give a true test, and a living picture of the point at which
-civilised Man had arrived in carrying out his mission, and to serve as a
-base of operations for further efforts which might carry Humanity
-upwards and onwards to a larger and loftier stage. Such, in a brief
-paraphrase, were the views of Prince Albert, and they ran through the
-country amidst a chorus of approval. The whole nation responded to the
-appeal of his Royal Highness, despite the metaphysics and mysticism
-which slightly tinged it, and the delight of the Queen was
-correspondingly great. We can easily understand that King Leopold was at
-first under the impression that a speech of such stately but restrained
-eloquence, rich in thought and fruitful in suggestion, must have been
-read. The Queen, however, informed him that he was mistaken. It was, she
-says, prepared most carefully and laboriously, and then written down;
-after which it was spoken freely and fluently without reference to the
-manuscript. “This,” says the Queen, in her letter to the King of the
-Belgians, “he does so well that no one believes he is ever nervous,
-which he is.” On the 23rd of February a meeting of ladies was held at
-Stafford House, under the presidency of the Duchess of Sutherland, with
-the object of inviting the women of England to assist in promoting the
-success of the Exhibition, and a very influential committee was formed
-for this purpose.</p>
-
-<p>When Easter arrived the Queen’s anxiety grew greater as she saw the
-Prince showing signs of increasing fatigue. At last, yielding to her
-importunity, he agreed to leave London and take a brief holiday at
-Windsor. But<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_451" id="page_451">{451}</a></span> his idea of a holiday was peculiar. It was to devise a
-system of draining Osborne, and utilising the sewage, &amp;c., of the
-estate.</p>
-
-<p>Age and infirmity had now begun to tell sadly on the Duke of Wellington,
-and he had become anxious as to the future of the army. Whilst he was
-alive and strong, as he said, he could hold the Commandership-in-chief.
-But his position was entirely exceptional for a subject, and in theory
-at least the office ought to be vested in the Sovereign, or some one
-very near the Throne. Englishmen have ever been a little jealous of
-permitting this post to be occupied by a subject. The favour it confers
-on him, and the influence which&mdash;if he has a magic personality&mdash;he may
-wield, might, if wedded to ambition, lead to untoward changes. But the
-fact that the Sovereign was a woman rendered it impossible to vest the
-Commandership-in-chief in the Crown. The Duke, therefore, to the
-surprise of the Queen, who apparently had never thought about the
-matter, suddenly proposed that arrangements should be made for
-installing Prince Albert as his successor. It says much for the sagacity
-and good sense of the Queen and Prince that neither of them liked the
-proposal&mdash;although it was one which would have presented an irresistible
-temptation to most young men. The Prince pleaded want of military
-experience. The Duke replied that his plan was to appoint under the
-Prince, as Chief of the Staff, the general who had most experience in
-the army. But this did not seem to weigh much with the Queen. Probably
-she knew her husband’s nature better than the Duke, and was perfectly
-well aware that he would never permit himself to hold office as an
-ornamental “dummy.” The revolution he wrought in Cambridge after he
-became Chancellor of the University gives us an indication of what must
-have happened in the army had he consented to become the Duke’s
-successor. It would be wrong to say that the Queen paid much heed to the
-objection on the score of inexperience. Like the Duke, she fully
-believed that her husband’s extraordinary power of work, and pertinacity
-of resolution, would soon fit him for the post. But, on the other hand,
-it was quite clear that the work would absorb all his time. In short, as
-the Prince would be certain to insist on doing the duty of the office to
-the fullest extent, and on his own responsibility, it was equally
-certain that if he became Commander-in-chief, he must abandon all his
-other occupations&mdash;even the chemical researches on the utilisation of
-sewage, in his pursuance of which he imagined at the time that he had
-within his grasp a discovery that would immortalise him as a benefactor
-of humanity. Moreover, how was the Queen to replace him as her private
-secretary? So much assiduous service could not be expected from any
-other holder of that office as Prince Albert cheerfully gave, and it was
-furthermore an office the duties of which, at a time when the Sovereign
-was beginning to wield an ever-increasing consultative and moderating
-influence on public affairs, were necessarily augmenting. Then the Queen
-also urged that as she believed the Prince was undertaking too much work
-already, she could not approve of his burdening himself with more. To
-sum up the views of the Queen and her husband<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_452" id="page_452">{452}</a></span> on this difficult and
-delicate affair: many able generals could do the duty of
-Commander-in-chief as well, if not better, than the Prince. Nobody,
-however, in the kingdom could possibly do the work he was then doing for
-the Queen as well as he did it, and so the flattering proposal was put
-aside. Had it been accepted, and had the Prince overhauled the Horse
-Guards as he did the University of Cambridge, perhaps the terrible and
-shameful disasters of the Crimea might have been avoided. On the other
-hand, it may be doubted if even his patient resolution would have
-enabled him to reform in so short a time the military administration
-which collapsed in 1854. In that case, the Court would have been blamed,
-and blamed unjustly, for the departmental catastrophes that still invest
-the Crimea with bitter memories for British soldiers.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_032" id="ill_032"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_452.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_452.jpg" height="271" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>CAMBRIDGE HOUSE, PICCADILLY (1854).</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>On the 1st of May the Duke of Connaught was born. His birthday was
-coincident with that of the Duke of Wellington, and he had as his
-sponsors two of the most illustrious soldiers of Europe&mdash;the great Duke
-himself, and Prince William of Prussia, afterwards Emperor of Germany.
-The ceremony of baptism took place on the 22nd of June, when the Prince
-was christened Arthur William Patrick Albert, the Duke and the Prince of
-Prussia both being present.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_033" id="ill_033"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_452a.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_452a.jpg" width="411" height="327" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE QUEEN AND PRINCE ARTHUR.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>After Winterhalter, 1850.</i>)</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_453" id="page_453">{453}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As spring gave place to summer, the shadow of death fell on the Royal
-Family. We have seen how genuine and profound was the Queen’s sorrow
-over the death of Peel. But closely following that sad event came the
-serious illness of the Duke of Cambridge, a kind-hearted Prince, noted
-for his <i>bonhomie</i> and for the profusion of his charities. The Queen was
-assiduous in her attentions to her uncle, whom she dearly loved, and one
-of her visits to his sick bed accidentally exposed her to a cowardly
-outrage. When she was leaving Cambridge House, sad-eyed and sorrowful, a
-man suddenly stepped forward and struck at her face with a cane. Her
-bonnet protected her somewhat, but her forehead was cruelly bruised by
-the assault. “The perpetrator is a dandy,” writes Prince Albert to
-Stockmar, “whom you must have often seen in the park, where he makes
-himself conspicuous.” He was one Robert Pate, formerly a lieutenant in
-the army. After being tried for his offence on the 11th of July, he was
-sentenced to seven years’ transportation. No motive could be assigned
-for the outrage, and the jury refused to accept Pate’s plea of insanity.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_034" id="ill_034"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_453.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_453.jpg" height="274" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>PATE’S ASSAULT ON THE QUEEN.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Duke of Cambridge, it may here be said, died on the 8th of July.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_454" id="page_454">{454}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Meantime, as if to add to the Queen’s private griefs, an extraordinary
-attack was made in the press upon Prince Albert and the Exhibition
-Commissioners. The building was to be in Hyde Park, and this invasion of
-one of the pleasure-grounds of “the people” was resented. The truth is
-that a rich and selfish clique of families dwelling in the neighbourhood
-objected to a great public show, likely to attract multitudes of
-sightseers, coming between the wind and their nobility, and they
-represented “the people” for the occasion. The extent to which they were
-sensitive as to the rights of the populace may be indicated by one
-suggestion which they made. It was that the Exhibition be transported as
-a nuisance to the Isle of Dogs, where “the people” dwell in teeming
-masses. At last an attack was organised on the Exhibition Commissioners
-in Parliament, and the Queen, knowing well that if it were successful,
-the project must be abandoned, was sorely grieved at the folly and
-prejudice which inspired the opposition. The <i>Times</i> was very bitter.
-Even Mr. Punch, notorious for his sentimental devotion to the Queen,
-proved himself a sad recreant on this occasion, and Leech made fun of
-the Prince, because the public were a little niggardly with their
-subscriptions,<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> which fell far short of £100,000, which was the
-lowest estimate tendered for the building. But though the attempt of “a
-little knot of selfish persons,” as the Queen calls them in a letter in
-which she implores Stockmar to come and comfort her and her husband in
-their troubles, to drive the Exhibition out of Hyde Park failed, and
-their attacks in Parliament collapsed, the Prince was still “plagued
-about the Exhibition,” and the old symptoms of insomnia reappeared,
-greatly to the alarm of her Majesty. At last a way out of all their
-difficulties was opened up. It was proposed to establish a guarantee
-fund to meet any deficit that might be incurred, and on the 12th of June
-it was started by a subscription of £50,000 from Messrs. Peto, the
-contractors. In a few days the subscriptions sufficed to solve the
-financial problem. Ultimately, to the surprise of those who had scoffed
-at the Prince’s sanguine anticipations, not only were the guarantors
-freed from all responsibility, but when the Exhibition accounts were
-closed, the Commissioners found themselves with a balance of a quarter
-of a million in hand. The work was accordingly begun without further
-delay.</p>
-
-<p>But no sooner had one source of vexation vanished than another was
-opened. In August the Queen, mortified at further displays of wayward
-recklessness on Lord Palmerston’s part, and failing to inspire the Prime
-Minister with enough courage to rebuke him, at last determined to take
-the matter in hand herself. Although Palmerston was then at the height
-of his popularity, owing to the triumph of his <i>civis Romanum sum</i>
-doctrine in the Don Pacifico debate, her Majesty penned a Memorandum to
-Lord John Russell, which has become historic. It is dated the 16th of
-August, and was written at Osborne. In it she accepts Lord Palmerston’s
-disavowal of an intention to<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_455" id="page_455">{455}</a></span> offer her any disrespect by his past
-neglect, but, to prevent fresh mistakes, she deems it as well to say
-that in future she requires&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“(1) That he (the Foreign Secretary) will distinctly state what he
-proposes in a given case, in order that the Queen may know as distinctly
-to what she has given her Royal sanction. (2) Having once given her
-sanction to a measure, that it be not arbitrarily altered or modified by
-the Minister. Such an act she must consider as failure in sincerity
-towards the Crown, and justly to be visited by the exercise of her
-Constitutional right of dismissing that Minister. She expects to be kept
-informed of what passes between him and the Foreign Ministers before
-important decisions are taken based on that intercourse; to receive the
-foreign despatches in good time, and to have the drafts for her approval
-sent to her in sufficient time to make herself acquainted with their
-contents before they must be sent off.” Lord John Russell sent this
-Memorandum to Palmerston, who lightly pleaded pressure of business in
-palliation of his past faults, but promised to behave better in time to
-come. Had he been a man of high spirit or sensitive feelings, he would
-have resigned when the Queen’s Memorandum was sent to him. High spirit,
-however, was not to be expected from the Minister that sent a British
-fleet to coerce Greece, though he dared not utter a word of protest
-against the Russian invasion of Hungary,<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> or who, whilst he could be
-swift to resent an impertinence from a decrepit Power like Spain,
-accepted with the utmost meekness a rebuke from Russia in reference to
-the Greek affair, couched in the language of deliberate insult. On the
-contrary, whilst his friends gave out that he was manfully fighting the
-battle of the people against the Sovereign and the foreign Prince, who
-was “the power behind the Throne,” Palmerston was abasing himself before
-both. He implored Prince Albert to intercede for him with the Queen in
-order that she might grant him an interview. The Prince, in a Memorandum
-dated 17th of August, 1850, writes:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“After the Council for the Speech from the Throne for the Prorogation of
-Parliament on the 14th I saw Lord Palmerston, as he had desired it. He
-was very <i>much agitated, shook, and had tears in his eyes</i>, so as to
-quite move me, who never under any circumstances had known him otherwise
-than with a bland smile on his face.” It was not the condemnation of his
-policy, he told Prince Albert, that affected him most closely. The
-“accusation that he had been wanting in his respect to the Queen, whom
-he had every reason to respect as his Sovereign, and as a woman whose
-virtues he admired, and to whom he was bound by every tie of duty and
-gratitude, was an imputation on his honour as a gentleman, and if he
-could have made himself guilty of it, he was almost no longer fit to be
-tolerated in society.”<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> The “almost” is<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_456" id="page_456">{456}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_035" id="ill_035"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_456.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_456.jpg" height="335" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>LORD JOHN RUSSELL (1850).</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">characteristically Palmerstonian. Her Majesty, according to Prince
-Albert, did not impute any <i>intentional</i> want of regard to Lord
-Palmerston; but her complaint was that he never submitted any question
-to her “intact,” that is to say, he always contrived to commit the
-Government before the Queen could express an opinion. As her opinion had
-of late been at variance with Lord Palmerston’s, this mode of doing
-business was to her objectionable. Her Majesty had always been frank
-with her Ministers, and when overruled, she had accepted loyally their
-decision. “She knew,” said the Prince, “that they were going to battle
-together, and that she was going to receive the blows which were aimed
-at the Government; and that she had these last years received several
-such as no Sovereign of England had before been obliged to put up with,
-and which had been most painful to her.” She did not wish to trouble
-her<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_457" id="page_457">{457}</a></span> Ministers about details. But when principles were settled at their
-conferences, she thought she too should be consulted and advised.
-Palmerston’s excuse was the old one&mdash;want of time; but he said he was
-willing to come to the Palace at any moment to Prince Albert, and give
-any explanations that might be wanted either to the Queen or her
-husband.</p>
-
-<p>If the Prince’s account be correct, the Minister seems to have conducted
-himself throughout this interview with hysterical servility, which may,
-however, have been simulated. As for his penitence, it was short-lived.
-In September he had another quarrel with the Queen over the wording of a
-despatch, in which he had foolishly gone out of his way to impugn the
-honour of England. This despatch rose out of the Haynau incident. The
-Austrian General Haynau had come to England on a visit, and the Radicals
-stirred up public feeling against him on account of his brutality in
-crushing the Hungarian insurrection, more especially for his cowardly
-conduct in stripping women, and flogging them publicly. When he went to
-visit the Brewery of Messrs. Barclay and Perkins, the workmen in the
-place recognised him. They turned out <i>en masse</i>, assaulted, hustled,
-and insulted “the Austrian butcher,” till he fled in terror from the
-premises, and took refuge in a little public-house, from which the
-police smuggled him away. Naturally, Lord Palmerston expressed his
-regret to the Austrian Ambassador; but it was also necessary to send a
-formal Note on the subject to the Austrian Government. This Note was a
-model of Palmerstonian maladroitness. In the first place, it contained
-an uncalled-for imputation on the English people, because it admitted
-that they were so incapable of courtesy and self-control that no
-foreigner was safe in England who happened to be unpopular. Secondly, it
-implied that Haynau had been imprudent in visiting England at all. The
-Queen, whose views were shared by the Prime Minister, objected to both
-of these statements&mdash;one as derogatory to the honour of England, the
-other as needlessly offensive to Austria. But, on her objecting, she
-discovered that it was impossible to alter the Note, which had been sent
-to the Austrian Ambassador <i>before</i> the draft had been submitted to her.
-The Queen, however, insisted on the withdrawal of the Note, and so did
-Lord John Russell. Palmerston first of all tried to browbeat the Prime
-Minister by threatening to resign. But when Lord John informed him (16th
-of October) that the threat was futile, Palmerston submissively withdrew
-the Note, and substituted for it another drawn up in accordance with the
-Queen’s views.</p>
-
-<p>Another serious conflict of opinion between the Queen and Lord
-Palmerston at this period arose out of the dispute between Denmark and
-the German States as to the settlement of Schleswig-Holstein. The German
-population of these Duchies had revolted against the petty tyranny of
-the Danes, and it was notorious that they were supported secretly by
-Prussia. The rebellion was suppressed; and though almost all the
-Liberals of Europe were in favour of letting the Duchies be incorporated
-in Germany, the Governments of the various Powers took the contrary
-view. The Austro-Prussian Convention at<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_458" id="page_458">{458}</a></span> Olmütz, of 29th November,
-restoring peace and stipulating for the disarmament of the Duchies, left
-the matter uncertain; but Austria was obviously for thwarting, whilst
-Prussia was for gratifying, the aspirations of the German or national
-party in the Duchies. All through this controversy the Queen was
-anti-Austrian, and strongly in favour of letting the
-Schleswig-Hoisteiners have their own way. Palmerston, and in this he was
-powerfully supported by the Tories, was violently pro-Austrian, and used
-the influence of England as far as possible to prevent the Duchies
-gravitating to Germany. For the moment he was successful. But subsequent
-events, as all the world knows, justified the wiser and more liberal
-views of the Queen.</p>
-
-<p>On the 26th of August, 1850, Louis Philippe died; in fact, the sad news
-of his death greeted the Queen and her husband a few days after their
-return from a brief visit to the King of the Belgians at Ostend, and
-marred the celebration of Prince Albert’s thirty-first birthday at
-Osborne.</p>
-
-<p>On the 27th of August the Royal Family migrated northwards. The Queen
-and Prince Albert opened the great railway bridges at Newcastle and
-Berwick, and then went on to Edinburgh, where they stayed at Holyrood
-Palace.</p>
-
-<p>The reception of the Queen in the “grey metropolis of the North” was
-picturesque as well as enthusiastic. The Royal Company of Archers in
-their quaint old costume, headed by the Duke of Buccleuch, claimed their
-historic right of acting as the Queen’s body-guard, and they surrounded
-her carriage as it drove through swarming crowds from the railway
-station to the Palace, in which no Queen of Scotland had set foot since
-Mary Stuart crossed its threshold, never to return to it again.
-Immediately after her arrival, the Queen and her family began to explore
-the Palace and its ruined precincts, and she records her delight in her
-Diary at discovering in the crumbling Abbey the tomb “of Flora
-Macdonald’s mother,” not the Flora Macdonald who assisted the Young
-Pretender to escape, but a lady of the Clanranald family, who was then
-serving as a Maid of Honour. Next morning the Queen and “the children”
-drove round the park, and climbed Arthur’s Seat, and the Prince
-proceeded to lay the foundation-stone of the National Gallery of Arts,
-whilst the rest of the day was spent in sightseeing. At half-past eight
-on the following morning her Majesty started for Balmoral, which she
-reached in the afternoon. Here, as Prince Albert says in one of his
-letters to Stockmar, they tried to strengthen their hearts amid the
-stillness and solemnity of the mountains,<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> and truly they had much
-need of rest. The harassing conflicts with Lord Palmerston, the deaths
-of Peel, Louis Philippe, Queen Adelaide, the Duke of Cambridge, and the
-faithful Anson, and the news that the Queen of the Belgians was dying,
-contributed to produce in the Queen great depression of spirits.</p>
-
-<p>The sport on the hills delighted the Prince. The primitive life and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_459" id="page_459">{459}</a></span>
-guileless character of the people vastly interested the Queen, who has
-left on record her account of several curious excursions she made, and
-of the gathering of clansmen at Braemar, which she witnessed. Writing on
-the 12th of September, 1850, her Majesty says in her “Leaves from a
-Journal of Our Life in the Highlands,” “We lunched early, and then went
-at half-past two o’clock, with the children and all our party, except
-Lady Douro, to the Gathering at the Castle of Braemar, as we did last
-year. The Duffs, Farquharsons, the Leeds’s, and those staying with them,
-and Captain Forbes and forty of his men who had come over from Strath
-Don, were there. Some of our people were there also. There were the
-usual games of ‘putting the stone,’ ‘throwing the hammer’ and ‘caber,’
-and racing up the hill of Craig Cheunnich, which was accomplished in
-less than six minutes and a half; and we were all much pleased to see
-our gillie Duncan,<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> who is an active, good-looking young man, win. He
-was far before the others the whole way. It is a fearful exertion. Mr.
-Farquharson brought him up to me afterwards. Eighteen or nineteen
-started, and it looked very pretty to see them run off in their
-different coloured kilts, with their white shirts (the jackets or
-doublets they take off for all the games), and scramble up through the
-wood, emerging gradually at the edge of it, and climbing the hill.</p>
-
-<p>“After this we went into the Castle, and saw some dancing; the prettiest
-was a reel by Mr. Farquharson’s children and some other children, and
-the ‘Ghillie Callum,’ beautifully danced by John Athole Farquharson, the
-fourth son. The twelve children were all there, including the baby, who
-is two years old.</p>
-
-<p>“Mama, Charles, and Ernest joined us at Braemar. Mama enjoys it all very
-much; it is her first visit to Scotland. We left after the dancing.”</p>
-
-<p>The Court returned to Windsor late in the autumn, and one of the first
-dismal communications made to her Majesty was that of the death of the
-Queen of the Belgians on the 11th of October. “Victoria is greatly
-distressed,” writes Prince Albert to Stockmar. “Her aunt was her only
-confidante and friend. Sex, age, culture, feeling, rank&mdash;in all these
-they were so much on a par, that a relation of unconstrained friendship
-naturally grew up between them.” This friendship, it may be added,
-survived even the treachery of Queen Louise’s father, Louis Philippe, in
-the matter of the Spanish marriages.</p>
-
-<p>The end of the year 1850 was marked by another amazing epidemic of
-bigotry on the part of the people and the Government, which was very
-distressing to the serene and evenly balanced minds of the Queen and her
-husband. This was known as the “Papal Aggression movement,” and it is
-in<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_460" id="page_460">{460}</a></span> these days difficult to understand how a sensible nation could have
-been swept into its vortex.</p>
-
-<p>On the 24th of September the Pope issued a Brief re-establishing the
-Roman Catholic hierarchy in England. In other words, he substituted
-Bishops and Archbishops deriving their titles from their sees, for the
-Vicars Apostolic who govern Romish missions in heathen lands. He
-partitioned England into sees, very much as the Wesleyans had mapped it
-into circuits and districts. The act was purely one of ecclesiastical
-administration, and of no concern to any body but the small Roman
-Catholic community in England. But prominent leaders of the Church began
-to talk about it in extravagant terms, as if it constituted the
-spiritual annexation of England to Rome, and as if it were a formal
-assertion of the authority of the Pope over that of the Queen. The
-Cardinal Archbishop of Westminster, Dr. Nicholas Wiseman, and Father
-(now Cardinal) Newman, were particularly indiscreet in their references
-to the Papal Brief. Dr. Wiseman, for example, issued a pompous Pastoral
-“Given out of the Flaminian Gate of Rome,” on the 7th of October,
-boasting that “Catholic England had been restored to its orbit in the
-ecclesiastical firmament, from which its light had long vanished.”</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Ullathorne, the Bishop of Birmingham, was one of those prelates who
-had the sense and tact to see what mischief would spring from Cardinal
-Wiseman’s folly, and he did his best to explain the real meaning of the
-Papal Brief. But his voice was like that of one crying in the
-wilderness. Did not Father Newman, preaching at Dr. Ullathorne’s
-enthronisation, say that “the people of England, who for so many years
-have been separated from the see of Rome, are about, of their own free
-will, to be added to the Holy Church”? Was it not clear, despite the
-reasonable explanations of Dr. Ullathorne and others, that what the
-Papists really meant was that the Reformation was now reversed, and that
-England was reconquered for Rome? Outraged Protestantism, arguing in
-this fashion, without distinction of party or sect, accordingly rose in
-its wrath, and hurled angry defiance at the Pope. The bigots, taking
-advantage of this outburst of popular passion, demanded that the law
-should step in and punish the insolent priesthood, who thus challenged
-the prerogatives of the Crown.</p>
-
-<p>On the 4th of November, Lord John Russell addressed to the Bishop of
-Durham a letter, almost equalling Cardinal Wiseman’s in its folly. The
-Prime Minister, in fact, gave expression to the worst phase of
-contemporary excitement, and fully endorsed the ridiculous notion that a
-prelate, who had but recently been restored to, and even then was kept
-on, his throne in Rome by foreign bayonets, had established his
-supremacy over England, in a manner inconsistent with the authority of
-the Queen. This Durham letter further stimulated the frenzy of
-intolerance into which England plunged. Meetings were held everywhere
-protesting against Papal aggression, and transmitting loyal addresses to
-the Queen. Guy Fawkes’ Day was celebrated with more<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_461" id="page_461">{461}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_036" id="ill_036"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_461.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_461.jpg" width="358" height="521" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE ROYAL APARTMENTS, HOLYROOD PALACE.</p>
-
-<p>1, Throne Room; 2, Breakfast Parlour; 3, Evening Drawing-room; 4, Grand
-Staircase; 5, Morning Drawing-room.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_462" id="page_462">{462}</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="nind">than usual zeal, and in most towns effigies of the Pope and Cardinal
-Wiseman were paraded through hooting crowds, and burnt in bonfires
-amidst the derision of the populace. The Universities and the
-Corporation of London in December sent deputations in great state to
-Windsor to present addresses to the Queen, protesting against insidious
-attacks on the authority, prerogatives, and exclusive jurisdiction of
-the Crown. The Queen’s replies to these addresses were spirited but
-calm, and absolutely free from intolerance. “I would never have
-consented,” she tells her “aunt Gloucester” in a letter written after
-the deputations had been received, “to say anything which breathed a
-spirit of intolerance. Sincerely Protestant as I always have been and
-always shall be, and indignant as I am at those who call themselves
-Protestants, while they are in fact quite the contrary,<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> I much
-regret the unchristian and intolerant spirit exhibited by many people at
-the public meetings. I cannot bear to hear the violent abuse of the
-Catholic religion, which is so painful and so cruel towards the many
-good and innocent Roman Catholics.”<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a></p>
-
-<p>On the last day of December, 1850, the Queen was gratified to hear that
-one of her husband’s cherished designs had been carried out. The
-building for the International Exhibition had risen from the ground in
-Hyde Park with the magical rapidity of a fairy palace. The design which
-had been chosen was that of a French artist, and Londoners had looked on
-with amazement at the erection of the great central dome of crystal,
-which dwarfed even that of St. Paul’s into insignificance. The plan for
-carrying out the design was suggested by Mr. Paxton, chief
-superintendent of the Duke of Devonshire’s gardens, and it was but an
-expansion of the grand conservatory which he had built for his Grace at
-Chatsworth. Iron and glass were the materials used for its construction.
-The cast-iron columns and girders were all alike&mdash;four columns and four
-girders being placed in relative positions forming a square of 24 feet,
-which could be raised to any height, or expanded laterally in any
-required direction, merely by joining other columns and girders to them.
-The building, therefore, grew up in multiples of twenty-four, and it
-could be taken to pieces just as readily as if it had been a doll’s
-house, and put up on any other site in exactly the same form. As a
-matter of fact, after the Exhibition was held in 1851, this wonderful
-Palace of Crystal was removed to Sydenham, where it has long been one of
-the raree-shows of London. The building covered 18 acres of ground, and
-gave an exhibiting surface of 21 acres; in truth, it was, within ten
-feet, twice the width of St. Paul’s, and four times as long. The
-contractors, Messrs. Fox, Henderson, and Co., accepted the order for the
-work on the 26th of July, and though there was not a single bar of iron
-or pane of glass prepared at that date, they handed the completed
-building over to the Commissioners, ready for painting and fitting, on
-the last day of the year.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_463" id="page_463">{463}</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXV" id="CHAPTER_XXV"></a>CHAPTER XXV.<br /><br />
-<small>FALL OF THE WHIG CABINET.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>Debates on “No Popery”&mdash;Mutiny of the Irish Brigade&mdash;Defeat of Lord
-John Russell&mdash;Lord Stanley “sent for”&mdash;Timid Tories&mdash;Lord Stanley’s
-Interviews with the Queen&mdash;A Statesman’s “Domestic Duties”&mdash;Is
-Coalition Possible?&mdash;The Queen’s Mistake&mdash;The Duke of Wellington’s
-Advice&mdash;Return of the Whigs to Office&mdash;The Queen’s Aversions&mdash;The
-“No Popery” Bill Reduced to a Nullity&mdash;Another Bungled Budget&mdash;The
-Income Tax Controversy&mdash;The Pillar of Free Trade&mdash;The Window Tax
-and the House Duty&mdash;The Radicals and the Slave Trade&mdash;King “Bomba”
-and Mr. Gladstone&mdash;Cobden on General Disarmament&mdash;Palmerston in a
-Millennial Mood&mdash;The Whig-Peelite Intrigue&mdash;The Queen and the
-Kossuth Demonstrations&mdash;Another Quarrel with Palmerston&mdash;A Merry
-Council of State.</p></div>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="smcap">On</span> the 4th of February, 1851, Parliament assembled with the din of the
-agitation over Papal aggression ringing in its ears. Men talked of
-nothing save the legislation that might be necessary to check the
-encroachments of Rome. But it was not supposed that the course of the
-Government would be other than smooth, for not only was the Prime
-Minister in full accord with the popular feeling against Papal
-aggression, but the great International Exhibition dwarfed public
-interest in purely party questions. We shall see how these anticipations
-were falsified by events, and how the Whig Government was hurried to its
-doom. One of the politicians behind the scenes, who forecast the fall of
-the Cabinet more accurately than the public, was Mr. Cobden. “I expect,”
-he writes on the 19th of February in one of his letters, “that this ‘No
-Popery’ cry will prove fatal to the Ministry. It is generally thought
-that the Government will be in a minority on some important question,
-probably the Income Tax, in less than a fortnight. The Irish Catholic
-members are determined to do everything to turn out Lord John. Indeed,
-Ireland is in such a state of exasperation with the Whigs, that no Irish
-member having a Catholic constituency will have a chance of being
-elected again unless he votes through thick and thin to upset the
-Ministry.”<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a></p>
-
-<p>The Address to the Queen was carried in both Houses. The Queen’s Speech
-promised a measure for resisting the assumption that a foreign Power had
-a right to confer ecclesiastical titles in England; and some forthcoming
-Chancery reforms, and reforms in the registration of titles, were also
-promised. The Protectionists harped on their old string&mdash;agricultural
-distress. The Radicals complained that the Government gave them no hope
-of cutting down taxation, and grumbled because no reference was made to
-Parliamentary reform. But they fought rather shy of the proposed
-legislation against Papal aggression; yet speaking generally, the “No
-Popery” cry was popular in both Houses of Parliament.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_464" id="page_464">{464}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_037" id="ill_037"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_464.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_464.jpg" width="331" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>ST. STEPHEN’S CRYPT, WESTMINSTER PALACE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>On the 7th of February, Lord John Russell moved for leave to introduce
-his Ecclesiastical Titles Bill, which prevented the assumption of such
-titles “in respect of places in the United Kingdom,” and he was met by a
-scathing attack from Mr. Roebuck, who condemned the measure as
-retrograde and reactionary. The feebleness of the Bill was in comic
-contrast with the fierce agitation which had produced it, and with the
-extravagant terms of the Premier’s speech, which might have led one to
-suppose the Penal Laws were being re-enacted. As Mr. Roebuck said, if
-Dr. Wiseman called himself Archbishop, instead of Archbishop of
-Westminster, the Bill could not even touch him. For four nights did the
-debate drag on, till ultimately leave to introduce the measure was
-carried by a majority of 332. The Irish members, had they been sixty
-Quakers instead of sixty Catholics, could dictate terms to any Ministry
-in a keen party fight, and as they were determined to punish Lord John
-Russell for his Ecclesiastical Titles Bill, it was obvious that on some
-other question where a close division was expected the Government would
-be beaten by the votes of their Irish supporters. It was an ominous sign
-that they were saved from defeat only by a majority of<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_465" id="page_465">{465}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_038" id="ill_038"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_465.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_465.jpg" height="331" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>MR. LOCKE KING.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">sixteen on Mr. Disraeli’s motion for the relief of agricultural
-distress. But the fatal blow came when Mr. Locke King, on the 20th of
-February, brought forward his motion for leave to introduce a Bill for
-equalising the town and county franchise, by reducing the latter to the
-limit of £10 yearly value. Although Lord John Russell promised to bring
-in a measure for improving representation, he resisted Mr. King’s
-motion. It was then carried against him by a vote of 100 against 52.
-“The Ecclesiastical Titles Bill,” writes Mr. Cobden to his friend Mr. J.
-Parker, “is the real cause of the upset of the Whig coach, or rather of
-the coachman leaping from the box to escape an upset. This measure
-cannot be persevered in by any Government so far as Ireland is
-concerned, for no Government can exist if fifty Irish members are
-pledged to vote against them under all circumstances when they are in
-danger. A<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_466" id="page_466">{466}</a></span> dissolution would give at least fifty members to do that
-work, and they would be all watched as they are now by their
-constituents. This mode of fighting by means of adverse votes in the
-House is far more difficult to deal with by our aristocratic rulers than
-was the plan of O’Connell, when he called his monster meetings. They
-could be stopped by a proclamation or put down by soldiers, but neither
-of these modes will avail in the House. What folly,” adds Mr. Cobden, as
-if he had even then foreseen the success of Parnellism in our day, “it
-was to give a real representation to the Irish counties, and to think of
-still maintaining the old persecuting ascendency.”<a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a> On the 22nd of
-February, Lord John, as Mr. Cobden says, “leaped from the box,” for on
-that day he and his colleagues resigned.</p>
-
-<p>The Queen sent for Lord Stanley, who frankly told her that he could not
-undertake to form a Ministry. He, however, said he would try to form one
-if Lord John Russell failed to reconstruct his defeated Cabinet. Lord
-Stanley’s motive for refusing office is to be found in the fact that
-there was a serious division of opinion among his followers, on the one
-question that was vital to their existence as a party. Some of the
-ablest of them, led by Mr. Walpole and Mr. Henley, objected to any
-proposal to tax foreign corn, and yet if the Protectionists refused to
-do that, their <i>locus standi</i> in the country was gone. Her Majesty next
-appealed to Lord John Russell to form a coalition with the Peelites.
-This project proved to be hopeless. The Peelites were bitterly opposed
-to the Ecclesiastical Titles Bill, and though Lord John offered to
-attenuate it to the verge of absolute nullity, they could not sanction
-it in any shape or form. Moreover, Sir James Graham was afraid that if
-he joined a Whig Ministry he might quarrel with Lord Palmerston, and
-Lord Grey was equally afraid that he might quarrel with Sir James
-Graham. The Peelite leaders also thought that before a Coalition
-Government could be organised with any chance of success, it must be
-preceded by co-operation in opposition, between the two parties to it,
-and hence they wished Lord Stanley to form a Ministry which, from its
-Protectionist policy, must needs have but a brief existence. This
-abortive attempt to form an alliance between the Whigs and the Peelites
-is memorable, because it was the first step that led them both on the
-path which brought them to the celebrated and fateful Coalition of 1852.</p>
-
-<p>On the 26th of February, the Queen accordingly sent for Lord Stanley
-again, and he, with a somewhat rueful countenance, pledged himself to
-try and form a Cabinet. Again he failed, and for reasons which are given
-by Lord Malmesbury in his diary under the date of the 28th of February.
-“We met,” writes Lord Malmesbury, “at Lord Stanley’s in St. James’s
-Square, and have failed in forming a Government. He had previously
-requested me to take the Colonial Office, which I consider a great
-compliment, as it is one of the hardest worked of places. Those
-assembled were Mr. Disraeli, Sir John Pakington, Mr. Walpole, Lord
-Hardwicke, Mr. Henley, Mr. Herries, Lord John Manners, and Lord<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_467" id="page_467">{467}</a></span>
-Eglinton. Everything went smoothly, each willingly accepting the
-respective post to which Lord Stanley appointed him, excepting Mr.
-Henley, who made such difficulties about himself, and submitted so many
-upon various subjects, that Lord Stanley threw up the game, to the great
-disappointment and disgust of most of the others present. Mr. Henley
-seemed quite overpowered by the responsibility he was asked to undertake
-as President of the Board of Trade, and is evidently a most nervous man.
-Mr. Disraeli did not conceal his anger at his want of courage and
-interest in the matter.... In the House of Lords, Lord Stanley announced
-his failure, and did not conceal it as being caused by the want of
-experience in public business which he found existed in his party. This
-is possibly the case, but what really caused the break up of the
-conference was the timid conduct of Mr. Henley and Mr. Herries.<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> Mr.
-Herries,” adds Lord Malmesbury, “at this conference, looked like an old
-doctor who had just killed a patient, and Mr. Henley like the undertaker
-who was to bury him.” Lord Stanley gave a half-sarcastic turn to his
-announcement in the House of Lords of the various motives which had led
-his friends to refuse office. There was a titter when he said that one
-gentleman had declined to serve because he was pressed with domestic
-duties, which gave occasion for one of Lord Stanley’s brightest jokes.
-Lady Jocelyn ironically asked Stanley who it was who was so anxious
-about his domestic duties. “It is not Jocelyn,” was the cutting
-reply.<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> An attempted combination with the Peelites had broken down,
-though Mr. Gladstone was offered a high post in the Cabinet, and the
-Queen then summoned the Duke of Wellington for his advice.</p>
-
-<p>Matters were at an absolute deadlock. There were three questions in the
-public mind&mdash;Protection <i>versus</i> Free Trade, Parliamentary Reform, and
-Papal Aggression. As Prince Albert put it in a memorandum which he drew
-up for the Duke’s consideration, on the <i>first</i> question Peelites,
-Radicals, and Whigs were united, and formed a solid working majority. On
-the <i>second</i> question they were also united against the Protectionists.
-But on the <i>third</i> question the Whigs and Protectionists were united
-against the Peelites and the Radicals reinforced by the Irish party. Any
-policy that could unite Peelites, Whigs, Radicals, and Irish would
-therefore furnish a majority capable of keeping in office a Cabinet that
-could carry on the Queen’s Government. But the Peelites, the Irish, and
-the Radicals were just as determined that there should be no anti-Papal
-legislation, as the Whigs and Protectionists were determined on
-demanding it. Why not, in such circumstances, leave Papal aggression an
-<i>open question</i>, in a Coalition Ministry of Whigs, Peelites, and
-Radicals, allowing Lord John Russell to go on with an attenuated
-Ecclesiastical Titles Bill, and Sir James Graham to oppose it? This
-suggestion<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_468" id="page_468">{468}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_039" id="ill_039"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_468.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_468.jpg" height="256" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE GREEN DRAWING-ROOM, WINDSOR CASTLE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">obviously sprang from the opinion which the Queen had held strongly ever
-since the year 1846, that the country would never get an efficient
-Government till a Coalition Ministry was formed. It was, however, quite
-impracticable. The Queen made no allowance for the ease with which a
-Cabinet loses prestige in the atmosphere of passion which pervades the
-House of Commons, where the fact that a Cabinet is even suspected of
-being divided destroys its moral authority. Neither the Duke of
-Wellington nor Lord Lansdowne, who was also consulted, could advise the
-Queen to put forward this project. The Duke, in fact, advised her to
-send for Lord John Russell once again. This was accordingly done. “The
-last act of the drama fell out last night,” writes Mr. Greville on the
-4th of March, “as everybody foresaw it would and must.” Lord John
-returned to office with his Ministry unchanged, which, says Mr.
-Greville, “was better than trying some trifling patching-up, or some
-shuffling of the same pack, and it makes a future reconstruction more
-easy.” On the same night Lord Granville dined at the Palace. “The Queen
-and Prince Albert,” writes Mr. Greville, “both talked to him a great
-deal of what has been passing, and very openly. She is satisfied with
-herself, as well she may be, and hardly with anybody else;<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_469" id="page_469">{469}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_040" id="ill_040"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_469.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_469.jpg" height="370" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>SIR GEORGE CORNEWALL LEWIS.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">not dissatisfied personally with Stanley, of whom she spoke in terms
-indicative of liking him. She thinks Lord John Russell and his Cabinet
-might have done more than they did to obtain Graham and the Peelites,
-and might have made the Papal question more of an open question; but
-Granville says that it is evident she is heart and soul with the
-Peelites, so strong is the influence of Sir Robert, and they are very
-stout and determined about Free Trade. The Queen and Prince think this
-resuscitated concern very shaky, and that it will not last. Her
-favourite aversions are, first and foremost, Palmerston, and Disraeli
-next. It is very likely that this latter antipathy (which no doubt<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_470" id="page_470">{470}</a></span>
-Stanley discovered) contributed to his reluctance to form a Government.
-Such is the feeling about him in their minds.” Mr. Disraeli, aware of
-their antipathy, had, indeed, offered to efface himself or to accept any
-office, no matter how humble, that would not bring him into personal
-communication with the Sovereign, in order to facilitate the return of
-his party to power. It may be here convenient to note that the Queen,
-though entertaining strong personal opinions about the capacity of her
-Ministers, has been ever prompt to change them when they gave her good
-reasons for doing so. Her antipathy to Peel in 1839 was notorious. Yet
-when Peel became Prime Minister he completely won her confidence. Her
-antipathy to Palmerston ceased after he left the Foreign Office and
-became Prime Minister, and the same may be said of her aversion to Mr.
-Disraeli, who, as Lord Beaconsfield, received from the Crown a tribute
-of homage and favour rarely accorded to any subject.</p>
-
-<p>The reinstatement of the Whigs pleased nobody. However, a dissolution
-was dreaded, and all parties were therefore forced to tolerate them. But
-they were, as a Government, utterly discredited, and their final fall
-was imminent. On their return to office, the Government produced a new
-edition of their Ecclesiastical Titles Bill. It consisted simply in a
-declaration that the assumption of such titles was illegal. What may be
-termed the stringent penal clauses were cut out, and in this form the
-measure was received with universal displeasure, mingled with contempt.
-The bigots complained that the measure was rendered futile. The Radicals
-complained that it was a concession to the bigots. As for the Irish
-members, they opposed what was left of it, simply to compel the
-Government to drain the chalice of mortification to the lees. So
-ingeniously was the Bill obstructed that it was not read a third time
-till a month after its introduction. The House of Lords passed it after
-debating the second reading for two nights. Its opponents predicted it
-would be a dead letter, and events verified their prophecies. As Sir
-George Cornewall Lewis said, “Neither the assumption of the territorial
-title nor the prohibition to assume it was of the least practical
-importance.”<a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a></p>
-
-<p>The story of the Parliamentary Session of 1851 may be briefly told. The
-obstruction of the Ecclesiastical Titles Bill left little time for
-legislation. Sir Charles Wood, as usual, bungled the Budget. He had a
-comfortable surplus of £2,521,000. His estimates were careful and
-judicious, and showed on the basis of existing taxation an anticipated
-surplus of £1,892,000. It was in disposing of this sum that Sir Charles
-plunged into a sea of difficulties. He said it would not enable him to
-abolish the Income Tax, the retention of which, during the early days of
-Free Trade, he recommended as necessary for the stability of the fiscal
-system. Hence he proposed to spend his estimated surplus in (1),
-reducing debt by about £1,000,000; (2), in commuting a tax “which bore
-on the health and morals of the lower classes,” namely, the Window Tax,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_471" id="page_471">{471}</a></span>
-into a house duty; (3), in reducing the duty on foreign and colonial
-coffee to a uniform rate of threepence in the pound; (4), in reducing
-the timber duty by fifty per cent.; (5), and by transferring to the
-State a certain proportion of the local charge for maintaining pauper
-lunatics. On the 17th of February, in Committee of Ways and Means, Sir
-Charles accordingly moved that the Income Tax and Stamp Duties in
-Ireland be renewed for a limited period. The manner in which the Budget
-was received clearly showed that it would be unpopular. The Tories
-attacked it because the Income Tax was to be retained, and the transfer
-of the charge for pauper lunatics they ridiculed as a mockery of relief
-to the distressed rural ratepayers. Mr. Hume complained that there was
-no attempt made to reduce military expenditure by asking the Colonies to
-bear the cost of their own defence. The representatives of the large
-towns protested violently against commuting the Window Tax into a house
-duty. The controversy was, however, cut short by Lord John Russell’s
-resignation after his defeat on Mr. Locke King’s resolution, to which
-reference has already been made.</p>
-
-<p>On the 5th of April Sir Charles Wood, after his usual manner, brought
-forward a new Budget. He proposed now to levy a uniform duty of
-ninepence on the annual value of houses, and sixpence on shops, without
-reference to the number of their windows. This would in nearly all cases
-impose a smaller burden on houses than the Window Tax, the capricious
-and unequal incidence of which had made it intensely unpopular&mdash;the
-greatest relief being given to the houses which had more windows than
-were proportionate to their annual value. The loss from the Window Tax
-and the reduction of the duty on coffee left a surplus of £924,000 for
-emergencies, and Sir Charles Wood was still deaf to the demand for the
-abolition of the Income Tax. The Tories contended that the tax had been
-granted to meet a deficit. There was now no deficit, therefore the tax
-ought to be removed. The Whigs admitted these facts, but denied the
-conclusion drawn from them. The tax, they argued, ought not to be
-removed, because a new reason had risen for its continuance, namely,
-that the Income Tax enabled the Government to minimise the loss to the
-revenue which might be entailed by the abandonment of protective duties.
-This, in fact, is the clue to all the tangled Income Tax controversies
-of the time. The Income Tax was in truth the keystone of Peel’s Free
-Trade policy. The Tories, therefore, spared no pains to strike it out of
-the fabric of fiscal legislation which he and the Whigs had built up.
-Yet the injustice and frauds perpetrated under the Income Tax were
-admitted on all sides; and finally an effort was made by Mr. Hume to
-limit the renewal of the tax to one year, and refer the whole question
-of its assessment and incidence to a Select Committee. Mr. Hume’s motion
-was carried against the Government by a vote of 244 to 230. But the
-fatal objection to it, as Mr. Sidney Herbert pointed out, was that,
-unless the Government had the Income Tax secured to them for three
-years, they could not make permanent<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_472" id="page_472">{472}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_041" id="ill_041"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_472.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_472.jpg" height="274" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE CAFFRE WAR: NATIVES ATTACKING A CONVOY.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">reductions in the duties on coffee and timber. It was absurd to dream of
-entering on a policy which involved further remission of taxation, so
-long as £5,000,000 of the revenue&mdash;for that was what the Income Tax
-brought in&mdash;depended on an annual vote of the House. Then the <i>concordia
-discors</i> of the majority was made manifest. As everybody had voted with
-Mr. Hume from different motives, it was impossible to get competent men
-to serve on the Committee. That difficulty, however, was after much
-trouble overcome, and the Government made the best of the situation.
-They accepted defeat; Lord John Russell, however, stipulating that,
-whatever might be done, the national credit must be maintained. In other
-words, he accepted the proposal on the ground that, though the motion
-granting the Income Tax for one year only was carried, there was no
-serious intention of refusing to renew the tax if necessary; and that it
-would be necessary was, of course, certain, unless the £5,500,000
-derived from it were replaced by protective duties. This was not a very
-logical position, and Mr. Disraeli seized the opening which it gave him.
-Hume’s victory, technically speaking, implied that the financial
-arrangements of the country were in a provisional state.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_473" id="page_473">{473}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_042" id="ill_042"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_473.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_473.jpg" height="262" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>GROUP OF DYAKS.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Why, then, asked Mr. Disraeli, sacrifice any revenue at all till
-something like permanence had been imparted to these arrangements? On
-the 30th of July he brought forward a futile motion to this effect in a
-grandiose speech, and was supported by Mr. Gladstone, whose antipathy to
-the Government was fast becoming uncontrollable. Yet Mr. Gladstone’s
-argument was sound enough. To surrender the Window Tax for one like the
-hated House Duty, which rested on a narrow basis and was vitiated by
-special anomalies of inequality and injustice of incidence, that had
-secured its abolition in 1834, was surely bad finance. And what was
-gained? Six-sevenths of the house property of the country were exempted
-from taxation&mdash;house property being a fair enough subject for taxation,
-provided it be assessed on fair general principles. Nothing could be
-more precarious than the position of the Income Tax; yet but for it the
-surplus in hand, which Sir Charles Wood was flinging away, would not
-exist. Mr. Disraeli, however, in spite of Mr. Gladstone’s support, lost
-his motion. His inconsistency in voting for Mr. Cayley’s proposal, on
-the 8th of May, to abolish the Malt Tax, which yielded £5,000,000 of
-revenue, and in protesting, on the 30th of June, against<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_474" id="page_474">{474}</a></span> the sacrifice
-of £1,600,000 of surplus, as ruinous to public credit, was, of course,
-disastrous to his pleading.</p>
-
-<p>In the debates on Colonial Policy the Government were more successful
-than could have been anticipated. Mr. Baillie’s motion censuring Lord
-Torrington’s maladministration of the affairs of Ceylon was defeated by
-a large majority, which, says Mr. Greville, set the Cabinet, smarting
-from various reverses at the time, “on their legs again.”</p>
-
-<p>On the 18th of April a much more important subject was broached by Sir
-W. Molesworth, who moved a series of resolutions demanding that the
-Colonies should be made autonomous, and charged to provide for their own
-defence. Other motions of the same sort as this one sprang from the
-<i>animus</i> against the Colonial Office which then existed among all
-parties. As Mr. Urquhart said in debate, independent members were of
-opinion that, if the good sense of the country did not put down the
-Colonial Office, the Colonial Office would put down the Empire. The
-objection of the Government to Sir W. Molesworth’s proposal was the old
-one to all Colonial reforms&mdash;that it must lead to the abandonment of our
-Colonial Empire. The debate was adjourned, and was not resumed.</p>
-
-<p>The chronic discontent of the Cape Colonists, smarting under Lord Grey’s
-abortive design to quarter convicts on them, led to some acrimonious
-discussions, which aggravated popular antipathy to the costly Caffre War
-which was raging. Lord John Russell, however, contrived to evade attacks
-by persuading the House of Commons to appoint a Select Committee to
-inquire into the relations of the Colony to the Caffre tribes.</p>
-
-<p>The Radicals of the Manchester school had raised early in the Session an
-agitation against Sir James Brooke, popularly called Rajah Brooke, of
-Sarawak. Rajah Brooke had waged war on the Dyak tribes because they were
-aggressive pirates. The Manchester school denied that the Dyaks were
-pirates, and contended that Sir James Brooke simply levied war on the
-natives in order to seize their territory. Mr. Hume insisted on
-referring the matter to a Select Committee, but he was defeated by a
-large majority, and the result of the debate was to exonerate Sir James
-Brooke from the charges of brutality and barbarism that had been
-advanced against him.</p>
-
-<p>The slave-hunting squadron in West Africa was another question as to
-which the Government were sadly harried. The cost of keeping up the
-squadron rendered it extremely unpopular, and Mr. Hume forced the
-Government, in Committee of Supply, to make a statement as to its work.
-According to Lord Palmerston, it was active, energetic, and successful
-in suppressing the infamous traffic in slaves, and the House of Commons
-thought that the results of the squadron’s operations were so valuable
-that England ought not to grudge the money spent upon it. On the other
-hand, the Party of Economy contended that the reduction in the slave
-trade was due, not to the English squadron, but to the new policy of
-Brazil, whose Government<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_475" id="page_475">{475}</a></span> had begun to co-operate with ours in seizing
-slave-traders, destroying barracoons, and releasing slaves.</p>
-
-<p>Foreign affairs but slightly interested Parliament in 1851. No doubt a
-great deal of excitement was produced by the two letters on the State
-prosecutions by the Neapolitan Government, which Mr. Gladstone addressed
-to Lord Aberdeen, and much indignation was expressed at the stupid
-tyranny of King “Bomba,” whose dungeons were full of political
-prisoners. The charges of cruelty and injustice caused Sir De Lacy Evans
-to question the Foreign Secretary on the subject in the House of
-Commons, and from Lord Palmerston’s reply it turned out that above
-20,000 persons were then confined in Neapolitan prisons for political
-offences, most of whom had been deprived of liberty in flagrant
-violation of the existing laws of their country. Copies of Mr.
-Gladstone’s letter were sent by Lord Palmerston to every foreign
-Government, in the hope that a joint-remonstrance from the Powers might
-put an end to King Ferdinand’s outrages on civilisation.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Cobden renewed his annual motion for bringing about a general
-disarmament among the European nations; and undoubtedly his speech was
-received with much more sympathy than usual by the House of Commons and
-the country. It was the year of the International Exhibition, and all
-the world was talking of fraternity among the nations, and of their
-strife being limited, in the golden future, to peaceful contests in the
-fields of industry. “We are witnessing now,” said Mr. Cobden in a
-memorable passage of his speech, “what a few years ago no one could have
-predicted as possible. We see men meeting together from all countries in
-the world, more like the gatherings of nations in former times, when
-they came up for a great religious festival; we find men speaking
-different languages and bred in different habits associating in one
-common temple erected for their gratification and reception.” The
-Government, he held, might with everlasting honour to themselves seize
-the favourable hour for broaching a peace policy, and endeavour to win
-the assent of Europe to a project for universal disarmament. The idea
-then in men’s minds was that England should set the example by
-approaching France with a proposal, that each country should reduce its
-armaments to the footing on which they stood at the time of the Syrian
-dispute. Lord Palmerston approved generally of Mr. Cobden’s objects, and
-was willing to say that he would do everything in his power to bring
-about the friendliest relations with France. But he did not wish to be
-fettered beforehand with definite instructions to open up at once
-negotiations for mutual disarmament; and, professing himself satisfied
-with this expression of opinion, Mr. Cobden withdrew his motion.</p>
-
-<p>The Jews in the Session of 1851 failed to remove the political
-disabilities under which members of their community lay.<a name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> They
-carried their point in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_476" id="page_476">{476}</a></span> House of Commons. In the House of Lords,
-however, the Tories threw the Jewish Disabilities Relief Bill out by a
-vote of 144 to 108. A hot controversy arose over the attempt of Alderman
-Salomons, the newly-elected member for Greenwich, to take the Oath
-without repeating the words, “On the true faith of a Christian.” It
-ended in the Alderman being removed from his seat by the
-Serjeant-at-Arms, and in Lord John Russell carrying a motion denying Mr.
-Salomons’s right to sit whilst he was unsworn.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_043" id="ill_043"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_476.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_476.jpg" width="282" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>LORD CARLISLE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The smaller measures of the Session included a Bill for strengthening
-the appellate branch of the Court of Chancery by appointing two extra
-judges. The Bill to legalise marriage with a deceased wife’s sister,
-though carried in the House of Commons, was, as usual, rejected in the
-Lords. Parliament was prorogued by the Queen in person on the 8th of
-August, and the occasion<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_477" id="page_477">{477}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_044" id="ill_044"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_477.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_477.jpg" height="334" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE GREAT EXHIBITION, HYDE PARK.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_478" id="page_478">{478}</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="nind">was interesting, for the representatives of the people for the first
-time went into her presence from the new House of Commons, which had at
-last been made ready for occupation. The long procession through the
-grand corridors, between the two chambers, was accordingly a little more
-orderly than usual. The Royal Speech was devoted to a brief review of a
-barren but not unimportant Session.</p>
-
-<p>Legislation, in fact, had been brought to a standstill by the anti-Papal
-Bill, which had been obstinately obstructed. The prestige of the
-Ministry was gone, and their natural strength completely abated by the
-mutiny of the Irish Whigs. And yet, when Lord John Russell resumed
-office after his resignation, he gained rather than lost in power, and
-the attack on him became more and more languid every day. The truth is
-that the people did not think much about politics after May, 1851. The
-Ministry was safe after the failure of the Tories to take their places.
-But it was no stronger than when it had been beaten on Mr. Locke King’s
-motion, and its lease of office depended largely on the tolerance of
-disdain. The people were indeed preoccupied with the Great Industrial
-Exhibition of All Nations to such an extent that they paid no more
-attention, during the latter half of the Session, to the doings of the
-Government, than to the debates of a local vestry. “There is,” writes
-Mr. Greville on the 8th of June, “a picture in <i>Punch</i> of the
-shipwrecked Government saved by the ‘Exhibition’ steamer, which really
-is historically true, thanks in great measure to the attractions of the
-Exhibition, which has acted on the public as well as upon Parliament....
-There has been so much indifference and <i>insouciance</i> about politics and
-parties that John Russell and his Cabinet have been released from all
-present danger. The cause of Protection gets weaker and weaker every
-day; all sensible and practical men give it up as hopeless.”<a name="FNanchor_36_36" id="FNanchor_36_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a> That he
-had been saved by the “Great Exhibition” steamer evidently did not
-satisfy Lord John Russell. Hence he seems to have been ever hankering
-after a plan for strengthening his Cabinet by the addition to it of a
-Peelite element. Sir George Cornewall Lewis was sent down to Netherby in
-September to intrigue with Sir James Graham for this purpose, but
-Graham, though offered the Board of Control, or as it would now be
-called the India Office, refused to join the Cabinet because he was
-afraid lest Lord John Russell might make dangerous concessions to the
-Party who were agitating for Parliamentary Reform. It is interesting to
-note that Lord Palmerston strongly opposed this project of inviting
-Graham to join the Whig Cabinet, and strove hard to induce his
-colleagues to make their overtures to Mr. Gladstone. It is impossible to
-blame Sir James for the course he took. Lord John Russell’s incurable
-antipathy to statistical research induced him to hand over the question
-of Reform to a small Ministerial Committee, consisting of Lord Minto,
-Lord Carlisle, and Sir C. Wood, and so little did the Whigs love Reform,
-that some of them, like Lord Lansdowne, had resolved to leave the
-Cabinet if a strong Reform measure were proposed.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_479" id="page_479">{479}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Another circumstance helped to weaken the Ministry. Lord Palmerston, as
-usual, succeeded during the autumn in again irritating the Queen and his
-own colleagues by one of his singular freaks at the Foreign Office. When
-Louis Kossuth, the Hungarian patriot, arrived at Southampton on the 23rd
-of October, he was welcomed by a popular demonstration, and some leading
-Radicals took part in it. Lord Palmerston immediately resolved to
-receive him, and it became known that if he did this the Austrian
-Government would recall their Ambassador. Lord John Russell pointed out
-the impropriety of the step which Lord Palmerston obstinately insisted
-on taking. Palmerston’s last word on the subject to the Prime Minister
-was that he considered he had a right to receive M. Kossuth privately
-and unofficially, and that he would not be dictated to as to the
-reception of a guest in his own house, though his office was at the
-disposal of the Government. A meeting of the Cabinet was immediately
-summoned, and the matter was laid before those present by Lord John
-Russell. It was agreed that Lord Palmerston could not with propriety
-receive Kossuth, and he promised to submit to the decision of his
-colleagues. Up to this point everything went smoothly, and the Queen was
-greatly relieved in mind to learn that the Foreign Secretary had been so
-reasonable as to promise <i>not</i> to insult a friendly Power. Her feeling
-on the subject was that, being at peace with Austria, we had no right to
-get up demonstrations in favour of persons who had been endeavouring to
-upset the Austrian Government. “I was at Windsor,” writes Mr. Greville
-on the 16th of November, “for a Council on Friday. There I saw Lord
-Palmerston and Lord John mighty merry and cordial, talking and laughing
-together. Those breezes leave nothing behind, particularly with
-Palmerston, who never loses his temper, and treats everything with
-gaiety and levity. The Queen is vastly displeased with the Kossuth
-demonstrations, especially at seeing him received at Manchester with as
-much enthusiasm as attended her own visit to that place.... Delane<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a>
-is just come from Vienna, where he had a long interview with
-Schwarzenberg, who treated, or at least affected to do so, the Kossuth
-reception with contempt and indifference.”<a name="FNanchor_38_38" id="FNanchor_38_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> Two days after Mr.
-Greville made this entry in his Diary, to the amazement of the Queen and
-Lord John Russell, Lord Palmerston, addressing a deputation that waited
-on him from Finsbury and Islington, expressed on behalf of England his
-strong sympathy with the cause of the Hungarian revolutionary leaders.
-He had kept the word of promise to the ear, but had broken it to the
-hope. What he had said was infinitely more irritating to Austria than
-his reception of Kossuth could have been. The breach of faith with his
-indignant colleagues was inexcusable, and it prepared the way for
-Palmerston’s expulsion from the Cabinet, which followed his recognition
-of the <i>coup d’état</i> in December.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_480" id="page_480">{480}</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXVI"></a>CHAPTER XXVI.<br /><br />
-<small>THE FESTIVAL OF PEACE AND THE <i>COUP D’ÉTAT</i>.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>The World’s Fair&mdash;Carping Critics&mdash;Churlish Ambassadors Rebuked by
-the Queen&mdash;Opening of the Great Exhibition&mdash;A Touching Sight&mdash;The
-Queen’s Comments on “<i>soi-disant</i> Fashionables”&mdash;The Duke of
-Wellington’s Nosegay&mdash;Prince Albert among the Missionaries&mdash;The
-Queen’s Letter to Lord John Russell&mdash;Her Pride in her Husband&mdash;The
-London Season&mdash;The Duke of Brunswick’s Balloon
-“Victoria”&mdash;Bloomerism&mdash;The Queen at Macready’s Farewell
-Benefit&mdash;The Queen’s Costume Ball&mdash;The Spanish Beauty&mdash;An Ugly
-“Lion”&mdash;The Queen at the Guildhall Ball&mdash;Grotesque Civic
-Festivities&mdash;Royal Visits to Liverpool and Manchester&mdash;A
-Well-Dressed Mayor&mdash;The Queen on the “Sommerophone”&mdash;The <i>Coup
-d’État</i>&mdash;The Assassins of Liberty&mdash;The Appeal to France&mdash;The
-Queen’s Last Quarrel with Palmerston&mdash;Palmerston’s Fall&mdash;Outcry
-against the Queen&mdash;A “Presuming” Muscovite&mdash;The Queen’s
-Vindication.</p></div>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="smcap">During</span> the greater part of the Session of 1851 the English people, to
-use a phrase of Mr. Disraeli’s, “were not up to politics.” It was the
-year of the marvellous World’s Fair, or Great International Exhibition,
-and the keen interest which it aroused diverted public attention from
-Ministerial blundering. But though the interest of the country in the
-Exhibition was strong, it was feeble compared with that which the Queen
-and Prince Albert took in it. In spring, when the Court returned to
-London, the Prince concentrated all his energies on the labour of
-organising the arrangements for the opening of the Crystal Palace. All
-through March and April he worked night and day, undaunted by the
-carping criticisms of those who predicted that the direst calamities
-would spring from the Exhibition. These foolish persons asserted that
-the Exhibition Commissioners were simply organising a foreign invasion
-of London. To attract to the capital dense crowds of foreigners, they
-declared, would lead to riot, to the spread of revolutionary doctrines,
-to the introduction of pestilence and of foreign forms of immorality,
-and to the ruin of British trade, the secrets of which would be revealed
-to our competitors in the markets of the world. Colonel Sibthorp, in the
-Debate on the Address, actually implored Heaven to destroy the Crystal
-Palace by hail or lightning, and others declared that the Queen would
-most surely be assassinated by some foreign conspirators, on the opening
-day of the great show.</p>
-
-<p>The diplomatic body in London also behaved churlishly to the promoters
-of the scheme, arguing that foreigners, by coming in contact with the
-democratic institutions of England, would lose their taste for
-Absolutism. When Prince Albert proposed that the Ambassadors should have
-an opportunity of taking part in the proceedings by presenting an
-Address to the Queen, M. Van de Weyer, as senior member of the
-diplomatic body in London, privately asked the opinion of his colleagues
-on the subject. They all gave their assent with one exception, Baron
-Brunnow, who was “not at home” when M. Van de Weyer called on him. But
-at a meeting of the diplomatic body it was decided by a majority of them
-not to present any Address to her Majesty. This decision<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_481" id="page_481">{481}</a></span> was arrived at
-mainly by the influence of Brunnow, who said he could not permit the
-Russian nation or people to be mentioned in an Address of this kind. He
-was also jealous of allowing M. Van de Weyer or any other Ambassador to
-speak for the Russian Government. The Queen was chagrined at this
-incivility, and instructed M. Van de Weyer to tell his colleagues that
-of course she could not compel them “to accept a courtesy which anywhere
-else would be looked on as a favour.” Brunnow, however, held out. In the
-end it was agreed that the Ambassadors should present no Address, but
-merely be formally presented to the Queen at the opening function, and,
-having bowed, that they should file away to the side of the platform,
-where they certainly did not cut an imposing figure during the ceremony
-of inauguration.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_045" id="ill_045"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_481.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_481.jpg" height="335" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>SIR JOSEPH PAXTON.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>On the 29th of April the Queen made a private visit to the Exhibition,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_482" id="page_482">{482}</a></span>
-and returned from it saying that her eyes were positively dazzled with
-“the myriads of beautiful things” which met her view. Though some of the
-Royal Family, like the Duke of Cambridge, were afraid that there might
-be a riot on the opening day, the Queen was not affected in the least by
-their warnings, asserting that she had the completest faith in the good
-sense, good humour, and chivalrous loyalty of her people. Nor was this
-confidence misplaced. On the day of the opening, she was received with
-passionate demonstrations of loyal enthusiasm from the crowds, amounting
-in the aggregate to about 700,000 persons, who came forth to see her
-pass. As for those who entered the building, they seemed awestruck with
-astonishment at the brilliant scene, radiant with life and colour, which
-lay before their eyes. At half-past eleven on the 1st of May the Royal
-<i>cortège</i> left the Palace, and filed along in a stately procession
-through the enormous crowds who swarmed in the Green Park and in Hyde
-Park. “A little rain fell,” writes the Queen, “just as we started, but
-before we came near the Crystal Palace the sun shone and gleamed upon
-the gigantic edifice, upon which the flags of all the nations were
-floating. We drove up Rotten Row, and got out at the entrance on that
-side. The glimpse of the transept through the iron gates, the waving
-palms, flowers, statues, myriads of people filling the galleries and
-seats around, gave us a sensation which I can never forget, and I felt
-much moved. We went for a moment to a little side room, where we left
-our shawls, and where we found Maria and Mary [now Princess of Teck],
-and outside which were standing the other Princes. In a few seconds we
-proceeded, Albert leading me, having Vicky at his right hand and Bertie
-[Prince of Wales] holding mine.... The tremendous cheers, the joy
-expressed in every face, the immensity of the building, the mixture of
-palms, flowers, trees, statues, fountains, the organ (with 200
-instruments and 600 voices, which sounded like nothing), and my beloved
-husband, the author of this ‘Peace-Festival,’ which united the industry
-of all nations of the earth&mdash;all this was moving indeed, and it was and
-is a day to live for ever.”<a name="FNanchor_39_39" id="FNanchor_39_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a> When the National Anthem had been sung,
-Prince Albert, at the head of the Commissioners, read their Report to
-the Queen. She in turn read a short reply. A brief prayer was offered by
-the Archbishop of Canterbury, and then the “Hallelujah Chorus” was sung.
-The grand State procession of all the dignitaries was then formed, and
-walked along the whole length of the crowded nave amidst deafening
-cheers. “Every one’s face,” writes the Queen in her Diary, “was bright
-and smiling, many with tears in their eyes. Many Frenchmen called out
-‘Vive la Reine!’.... The old Duke and Lord Anglesey walked arm in arm,
-which was a touching sight.” When the procession returned to the point
-from which it started, Lord Breadalbane proclaimed the Exhibition open
-in the name of the Queen, whereupon there was a flourish of trumpets and
-more cheering. “Everybody,” writes the Queen,</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_046" id="ill_046"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_482a.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_482a.jpg" height="482" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>OPENING OF THE GREAT EXHIBITION, HYDE PARK.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>After the Picture by Eugène Lamé.</i>)</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_483" id="page_483">{483}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“was astonished and delighted. Sir George Grey (Home Secretary) in
-tears.” On the way home her Majesty again met with a magnificent
-reception. After entering the Palace, she and the Prince showed
-themselves on the balcony and bowed their adieus to the vast throng,
-whose loyal shouts rent the air. The most perfect order was maintained,
-and, writes the Queen, “the wicked and absurd reports of dangers of
-every kind which a set of people, namely, <i>soi-disant</i> fashionables and
-the most violent Protectionists spread, are silenced.... I must not,”
-she adds, “omit to mention an interesting episode of this day, namely,
-the visit of the good old Duke on this his eighty-second birthday to his
-little godson, our dear little boy.<a name="FNanchor_40_40" id="FNanchor_40_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a> He came to us both at five, and
-we gave him a golden cup and some toys, which he himself had chosen, and
-Arthur gave him a nosegay.” From every quarter congratulations on the
-complete success of the day poured in upon the Queen, and though 700,000
-spectators lined the route between the Exhibition and the Palace, no
-accidents and not a single police case could be traced to this enormous
-gathering of sightseers.</p>
-
-<p>One result of the Exhibition was the celebration of the one hundred and
-fiftieth anniversary of the Society for Propagating the Gospel in
-Foreign Parts. It was thought that the great gathering of foreigners
-offered a fitting occasion for celebrating an event of the kind, and
-Prince Albert was asked to preside over the commemoration. His Royal
-Highness agreed, but stipulated that the celebration was to have no
-denominational or sectarian turn. Representatives of all parties,
-therefore, were invited; and the Prince’s speech, which he prepared with
-unusual care, was marked by broad catholicity of feeling, and was
-admirably in harmony with the great festival of civilisation which he
-himself had organised. Lord John Russell was so deeply impressed with
-the speech, that he wrote to the Queen congratulating her on the effect
-that it had produced. In reply the Queen wrote as follows:&mdash;“We are both
-much pleased at what Lord John Russell says about the Prince’s speech of
-yesterday. It was on so ticklish a subject, that we could not feel
-certain beforehand how it might be taken.” At the same time, the Queen
-felt sure that the Prince would say the right thing, from her entire
-confidence in his great tact and judgment. The Queen, at the risk of not
-appearing sufficiently modest (and yet why should a wife ever be modest
-about her husband’s merits?), must say that she thinks Lord John Russell
-will admit now that the Prince is possessed of very extraordinary powers
-of mind and heart. She feels so proud of being his wife, that she cannot
-refrain from herself paying a tribute to his noble character.”<a name="FNanchor_41_41" id="FNanchor_41_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a></p>
-
-<p>As might have been expected, the London season of the Exhibition year
-was an exceptionally brilliant one. It was marked by a strange
-combination of eccentricity and gaiety. The Duke of Brunswick kept the
-town talking with<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_484" id="page_484">{484}</a></span> sufficient volubility, and his voyage to France in a
-balloon, the “Victoria,” with Mr. Green, the aëronaut, was a nine days’
-wonder. In midsummer “Bloomerism” whetted the wits of Londoners. The
-votaries of “Bloomerism” took their name from the wife of a gallant
-American officer. This lady invented a new costume for women, consisting
-of loose trousers gathered at the ankles, a short, full skirt, and a
-broad hat. Adventuresses and “advanced” ladies tried to popularise the
-costume, but failed. Ridicule killed their cause, and when barmaids in
-public-houses and “fast” women generally began to adopt “Bloomerism,”
-its doom was sealed. The season of 1851 was, indeed, clouded with but
-one dismal fact; the aristocracy were somewhat pinched because
-agricultural prices were low, and yet the nobility bore their part in
-the great vortex of hospitality, which the World’s Fair had set
-whirling, bravely enough. London swarmed with distinguished foreigners,
-and balls and routs and dinner-parties went on without ceasing.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_047" id="ill_047"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_484.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_484.jpg" width="271" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>ST. GEORGE’S HALL, LIVERPOOL.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The first striking event of the season was the withdrawal of Macready
-from the stage on the 1st of February, and from the Memoirs of that
-great actor we find that the Queen made a point of being present at his
-farewell performance on the 26th of February at Drury Lane&mdash;the scene of
-his triumphs, not only as an actor but as a manager, who had restored
-Shakespeare’s plays to the stage in their fullest integrity. Nor was
-this the only performance which her Majesty honoured with her presence.
-Writing on May 17th, Lord Malmesbury records that “Lady Londonderry
-appeared at the Duke of Devonshire’s play in a gown trimmed with green
-birds, small ones round the body and down the sides, and large ones down
-the centre. The beak of one of the birds caught in the Queen’s dress,
-and was some time before it could<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_485" id="page_485">{485}</a></span> be disentangled.” On the 12th of June
-there was a grand fancy ball at the Palace, the period chosen for
-illustration being the time of Charles II. The nobility and gentry
-appeared in the characters of their ancestors. The high officers of
-State donned the costumes of their predecessors in the reign of the
-“Merry Monarch.” “We went to the Queen’s Ball,” writes Lord Malmesbury;
-“it is said that her Majesty received 600 excuses out of 1,400
-invitations, and that she did not fill up their places. I thought it
-very inferior to the first two. Most of the fancy dresses shabby, as if
-they had been got up cheap.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_048" id="ill_048"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_485.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_485.jpg" width="323" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE ROYAL VISIT TO WORSLEY HALL: THE STATE BARGE ON THE
-BRIDGWATER CANAL.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>This was the season during which “the Spanish beauty,” Mademoiselle de
-Montijo, afterwards Empress of the French, shone meteor-like in London
-Society, and divided the honours with Narvaez, “an ugly, little fat man,
-with a vile expression of countenance,” according to Lord Malmesbury,
-and who, after being Prime Minister of Spain, and having headed many
-pronunciamientos, uttered one famous <i>bon mot</i> on his deathbed. When he
-was asked by the priest to forgive his enemies, he answered, “I have
-none, as I always got rid of them.”<a name="FNanchor_42_42" id="FNanchor_42_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_486" id="page_486">{486}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On the 9th of July, however, the most remarkable event of the season
-took place. It was the gorgeous ball given at Guildhall by the Lord
-Mayor and Corporation of the City of London to celebrate the success of
-the Great Exhibition. That success was now assured. The weekly takings
-at the gates had never been less than £10,298. In one week they had
-amounted to £22,189, and already Prince Albert was discussing, with his
-confidential advisers, what they should do with the large surplus which
-they were certain they would have in hand. The crowning triumph of the
-undertaking was therefore celebrated by the City magnates with more than
-their usual display of lavish magnificence. The Queen and Prince Albert
-accepted invitations, and when they started in their State carriage from
-Buckingham Palace, they drove through dense crowds of people, amidst
-shouts of congratulations delivered in all sorts of tongues. Nay, when
-they left the Guildhall on the morning of the 10th of July, at daybreak,
-they were amazed to find loyal crowds still waiting to cheer them, with
-no diminution of enthusiasm as they drove home. “A million of people,”
-writes the Prince to Baron Stockmar on the 14th of July, “remained till
-three in the morning in the streets, and were full of enthusiasm towards
-us.” He says, also, that the ball passed off “brilliantly,”<a name="FNanchor_43_43" id="FNanchor_43_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a> but with
-this must be read, as a mild corrective, the description given by Lord
-Malmesbury in his Diary, which is as follows:&mdash;“July 10th.&mdash;Went in the
-evening to Madame Van de Weyer’s. I hear the ball to the Queen at the
-Guildhall was extremely amusing. People very ridiculous. The ladies
-passed her at a run, never curtseying, and then returned to stare at
-her. Some of the gentlemen passed with their arms round the ladies’
-waists, others holding them by the hand at arm’s length, as if they were
-going to dance a minuet. One man kissed his hand to the Queen as he went
-by, which set her Majesty off in a fit of laughter.” The ball, however,
-marked the beginning of the end of this splendid season. “To-night,”
-writes Prince Albert to Baron Stockmar in the letter just alluded to,
-“we have our last ball. The day after to-morrow I come back here to dine
-with the Agricultural Society.... On the 18th we return to Osborne for
-good.” It was not, however, till the 28th of July that the Court removed
-to Osborne, and on the 18th they visited the Crystal Palace once more.
-This visit the Queen describes in a letter to Stockmar, in which she
-says:&mdash;“The immense number of manufacturers with whom we have spoken
-have gone away delighted. The thousands who are at the Crystal Palace
-when we are leaving are all so loyal and so gratified, many never having
-seen us before. All this will be of a use not to be described. It
-identifies us with the people, and gives them an additional cause for
-loyalty and attachment.”</p>
-
-<p>On the 27th of August the Queen, Prince Albert, and their family left
-Osborne for Balmoral, which had now been purchased by the Prince from<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_487" id="page_487">{487}</a></span>
-its owner. On the journey northwards they were received at Peterborough
-by the venerable Bishop of that see, who had been her Majesty’s tutor,
-and a touching interview took place between the Queen and her old
-preceptor. At Boston and Doncaster loyal addresses were presented, the
-party passing the night at the Angel Inn, Doncaster, much to the delight
-of the inhabitants of that town. On the 28th they reached Edinburgh,
-where they occupied the State apartments at Holyrood, and drove through
-the town in the evening. Next day they arrived at Balmoral, where they
-remained till the 7th of October. During this holiday the Queen and her
-husband devoted themselves to the rural occupations that always while
-away the autumn in the Highlands&mdash;the Queen walking, driving, riding,
-sketching, and visiting the cottages of the poor people in her
-neighbourhood, with whom she had become an especial favourite&mdash;the
-Prince pursuing his favourite sport of deer-stalking, with even more
-than his wonted ardour. They also entertained many distinguished guests,
-among whom may be mentioned Hallam the historian, and Liebig the
-chemist, who were both charmed with the welcome which they received, and
-with the easy simplicity of the Queen’s life in her northern home.</p>
-
-<p>On the 8th of October they proceeded to Edinburgh, and met with one or
-two adventures by the way which brought vividly to the Queen’s mind the
-hazards of railway travelling. When nearing Forfar the axle of a
-carriage truck became overheated by friction, and the train was stopped
-till the truck was uncoupled. At Kirkliston there was an explosion of
-steam in one of the feeder-pipes of the engine, which delayed the train
-for an hour, and prevented the Royal party from reaching Edinburgh till
-eight o’clock at night. Next morning they resumed their journey. At
-Lancaster, where they stopped for luncheon, the Queen and her children
-went to view John of Gaunt’s ancient castle, and she was presented with
-its keys at the gateway of the stronghold&mdash;two addresses being read to
-her, which she herself has said were “very prettily worded.” In the
-afternoon the Royal party reached Croxteth Park, the seat of the Earl of
-Sefton. Next morning they started to visit Liverpool, calling on Lord
-Derby at Knowsley Park on the way.</p>
-
-<p>They would have been welcomed with a splendid reception from the Mayor
-and Corporation and inhabitants of the great northern seaport, had not
-the weather broken, and had not torrents of rain poured down without
-ceasing, veiling everything and everybody in the densest fog. Still the
-Queen persisted in proceeding with the appointed programme, and,
-good-naturedly determined to make the best of the unpropitious elements,
-she visited the eastern and southern districts of the town, inspected
-the docks by land, viewed them from the Mersey from the deck of the
-<i>Fairy</i>, and made a return progress through the central and northern
-streets, which by this time were one sea of mud, where, however, patient
-and loyal crowds stood waiting to cheer their Sovereign and her family
-as they passed. “We proceeded,” writes her Majesty, “to the Council
-Room, where we stood on a throne, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_488" id="page_488">{488}</a></span> received the addresses of the
-Mayor and Corporation, to which I read an answer, and then knighted the
-Mayor, Mr. Bent, a very good man.” What seems to have pleased the Queen
-most was her visit to St. George’s Hall, a building which she
-enthusiastically described as “being worthy of ancient Athens.” Here she
-had to step out on the balcony and stand in the rain bowing her
-acknowledgments to the vast crowd who stood cheering with undamped
-ardour in the street below. From Liverpool the Queen and her party,
-attended by Lady Ellesmere, the Duke of Wellington, Lord and Lady
-Westminster, and Lord and Lady Wilton, proceeded in a barge along the
-Bridgwater Canal to Worsley Hall, the seat of Lord Ellesmere. The barge
-was towed by four horses, and whilst one half was covered in, over that
-part which was open an awning was stretched. “The boat,” writes the
-Queen, “glided along in a most noiseless and dream-like manner amidst
-the cheers of the people who lined the sides of the canal.” At Worsley
-Hall the Queen met Mr. Nasmyth, the inventor of the steam-hammer, and
-she seems to have been greatly delighted with his conversation, and
-fascinated by his drawings and maps explaining his investigations into
-the geography of the moon. The evening, indeed, was devoted mainly to
-scientific conversation, this ascetic turn being given to it by the
-arrival of the news that the first great submarine telegraph cable had
-been successfully laid between Dover and Calais. Next day, the 10th of
-October, the weather brightened, and the Royal party visited Manchester,
-the working people of the town turning out in holiday garb to welcome
-their Sovereign. “A very intelligent but painfully unhealthy-looking
-population they all were, men as well as women”&mdash;such is the Queen’s
-description of her hosts. In the Peel Park, Salford, her reception by
-82,000 school children of all sects and creeds, and their singing of the
-National Anthem, appear to have surprised and impressed her profoundly.
-She also remarked “the beautifully dressed” Mr. Potter, the Mayor of
-Manchester, “the Mayor and Corporation of which town,” writes the Queen,
-“had till now been too Radical to have robes.” Mr. Potter was duly
-knighted for his courtesy and kindness to the Royal party, and the Queen
-expressed herself as especially delighted with the order and good
-behaviour of the crowds who followed. She notes, however, in her Diary
-“that there are no really fine buildings” in Manchester&mdash;an observation
-which serves to mark the progress made by this now splendid city since
-1851. Next day the Royal party left Worsley Hall, passed again through
-Manchester, and through Stockport, Crewe, Stafford, Rugby, Weedon,
-Wolverton, and Watford, where their carriages were found waiting for
-them ready to post to Windsor, which they reached at half-past seven in
-the evening.</p>
-
-<p>On the 14th of October the Queen paid her final visit to the Great
-Exhibition, and she records the fact that “an organ, accompanied by a
-fine and powerful brass instrument, the Sommerophone, was being played,
-and it nearly upset me.” The Sommerophone had a compass of five octaves,
-and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_489" id="page_489">{489}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_049" id="ill_049"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_489.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_489.jpg" width="513" height="348" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE QUEEN’S ARRIVAL IN PEEL PARK: CHILDREN OF THE
-MANCHESTER AND SALFORD SCHOOLS SINGING THE NATIONAL ANTHEM.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_490" id="page_490">{490}</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="nind">when played by its inventor, Herr Sommer&mdash;the only performer who could
-make it discourse music&mdash;was one of the marvels of a year singularly
-full of the marvellous. Next day the grand show was closed with somewhat
-scant ceremony, the Queen writing in her Diary, “How sad and strange to
-think that this great and bright time has passed away like a dream,
-after all its triumph and success.” It is curious to observe that in the
-contemporary expressions of public feeling which were prompted by the
-wind-up of the Exhibition, the same note of melancholy is sounded, as if
-there were abroad a half-conscious foreboding that the Festival of Peace
-was only too likely to be followed by War.</p>
-
-<p>These forebodings were justifiable. Affairs abroad began to assume a
-threatening aspect. It has been shown how the enthusiastic
-demonstrations with which Louis Kossuth had been honoured in England had
-caused the Queen many anxious moments. Her mind was sadly troubled,
-also, by the ostentatious display of sympathy which Lord Palmerston
-extended to the Hungarian patriot, and by the veiled threat of Austria
-to recall her Ambassador if these demonstrations continued. Mr. Greville
-has somewhat maliciously said that the Queen’s feelings on this subject
-were caused by jealousy. Kossuth’s reception at Manchester, he observes,
-had been even more enthusiastic than her own. <i>Hinc illæ lacrymæ.</i> Here
-Mr. Greville does her Majesty a gross injustice. The abhorrence of the
-English Court for Austrian Absolutism was strong and unstinted, and most
-forcible expression is given to it in many letters from Prince Albert to
-Stockmar. England, however, was at peace with Austria, and had no
-interest in going to war with her. But the Queen argued that it would be
-impossible to keep up even the semblance of friendly relations with
-foreign States, if her Foreign Secretary were to pose as the friendly
-protector of every rebel leader who had attempted to upset their
-Government, or received addresses in which their rulers were stigmatised
-as “odious assassins.” Her anger against Lord Palmerston was not to be
-appeased by his apologists, who reminded her that he was taking a
-popular and democratic line, which was sure to win for the Queen the
-affection of the people, thereby more than compensating her for the loss
-of Austria’s goodwill. Her answer, penned by herself in a vigorous
-letter to Lord John Russell on the 21st of November, was:&mdash;“It is no
-question with the Queen whether she pleases the Emperor of Austria or
-not, but whether she gives him a just ground of complaint or not. And if
-she does so she can never believe that this will add to her popularity
-with her own people.”<a name="FNanchor_44_44" id="FNanchor_44_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> We have already<a name="FNanchor_45_45" id="FNanchor_45_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a> described the action which
-was taken by the Cabinet in relation to this business, and it now
-remains to record the next quarrel which her Majesty had with Lord
-Palmerston, and which ultimately led to his expulsion from the Ministry.</p>
-
-<p>On the morning of the 4th of December the Queen was at Osborne, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_491" id="page_491">{491}</a></span>
-there she was informed of the <i>coup d’état</i> in Paris on the 2nd inst.
-The Prince-President, Charles Louis Napoleon Bonaparte, though he had
-sworn to protect the Republic, had, in concert with a clique of
-conspirators,<a name="FNanchor_46_46" id="FNanchor_46_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a> long before the 1st of December determined to restore
-the Empire. The first thing to do was to win over the army. The next to
-disgust the nation with Parliamentary institutions. The former task was
-easily accomplished. The latter, however, was somewhat more difficult,
-and the manner in which the conspirators set about it was most
-ingenious. Every newspaper that directed attention to the dangerous
-drift of the Prince-President’s policy was suppressed. He began to
-conspire, says Alexis de Tocqueville, “from November 10th, 1848. His
-direct instructions to Oudinot, and his letter to Ney only a few months
-after his election, showed his determination not to submit to
-Parliamentary Government. Then followed his dismissal of Ministry after
-Ministry, until he had degraded the office to a clerkship. Then came the
-semi-royal progress, then the reviews of Satory, the encouragement of
-treasonable cries, the selection for all the high appointments in the
-army of Paris of men whose infamous character fitted them to be tools.
-Then he publicly insulted the Assembly at Dijon, and at last, in
-October, we knew his plans were laid. It was then only that we began to
-think what were our means of defence, but that was no more a conspiracy
-than it is a conspiracy in travellers to look for their pistols when
-they see a band of robbers advancing.”<a name="FNanchor_47_47" id="FNanchor_47_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a></p>
-
-<p>Two powerful motives urged the Prince-President forward. The time for
-the revision of the Constitution was approaching, a fundamental law of
-which was that he was ineligible for re-election at the expiry of his
-term of office. This law virtually forced him to choose between
-usurpation and obscurity, unless he could get it revised in his
-interests. But it was evident to him that it would not be so revised,
-unless popular pressure were put upon the Assembly, by some imposing
-demonstration of the masses in his favour. To win their sympathies he
-demanded the abolition of the Electoral Law of May 31st, 1850. That law
-imposed a three years’ residential qualification on the voter, and in
-practice it reduced the electorate from 10,000,000 to 7,000,000
-electors. The electoral law of May 31st was therefore the
-Prince-President’s moral weapon against the Assembly. The Assembly,
-however, refused to further his policy on both points, and endeavoured
-to protect itself against reprisals by authorising its President to
-exercise such control over the army as he might deem necessary for its
-protection. This in turn was resented by the Prince-President as an
-attack on the prerogatives of the Executive, and Cabinet after Cabinet
-fell in the course of the struggle between the Chief of the State and
-the Parliament. But the end was within sight when a Bill<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_492" id="page_492">{492}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_050" id="ill_050"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_492.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_492.jpg" width="338" height="268" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE COUP D’ÉTAT: LANCERS CHARGING THE CROWD IN THE
-BOULEVARDS OF PARIS.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">determining the responsibility of the Prince-President and his Ministers
-was brought forward. It provided for the punishment and trial of
-Ministers and of the Prince-President in the event of their violating
-the Constitution, and it was the last measure of importance which the
-Chamber was permitted to consider. On the night of the 1st of December
-the Prince-President and his coadjutors secretly printed a number of
-decrees, which were posted before daybreak on the walls of Paris. These
-announced the dissolution of the National Assembly and of the Council of
-State; the abrogation of the law of May 31st, 1850; the convocation of
-the French electoral colleges from the 14th to the 21st of December; and
-the proclamation of a state of siege in Paris. The Prince-President
-further submitted to the electors a new programme, of which the chief
-points were (1), a responsible chief named for ten years; (2), Ministers
-dependent on the Executive alone; (3), a Council of State; (4), a
-Legislature elected by universal suffrage without <i>scrutin de liste</i>,
-and (5), a Second Assembly, or Senate, filled with all the illustrious
-persons of the nation. In a word, he proposed to revive the system under
-which the First Consul transformed France into a military Empire.
-Proclamations appealing to the army<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_493" id="page_493">{493}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_051" id="ill_051"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_493.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_493.jpg" height="307" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>PRINCE CHARLES LOUIS NAPOLEON.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">were also issued. As for the Chamber, its members were arrested when
-they attempted to offer a protest. All prominent men who might have
-organised opposition among the masses were suddenly captured and thrown
-into prison. At the first show of popular resistance, the troops, who
-had been plied with strong drink for the occasion, fired on the
-people&mdash;in fact, the army seized France, and, having gagged and bound
-her, laid her at the feet of the Bonapartists. When Mr. Senior asked M.
-de Tocqueville if he did not think that the contest had been virtually
-forced on by the Assembly, we have said that the French statesman denied
-the charge. M. de Tocqueville contended that the proposition to put the
-army under the orders of the President of the Chamber was absurd,
-because it was impracticable, and need not have alarmed the
-Prince-President. The army had been so corrupted that it would not have
-obeyed the orders of the Chamber. As for the law of responsibility, that
-was not meant as a step in a conspiracy to crush the Prince-President.
-This law, M. de Tocqueville assured Mr. Senior, was sent<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_494" id="page_494">{494}</a></span> up to the
-Chamber by the Council of State, who had been two years at work on it,
-and the Committee of the Chamber, fearing lest it might provoke a
-collision with the President, actually refused to declare it urgent.
-“Though I have said,” observed De Tocqueville, “that he (the
-Prince-President) has been conspiring since his election, I do not
-believe that he intended to strike so soon. His plan was to wait till
-next March, when the fears of May, 1852, would be most intense. Two
-circumstances forced him on more rapidly. One was the candidature of the
-Prince de Joinville. He thought him the only dangerous competitor. The
-other was an agitation set on foot by the Legitimists in the <i>Conseils
-Généraux</i> for the repeal of the law of May 31st. That law was his moral
-weapon against the Assembly, and he feared that if he delayed, it might
-be repealed without him.”<a name="FNanchor_48_48" id="FNanchor_48_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a> The brutality displayed by the police who
-dispersed the Legislative Assembly, and by the soldiery who fired in the
-most wanton manner on the 3rd of December, without any justification
-whatever, on the houses, and on peaceful passers-by along the boulevards
-of Paris, was stigmatised by the public opinion of England as barbarous
-and outrageous. It set the educated classes in France without
-distinction of party against the Prince-President to such an extent,
-that it became a mark of social and intellectual distinction to refuse
-to recognise or serve under the new <i>régime</i>. In the provinces the
-Prince-President’s tactics of repression were equally successful, and
-some 10,000 persons were seized and transported to penal settlements,
-without being convicted by any form of legal trial. The papers of the
-distinguished statesmen and generals who were alleged to have been
-conspiring against the Prince-President were ransacked; but no trace of
-evidence was found against them, and they were accordingly never brought
-to trial at all. Having thus destroyed the Constitution by the sword,
-Prince Charles Louis Bonaparte appealed for a vote of indemnity to a
-nation which had no alternative but to choose between him and anarchy.
-The result of this appeal was a vote of 7,439,000 votes in his favour,
-and 640,737 against him&mdash;M. de Montalembert, to the grief and surprise
-of the educated classes, being among those who joined the majority.</p>
-
-<p>What was the attitude of the Queen to these events? On the 5th of
-December, Lord Palmerston sent a despatch to Lord Normanby, the British
-Ambassador at Paris, stating that “it is her Majesty’s desire that
-nothing should be done by her Ambassador at Paris which could wear the
-appearance of an interference of any kind in the internal affairs of
-France.” Lord Normanby accordingly called on M. Turgot, Minister of
-Foreign Affairs, to communicate this instruction, and apologised for his
-delay in making the communication. M. Turgot sarcastically replied that
-the delay was not of importance, as he had two days before that heard
-from M. de Walewski, the French Envoy in London, that Lord Palmerston
-had approved of the deeds of<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_495" id="page_495">{495}</a></span> the Prince-President. When the despatch
-from Lord Normanby recording this interview reached the Queen, she sent
-it to Lord John Russell, pointing out that Lord Palmerston’s approval of
-the <i>coup d’état</i> was not only a defiance of her own personal wishes,
-but also of a resolution of the Cabinet. Lord John Russell complained to
-Lord Palmerston about the matter, but instead of expressing regret, the
-latter sent to Lord Normanby a despatch strongly approving of the <i>coup
-d’état</i>, which, however, he concealed from the Prime Minister and the
-Queen. It was not till the 18th of December that Lord John Russell was
-able to inform the Queen that he had at last received from Lord
-Palmerston an explanation, which was so unsatisfactory that he had been
-compelled to write to that turbulent Minister “in the most decisive
-terms.” In plain English, Lord John called on Palmerston to resign. He
-sent in his resignation promptly enough, excusing himself by saying that
-his approval of the <i>coup d’état</i> was but the expression of a personal
-and not of an official opinion. The whole correspondence was submitted
-to the Queen, who accepted the resignation of the Foreign Secretary with
-alacrity. “It was quite clear to the Queen,” writes Prince Albert in a
-letter to the Prime Minister, “that we were entering on most dangerous
-times, in which Military Despotism and Red Republicanism will for some
-time be the only powers on the Continent, to both of which the
-Constitutional Monarchy of England will be equally hateful.” The
-calmative influence of England, her Majesty thought, should be used to
-assuage and not embitter the conflicts abroad which produce such a
-perilous state of things. But this influence, she held, had “been
-rendered null by Lord Palmerston’s personal manner of conducting the
-foreign affairs, and the universal hatred which he has succeeded in
-inspiring on the Continent.”</p>
-
-<p>On the 22nd of December a Cabinet Meeting unanimously condemned
-Palmerston’s conduct, and the post vacated by him was accepted by Lord
-Granville, who was installed at the Foreign Office on the 27th of
-December. Lord Palmerston’s friends forthwith began to fill the Press
-with foolish reports, that he had been dismissed because foreign Courts
-had influenced the Queen against him. These insinuations were utterly
-unjust. For when Baron Brunnow asked Lord John Russell to contradict
-these rumours, the Queen wrote to Lord John as follows:&mdash;“Baron
-Brunnow’s letter is in fact very presuming, as it insinuates the
-possibility of changes of government in this country taking place at the
-instigation of Foreign Ministers, and the Queen is glad that Lord John
-gave him a dignified answer.” Palmerston’s dismissal, in truth, was due
-to his incurable recklessness, and his inveterate habit of not only
-compromising both the Queen and the Cabinet without consulting them, but
-of acting contrary to the course which had been definitely adopted by
-Queen and Cabinet alike, in grave and delicate affairs. Louis Napoleon
-was the only personage of distinction who regretted his fall. “So long
-as he was in office,” remarked the Prince-President cynically, “England
-would have no allies.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_496" id="page_496">{496}</a></span>”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_052" id="ill_052"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_496.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_496.jpg" width="328" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>DIANA FOUNTAIN, BUSHEY PARK.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXVII"></a>CHAPTER XXVII.<br /><br />
-<small>A YEAR OF EXCITEMENT AND PANIC.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>Cassandras in the Service Clubs&mdash;The Tories and the Queen’s
-Speech&mdash;Lord John Russell’s Triumph&mdash;The Militia Bill&mdash;Defeat of
-the Russell Ministry&mdash;Fall of the Whig Cabinet&mdash;Palmerston’s “Tit
-for Tat”&mdash;A Protectionist Government&mdash;Novices in Office&mdash;A Cabinet
-of Affairs&mdash;Mr. Disraeli’s Budget&mdash;Lord John Russell’s Fatal
-Blunder&mdash;The Second Burmese War&mdash;Dalhousie’s Designs on Burmah&mdash;How
-the Quarrel Grew&mdash;Lambert’s Indiscretion&mdash;The Attack on
-Rangoon&mdash;Fall of the Citadel&mdash;Annexation&mdash;Desultory
-Warfare&mdash;Dissolution of Parliament&mdash;The General Election&mdash;Equipoise
-of Parties&mdash;Factions and Free Trade&mdash;Palmerston’s
-Forecasts&mdash;Forcing the Hand of the Ministry&mdash;Death of the Duke of
-Wellington&mdash;The Queen’s Grief&mdash;The Nation in Mourning&mdash;The
-Lying-in-State&mdash;Shocking Scenes&mdash;The Funeral Pageant&mdash;The Ceremony
-in St. Paul’s&mdash;A Veteran in Tears&mdash;The Laureate’s Votive
-Wreath&mdash;Review of the Duke’s Character.</p></div>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="smcap">Eighteen</span> hundred and fifty-two was a year fruitful in alarms and
-excitement. The excitement arose from the discovery of gold in Australia
-towards the end of the year 1851, and from the rich supplies of the
-precious metal which came pouring in from the new El Dorado. The alarms
-arose from the unsettled state of affairs abroad, the tortuous policy of
-Louis Napoleon, and Cassandra-like warnings from military writers that
-the national defences were utterly untrustworthy. A troublesome Caffre
-War at the Cape had also been draining away the best blood of the army
-during eighteen months, and absorbing troops who could be ill spared at
-home.</p>
-
-<p>Parliament met on the 3rd of February, and members, of course, could
-talk of nothing save the rupture between Lord Palmerston and the
-Ministry. The Queen’s Speech suggested, as topics of legislation,
-certain Reports of Commissions on the practice and proceedings in the
-Supreme Court of Law and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_497" id="page_497">{497}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_053" id="ill_053"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_497.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_497.jpg" width="411" height="302" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>HARNESSING THE BLACK HORSES AT THE ROYAL MEWS, BUCKINGHAM
-PALACE.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>After the Painting by Charles Lutyens, in the Possession of the Earl
-of Bradford.</i>)</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Equity, the reorganisation of the Government of New Zealand, and
-Parliamentary Reform. Why, asked the Tories, was there no allusion to
-agricultural distress? Was it not absurd to congratulate the country on
-the fact that remission of import duties had not diminished revenue,
-when revenue was only maintained by the unpopular and iniquitous Income
-Tax? Why was no notice taken of the open and ostentatious defiance by
-the Roman Catholics<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_498" id="page_498">{498}</a></span> of the Act against Papal Aggression? For the
-tranquillity of Ireland the Government surely ought not to take credit,
-inasmuch as it was due to the exodus of the Irish people to America. As
-for Parliamentary Reform, Lord Derby declared contemptuously that there
-were not 500 reasonable men in the country who wanted a new Reform Bill.
-These criticisms, however, fell flat. The one question of the hour was,
-Why had the Foreign Secretary resigned? and explanations were given by
-Lord John Russell and Lord Palmerston. “In all my experience,” says Mr.
-Greville, writing of this incident, “I never recollect such a triumph as
-Lord John Russell achieved, and such complete discomfiture as
-Palmerston’s.... Palmerston was weak and inefficient, and it is pretty
-certain he was taken by surprise, and was unprepared for all that John
-Russell brought forward. Not a man of weight or influence said a word
-for him, nobody but Milnes [afterwards Lord Houghton] and [Lord] Dudley
-Stuart. The Queen’s letter was decisive, for it was evident his conduct
-must have been intolerable to elicit such charges and rebukes; and it
-cannot fail to strike everybody that no man of common spirit, and who
-felt a consciousness of innocence, would have brooked anything so
-insulting.”<a name="FNanchor_49_49" id="FNanchor_49_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a></p>
-
-<p>But Palmerston, though a fallen Minister, was not the man to sit meekly
-under such a mortification. As he said himself, he would soon give Lord
-John Russell “tit for tat.” His chance for retaliation came when the
-arbitrary acts of the Prince-President of the French Republic roused the
-fighting instincts of the English people. A wave of panic ran over the
-country, and it was asserted that as Charles Louis Bonaparte had founded
-his power by the sword, so by free use of the sword must he keep it. M.
-Berryer had expressed in the Chamber the taunt which was freely
-whispered through France, that the Prince-President’s aim was to
-establish an “Empire without genius and without military glory.” Surely,
-then, Englishmen argued, France under this unscrupulous usurper must be
-forced into war, in order to divert her attention from the bondage in
-which she is held by her Autocrat and his army. But if France must needs
-make war so that the French people may get military glory in
-compensation for civil liberty, a war on England, whose Press teemed
-with insulting criticisms on the brutality of the <i>coup d’état</i>, was of
-all wars the one most likely to be popular with the French soldiery.
-From such reasoning it was but a corollary that England was, as usual,
-utterly unprepared for attack, and a panic-cry was accordingly revived
-in favour of strengthening her defensive forces. Yielding to this cry,
-Lord John Russell introduced his celebrated Militia Bill, which
-organised a local as distinguished from a general militia&mdash;that is to
-say, a force whose regiments could be called on for service, not in any
-part of the United Kingdom, but only in their own counties. This was the
-weak point of the scheme, and the Duke of Wellington did not conceal his
-bad opinion of it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_499" id="page_499">{499}</a></span> Fortified by the Duke’s moral support, Lord
-Palmerston assailed the Militia Bill of the Government with relentless
-ferocity. On the 20th of February he carried against the Government, by
-a majority of nine, an amendment in favour of organising a general
-instead of a local militia, and Lord John Russell resigned on the 23rd
-of February. Thus fell the last Whig Cabinet that has ruled England&mdash;all
-succeeding Liberal Ministries being either coalitions of Whigs,
-Peelites, and Radicals, or of Whigs and Radicals alone.</p>
-
-<p>For reasons which have been already given, the times were not propitious
-for a coalition of this sort. The Queen had therefore no option but to
-send for Lord Derby, and ask him to form a Protectionist Ministry. She
-was, of course, deeply sensible of the fact that by recent declarations
-in favour of Protection, no Ministry of which he was the head could
-command the confidence of the nation. Indeed, Lord Derby himself was
-aware of this. But as his followers had joined Lord Palmerston in
-ejecting the Whigs, he felt that he could not in honour shrink from the
-embarrassing task of forming a Cabinet to govern the country, with a
-certain majority against him in the House of Commons, and a dubious
-majority at his back in the House of Lords. A futile attempt was made to
-induce Lord Palmerston to join the Tory Cabinet&mdash;the Queen agreeing to
-accept him as a Minister, provided he did not go to the Foreign Office,
-and was not entrusted with the leadership of the House of Commons.
-Palmerston refused all Lord Derby’s overtures, because he did not care
-to cast in his lot with a Party which was committed to Protection. One
-Tory leader, however, shared none of Lord Derby’s fears for the future.
-Writing in his Diary on the 20th of February, Lord Malmesbury
-says:&mdash;“Went to Disraeli’s after breakfast, and found him in a state of
-delight at the idea of coming into office. He said he ‘felt just like a
-young girl going to her first ball,’ constantly repeating, ‘now we have
-got a <i>status</i>.’<span class="lftspc">”</span></p>
-
-<p>The chief appointments in the new Cabinet were as follows:&mdash;The Earl of
-Derby, Prime Minister; Lord St. Leonards, Lord Chancellor; Mr. Disraeli,
-Chancellor of the Exchequer, as to which the joke current in Society at
-the time was “that Benjamin’s mess will be five times as great as the
-others;”<a name="FNanchor_50_50" id="FNanchor_50_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a> the Earl of Malmesbury, Foreign Secretary; Sir John
-Pakington, Colonial Secretary; Mr. Spencer Walpole, Home Secretary; Mr.
-Herries, President of the Board of Control;<a name="FNanchor_51_51" id="FNanchor_51_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a> Earl of Lonsdale, Lord
-Privy Seal. The only members of the Cabinet who had ever held office
-before were Lord Derby and Lord Lonsdale, and the country was anxious as
-to the competence of a Cabinet of novices to carry on the Government of
-the Queen. “The new Government,” writes Mr. Greville, “is treated with
-great contempt, and many of the appointments are pitiable.” Sir George
-Cornewall Lewis, in a letter to Sir Edmund Head, remarks that “the chief
-effect of the change has been that Graham and Cardwell have come to sit
-among the Whigs, while Gladstone and Sidney<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_500" id="page_500">{500}</a></span> Herbert sit below the
-gangway.”<a name="FNanchor_52_52" id="FNanchor_52_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a> As for Lord Palmerston&mdash;though he got Lady Palmerston to
-invite Lord John Russell to one of her parties, and otherwise showed in
-public some desire to be reconciled to him&mdash;he told Lord Clarendon
-privately that “John Russell had given him his independence, and he
-meant to avail himself of that advantage.”<a name="FNanchor_53_53" id="FNanchor_53_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a> Moreover, to add to Lord
-Derby’s perplexities, there soon arose great complaints against Mr.
-Disraeli as Leader of the House of Commons. “They say,” writes Mr.
-Greville, “that he does not play his part as Leader with tact and
-propriety, and treats his opponents impudently and uncourteously.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_054" id="ill_054"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_500.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_500.jpg" height="266" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>SIDNEY HERBERT. (<i>After the Statue by Foley.</i>)</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The new Government promised the Queen that they would wind up the
-affairs of the Session as quickly as possible, and as a dissolution was
-objectionable at that critical moment, they assured her that they would
-bring forward no contentious business. They introduced a Militia Bill,
-designed to meet the objections of Lord Palmerston to the measure of
-Lord John Russell.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_501" id="page_501">{501}</a></span> Though Mr. Walpole, the Minister in charge of the
-Bill, covered the Cabinet with ridicule by proposing that every
-militiaman who served two years should get a vote for the county in
-which he was enrolled, public contempt was diverted from the Ministry to
-the Opposition. By an inconceivable blunder, Lord John Russell, without
-consulting with his colleagues, came down to the House of Commons and
-opposed the second reading of a Bill, to the principle of which he knew
-the majority were already committed by the vote that had expelled him
-from office. He thus gave Lord Palmerston an opportunity of making a
-bitter attack on him. He also led his Party to a defeat as sure as it
-was disastrous. He discovered dissensions and divisions of opinion among
-his followers, the exposure of which not only demoralised them, but
-weakened public confidence in them as a competent governing
-organisation. This blunder settled the destiny of Lord John Russell. All
-sections of the Opposition now joined Mr. Bright in saying that Lord
-John must never again be permitted to lead the Liberal Party. The
-incident, unimportant as it seems, was of high historic significance. It
-rendered the Coalition Ministry under Lord Aberdeen inevitable. It
-rendered Whig Cabinets henceforth impossible in England.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_055" id="ill_055"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_501.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_501.jpg" width="336" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>ST. ALBANS, FROM VERULAM.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Mr. Disraeli’s Budget speech was a brilliant performance which pleased
-everybody but his own Party. Its principal point was to provide for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_502" id="page_502">{502}</a></span>
-continuance of the Income Tax for one year. But what made it interesting
-was its glowing eulogy of the Free Trade measures of Sir Robert Peel,
-not to mention the elaborate statistics by which Mr. Disraeli, while
-silent on the Corn Duties, proved that incomparable benefits had been
-conferred on the country by Peel’s tariffs, and by his reductions of
-import duties. The oration was, of course, a bid for the accession of
-Palmerston and the Peelites to the Tory Party. “Disraeli’s speech on
-introducing his Budget,” writes Lord Malmesbury, “has produced a bad
-effect in the country, for the farmers, though reconciled to giving up
-Protection, expected relief in other ways, and he does not give a hint
-at any measure for their advantage.”<a name="FNanchor_54_54" id="FNanchor_54_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a> A night or two afterwards, Mr.
-Disraeli had therefore to make a vague recantation of his change of
-opinions, and at a Mansion House dinner Lord Derby did his best to
-explain away the Budget speech of his embarrassing colleague, by an
-elaborate exposition of the doctrine of compromise, on which he said
-British institutions were founded.</p>
-
-<p>During the first part of the Parliamentary Session of 1852 the cause of
-Parliamentary Reform made but little progress. Mr. Hume, on the 25th of
-March, moved for leave to bring in a Bill for the extension of the
-Franchise. Though he tried to galvanise his party into vigorous life by
-a scornful and defiant retort to Lord Derby’s recent attack on
-democracy,<a name="FNanchor_55_55" id="FNanchor_55_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a> the discussion of the subject was felt to be academic
-rather than practical, and his motion was rejected by a vote of 244 to
-39. A similar fate attended Mr. Locke King when he, too, brought in his
-motion to assimilate the County and Borough Franchise. Several debates
-were devoted to the question of the prevalence of bribery at elections,
-and Lord John Russell’s Bill, empowering the Crown to direct a
-Commission of Inquiry into any place at which an Election Committee
-reported the existence of bribery, was carried through both Houses of
-Parliament. The disfranchisement of Sudbury and St. Albans for corrupt
-practices had left four seats in the House of Commons to dispose of. Mr.
-Disraeli’s scheme for allocating them to the West Riding of Yorkshire
-and the Southern Division of Lancashire was, however, rejected on Mr.
-Gladstone’s amendment&mdash;a defeat which was a sharp reminder to the
-Ministry that, so long as they were in a minority and refused to
-dissolve Parliament, they could not hope to control the House of Commons
-when contentious business came before it.</p>
-
-<p>An attack on the endowment of Maynooth College by Mr. Spooner, who
-demanded an inquiry into the system of education pursued at that
-seminary, wasted much time. Both parties, with a General Election
-impending, shrank<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_503" id="page_503">{503}</a></span> from offending the Roman Catholic voters too deeply.
-Yet they were equally afraid of displeasing the aggressive Protestantism
-of the country. After repeated adjournments the matter dropped, chiefly
-owing to a significant threat from Mr. Gladstone and Lord John Russell,
-that to attack Maynooth was to reopen the whole question of the
-distribution of ecclesiastical endowments in Ireland, a question the
-discussion of which could not be advantageous to the Anglican minority
-in that kingdom. A barren debate on the remission of the Hop Duty, and
-Mr. Milner Gibson’s failure to carry resolutions condemning the Paper
-Duty, the Duty on advertisements, and the Stamp Duty on newspapers,
-together with Mr. Disraeli’s success in carrying his provisional Budget,
-continuing the Income Tax for one year, sum up the financial business of
-the Session. By the end of June all the measures which the Government
-had proposed to pass were disposed of.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Derby’s first Government may have consisted of novices, but it
-evidently did excellent practical work as a Cabinet of affairs. For
-between its accession to office and the dissolution of Parliament it
-passed the Militia Act, the New Zealand Constitution Act, several good
-Law Reforms, including an Act to simplify special pleading and to amend
-procedure in the Common Law Courts, an Act extending the jurisdiction of
-County Courts, and another to abolish the office of the Masters in the
-Court of Chancery. Besides these, they passed useful Acts for improving
-the water supply of London, and restricting intramural interments.</p>
-
-<p>Parliament was prorogued by the Queen in person on the 1st of July, one
-of the most interesting passages in her speech referring to the origin
-of the second Burmese war, and the capture of Rangoon and
-Martaban&mdash;events the record of which need not detain us long.</p>
-
-<p>The second Burmese war ostensibly arose out of a complaint made to the
-Indian Government by a Mr. Sheppard, master of a Madras trading
-vessel.<a name="FNanchor_56_56" id="FNanchor_56_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_56_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a> He alleged that he had been imprisoned and fined by the
-Governor of Rangoon on the false charge of having thrown a man
-overboard. This was followed by other complaints from British subjects,
-who had been ill-used by the Burmese authorities, and the Rangoon
-merchants declared that, unless they were protected against the lawless
-exactions of the Governor’s subordinates and dependants&mdash;who had been
-told by him to get money as best they could, seeing he had none with
-which to pay their salaries&mdash;they must abandon all efforts to trade in
-the country. The Governor-General of India came to the conclusion that
-these complaints were justifiable, and easily proved that the Treaty of
-Yandaboo, made at the end of the first Burmese<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_504" id="page_504">{504}</a></span> war, had been violated.
-Commodore Lambert was accordingly sent in H.M.S. <i>Fox</i> and two steamers
-to Rangoon, with a courteous message seeking reparation from the King of
-Ava, on account of the conduct of the Governor of Rangoon. The request
-was refused, and it was followed by a more peremptory demand. The Court
-of Ava replied in a conciliatory tone, recalled the Governor of Rangoon,
-and appointed a new one, who treated Commander Fishbourne, Lambert’s
-second in command, with some discourtesy. Commodore Lambert forthwith
-blockaded Rangoon, and seized a vessel belonging to the Burmese
-king.<a name="FNanchor_57_57" id="FNanchor_57_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_57_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a> On the 10th of January, four days after the blockade was
-established, the <i>Fox</i> was compelled to destroy a hostile stockade on
-the river. After some diplomatic fencing between the Indian Government
-and the King of Ava, an ultimatum was sent to his Majesty. He still
-refused to make any concessions, and war was declared.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_056" id="ill_056"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_504.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_504.jpg" height="268" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>VIEW NEAR RANGOON.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>General Goodwin, with a contingent from the Bengal Army, sailed from<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_505" id="page_505">{505}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_057" id="ill_057"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_505.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_505.jpg" width="326" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>MAJOR FRASER’S STORMING PARTY CARRYING THE STOCKADE IN
-FRONT OF RANGOON.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>India for the mouth of the Irawaddy on the 28th of March. He arrived
-there on the 2nd of April, and on the 5th stormed and captured Martaban,
-where the enemy, five thousand strong, fought behind a river line of
-defences extending over 800 yards. In the meantime, General Goodwin had
-been reinforced by a contingent from Madras, and Commodore Lambert had
-destroyed the stockades on the Rangoon river. It was then determined to
-attack Rangoon on the 9th of April. On the 11th, Rear-Admiral Austen
-cleared the way for the army by destroying the whole line of river
-defences on both banks. On the 12th three regiments of infantry and part
-of the artillery were landed, and the contest was, to the surprise of
-the General, commenced by the Burmese, who left their stockades and
-attacked the flanks of our advance. A strong stockade which stood in the
-way was carried, after severe losses. Major Fraser, Commanding Engineer,
-took the ladders to the fort, and mounting its defences alone, attracted
-by his gallantry the storming party round him which drove the enemy from
-the position. The troops were ordered to march on Rangoon, but by a
-different road from that on which the Burmese had made preparations to
-meet them. They carried by assault the Grand Pagoda, the fall of which
-citadel made us masters of<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_506" id="page_506">{506}</a></span> the town. All the posts on the river fell
-into our hands in turn, and on the 27th of July Lord Dalhousie, the
-Governor-General of India, arrived at Rangoon, and congratulated the
-army on its victories. He then returned to Calcutta. On the 9th of
-October General Goodwin occupied Prome with a strong force, and in
-November an expedition was sent against Pegu, which was taken, after
-some sharp fighting, on the 20th of that month. After this victory Lord
-Dalhousie annexed the whole province to the British dominions; indeed,
-had it not been that he had an objection to expose British India to
-contact with the frontier of China, he would probably have annexed the
-whole of Burmah. Our small garrison at Pegu was then subjected to
-harassing attacks by the Burmese, and the war dragged slowly on. The
-Burmese always fled to the jungle whenever our men attacked them,
-returning to annoy our troops whenever they fell back on their quarters.
-Our capture of the chief centres of population and defence was not
-followed by the submission of the people. There were few roads in the
-country. General Goodwin had not adequate transport for his artillery.
-The climate had sadly weakened his forces, so that the unexpected
-prolongation of the war, however disappointing to the country, was
-inevitable.</p>
-
-<p>After the prorogation of Parliament, on the 1st of July, it was
-dissolved on the 21st of August. On all important questions the
-Government during the Session had held uncertain and ambiguous language,
-appealing to the hopes of all parties alike. There was no strong feeling
-in the country on any subject save that of Free Trade, and it soon
-became apparent that the majority of the electors would not tolerate a
-return to Protection, or the imposition of a protective duty on corn.
-Still, the Protectionists were able to defeat some very able and
-distinguished men, notably Sir George Cornewall Lewis in Herefordshire,
-Sir George Grey in Northumberland, and Mr. Cardwell in Liverpool. In
-each case their successors were feeble mediocrities. Edinburgh, however,
-elected Macaulay without his even becoming a candidate. But though the
-Tories did not gain enough seats to enable them to abolish Free Trade,
-they had fully 300 staunch supporters who would vote like one man for
-their policy. The Opposition was more numerous, but it was split up into
-Whigs, Radicals, Peelites, and the Irish brigade, pledged not to give
-any vote that might tend to bring Lord John Russell back to office. The
-attitude of the Government was very equivocal during the contest. “They
-have,” writes Mr. Greville, “sacrificed every other object to that of
-catching votes; at one time, and at one place, representing themselves
-as Free Traders, in another as Protectionists, and everywhere pandering
-to the ignorance and bigotry of the masses by fanning the No Popery
-flame. Disraeli announced that he had no thoughts, and never had any, of
-attempting to restore Protection in the shape of import duties; but he
-made magnificent promises of the great things the Government meant to do
-for the farmers and the owners of land&mdash;by a scheme the nature and
-details of which he refused to<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_507" id="page_507">{507}</a></span> reveal.” This scheme was to be one
-giving compensation by fiscal arrangements to the landed interest for
-the loss of the Corn Duties. Fear of an alliance between the Whigs, the
-Peelites, and the Manchester Radicals, on the basis of reduced
-expenditure and fresh Reform Bills, caused many Whigs to desert their
-Party. The Opposition was in a truly deplorable state. Their resentment
-against Lord John Russell, to whose mismanagement they attributed their
-electoral reverses, was deep and bitter. Malcontents openly advocated
-that the leadership should be transferred to Lord Lansdowne; and Lord
-Palmerston said that though he would be willing to join a Lansdowne
-Cabinet if formed, he would never serve <i>under</i> Lord John Russell,
-though he had no objection to serve <i>with</i> him. Lord Lansdowne’s
-hostility to Parliamentary Reform rendered him incapable of leading a
-Party that could not afford to dispense with Liberal votes. Moreover, he
-objected from chivalrous motives to take the leadership unless Lord John
-Russell asked him to do so. Lord John, on the other hand, told Sir J.
-Graham that he had made up his mind not to join any Government unless he
-was replaced in his post as Premier&mdash;an arrangement which would have
-simply perpetuated those divisions and dissensions in the Liberal Party
-that enabled the Tories to hold office. Lord Palmerston forecast the
-fate of the Government with wonderful shrewdness, when he said that the
-chances were they would fall on some mountebankish proposal for helping
-everybody out of the taxes, without adding to the burdens on the
-taxpayer.<a name="FNanchor_58_58" id="FNanchor_58_58"></a><a href="#Footnote_58_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a></p>
-
-<p>The Queen’s Speech, so to speak, showed the cloven hoof of the
-Protectionists. One paragraph filled the Free Traders with the darkest
-suspicions. It ran as follows:&mdash;“It gives me pleasure to be enabled, by
-the blessing of Providence, to congratulate you on the generally
-improved condition of the country, and especially of the industrious
-classes. If you should be of opinion that recent legislation, in
-contributing with other causes to this happy result, has at the same
-time inflicted unavoidable injury on certain important interests, I
-recommend you dispassionately to consider how far it may be practicable
-equitably to mitigate that injury, and to enable the industry of the
-country to meet successfully that unrestricted competition to which
-Parliament in its wisdom has decided that it should be subjected.”
-Writing to his wife on the day after the debate on the Address, Mr.
-Cobden alluded to this paragraph as “a queer, tricky allusion to the
-Free Trade question,” which “brought on a sharp attack upon the
-Government last night, and as all parties are agreed to force the
-Disraelites, I hope we shall bring matters to an end soon.”<a name="FNanchor_59_59" id="FNanchor_59_59"></a><a href="#Footnote_59_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a> The
-great aim of the Opposition, without distinction of faction, was to
-force the Government to say, frankly and fairly, whether they did or did
-not accept Free Trade in its entirety. But in the meantime an event
-occurred which for<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_508" id="page_508">{508}</a></span> the moment stilled the clamour of contending
-parties, and united the whole nation in one great wail of mourning.</p>
-
-<p>That event was the death of the Duke of Wellington at Walmer Castle on
-the 14th of September. This mournful calamity had been long expected.
-But when it happened the people seemed incapable of realising it. “It
-was,” said Prince Albert in a letter to Colonel Phipps, “as if in a
-tissue a particular thread which was worked into every pattern was
-suddenly withdrawn.” Moreover, it broke the last link that bound the
-nineteenth to the eighteenth century. “He was,” wrote the Queen to King
-Leopold, “the pride and good genius, as it were, of this country; the
-most loyal and devoted subject, and the staunchest supporter the Crown
-ever had. He was to us a true friend and most valuable adviser.... We
-shall soon stand sadly alone. Aberdeen is almost the only personal
-friend of the kind left to us&mdash;Melbourne, Peel, Liverpool, now the
-Duke&mdash;all gone.”<a name="FNanchor_60_60" id="FNanchor_60_60"></a><a href="#Footnote_60_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_058" id="ill_058"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_508.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_508.jpg" height="283" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>WALMER CASTLE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Queen would at once, and of her own motion, have ordered a public
-funeral, with the highest honours of State, for the remains of the
-illustrious dead, following the precedent set in the case of Nelson.
-She, however,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_509" id="page_509">{509}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_059" id="ill_059"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_509.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_509.jpg" width="256" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE DUKE OF WELLINGTON.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>After the Portrait by Count D’Orsay.</i>)</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">deemed that a solemn vote of Parliament would confer additional
-distinction on the ceremony. It was thus determined that the body of the
-Duke should lie in the custody of a Guard of Honour until both Houses of
-Parliament could meet in November and pass a resolution in favour of
-burying, in St. Paul’s Cathedral, the Victor of Waterloo by the side of
-the Victor of the Nile. The pages of <i>Hansard</i> are full of the glowing
-tributes to the memory of the great Duke, paid by the foremost orators
-of the Senate. Of these, one of the most brilliant came from Mr.
-Disraeli, and it subsequently gave rise to a good deal of scandal. A
-morning paper published a translation&mdash;said to come from the pen of the
-late Mr. Abraham Hayward, Q.C.&mdash;of the eulogium passed by M. Thiers in
-the French Chamber on the Emperor Napoleon I. This certainly bore such a
-suspiciously close resemblance to Mr. Disraeli’s oration,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_510" id="page_510">{510}</a></span> that the
-English orator was accused of plagiarism. But the highest tribute of
-homage to the Duke of Wellington came from the English people, to whom
-the Duke seemed to embody all the manly virtues of their race. To this
-fact Mr. Cobden himself bears striking, though grudging, testimony in a
-letter to his friend Mr. Thomasson, of Bolton, condemning the militant
-policy which led to an ever-increasing war expenditure. “Let as ask
-ourselves candidly,” he writes, “whether the country at large is in
-favour of any other policy than that which has been pursued by the
-aristocracy, Whig and Tory, for a century and a half? The man who
-impersonated that policy more than any other was the Duke of Wellington,
-and I had the daily opportunity of witnessing, at the Great Exhibition
-last year, that all other objects of interest sank to insignificance,
-even in that collection of a world’s wonders, when he made his entry
-into the Crystal Palace. The frenzy of admiration and enthusiasm which
-took possession of a hundred thousand people of all classes at the very
-announcement of his name, was one of the most impressive lessons I ever
-had of the real tendencies of the English character.”<a name="FNanchor_61_61" id="FNanchor_61_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_61_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a></p>
-
-<p>On the announcement of the Duke’s death every town in England displayed
-the customary emblems of mourning. When, on the 10th of November, the
-arrangements for the public funeral were well advanced, the corpse was
-removed, under military escort, from Walmer Castle to the great hall in
-Chelsea Hospital, where it was received by the Lord Chamberlain, and
-laid in state on a bier prepared for the purpose. On the 11th, the
-Queen, Prince Albert, and their family privately visited the Hospital,
-and paid their last respects to their dead friend. After they left, the
-Chelsea Pensioners, the Life Guards and Grenadiers, and the children of
-the Duke of York’s Schools were admitted. On the 12th, the nobility and
-gentry who held tickets of admission from the Lord Chamberlain came, and
-then there ensued a scene of deplorable confusion. Eighteen thousand
-persons passed before the bier between nine o’clock in the morning and
-five in the afternoon, and many thousands more, after waiting wearily
-outside in rain and gusty weather, turned away hopelessly when darkness
-set in.</p>
-
-<p>When the public appeared next day (Saturday) claiming admission, the
-crowd before the Hospital gates in the morning simply overwhelmed the
-police. As it grew and gathered, the press became unbearable, and a
-surging mass of spectators fought and struggled with each other for
-their lives. Yells of agony rent the air; men and women were knocked
-down, or fell fainting for want of breath. Screaming children were held
-aloft in the air to escape suffocation by mothers, who themselves
-disappeared every minute in the struggle. A great cloud of steam exhaled
-from the heaving multitude, and far and near the approaches were
-impassable. After some time the police, reinforced by soldiery, gained
-control over the crowd, and some 50,000 persons then passed through the
-hall. On Monday better arrangements prevailed, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_511" id="page_511">{511}</a></span> 50,000 persons
-passed the body with the greatest ease. On Tuesday 60,000, and on
-Wednesday 65,000 persons were admitted. On Saturday three persons, and
-on Tuesday two, perished in the crush.</p>
-
-<p>On Wednesday a squadron of cavalry conveyed the corpse to the Horse
-Guards.</p>
-
-<p>As it became clear that the day of the funeral (the 18th of November)
-would be kept as one of almost religious solemnity, and that no business
-would be done in London, the Bills of Exchange and Notes (Metropolis)
-Bill was passed quickly through Parliament. It enacted that bills
-falling due on the 18th of November should become payable and be
-presented on the 17th, but that, if paid before 2 p.m. on the 19th, they
-should not be subject to charges for notarial protest.</p>
-
-<p>On the morning of the 18th of November the great funeral pageant, which
-Charles Dickens irreverently termed “a masquerade dipped in ink,” passed
-to St. Paul’s, through streets draped in black. Heavy rain and biting
-wind did not prevent spectators from perching themselves all through the
-preceding night on every spot where a glimpse of the procession could be
-obtained. Windows, roofs of houses, porticoes, balconies, every “coign
-of vantage” were covered with mourners. A million and a half of
-spectators gazed at the procession, and few ever forgot the strange and
-sudden silence into which the multitude was everywhere hushed, when the
-head of the column appeared, led by the dark, frowning masses of the
-Rifle Brigade, marching to the beat of muffled drum and the wail of the
-“Dead March” in <i>Saul</i>. Solemnly,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Sad and slow,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">As fits an universal woe,”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">one of the most wondrous of military pageants filed past to the strains
-of mournful martial music. When the car with the remains of the Duke
-appeared, a thrill of sorrowful emotion surged through the crowd at each
-point of the route, as they saw “warriors carry the warrior’s pall.”
-Strange unutterable thoughts were aroused at the sight of the narrow and
-curiously emblazoned tenement which contained all that Time and Death
-had left of him who had overcome the master of modern Europe, but who,
-in turn, had himself fallen before a Conqueror unconquerable by the
-mightiest. To this exaltation of feeling succeeded an outburst of homely
-grief when the Duke’s favourite charger, led by his venerable groom,
-appeared following his master’s coffin. When the procession came to
-Temple Bar it was received by the Lord Mayor and Corporation, and at ten
-minutes to twelve it reached St. Paul’s.</p>
-
-<p>The appearance of the cathedral will never be forgotten. Tiers of seats
-covered with black cloth rose on every side of the nave. The sombre
-draperies of the interior threw up the florid architecture of the great
-Protestant temple in relief of dazzling whiteness, and rows of gas jets
-round the cornices shed a soft, warm radiance on the scene. The service
-was choral. The Dean read<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_512" id="page_512">{512}</a></span> the lesson, and when the “Nunc dimittis” was
-chanted, a dirge accompanied by trumpets followed, at the end of which
-the body was slowly lowered into the vault, the while the organ and wind
-instruments pealed forth the sad strains of the “Dead March.” As the
-coffin slowly vanished from view a wave of intensely sorrowful emotion
-passed over the vast assembly of mourners. Prince Albert visibly shook
-with grief. The veteran Marquis of Anglesey lost control of his
-feelings. Tears suddenly coursed down his furrowed cheeks, and, stepping
-forward, he placed his trembling hand on the vanishing coffin, as if to
-bid a last farewell to his old chief and companion in arms. The rest of
-the service proceeded in the usual manner, the conclusion of the ritual
-being Handel’s anthem&mdash;“His body is buried in peace.” Thereupon Garter
-King at Arms stepped forward and proclaimed the style and titles of the
-illustrious dead, and the Comptroller of the Household of the Duke
-advanced, broke his staff of office, and handed the pieces to Garter
-King at Arms, who laid them in the grave. The Bishop of London
-pronounced the benediction, and all was over.</p>
-
-<p>The Queen and Prince Albert were of opinion that no <i>éloge</i> on the great
-Duke was in better taste than Lord John Russell’s; but, perhaps, the one
-that will best stand the test of time was that of Alfred Tennyson:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Where shall we lay the man whom we deplore?<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Here in streaming London’s central roar,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Let the sound of those he wrought for,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">And the feet of those he fought for,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Echo round his bones for evermore.<br /></span>
-
-<span class="i0ast">* * * * * <br /></span>
-
-<span class="i1">Mourn, for to us he seems the last,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Remembering all his greatness in the past,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">No more in soldier fashion will he greet<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">With lifted hand the gazer in the street.<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">O friends, our chief state-oracle is mute:<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Mourn for the man of long-enduring blood,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">The statesman-warrior, moderate, resolute,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Whole in himself, a common good.<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Mourn for the man of amplest influence,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Yet clearest of ambitious crimes,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Our greatest yet with least pretence,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Great in council and great in war,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Foremost captain of his time,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Rich in sowing common-sense,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">And, as the greatest only are,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">In his simplicity sublime.<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">O good grey head, which all men knew,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">O voice from which their omens all men drew,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">O iron nerve to true occasion true,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">O fall’n at length that tower of strength<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Which stood four-square to all the winds that blew.<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Such was he whom we deplore.<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">The long self-sacrifice of life is o’er.<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">The great World-victor’s victor will be seen no more.”<br /></span>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_513" id="page_513">{513}</a></span></div></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_060" id="ill_060"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_513.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_513.jpg" height="345" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE WELLINGTON MONUMENT IN ST. PAUL’S CATHEDRAL,
-COMPLETED IN 1878. (<i>By Alfred Stevens.</i>)</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Though much has been written about the career of the Duke of Wellington,
-a brief review of his character may not be amiss here. “His striking
-characteristic was his judgment,” writes Mr. Spencer Walpole. “He had no
-doubt in addition capacity and courage. He could not have fought
-Salamanca without the one, and he would not have held Waterloo without
-the other. But in capacity he was not, possibly, superior to Moore; in
-courage he was not superior to Gough. He was a great general, not
-because he had a great intellect, but because he made fewer mistakes
-than other men.”<a name="FNanchor_62_62" id="FNanchor_62_62"></a><a href="#Footnote_62_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a> His success in war was as conspicuous as his
-failure in politics, and for the simplest of reasons. He was the only
-great soldier of his time who understood<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_514" id="page_514">{514}</a></span> that to triumph in battle it
-is necessary to have the most exact and minute knowledge of the
-mechanism of an army, to know as thoroughly how a soldier’s knapsack
-should be buckled, as how a mighty campaign should be planned. In this
-consisted his superiority over Napoleon I., who concentrated his mind on
-the grand scheme of a battle or a campaign, leaving to his subordinates
-the task of carrying it out in detail. All Napoleon’s subordinates could
-do the work of subordinates better than their Imperial master. Not one
-of Wellington’s subordinates, from the Marquis of Anglesey himself down
-to the humblest private, could do his individual work better than the
-Duke could do it for him. It was this easy mastery in handling all the
-machinery of war that enabled him to readjust his arrangements so much
-more quickly than his opponents could, when any part of a
-carefully-planned scheme miscarried. But just because he did not possess
-the same minute and exact knowledge of the political organism, he
-constantly fell into grievous errors in statesmanship. Starting with
-wrong premises in politics, he perpetually blundered into erroneous
-conclusions. His saving virtue as a politician was his strong common
-sense. It taught him with unerring certitude when a thing <i>must</i> be done
-long before his reasoning faculty, obscured by faulty data, taught him
-that it ought to be done. He never regarded himself as in any sense the
-servant of the people. It was as the sworn servant of the Crown that he
-always spoke and acted, and the only test he ever applied to any project
-of legislation was whether it was likely to strengthen or weaken the
-Monarchy. No considerations of personal consistency, conviction, or
-convenience could deter him from accepting or abandoning a policy or a
-principle, if it could be shown that by doing either he prevented the
-authority of his Sovereign from being undermined. Duty to the Crown was
-the pole-star of his life. To gain a point for the advantage of his
-Sovereign he would even push aside all considerations of personal
-dignity. Sir Francis Doyle tells a story about him which illustrates
-most curiously this dominant trait in his character. One day, when Sir
-Francis Doyle’s father was dining at Apsley House, the Duke said to him,
-“After the battle of Talavera I wanted the Spanish force to make a
-movement, and called upon Cuesta to take the necessary steps, but he
-demurred. He said, by way of answer, ‘For the honour of the Spanish
-Crown I cannot attend to the directions of the British general, unless
-that British general go upon his knees and entreat me to follow his
-advice.’ Now,” proceeded the Duke, “I wanted this thing done, while as
-to going upon my knees I did not care a twopenny damn, so down I
-plumped.”<a name="FNanchor_63_63" id="FNanchor_63_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_63_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a> This little anecdote gives one a clearer insight into the
-secret of the Duke of Wellington’s public life than all the biographies
-of him that have ever been written.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_515" id="page_515">{515}</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVIII" id="CHAPTER_XXVIII"></a>CHAPTER XXVIII.<br /><br />
-<small>THE LAST YEAR OF “THE GREAT PEACE.”</small></h2>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>Abortive Attacks on the Ministry&mdash;Mr. Disraeli’s First Budget&mdash;Fall
-of the Tory Cabinet&mdash;The Queen and Lord Aberdeen&mdash;Organising the
-Coalition&mdash;A Ministry of “All the Talents”&mdash;The Queen and South
-Kensington&mdash;A Miser’s Legacy to the Queen&mdash;Sport at
-Balmoral&mdash;Proclamation of the Second Empire&mdash;The “Battle of the
-Numeral”&mdash;The Queen Initiates a Policy&mdash;Personal Government in the
-Victorian Age&mdash;A Servile Minister&mdash;Lord Malmesbury’s
-Spies&mdash;Napoleon III. and “Mrs. Howard”&mdash;Creole Card-Parties at
-Kensington&mdash;Napoleon III. Proposes to Marry the Queen’s Niece&mdash;Lord
-John Russell’s Education Scheme&mdash;Mr. Gladstone’s First Budget&mdash;The
-India Bill&mdash;Transportation of Convicts to Australia Stopped&mdash;The
-Gold Fever in Australia&mdash;The Rush to the Diggings&mdash;The First Gold
-Ships in the Thames&mdash;Gold Discoveries and Free Trade&mdash;Chagrin of
-the Protectionists&mdash;The Rise in Prices&mdash;Practical Success of Peel’s
-Fiscal Policy&mdash;Strikes and Dear Bread&mdash;End of the Great Peace.</p></div>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="smcap">No</span> sooner had the Duke of Wellington been buried than rival parties
-resumed the war of faction. The Free Traders, who had been resuscitating
-the old anti-Corn Law organisation in the North of England, resolved to
-force from the Ministry an unambiguous declaration against Protection.
-Mr. Charles Villiers accordingly moved a series of resolutions on the
-23rd of November, affirming, that the Free Trade policy of the country
-had been wise, just, and beneficial<a name="FNanchor_64_64" id="FNanchor_64_64"></a><a href="#Footnote_64_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a>&mdash;“three odious epithets,” said
-Mr. Disraeli, which could not be accepted by the Tory Party. He
-ridiculed this attempt to revive the cries of “exhausted factions and
-obsolete politics.” He was himself fain, however, to propose a
-resolution, which admitted that Free Trade had cheapened the necessaries
-of life, which bound the Government to adhere to that policy, but which
-did not contain any formal recantation of Protectionist principles.<a name="FNanchor_65_65" id="FNanchor_65_65"></a><a href="#Footnote_65_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a>
-Mr. Bright hit the weak spot in these tactics when he asked, was it
-safest to let the national verdict on Free Trade be drawn up by Mr.
-Villiers, who advocated it, or by Mr. Disraeli, who did not advocate it,
-and the majority of whose followers were pledged to exact from the
-people some kind of compensation to the landed interest for the repeal
-of the bread tax? Had it suited Lord Palmerston to let the Ministry be
-beaten, nothing could have prevented their defeat. But, as we have seen,
-he had resolved never to serve under Lord John Russell; and there was
-too much reason to fear that at the moment Lord John was the only
-possible Premier in the event of Lord Derby resigning office.</p>
-
-<p>“A moderate resolution,” writes Sir George Cornewall Lewis to Sir Edmund
-Head, “had been prepared by Graham, and assented to by Lord John and
-Gladstone. Charles Villiers was willing to move it, but Cobden insisted
-on something stronger, in the secret hope that the House would reject
-it, and thus damage itself in public opinion, thereby promoting the
-cause of Parliamentary Reform. Palmerston got possession of the
-resolution prepared by Graham, and moved it as an intermediate
-proposition.”<a name="FNanchor_66_66" id="FNanchor_66_66"></a><a href="#Footnote_66_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a> The<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_516" id="page_516">{516}</a></span> resolution affirmed the principle of Free Trade,
-but not in terms obtrusively offensive to the Tories. It was eagerly
-accepted by Mr. Disraeli, who saw in it the means of deliverance from
-his enemies, and it was carried by a majority of 468 to 53&mdash;the minority
-representing all the Tories who were prepared to cling to Protection,
-even after it had been formally abandoned by Mr. Disraeli in his
-audacious address to his constituents.<a name="FNanchor_67_67" id="FNanchor_67_67"></a><a href="#Footnote_67_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a></p>
-
-<p>Mr. Disraeli’s tactics in thus evading defeat have sometimes been cited
-as a proof of his skill. In reality, they were the outcome of
-inexperience and exaggerated self-confidence. He did not correctly
-understand why Sir James Graham and Mr. Gladstone desired to move a
-moderate resolution. They were, of course, anxious not to turn out the
-Ministry before Mr. Disraeli’s Budget saw the light. They were morally
-certain that it would contain some fantastic proposals, which must not
-only wreck the popularity of the Government, but destroy public
-confidence for ever in Mr. Disraeli’s financial skill. Events proved
-that they were right in their calculation.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_061" id="ill_061"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_516.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_516.jpg" width="316" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>NORTH TERRACE AND WYKEHAM TOWER, WINDSOR CASTLE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>On the 3rd of December, in a speech of dazzling brilliancy, Mr. Disraeli
-introduced his famous and fatal Budget. It reduced the Malt Tax by
-one-half. The House Duty was raised from 9d. to 1s. 6d. in the £, and
-extended from houses of £20 to houses of £10 rental. Light dues paid by
-ships other than for the support of lighthouses pure and simple were
-taken off. Tea duties were to be reduced gradually by small annual
-amounts from 2s. 2¼d. to 1s. a<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_517" id="page_517">{517}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_062" id="ill_062"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_517.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_517.jpg" width="278" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE DUKE OF ARGYLE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">pound. The Income Tax was to be extended to funded property and salaries
-in Ireland. A distinction was drawn in taxing permanent and precarious
-incomes, the exemption for industrial incomes being limited to £100 a
-year, and for incomes from property to £50; and the rates of assessment
-per £ were 7d. on incomes from rent of land and from funds, but only
-5¼d. on incomes from farming, trade, and salaries. Farmers’ incomes
-were to be taken as a third instead of a half of their rents. The
-remissions were so balanced by the additions to taxation that no surplus
-on the estimated revenue could be shown. A surplus of £400,000 was,
-however, manufactured by appropriating as revenue the repayments on
-local loans made to the Exchequer Loan Commission&mdash;repayments hitherto
-used for clearing off debt. The scheme<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_518" id="page_518">{518}</a></span> could not stand criticism. After
-four nights’ debate, it was utterly demolished, Mr. Gladstone’s speech
-attacking it being one of the few which are said to have ever really
-turned doubtful votes in the House of Commons. The addition to the House
-Tax, pressing, as it did, on those who would come within the extended
-range of the Income Tax, infuriated the urban voters. The remission of
-half the Malt Tax failed to satisfy a landed interest, hungering for
-compensation for the abolition of the Corn Laws, because a reduced Malt
-Tax, it was agreed, benefited nobody but the publicans and the brewers.
-An extension of the Income Tax to funded property, Mr. Gladstone
-contended, was a breach of Mr. Pitt’s pledge to the public creditor, in
-1798, that no distinct and special tax should ever be laid on the
-stockholder as such. Mr. Gladstone, like all the eminent financial
-authorities, protested against recognising the illusory principle of a
-graduated Income Tax, which lurked in the distinction made between
-permanent and precarious incomes. He further protested against the
-danger of estimating too narrowly for the services of the year, and
-urged with incontestable force that it was a vicious principle to reckon
-as surplus revenue £400,000 of repayments on the score of local
-loans&mdash;that is to say, to regard the repayment of borrowed money as true
-income. The Government were beaten on their Budget, by a vote of 305 to
-286, on the morning of the 17th of December.<a name="FNanchor_68_68" id="FNanchor_68_68"></a><a href="#Footnote_68_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a> In the evening Lord
-Derby handed his resignation to the Queen at Osborne.</p>
-
-<p>Her Majesty, fully aware of the reasons that rendered Lord John Russell
-an impossible Premier, now saw her way to organising the strong
-Government of capable and experienced statesmen which, ever since 1846,
-she had held could only be formed by a coalition of the Whigs and the
-Peelites. She accordingly summoned Lord Aberdeen and Lord Lansdowne to
-assist her out of the Ministerial crisis. Gout prevented Lord Lansdowne
-from attending at Osborne. His ill-health, together with his loyalty to
-Lord John Russell, and the disinclination of the Peelites to serve under
-him, rendered it impossible for him to accept the Premiership. It was
-equally impossible for the Queen to ask Lord Palmerston to become Prime
-Minister, after the recent events which had led to his dismissal from
-the Foreign Office. Hence Lord Aberdeen, though the head of the smallest
-faction, was the candidate for the Premiership who least divided the
-Opposition. He was therefore charged with the task of forming a
-Cabinet.<a name="FNanchor_69_69" id="FNanchor_69_69"></a><a href="#Footnote_69_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a> On the 28th of December the famous Coalition<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_519" id="page_519">{519}</a></span> Ministry was
-organised&mdash;Lord Cranworth was Lord Chancellor; Lord Aberdeen, Prime
-Minister; Mr. Gladstone, Chancellor of the Exchequer; Lord Palmerston,
-Home Secretary; Lord John Russell,<a name="FNanchor_70_70" id="FNanchor_70_70"></a><a href="#Footnote_70_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a> Foreign Secretary; the Duke of
-Newcastle, Colonial Secretary; Mr. Sidney Herbert, War Secretary; Sir J.
-Graham, First Lord of the Admiralty; Lord Granville, President of the
-Council; Sir C. Wood, President of the Board of Control; the Duke of
-Argyle, Lord Privy Seal; Sir W. Molesworth, Chief Commissioner of Works;
-the Marquis of Lansdowne, a Minister without office. “The success of our
-excellent Aberdeen’s arduous task,” writes the Queen to the King of the
-Belgians, “and the formation of so brilliant and strong a Cabinet would,
-I was sure, please you. It is the realisation of the country’s and our
-own most ardent wishes, and it deserves success, and will, I think,
-command support.”<a name="FNanchor_71_71" id="FNanchor_71_71"></a><a href="#Footnote_71_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a> The Queen here simply reflected public opinion.
-Never had a Cabinet of abler men, individually speaking, ruled England
-since the Ministry of “All the Talents” fell from power. But the
-Sovereign and her people both forgot that in our strange and anomalous
-constitution no Cabinet is, as a rule, so weak as a Cabinet of strong
-men. This Ministry, which started on its career on the flood-tide of
-Court and popular favour, was destined, by its vacillation in foreign
-policy, to lead the country into the terrible calamity of a European
-war. It was doomed to fall amidst the execrations even of those who,
-like Mr. Cobden, declared that to his dying day he could never
-sufficiently regret giving one of the votes that brought it into power.</p>
-
-<p>After the formation of the Government, the usual explanations of the
-position of affairs were given in both Houses of Parliament, Lord Derby
-attempting to show that the destruction of his Ministry had been plotted
-by an unprincipled combination of hostile factions. On the contrary, as
-Sir George Cornewall Lewis says in one of his letters, “there was no
-real anxiety on the part of the Opposition to turn out the Government;
-the sections of it were divided, and there was none of that ‘coalition’
-which Lord Derby spoke of. The Budget, however, was more than human
-flesh and blood could bear. The promises of a substitute for Protection
-which Disraeli had made at the Elections rendered it necessary that the
-Government should propose something which appeared for the benefit of
-the agriculturists. They sounded some of their supporters among the
-county members as to a transfer from the local rates to the Consolidated
-Fund; but I believe the answer they got was, that a measure which
-destroyed the power of the magistrates and the local<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_520" id="page_520">{520}</a></span> authorities would
-not be acceptable to their party. They had nothing then to propose but a
-reduction of the Malt Tax, which created a large deficit, and rendered
-an increase of taxation necessary. This latter object was effected by
-doubling and enlarging the House Tax. Disraeli was evidently very
-confident of the success of his Budget, and impatient to produce it. But
-when it had been out a week it was clear the country would not agree to
-it. The farmers did not care about the reduction of the Malt Tax; but
-the towns did care very decidedly for the increase of the House Tax, and
-showed a strong objection to it.... Having made their Budget a means of
-redeeming their promise to give their party an equivalent for
-Protection, they could not modify it, and therefore defeat on it was
-vital.”<a name="FNanchor_72_72" id="FNanchor_72_72"></a><a href="#Footnote_72_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a> On the 31st of December all the appointments under the new
-Government were filled up, and Parliament was adjourned till the 10th of
-February, 1853.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_063" id="ill_063"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_520.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_520.jpg" height="276" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>VIEW IN BRAEMAR.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the early part of the year the Queen was much distressed by reason of
-her husband’s anxieties in connection with the affairs of the Great
-Exhibition. His idea was to apply the surplus in the hands of the
-Exhibition Commissioners</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_064" id="ill_064"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_520a.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_520a.jpg" width="331" height="390" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>QUEEN VICTORIA.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>After the Equestrian Portrait by Count D’Orsay</i>)</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_521" id="page_521">{521}</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="nind">to the purchase of a site at South Kensington, for the Science and Art
-Institution which he hoped to see created. Ninety acres of land were
-bought for £342,500, of which sum Government advanced £177,500, with the
-intention of transferring the National Gallery to the site. The agent of
-the Commissioners, however, had in purchasing the land stupidly agreed
-to take it on a building lease, under conditions which would have
-destroyed their plans, and involved them in the dilemma of repudiating
-their agent, or incurring liabilities to erect dwelling-houses, which
-they dared not undertake. The vendor, Baron Villars, generously
-permitted them to make other arrangements for buying the fee-simple of
-the land; but the anxieties of the Prince during the period when the
-issue was in suspense preyed terribly on his mind and health, and the
-Queen has herself recorded how she exhausted all means in her power to
-cheer and sustain him in his distress.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_065" id="ill_065"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_521.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_521.jpg" height="265" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE QUEEN’S VISIT TO THE BRITANNIA TUBULAR BRIDGE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Her Majesty’s birthday was spent in the sunshine of domestic happiness
-at Osborne. In the festivities of the season the Queen, early in June,
-assures her uncle, King Leopold, that she and her family joined only to
-a limited extent. They gave two State balls and two State concerts. They
-go, she says, three or four times a week to the play or opera, are
-hardly ever<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_522" id="page_522">{522}</a></span> later than midnight in going to bed and, but for the
-fagging business of public affairs, the Season “would be nothing to us.”
-During the summer, life at Osborne was diversified by several short
-yachting excursions round the South Coast. In August the Queen planned
-and carried out a brief visit to her uncle, King Leopold of Belgium,
-reaching Antwerp on the 10th in the Royal yacht in a tempest of wind and
-rain. At the King’s country seat at Laeken the Royal party spent four
-bright and happy days, saddened only by the too visible gap in the
-family circle, left by the death of Queen Louise. The disagreeable and
-tempestuous voyage homeward was only broken by a charming visit to
-Terneusen, where the simple hospitality and quaint old-world ways of the
-villagers greatly delighted her Majesty, who seems to have passed a
-pleasant day among them.</p>
-
-<p>On the 30th of August her Majesty was amazed to receive information at
-Balmoral to the effect that an eccentric old barrister called Nield had
-bequeathed a legacy of £250,000 to her. John Camden Nield was a miser,
-who had pinched and starved himself for thirty years to add to his
-patrimony. The Queen very properly resolved to refuse the legacy if Mr.
-Nield had any relations living who had a claim to the money;<a name="FNanchor_73_73" id="FNanchor_73_73"></a><a href="#Footnote_73_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a> but as
-it appeared he had none, she accepted the gift. The holiday at Balmoral
-was as bright and happy as could be wished. “Nothing,” writes Lord
-Malmesbury, who was in attendance on the Queen at this time, “can exceed
-the good nature with which I am treated, both by her Majesty and the
-Prince. Balmoral is an old country house in bad repair, and totally
-unfit for Royal personages.... The Royal party consists of the Duchess
-of Kent, the ladies in waiting, Colonel Phipps, and Sir Arthur Gordon.
-The rooms are so small that I am obliged to write my despatches on my
-bed, and to keep the window constantly open to admit the necessary
-quantity of air; and my private secretary, George Harris, lodged
-somewhere three miles off. We played at billiards every evening, the
-Queen and the Duchess being constantly obliged to get up from their
-chairs to be out of the way of the cues. Nothing could be more cheerful
-and evidently perfectly happy than the Queen and Prince, or more kind to
-every one round them. I never met any man so remarkable for the variety
-of information on all subjects as the latter, with a great fund of
-humour <i>quand il se déboutonne</i>.” The Prince himself records in his
-Diary,<a name="FNanchor_74_74" id="FNanchor_74_74"></a><a href="#Footnote_74_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a> however, that “Balmoral is in full splendour, and the people
-there are very glad that it is now entirely our own.” On the 4th of
-September Lord Malmesbury writes:&mdash;“The Prince had a wood driven not far
-from the house. After we had been posted in line, two fine stags passed
-me, which I missed. Colonel Phipps fired next, and lastly, the Prince,
-without any effect. The Queen had come out to see the sport, lying down<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_523" id="page_523">{523}</a></span>
-in the heather by the Prince, and witnessed all these fiascos, to our
-humiliation.”<a name="FNanchor_75_75" id="FNanchor_75_75"></a><a href="#Footnote_75_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a> This happy holiday was sadly broken by the death of
-the Duke of Wellington, which brought the Court unexpectedly back to
-Windsor in October, their route being through Edinburgh, Preston,
-Chester, and North Wales, where they inspected, on the 14th of October,
-the Britannia tubular bridge over the Menai Straits. The Queen drove
-through the bridge in a State carriage drawn by men, while Prince
-Albert, accompanied by Mr. R. Stephenson, walked across on the roof of
-the tube. On reaching the south end, the party descended to the water’s
-edge, from which they obtained a complete view of the magnificent
-proportions of the gigantic structure.</p>
-
-<p>During 1852 one striking event in Foreign Affairs that occupied the
-attention of the Queen was the transformation of the French Republic
-into the Second Empire. In Paris, on the 1st of January, Charles Louis
-Napoleon was installed at Notre Dame as President of France, and he
-promulgated a new Constitution, preserving little of the form and none
-of the spirit of Liberty. The whole Executive was to be vested in the
-President, who was to be advised by a Council of State, a Senate of
-nobles nominated for life, and a powerless legislative body elected by
-universal suffrage for six years, whose transactions at the demand of
-five members could be kept secret. The next step taken by the
-Prince-President was to issue Decrees on the 23rd of January, compelling
-the Orleans Princes to sell their real and personal property in France
-within a year, and confiscating the property settled on the family by
-Louis Philippe previous to his accession in 1830. This raised a storm of
-indignation among all Frenchmen who were not accomplices of the
-Prince-President in the <i>coup d’état</i>, and it caused Montalembert to
-resign his seat on the Consultative Commission of the 2nd of December.
-De Morny and Fould also resigned, M. de Persigny replacing the
-former.<a name="FNanchor_76_76" id="FNanchor_76_76"></a><a href="#Footnote_76_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a> To the Queen, whose partiality for the Orleans family was
-well known, these Decrees were painfully offensive. The
-Prince-President’s strongest partisan in England, Lord Malmesbury, wrote
-a letter remonstrating with him, and the reply serves to illustrate the
-character of the men who consented to serve in the Senate. “He (the
-Prince-President),” says Lord Malmesbury in a letter to Lord Cowley,
-British Ambassador at Paris, “declared the confiscation necessary, as
-even some of his own Senators had been tampered with by Orleanist agents
-and money.”<a name="FNanchor_77_77" id="FNanchor_77_77"></a><a href="#Footnote_77_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a> On September 13th this patriotic Senate prayed for “the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_524" id="page_524">{524}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_066" id="ill_066"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_524.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_524.jpg" height="323" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>NOTRE DAME, PARIS (WEST FRONT).</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">re-establishment of the hereditary sovereign power in the Bonaparte
-family;” and on the 4th of November the Prince-President announced that
-he had in view the restoration of the Empire, and ordered the French
-people to be consulted on the matter. The French people, when consulted,
-were for the restoration&mdash;7,839,552 voting “Yes,” and 254,501 “No.” The
-vote was cast on the 21st of November, three days after Wellington was
-laid in the grave. As Cobden said, one might almost picture the third
-Napoleon rising from the yet open tomb of the vanquisher of the
-first.<a name="FNanchor_78_78" id="FNanchor_78_78"></a><a href="#Footnote_78_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a> On the 2nd of December Charles Louis Napoleon was declared
-Emperor of the French under the title of Napoleon III. The Constitution
-of January was confirmed with some slight modifications. A Royal title
-was given to Jérôme Bonaparte, Napoleon’s uncle. St. Arnaud, Magnan, and
-Castillane were created Marshals of France; and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_525" id="page_525">{525}</a></span> then there arose the
-first of the Imperial difficulties&mdash;that of obtaining recognition from
-the European Courts.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_067" id="ill_067"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_525.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_525.jpg" height="288" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>COMTE DE MONTALEMBERT.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Queen took a thoroughly sensible view of the situation. The
-atrocities of December and the confiscation of the Orleans property had
-not prepossessed her Majesty in favour of the French Emperor. But in her
-opinion there was no essential difference between such a Republic as had
-been established by the <i>coup d’état</i> strengthened by the Constitution
-of January, and a military Empire without glory or genius. If the vast
-majority of Frenchmen were desirous of transforming their
-Prince-President into an Emperor, that was their affair, and Foreign
-Courts had no concern in the matter. The Queen was, therefore, strongly
-in favour of recognising the title of the Emperor of the French, and of
-according to him the customary courtesy of addressing him in ceremonial
-communications as <i>mon frère</i>.<a name="FNanchor_79_79" id="FNanchor_79_79"></a><a href="#Footnote_79_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a> The Northern Courts, however, could
-not bring themselves to treat<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_526" id="page_526">{526}</a></span> as an equal, an adventurer who, to use
-his own expression in announcing his marriage in the Chamber on the 22nd
-of January, 1853, “had frankly taken up before Europe the <i>position de
-parvenu</i>.” Ultimately they all yielded to facts, and with the exception
-of Russia, agreed to address Charles Louis Bonaparte as their “brother.”
-The haughty autocrat of Muscovy, who had smiled on him approvingly when
-he strangled Liberty in France, frowned on the attempt to raise on its
-ruins a fabric of Empire, claiming parity with the ancient dominion of
-the Romanoffs. The Czar, therefore, persisted in addressing the French
-Emperor, not as “my brother,” but “my cousin.” This trivial slight is
-mentioned here, because it had subsequently a potent influence on the
-fortunes of England.</p>
-
-<p>“England,” writes Sir Theodore Martin, “conceded the phrase <i>mon frère</i>
-without a grudge.”<a name="FNanchor_80_80" id="FNanchor_80_80"></a><a href="#Footnote_80_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a> That is a somewhat misleading statement. It was
-certainly decided in England that the Emperor should be recognised some
-little time before the Empire was proclaimed, because everybody knew
-that its proclamation was inevitable. Having determined that the
-Prince-President was to be recognised in some fashion as Emperor, a
-question as to style was raised by the pedants of diplomacy, which
-showed where the “grudge” lay. It gave rise to that most grotesque of
-diplomatic struggles&mdash;the once famous but now forgotten Battle of the
-Numeral. Charles Louis Bonaparte, through his envoys, let it be known at
-the Court of the Queen that he meant to call himself Napoleon III. “Why
-Napoleon the Third?” asked alarmed Diplomacy. “Clearly he means to filch
-from us a recognition of the ephemeral title of the Duc de Reichstadt,
-the son and heir of Napoleon I., who was proclaimed when the First
-Empire crashed into ruins.” It was a crafty device to avenge Waterloo
-with the blast of a herald’s trumpet, and to wipe out fifty years of
-French history, just as the Parliament of the Restoration tried to
-efface the Commonwealth by dating the statutes of 1660, as of the
-twelfth year of the Merry Monarch’s reign. The usurper might be
-recognised by England as Napoleon II., perhaps, but never, argued Lord
-Malmesbury, as Napoleon III., for that would have countenanced more than
-our recognition of the Second Empire was actually meant to convey. It
-would have implied a recognition of the Emperor’s <i>hereditary</i>, as
-distinguished from his <i>elective</i>, title to the Throne. Most wearisome
-were the disputes and most tiresome the conferences between Lord
-Malmesbury, then Foreign Secretary, and the French Ambassador on this
-subject. At last it was agreed that we should accept the disagreeable
-numeral, after the French Government admitted in writing that it was not
-to imply our recognition of the Emperor’s hereditary right to the
-Imperial<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_527" id="page_527">{527}</a></span> Crown of France. From first to last, however, Lord Malmesbury
-and the other diplomatists were mistaken. Very little reflection might
-have taught them that if the numeral were meant to efface Waterloo, and
-the Monarchies of the Bourbons and the Barricades, the usurper would
-have styled himself Napoleon V., and not Napoleon III., for his elder
-uncle Joseph and his father Louis both survived the young and ill-fated
-Duc de Reichstadt. A hereditary title, moreover, would not need to have
-been consecrated by a <i>plebiscite</i>, and the reign of its wearer would
-not have been dated from 1852, but from the date of Louis Bonaparte’s
-death. It is, therefore, natural to ask how Charles Louis Bonaparte came
-to style himself the Third and not the Second Emperor. The explanation
-illustrates the facility with which the tragicomedy of fussy English
-diplomacy is transformed into farce at the touch of fact. Lord
-Malmesbury, who is rendered supremely ridiculous by the story, tells it
-himself as follows in his Diary:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“December 29 (1852). We went to Heron Court. Whole country under water.
-Lord Cowley<a name="FNanchor_81_81" id="FNanchor_81_81"></a><a href="#Footnote_81_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a> relates a curious anecdote as to the origin of the
-numeral III. in the Emperor’s title. The Prefect of Bourges, where he
-slept the first night of his progress, had given instructions that the
-people were to shout ‘Vive Napoléon!’ But he wrote ‘Vive Napoléon!!!’
-The people took the three notes of interjection for a numeral. The
-President, on hearing it, sent the Duc de Mortemart to the Prefect to
-know what the cry meant. When the whole thing was explained, the
-President, tapping the Duke on the shoulder, said, ‘<i>Je ne savais pas
-que j’avais un Préfet Machiavéliste.</i>’<span class="lftspc">”</span><a name="FNanchor_82_82" id="FNanchor_82_82"></a><a href="#Footnote_82_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a></p>
-
-<p>After the proclamation of the French Emperor, his matrimonial schemes
-touched the family connections of the Queen somewhat closely. The
-Emperor’s marriage, in truth, was the favourite topic for gossip and
-scandal in every high social circle in Europe. As a matter of fact,
-Charles Louis Napoleon was averse from marriage. Two women were already
-devoted to him; perhaps more zealously than any bride of exalted rank
-could ever be. One was Madame Favart de l’Anglade, a creole, who lived
-some time at Kensington Gate, and whose whist and dinner parties have,
-perhaps, not yet been quite forgotten in the old Court suburb. (Lord
-Malmesbury, it may be said in passing, was told by Kisseleff, the
-Russian Ambassador at Paris, that had the <i>coup d’état</i> failed, Charles
-Louis Bonaparte and De Morny were to have fled for concealment to this
-lady’s house.) The other woman who exercised so much influence on the
-Prince-President’s life was a Mrs. Howard. She was his mistress, and he
-created her Comtesse de Beauregard after he broke off his intimacy with
-her.<a name="FNanchor_83_83" id="FNanchor_83_83"></a><a href="#Footnote_83_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a> This event was virtually an intimation of his intention to
-marry. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_528" id="page_528">{528}</a></span> was anxious to have an heir&mdash;for obviously none of the
-Bonapartes were fit to succeed him. To perpetuate a dynasty a Royal
-bride would be useful, and to enable him to obtain a Royal bride,
-Charles Louis Bonaparte persuaded France to proclaim him Emperor.</p>
-
-<p>His first project was to seek in marriage the Princess Caroline
-Stephanie de Vasa, a grand-daughter of the Grand Duchess of Baden, and
-daughter of Prince Gustave de Vasa, son of the last King of Sweden of
-the old legitimate dynasty. The proposal was not accepted, and the lady
-afterwards married a German Prince. In December, however, Walewski was
-sent to the English Court to ask the hand of the Princess Adelaide of
-Hohenlohe for his Imperial master, greatly to the disquietude of the
-Queen, who was her aunt. On the 28th of December, when the Tory
-Ministers went to Windsor to deliver up their seals of office, the Queen
-began at once to discuss this delicate affair with them. Lord Malmesbury
-says:&mdash;“The Prince (Albert) read a letter from Prince Hohenlohe on the
-subject, which amounted to this, that he was not sure of the settlement
-being satisfactory, and that there were objections of religion and
-morals. The Queen and Prince talked of the marriage reasonably, and
-weighed the <i>pros</i> and <i>cons</i>. Afraid the Princess should be dazzled if
-she heard of the offer. I said I knew an offer would be made to the
-father. Walewski would go himself. The Queen alluded to the fate of all
-the wives of the rulers of France since 1789, but did not object
-positively to the marriage.”<a name="FNanchor_84_84" id="FNanchor_84_84"></a><a href="#Footnote_84_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a> This project, however, fell to the
-ground, and the Emperor, tired of being rejected by Princesses, acted on
-the wise apophthegm of Ovid&mdash;<i>Si qua vis apte nubere, nube pari</i>. On the
-22nd of January, 1853, he announced his intention of marrying Eugenia de
-Montijo, Countess of Théba, daughter of the Donna Maria Manuela
-Kirkpatrick, Dowager Countess de Montijo, by the Count de Montijo, an
-officer of rank in the Spanish army. The father of the Donna Maria
-Manuela Kirkpatrick was British Consul at Malaga, and supposed to be
-descended from the assassin of the Red Comyn, whose family motto, “I mak
-sickar” (“I make sure”), perpetuates grim<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_529" id="page_529">{529}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_068" id="ill_068"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_529.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_529.jpg" width="360" height="498" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>MDLLE. EUGENIA DE MONTIJO, AFTERWARDS EMPRESS OF THE
-FRENCH.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_530" id="page_530">{530}</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="nind">memories of his loyalty to the Bruce. His Majesty told the deputations
-from the Senate, the Legislative Body and the Council of State, that
-whilst it was his aim to place France once more within the pale of the
-old Monarchies, that result would be better attained by policy than by
-“Royal alliances, which create feelings of false security, and
-frequently substitute family interests for those of the nation.” Now,
-any dispute which engages Europe in diplomatic controversy that finally
-leads to war, is apt to produce fresh groupings of the Powers. An
-Imperial parvenu seeking for a respectable ally finds in these new
-groupings excellent opportunities for insinuating himself into “the pale
-of the old monarchies.” Hence the Emperor’s marriage was a sinister omen
-for England, because it was his fixed idea that England was the most
-profitable ally France could have. The Queen, however, on hearing that
-the Emperor’s marriage was a love match, imagined that his abandonment
-of an attempt to contract a Royal alliance gave additional force to his
-assurance at Bordeaux, on the 9th of October, 1852, that the “Empire was
-Peace,” and that under its guidance France was about to enter on a busy
-epoch of Industrialism. English Society approved of the marriage,<a name="FNanchor_85_85" id="FNanchor_85_85"></a><a href="#Footnote_85_85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a>
-and the Press was loud in its praises of the Imperial pair.<a name="FNanchor_86_86" id="FNanchor_86_86"></a><a href="#Footnote_86_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a> Nobody,
-indeed, had the faintest suspicion at the time that war was in store for
-us&mdash;a war which gave the French Emperor that very alliance with England
-for which he was then scheming. But before describing the events that
-led up to the most disastrous calamity that darkens the Queen’s reign,
-it may be well to sketch briefly the chief points in the Home Policy of
-her Majesty’s Ministers during 1853.</p>
-
-<p>It has been said that there were only two great projects in which the
-Queen interested herself during this year, filled, as it was, with
-distracting anxieties as to foreign affairs&mdash;the Budget and the India
-Government Bill. There was, however, a third: Lord John Russell’s
-scheme&mdash;unhappily abortive&mdash;for establishing a national system of public
-instruction.</p>
-
-<p>Parliament met on the 10th of February, and Mr. Disraeli called Sir
-James Graham and Sir Charles Wood to account for speaking rudely of the
-French Emperor in their hustings addresses. Nothing came of his pungent
-attack, and public interest in politics was languid till April arrived,
-when Mr. Gladstone introduced his celebrated Budget&mdash;the first of a
-series that enabled<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_531" id="page_531">{531}</a></span> him to divide with Sir Robert Peel the glory of
-being the greatest Finance Minister of the Victorian age.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Gladstone found that Mr. Disraeli, by under-estimating his revenue
-and over-estimating his expenditure, had left him with a surplus, not of
-£461,000, but of £2,307,000.<a name="FNanchor_87_87" id="FNanchor_87_87"></a><a href="#Footnote_87_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a> Unexpected military expenditure, due to
-dread of a French invasion, had reduced this surplus to £807,000. The
-primary feature in Mr. Gladstone’s Budget was the extension of the tax
-on personal property devised by will to real property, and also to
-personal property that passed by settlement. This, Mr. Gladstone
-reckoned, would ultimately bring in £2,000,000, and put him in a
-position to deal with the Income Tax, which came to an end in 1853. He
-proposed to continue the Income Tax at sevenpence in the pound for two
-years, then to reduce it to sixpence, and in three years after that to
-reduce it to fivepence. He extended the tax to Ireland, but, by way of
-compensation, remitted the debts which Ireland had recently incurred to
-the Imperial Treasury. He increased the duties on Scotch spirits from
-3s. 5d. to 4s. 8d., and on Irish spirits from 2s. 8d. to 3s. 4d. a
-gallon, and thus, he reckoned, he had a surplus of £2,151,000 to spend.
-How did he spend it? He abolished the duty on soap, thereby terminating
-the last of the taxes on the four “necessaries”&mdash;salt, leather, and
-candles were the other three&mdash;which Adam Smith condemned a century
-before.<a name="FNanchor_88_88" id="FNanchor_88_88"></a><a href="#Footnote_88_88" class="fnanchor">[88]</a> He reduced the taxes on 256 minor articles of food, besides
-tea, advertisements, carriages, dogs, male servants, apples, cheese,
-cocoa, butter, and raisins. He reduced the rate of postage to the
-Colonies&mdash;a reduction which, it is surprising to find, had not been even
-suggested by Mr. Disraeli or any of his predecessors in the highest of
-Imperial interests. An ingenious feature in his Budget was his
-manipulation of the Funds. Old Three per Cent. Consols, which could be
-paid off at a year’s notice, sold for a little over par, that is to say,
-£100 of stock sold for a little more than £100. New Three per Cents,
-however, which were not redeemable for twenty years, sold for
-£103&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, £100 of stock was worth in the market £103, the difference
-of £3 representing the value of the State guarantee to pay interest on
-the stock for twenty years. Hence, he said, if he gave a like guarantee
-for some of the unguaranteed stock, he might lay hands on the increment
-of value thereby added to it for the benefit of the State. He
-accordingly permitted fundholders to exchange £100 of Consols, or
-“Reduced Three per Cents.” for Exchequer bonds,<a name="FNanchor_89_89" id="FNanchor_89_89"></a><a href="#Footnote_89_89" class="fnanchor">[89]</a> or for £82 10s. in
-New Three and a Half per Cent. Stock, guaranteed for forty years to pay
-£2 17s. 9d. of interest, or for £110 irredeemable Two and a Half per
-Cent. Stock. Mr. Spencer Walpole has said<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_532" id="page_532">{532}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_069" id="ill_069"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_532.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_532.jpg" height="293" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>PRINCE JÉRÔME BONAPARTE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">that “in breadth, in comprehension, in boldness, in knowledge, and in
-originality,” Mr. Gladstone’s first Budget will compare with Peel’s
-greatest efforts in 1842 and 1845.<a name="FNanchor_90_90" id="FNanchor_90_90"></a><a href="#Footnote_90_90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a> But even Mr. Walpole admits that,
-whereas Peel’s Budgets can be tested by results, Mr. Gladstone’s can be
-judged of only from its intention. The Crimean war&mdash;which he did not
-foresee, and which, as will be shown presently, was then brewing&mdash;upset
-all his calculations. It was not favourable to conversion of debt;
-moreover, the new succession duty did not bring in one-fourth of the
-estimated sum.<a name="FNanchor_91_91" id="FNanchor_91_91"></a><a href="#Footnote_91_91" class="fnanchor">[91]</a> Only one important change was effected in the scheme.
-The duty on advertisements, which Mr. Gladstone proposed should be
-reduced to 6d., was abolished by the odd and novel method of moving and
-carrying an amendment substituting the cipher (0) for the figure 6(d.),
-in the resolution of the Chancellor of the Exchequer. Mr. Hume<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_533" id="page_533">{533}</a></span>
-challenged the competence of the House of Commons in Committee to adopt
-a resolution with a “nought” in it instead of a definite figure, but the
-Speaker ruled against him.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_070" id="ill_070"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_533.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_533.jpg" height="356" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>SKETCH IN THE OUTER CLOISTERS, WINDSOR CASTLE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The India Bill was introduced by Sir C. Wood on the 3rd of June, 1853.
-The complaints against the system under which India was ruled were that
-it led to wars, deficits, maladministration of justice, neglect of
-public works and of education. The Dual Government of the Imperial Board
-of Control and the Court of Directors of the East India Company was
-maintained, but the Court of Directors was reduced from thirty members
-to eighteen, twelve of whom were to be chosen by the Company, and six
-nominated by the Crown,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_534" id="page_534">{534}</a></span> who were to be Indian officials of ten years’
-service. The new system, which was to prevail till Parliament chose to
-change it, put an end to the old plan of leasing the Indian Empire for a
-term of years to a Company of merchant adventurers. As to patronage,
-competition was substituted for nomination as the mode of entering the
-public service. Direct appointments to the Indian Army were, however,
-left in the hands of the Directors of the Company. The scheme was warmly
-discussed, the friends of the Company insisting on immediate
-legislation; its enemies, thinking that in time they might be able to
-educate the country up to the point of abolishing the authority of the
-Directors, and transferring the government of India absolutely to the
-Crown,<a name="FNanchor_92_92" id="FNanchor_92_92"></a><a href="#Footnote_92_92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a> pressed for delay. Mr. Disraeli and the bulk of the Tories
-were for postponing legislation, but in the end the Government carried
-the Bill.</p>
-
-<p>Lord John Russell, on the 4th of April, explained his scheme for
-establishing a system of national education. The main point in it was
-that it empowered Municipal Authorities to raise a rate in aid of
-voluntary schools, the rate to be applied to pay twopence in the week
-for each scholar, provided fourpence or fivepence were contributed from
-other sources. The scheme was, however, abandoned. Lord John had in his
-speech foreshadowed the introduction of a Bill imposing drastic reforms
-on the Universities, and this roused the Tory Party to obstruct his
-proposals. It is but fair to draw attention to this Bill, because Lord
-John Russell is entitled to the credit of having been the first
-statesman to present a comprehensive scheme for organising primary
-education, based on the principle that it is the duty of the community
-to provide for the instruction of the people by levying an education
-rate. This, said Mr. W. J. Fox, was “a most important step in the
-progress of public instruction.”</p>
-
-<p>A Bill empowering the Local Governments in Canada to deal with Clergy
-Reserves was introduced by Mr. F. Peel on the 15th of February. It is
-notable because the debates on it illustrate the difference between the
-ideas of the two parties in the State as to Colonial Government&mdash;the
-Tories in those days being on the whole opposed to granting the Colonies
-privileges of self-government, whilst the Liberals favoured such grants.
-In 1791 it was enacted that whenever the Crown disposed of waste lands
-in Canada, one-seventh of their value should be reserved for the support
-of the Protestant clergy. The funds, it seems, had not been fairly
-distributed, the Established Churches of England and Scotland having
-received the largest share of them. In 1840 the Imperial Legislature had
-confirmed this appropriation by restraining the Canadian Legislatures
-from meddling with these funds. The Bill of the Government simply gave
-the Canadian Legislature the right of dealing with them as it thought
-fit, on the ground that the disposal of lands which derived their value
-from Canadian capital and Canadian enterprise was a matter of Colonial
-rather than of Imperial concern. The Bill was passed.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_535" id="page_535">{535}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On the 11th of July a Bill for altering the punishment of transportation
-was introduced into the House of Lords by the Lord Chancellor. Only one
-Colony&mdash;Western Australia&mdash;was willing to receive convicts, and not more
-than 800 to 1,000 a year could be sent there. The Government proposed,
-therefore, to limit transportation to such cases of crime as would carry
-a sentence of fourteen years’ imprisonment, and substitute shorter
-periods of imprisonment for offences, which up till now had been
-punished by varying periods of transportation.</p>
-
-<p>This proposal, which was carried, was forced on the State by the great
-changes which had been effected in the Australian Colonies after the
-discovery of gold in New South Wales. Here it may be well to notice the
-manner in which these gold discoveries were made, and their effect on
-the prosperity of the Empire.</p>
-
-<p>It was on the 10th of September, 1852, that the West India mail steamer
-brought news to England which revived the old yearning for the discovery
-of the fabled El Dorado&mdash;dormant in the English breast since the days of
-Raleigh. Gold, it was reported, had been found near Bathurst, in New
-South Wales, where a frantic rush to the diggings had taken place. The
-merchant left his warehouse, the shopman his counter, even the lawyers
-deserted their clients&mdash;all eager to join in the headlong race to the
-mines. But all the gold they were likely to win could not possibly
-balance the loss caused to the Colony at the time by the mad stampede of
-the shepherds, who abandoned their countless flocks for the mines. The
-gold fever was further exacerbated by the subsequent discovery of
-another rich deposit in Victoria. America had found her El Dorado in
-California; Englishmen accordingly heard with pride that they, too, had
-come into a richer heritage in the hitherto despised convict settlements
-of Australasia. On the 23rd of November, 1852, three vessels from
-Australia sailed into the Thames with a cargo of seven tons of solid
-gold. The <i>Eagle</i> brought 160,000 ounces, worth £600,000, and she had
-made the passage from Melbourne to the Downs in seventy-six days; the
-<i>Sapphire</i> and <i>Pelham</i>, from Sydney, brought 14,668 ounces and 27,762
-ounces respectively; the <i>Maitland</i>, from Sydney, followed with 14,326
-ounces; the <i>Australia</i>, the first steamer that arrived from these
-Colonies, next came in with a still larger quantity; and in December the
-<i>Dido</i> appeared with a cargo of gold-dust valued at £400,000.</p>
-
-<p>Politically the Protectionists tried to turn these discoveries to some
-account. They had predicted that Free Trade would ruin the country. On
-the contrary, £6,000,000 of taxation had been remitted since 1846, and
-yet there was no shrinkage of revenue. Exports had risen from
-£58,000,000 to £78,000,000, the shipping trade was brisker than ever,
-and on the 1st of January, 1853, there were not quite 800,000 paupers in
-the country.<a name="FNanchor_93_93" id="FNanchor_93_93"></a><a href="#Footnote_93_93" class="fnanchor">[93]</a> Even the landed interest could not pretend to have been
-ruined, seeing that the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_536" id="page_536">{536}</a></span> Income Tax assessment under Schedule B, which
-is levied on rents of agricultural land, had risen from £46,328,811 in
-1845 to £46,681,488 in 1852. This tide of prosperity under Free Trade
-seemed certain to flow rather than to ebb, so that the Tories were
-taunted with the utter failure of their dismal Protectionist prophecies.
-It need hardly be said that the Queen, who, as a strong Free Trader, had
-watched with deep anxiety the result of the great revolution in fiscal
-policy which she had helped Peel to initiate, was intensely gratified,
-not to say relieved in mind, when the figures illustrating the
-commercial condition of her realm were brought under her notice. The
-Protectionists, however, had an answer to these facts. It was, they
-averred, the unexpected discovery of gold in Australia that had saved
-the country from the ruin which they predicted must come from Free
-Trade. It may be pointed out that the figures we have given for the
-purpose of showing how the trade of the country stood after 1846, cover
-the period <i>before</i>, and not the period <i>after</i>, gold was imported from
-Australia&mdash;a circumstance which the Queen and Prince Albert were quick
-to note and appreciate. The Tory Protectionists, in fact, completely
-misunderstood the effect which would be produced by any sudden increase
-in the supply of gold. That effect was two-fold: (1) on the mother
-country, and (2) on the Australian Colonies.</p>
-
-<p>There is very little mystery about the effect of an increase in the
-production of gold. The more we put into the market the less valuable
-will it become. If we double the quantity of gold in circulation, it
-follows that an article which could be bought for a sovereign will not
-be sold for less than two sovereigns. The price of the article is thus
-said to rise, whereas the value, or, properly speaking, the purchasing
-power of the gold, for which it is exchanged, is said to fall. An
-increase in the stock of gold ought, therefore, to lead to a rise in
-prices, and to a fall or depreciation in the value of the metal. In 1853
-some foolish persons therefore predicted that gold would soon be as
-cheap as silver; and yet, though the supply was trebled, gold was not
-trebly depreciated in value. “Undoubtedly some effect,” says Mr.
-Walpole, “was consequently made on prices; but the effect was probably
-only slowly and gradually felt. Gold was absorbed in vast and
-unprecedented quantities in the arts, and the supply which was actually
-available for barter was not immediately augmented to the same
-degree.”<a name="FNanchor_94_94" id="FNanchor_94_94"></a><a href="#Footnote_94_94" class="fnanchor">[94]</a> It is difficult to understand how so able a writer has been
-led into an error which must vitiate every deduction drawn from the
-effect of the Australian gold discoveries on the prosperity of the
-English people, in the Victorian period. Nobody has ever been able to
-estimate even approximately the amount of gold that is absorbed in the
-arts. All that we know is that the amount is so small, that it could not
-affect such an enormous increase in the supply as that which came from
-Australia.<a name="FNanchor_95_95" id="FNanchor_95_95"></a><a href="#Footnote_95_95" class="fnanchor">[95]</a> Besides, as gold did not fall much in value, it was not
-likely<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_537" id="page_537">{537}</a></span> that it would be much absorbed in the arts. But, then, what
-became of all the gold that was so suddenly poured into England from
-Australia? Some of it was absorbed in coinage,<a name="FNanchor_96_96" id="FNanchor_96_96"></a><a href="#Footnote_96_96" class="fnanchor">[96]</a> but not enough to
-account for the absorption of the vast quantity that remained. The key
-to the puzzle is, in truth, to be found in the statistics of commerce
-which we have already cited.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_071" id="ill_071"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_537.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_537.jpg" width="326" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE CONVEYING OF AUSTRALIAN GOLD FROM THE EAST INDIA
-DOCKS TO THE BANK OF ENGLAND.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>After the Engraving in the “Illustrated London News.”</i>)</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The value of gold was kept up in spite of the sudden increase in the
-supply, because, under Free Trade, the commerce of the country began to
-expand by leaps and bounds. The Australian supplies, in fact, were
-absorbed in trade, for it is obvious that the sudden expansion of
-business which followed from Free Trade must have caused a corresponding
-demand for money, not only to conduct the operations of barter, but to
-pay the wages of the additional workers who produced the articles sold
-for money. When this fact is grasped, it is easy to understand what the
-Australian gold discoveries did for England. Had no new supplies of gold
-been found in 1853, Free Trade would have brought serious disasters in
-its wake, but not precisely in the form predicted by the Tories. The
-sudden expansion of trade would have<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_538" id="page_538">{538}</a></span> caused a sudden demand for gold;
-the value of gold must have risen. Supposing gold had thus doubled in
-value, then the prices of commodities would have been halved, that is to
-say, one hundred oxen would have sold only for as many sovereigns as
-fifty sold for before the value of gold was thus increased. Everybody
-who had to make a fixed money payment, such as rent or interest, would
-have had their payment doubled, for they would have had to produce twice
-as much to meet their obligations as originally sufficed for that
-purpose. The burden of the National Debt, for example, would have been
-doubled, for, to pay every pound’s worth of interest to the fundholder,
-the public would have had to realise what represented two pounds’ worth
-of wealth when the interest was first fixed. In fact, the only people
-who would have gained, would have been the few who had to receive fixed
-payments, at the expense of the many who had to make them. The discovery
-of gold at a time when a liberated and expanding trade was causing an
-increased demand for the metal was thus a providential coincidence. By
-preventing the demand from outrunning the supply, it prevented a sudden
-increase in the value of the metal, which must have reduced prices and
-upset all the monetary arrangements of the country.</p>
-
-<p>What was the effect of the discovery of gold on the Australian Colonies?
-Very much the same as the discovery of rich deposits of any other
-saleable ore, excepting in this respect, that gold is the one metal that
-commands an immediate sale, at a high and very slightly varying price.
-Land, Labour, and Capital are the three great requisites of production.
-Of these Australia, prior to 1853, had only the first in abundance. The
-gold mines attracted a rush of emigrants to Australia. But gold mining
-is a lottery in which the prizes fall to the few. The average earnings
-of the digger were soon found to be lower than the wages paid in other
-employments. Hence crowds of men who had been attracted to the mines
-soon left them, and were ready to follow other pursuits, so that the
-gold rush gave Australia the second element in production&mdash;labour. But
-the gold which was won, and the demands of the mining population, soon
-stimulated industry and increased wealth in the Colonies&mdash;in other
-words, the gold rush brought to Australia the third requisite of
-production&mdash;capital.</p>
-
-<p>The Australian gold discoveries, therefore, transformed an insignificant
-penal settlement into a rich and queenly Commonwealth, and saved England
-from the gold famine, with its disastrous fall in prices, which a sudden
-expansion of trade must inevitably have produced after Protective duties
-were abolished. There were, however, two shadows on the picture. The
-gold rush to Australia depleted the labour market at home. The demands
-of the Australian Colonies for British goods, after gold had been
-discovered, were enormous. A sudden diminution in the supply of labour,
-combined with a corresponding increase in the demand for the goods which
-Labour produces, naturally led to a demand in England for increased
-wages. Strikes broke<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_539" id="page_539">{539}</a></span> out all over the country. Labour was scarce and
-business brisk, and though the conflict was, except in rare cases,
-unaccompanied by violence, it may be said that generally speaking
-victory lay rather with the workers than with their masters. Wages were
-forced up, which was perhaps fortunate, because, as the year wore on, it
-soon became apparent that a bad harvest in England, France, and Germany
-would seriously increase the price of food.<a name="FNanchor_97_97" id="FNanchor_97_97"></a><a href="#Footnote_97_97" class="fnanchor">[97]</a> The enormous impetus
-given to industry, and the rise in wages which followed, enabled skilled
-labour to bear this increase in the price of bread. The unskilled
-labourers, however, who from lack of organisation cannot “strike” with
-much effect, suffered acutely, especially towards the end of the year.
-But by that time a calamity was within measurable distance, which
-diverted the minds of the English people from dear bread and bad
-harvests. That calamity was the Crimean war, which rendered 1853 the
-last year of “The Great Peace” which followed the battle of Waterloo.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_072" id="ill_072"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_539.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_539.jpg" width="135" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>STUDY OF A CHILD.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>After an Etching by the Queen.</i>)</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_540" id="page_540">{540}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_073" id="ill_073"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_540.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_540.jpg" width="328" height="137" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>OFF THE COAST OF ASIA MINOR (TURKEY IN ASIA).</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIX" id="CHAPTER_XXIX"></a>CHAPTER XXIX.<br /><br />
-<small>DRIFTING TO WAR.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>Origin of the Crimean War&mdash;Russia and “the Sick Man”&mdash;Coercing
-Turkey&mdash;The Dispute about the Holy Places&mdash;A Monkish
-Quarrel&mdash;Contradictory Concessions&mdash;The Czar and the Tory Ministry
-of 1844&mdash;The Secret Compact with Peel, Wellington, and
-Aberdeen&mdash;Nesselrode’s Secret Memorandum&mdash;The Czar and Sir Hamilton
-Seymour&mdash;Lord John Russell’s Admissions&mdash;The Czar’s
-Bewilderment&mdash;Lord Stratford de Redcliffe&mdash;The Marplot at
-Constantinople&mdash;A Hectoring Russian Envoy&mdash;The Allied Fleets at
-Besika Bay&mdash;The Conference of Vienna&mdash;The Vienna Note&mdash;The Turkish
-Modifications&mdash;The Case for England&mdash;The British Fleet in the
-Euxine&mdash;A Caustic Letter of the Queen to Lord Aberdeen&mdash;Prince
-Albert’s Warnings&mdash;The Massacre of Sinope&mdash;Internal Feuds in the
-Cabinet&mdash;Lord John Russell’s Intrigues&mdash;Palmerston’s Resignation
-and Return&mdash;The Fire at Windsor&mdash;Birth of Prince Leopold&mdash;The Camp
-at Chobham&mdash;The Czar’s Daughters&mdash;Naval Review at Spithead&mdash;Royal
-Visit to Ireland.</p></div>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="smcap">When</span> Parliament was prorogued on the 20th of August, 1853, the following
-passage was inserted in the Queen’s Speech. “It is with deep interest
-and concern that her Majesty has viewed the serious misunderstanding
-which has recently risen between Russia and the Ottoman Porte. The
-Emperor of the French has united with her Majesty in earnest endeavours
-to reconcile differences, the continuance of which might involve Europe
-in war.” The war to which these differences led has ever been regarded
-by the Queen as the one heart-breaking calamity of her reign&mdash;a calamity
-hardly equalled by the great Mutiny, which, though it nearly wrecked her
-Eastern Empire, ended in establishing her authority more firmly than
-ever in her Asiatic dominions. No such tangible result as that followed,
-however, from the war into which the country was now being rapidly
-hurried. The results of this war&mdash;the battles, the siege operations,
-“the moving accidents by flood and field”&mdash;are all well known; but its
-causes are to this day very imperfectly understood by Englishmen. The
-folly and weakness of the Aberdeen Ministry, the influence of Prince
-Albert, the aggressive designs of Russia, the obstinacy and brutality of
-the Turks, the determination of Napoleon III. to foment a disturbance
-from which he might emerge with the status of a Ruler who had linked the
-throne of a parvenu in an alliance with an ancient<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_541" id="page_541">{541}</a></span> monarchy, the
-factious desire of the Tory Opposition to entangle the Coalition
-Ministry in Foreign troubles&mdash;to all these causes have different writers
-traced the Crimean war. Let us, then, examine carefully, and closely,
-the development of the dispute that broke the peace of Europe in
-connection with the attitude to it&mdash;sometimes, it must be frankly said,
-a wrong attitude&mdash;which the Queen and the Court of St. James’s held.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_074" id="ill_074"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_541.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_541.jpg" height="221" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>BAZAAR IN CONSTANTINOPLE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The geographical conditions of Russia, and the political state of
-Turkey, favoured the outbreak of war between these States. Russia has no
-outlet to the sea except through the Baltic in the north, which is
-frozen in winter, and through the Bosphorus in the south, which is open
-all the year, but which is dominated by the Sultan so long as
-Constantinople is the capital of Turkey. Russia has, therefore, an
-obvious interest either in making Turkey her vassal, or in expelling the
-Turks from Europe, and establishing a Power at Constantinople in
-servitude to the Czar. It is almost a heresy to say that Russia has not
-aimed at seizing Constantinople herself. Yet if we are to base our
-judgment on authentic historical documents, and not on the heated
-imaginings of excited Russophobists, it is necessary to say this. The
-Emperor Nicholas was the most aggressive of modern Czars, and there is
-no reason to doubt the cynical candour with which he expressed his views
-on this subject to Sir George Hamilton Seymour, in his conversations
-with him early in the year.<a name="FNanchor_98_98" id="FNanchor_98_98"></a><a href="#Footnote_98_98" class="fnanchor">[98]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_542" id="page_542">{542}</a></span></p>
-<p>Yet it is certain that his ideas as to
-the reconstitution of European Turkey in the event of the Turkish Empire
-breaking up, took the form of organising a series of autonomous States,
-which, like the Danubian Principalities in 1853, should be under his
-protection, though, perhaps, under the nominal suzerainty of the
-Turks&mdash;by that time banished to Asia Minor&mdash;“bag and baggage.” These
-ideas may have been right or wrong. It is, however, just to say that
-they were the ideas of the Czar, and that they do not correspond with
-the scheme for making Constantinople the capital of Russia, which most
-popular English writers accuse him of cherishing.<a name="FNanchor_99_99" id="FNanchor_99_99"></a><a href="#Footnote_99_99" class="fnanchor">[99]</a> The interest of
-Russia being thus revealed, let us see where her opportunity lay. It lay
-in the fact that the Ottomans, though they had enough bodily strength to
-conquer, had never enough brain-power to govern a European Empire. In
-this respect they differed signally from the equally savage hordes of
-Manchu Tartars, who overran China, and who, instead of destroying,
-adapted themselves to the civilisation with which they came in contact.
-The Christian provinces of Turkey, and the Greek Christians, under the
-rule of the Sultan were misgoverned, plundered, and at times tortured by
-the myrmidons of a barbarous and feeble autocracy. The Russian Czar, as
-head of a nation fanatically devoted to the Greek cult, could always
-find in this misgovernment and oppression apt opportunity for
-interfering between the Sultan and his Greek subjects. Moreover, in
-every act of interference the Czar of Muscovy knows that he will be
-supported to the death by the fervid fanaticism of the Russian people.</p>
-
-<p>But the example of other Powers was not wanting in 1853 to emphasise the
-promptings of interest and opportunity. In 1852 the Turks determined to
-strike a blow at Montenegro, with which they had for centuries waged
-chronic warfare. The Sublime Porte sent Omar Pasha to occupy the
-Principality of the Black Mountain. Austria, alarmed at the prospect,
-despatched Count Leiningen to Constantinople, and instructed him to
-press for the recall of Omar. The Porte yielded to this demand, and
-recalled him.<a name="FNanchor_100_100" id="FNanchor_100_100"></a><a href="#Footnote_100_100" class="fnanchor">[100]</a></p>
-
-<p>Nor was Austria the only Power that was demonstrating the ease with
-which Turkey might be coerced. France had a dispute pending with Turkey,
-as to the privileges of the Roman Catholic monks in Jerusalem&mdash;a dispute
-into which the French Emperor, when Prince-President in 1850, had
-entered with vigour, for the purpose of conciliating the French clergy.
-Mr. Kinglake insinuates that Napoleon III. manufactured this quarrel in
-order to force on<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_543" id="page_543">{543}</a></span> a European war that might strengthen his position. It
-is but fair to say that the Emperor inherited the controversy from Louis
-Philippe.<a name="FNanchor_101_101" id="FNanchor_101_101"></a><a href="#Footnote_101_101" class="fnanchor">[101]</a> As it led to the assertion of claims on the part of
-Russia, the rejection of which by Turkey caused the Crimean war, it may
-be well briefly to set forth its salient points.</p>
-
-<p>In 1740 the Porte, in a treaty with France, granted to the Roman
-Catholic monks and clergy in Jerusalem the custody of certain places in
-the Holy Land, associated with the memory of Christ, and to which Greek
-and Latin Christians were in the habit of making pilgrimages. The Great
-Church of Bethlehem, the Sanctuary of the Nativity, the Tomb of the
-Virgin, the Stone of Anointing, and the Seven Arches of the Virgin in
-the tomb of the Holy Sepulchre, were among the Sacred Places thus
-ceded.<a name="FNanchor_102_102" id="FNanchor_102_102"></a><a href="#Footnote_102_102" class="fnanchor">[102]</a> During the Revolution, French zeal for maintaining the
-privileges of the Romish clergy in Syria grew cool, and the Holy Places
-in the custody of the Latin monks were shockingly neglected. The Greek
-Christians, however, not only visited these consecrated spots as
-pilgrims, but piously repaired them with the sanction of the Porte, thus
-acquiring by firmans from the Sultan the privilege of worshipping in
-them. The policy of the Porte seems to have been to induce Latins and
-Greeks to share the use of the sacred shrines. But Latins and Greeks,
-under the protection of France and Russia respectively, each claimed an
-exclusive right of control and guardianship over them. The dispute had
-been carried on in a desultory way till, in 1850, it was narrowed down
-to this point: France, on behalf of the Latin monks, contended that, in
-order to pass into the grotto of the Holy Manger, they should have
-exclusive possession of the key of the Church of Bethlehem, and of one
-of the keys&mdash;the other being in Greek custody&mdash;of each of the two doors
-of the Holy Manger; further, that the Sanctuary of the Nativity itself
-should be ornamented with a silver star, and the arms of France. In
-February, 1853, the Porte adjudicated on the rival claims in a letter
-addressed to the French Chargé d’Affaires, and in a firman to the Greek
-patriarch. The representative of France was told that the Latins were to
-have the keys they demanded. The Patriarch was told that Greeks,
-Armenians, and Latins should have keys also, and that the Latins were
-not to have any of the exclusive rights over the Holy Places that they
-claimed. When it became known that the Porte had thus spoken with “two
-voices,” France complained that the exclusive rights demanded by her
-under the Treaty of 1740 were denied in the firman. Russia, on behalf of
-the Greeks, claimed credit for moderation in accepting the firman as a
-compromise,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_544" id="page_544">{544}</a></span> and insisted on its being publicly proclaimed at Jerusalem
-as a charter of Greek privileges. The Porte, in deference to the
-opposition of France, refused to make public proclamation of the
-firman.<a name="FNanchor_103_103" id="FNanchor_103_103"></a><a href="#Footnote_103_103" class="fnanchor">[103]</a> The Russian Consul-General left Jerusalem in high dudgeon.
-“The Latins,” says Mr. Walpole, “on hearing the decision of the Porte,
-that they should be allowed to celebrate mass once a year in the Church
-of the Virgin, near Gethsemane, but that they should not be allowed to
-disturb the altar and its ornaments, declared that it was impossible to
-celebrate mass on a schismatic slab of marble, and before a crucifix
-whose feet were separated.”<a name="FNanchor_104_104" id="FNanchor_104_104"></a><a href="#Footnote_104_104" class="fnanchor">[104]</a> In this quarrel of a few ignorant monks
-over the mummeries of their rival rituals lay the germ of that great war
-in which England sacrificed the lives of 28,000 brave men, and spent
-£30,000,000 of sterling treasure!</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_075" id="ill_075"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_544.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_544.jpg" width="334" height="170" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>CONVENT OF THE NATIVITY, BETHLEHEM.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Porte endeavoured, by contradictory concessions, such as by publicly
-reading the firman, and by permitting the Latins to put a star over the
-altar of the Nativity, to please both parties&mdash;but in vain. Russia,
-towards the end of 1852, had moved a <i>corps d’armée</i> on the frontier of
-Moldavia. France threatened to send her fleet to Syria; and in the end
-of February, 1853, the Czar sent Prince Menschikoff on a special mission
-to Constantinople, for the purpose of enforcing the Russian demands.</p>
-
-<p>The turn in affairs that placed Lord Aberdeen at the head of the Queen’s
-Government did not tend to moderate these demands, or induce the Czar to
-treat the Porte with any delicacy. The Czar, in fact, was honestly
-convinced that his views as to the future of Turkey were, in the main,
-shared by Lord Aberdeen, and therefore by the British Cabinet. It was<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_545" id="page_545">{545}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_076" id="ill_076"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_545.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_545.jpg" height="220" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>INTERIOR OF THE CHAPEL OF THE NATIVITY, BETHLEHEM.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">well known that when the Czar visited England, in 1844, he had discussed
-the Eastern Question with the Queen and her principal advisers, and that
-he and Lord Aberdeen had become personal friends. His Majesty had
-propounded to Peel and Aberdeen his fixed idea that it would be well, in
-view of the impending dissolution of the Ottoman Empire, that England
-and Russia should agree as to the disposal of its European provinces. As
-Austria would follow Russia, an Anglo-Russian coalition would
-necessarily dictate terms to France, who, by her support of Mehemet Ali,
-had shown that her interests were as hostile to those of England in
-Egypt, as they were to those of Russia in Syria. In fact, the Czar’s
-conversations with the Tory Ministers in 1844 were almost identical with
-those which he subsequently held with Sir Hamilton Seymour in 1853. Sir
-Theodore Martin asserts that Peel rejected these overtures, saying that
-England did not regard the dissolution of Turkey as imminent, that she
-wanted no Turkish territory for herself, that she merely desired to
-prevent any government in Egypt from closing the road to India, and that
-she must decline to pledge herself to accept Russian plans for disposing
-of the Turkish territory, till events rendered its disposal a pressing
-question.<a name="FNanchor_105_105" id="FNanchor_105_105"></a><a href="#Footnote_105_105" class="fnanchor">[105]</a> Sir Theodore Martin, however, admits that there was “a
-general concurrence in the principle expressed” by the Czar, that no
-Great Power&mdash;least of all France&mdash;should be permitted to aggrandise
-itself at the expense<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_546" id="page_546">{546}</a></span> of Turkey. Now, it seems certain that up to the
-very moment when war was declared, the Emperor Nicholas was convinced
-that Lord Aberdeen’s Government would never take sides with France
-against him, in any quarrel about Turkey. He was convinced, despite the
-despatches of the British Ministry, that the ideas of the British
-Government and his own in regard to the future of Turkey, were in
-principle the same&mdash;and this conviction he evidently carried away with
-him from England in 1844. He must have been, therefore, too stupid to
-correctly understand what Peel said to him, or Peel must have said more
-to him than Sir Theodore Martin felt himself at liberty to record, in
-his masterly but discreet biography of Prince Albert. The manifest
-reluctance of Lord Aberdeen to thwart the Russian Emperor, and his
-obvious embarrassment when his duty forced him to comment publicly on
-Russian diplomacy in 1853, indicate that something more <i>was</i> said. What
-it was has been revealed by Lord Malmesbury in an entry in his Diary
-under date the 3rd of June, 1853. “There is,” says Lord Malmesbury, who
-speaks with the authority of one who had held the seals of the Foreign
-Office, “a circumstance which I think must strongly influence Lord
-Aberdeen at this moment; which is, that when the Emperor Nicholas came
-to England in 1844, he, Sir Robert Peel (then Prime Minister), the Duke
-of Wellington, and Lord Aberdeen (then Foreign Secretary) drew up and
-signed a memorandum, the spirit and scope of which was to support Russia
-in her legitimate protectorship of the Greek religion and the Holy
-Shrines, and to do so without consulting France. When Lord Derby’s
-government came in, at first, I was unable to understand the mysterious
-allusions which Brunnow<a name="FNanchor_106_106" id="FNanchor_106_106"></a><a href="#Footnote_106_106" class="fnanchor">[106]</a> made now and then, and which he retracted
-when he saw that either I knew nothing of this paper, or that I desired
-to ignore it. Since it was composed and written, the position of affairs
-in Europe is totally changed, and is even reversed. In 1840 the events
-in the East had then estranged England and France from one another, and
-Louis Napoleon did not exist as a factor in European policy. Now he is
-Emperor of the French, and the Duke and Peel are dead, yet it is not
-unnatural to believe that Nicholas, finding Lord Aberdeen Prime
-Minister, and the sole survivor of these three English statesmen, should
-feel that the moment had arrived, so long wished for by Russia, to fall
-upon Turkey.... He believes that Lord Aberdeen never will join France
-against him, and probably thinks Palmerston stultified by the drudgery
-of the Home Office.”<a name="FNanchor_107_107" id="FNanchor_107_107"></a><a href="#Footnote_107_107" class="fnanchor">[107]</a> This passage in Lord Malmesbury’s Diary
-explains why Lord Beaconsfield used to say that he knew as a fact within
-his own knowledge, that had Lord Aberdeen not come to power in 1852, the
-Crimean war would never have broken out.<a name="FNanchor_108_108" id="FNanchor_108_108"></a><a href="#Footnote_108_108" class="fnanchor">[108]</a> Perhaps it explains why
-Mr. Cobden and Mr. Bright declared that if the Tories had not been
-driven from Office in 1852, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_547" id="page_547">{547}</a></span> Crimean war would have been avoided. It
-is now only too easy to understand that, if he had this Secret
-Memorandum in his possession, the Czar Nicholas naturally believed that
-the British Government were not serious in their antagonism. It is also
-easy to understand why Lord Aberdeen always shrank from speaking the
-firm word of warning, which would have induced Russia to pause ere her
-troops crossed the Pruth, and draw back whilst it was possible to draw
-back with honour.</p>
-
-<p>The existence of an informal understanding between the Czar and the old
-Tory Government of 1844 shows us why his Majesty, in conversation with
-Sir Hamilton Seymour, on the 9th and 14th of January, 1853, reopened the
-question which he believed he had virtually arranged with that
-Government. The last living representative of it&mdash;Lord Aberdeen&mdash;was
-Prime Minister of England; Turkey was in a more decrepit condition than
-ever; France seemed bent on reviving the Napoleonic legend&mdash;of evil omen
-to England in Egypt; nay, she was challenging the claim of Russia to
-secure protection for the Greek Christians in the Ottoman Empire&mdash;a
-claim which the Tory leaders in 1844 were disposed to favour.<a name="FNanchor_109_109" id="FNanchor_109_109"></a><a href="#Footnote_109_109" class="fnanchor">[109]</a> The
-Czar therefore thought it most opportune to say to Sir Hamilton Seymour,
-as he had said to Wellington and Peel, that Turkey, “the Sick Man,” was
-dying on their hands, that England and Russia should either agree what
-should or should not be done with his heritage when he died, and,
-further, to suggest that the Christian provinces of Turkey should be
-organised as independent States under Russian protection, whilst England
-occupied Egypt and Candia.<a name="FNanchor_110_110" id="FNanchor_110_110"></a><a href="#Footnote_110_110" class="fnanchor">[110]</a> Lord John Russell’s reply to these
-conversations must have also misled the Czar, preoccupied as he was with
-the fact that, in terms of the Secret Memorandum of 1844, England and
-Russia had agreed on a common policy in Turkey. Lord John, in effect,
-said that, as the British Government did not think that the Turk was
-quite moribund, it was premature to discuss any project, negative or
-positive, for disposing of his territory, and that England had no desire
-for territorial aggrandisement. But he went on to add that he thought
-the Sultan should be “advised” to treat his Christian subjects justly
-and humanely, because, if he did so, the Czar would not find it
-“necessary to apply that exceptional protection which his Imperial
-Majesty has found so burdensome and inconvenient, though no doubt
-<i>prescribed by duty and sanctioned by treaty</i>.” The words here
-italicised were not altogether in accord with the facts, for no treaty
-sanctioned in plain, definite terms this “exceptional protection;”
-moreover, they admitted the whole Russian case; for, as will be seen, it
-was precisely because the Czar was supposed to be bent on extorting from
-Turkey an extension of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_548" id="page_548">{548}</a></span> sanction given by existing treaties to the
-Russian Protectorate over her oppressed Christian subjects, that Turkey
-and England went to war with Russia. Whether that war was right or
-wrong, this is certain: it was waged by the English Government to rebut
-a claim, which that Government at the outset admitted. The Czar, through
-Count Nesselrode, expressed himself satisfied with the self-denying
-pledges which had passed between the Russian and English Governments,
-and, as England had promised not to entertain any project for the
-protection of Turkey without a previous understanding with Russia, so
-Russia, he said, gave a similar undertaking to England. But he observed
-that the surest way to prevent the fall of Turkey would be to induce the
-Porte to treat the Greek Christians with equity and humanity. The
-English Government, delighted with this friendly communication, advised
-the Porte to compose the dispute between France and Russia, by offering
-to accept any arrangement which these two Powers would take as
-satisfactory. It remonstrated with France for having been the first, not
-only to raise the quarrel about the Holy Places, but also to support her
-demands by a threat of war. This was a second admission on the part of
-England that in this controversy Russia was in the right. Napoleon III.
-recalled M. de Lavalelle, his hectoring Envoy at Constantinople, and
-sent M. de La Cour in his place. Russia ceased her warlike preparations
-on the Moldavian frontier, and the war-cloud on the horizon began to
-melt away.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_077" id="ill_077"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_548.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_548.jpg" height="204" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE NICOLAI BRIDGE ACROSS THE NEVA, ST. PETERSBURG.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Unfortunately for the prospects of peace, Lord Aberdeen ordered Lord
-Stratford de Redcliffe to resume his duties as Ambassador at
-Constantinople.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_549" id="page_549">{549}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_078" id="ill_078"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_549.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_549.jpg" width="261" height="342" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>LORD STRATFORD DE REDCLIFFE.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>From a Photograph by Messrs. Boning and Small.</i>)</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Stratford de Redcliffe was a man of indomitable strength of character,
-restless energy, and invincible tenacity of purpose. His fitness for the
-office of a mediator between Turkey, Russia, and France, charged
-specially to avert war, may be estimated by the following entry in Lord
-Malmesbury’s Diary, under date February 25th, 1854:&mdash;“Lord Bath,” writes
-Lord Malmesbury, “has come back from Constantinople, and says that Lord
-Stratford openly boasts having got his personal revenge against the Czar
-by fomenting the war. He told Lord Bath so.” According to Lord
-Malmesbury, his hatred to the Czar dated from the time when his Majesty
-refused to receive him as Ambassador at St. Petersburg. It is now beyond
-doubt that Lord Stratford de Redcliffe,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_550" id="page_550">{550}</a></span> from the beginning to the end
-of the negotiations between the Powers, acted the part of a Marplot. As
-Prince Albert, in a letter to Baron Stockmar on the 27th of November,
-said, “The prospects of a peaceful settlement in the East do not
-improve. Lord Stratford fulfils his instructions to the letter, but he
-so contrives that we are getting constantly deeper and deeper into a war
-policy.” It is impossible to describe in truer words the malign and
-baneful influence of the diplomatist who, to gratify his personal
-rancour, inflicted the torture of war upon his country.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Stratford de Redcliffe reached Constantinople on the 5th of April,
-1853. There he found that Prince Menschikoff, at the head of a menacing
-mission, had arrived before him on the 28th of February. Menschikoff
-began operations by refusing to treat with Fuad Effendi, the Foreign
-Minister. Fuad resigned in favour of Rifaat Pasha. The tone of the
-Russian envoy then alarmed the Grand Vizier, who sought advice from
-Colonel Rose,<a name="FNanchor_111_111" id="FNanchor_111_111"></a><a href="#Footnote_111_111" class="fnanchor">[111]</a> British Chargé d’Affaires. Colonel Rose immediately
-begged Admiral Dundas to bring the Mediterranean squadron to the mouth
-of the Dardanelles, but the Admiral refused to sail without instructions
-from the Cabinet, and the Cabinet disapproved of Rose’s action. France,
-however, thought that this act indicated an intention on the part of
-England to forestall her, and despatched the Toulon squadron to Salamis,
-without waiting to hear whether Colonel Rose’s action had been
-sanctioned by his Government.<a name="FNanchor_112_112" id="FNanchor_112_112"></a><a href="#Footnote_112_112" class="fnanchor">[112]</a> The presence of the French fleet so
-near the scene of an acrid controversy between France and Russia, would
-have tended to neutralise the conciliatory diplomacy of England, even if
-Lord Stratford de Redcliffe had honestly meant to work in the interests
-of peace.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Stratford, when he arrived at Constantinople, found the Sublime
-Porte in a panic. Though Russia had assured the English Government that
-no question then remained open between her, France, and Turkey, except
-that of the Holy Places, Menschikoff had demanded from the Porte a
-treaty, the negotiation of which, he said, must be kept secret from the
-Powers, acknowledging the right of Russia to a protectorate over all
-Greek Christians in Turkey. Ultimately he offered to accept a Note; but
-the objection to the concession in any such shape, was that it virtually
-transferred to the Russian Czar the allegiance of 12,000,000 of the
-Sultan’s subjects. Lord Stratford de Redcliffe advised the Porte to
-begin by settling the question of the Holy Places, which was the <i>fons
-et origo</i> of the dispute. That question was quickly settled, and then
-Menschikoff promptly and peremptorily pressed the new claim of Russia to
-a protectorate over the Greek Church in Turkey. On the 5th of May he<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_551" id="page_551">{551}</a></span>
-sent an ultimatum to the Porte demanding its surrender on this point
-within five days. On Lord Stratford’s advice the Porte refused to
-surrender, and Prince Menschikoff and his suite left Constantinople in
-wrath.<a name="FNanchor_113_113" id="FNanchor_113_113"></a><a href="#Footnote_113_113" class="fnanchor">[113]</a> At this crisis the voice of Nicholas was for war; but that
-of Nesselrode, his able and tranquil Minister, was for peace. As a
-compromise the Czar therefore determined that the Danubian
-Principalities should be occupied by his troops, and held till Turkey
-guaranteed to Russia “the rights and privileges of all kinds which have
-been granted by the Sultan to his Greek subjects.”<a name="FNanchor_114_114" id="FNanchor_114_114"></a><a href="#Footnote_114_114" class="fnanchor">[114]</a> On the 31st of
-May Nesselrode wrote to Reschid Pasha that Russian troops would cross
-the Pruth, and on the 2nd of June Admiral Dundas was ordered to proceed
-with the Mediterranean squadron to Besika Bay. The French fleet was
-ordered to go there also, and the allied squadrons made their appearance
-in Turkish waters about the same time.<a name="FNanchor_115_115" id="FNanchor_115_115"></a><a href="#Footnote_115_115" class="fnanchor">[115]</a> The quarrel up till now had
-been one between France and Russia. It was thus suddenly transformed
-into one between France and England on the one side and Russia on the
-other. On the 2nd of July Prince Gortschakoff entered the
-Principalities; and then Austria, which had selfishly held aloof, became
-nervous as to the control of the Danube, and manifested a desire to act
-with the Western Powers. Turkey was advised not to treat Russian
-aggression on the Principalities as a <i>casus belli</i>, and the Porte met
-it with a protest, though it was very nearly forced by its fanatical
-Moslem subjects to declare war. In England the Government was condemned
-for its extreme reticence in Parliament as to the turn affairs were
-taking; and up to this point the Cabinet certainly committed three
-blunders. In the first place, they permitted Lord Stratford to encourage
-the Porte to resist Russia, without having come to a clear and definite
-determination to support that resistance by force, if Russia proved
-unbending. Secondly, they relied too much on Count Nesselrode’s smooth,
-pacific assurances after they knew, or ought to have known, from Prince
-Menschikoff’s proposal of a secret treaty to the Porte, and from the
-warlike demonstration on the Moldavian frontier,<a name="FNanchor_116_116" id="FNanchor_116_116"></a><a href="#Footnote_116_116" class="fnanchor">[116]</a> that these
-assurances were illusory. Thirdly, they did not meet the proposal for a
-secret treaty and the demonstration on the frontier by ordering Dundas
-to Besika Bay, and they met the occupation of the Principalities by
-sending Dundas, not to the Black Sea, but only to Besika Bay. Lord
-Aberdee<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_552" id="page_552">{552}</a></span>n’s apologists allege that the latter step would have caused
-Russia to occupy Constantinople. That is a feeble defence, for
-subsequent events showed that Russia could not even mobilise enough
-troops to hold the Principalities against the Turks. The English
-Government did enough to irritate the Czar, and though they did not do
-enough to check him, they did too much to enable them to extricate
-themselves with honour from the quarrel.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_079" id="ill_079"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_552.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_552.jpg" height="238" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>TOWN HALL, VIENNA.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Something, however, had to be done for the Porte, after it had, at the
-bidding of England and France, refrained from defending the
-Principalities, which were in its dominions. A Conference of the Powers
-was therefore assembled at Vienna, on the 24th of June, to arrive at a
-pacific solution of the difficulty, and on the 31st they adopted the
-Vienna Note, which has become famous in European history. It was sent to
-Russia and Turkey for acceptance as a settlement which, in the opinion
-of Europe, would be equally honourable and fair to both. The Czar
-accepted it promptly on the 10th of August. Lord Stratford de Redcliffe,
-in his official capacity, advised Turkey to accept it; but he played his
-Government false, by plainly indicating his personal objections to it.
-The Porte acted on his private advice, and refused to accept the Note
-unless it were modified. Turkey thus dashed all hopes of peace by
-repudiating the advice of the Powers, and, by thus putting herself in
-the wrong, she put Russia in the right.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_553" id="page_553">{553}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_080" id="ill_080"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_553.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_553.jpg" width="261" height="327" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>PRINCE MENSCHIKOFF.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Here Lord Aberdeen and his colleagues committed another blunder. On
-balancing the gain against the loss to Turkey which was likely to accrue
-from concessions that would prevent war, they might fairly enough have
-told the Porte that, if it rejected the Vienna Note, it would be left to
-struggle with Russia single-handed. Austria, however, followed by
-France, England, and Prussia, asked the Czar to accept the modifications
-of Turkey. The Czar refused to do this, and instructed Count Nesselrode
-to give his reasons for refusing, whereupon Austria and Prussia veered
-round, and again recommended the Porte to accept the original Note.
-England and France, on the contrary, alleging that Count Nesselrode’s
-despatches proved that the Czar attached a different meaning to the Note
-from that which they attributed to it, declined to join Austria and
-Prussia in pressing Turkey to accept it. The European concert was
-destroyed, and it was the European concert which alone rendered war<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_554" id="page_554">{554}</a></span>
-impossible.<a name="FNanchor_117_117" id="FNanchor_117_117"></a><a href="#Footnote_117_117" class="fnanchor">[117]</a> Unfortunately, on this occasion, the Queen, wary and
-ingenious as she has shown herself during other crises in checking the
-“drift” of Cabinets towards war, fell too easily under the influence of
-Lord Aberdeen, for whom personally she ever entertained the warmest
-regard. He sent Nesselrode’s despatch to her, but he prepossessed her
-mind by pointing out to her first, that Nesselrode’s reasons for
-refusing to accept the Turkish modifications of the Vienna Note, showed
-that Russia put a different interpretation on it from that which its
-framers meant it to bear; and secondly, that it would be dishonourable
-to ask the Porte to accept it in the face of this fact. Her Majesty,
-easily touched by such an appeal, wrote from Balmoral a strong letter to
-Lord Aberdeen supporting his view with much ability. “It is evident,”
-she said, “that Russia has hitherto attempted to deceive us, in
-pretending that she did not aim at the acquisition of any <i>new</i> right,
-but required only a satisfaction of honour, and an acknowledgment of the
-rights she already possessed by treaty&mdash;and that she does intend, and
-for the first time lays bare that intention, to acquire new rights of
-interference.” The Queen then made a suggestion which was carried out.
-It was that England should lay the whole case before Europe, declaring
-that the Russian demands were inadmissible, and “that the continuance of
-the occupation of the Principalities, in order to extort these demands,
-constitutes an unwarrantable aggression upon Turkey, and infraction of
-the public law of Europe.”<a name="FNanchor_118_118" id="FNanchor_118_118"></a><a href="#Footnote_118_118" class="fnanchor">[118]</a> As matters stood, such an intimation to
-the fiery Czar was virtually a challenge to mortal combat.</p>
-
-<p>Those who hold the destinies of great nations in their hands are now
-chary of committing themselves to war for the sake of honour or the
-public law of Europe. The subterfuges by which Russia disorganised
-Bulgaria in 1886, and got rid of Prince Alexander, whose anti-Russian
-proclivities had been encouraged by England, touched British honour more
-closely than the “explicative Note” of Count Nesselrode. Yet England,
-guided solely by her interests, did not make Russian interference with
-Bulgaria in 1886, a <i>casus belli</i>. A greater statesman than Aberdeen in
-1853, also eliminated all considerations of “honour” from his policy,
-and looked solely to the material interest of his country. Prussia was
-scoffed at by Prince Albert as “a reed shaken by the wind.” But Prussia
-not only refused to join the Western Powers against Russia, but deterred
-Austria from joining them. And why? Because Herr von Bismarck had enough
-influence with the King to convince him that the interest of Prussia did
-not lie in strengthening the Western Powers, or in offending Russia,
-whose benevolent neutrality might one day be valuable to his country.
-Why, he argued, should Prussia waste her strength<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_555" id="page_555">{555}</a></span> in helping France and
-Austria to weaken Russia, without the prospect of winning for Prussia “a
-prize worthy of us”? He was “appalled” by the notion that “we may plunge
-into a sea of trouble and danger on behalf of Austria, for whose sins
-the King displays as much tolerance as I only hope God in Heaven will
-one day show to mine.” The “interest of Prussia,” he said, after the
-Crimean war was over, “is my only rule of action, and had there ever
-been any prospect of our promoting this interest by taking part in the
-war, I should certainly never have been one of its opponents.”<a name="FNanchor_119_119" id="FNanchor_119_119"></a><a href="#Footnote_119_119" class="fnanchor">[119]</a> Lord
-Salisbury, on the 9th of November, 1886, speaking at the Guildhall, has
-in our time said that England has no interest to resist Russian
-aggression in European Turkey, where Austria has none. Tested by that
-principle the policy of the Cabinet and the Crown in 1853 was
-chivalrous, but indefensible. Yet if the Sovereign and her Ministers
-erred, what is to be said of the Nation? It was simply mad for war with
-Russia, and the section of the Cabinet headed by Palmerston and Russell
-vied with the Tories in inflaming the war-fever of the hour. Aberdeen
-was vilified as a Russian agent&mdash;because he was desirous of maintaining
-peace. Prince Albert was attacked with equal scurrility as a tool of the
-Czar, because he was not a Russophobe, and because he did not conceal
-his opinion that the Turkish Government was brutal, fanatical, and
-ignorant.</p>
-
-<p>Had Turkey accepted the Vienna Note, had the Powers not asked Russia to
-accept the Turkish amendments to it, had Nesselrode in refusing to
-accept these refrained from giving reasons for his refusal, peace would
-have been preserved. It is, therefore, necessary to examine the points
-that were at issue when the Vienna Note was rejected by Turkey. This is
-to be done by comparing together Menschikoff’s original Note with the
-Vienna Note, and the Turkish modification of it. Menschikoff started by
-assuming that Russia and Turkey “being mutually desirous of maintaining
-the stability of the orthodox Greco-Russian religion, professed by the
-majority of their Christian subjects, and of guaranteeing that religion
-against all molestation for the future,” should agree (1) that “no
-change shall be made as regards the rights, privileges, and immunities
-which have been enjoyed or are possessed <i>ab antiquo</i> by the Orthodox
-Greek Churches, pious institutions, and clergy, in the dominions of the
-Sublime Ottoman Porte, which is pleased to secure the same to them in
-perpetuity on the strict basis of the <i>status quo</i> now existing. (2) The
-rights and advantages conceded by the Ottoman Government, or which shall
-hereafter be conceded, to the other Christian rites by treaties,
-conventions, or special arrangements, shall be considered as belonging
-also to the Orthodox Church.”<a name="FNanchor_120_120" id="FNanchor_120_120"></a><a href="#Footnote_120_120" class="fnanchor">[120]</a> The Vienna Note differed but slightly
-from this&mdash;and it may be well to put it side by side with the Turkish
-modifications&mdash;reproducing only the controversial passages.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_556" id="page_556">{556}</a></span></p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="1"
-style="font-size:90%;">
-<tr class="smcap"><td class="c">
-Vienna Note.
-</td><td class="c">
-Turkish Modifications.
-</td></tr>
-<tr valign="top"><td>
-“If the Emperors of Russia have at all times<br />
-evinced their active solicitude for the [<i>maintenance<br />
-of the immunities and privileges of the<br />
-Orthodox Greek Church in the Ottoman Empire,<br />
-the Sultans have never refused to confirm<br />
-them</i>] by solemn acts testifying their ancient<br />
-and constant benevolence towards their Christian<br />
-subjects.<br />
-<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 15%;letter-spacing:1em;">* * * * *</span>
-<br />
-The undersigned has, in consequence, received<br />
-orders to declare by the present Note that the<br />
-Government of his Majesty the Sultan will remain<br />
-faithful to [<i>the letter and to the spirit of<br />
-the Treaties of Kainardji and Adrianople relative<br />
-to the protection of the Christian religion,<br />
-and</i>] that his Majesty considers himself bound<br />
-in honour to cause to be observed for ever, and<br />
-to preserve from all prejudice either now or<br />
-hereafter, the enjoyment of the spiritual privileges<br />
-which have been granted by his Majesty’s<br />
-august ancestors to the orthodox Greek Eastern<br />
-Church, which are maintained and confirmed<br />
-by him; and, moreover, in a spirit of exalted<br />
-equity, to cause the Greek rite to share in the<br />
-advantages granted [<i>to the other Christian rites<br />
-by convention or special arrangement</i>].”<br />
-</td>
-
-<td><br />
-orthodox Greek worship and Church (le culte et<br />
-l’Église orthodoxe Grecque), the Sultans have<br />
-never ceased to provide for the maintenance of<br />
-the privileges and immunities which at different<br />
-times they have spontaneously granted to that<br />
-religion and to that Church in the Ottoman<br />
-Empire, and to confirm them<br />
-<br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
-the stipulations of the Treaty of Kainardji,<br />
-confirmed by that of Adrianople, relative to the<br />
-protection by the Sublime Porte of the Christian<br />
-religion, and he is, moreover, charged to make<br />
-known<br /><br /><br />
-<br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
-or which might be granted to the other Christian<br />
-communities, Ottoman subjects.</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="nind">Were the points of difference between the Vienna Note and that Note as
-modified by the Porte worth fighting for?</p>
-
-<p>It is inconceivable that any English Minister or diplomatist having even
-a cursory acquaintance with Turkish history could agree with the Porte
-in affirming that the Ottoman Sultans had “never ceased to provide for”
-the maintenance of the privileges of their Christian subjects. “Never
-honestly attempted to provide for” would have been the truer statement
-of the fact. So the <i>first</i> modification of the Porte may be summarily
-dismissed. As to the <i>second</i>, the Turks averred that it was necessary
-(1) because the Vienna Note extended the scope of the Treaties of
-Kainardji and Adrianople, and (2) because it gave the Czar new powers of
-interfering between the Sultan and his subjects. The 7th and 14th
-Articles of these Treaties, when studied, show that the Porte<a name="FNanchor_121_121" id="FNanchor_121_121"></a><a href="#Footnote_121_121" class="fnanchor">[121]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_557" id="page_557">{557}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_081" id="ill_081"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_557.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_557.jpg" width="330" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE MOSQUE OF SELIM II. AT ADRIANOPLE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">was clearly wrong on one point. The Sultan, said the Porte, will in
-future recognise the stipulations relative to protection given <i>by the
-Porte</i> alone; but the Treaty had also stipulations relative to
-protection which was to be given by Russia. The Czar was therefore not
-unreasonable in suspecting that the Turks were trying, by their
-amendment of the Vienna Note, to cancel some of his rights under the
-Treaty of Kainardji. The other point at issue must be decided with
-reference to history. It is plain that Menschikoff’s Note, from its
-terms and from the tone of the Envoy who presented it as an ultimatum,
-might fairly be considered offensive to Turkey, and that she, therefore,
-had plausible reasons for rejecting it. It might be so construed as to
-extend to the whole Empire the Russian right of special protection,
-which the Treaty of Kainardji limited to a single Christian temple, and
-that of Adrianople restricted to two Principalities. On the other hand,
-the Porte, by saying that the Sultan would in future “remain faithful to
-the stipulations of the Treaty of Kainardji, confirmed by that of
-Adrianople,” was justly suspected of wriggling out of other stipulations
-in the latter Treaty, which were not in the former, and which made the
-Czar the special guardian of Christian rights in the Principalities. But
-holding in view the history of Turkish misrule and oppression,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_558" id="page_558">{558}</a></span> together
-with Lord Stratford de Redcliffe’s denunciations of the bad faith of the
-Turkish Government in keeping its promises of reform, it is impossible
-to blame the Czar for rejecting the Turkish amendment. That amendment
-consisted simply in cutting out of the Vienna Note the all-important
-words, “letter and spirit.” The Czar denied that Turkey had been
-faithful to the letter of existing treaties guaranteeing Christian
-privileges. All Europe admitted that she had not been faithful to the
-spirit of them, and that if, under Russian pressure, she ever kept the
-word of promise to the ear, she usually broke it to the hope. Turkey,
-when asked to pledge herself to be true to the spirit as well as the
-letter of her obligations, was, therefore, trifling with Europe in
-refusing to commit herself to a pledge that would have bound her by both
-the letter and spirit of her engagements. Here again, it seems, judgment
-must go against Turkey. The object of her third amendment was quite
-clear. The stipulation of the Vienna Note that privileges given to any
-Christian Church should be also enjoyed by all Greek Christians in
-Turkey, was a sort of “most favoured nation clause.” It made the
-contract keep all sects automatically on the same level. The Porte,
-however, by its amendment, promised Russia to give Greek Christians, not
-the privileges it gave to all other Christians, but only to other
-Christians who were Turkish subjects. No doubt the Vienna Note would
-have given Russia a right of complaint against Turkey in the case of
-Greek Christians, who were refused privileges granted to (1) Greek
-Christians, (2) Roman Catholics, (3) Protestants, and (4) Armenians who
-were not Turkish subjects. But these were few in number, and the affair
-of the Holy Places showed that this right of complaint could be pressed
-by Russia to some purpose, whether conferred by treaty or not. It almost
-seemed as if the third amendment of the Porte were designed to bar
-Russia from similar acts of intervention; in other words, to put her in
-a worse position than that which she held without any fresh compact
-whatever. Strangely enough, the one strong objection which Turkey had a
-right to make to the Vienna Note&mdash;namely, that it did not make the
-evacuation of the Principalities a condition precedent of the
-settlement&mdash;was not strongly pressed by Europe.</p>
-
-<p>One argument, and one only, was urged with even the shadow of
-plausibility by England. It was that the Czar might claim, under the
-Vienna Note, a protectorate over the Greek Christians in Turkey, which
-would transfer to him the allegiance of nearly all the Sultan’s European
-subjects. As the Vienna Note gave the Czar nothing but what he could
-claim according to “the letter and to the spirit” of two existing
-treaties, it is difficult to understand how the English Government could
-advance such an argument, unless, indeed, they meant to affirm that it
-was futile to ask Turkey to abide by “the spirit” of any of her pledges.
-But if the contention of the English Cabinet is to be taken as true,
-what must we say of the wisdom with which the world is governed? The
-four Ambassadors, the four Cabinets, and the four<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_559" id="page_559">{559}</a></span> Sovereigns of the
-European Powers who had the clearest interest in preserving the
-independence of Turkey drew up, studied, debated, and revised again and
-again every word and phrase of a Joint Note which they declared could be
-honourably and justly accepted by the Sublime Porte. When Turkey
-rejected it, these very same Ambassadors, Cabinets, and Sovereigns
-suddenly turned round and said that they had unwittingly so worded their
-Note that it threatened with ruin the empire which they meant it to
-save! And of these Powers two&mdash;England and France&mdash;entered on a
-profitless and calamitous war, because their Ambassadors, Ministers of
-State, and Sovereigns did not understand the meaning of their own words
-in a solemn diplomatic instrument! It is upon this hypothesis&mdash;at once
-so grotesque and incredible&mdash;that Lord Aberdeen’s Government justified
-itself in advising Turkey to reject the Vienna Note, and in making war
-on Russia because the Czar adhered to it after he had accepted it at the
-request of Europe.</p>
-
-<p>England, it has been said, following the lead of Austria, encouraged the
-Porte to resist, and pressed Russia to accept the Turkish modification
-of the Note. It has been shown how, when Russia refused to do this,
-Austria, with whom Prussia acted, suddenly wheeled round and pressed the
-original Note on Turkey. England, however, had made herself sufficiently
-ridiculous in first recommending Turkey to accept the Note, and in then
-supporting her in rejecting it. Lord Aberdeen’s Government accordingly
-refused to recommend the Note again to Turkey, and the Government of
-France took the same course. The concert of the Powers which thus alone
-rendered peace possible was broken, and neither England nor France
-seemed to have made any serious effort to repair it. On the contrary,
-they not only approved of Lord Stratford’s conduct in summoning two
-ships of war from Besika Bay to Constantinople, but in September,
-yielding to Palmerston,<a name="FNanchor_122_122" id="FNanchor_122_122"></a><a href="#Footnote_122_122" class="fnanchor">[122]</a> they put the whole fleet at his disposal.
-It was contrary to the Treaty of 1841 for the Porte to admit war-ships
-to the Bosphorus in time of peace. To send the English fleet to
-Constantinople was therefore a declaration on the part of England that
-Turkey was at war with Russia. Turkey formally declared war on Russia on
-the 5th, and the British Fleet entered the Bosphorus on the 30th of
-October. To order our Fleet to defend the Turks in the Euxine if they
-were attacked by Russia was a perilous step to take. Yet it is curious
-to observe that the Queen was the only high personage engaged in this
-transaction who, in the midst of the popular war frenzy, foresaw the
-peril of it. Even her habit of deference to Lord Aberdeen, which
-unfortunately led her to sanction without demur the blunders which have
-now been recorded, could not induce her to approve of this last and, as
-will be seen, most fatal error. Her trenchant criticism of it,
-unanswered and unanswerable to this day, is to be found in a letter
-which she wrote to the Prime Minister, in which she said:&mdash;“It appears
-to the Queen that we have taken on ourselves, in conjunction with<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_560" id="page_560">{560}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_082" id="ill_082"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_560.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_560.jpg" width="254" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE DUKE OF NEWCASTLE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>France, all the risks of an European war, without having bound Turkey to
-any conditions with respect to provoking it. The 120 fanatical Turks
-constituting the Divan at Constantinople are left sole judges of the
-line of policy to be pursued, and made cognisant at the same time of the
-fact that England and France have bound themselves to defend the Turkish
-territory. This is entrusting them with a power which Parliament would
-be jealous of confiding even to the hands of the British Crown. It may
-be a question whether England ought to go to war for the so-called
-Turkish independence, but there can be none that, if she does so, she
-ought to be the sole judge of what constitutes a breach of that
-independence, and have the fullest power to prevent by negotiation the
-breaking out of the war.”<a name="FNanchor_123_123" id="FNanchor_123_123"></a><a href="#Footnote_123_123" class="fnanchor">[123]</a> Had the Queen subjected<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_561" id="page_561">{561}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_083" id="ill_083"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_561.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_561.jpg" width="506" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>DESTRUCTION OF THE TURKISH FLEET AT SINOPE. (<i>See</i> p.
-562.)</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_562" id="page_562">{562}</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="nind">every act of the Cabinet from the day on which Menschikoff arrived at
-Constantinople, to the same kind of pitiless logical analysis, even the
-Coalition Cabinet would have found it difficult to blunder into war.
-There was also another calm but acute observer of events who could not
-be diverted from his devotion to tangible British interests by
-passionate outbursts of popular <i>chauvinism</i>, and who saw at a glance
-the risks the Government were running. In a letter to Baron Stockmar,
-dated the 27th of November, Prince Albert says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Six weeks ago Palmerston and Lord John carried a resolution that we
-should give notice that an attack on the Turkish fleet by that of Russia
-would be met by the fleets of England and France. Now the Turkish
-steam-ships are to cross over from the Asiatic coast to the Crimea, and
-to pass before Sebastopol! This can only be meant to insult the Russian
-fleet and entice it to come out, in order to make it possible for Lord
-Stratford to bring our fleet into collision with that of Russia,
-according to his former instructions, and so make an European war
-certain.”<a name="FNanchor_124_124" id="FNanchor_124_124"></a><a href="#Footnote_124_124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a></p>
-
-<p>Just before the allied fleets were sent to defend Turkey in the Black
-Sea the Porte ordered Omar Pasha to demand the evacuation of Moldavia
-within fifteen days, and, failing compliance, to attack the Russians at
-once. The Russians held their ground, standing on the defensive, and the
-Turks crossed the Danube, inflicting on them defeats that, of course,
-deeply wounded the pride of the Czar. He therefore ordered the Russian
-squadron at Sebastopol to retaliate in the Euxine. On the 30th of
-November it discovered a Turkish fleet at Sinope, which, the Turks
-declared, was bound for Batoum. The Russian admiral, however, believed
-it was on its way to the Circassian coast, for the purpose of stirring
-up an insurrection against Russia in the Caucasus. Instead of watching
-it or blockading it, as he might have done, he attacked and destroyed
-it.</p>
-
-<p>This catastrophe, of course, brought England nearer to war. A fierce cry
-of wrath went up from the English people. Their fleet had been sent to
-defend Turkey against Russia, yet it had tamely allowed Russia to
-perpetrate “the massacre of Sinope.” Russia knew that England stood
-pledged to protect Turkey from attack in the Euxine. Sinope was,
-therefore, a direct challenge to England, and it must be promptly taken
-up. The foresight of Prince Albert was thus amply justified. The
-Government had stupidly sent to the Black Sea a fleet strong enough to
-provoke Russia, but not strong enough to protect Turkey, and
-insinuations of treason were freely made. “The defeat of Sinope,” wrote
-the Prince, “upon our own element&mdash;the sea&mdash;has made the people furious;
-it is ascribed to Aberdeen having<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_563" id="page_563">{563}</a></span> been bought over by Russia.” Nor was
-Aberdeen the only one who suffered. Prince Albert was scurrilously
-attacked by Tories and Radicals of the baser sort, and, almost in as
-many words, accused of being a Russian spy, whose influence with the
-Queen was paralysing her Government. But if the English Government
-blundered foolishly in sending the British fleet to the Black Sea with
-orders to protect Turkey, without first making sure that Turkey would
-not provoke attack, or that our fleet was strong enough to defend her,
-Russia blundered, not foolishly, but criminally, in attacking the Turks
-at Sinope. Mr. Spencer Walpole says:&mdash;“Though the attack on Sinope may
-be justified, its imprudence cannot be excused.”<a name="FNanchor_125_125" id="FNanchor_125_125"></a><a href="#Footnote_125_125" class="fnanchor">[125]</a> But surely if it
-cannot be excused it is idle to “justify” it. The Czar was warned that
-England and France would defend Turkey if the latter was assailed in the
-Euxine. An attack on Turkey at Sinope, in spite of that warning, he must
-have known would be taken by the English and French people as a
-defiance, which would so madden them, that the war party in France and
-England must forthwith control the situation. Therefore, to say it was
-an “imprudence” is to say that, in the circumstances, it was a crime
-against civilisation. As will be seen later on, it provoked France and
-England to order their fleets to patrol the Black Sea, and require every
-Russian ship they met to put back into Sebastopol, so that a second
-Sinope might be prevented.</p>
-
-<p>During most of this anxious time it is hardly necessary to say that the
-domestic life of the Queen was one of wearing excitement. At the outset
-of the diplomatic disputes in which her Government entangled the country
-it seems that she paid rather less attention than usual to foreign
-affairs. Palmerston was no longer at the Foreign Office, and in Lord
-Aberdeen, who was at the head of the Government, the Queen put the most
-implicit confidence. She had formed a habit of regarding him as the
-<i>beau idéal</i> of a “safe” Minister, and thus, when she sat down every
-morning to read her official correspondence, her Majesty approached all
-the projects of her Government, if not with a decided bias in favour of
-them, at any rate without that wholesome prepossession of suspicion,
-that rendered her a keen and searching critic of the Foreign Policy of
-the country when it was under the direction of Lord Palmerston. It was
-not till late in the autumn that the Queen’s correspondence, so far as
-it has been made public, shows a disposition on her part to resume the
-tone of independent, outspoken, but confidential criticism, that so
-often checked the vagaries of Lord John Russell’s Cabinet. The Queen, in
-fact, put too much confidence in the sagacity of the Coalition
-Government. The Coalition Government, conscious that, so long as
-Aberdeen could be persuaded to endorse their doings, they would not be
-very jealously scrutinised by the Crown, entered with a light heart on
-the most dangerous course of diplomacy. The Queen, the Prime Minister,
-the Cabinet, and the Czar all set out with the most sincere and
-unbounded confidence in each<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_564" id="page_564">{564}</a></span> other. In little more than twelve months
-they were accordingly in almost irreconcilable controversy.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_084" id="ill_084"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_564.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_564.jpg" width="322" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE THRONE ROOM, WINDSOR CASTLE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>After the Coalition Ministry was formed, what the Queen dreaded most was
-that it might break up over the question of Parliamentary Reform, or
-over some dispute as to the Premiership, in the event of Lord Aberdeen
-resigning office. Aberdeen was old and somewhat infirm, and there can be
-little doubt that he would have resigned soon after the Coalition was
-organised had not the Eastern Question risen to tie him to his post.
-Lord John Russell had some notion that he would be Aberdeen’s successor,
-and it was his fixed idea that his scheme for reforming Parliament would
-not have a fair chance, unless it were launched by him with all the
-prestige of the Premier’s advocacy in its favour. Some members of the
-Cabinet did not desire that this scheme should be launched at all;
-others, like Palmerston, were determined that it should not be launched,
-and that Lord John should not be Premier. A few weeks after the Ministry
-was constituted Lord John resigned the seals of the Foreign Office to
-Lord Clarendon, becoming a Minister without an office, but retaining the
-leadership of the House of Commons. The Queen warned him that he would
-grow discontented with<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_565" id="page_565">{565}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_085" id="ill_085"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_565.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_565.jpg" width="319" height="265" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>SEBASTOPOL.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">this position, but her warning was unheeded; and yet Lord John soon had
-reason to regret that he did not lay it to heart. After the Session
-ended he began to give Aberdeen broad hints that it would be well for
-him to retire, and to indicate that he himself might have to secede, if
-these hints were not acted on. His secession would have broken up the
-Coalition, which, Aberdeen knew, the Sovereign had set her heart on
-keeping together. Hence, every effort was made to conciliate Lord John
-Russell, and, as he soon became, next to Palmerston, the most zealous
-member of the War Party in the Cabinet, he was therefore able to exert a
-baneful influence on the Foreign Policy of the Ministry. This was,
-indeed, one reason why that policy perpetually alternated between energy
-and apathy. Still, the Cabinet kept together till Russell’s Reform
-scheme was thrust upon it. Then, on the 15th of December, the world was
-startled to find that Palmerston had resigned. This event, occurring as
-it did immediately after the massacre of Sinope, created a dreadful
-sensation in the country. The Press declared that Palmerston had been
-turned out because of the Eastern Question. He was the victim of a Court
-intrigue. It was whispered that Prince Albert, as a spy of Russia, had
-persuaded the Queen to get rid of a high-spirited Minister because he
-was eager to<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_566" id="page_566">{566}</a></span> avenge against Russia the insult offered to England at
-Sinope. The Prince, it was said, had been detected betraying the secrets
-of the Government to foreign Courts. One day it was actually reported
-that he had been committed to the Tower on a charge of high treason, and
-a gaping crowd collected to see him locked up as a traitor. This clamour
-was raised by the Palmerstonian clique, and it gave infinite pain to the
-Queen. She knew as well as Lord Palmerston and his friends that these
-attacks were based on a tissue of falsehoods, for, as a matter of fact,
-Lord Palmerston had resigned simply on the question of Reform. His idea
-was that Lord Lansdowne, who also disliked Reform, would resign along
-with him, and that the public outcry would be so great that the Ministry
-must be shattered. The outcry <i>was</i> great, but it was too obviously that
-of a personal <i>claque</i>; and Palmerston, astounded to find that the
-nation did not regard his retirement as an irreparable calamity,
-immediately begged the Cabinet to let him come back again. This they
-did, having, however, forced him to swallow ignominiously his objections
-to Lord John Russell’s Reform Bill. Then the Palmerstonian newspapers
-suddenly dropped their attacks on the Queen and Prince Albert, though
-the Tory organs kept them up in the true old crusted Protectionist
-style. “The best of the joke,” writes the Prince to Stockmar, “is that
-because he [Palmerston] went out the Opposition journals extolled him to
-the skies in order to damage the Ministry, and now the Ministerial
-journals have to do so in order to justify the reconciliation.”
-According to Prince Albert, it was the Duke of Newcastle and the
-Peelites who induced the Cabinet to let the black sheep that had gone
-astray, return to the fold of the Coalition.<a name="FNanchor_126_126" id="FNanchor_126_126"></a><a href="#Footnote_126_126" class="fnanchor">[126]</a></p>
-
-<p>Till the Eastern Question assumed a grave aspect towards the end of the
-year, the Court seems to have busied itself chiefly about non-political
-affairs.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_567" id="page_567">{567}</a></span> The Queen, who shared her husband’s artistic tastes,
-encouraged him in early spring to form a splendid collection of copies
-of all Raphael’s known works, a fine series of original drawings by that
-master in Windsor being the nucleus of this interesting collection. It
-was alas! left to her Majesty to complete it, after the death of her
-husband made her the sole sad heir of that and many other cherished
-projects which they had planned together.</p>
-
-<p>Curiously enough, about this time the art treasures of Windsor were very
-nearly destroyed. A disastrous fire broke out in the Castle on the 19th
-of March in one of the apartments on the floor over the dining-room on
-its north side. It burnt outwards, but limited itself to the upper
-portions of the Prince of Wales’s Tower. It would have destroyed the
-plate-rooms and the priceless collection known as the Jewelled Armoury,
-which contained, by the way, the jewelled peacock of Tippoo Sahib among
-its trophies, adjoining the Octagon-room. The Queen and Prince Albert
-were not in the Castle when the fire was discovered, but they, with the
-officials of the household, were soon on the spot. The scene was one of
-excitement, without confusion. The firemen worked with a will, but the
-bustle was greatest among the servants and others, who undertook to
-dismantle the rooms whose costly treasures were in danger. The fire
-began at ten on Saturday night, and was put out at four o’clock on
-Sunday morning. The Queen, it seems, was much agitated at first, but she
-and her ladies soon regained their composure, and watched the
-conflagration from the drawing-room all through the night.<a name="FNanchor_127_127" id="FNanchor_127_127"></a><a href="#Footnote_127_127" class="fnanchor">[127]</a></p>
-
-<p>On the 7th of April another Prince was born to the Royal pair, and on
-the 18th the Queen was able to write to her uncle, the King of the
-Belgians, informing him of the event, and of her intention of naming her
-child after him. “It” [Leopold], she says, “is a name which is the
-dearest to me after Albert, and one which recalls the almost only happy
-days of my sad childhood.” The Prince’s other names were to be George,
-Duncan, and Albert&mdash;George after the King of Hanover, and Duncan, so the
-Queen said, as “a compliment to dear Scotland.” The compliment paid to
-that country in subsequently conferring on this Prince the title of Duke
-of Albany was a fateful one for him. It is an unlucky title, and Prince
-Leopold was not exempt from the evil fortune of most of those who have
-worn it. On the 23rd of April the Court removed to Osborne, and on the
-27th of May the Queen reluctantly returned to London for the season,
-greatly reinvigorated by her holiday.</p>
-
-<p>One of the events of the London season of 1853 was the establishment of
-an experimental military camp at Chobham for the purpose of practising
-sham-fighting. The camp took the place in the season of ’53, that had
-been held by the Great Exhibition in ’51, and young men of rank who were
-braving the perils of mimic warfare on the Sussex ridges were the idols
-of the hour. On<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_568" id="page_568">{568}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_086" id="ill_086"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_568.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_568.jpg" width="325" height="263" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>FIRE IN THE PRINCE OF WALES’S TOWER, WINDSOR CASTLE.
-(<i>See</i> p. 567.)</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">the 21st of June serious operations began in the presence of the Queen.
-She rode to the ground on a superb black charger, accompanied by Prince
-Albert, the King of Hanover, and the Duke of Coburg, the scene as she
-passed along the lines being most impressive. The moving incidents of
-the field, the noise of the firing, the shifting panorama of colour,
-delighted the fashionable crowds who followed her Majesty to what Mr.
-Disraeli would have called an arena “bright with flashing valour.” On
-the 14th of July the camp was broken up, and other contingents took the
-places of the regiments which had formed it. They, however, attempted a
-movement of real difficulty in endeavouring to effect the passage of the
-Thames at Runnymede, where the river is deep and the current rapid.
-Artillery on Cooper’s Hill played on the pontoon bridge murderously, in
-spite of which, however, it is stated in newspaper records of the day,
-that several regiments contrived to pass over safely. But the horses
-that dragged the second gun taken across, took fright, and one of them
-pulled the rest, with gun and gunners, into the water. The men were
-saved. The four leading horses, however, met with a strange death. They
-rose to the surface, and, with eyes and nostrils dilated with terror,
-beat the water in vain, for the gun, of course, held them</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_087" id="ill_087"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_568a.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_568a.jpg" height="340" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE QUEEN AT THE CAMP AT CHOBHAM.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_569" id="page_569">{569}</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="nind">with the wheelers in the river. Yet such was the strength which terror
-imparted to them, that they dragged not only the gun but the wheelers
-also, close to the bank before they succumbed.</p>
-
-<p>On the 28th of June Prince Albert, who had been “roughing it” with the
-Guards in camp, returned to town complaining of a slight cold. The
-Prince of Wales had measles at the time, and, to the surprise of
-everybody, Prince Albert, the Queen, all the Royal children except the
-two youngest, the Crown Prince of Hanover, the Duke and Duchess of
-Coburg, were smitten,<a name="FNanchor_128_128" id="FNanchor_128_128"></a><a href="#Footnote_128_128" class="fnanchor">[128]</a> Prince Albert suffering more severely than
-any of the others. This illness prevented the Queen and her husband from
-visiting the camp till the 6th of August. On the 28th it broke up.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_088" id="ill_088"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_569.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_569.jpg" width="334" height="226" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>RUNNYMEDE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Two of the Czar’s daughters had come over on a visit to the Queen, with
-an autograph letter from their father recommending them to her Majesty’s
-protection. Care was of course taken to make them acquainted with the
-intense anti-Russian feeling which pervaded England, and they seem to
-have been utterly amazed to find that hardly any body put the slightest
-faith in their father’s word. They were invited to accompany the Queen
-to see the great naval review at Spithead, which took place on the 11th
-of August&mdash;a<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_570" id="page_570">{570}</a></span> superb demonstration of the strength of England on the
-high seas. Twenty-five stately ships of war&mdash;six steam-ships of the
-line, three sailing-ships, and sixteen steam-frigates and
-sloops&mdash;composed the squadron that took part in this magnificent
-spectacle. The fleet carried 1,076 guns, 10,000 men, and was moved by
-steam equivalent to the power nominally of 9,680 horses, but really of
-double that amount&mdash;in other words, by more horse-power than the cavalry
-of the British army could muster at the time. The smallest of its guns
-was as large as the largest carried by Nelson’s ships at Trafalgar,
-whilst the largest threw a solid shot of 104 lbs. The review was an
-event that stirred to its inmost depths the pride of England, because,
-for the first time, a mighty fleet propelled by steam was manœuvred
-under the eye of the Sovereign, as if it were engaged in actual battle.
-The occasion was rendered unique by the presence at the review of the
-House of Commons&mdash;in fact, the House, on the day of the review, could
-not form a quorum till half-past eleven o’clock at night.<a name="FNanchor_129_129" id="FNanchor_129_129"></a><a href="#Footnote_129_129" class="fnanchor">[129]</a></p>
-
-<p>About 10 o’clock in the morning, the Queen, her husband, her family, and
-her Russian and German guests, bore down in the Royal yacht on Admiral
-Cochrane’s flagship, the <i>Duke of Wellington</i>. Having remained on board
-her for some little time, they returned to the yacht, and then, led by
-the Queen in the <i>Victoria and Albert</i>, this invincible Armada put out
-to sea in two divisions. The weather was exceptionally fine, and most
-majestic was the progress of the fleet as it steamed, at the rate of
-eleven miles an hour, down to the Nab, where it formed line with an ease
-and precision of movement that astonished all beholders. Then “the
-enemy,” under Admiral Fanshawe, were sighted, and a memorable sham fight
-began amidst cyclopean thunders of artillery. When it was over, each
-ship made for port at racing speed, the winner being the <i>Agamemnon</i>.
-The effect of it all, not only on the Queen’s guests but on the country,
-was duly reported by Prince Albert to Stockmar, who replied, “I am well
-pleased that the ladies (the Russian princesses) should have been
-present at the manœuvres of the fleet. For what the eyes see that does
-the heart believe, and with what that is full of the mouth will overflow
-in letters to St. Petersburg.”<a name="FNanchor_130_130" id="FNanchor_130_130"></a><a href="#Footnote_130_130" class="fnanchor">[130]</a> At this time the political barometer
-at Court was pointing to “fair,” and the Queen and Prince Albert were
-congratulating each other that the acceptance of the Vienna Note by
-Russia, would settle honourably the Russo-Turkish dispute. Though the
-evacuation of the Principalities was not insisted on in that Note as it
-ought to have been, the Queen and her husband alike regarded it as a
-<i>sine quâ non</i>, and never doubted that Russia would withdraw her army of
-occupation.<a name="FNanchor_131_131" id="FNanchor_131_131"></a><a href="#Footnote_131_131" class="fnanchor">[131]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_571" id="page_571">{571}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>At the end of August the Queen determined to visit Dublin on her way to
-Balmoral; and on the 29th she and her family landed at Kingstown
-Harbour.<a name="FNanchor_132_132" id="FNanchor_132_132"></a><a href="#Footnote_132_132" class="fnanchor">[132]</a> Thence they proceeded to the Irish capital, where in their
-progress to the Vice-regal Lodge they met with an enthusiastic reception
-that recalled pleasant memories of their last tour. In the evening the
-city was illuminated in honour of its Royal guests. On the 30th they
-visited the Exhibition of Irish Industry, which had been organised at
-the sole expense of Mr. Dargan, a public-spirited citizen, whose simple,
-manly bearing so charmed the Queen that she says in one of her letters,
-“I would have made him a baronet but he was anxious it should not be
-done.” Nor was she less delighted with the products of native industry,
-which she inspected most carefully, and which she says convinced her
-that the display would be of vast use in encouraging the spirit of the
-people, by showing them what excellent work they could turn out by their
-own efforts. Though the Queen met with wretched weather, yet she records
-her delight with her visit&mdash;“a pleasant, gay, interesting time” she
-calls it&mdash;and speaks gratefully of the extreme kindness shown to her by
-all classes of the people. On the 3rd of September she left Kingstown,
-and on the 6th was enjoying the bracing air of Balmoral once more.</p>
-
-<p>It was here, on the evening of the 12th, that she heard that the Vienna
-Note was rejected by the Turks, and that the Eastern question was again
-simmering in the fatal cauldron of diplomatic incapacity. From that day
-her Majesty’s great aim was to work, like Lord Aberdeen, for peace; but
-there was an end to holiday repose at Balmoral. Foreign affairs became
-more and more unsettled, and on the 6th of October Stockmar was implored
-to come over and give the Queen and her husband the benefit of his
-advice. Sir James Graham was staying with them at the time, and his
-depressed spirits reacted on the Royal family. To refuse to protect the
-Sultan the Queen saw would so rouse public opinion that the Coalition
-Ministry, which she was so anxious to support, must fall. To declare war
-on Russia, Prince Albert assured her, would with equal certainty
-ultimately destroy that Ministry. One thing only was clear to them.
-Aberdeen must abandon all idea of resigning in favour of Lord John
-Russell, and, despite age and infirmity, must remain at the head of
-affairs till the war-cloud passed away. On the 14th of October the Queen
-accordingly returned to Osborne, painfully anxious lest the concessions
-which Lord Aberdeen had made to Palmerston and Russell as leaders of the
-War Party, and on which she commented caustically in her letter of the
-11th of October to the Prime Minister, would bring the country still
-nearer to war. What were we to go to war for? That was the question
-which troubled the Queen. She could understand that in some dire
-extremity it might be right to exact the most terrible of sacrifices
-from her people, to keep the Russians out of Constantinople, and prevent
-the balance of power from being upset to the detriment of England. That
-was an intelligible war<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_572" id="page_572">{572}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_089" id="ill_089"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_572.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_572.jpg" width="335" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>SPITHEAD.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">for the tangible interest of England and the civilised Powers. But such
-a war was a very different affair from the kind of war for which
-Palmerston clamoured&mdash;a war for the maintenance of the complete
-integrity of the Ottoman Empire. If waged, it must surely not be so
-waged that it would end by putting the oppressed Christians in Turkey
-once again in the absolute power of such a cruel dominion as that of the
-Porte. To this conclusion her Majesty had been forced by her close study
-of Lord Stratford de Redcliffe’s own despatches, describing the brutal
-treatment to which the Christians in Turkey were even at that time
-subjected. But then, of what use was it to suggest these ideas to the
-Cabinet, even though Lord Aberdeen supported them? When Prince Albert,
-at the Queen’s request, put them into the form of a Memorandum,
-Palmerston wrote a flippant reply to it only too closely in harmony with
-the popular frenzy of the time, the gist of the answer being that it was
-the duty of England to make war for Turkey and for Turkey alone, quite
-irrespective of any considerations affecting her treatment of her
-Christian subjects. To ask Turkey for concessions to civilisation, he
-argued, somewhat inconclusively, meant that we must connive at her
-expulsion from Europe.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_573" id="page_573">{573}</a></span> As for all the stories of Turkish fanaticism
-that had frightened the Queen, Lord Palmerston scoffingly described them
-as “fables invented at Vienna and St. Petersburg.”<a name="FNanchor_133_133" id="FNanchor_133_133"></a><a href="#Footnote_133_133" class="fnanchor">[133]</a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_090" id="ill_090"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_573.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_573.jpg" height="336" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>BALMORAL CASTLE FROM THE ROAD.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Czar’s Manifesto of the 1st of November still further excited the
-War Party, and it was followed by a letter to the Queen, written by his
-own hand, begging her Majesty to decide between him and her Government
-in the dispute which had arisen from his attempt to apply the principles
-of the Treaty of Kainardji to the new situation which French pretensions
-in Syria had created in Turkey. To this the Queen replied with dignified
-courtesy, saying that, after repeatedly reading and studying the 7th
-Article of that<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_574" id="page_574">{574}</a></span> Treaty, she could not fairly say that the Czar’s
-interpretation of it was correct, and adding that the continued
-occupation of the Principalities must lead to events “which I should
-deplore, in common with your Majesty.”<a name="FNanchor_134_134" id="FNanchor_134_134"></a><a href="#Footnote_134_134" class="fnanchor">[134]</a> The year closed with the
-ferocious attacks of a certain portion of the Press on Prince Albert,
-and as for the future, it was dark with the signs and omens of impending
-war.</p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXX" id="CHAPTER_XXX"></a>CHAPTER XXX.<br /><br />
-<small>WAR.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>The War Fever in 1854&mdash;Attacks on Prince Albert&mdash;Aberdeen’s
-Correspondence with the Queen&mdash;The Queen’s Opinion of the
-Country&mdash;“Loyal, but a little mad”&mdash;Stockmar on the
-Constitution&mdash;Prince Albert’s Position at Court&mdash;The Privileges of
-a Reigning Queen’s Husband&mdash;Debates on the Prince’s Position&mdash;The
-Peace and War Parties&mdash;Mr. Cobden’s Influence&mdash;A new Vienna Note&mdash;A
-Challenge to Russia&mdash;The Russian Ambassador leaves London&mdash;Recall
-of Sir H. Seymour from St. Petersburg&mdash;Russian Intrigues with the
-German Powers&mdash;The Czar’s Counter-Propositions&mdash;His Sarcastic
-Letter to Napoleon III.&mdash;An Austrian Compromise&mdash;Lord Clarendon’s
-<i>Ultimatum</i> to Russia&mdash;The Czar’s Reply&mdash;Declaration of War&mdash;Omar
-Pasha’s Victories in the Principalities&mdash;The Siege of
-Silistria&mdash;Evacuation of the Principalities&mdash;The Rising in
-Greece&mdash;The Allies at the Piræus&mdash;The Allies occupy
-Gallipoli&mdash;Another English Blunder&mdash;Invasion of the Crimea&mdash;The
-Duke of Newcastle and a Sleepy Cabinet&mdash;Lord Raglan’s Opinion on
-the War&mdash;The Landing of the Allies at Eupatoria&mdash;Battle of the
-Alma&mdash;Death of Marshal St. Arnaud&mdash;Russian Fleet Sunk at
-Sebastopol&mdash;At Balaclava&mdash;The Siege of Sebastopol&mdash;Battles of
-Balaclava and Inkermann&mdash;Mismanagement of the War&mdash;Public
-Indignation against the Government&mdash;Mr. Roebuck’s Motion&mdash;Fall of
-the Coalition Ministry.</p></div>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="smcap">No</span> writer has described more effectively than Mr. Cobden the sudden
-change that hurried the country into the military alliance with France
-against Russia which was made operative in 1854. Suppose, he said, an
-invalid had been ordered in the spring of 1853 to go to Australia and
-back for the benefit of his health. When he left home he must have noted
-that “the Militia was preparing for duty; the coasts and dockyards were
-being fortified; the Navy, Army, and Artillery were all in course of
-augmentation; inspectors of artillery and cavalry were reported to be
-busy on the Southern coast; deputations from railway companies, it was
-said, had been waiting on the Admiralty and Ordnance to explain how
-rapidly the commissariat and military stores could be transported from
-the Tower to Dover or Portsmouth; and the latest paragraph of news from
-the Continent was that our neighbours on the other side of the Channel
-were practising the embarkation and disembarkation of troops by night.
-He left home amidst all these alarms and preparations for a French
-invasion. But he returns, and, supposing he has not been hearing<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_575" id="page_575">{575}</a></span> or
-giving heed to tidings from Europe, in what condition does he find his
-country? He steps on shore at Liverpool, and the first newspaper he sees
-informs him that the English and French fleets are lying side by side in
-Besika Bay. An impending naval engagement between the two Powers is
-naturally the idea that first occurs to him; but, glancing at the
-leading article of the journal, he learns that England and France have
-entered on an alliance, and that they are on the eve of commencing a
-sanguinary struggle against Russia.”<a name="FNanchor_135_135" id="FNanchor_135_135"></a><a href="#Footnote_135_135" class="fnanchor">[135]</a> He would have also found the
-Tory organs of public opinion vieing with the demagogic Press in
-denouncing the Queen’s husband as a traitor to his wife and as a servile
-spy of Russia; from which, if he had been a shrewd man, he would have
-inferred that the Queen had been again guilty of the atrocious crime of
-differing from Lord Palmerston, and that Prince Albert had been
-criticising rather too plainly his bellicose Foreign Policy.</p>
-
-<p>During the first few weeks of 1854 society, indeed, could talk of little
-else than the “treason” of Prince Albert. The Queen’s vexation found
-frequent expression in letters to Lord Aberdeen, and that amiable
-Minister did what he could to comfort her. The Prince, however, treated
-his slanderers with well-simulated contempt, but, in spite of that,
-their injustice stung him to the quick, and he suffered much both in
-health and spirits. Yet nothing could be done in his defence till
-Parliament met, and the Queen was, therefore, fain to believe that the
-country, as she says in a letter to Stockmar, was “as <i>loyal</i> as ever,
-only a little mad.” Long and ponderous essays from Stockmar on the
-Constitutional prerogatives of the Crown, and the political functions of
-Prince Albert, as her Majesty’s private secretary, did little to dispel
-the gloom that settled over the Court. The fact is that Stockmar
-slightly erred in imagining that the hostility to the Prince was really
-due to wrong ideas on these interesting points. As Prince Albert bluntly
-put it, one main element in the agitation against him was the hatred of
-the old High Tory Party towards him, in the first place, because of his
-friendship with Peel, and, secondly, because of his success with the
-Great Exhibition.<a name="FNanchor_136_136" id="FNanchor_136_136"></a><a href="#Footnote_136_136" class="fnanchor">[136]</a> The grumblers of the military clubs, too, joined
-in the cry against his Royal Highness because, when Adjutant-General
-Browne resigned, after quarrelling with Lord Hardinge, the
-Commander-in-Chief, about the weight of the soldier’s knapsack, the
-Prince was supposed to have taken Lord Hardinge’s side. The masses, too,
-had never seriously thought out the question of the position which an
-able man who was husband of a reigning Queen was certain, through the
-mere dictates of nature, to take in the counsels of the Sovereign. It
-struck them like a galvanic shock when they discovered that for fourteen
-years the Prince had been actively helping to govern them, whilst the
-omniscient flunkeys of the Press were almost daily smothering him with
-adulation<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_576" id="page_576">{576}</a></span> for his “wise abstinence from politics.” Having stupidly
-deceived themselves as to the precise influence which the Prince
-wielded, they were in the right state of mind to be deceived by the
-Prince’s enemies as to the influence which he did not wield, and which
-he never sought to wield. These reasons, and not the dubiety of the
-British Constitution as to the political rights of the husband of an
-English Queen, gave rise to much of the foolish clamour of the hour.</p>
-
-<p>It need hardly be said that when Parliament met on the 31st of January,
-the leaders of both parties in both Houses summarily disposed of the
-falsehoods which had been uttered to the discredit of the Court. The
-Debates on the Address on this occasion are of high historical and
-Constitutional importance, because they defined with great precision the
-position of the consort of a queen regnant in the British Constitution,
-establishing beyond doubt his right to assist the Sovereign with advice
-in all matters of State. The address of Lord Campbell may be usefully
-referred to as giving the legal view of the question; but the speeches
-which delighted the Queen most were those of Lord John Russell, who, she
-says, in a letter to Stockmar, “did it admirably,” and “dear, excellent
-Lord Aberdeen, who has taken it <i>terribly to heart</i>.” It was, however,
-Lord Campbell’s address which gave most satisfaction to Prince Albert.
-The common-sense view of the question obviously was, that if the husband
-of a queen regnant in England embarrassed her Majesty’s responsible
-Ministers by unconstitutional interference, the fault must be theirs and
-not his. The Constitution places in their hands the formidable weapon of
-resignation, and resignation in such circumstances simply means that
-government is rendered impossible till the unconstitutional interference
-which is objected to is stopped.</p>
-
-<p>Nobody has stated with greater correctness the political situation of
-the country at the beginning of 1854 than Sir George Cornewall Lewis.
-“If,” said he, in a letter to Sir Edmund Head, “war is averted, there
-will be a Reform Bill, which is likely to lead to an early Dissolution.
-If war arrives, the Reform Bill and all other similar measures likely to
-produce party struggles and divisions must be postponed.”<a name="FNanchor_137_137" id="FNanchor_137_137"></a><a href="#Footnote_137_137" class="fnanchor">[137]</a> The
-Tories had, therefore, one strong temptation to encourage the War Party.
-Those Whigs who, like Lord Palmerston, dreaded Reform, were in like
-case, except Lord John Russell, who, with a Reform Bill on the anvil,
-was foolish enough to share with Palmerston the leadership of the War
-Party in the Cabinet. As the war would be one against Russia, the
-mainstay of despotism in Europe, the Radicals, mindful of how the
-revolution was stamped out in Hungary, were for once on the side of war.
-Nobody, in fact, had any genuine desire for peace save the Queen, Prince
-Albert, and the Peelites, who desired “peace with honour,” and the
-Cobdenites, who seemed to desire “peace at any price.” The Peace Party
-was strong in brains and common-sense, but weak in numbers. The
-strength<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_577" id="page_577">{577}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_091" id="ill_091"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_577.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_577.jpg" width="291" height="388" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE OUTER CLOISTERS AND ANNE BOLEYN’S WINDOW, WINDSOR
-CASTLE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">of the War Party lay in its numbers, and it would be absurd to assert
-that, with leaders like Derby, Disraeli, Palmerston, and Russell, it
-lacked intellectual ability. As usual, numbers won the day, and an
-abnormal alliance of “the classes and masses” rendered the Peace
-Party&mdash;sadly weakened in moral authority by the Moravian fanaticism of
-the Cobdenites&mdash;utterly impotent. Mr. Cobden cherished the illusion that
-his influence had strengthened the Peace Party. Yet, with the exception
-of Lord Palmerston, Lord John<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_578" id="page_578">{578}</a></span> Russell, Lord Derby, and Lord Lyndhurst,
-no public men did more to make peace impossible than Mr. Cobden and Mr.
-Bright, the tone of whose pacific speeches acted on the pugnacious
-temper of the country as soothingly as a sting on an open and irritable
-wound.<a name="FNanchor_138_138" id="FNanchor_138_138"></a><a href="#Footnote_138_138" class="fnanchor">[138]</a></p>
-
-<p>As might be expected, the Eastern policy of Ministers was fiercely
-attacked in both Houses of Parliament. But to understand the point of
-these attacks and the relation of the Queen to them, one must explain
-what was done after Sinope drove England into a frenzy of anger only
-comparable with that of the Danes when Nelson destroyed their fleet at
-Copenhagen.</p>
-
-<p>To rightly appraise the criminal blunder of Russia at Sinope, it is
-necessary to remember that when that “massacre” occurred, the European
-Powers had agreed on a new Note embodying what they considered an
-honourable settlement of the dispute between Russia and Turkey. That was
-the Note of the 5th of December, and Lord Stratford de Redcliffe, under
-orders from Lord Clarendon, persuaded the Porte to accept it. This was a
-great step towards peace, for all that remained was to induce the Czar
-to be equally reasonable. But on the very day (the 13th of January,
-1854) when the Powers, in concert at Vienna, decided to press this
-settlement on Russia, Sir Hamilton Seymour was instructed by Lord
-Clarendon to intimate to Count Nesselrode at St. Petersburg that England
-and France had lifted the gage of battle flung to them at Sinope. Russia
-was informed that the English and French fleets had sailed for the Black
-Sea, charged to “require” every Russian ship they met to put back to
-port. This irritated the Czar, who professed to regard it as “a flagrant
-act of hostility.”<a name="FNanchor_139_139" id="FNanchor_139_139"></a><a href="#Footnote_139_139" class="fnanchor">[139]</a> Yet the Czar, or rather Nesselrode&mdash;who, like
-Lord Aberdeen, was braving infinite obloquy on account of his pacific
-proclivities&mdash;was willing to condone the act, if England would only
-state formally that she would impose on Turkish ships the same
-restrictions she imposed on those of Russia. Lord Clarendon, in his
-despatch, dated the 31st of January, did not make this statement, and
-accordingly, on the 4th of February, the Russian Ambassador in London
-announced that he and his retinue must return at once to St. Petersburg.
-On the 7th of February Lord Clarendon ordered the British Ambassador at
-the Court of the Czar to return to England;<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_579" id="page_579">{579}</a></span> the French Government took
-the same course, and thus the rupture between Russia and the Western
-Powers became complete. It was in such circumstances hopeless to expect
-that the Note of the 5th of December, which had been accepted by the
-Porte, and which the Four Powers agreed to recommend to Russia on the
-very day that the despatch of the allied fleets to the Euxine was
-notified to Count Nesselrode (the 13th of January), would be accepted by
-the Czar. Indeed, but for Nesselrode, it would have been ignored with
-contempt.<a name="FNanchor_140_140" id="FNanchor_140_140"></a><a href="#Footnote_140_140" class="fnanchor">[140]</a> Russia, however, temporised. Taking advantage of the
-false step of England and France in sending their fleets to the Euxine
-without consulting Austria and Prussia, Russia artfully attempted to
-detach the German States from the European Concert. Having failed in
-this, the Russian Government sent two replies to the Protocol of the
-13th of January, transmitting the settlement which the Powers had agreed
-upon, and which the Porte had accepted.</p>
-
-<p>The proposal of the Powers provided, amongst other things, for (1) the
-evacuation of the Principalities as soon as possible; (2) the renewal of
-the ancient treaties; (3) a formal guarantee by Turkey to all her
-non-Mussulman subjects of their spiritual privileges, which should
-likewise be communicated to all the Powers, including Russia,
-“accompanied with suitable assurances” to each of them; (4) a pledge
-from the Porte to reform its system of administration; and (5) the
-customary promise on the part of the Sultan to uphold the old rights and
-immunities granted to his Christian subjects by existing treaties.
-Russia rejected these proposals, and committed the blunder of extending
-her demands in her first series of counter-propositions.<a name="FNanchor_141_141" id="FNanchor_141_141"></a><a href="#Footnote_141_141" class="fnanchor">[141]</a> But
-subsequently she submitted a second series of propositions, in which she
-withdrew the stipulations as to political refugees, and her ungenerous
-demand that the Porte should negotiate terms of peace at St. Petersburg,
-or at the Russian headquarters in Moldavia. The Powers decided that the
-Russian settlement could not be recommended to Turkey, their main
-objection being, that while their terms embodied a recognition of the
-principle that the Turkish concessions and guarantees were given to
-Europe as well as to Russia, the Russian terms proceeded on the
-assumption that they were given to Russia alone. The Czar here was in
-the wrong. In the war on the Danube the Turks had been victorious. He
-insisted, however, that they should sue for peace, as if they were
-prostrate in defeat. On the other hand, the Four Powers proposed terms
-which did not imply that victory or defeat rested with either
-belligerent. The only defence that can be made for the obstinacy of the
-Emperor Nicholas in thus refusing to cross the golden bridge of<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_580" id="page_580">{580}</a></span>
-honourable retreat built for him by the Powers is, that the War Party in
-Russia was as rabid as the War Party in England. “The Emperor,” wrote
-Sir H. Seymour to Lord Clarendon on the 2nd of January, “is infinitely
-more moderate than the immense bulk of his subjects,” who denounced
-Nesselrode “as an alien, a traitor, and a man bought by English
-gold”&mdash;precisely the language which the same kind of people in England
-applied to Lord Aberdeen. In fact, the Czar himself was rapidly losing
-his popularity and authority because of the deference he was showing to
-the Powers, and it is probable that if he had made further concessions
-he would have been assassinated. But inasmuch as Nicholas himself, in
-spite of the advice of his three ablest servants,<a name="FNanchor_142_142" id="FNanchor_142_142"></a><a href="#Footnote_142_142" class="fnanchor">[142]</a> had roused the
-fanaticism and fury of his subjects by his policy, even this defence,
-though it explains, does not justify his conduct.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_092" id="ill_092"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_580.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_580.jpg" height="304" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>RUSSIAN REPULSE AT SILISTRIA.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_581" id="page_581">{581}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_093" id="ill_093"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_581.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_581.jpg" width="261" height="323" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>LORD RAGLAN.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Yet, by a strange stroke of fortune, war between Russia and the Western
-Powers was still avoided. War with Russia was hateful to the French
-people&mdash;almost as hateful as a military alliance with Turkey. But the
-Emperor Napoleon III., for dynastic reasons, was committed to such a
-war, and on the 29th of January he accordingly wrote a pacific letter to
-the Czar couched in language certain to provoke his wrath. Nicholas
-answered it with infinite <i>hauteur</i>, two contemptuous sentences in his
-reply stinging the Bonapartists into rage.<a name="FNanchor_143_143" id="FNanchor_143_143"></a><a href="#Footnote_143_143" class="fnanchor">[143]</a> France now had her War
-Party rampant, and this did not improve the outlook. Still, one last
-effort was made in the cause of peace. On the 22nd of February the
-Austrian Minister, Count Buol, told the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_582" id="page_582">{582}</a></span> French Ambassador at Vienna
-that if England and France would only fix “a delay”<a name="FNanchor_144_144" id="FNanchor_144_144"></a><a href="#Footnote_144_144" class="fnanchor">[144]</a> for the
-evacuation of the Principalities, and agree to keep the peace till that
-term ran out, Austria would join them in sending Russia a summons to
-retire across the Pruth. It was tolerably certain that what Austria did,
-Prussia would do, and here again the European Concert was united in
-putting irresistible diplomatic pressure on Russia. Lord Clarendon,
-hearing of this, very naturally asked the German Powers how they would
-act if the joint summons were ignored by the Czar. Clarendon seems to
-have taken it for granted that they would in that case join England in
-going to war, for, without waiting for their reply, he sent to St.
-Petersburg on the 27th of February an ultimatum to Russia, demanding the
-evacuation of the Principalities under threat of war. When the replies
-from the German Powers arrived on the 28th of February, Lord Clarendon
-found that Austria merely promised to support England in sending the
-summons, but not to support her in any action she might take in the
-event of its being ignored; whereas Prussia, though she thought the
-summons a good thing to send, was not quite sure if she would join the
-other Powers in sending it. Thus the English Government, by Lord
-Clarendon’s impetuous indiscretion, again broke up the European Concert;
-but now under circumstances of supreme peril, for he had positively
-committed England to enforce alone against Russia, a proposal which not
-only originated with Austria, but in the enforcement of which the
-interest of Austria, menaced by a Russian occupation of Moldavia, was
-obviously greater than that of either England or France. France joined
-England in this foolish step, and the German States, well pleased to see
-the Western Powers fighting their battles, and relieved from
-responsibility by Lord Clarendon’s precipitate action on the 27th of
-February, astutely kept out of the fray. The Czar instructed Nesselrode
-to inform Consul Michele at St. Petersburg on the 18th of March that he
-did not think fit to reply to Lord Clarendon’s ultimatum,<a name="FNanchor_145_145" id="FNanchor_145_145"></a><a href="#Footnote_145_145" class="fnanchor">[145]</a> and thus,
-with France as an ally, England went into the war&mdash;for the evacuation of
-the Principalities.</p>
-
-<p>The case of the Tory Opposition in Parliament against the Government was
-now unanswerable. Their leaders had systematically blamed the Government
-for not warning Russia at the outset that the invasion of the
-Principalities would be a <i>casus belli</i>. Had that been done, Russia
-might have held her hand, whereas it was not done till retreat for
-Russia meant humiliation.</p>
-
-<p>But, strange as it may seem, the English Government had still one more
-blunder open to them. The Turks, under Omar Pasha, had not only held the
-line of the Danube against Russia, but they had won important victories.
-In May, 1854, the Russians, under Paskiewitch, attacked Silistria; but
-the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_583" id="page_583">{583}</a></span> Turks, animated by the heroism and admirably served by the skill of
-some English officers, beat off the enemy, and on the 22nd of June the
-Russians raised the siege. Two weeks afterwards Gortschakoff was
-repulsed at Giurgevo, and the Russians were soon driven back across the
-Pruth.</p>
-
-<p>The evacuation of the Principalities, to bring about which England had
-gone to war, was thus achieved. The one blunder which was now left for
-England to commit was to ignore this fact and refrain from taking
-advantage of it. And this was precisely what England did. Yielding to
-the popular passion of the hour,<a name="FNanchor_146_146" id="FNanchor_146_146"></a><a href="#Footnote_146_146" class="fnanchor">[146]</a> the Government found a new object
-to fight for, namely, the destruction of Russia as an enemy to Mankind.
-And yet, with this amazing fact on record, there are still people on the
-Continent who aver that England is a practical nation, which never
-fights for an idea!</p>
-
-<p>War was declared by England against Russia on the 28th of March, and by
-France on the 27th, the military alliance between the two Powers being
-signed on the 12th. Lord Raglan had been appointed to command the
-British army, whilst Marshal St. Arnaud headed that of France, and the
-British troops had departed for the seat of war on the 20th of February,
-amidst scenes of great excitement and popular enthusiasm, which
-naturally inflamed the bellicose feeling of the metropolis. On the 30th
-of March the French occupied Gallipoli, in European Turkey, a little
-above the point where the Dardanelles expand into the Propontis or Sea
-of Marmora. The English detachments began to arrive on the 5th of April.
-The allies threw fortified lines across the peninsula, so that if Russia
-had driven back the Turks from the Danube and, crossing the Balkans to
-Adrianople, had made a dash for Constantinople, as in 1829, the Turks
-would have been paralysed by the allied forces on their right flank. But
-the pride of England as a maritime Power had to be gratified, and, as
-the ice was breaking in the Baltic, it was decided to order a great
-fleet to reduce Cronstadt and let the Czar hear the voice of England
-thundering from her cannon at the very gates of his capital. Sir Charles
-Napier, the Admiral appointed to command the magnificent Armada at
-Spithead, was entertained at an absurd Reform Club banquet on the 7th of
-March. There he, Lord Palmerston, and Sir James Graham, delivered
-themselves of flippant, vaunting orations, which Mr. Bright, in the
-House of Commons, denounced as “discreditable to the grave and
-responsible statesmen of a Christian nation.”<a name="FNanchor_147_147" id="FNanchor_147_147"></a><a href="#Footnote_147_147" class="fnanchor">[147]</a> Very different was
-the feeling of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_584" id="page_584">{584}</a></span> Queen when, on the 11th of March, she reviewed the
-stately procession of war-ships at Spithead, as they steamed past her
-yacht, while she waved her handkerchief to the Admiral and crew of the
-colossal <i>Duke of Wellington</i>, which brought up the rear. Before leaving
-town she wrote to Lord Aberdeen, “We are just starting to see the fleet,
-which is to sail at once for its important destination. It will be a
-solemn moment.<a name="FNanchor_148_148" id="FNanchor_148_148"></a><a href="#Footnote_148_148" class="fnanchor">[148]</a> Many a heart will be very heavy, and many a prayer,
-including our own, will be offered up for its safety and glory.”<a name="FNanchor_149_149" id="FNanchor_149_149"></a><a href="#Footnote_149_149" class="fnanchor">[149]</a> On
-the 12th of April Napier sailed from Kiöge Bay and completely blockaded
-the Gulf of Finland. Russia was thus paralysed when she evacuated the
-Principalities. Omar Pasha kept her at bay on the other side of the
-Pruth. Napier locked up her fleet and shipping in the Baltic. The allied
-armies covered Constantinople. The allied fleets swept the Euxine. The
-“material guarantees” which she had seized for the purpose of forcing
-her terms on Turkey were wrested from her hands, and as war abrogates
-all treaties, she had even lost the shadow of a claim to exercise her
-old rights of protection over the Sultan’s Christian subjects. Russia
-was now at the mercy of the Western Powers, and had they simply remained
-passive, she would soon have been compelled to sue for peace on their
-terms. But the War Party in England, disappointed that this supreme
-advantage had been gained without gilding British arms with glory,
-scoffed at the idea of settling the original dispute between Russia and
-Turkey on these terms. The British Government accordingly resolved, not
-merely to bring Russia to reason, but to humiliate her and punish her in
-such a manner that her power in South-Eastern Europe would be utterly
-broken. As it was this determination which led to the calamitous
-invasion of the Crimea, it may be well to trace the diplomatic history
-of such an astounding blunder.</p>
-
-<p>On the 9th of April, after war had been declared, the four
-Powers&mdash;England, France, Austria, and Prussia&mdash;signed a Protocol at
-Vienna which bound them (1) to remain united in maintaining the
-integrity of Turkey, and in safeguarding, under the guarantee of Europe,
-the liberties of her Christian inhabitants by every means compatible
-with the independence of the Sultan; (2) to enter into no arrangement
-with Russia or any other Power which might be inconsistent with this
-object without first of all discussing it in concert. On the 20th of
-April Austria and Prussia concluded an offensive and defensive alliance.
-In separate Notes they summoned Russia to evacuate the Principalities.
-On the 29th of July, when Omar Pasha was just about to drive the
-Russians back to their territory, Count Nesselrode replied to Austria
-stating that the Czar accepted the principles of the Protocol of the 9th
-of April. But before evacuating the Principalities, he requested the
-Cabinet of Vienna to give<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_585" id="page_585">{585}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_094" id="ill_094"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_585.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_585.jpg" width="324" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE QUEEN WAVING FAREWELL TO THE “DUKE OF WELLINGTON”
-FLAG-SHIP.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">him some guarantee that hostilities would cease.<a name="FNanchor_150_150" id="FNanchor_150_150"></a><a href="#Footnote_150_150" class="fnanchor">[150]</a> Austria was
-willing to persuade England and France to agree to the condition which
-the Czar thus made, a condition <i>sine quâ non</i> of evacuation, but Count
-Buol Schauenstein instructed the Austrian ambassador at St. Petersburg
-to warn Nesselrode that if the Maritime Powers remained obdurate,
-Austria must still insist on the withdrawal of Russia from Moldavia and
-Wallachia. Prussia, however, refused to take part in a Conference which
-Austria suggested might advantageously be held to consider the Russian
-terms. King Frederick William and Manteuffel thought that in offering to
-evacuate the Principalities, Russia had made a sufficient concession to
-the interests of Germany. But Lord Clarendon was of a different
-opinion.<a name="FNanchor_151_151" id="FNanchor_151_151"></a><a href="#Footnote_151_151" class="fnanchor">[151]</a> England, he saw, would no longer be content with the mere
-evacuation of the Principalities, which was the sole object of the war.
-Imitating the initial<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_586" id="page_586">{586}</a></span> blunder of the Czar, he insisted on getting a
-“material guarantee” against any future molestation of Turkey. The
-exclusive right of Russia to protect Moldavia and Wallachia must, he
-said, be abolished, and instead of it a European Protectorate
-established. Russia must also cease to control the chief mouth of the
-Danube. The ill-defined relations of Russia to the Christian subjects of
-the Porte, embodied in the Treaty of 1841, must be defined in the
-interests of the balance of power in Europe, and the independence of
-Turkey. Russia must finally renounce her claim to exercise any
-individual or official right of protecting Turkish subjects, no matter
-what their religion might be. The position of Russia as a naval Power in
-the Black Sea must also be modified.<a name="FNanchor_152_152" id="FNanchor_152_152"></a><a href="#Footnote_152_152" class="fnanchor">[152]</a> The Czar rejected these
-terms<a name="FNanchor_153_153" id="FNanchor_153_153"></a><a href="#Footnote_153_153" class="fnanchor">[153]</a>&mdash;indeed, if he had accepted them when as yet he had not
-suffered any crushing defeat from the Western Powers, his life would not
-have been worth many days’ purchase. Austria and Turkey concluded a
-Treaty on the 14th of June, in virtue of which Austria was to occupy the
-Principalities on behalf of the Sultan. On the 23rd of August the
-Austrian army entered Wallachia, thus setting the Turks free to
-co-operate with the Allies for the defence of Constantinople. But at
-this point the war passed from the defensive to the offensive stage, and
-it will therefore be convenient to trace the movement of opinion in
-England which powerfully influenced the change in our plans.</p>
-
-<p>The attacks on Prince Albert created an unusual interest in the opening
-of Parliament on the 30th of January, 1854. When the Queen passed in her
-State procession from her palace to the House of Lords, the route was
-lined by a seething crowd of enthusiasts, who cheered her wildly as she
-went by. She was evidently more popular than even the Turkish
-Ambassador, who was the idol of West-End mobs in these mad, foolish, and
-to us, the rising generation, far-off days. The Speech from the Throne
-referred somewhat hopefully to the diplomatic negotiations which were
-then going on between the Powers. But it contained an ominous intimation
-that her Majesty thought it necessary to increase the strength of the
-army and navy, “with the view of supporting her representations, and of
-more effectually contributing to the restoration of peace.” She
-announced a comprehensive programme of domestic legislation, comprising
-a Reform Bill, with Bills to remodel Parliamentary Oaths, to reform the
-methods of selection for the Civil Service, to change the law of removal
-and settlement, and to renovate the tribunal for trying disputed
-Parliamentary Elections. If Ministers imagined that they would thus
-divert attention from the Eastern Question they were mistaken. In both
-Houses the Opposition attacked the Speech bitterly. They denied that the
-Government had used its best efforts to preserve peace, because its
-policy was a tangle of vacillation and inconsistency. They complained
-that the part<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_587" id="page_587">{587}</a></span> played by England had been shrouded in secrecy and
-mystery, so that the country had to look to foreign sources for such
-scraps of information as had come to it. Ministers had shown such lack
-of energy that the Emperor of Russia had been led to regard them as his
-instruments, or, if that were not the case, as men who had not the
-courage to vindicate British honour by British arms. Were we at war with
-either or both of the belligerent Powers&mdash;Russia or Turkey&mdash;or were we
-not? If not, why send our fleet to the Black Sea to enforce against
-Russia a compulsory armistice? If we were, why was war not waged boldly
-and with vigour? Was it not foolish to dissipate the energies of the
-country in Reform controversies when it might any day find itself forced
-to make war in real earnest? The Vienna Note was denounced as a betrayal
-of Turkey, and the aggressive policy of Russia was unsparingly
-condemned. The Ministerial defence was weak and spiritless.</p>
-
-<p>After the Russian Ambassador left London the Government was pressed to
-divulge what it knew of Count Orloff’s suspicious mission to
-Vienna,<a name="FNanchor_154_154" id="FNanchor_154_154"></a><a href="#Footnote_154_154" class="fnanchor">[154]</a> as to which it was wondrously secretive; and various
-debates sprang up, notably one in the House of Commons on the 17th of
-February, which was raised by Mr. Layard on the official papers that had
-been published. To remove the impression produced by adverse criticism,
-Ministers seemed to think that the more bellicose they made their
-speeches the better.<a name="FNanchor_155_155" id="FNanchor_155_155"></a><a href="#Footnote_155_155" class="fnanchor">[155]</a> “We mean to fight, so do not weaken the hands
-of the Government unless you are prepared to take its place”&mdash;this was
-the gist of the Ministerial rhetoric. As to their policy of protracted
-negotiation, Ministers argued, reasonably enough, that forbearance in
-the circumstances could not be a crime. Mr. Hume and Mr. Roebuck took
-this view, and, on the whole, the debates, together with the Blue-books,
-may be said to have won for the Government a favourable verdict from the
-country. Mr. Cobden, however, had the audacity to challenge this verdict
-and to oppose, on what to the present generation seem sensible grounds,
-the whole policy of the war. His long speeches and pamphlets on this
-subject can be summed up in three sentences. Either we were going to
-fight Russia for the sake of Turkey, or for the sake of protecting the
-liberties of Europe from the encroachment of the Russian autocrat. If we
-were fighting for the sake of Turkey, we were fighting in a cause that
-we ought to be ashamed of. If we<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_588" id="page_588">{588}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_095" id="ill_095"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_588.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_588.jpg" height="312" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>MARSHAL ST. ARNAUD.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">were fighting to protect European civilisation from Russia, we ought to
-let the Powers nearest to the source of danger&mdash;Austria and
-Germany&mdash;begin first. This argument was indeed the only one that had the
-least effect on the House. Members were, however, so completely
-frightened by the clamour of London Society and the London Press, that
-even those who agreed with Cobden did not dare to say so.<a name="FNanchor_156_156" id="FNanchor_156_156"></a><a href="#Footnote_156_156" class="fnanchor">[156]</a> His
-simple but lucid exposition of the Turkish system of Government which we
-were asked to maintain, had unexpectedly disturbed the minds, not only
-of the Nonconformists, but of many good Churchmen<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_589" id="page_589">{589}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_096" id="ill_096"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_589.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_589.jpg" width="322" height="259" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>FORTS ALEXANDER AND PETER THE GREAT, CRONSTADT.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">also. It was, perhaps, slightly emphasised by the taunt of the Czar in
-his Manifesto of the 9th of February to the effect that England and
-France were fighting for Islam against Russia, who was striving to
-protect Christianity. The War Party feared that there might be a
-reaction against them, and accordingly they very cleverly induced Lord
-Shaftesbury, on the 10th of March, to answer this portion of the
-Manifesto, and not only to prove that the Grand Turk did more than the
-Czar to advance the progress of Christianity, but also to defend the
-righteousness of making an alliance with any Power, heathen though it
-might be, to maintain “the cause of right, justice, and order, against
-the aggressions even of professing Christians.” Of this speech Lord
-Shaftesbury says in his Diary that nothing pleased him more than the
-statement of Lord Clarendon that the debate which he originated “was
-most opportune.”<a name="FNanchor_157_157" id="FNanchor_157_157"></a><a href="#Footnote_157_157" class="fnanchor">[157]</a> From a Ministerial point of view it was opportune.
-Mr. Morley complains that the Nonconformists, who “have so seldom been
-found fighting on the wrong side,” were now so seriously divided that
-they did<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_590" id="page_590">{590}</a></span> nothing to help Mr. Cobden to resist the warlike policy of the
-Government.<a name="FNanchor_158_158" id="FNanchor_158_158"></a><a href="#Footnote_158_158" class="fnanchor">[158]</a> Their neutrality explains why Clarendon was so effusive
-in his congratulation to the Peer whose influence over this section of
-the community was supreme.</p>
-
-<p>But the whole question soon passed out of the region of debate. On the
-27th of March, the Queen’s message proclaiming war&mdash;though oddly enough
-the word war is not mentioned in it&mdash;was read to both Houses of
-Parliament; and on the 31st a loyal address agreeing to it was duly
-moved and carried, after a debate which was worthier of such an occasion
-than many others that had preceded it. The Opposition leaders seem to
-have been sobered by the solemnity of the moment, and all parties
-practically supported the Government with the helpless unanimity of
-despair. In the Upper House, Lord Grey alone uttered a strong protest
-against the war. In the House of Commons, Mr. Bright and the Marquis of
-Granby were the only speakers who were for peace. The violent
-Russophobists found in Mr. Layard an energetic champion. He condemned
-the Government, first, because it had not coerced Russia immediately
-after the massacre of Sinope, and secondly, because even now Ministers
-did not specifically declare that the object of the war was to lock up
-Russia within well-defined limits, so as to cripple her for ever. The
-Tory leaders were more cautious. They naturally made capital out of the
-Secret Correspondence,<a name="FNanchor_159_159" id="FNanchor_159_159"></a><a href="#Footnote_159_159" class="fnanchor">[159]</a> already referred to (pp. 546-7). They had
-little difficulty in convicting the Government of misleading the Czar as
-to their rooted objection to his Turkish policy. Lord John Russell had
-not rejected the Russian proposals with the sternness of one who had
-serious hostility to them. He had, indeed, admitted the very claim which
-he and his colleagues were now about to rebut by war.<a name="FNanchor_160_160" id="FNanchor_160_160"></a><a href="#Footnote_160_160" class="fnanchor">[160]</a> A “hybrid
-policy of credulity and connivance,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_591" id="page_591">{591}</a></span>” as Mr. Disraeli once called it,
-could have no other result than that of tempting the Czar to advance
-pretensions which he could not withdraw without prejudicing his Imperial
-position, and it is strange that this aspect of the affair was dealt
-with somewhat leniently by the critics and enemies of the Ministry. The
-questions that seemed to be of supreme interest to both Houses were
-really two&mdash;What was the object of the war? Where were our allies? To
-the one question the answer was vague. To the other the reply was
-neither frank nor candid. Lord Clarendon said that the object of the war
-was “to check and repel the unjust aggression of Russia”&mdash;which, as
-things stood, meant to force her out of the Danubian Principalities.
-But, he added, to ask what was the object of the war was to ask on what
-terms peace would be made?&mdash;a question the answer to which must depend
-on chances nobody could forecast. As for allies, it was easy to say that
-France was with us. The difficulty was to say what the German Powers
-would do. Ministers felt that Cobden had pierced their armour when, in
-the adjourned debate on Mr. Layard’s motion (20th Feb.), he asked
-whether it would not be sensible to let those Powers who were nearest
-Russia&mdash;and must therefore suffer first from her aggression&mdash;begin the
-fighting. Parliament must therefore be cajoled into a belief that
-Austria and Prussia would join us. Both Houses knew that though Austria
-and Prussia had concurred with England and France in recommending Russia
-to evacuate the Principalities, they had not pledged themselves to
-co-operate with us in war. Still, said Lord John Russell, when Austria
-was asked what she would do in the event of war breaking out, “the
-answer was at the time satisfactory,” and if Prussia had only fallen in
-with her views, he would have had a most satisfactory statement to make
-to the House. Though Prussian views seemed to Lord John “too narrow,
-taking in German interests alone,” he (Lord John) trusted that a short
-time would bring Prussia “to the conclusion that the disturbance of the
-balance of Power and the aggrandisement of Russia were matters of
-concern to Prussia as well as to other Powers.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord John Russell unscrupulously deceived the House of Commons and the
-country on both points. The whole course of the negotiations had shown
-first, that Prussia considered the Czar’s final concessions sufficient,
-and, secondly, that Austria, though regretting that Russia did not do
-more to mollify Lord Clarendon, refused to admit that a declaration of
-war was necessary for that purpose. Lord John Russell’s statement as to
-Prussia was not only untrue, but the dates of the official despatches
-prove that he and his colleagues must have known it to be untrue.<a name="FNanchor_161_161" id="FNanchor_161_161"></a><a href="#Footnote_161_161" class="fnanchor">[161]</a>
-When it was made in the House of Commons by him, and virtually in the
-same form in the House of Lords by Lord Clarendon, neither Austria nor
-Prussia had given any direct answer whatever to the question as to what
-they would do if war broke out. The Prussian Minister, indeed, said he
-did not think that Prussia would join the Powers in such a<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_592" id="page_592">{592}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_097" id="ill_097"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_592.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_592.jpg" width="251" height="312" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>OMAR PASHA.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">war.<a name="FNanchor_162_162" id="FNanchor_162_162"></a><a href="#Footnote_162_162" class="fnanchor">[162]</a> But a still grosser deception was the delusive assurance that
-Prussia would yet come to our assistance. The Government knew too well
-that the views of Prussia were such as to absolutely destroy this hope.
-The King of Prussia looked upon war against Russia on the issue raised
-as a crime, and he had written an autograph letter to the Queen, a fact
-which was concealed from Parliament, saying so in the plainest words. He
-reminded her of what it is to be feared the Queen, like most of her
-countrymen, did not then sufficiently realise&mdash;the agonies of a great
-war such as that of 1813-15&mdash;agonies that he had seen, but which, alas!
-her Majesty and the new generation had only read about. Yet that was a
-war worth the horrors of its sacrifices. Was this one now impending
-worth similar sacrifices?<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_593" id="page_593">{593}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_098" id="ill_098"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_593.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_593.jpg" width="327" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>MAP OF THE CRIMEA.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Hardly, argued the King, for even England had at last become ashamed of
-the cause she had taken up&mdash;that of the Turk, and her endeavour now was
-to persuade herself and the world that it was for another cause&mdash;the
-equilibrium of Europe, menaced by the preponderance of Russia&mdash;that she
-was about to draw the sword. “The preponderance of Russia,” he writes in
-this letter, “is to be broken down! Well! I, her neighbour, have never
-felt this preponderance, and have never yielded to it.” It was war for
-an idea, and, adds the King with intense earnestness, “Suffer me to ask,
-‘Does God’s law justify war for an idea?’<span class="lftspc">”</span> He implores the Queen to
-reconsider the Russian proposals in a friendly spirit, sifting what is
-really objectionable from them, and pledges himself that if a golden
-bridge is built to save the Czar’s honour, the Czar will cross it. But
-one word the King craves leave to speak plainly to the Queen: “For
-Prussia and myself,” he writes, “<i>I am resolved to maintain a position
-of complete neutrality</i>; and to this I add, with proud elation, <i>my
-people</i> and myself are of one mind. They <i>require</i> absolute neutrality
-from me. They say (and I say), ‘What have we to do with the Turk?’
-Whether he stand or fall in no way concerns the industrious Rhinelanders
-and the husbandmen of the Riesengeberg and Bernstein.” Russia, he
-admits, might have perhaps pressed hard on the Turk. However, “it was
-the Turk, not we, who<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_594" id="page_594">{594}</a></span> suffered, and the Turk has plenty of good
-friends, but the Emperor is a noble gentleman, and has done us no harm.
-Your Majesty will allow that this North German sound practical sense is
-difficult to gainsay.” Yet it was with such a letter in their possession
-that the Government led the country to believe, first, that Austria, who
-could not possibly move without Prussia, would join us in the war; and,
-second, that Prussia would also draw her sword for a cause which she
-declared we ourselves were even then ashamed of!</p>
-
-<p>On the 17th of March, 1854, the Queen, nettled by the rough practical
-“North German sense” in this letter from the King of Prussia,
-endeavoured to answer it&mdash;her draft being submitted to Lord Clarendon
-and Lord Aberdeen for approval. Her answer, according to Sir Theodore
-Martin, indicates a “firm hand” and “admirable tact.”<a name="FNanchor_163_163" id="FNanchor_163_163"></a><a href="#Footnote_163_163" class="fnanchor">[163]</a> To the
-political student of the present day it indicates neither the one nor
-the other. There was no tact in scoffing at the King’s “North German
-sound practical sense” by saying, “Had such language fallen from the
-King of Hanover or of Saxony, I would have understood it,” and there was
-more weakness and sentimentality than firmness and statecraft in the
-hand that added, “But up to the present hour I have regarded Prussia as
-one of the five great Powers which, since the Peace of 1815, have been
-the guarantors of treaties, the guardians of civilisation, the champions
-of right, and ultimate arbitrators of the nations; and I have for my
-part felt the holy duty to which they were thus divinely called, being
-at the same time perfectly alive to the obligations, serious as they
-are, and fraught with danger, which it imposes. Renounce these
-obligations, my dear brother, and in doing so you renounce for Prussia
-the status she has hitherto held.”<a name="FNanchor_164_164" id="FNanchor_164_164"></a><a href="#Footnote_164_164" class="fnanchor">[164]</a> If the example thus set by
-Prussia&mdash;that of making the interests of the Prussian people the supreme
-object of her policy&mdash;should find imitators, the Queen contended,
-“European civilisation is abandoned as a plaything to the winds; right
-will no longer find a champion, nor the oppressed an umpire to appeal
-to.”</p>
-
-<p>Such was the reply which the Queen made to what Sir Theodore Martin
-calls “the amiable but most mischievous weakness” that pervaded the
-letter from the King of Prussia. Such was the appeal which she made to
-what Sir Theodore calls “a sentiment higher than the short-sighted and
-selfish policy which it announced.” The King’s letter was perhaps
-amiable&mdash;but it was not weak. Its policy was perhaps selfish&mdash;a
-Sovereign who draws or sheathes the sword, save from motives of national
-selfishness, is guilty of a crime against his people&mdash;but it was not
-shortsighted. As Mr. Lowe, in his biography of Prince Bismarck, says,
-“Every one is now agreed, in the words of Leopold von<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_595" id="page_595">{595}</a></span> Ranke, that his
-(the King of Prussia’s) neutrality during the Crimean War was the
-condition precedent of the great achievements which afterwards made
-Germany one.”<a name="FNanchor_165_165" id="FNanchor_165_165"></a><a href="#Footnote_165_165" class="fnanchor">[165]</a> Prussia, in fact, was at this moment master of the
-situation; and it is amazing that the Queen, through her German
-connections, did not know it. Herr von Bismarck had been sent on a
-secret mission to the minor German States. His intrigues had rendered it
-certain that if Austria joined the Western Powers in war, Prussia would
-step into her place as the dominant power in Germany.<a name="FNanchor_166_166" id="FNanchor_166_166"></a><a href="#Footnote_166_166" class="fnanchor">[166]</a> In fact, but
-one excuse is given for the grave error of the English Court in not
-seizing the opportunity offered by the letter of the King of Prussia for
-building the “golden bridge” over which his Majesty pledged his word the
-Czar would even then have gladly retreated. The Queen’s reason in her
-reply was that the resources of diplomacy&mdash;its Protocols, Notes,
-Conventions, &amp;c., &amp;c.&mdash;had been exhausted, and that “the ink that has
-gone to the penning of them might well be called a second Black
-Sea.”<a name="FNanchor_167_167" id="FNanchor_167_167"></a><a href="#Footnote_167_167" class="fnanchor">[167]</a> A sanguine and proud young Princess must not be too harshly
-judged by History for a light jest, even on such a momentous issue. In a
-few brief months it was wiped out with her tears and her people’s blood.
-Moreover, her Majesty, as will be seen later, did not forget the hard
-stern lesson read to her by this “war for an idea,” when she saved
-England from a similar calamity in the dispute between Germany and
-Denmark over the Duchies.</p>
-
-<p>Only one thing now vexed the hearts of the War Party. The Address in
-answer to the Queen’s Message announcing war was carried. But the debate
-did not definitely commit the Government to a war for the purpose of
-breaking the power of Russia.</p>
-
-<p>There was, however, an insurrection in the Greek provinces of Turkey,
-which gave promise of bloodshed, for early in March Nesselrode had
-authorised the agents of Russia to support the insurgents. King Otho of
-Greece gave them unofficial support. The atrocious cruelty of the
-Turkish Bashi-bazouks, according to one party, had caused the rising,
-whilst another party held that it was due to Russian intrigue. Doubtless
-it was due to both causes, more especially as it was the hope of getting
-rid of the torture of Turkish misrule, that led the Greeks to listen
-eagerly to the Russian intriguers. The insurrection was easily strangled
-by the Allies who occupied the Piræus on the 25th of May; but one of its
-incidents was the expulsion of the Greeks from Constantinople. Now, as
-the Greeks in those days carried on nearly all the trade of Turkey,
-dealing with<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_596" id="page_596">{596}</a></span> Manchester and Glasgow to the extent of £3,000,000 a year,
-a strong attack might have been made against the Ministry. They could
-have been taunted with going to war for British interests in support of
-the Turks, who were destroying our trading agencies in Turkey. Mr.
-Cobden saw this point clearly, and though he put it before the House of
-Commons, he spoilt it by foolishly arguing, on sentimental grounds, that
-we ought not to support an act as barbarous as the Edict of Nantes. Lord
-John Russell won an easy victory over him by virtually ignoring the
-question of English commercial interests, and showing that there was no
-parallel between the expulsion of Frenchmen from France on account of
-their religious opinions, and the expulsion from Turkey of the subjects
-of a foreign Prince who was fomenting rebellion. As for the atrocities
-of the Turks, the House of Commons was, of course, told that they were
-the natural results of Russian ambition, “for which there was scarcely
-one apologist but Mr. Cobden!”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_099" id="ill_099"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_596.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_596.jpg" width="338" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE BARRACKS HOSPITAL, SCUTARI.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the meantime the war had to be financed, and the country reconciled
-to increased taxation. Mr. Gladstone’s ordinary, as distinguished from
-his War Budget, was introduced on the 6th of March, when his position
-was this.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_597" id="page_597">{597}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_100" id="ill_100"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_597.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_597.jpg" width="340" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>ODESSA.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>He had collected £54,025,000 of revenue, or £1,035,000 in excess of what
-he had counted on. He had spent £51,171,000, which, in spite of military
-operations, was less by £1,012,000 than he had estimated. His balance in
-hand from the past year was £2,854,000. For the coming year his
-estimates must necessarily be increased by additional military
-outlay,<a name="FNanchor_168_168" id="FNanchor_168_168"></a><a href="#Footnote_168_168" class="fnanchor">[168]</a> which would bring up his estimated expenditure to
-£56,189,000. As the revenue he could depend upon from existing taxes was
-only £53,349,000, he had therefore a deficit of £2,840,000. Had there
-been no need to increase his estimates,<a name="FNanchor_169_169" id="FNanchor_169_169"></a><a href="#Footnote_169_169" class="fnanchor">[169]</a> he might have had a surplus
-of £1,166,000 for the remission of taxation. As things stood, how was
-the deficit to be met? Not by a loan, answered Mr. Gladstone, because no
-nation had mortgaged its industry to such a frightful extent as England,
-whose National Debt of £750,000,000<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_598" id="page_598">{598}</a></span> exceeded that of all countries in
-the world put together. Without pledging themselves to pay all future
-war charges out of the revenue of each year, Mr. Gladstone said it was
-as yet possible for the House of Commons “to put a stout heart upon the
-matter, and to determine that so long as these burdens are bearable, and
-so long as the supplies necessary for the service of the year can be
-raised within the year, so long we will not resort to the system of
-loans.” The expenses of a war, he observed, “are the moral check which
-it has pleased the Almighty to impose upon the ambition and the lust of
-conquest that are inherent in nations.” He therefore proposed to
-increase the Income Tax by one-half, but to collect the whole of the
-increase in the first six months of 1854; in other words, he doubled the
-tax in the first half year. He was assailed on two grounds. The Tories
-protested against the doctrine of meeting war expenditure out of current
-revenue, and they taunted him with the failure of his scheme for the
-conversion of the debt,<a name="FNanchor_170_170" id="FNanchor_170_170"></a><a href="#Footnote_170_170" class="fnanchor">[170]</a> which, they pretended, had been disastrous.
-“The next Party conflict,” wrote Prince Albert in a letter to Stockmar
-on the 18th of April, “will be upon finance. Gladstone wants to pay for
-the war out of the current revenue, so long as he does not require more
-than ten millions sterling above the ordinary expenditure, and to
-increase the taxes for the purpose. The Opposition are for
-borrowing&mdash;that is, increasing the debt&mdash;and do not wish to impose in
-the meantime any further burdens on themselves. The former course is
-manly, statesmanlike, and honest; the latter is convenient, cowardly,
-perhaps popular. We shall see.”<a name="FNanchor_171_171" id="FNanchor_171_171"></a><a href="#Footnote_171_171" class="fnanchor">[171]</a> This is a masterly summary of the
-great financial controversy that raged throughout the Session of 1854.
-It leaves nothing more to be said save this, that when Mr. Gladstone
-explained his second or War Budget (8th of May), after war had been
-declared, his eloquence carried the country in favour of his policy. He
-obtained his war expenditure by doubling the Income Tax and increasing
-the duty on spirits and malt, and he pointed to the rapidly-growing
-trade of the nation as a proof that it ought not to adopt the course
-which Pitt found ruinous,<a name="FNanchor_172_172" id="FNanchor_172_172"></a><a href="#Footnote_172_172" class="fnanchor">[172]</a> and which Prince Albert so justly
-described as “convenient and cowardly.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_599" id="page_599">{599}</a></span>”</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the first Budget in February had slightly sobered the
-country&mdash;at all events, the 26th of April was set apart for a day of
-Fast, Humiliation, and Prayer. Over this a slight controversy had broken
-out. The Queen was a little offended that Lord Aberdeen had announced,
-without consulting her, in the House of Lords, on the 31st of March,
-that such a Fast would be proclaimed. She thought Fasts of Humiliation
-were resorted to too often, and that it was hypocritical to publicly
-confess in the stereotyped form that “the great sinfulness of the nation
-had brought about this war.” Therefore she desired that the Fast should
-be called a Day of Prayer and Supplication, and urged Lord Aberdeen “to
-inculcate the Queen’s wishes into the Archbishop’s mind, that there be
-no Jewish imprecations against our enemies.” Her desire was to adapt the
-prayer in the Church Service, “To be used before a Fight at Sea,” to the
-occasion.<a name="FNanchor_173_173" id="FNanchor_173_173"></a><a href="#Footnote_173_173" class="fnanchor">[173]</a> According to Mr. Greville, bankers in the City pointed
-out that if the word “Fast” were omitted, Bills would be payable on that
-day and not on the day before, as Masterman’s Act provides in such
-cases. The Queen was, therefore, persuaded by Lord Aberdeen to proclaim
-“a Day of Solemn <i>Fast</i>, <i>Humiliation</i>, and Prayer, to be kept on the
-26th.” It was observed solemnly in the United Kingdom, India, and the
-Colonies, by British subjects of all races and creeds.</p>
-
-<p>When it was found that the object for which the war was undertaken&mdash;the
-evacuation of the Principalities&mdash;had been effected by the retreat of
-the Russians across the Pruth on the 28th of July, there was some fear
-lest the taxpayers, who were painfully digesting Mr. Gladstone’s War
-Budget, might consider enough had been done to bring Russia to reason.
-Russia, it has been shown, was now in such a position that her
-surrender, under the passive pressure of the Powers, was inevitable, so
-as a matter-of-fact enough <i>had</i> been done. But the growth of this
-feeling had to be stopped, for the War Party<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_600" id="page_600">{600}</a></span> insisted that Russia must
-be rendered incapable of again disturbing Europe. It was a curious
-revival of a policy, the practicability of which Napoleon I. had ruined
-himself to illustrate. Yet on the 19th of June Lord Lyndhurst invited
-the House of Lords to preside at its resurrection. The long, virulent,
-and passionate harangue by which he endeavoured to excite the hatred of
-England against Russia, his indictment of her as an enemy of the human
-race, his appeals for her destruction in the sacred interests of liberty
-and civilisation, drew forth cheer after cheer even from that frigid
-Assembly of patricians. It produced a prodigious effect on the country,
-and forthwith Englishmen worked themselves up into a belief that unless
-a mortal blow were dealt at Russia, Europe would be overrun by Cossacks,
-and every honest man in England would be buried alive in Siberia. Lord
-Aberdeen ventured to protest against Lyndhurst’s extravagant and
-scurrilous abuse of the Czar, and to remind the Peers that in 1829, when
-Turkey was at his mercy, he had not seized Turkish territory, but had
-been content with the Treaty of Adrianople. For this Aberdeen was
-denounced as a tool of Russia, who desired to patch up a hasty and
-dishonourable peace.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_101" id="ill_101"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_600.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_600.jpg" width="343" height="279" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>HEIGHTS OF THE ALMA.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_601" id="page_601">{601}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_102" id="ill_102"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_601.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_601.jpg" height="314" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>SIR JOHN BURGOYNE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Mr. Layard, on the 23rd of June, gave notice of motion in the House of
-Commons, “that, in the opinion of this House, the language held by the
-First Minister of the Crown was calculated to raise grave doubts in the
-public mind as to the objects and results of the present war, and to
-lessen the prospect of a durable peace.” Even the Queen wrote to the
-aged statesman a letter scolding him because he had annoyed the public
-by “an impartial examination of the Emperor of Russia’s conduct.” She
-admired Aberdeen’s courage and honesty, but expressed a hope&mdash;in the
-circumstances her “hope” was a command&mdash;that in any explanation of his
-unlucky speech “he will not undertake the ungrateful and injurious task
-of vindicating the Emperor of Russia from any of the exaggerated charges
-brought against him and his policy, at a time when there is enough in
-that policy to make us fight with all our might against it.”<a name="FNanchor_174_174" id="FNanchor_174_174"></a><a href="#Footnote_174_174" class="fnanchor">[174]</a> What
-Aberdeen said was that he objected to Russian<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_602" id="page_602">{602}</a></span> aggression on Turkey, but
-as for Russian aggression on Europe, he did not fear it in the least.
-There was nothing in that to cause offence, except to those who,
-suddenly finding that Russian aggression on Turkey had been repelled by
-Omar Pasha, supported by the hostile demonstrations of the Western
-Powers, were now at a loss to discover another form of Russian
-encroachment, real or imaginary, to repel. There must therefore, cried
-Lyndhurst and the War Party, be no talk of peace till the Russian fleet
-in the Black Sea was destroyed, and the walls of Sebastopol razed to the
-ground. “For the future,” exclaimed Lord Derby, “it was impossible to
-permit the Black Sea to be a Russian lake, or that the Danube should be
-a Russian ditch, choked with mud and filth.”<a name="FNanchor_175_175" id="FNanchor_175_175"></a><a href="#Footnote_175_175" class="fnanchor">[175]</a> A great army had been
-sent to Turkey; but the fighting and the glory had fallen to Omar Pasha
-on the Danube. As Lord Hardwicke said, in the debate in the House of
-Lords on a Vote of Credit (24th of July), “if the present campaign
-closed without some great deed of arms equal to the power and dignity of
-this country, Her Majesty’s Government would lie under a heavy
-responsibility.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord John Russell, in defending this Vote of Credit in the House of
-Commons, said that the Government had now three objects in view besides
-the evacuation of the Principalities: (1) to place Turkey under the
-protection of the European Powers, to whom, and not to Russia alone, she
-should be asked for the future to guarantee the privileges of her
-Christian subjects; (2) to deprive Russia of her special right of
-protecting the Principalities under the Treaty of Adrianople; (3) to
-reduce the power of Russia in the Black Sea, so that she should not be
-able to menace Turkey. In connection with this third aim, Lord John
-threw out a sinister allusion to the destruction of Sebastopol, which
-Mr. Disraeli protested he heard with “consternation,” and which Lord
-John vainly endeavoured to explain away. The German Powers objected as
-much to the occupation of Russian territory by England or Turkey, as to
-the occupation of Turkish territory by Russia. Lord John Russell had,
-therefore, emulated Lyndhurst in his eagerness to give Austria and
-Prussia a pretext for refusing England and France their co-operation.</p>
-
-<p>It was in truth easy to whet the fashionable appetite for adventure and
-glory. The country sulked over the inaction of the British fleet in the
-Baltic and the army at Varna. Yet the fleet under Napier, though it
-failed to make good the foolish vaunting of its commander when he
-started, did some useful work. It found the frowning fortifications of
-Cronstadt impregnable,<a name="FNanchor_176_176" id="FNanchor_176_176"></a><a href="#Footnote_176_176" class="fnanchor">[176]</a> but at all events it shut up the Russian
-navy in their harbours, and swept their commerce from the sea. Captain
-Hall’s daring reconnoissance of Hango<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_603" id="page_603">{603}</a></span> Bay in the month of May, elicited
-a tribute of admiration from the Grand Duke Constantine himself. Admiral
-Plumridge destroyed Bomarsund, a fortress built to dominate the Gulf of
-Bothnia. But in the Pacific the Allies were decidedly less successful in
-August in their attack on Petropaulovski. The English Admiral, Price,
-had committed suicide, and was succeeded by Sir F. Nicholson. On the 4th
-of September an attempt was made to take the place in the rear, but
-owing to the treachery of two guides, our men were misled and repulsed.
-They were driven over a precipice 70 feet high which lay between them
-and the shore, many of them being killed, and still more being wounded
-in taking a headlong leap for their lives.</p>
-
-<p>In the Black Sea the record was more brilliant. The first shot fired in
-the war was at Odessa, which was bombarded for ten hours on the 22nd of
-April, in revenge for an outrage committed by the Russians, who fired on
-a flag of truce. This was followed by a challenge to the Russian fleet
-in Sebastopol, which was not accepted. On the 12th of May the <i>Tiger</i>
-ran aground off Odessa, and had to strike her flag. Her crew were made
-prisoners, but treated with the utmost kindness and courtesy by the
-Russians. The captain (Gifford) died of his wounds on the 19th of June,
-and the lieutenant (Royer) was sent to St. Petersburg by order of the
-Czar, who at once set him free. Captain Parker, on the 8th of July,
-destroyed the Russian works at the Sulina mouth of the Danube.</p>
-
-<p>In May there were 20,000 French on the European and 10,000 British
-troops on the Asiatic side of the Danube. Gallipoli was fortified, and
-works thrown up in order to check the Russians had they crossed the
-Danube. Constantinople was also fortified, and then the Allies
-concentrated at Varna, ready, if need be, to carry war into the enemy’s
-territory. They were encamped at a spot which was saturated with the
-germs of malaria, and which was chosen with a reckless disregard of
-sanitary considerations. During June and July malaria, dysentery, and
-cholera decimated their ranks. They sat brooding listlessly in the
-shadow of death all through that fatal summer, chafing, as did their
-countrymen at home, over their inglorious fortune. Cardigan’s
-reconnoissance of the country up to Trajan’s Wall on the confines of the
-Dobrudscha alone broke the monotony of their existence, and on his
-return they were cheered by his news of the disastrous retreat of the
-Russians on Bessarabia. On the 26th of August a Council of War was held
-at Varna, and the rumour that the army was to be led to the invasion of
-the Crimea flew through the disheartened camp like tidings of great joy.
-It has been shown by what steps the English Government was lured on to
-this fatal decision. Yet it is due to Lord Aberdeen’s Cabinet to say,
-that it was not at first unanimous as to the expediency of widening the
-area of conflict, and attempting to break the power of Russia, “by
-razing Sebastopol to the ground.” Mr. Kinglake<a name="FNanchor_177_177" id="FNanchor_177_177"></a><a href="#Footnote_177_177" class="fnanchor">[177]</a> has stated that this
-enterprise was sanctioned at a Cabinet meeting held on June 28 in Lord
-John Russel<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_604" id="page_604">{604}</a></span>l’s house (Pembroke Lodge). Mr. Kinglake, at a loss to
-explain to posterity how a number of intelligent men could have approved
-an act of such stupendous folly, has invented an ingenious theory. The
-Duke of Newcastle, as Secretary of State for War, subsequently blamed
-Lord Raglan for mismanaging the campaign. But Mr. Kinglake has
-constituted himself Lord Raglan’s champion, and he accordingly
-endeavours to lay as much blame as possible on the Duke. The Duke came
-to the meeting, says Mr. Kinglake, with a ponderous despatch, which he
-proposed, with the approval of his colleagues, to send to Lord Raglan
-ordering him to invade the Crimea. As he went on reading it, one
-Minister after another fell asleep. When he finished, they awoke, and
-sanctioned the Duke’s instructions without knowing what they were. It is
-unfortunately not possible to save the reputation of the Aberdeen
-Ministry by making drowsiness an excuse for blundering. Sir George
-Cornewall Lewis, in one of his letters,<a name="FNanchor_178_178" id="FNanchor_178_178"></a><a href="#Footnote_178_178" class="fnanchor">[178]</a> gives the flattest
-contradiction to Mr. Kinglake’s amusing fable, and so does Sir Theodore
-Martin.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_103" id="ill_103"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_604.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_604.jpg" width="336" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>PEMBROKE LODGE, RICHMOND.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_605" id="page_605">{605}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_104" id="ill_104"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_605.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_605.jpg" width="343" height="273" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>CODRINGTON’S BRIGADE (23RD ROYAL WELSH FUSILIERS) AT THE
-ALMA.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>An eccentric Member of the House of Commons, Mr. H. Drummond, in one of
-the debates on the War, said that there was a division of labour in the
-operations, for whilst we found the money, the French Emperor found the
-brains. The project of wounding Russia in a vital point by invading the
-Crimea, was originated by the French Emperor, who possibly thought his
-illustrious uncle’s experiment at Moscow needed no verification. The
-French Emperor’s plan was submitted to the Queen on the 14th of March as
-one approved of by Lord Raglan, Lord de Ros, Lord Clarendon, and the
-Duke of Newcastle. It was dropped because some sensible person suggested
-that it would be hardly safe to leave Constantinople, then covered by
-the allied troops, at the mercy of the Russians. But after
-Constantinople was fortified against attack, the mischievous idea was
-revived. On the 28th of June it was embodied in the draft despatch
-containing the instructions to Lord Raglan,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_606" id="page_606">{606}</a></span> which was sanctioned by
-that fatigued Cabinet, the Members of which, according to Mr. Kinglake,
-fell asleep. One other fact may be cited against Mr. Kinglake. The plan
-was opposed by certain Members of the Ministry who, though they thought
-something should be done to limit Russia’s opportunities of interfering
-with Turkey in future, felt sure that an invasion of the Crimea must end
-in failure. They complained that nobody knew what could be done with the
-Crimea even if it were taken, or how the Russians could be stopped from
-rebuilding Sebastopol, except by another war, after it was destroyed.
-But why has there ever been any controversy over the point at all?
-Simply because the project was such a mad one, that everybody who had
-anything to do with it, has been anxious to blame somebody else for
-originating it. The Ministry and their apologists declared that they
-left the whole affair to the discretion of Lord Raglan. He was only
-instructed to invade the Crimea if as a soldier he thought an invasion
-practicable. Lord Raglan and his friends declared that he had no
-discretion in the matter, and that the instructions of the Cabinet
-amounted to an order from the Secretary of State for War, which he as
-the General in command had no option but to obey. Lord Aberdeen’s
-account of the matter to the Queen was that, “although the expedition to
-the Crimea was pressed very warmly” on Lord Raglan, “the final decision
-was left to the judgment and discretion” of Raglan and St. Arnaud,
-“after they should have communicated with Omar Pasha.” Sir George
-Cornewall Lewis, in the letter already quoted, says he does not think
-that the Cabinet could have given Raglan a wider discretion, because
-they would have probably thought they were throwing too much
-responsibility on him. But the obvious truth is that, as the Cabinet and
-the General had approved of the plan in March, they were alike
-responsible for it, and that if it had not been disastrous to their
-reputations, they would have each claimed credit for it.<a name="FNanchor_179_179" id="FNanchor_179_179"></a><a href="#Footnote_179_179" class="fnanchor">[179]</a> Mr.
-Kinglake says that St. Arnaud was also opposed to the invasion of the
-Crimea, but it was his Imperial Master’s plan, and he had to adopt it
-against his better judgment. Possibly, Raglan’s doubts, confided to Sir
-G. Brown at Varna, sprang from conferences with St. Arnaud.<a name="FNanchor_180_180" id="FNanchor_180_180"></a><a href="#Footnote_180_180" class="fnanchor">[180]</a></p>
-
-<p>The order to invade was dated the 28th of June, and two months were
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_607" id="page_607">{607}</a></span>spent in preparing for the expedition. At the last moment it was found
-that there was no means of embarking and disembarking the cavalry and
-artillery. This difficulty was cleverly overcome by Mr. Roberts, a
-master in the navy. “Roberts did more for us than anybody,” said Lord
-Raglan to Admiral Lyons. He set the Turkish caïques in rows, and built
-great pontoons on them buoyant enough to support the enormous weight of
-horses and guns.<a name="FNanchor_181_181" id="FNanchor_181_181"></a><a href="#Footnote_181_181" class="fnanchor">[181]</a> On the 13th of September the expedition sighted
-the shores of the Crimea. The allied troops skilfully disembarked
-without loss or confusion at the Old Fort, a spot twenty miles south of
-Eupatoria. Twenty thousand French and twenty thousand English soldiers,
-with a powerful artillery, were thus thrown upon a hostile coast in
-perfect marching order in one single day. On the 19th of September they
-moved southwards, and got touch of the Russians under Prince
-Menschikoff. These were 40,000 strong, and they held a fortified
-position on the heights of the Alma, a little river which flowed between
-them and the Allies. On the morning of the 20th the battle began. St.
-Arnaud was to attack, and if possible turn the Russian left. When that
-had been done, the English were to dash at the right wing of the
-Russians. St. Arnaud was farther away from his objective point than our
-men, and before he completed his manœuvre, he seems to have asked Lord
-Raglan to advance. Abandoning the original plan of the battle, Raglan
-moved forward on the swarming masses of Russians in front of him, and
-drove them from their position. In this contest one sees nothing
-admirable save the rough masculine vigour of the English attack, and the
-skill with which the battle was planned by St. Arnaud. Lord Raglan’s
-conduct was likened by the Secretary of State to that of the Duke of
-Wellington. As a matter of fact, at the outset he seems to have plunged
-into the river with his Staff, dashed on into the enemy’s lines, till he
-found himself on the extreme left of the French, without any control
-over his army. It was really led into action by his Generals of
-Divisions, who, till after the crisis of the battle was over, seemed
-scarcely conscious of the existence of their Commander-in-Chief.<a name="FNanchor_182_182" id="FNanchor_182_182"></a><a href="#Footnote_182_182" class="fnanchor">[182]</a>
-The French attack was dashing, but somehow it did not succeed
-quickly.<a name="FNanchor_183_183" id="FNanchor_183_183"></a><a href="#Footnote_183_183" class="fnanchor">[183]</a> As for the Russians, they were clumsily handled.
-Menschikoff chose a good position&mdash;so good that he staked his field
-defence<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_608" id="page_608">{608}</a></span> of Sebastopol on it. But he manœuvred in massive columns, so
-that his front did not nearly cover all his ground. He seemed nervously
-anxious to meet attacks in detail, hurrying regiments from point to
-point wherever he thought his troops were being hard pressed, to the
-utter confusion of his formation. His subordinates were so stupid that
-they did not even think of bringing their strongest arm, the cavalry,
-into action.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_105" id="ill_105"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_608.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_608.jpg" width="252" height="313" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>GENERAL CANROBERT.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Curiously enough at this point, the expedition, owing to Menschikoff’s
-bungling, had success within its grasp. The defence of Sebastopol was
-staked upon the army of the Alma. The stronghold lay at the mercy of the
-Allies after that army was routed, and could have been taken next
-morning by a <i>coup de main</i>. Raglan, to do him justice, was eager to
-press on, but St. Arnaud held him back. The Allies then spent three days
-in burying the dead, and by that time the Russians had considerably
-strengthened their fortifications. Raglan again urged that the city
-should be attacked, but, as St. Arnaud was unwilling to<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_609" id="page_609">{609}</a></span> risk an
-assault, it was agreed that the invaders should march round to the south
-of the citadel, and attack it from that aspect. On the 29th St. Arnaud,
-whose health and brain had been long failing him, died, and Canrobert,
-an equally sluggish soldier, succeeded to his command. Whilst the Allies
-were, at Raglan’s instigation, marching round to the south of
-Sebastopol, they were for a whole day exposed to a flank attack from the
-enemy, which, had it been delivered, would have simply cut them to
-pieces. Menschikoff’s incapacity saved them from this disaster, and on
-the 28th of September the Russians, who had been looking for an attack
-from the north, to their surprise found their feeble works on the south
-at the mercy of their enemies. Some of the divisional commanders, like
-Cathcart and Campbell, were eager for storming the place at once, and,
-had they done so, they could have captured it with hardly any
-appreciable loss. Sir John Burgoyne&mdash;then supposed to be infallible as a
-military engineer&mdash;and General Canrobert thought the risks too great,
-and said that the army must wait till the siege-train was brought up.
-Raglan yielded to Canrobert’s hesitancy and Burgoyne’s ignorance.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_106" id="ill_106"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_609.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_609.jpg" width="334" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>ENTRANCE TO BALACLAVA HARBOUR.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_610" id="page_610">{610}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Russians, who expected every moment to see the enemy swarming over
-their walls, must have looked on the unintelligible paralysis of the
-Allies as an intervention of Providence on their behalf. Oddly enough,
-when Raglan was making his flank march from north to south, Menschikoff,
-instead of springing on him and destroying his army, was marching with
-equal stupidity from the south to the north.<a name="FNanchor_184_184" id="FNanchor_184_184"></a><a href="#Footnote_184_184" class="fnanchor">[184]</a> Here the allied attack
-was looked for; here all available troops were hurried. Nachimoff, who
-remained on the south bank of the harbour, had just 3,000 troops to hold
-indefensible works against an army of 40,000 men. He behaved with high
-spirit; he sank his ships so as to block the channel. Admiral Korniloff
-hastened from the north side to his aid and took command, and filled the
-troops with his own determination to hold out to the last, no matter how
-heavy were the odds against them. Colonel Todleben&mdash;whose master mind
-was about to revolutionise the art of fortification&mdash;accompanied him,
-and these two perfectly dauntless men, profiting by the blunder of
-Canrobert and Burgoyne, simply wrecked the expedition of the Allies. The
-time spent in waiting for the siege-train was precisely what Todleben
-prayed for.</p>
-
-<p>Inspirited by Korniloff’s enthusiasm, and guided by Todleben’s genius,
-the Russians toiled like galley-slaves to strengthen their
-fortifications. Korniloff succeeded in inducing Menschikoff to march
-25,000 troops into the town, so that on the 17th of October, when the
-siege-train of the Allies had arrived, Sebastopol, which had been at
-their mercy on the 25th of September, was virtually impregnable. On the
-17th of October an attempt was made to demolish the earthworks of the
-enemy by a general bombardment, after which it was the intention of the
-Allies to dash forward and storm the southern half of the town.<a name="FNanchor_185_185" id="FNanchor_185_185"></a><a href="#Footnote_185_185" class="fnanchor">[185]</a> The
-English batteries did not fail, for they seriously damaged the Redan
-Fort of the enemy. Nachimoff’s sacrifice of the sunken fleet, however,
-prevented our ships from getting far enough up the harbour to assist our
-land force, and though the sea batteries were open to attack, shoal
-water prevented our ships from getting close enough to them to do them
-much harm.<a name="FNanchor_186_186" id="FNanchor_186_186"></a><a href="#Footnote_186_186" class="fnanchor">[186]</a> The failure of the bombardment was followed up by a
-series of attacks on the position of the Allies, the results of which
-may now be summarised. The great flank march from north to south had
-left every<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_611" id="page_611">{611}</a></span> road from Russia open to the enemy. Reinforcements swarmed
-into the Crimea, even from the Russian Army of the Danube, which was
-liberated when the Austrians occupied the Principalities. The English
-army at the end of October numbered 25,000. The French had 40,000 in the
-field. But 120,000 combatants had rallied to the standards of Prince
-Menschikoff. They held not a fortress but a great entrenched camp,
-defended by impregnable works on which, says Lord Raglan, plaintively,
-in one of his despatches, “an apparently unlimited number of heavy guns,
-amply provided with gunners and ammunition, are mounted.” Now, it is a
-rule of warfare that the besieging force should be five times as strong
-as the besieged. No general with a grain of prudence will attempt to lay
-siege to a stronghold unless his force is three times as strong as that
-of the garrison, and unless he has an army of observation besides to
-protect him from molestation. Before Sebastopol the besiegers were only
-half as strong as the besieged, and they had no covering force whatever.
-Like the Athenians at Syracuse, the besiegers had become the besieged.
-If Lord Raglan did not complete the parallel by sacrificing his army to
-an eclipse of the moon, he did his best to emulate that historic
-achievement by sacrificing it to the flank march from the Belbeck to
-Balaclava.<a name="FNanchor_187_187" id="FNanchor_187_187"></a><a href="#Footnote_187_187" class="fnanchor">[187]</a></p>
-
-<p>In these circumstances the Russians promptly adopted offensive tactics.
-Menschikoff ordered Liprandi to march round to the rear of the British
-position and attack Balaclava, from which we drew our supplies, and on
-the 25th of October the Russians suddenly drove the Turks from the
-redoubts that formed one of our chief defences. This gave him the
-northern half of the Balaclava valley. The British cavalry were
-withdrawn from the southern half westwards behind redoubts, which were
-still in our hands, and the road to Balaclava, with all our shipping and
-our stores, was clear. Yet not quite clear. Sir Colin Campbell and the
-93rd Highlanders were in the way, and his consummate skill and their
-stubborn valour saved our base of operations. At a glance Campbell saw
-that Liprandi meant to annihilate the Scots, by hurling against them
-overwhelming masses of cavalry covered by artillery. To such an onset a
-single regiment in square formation could obviously offer no effective
-resistance whatever. In an instant Campbell conceived the novel and
-daring project of receiving the Russian cavalry in line.<a name="FNanchor_188_188" id="FNanchor_188_188"></a><a href="#Footnote_188_188" class="fnanchor">[188]</a> Such a<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_612" id="page_612">{612}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_107" id="ill_107"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_612.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_612.jpg" width="164" height="206" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>SIR COLIN CAMPBELL.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">manœuvre could be possible only where a commander and his troops had
-implicit confidence in each other, and where officers and men, instinct
-with barbaric strength and courage, went forth to battle under the iron
-discipline of civilised warfare. In grim silence the Scots obeyed the
-stern, curt orders of their leader, and formed the famous “thin red line
-tipped with steel,” on the solidity of which, for a moment, the fate of
-the army depended. Their flanks were covered by the Turks who had fled
-from the redoubts. A hundred sick men, who crawled from the hospital to
-rally round their chief, were formed under Lieutenant-Colonel Daveney as
-“supports.” The Russian commander, with great ability, modified his plan
-of attack and struck swiftly not only at the centre, but strongly at
-Campbell’s right flank, where the Turks were posted. The dense masses of
-cavalry first reeled and then broke up when they came within the central
-zone of fire, but the Turks fled, leaving the “thin red line” uncovered
-on the right. The Russians, feeling that the game was now in their
-hands, charged again, confident that they could roll up the line at this
-unprotected spot. Campbell was, however, equally alert. When the Turks
-ran away he ordered his grenadier company to wheel to the right. It went
-swiftly and silently round, with automatic precision, like a door on a
-hinge, and met the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_613" id="page_613">{613}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_108" id="ill_108"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_613.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_613.jpg" width="405" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>BALACLAVA&mdash;“THE THIN RED LINE.”</p>
-
-<p>(<i>After the painting by Robert Gibb, R.S.A., in the possession of
-Archibald Ramsden, Esq., Leeds.</i>)</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Russian squadrons with a scorching storm of fire, that sent them flying
-in confusion from the field. “During the rest of the day,” said Sir
-Colin Campbell, with a touch of grim humour in his despatch, “the troops
-under my command received no further molestation from the Russians.” A
-still more formidable body of Russian horse, however, had swooped down
-on our Heavy Cavalry (Brigadier-General Scarlett). The Scots Greys and
-Enniskilling<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_614" id="page_614">{614}</a></span> Dragoons sprang forward to meet them, tore through the
-first and second lines of the enemy, and, supported by the Dragoon
-Guards, broke up their heavy masses in utter rout. At this moment Lord
-Raglan ordered Lord Lucan, who was in command of the cavalry, to advance
-his Light Brigade and prevent the Russians from carrying away some of
-the guns which the Turks had abandoned in the redoubts. When the order
-was carried to Lucan by Captain Nolan, Raglan’s aide-de-camp, the
-Russians had recovered from their reverses and had completely re-formed
-on their own ground. Raglan’s order, therefore, had come to mean that
-Lucan was to hurl his slender Light Cavalry Brigade, utterly devoid of
-supports, against a great army holding a strong position, flanked and
-covered on all sides by murderous artillery. For a moment he hesitated,
-appalled by the hideous madness of the order. A taunt from Nolan stung
-him to the quick, and he spoke the word that sent Cardigan into the
-“valley of death” with the far-famed Six Hundred.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Long shall the tale be told,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Yea, when our babes are old”&mdash;<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">how they rode onward&mdash;through the smoke and fire that belched forth from
-the iron throats of the Russian cannon&mdash;how they clove their way through
-the Russian masses and cut down the gunners at their guns&mdash;how they cut
-their way back, “stormed at with shot and shell,” a broken remnant of
-wounded and dismounted troopers, who had to report that they had failed
-to do that which even the demigods of ancient legend would not have been
-reckless enough to attempt. Nolan was killed at the very first
-onset&mdash;whilst riding far in advance cheering on the Brigade.<a name="FNanchor_189_189" id="FNanchor_189_189"></a><a href="#Footnote_189_189" class="fnanchor">[189]</a> “It
-was magnificent, but it was not war” was the comment of the French
-General Bosquet, on this horrible sacrifice&mdash;a sacrifice so horrible
-that, when it was over, even the Russians ceased firing and stood
-motionless and awe-stricken, gazing at the sickening scene. They claim
-Balaclava as a victory. Certainly they took more than half the field
-from us; but on the other hand, thanks to the obstinate tenacity of the
-93rd Highlanders, we repelled their attack on our base of operations,
-which was, of course, their objective point.<a name="FNanchor_190_190" id="FNanchor_190_190"></a><a href="#Footnote_190_190" class="fnanchor">[190]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_615" id="page_615">{615}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>After this fight the Russians concentrated an overwhelming force and
-planned an attack on our position at Inkermann. Its weakest point, in
-spite of the warnings of Lieutenant-General Sir De Lacy Evans, had been
-left badly protected, and on the 5th of November the Russians surprised
-our pickets. Having driven them in they fell on our Second Division, who
-had barely time to stand to their arms when they found themselves
-struggling with overwhelming masses of the enemy. Pennefather was in
-command, for, unfortunately, De Lacy Evans was disabled. Instead of
-retiring in order and attempting to ward off the attack by artillery,
-Pennefather hurried up little mobs of troops to his outposts, and there
-waged a dreadful hand to hand fight against an army ten times as strong
-as his own. It was “a soldiers’ battle” that raged through the morning
-on these misty heights&mdash;a confused <i>melée</i>, in which officers lost their
-men, and men lost their officers&mdash;in which, when ammunition failed, the
-English troops fought with bayonets; when these broke or bent, with
-stones; and when these failed, with clenched fists. Column after column
-of Russians was hurled at our little force&mdash;but without avail. No man
-could be moved from his position till he was shot or cut down, and the
-indomitable courage of the Duke of Cambridge and his Guards&mdash;for his
-Royal Highness, though he lacked skill and knowledge, never lacked
-pluck&mdash;held the Russians in check so long, that the French had time to
-come to the rescue. Then the enemy beat a retreat. We retook the
-positions we had lost, and once again demonstrated that the English
-infantry were without a rival in the world. The Russian plans were so
-laid, that it was a mathematical certainty our army must be driven into
-the sea. Two sons of the Czar had been invited to witness this
-catastrophe. And, in spite of the splendid fighting qualities of our
-men, the catastrophe must have happened, had it not been for two
-blunders which the Russians committed. In the first place, Menschikoff,
-who seems to have been even a stupider person than Raglan or Burgoyne,
-attacked in massive columns. This so reduced his fighting front that our
-weak detachments formed in line decimated them with their fire, and when
-our artillery came into action every shot and every shell also told on
-them with deadly effect. The Russian sortie from Sebastopol, moreover,
-was mismanaged. The commander lost his way in the mist, and instead of
-falling on us, he found himself entangled with the French far away on
-our left, so that he gave no real aid to the main attack.</p>
-
-<p>The Russians lost 12,000 men in this battle, the French lost 1,800, and
-the British lost 2,600. It was therefore clear that the siege must be
-raised, or that the Allies must enter on a winter campaign. Up till now
-the troops had suffered very little hardship; but, alas! when winter set
-in they were doomed to cruel suffering. A terrific storm on the 14th of
-November blew<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_616" id="page_616">{616}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_109" id="ill_109"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_616.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_616.jpg" width="334" height="230" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>VALLEY OF INKERMANN.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">down their tents and destroyed twenty-one vessels in Balaclava Bay laden
-with supplies. It rendered the valley from Balaclava to the camp&mdash;a
-distance of nine miles&mdash;almost impassable. Two-thirds of the transport
-horses died, and there was hardly any forage obtainable for the
-remainder. Cholera&mdash;the germs of which had been carried to the Crimea
-from Varna&mdash;raged in our lines, and those who escaped it fell victims to
-scurvy, dysentery, or fever. “Between the beginning of November,” writes
-Mr. Spencer Walpole, “and the end of February, 8,898 British troops
-perished in hospital. At the last of these dates 13,608 men were still
-in hospital.”<a name="FNanchor_191_191" id="FNanchor_191_191"></a><a href="#Footnote_191_191" class="fnanchor">[191]</a> The state of the hospitals was so bad that men died
-there more quickly than on the field. Part of the ghastly tale of
-mismanagement had been told by Mr. W. H. Russell, the special
-correspondent of the <i>Times</i>, when Parliament met on the 12th of
-December, and empowered the Queen to raise a foreign legion and utilise
-the Militia for foreign service&mdash;measures forced on the Ministry by
-Prince Albert. But soon after it separated the cry of distress from the
-Crimea grew too loud to be stifled. When it rang through England the
-people turned on the Government in furious anger, and called them to
-account for their gross mismanagement of the war. The Duke of Newcastle,
-being Secretary of State for War, was blamed because he was alleged to
-be incompetent.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_617" id="page_617">{617}</a></span> Aberdeen was blamed because it was said he was at heart
-a Russian. The scurrilous charges against Prince Albert were revived,
-and he was accused of impeding the operations of our army by his
-treacherous interference. As a matter of fact, these charges were all
-untrue. Prince Albert, Aberdeen, and Newcastle were the three men who
-alone had courage to face the situation, when they suddenly discovered
-that the military system of England had failed them, and that the
-military machine which they inherited from Wellington had broken down.
-They had toiled long and wearily to mend it when the distinguished
-persons who afterwards attacked them were away enjoying their holidays.
-But when Parliament reassembled on the 23rd of January, 1855, the
-gathering storm broke on the head of the Government. Mr. Roebuck gave
-notice of a motion for the appointment of a committee to inquire into
-the mismanagement of the war; Lord John Russell deserted his colleagues
-and resigned. The Ministry, who resisted Mr. Roebuck’s motion, were
-beaten, on a division, by 305 votes to 148, and the Coalition Government
-resigned on the 31st of January, 1855. The army was starving, with
-abundance of supplies within its reach, through the sheer stupidity of
-those whose duty it was to feed it. Its camp was a hospital, and its
-hospitals were pest-houses. The nation was utterly humiliated. As for
-the War Party, which was really responsible for the invasion of the
-Crimea, it naturally destroyed the Ministry which had stooped to be the
-instrument of its braggart passions and its ignorant policy.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_110" id="ill_110"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_617.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_617.jpg" height="210" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE STORM OFF BALACLAVA.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_618" id="page_618">{618}</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXI" id="CHAPTER_XXXI"></a>CHAPTER XXXI.<br /><br />
-<small>PARTY GOVERNMENT AND WAR.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>Stratford de Redcliffe Cooling Down&mdash;Tory Distrust of the French
-Alliance&mdash;The Queen’s Kindness to Lord Aberdeen&mdash;The Emperor
-Napoleon and Prince Albert&mdash;The Prince Visits France&mdash;The Queen at
-Balmoral&mdash;Her Feelings towards the Prince of Prussia&mdash;The Queen
-holds a Council of War&mdash;She Demands Reinforcements for Lord
-Raglan&mdash;Napoleon’s Alarm&mdash;Prince Albert’s Plan for an Army of
-Reserve&mdash;The Queen on the Austrian Proposals&mdash;Her Anxiety about the
-Troops&mdash;Raglan’s Meagre Despatches&mdash;The Queen and Miss
-Nightingale&mdash;At Work for the Soldiers&mdash;Extorting Information from
-Lord Raglan&mdash;Ministerial Changes&mdash;Lord John Russell’s
-Selfishness&mdash;A Miserly Whig Duke&mdash;The Queen’s Disgust at Russell’s
-Treachery&mdash;Resignation of Russell&mdash;Fall of the Coalition&mdash;The Queen
-and the Crisis&mdash;She holds out the Olive Branch to
-Palmerston&mdash;Palmerston’s Cabinet&mdash;Quarrel between Mr. Disraeli and
-Lord Derby&mdash;The Sebastopol Committee&mdash;Mr. Roebuck and Prince
-Albert&mdash;The Vienna Conference and the Death of Czar Nicholas&mdash;The
-Austrian Compromise&mdash;Parties and the War&mdash;Russell’s Humiliation&mdash;He
-Resigns in Disgrace&mdash;The Queen quashes the Peace Negotiations&mdash;A
-Royal Blunder&mdash;The Queen tries to Gag the Peelites&mdash;Aberdeen
-Browbeaten by the Court&mdash;Canrobert’s Resignation&mdash;Crimean
-Successes&mdash;Failure of the Attack on the Redan&mdash;Death of Raglan.</p></div>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="smcap">During</span> the Parliamentary Session of 1854, it was very plainly shown that
-Government by Party is not the best kind of Government for carrying on
-diplomacy or warfare. The Opposition in the House of Commons, instead of
-checking the drift of the Cabinet towards war, seemed ever bent on
-hounding them on. They hardly ever gave a vote save for the purpose of
-discrediting and weakening the Ministry. It is, therefore, not unfair to
-infer that they rejoiced in the prospect of war, because they foresaw
-that its hazards and its chances might lead to the destruction of the
-Government. The temper of the Tories at this time was admirably
-illustrated by Mr. Disraeli. When a motion was brought before the House
-of Commons by Mr. Chambers early in February, 1854, to investigate the
-claims of an English company at Madeira against Portugal, Lord
-Malmesbury writes of the Ministerial defeat as follows: “I fear Disraeli
-voted against the Government, as it is his policy to join with anybody
-to defeat them.”<a name="FNanchor_192_192" id="FNanchor_192_192"></a><a href="#Footnote_192_192" class="fnanchor">[192]</a> With such a spirit of faction animating the
-Opposition, it was hardly possible for the Ministry to steer a steady
-course in the stormy sea of diplomatic intrigue on which it had
-embarked. Yet it is but right to say that there were some patriotic
-Tories who objected very strongly to the tactics and strategy of their
-Party. John Wilson Croker was so firmly opposed to the policy of the
-war, and the entangling alliance with the French Emperor,<a name="FNanchor_193_193" id="FNanchor_193_193"></a><a href="#Footnote_193_193" class="fnanchor">[193]</a> that he
-severed his connection with the <i>Quarterly Review</i> on this account.
-Croker’s belief was that France was an unsafe ally, that the French had
-manufactured the quarrel with Russia and inveigled us into it; that our
-Government knowing, from the Secret Memorandum of 1844, what the Cza<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_619" id="page_619">{619}</a></span>r’s
-views were, should have urged Turkey to resist the intimidation of
-France at the outset. We should have warned her of the peril she stood
-in from Russia, whilst at the same time we warned Russia that, though we
-had no objection to induce Turkey to do her justice, we could not
-sanction the partition of the Ottoman Empire. This course, says Mr.
-Croker, in a remarkable letter to Lord Lyndhurst, “would have placed the
-matter on its real grounds&mdash;that is, a struggle between France and
-Russia, in which we should have been spectators, and eventually
-mediators, but not parties, till some pretensions contrary to the
-permanent balance of power should be raised by any of the
-belligerents.”<a name="FNanchor_194_194" id="FNanchor_194_194"></a><a href="#Footnote_194_194" class="fnanchor">[194]</a> Lyndhurst himself began towards the end of the year
-to doubt whether our alliance with the French was not as dangerous as
-Russian pretensions. Very few members of the House of Commons, however,
-shared these doubts. The House, in fact, rapidly became unmanageable,
-and, as Lord Malmesbury says in his “Memoirs” would support nothing but
-the war. Bill after Bill had to be withdrawn by Aberdeen’s Government,
-so that its legislative achievements can be briefly recorded. During the
-first Session of the year the Oxford University Bill was passed. It
-substituted for an incompetent governing oligarchy a Council of eminent
-and talented men, and gave the Colleges great powers for
-self-improvement. Mercantile laws were consolidated into one Act. Usury
-laws were abolished. The principle of allowing traders to form Joint
-Stock Companies under limited liability of partnership was affirmed by
-the House of Commons, and the old system of granting such undertakings
-charters from the Board of Trade, finally condemned. Lord John Russell’s
-Reform Bill was one of the measures which were introduced, debated, and
-withdrawn. It had produced a second crisis in the Cabinet in early
-spring, which was overcome by Lord Aberdeen’s mediation between Lord
-John and Lord Palmerston. This episode seriously disturbed the Queen’s
-peace of mind, and in one of her letters she expresses her deep
-gratitude to the Prime Minister for his devotion to her. Nothing,
-indeed, is more touching than the references to the aged statesman with
-which the Queen’s letters are filled at this period. She is found
-frequently devising plans for the purpose of lightening the burden of
-care that was crushing his spirits. On the 1st of May, Prince Arthur’s
-birthday, she writes as follows:&mdash;“Though the Queen cannot send Lord
-Aberdeen a card for a child’s ball, perhaps he may not disdain coming
-for a short time to see a number of happy little people, including some
-of his grandchildren, enjoying themselves.” In September, again, she
-writes to him from Balmoral, peremptorily insisting on his leaving
-London and proceeding to Scotland at once to recruit his health. At
-Haddo, she says, he will be near her, and, she adds, “Lord Aberdeen
-knows that his health is not his own alone, but that<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_620" id="page_620">{620}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_111" id="ill_111"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_620.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_620.jpg" width="256" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>MR. ROEBUCK (1858).</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">she (the Queen) and the country have as much interest in it as he and
-his own family.”<a name="FNanchor_195_195" id="FNanchor_195_195"></a><a href="#Footnote_195_195" class="fnanchor">[195]</a> In midsummer she gave him her best support and
-sympathy when the Peelites and the Whigs almost openly quarrelled, and
-attacks on the Prime Minister were freely indulged in by his own
-supporters. “Aberdeen,” writes Prince Albert in July to Stockmar, “is a
-standing reproach in their eyes, because he cannot share the enthusiasm
-while it is his part to lead it. Nevertheless he does his duty and keeps
-the whole thing together, and is the only guarantee that the war will
-not degenerate into crack-brained, fruitless absurdities”&mdash;such as the
-re-organisation of Poland, the seizure of Finland, a mad project of
-certain Tories like Lyndhurst, and the annexation of the Crimea. Before
-Parliament met in January, 1855, the Queen was indeed so keenly sensible
-of the injustice of the attacks on Lord Aberdeen, that she insisted on
-his accepting the Order of the Garter as a public testimony of her<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_621" id="page_621">{621}</a></span>
-confidence in his administration, and of “her personal feelings of
-regard and friendship” for himself. The end of the London season, when
-the Court came to the capital to prorogue Parliament, was gloomy.
-Cholera was spreading fast through the town, and even the world of
-fashion had to offer up its tale of victims.<a name="FNanchor_196_196" id="FNanchor_196_196"></a><a href="#Footnote_196_196" class="fnanchor">[196]</a> The Queen was
-therefore fain to hurry back to Osborne as quickly as possible; and, on
-the 29th of August, she writes to the King of the Belgians that she is
-reconciling herself to the prospect of a long parting from her husband,
-who was about to visit Napoleon III.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_112" id="ill_112"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_621.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_621.jpg" width="336" height="266" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>BUCKINGHAM PALACE, FROM ST. JAMES’S PARK.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Prince Albert’s visit to France was planned by the Emperor Napoleon for
-the purpose of raising his status in the eyes of his people, whose
-cultured and aristocratic classes looked askance at his upstart court
-and his mushroom nobility. First of all, he sounded Lord Cowley on the
-subject. The Queen thought that such a visit might render the French
-alliance more trustworthy than she was disposed to consider it, and the
-Prince soon let Lord Cowley know he would visit France whenever he was
-invited. Napoleon III. accordingly, on the 3rd of July, asked the Prince
-to come and inspect the summer<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_622" id="page_622">{622}</a></span> camp of 100,000 troops which was to be
-formed between St. Omer and Boulogne, and the Prince promised to go. He
-sailed from Osborne on the 3rd of September, carrying an autograph
-letter from the Queen to the Emperor, who met his guest on the quay at
-Boulogne on the 4th. On the 8th he returned to Osborne, on the whole
-well pleased with his visit.</p>
-
-<p>The 15th of September found the Court at Balmoral; indeed, it was there
-that the Queen received most of the stirring news that made English
-hearts beat fast during these anxious months when the Crimean struggle
-was begun. She was greatly cheered by the successful landing of the
-troops near Eupatoria, and her pride when the tidings of the victory of
-the Alma arrived, is frankly and ingenuously expressed in her
-correspondence.</p>
-
-<p>On the 11th of October the Court returned to Windsor, the Queen visiting
-Edinburgh, Hull, and Grimsby on the way. It was at Edinburgh that she
-first heard of the abandonment of the attack on the northern front of
-Sebastopol, and of Raglan’s foolish “flank march” to the south side of
-the town. Prussian diplomacy had at this time again irritated both the
-Queen and her husband, for when Austria was once more pressed to take
-the field with us, Prussia held her back by threatening to withdraw from
-the offensive and defensive alliance which had been signed between the
-two countries. Prince Albert remonstrated with the Crown
-Prince&mdash;afterwards Emperor of Germany&mdash;but in vain. The conduct of
-Prussia was especially provoking to the Queen, because she even then saw
-certain signs which indicated that the son of the Crown Prince would
-probably be soon a successful suitor for her eldest daughter’s hand. Her
-Majesty next induced her uncle, King Leopold, to remonstrate with the
-King of Prussia. Prussia was warned that France would seize the left
-bank of the Rhine, and that England would abet her. Herr Von Bismarck,
-who made it his business to thwart King Leopold’s schemes, met this
-threat by pointing out that whoever held the Rhine was master of
-Belgium&mdash;a trifling circumstance which the Queen and Prince Albert seem
-to have overlooked, when they persuaded King Leopold to press Prussia
-into the service of the Allies.</p>
-
-<p>When October brought the first hints of bad news from the Crimea, the
-heart of the Queen grew heavy with anxiety. She now knew, by advices
-from Raglan, that he had not enough troops for the task that was imposed
-on him. The country was growing restive over the sluggishness of the
-attack. The Queen and Prince Albert therefore implored Lord Aberdeen to
-consider how reinforcements were to be sent out. On the 11th of November
-her Majesty asked the Prime Minister to visit her at Windsor, and, with
-the Duke of Newcastle, talk over a project of the Prince’s for raising
-the Militia by ballot and sending them abroad, and for organising a
-legion of foreign mercenaries. The Queen desired this step to be taken
-at once, assuring her Ministers that they would have no difficulty in
-getting a Bill of Indemnity from Parliament; but her suggestion was
-overruled. And yet at this time<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_623" id="page_623">{623}</a></span> Raglan was begging the Secretary for
-War to send out 10,000 troops without delay! Meanwhile Napoleon III. was
-alarmed to find that the English army was vanishing before Canrobert’s
-eyes. Hence he offered to send out every French soldier he could muster,
-if England would only find the transports. Sir James Graham found them,
-and they carried, not only French troops to the Crimea, but all the
-lavish stores of food and comforts which never reached those for whom
-they were supplied. The terrible loss of life at Inkermann again
-prompted the Queen to press on the Duke of Newcastle the necessity for
-reinforcing our shattered army. Prince Albert was equally urgent in his
-importunity, and on the 1st of December he was successful in persuading
-the Cabinet to adopt his plan for forming an Army of Reserve at Malta.</p>
-
-<p>Meantime, diplomacy was again appealed to for the purpose of ending the
-war. “If Austria did her duty,” writes the Queen when as yet the tidings
-of carnage were fresh in her mind, “she might have prevented much of
-this bloodshed. Instead of this, her Generals do nothing but juggle the
-Turks of the Principalities, and the Government shuffles about, making
-advances and then retreating. We shall see now if she is sincere in her
-last propositions.”<a name="FNanchor_197_197" id="FNanchor_197_197"></a><a href="#Footnote_197_197" class="fnanchor">[197]</a> These were that certain demands should be made
-by her on Russia. If Russia rejected them, then Austria would be willing
-to join us in the war. But, on the other hand, if Russia accepted the
-Austrian proposals, England and France must agree to make peace. What
-then, asked Austria, were the terms which France and England would
-insist on having? Prince Albert was asked by Lord Clarendon to suggest
-an answer. The Prince replied very sensibly that he should not ask for
-anything beyond the “Four Points” on which Austria was prepared to
-insist, though it might be well, he said, to define their somewhat
-elastic terms. These points were the substitution of a European for a
-Russian Protectorate over the Principalities; the freedom of navigation
-on the Danube; the revision of the Treaty of 1841 so as to destroy the
-preponderance of Russia in the Black Sea; a guarantee from the Sultan to
-the Great Powers confirming the liberties and privileges of his
-Christian subjects, instead of a guarantee from the Sultan to Russia
-alone. The Queen greatly approved of the Ministerial Despatch which was
-drawn up on the lines of Prince Albert’s advice, and in a letter to Lord
-Clarendon she gave him sound reasons for her belief that Austria was
-acting honestly in the transaction, and not, as Lord Clarendon
-suspected, seeking to evade her moral responsibilities.</p>
-
-<p>But it was the condition of the army itself during the winter of 1854 in
-the Crimea, rather than the diplomacy of the struggle that disturbed
-most grievously the mind of the Queen. Official Despatches, especially
-those of Lord Raglan, were culpably silent on the subject. Private
-letters, however, from officers and men, teemed with complaints, and
-officers in the Guards kept the Court well informed about the actual
-state of things. Early in October, the <i>Times</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_624" id="page_624">{624}</a></span> newspaper generously
-opened a subscription for the benefit of the army, and sent Mr.
-Macdonald to the Crimea to administer it. The services which this
-gentleman rendered to the troops will never be forgotten. He seemed to
-make his pence go as far as other men’s pounds, and to his skilful
-administration may be traced many most important reforms which were
-adopted by the Government in their methods of issuing rations to the
-army. The Queen was now of opinion that the time had come for appealing
-to the generosity of the people on behalf of the sufferers from the war.
-On the 13th of October a Royal Commission was issued, headed by Prince
-Albert, to establish the Patriotic Fund for the relief of the families
-of those who had perished in the Crimea. A staff of hospital nurses was
-organised under Miss Florence Nightingale&mdash;a lady whose good deeds and
-kindly offices to the sick and wounded at Scutari have given her
-imperishable fame. On the 5th of November she reached the scene of her
-labours&mdash;as the wounded men were being brought in from Balaclava&mdash;and
-the hospital which had been a foul and disorderly pest-house, was soon
-rendered a wholesome and serviceable sanatorium. It was Mr. Sidney
-Herbert who requested Miss Nightingale to undertake this work, and he
-was bitterly condemned at the time for sanctioning such an innovation as
-the introduction of a volunteer staff of thirty-seven lady nurses into a
-military hospital.<a name="FNanchor_198_198" id="FNanchor_198_198"></a><a href="#Footnote_198_198" class="fnanchor">[198]</a> Nor was the Queen contented merely to help all
-these good works by her counsel, sympathy, and support. With her own
-hands she, her daughters, and the ladies of her Household knitted
-woollen comforters, socks, and mittens, and plied their needles as
-busily as the most toilworn seamstresses in the East-end, making
-under-clothing for the soldiers. Their example was quickly followed by
-every lady of leisure in the three kingdoms. Prince Albert sent fur
-coats to his brother officers in the Guards, and bountiful supplies of
-tobacco for the men. He devised a series of forms in order to extract,
-or rather extort, full information from Lord Raglan and his subordinates
-as to the condition of the troops, and it was not till his system of
-tabulated returns was adopted that the Government had the data necessary
-for devising measures of relief for the miseries of the army. On the
-first day of the year 1855, the Queen, in sending her congratulations to
-Lord Raglan, speaks in touching language of the grief which a long
-stream of Crimean reports have caused her. She urges vehemently that
-every effort be made to save her troops from privation. She even goes
-into particulars, and speaks sharply about the blunder which led to
-green coffee beans instead of ground coffee being served out&mdash;a blunder
-that was one of the notorious scandals of the time.<a name="FNanchor_199_199" id="FNanchor_199_199"></a><a href="#Footnote_199_199" class="fnanchor">[199]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_625" id="page_625">{625}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_113" id="ill_113"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_625.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_625.jpg" width="520" height="374" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>MISS NIGHTINGALE AND THE NURSES IN THE BARRACKS HOSPITAL
-AT SCUTARI.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_626" id="page_626">{626}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>One curious change in the organisation of the Ministry took place in
-1854, which, however, does not seem to have greatly concerned the Court.
-The Secretaryship of State for War had hitherto been an appendage of the
-Colonial Office. It was now made a separate Secretaryship, and, in an
-unfortunate moment for himself, the Duke of Newcastle elected to take
-the appointment, letting Sir George Grey become Secretary of State for
-the Colonies. Mr. Sidney Herbert remained as “Secretary <i>at</i> War”&mdash;a
-Parliamentary secretary representing the War Office in the House of
-Commons,<a name="FNanchor_200_200" id="FNanchor_200_200"></a><a href="#Footnote_200_200" class="fnanchor">[200]</a> Lord John Russell becoming President of the Council.<a name="FNanchor_201_201" id="FNanchor_201_201"></a><a href="#Footnote_201_201" class="fnanchor">[201]</a>
-Lord John, however, who seems to have been the fly in the ointment pot
-of the Coalition, soon began to find fault with the readjustment of
-offices. In November he told Lord Aberdeen that the War Office ought to
-be put in stronger hands than those of the Duke of Newcastle. This
-suggestion, described afterwards by Mr. Disraeli as “a profligate
-intrigue” worthy of the “Memoirs” of Bubb Doddington, gave offence to
-the Queen. It seemed to her a treacherous attempt to disintegrate the
-Cabinet, and she did not conceal her sympathy with the statesman thus
-attacked. The Duke, however, generously offered to sacrifice himself so
-that Lord John Russell might not have a pretext for embarrassing the
-Crown by breaking up the Government at a critical moment; but the
-Cabinet would not permit the Duke to be sacrificed. Even Palmerston, to
-do him justice, repudiated the idea, and so Lord John again threatened
-to resign. Aberdeen met this threat by persuading the Queen to overcome
-her personal aversion to Palmerston, and obtaining her leave to appoint
-him Leader of the House of Commons, in the event of Lord John Russell
-deserting his post.</p>
-
-<p>Lord John, now finding that he had made a mistake, succumbed on the 16th
-of December; and so the scandal was hushed up. The Queen, however, felt
-ill at ease, for, by this time, she knew that the Ministry had no
-stability, and that Lord John would soon again give his colleagues more
-serious trouble. But he remained in the Cabinet fully cognisant of
-everything that was done by the War Department, and never expressing the
-least disapproval of its management till Parliament met in January,
-1855. Then, when Mr. Roebuck gave notice of his motion for inquiring
-into the conduct of the war, Lord John, without the slightest warning,
-resigned, saying that as he agreed with Mr. Roebuck he did not see how
-the motion could be resisted. The Duke of Newcastle<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_627" id="page_627">{627}</a></span> again offered to
-retire in favour of Lord Palmerston, if haply Lord John Russell could be
-thereby induced to withdraw his resignation. But again, his colleagues
-refused to sacrifice him, and so they all offered to resign. This was a
-cruel blow to the Queen. She protested that there was no precedent for a
-Ministry resigning in the midst of a war till they were dismissed. She
-implored Lord Aberdeen not to desert her at a moment when the very worst
-possible effect would be produced by the spectacle of the nation
-struggling through war without a Government. The Cabinet accordingly
-determined to face Mr. Roebuck’s motion; but when he carried it against
-them, as has already been recorded, they were compelled to retire from
-office. Then the Queen had to meet one of the most perplexing and
-anxious Ministerial crises of her reign. Lord Derby was appealed to. But
-he found he could only obtain “independent support” from Lord
-Palmerston, Mr. Sidney Herbert, Mr. Gladstone, and Lord Aberdeen’s
-friends&mdash;which, he observed cynically, was “support which could never be
-depended on.” He did not seem to have much faith in his own colleagues,
-and he consequently declined to form a Ministry. But he sympathised with
-the Queen in her vexation at the turn which events had taken&mdash;quoting to
-her a remark of Walewski’s&mdash;“What influence can a country like England
-pretend to have without an army and without a Government?” Lord
-Lansdowne was next consulted. He was willing to form a Cabinet, but then
-he was old and broken in health. He could not possibly serve for more
-than a few months, and obviously his enforced retirement would again
-cast everything into confusion. Lord John Russell, of course, had long
-been under the hallucination that he could form an Administration
-without the aid of the Peelites. His cantankerous treachery to his
-colleagues, and his unscrupulous pertinacity in disintegrating the
-Coalition Cabinet in circumstances most damaging to the country,
-rendered him objectionable to the Queen. But still acting on Lansdowne’s
-advice, she determined to let him try, so that the mortification of
-failure might perchance dispel his delusion that he had still a name to
-conjure with as a Party leader. He tried, and, of course, failed
-ignominiously. No man trusted him or cared to serve under or with him.
-The Queen, however, in her letter to Lord John, very shrewdly and
-gracefully held out the olive branch to Palmerston by saying that it
-would give her great pleasure if he would join the new Government.
-Palmerston, feeling that the crisis was one which also called for
-sacrifices on his part, offered to serve even under Lord John as
-Secretary for War, if he could thereby extricate the Crown from its
-difficulties. But he deemed it imperative that Lord Clarendon should
-join the Ministry, and this Lord Clarendon stoutly refused to do. His
-colleagues, he said, had all been loyal to him, and he would not serve
-under a man who, from the time he entered the late Ministry, had
-persistently embarrassed it, and intrigued for its destruction. Lord
-John found that he had attempted the impossible, and on the 4th of
-February the country was still without a Government, to the infinite
-damage<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_628" id="page_628">{628}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_114" id="ill_114"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_628.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_628.jpg" width="284" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>HENRY VIII.’S GATEWAY, WINDSOR CASTLE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">of its prestige in the eyes of foreign nations. The Czar rejoiced grimly
-at our embarrassments. The French Emperor began to doubt whether a
-stable alliance could be formed with a nation whose organic institutions
-were so unstable. The Queen accordingly put an end to Russell’s
-intrigues, which had wrought all this mischief, in a very summary
-manner. Lord Palmerston’s public-spirited behaviour in the crisis had
-obliterated all recollection of his faults in the past. Her Majesty
-therefore called on Palmerston to organise a Government. The Whigs who
-had served in the Coalition Cabinet agreed to serve under him. The
-Peelites would have done so, but they declined because of their deep
-personal<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_629" id="page_629">{629}</a></span> regard for Aberdeen and Newcastle, who, they declared, had
-been most unjustly and spitefully attacked by the majority that had
-destroyed the Coalition Government.<a name="FNanchor_202_202" id="FNanchor_202_202"></a><a href="#Footnote_202_202" class="fnanchor">[202]</a> Aberdeen and Newcastle,
-however, remonstrated with them, and the result was that Mr. Gladstone,
-Mr. Sidney Herbert, and the Duke of Argyle consented to take office
-under Palmerston. When Lord Palmerston informed the Queen of this fact
-she felt that for a time her troubles were over, that again she was
-indebted to the disinterested devotion of Lord Aberdeen for a happy
-release from her difficulties. Palmerston himself also expressed his
-gratitude to Aberdeen in strong and cordial terms.<a name="FNanchor_203_203" id="FNanchor_203_203"></a><a href="#Footnote_203_203" class="fnanchor">[203]</a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_115" id="ill_115"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_629.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_629.jpg" width="336" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>REFRESHMENT ROOM, HOUSE OF LORDS.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The new Cabinet was really the old one. Only Russell, Aberdeen, and
-Newcastle were out of it, and Lord Panmure&mdash;a blustering person who was
-clever enough to make the world believe that to be noisy was to be
-energetic<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_630" id="page_630">{630}</a></span>&mdash;was Secretary of State for War. This seemed rather to
-disconcert the factious place-hunters. “The Whigs at Brooks’s,” wrote
-Lady Palmerston to her son-in-law,<a name="FNanchor_204_204" id="FNanchor_204_204"></a><a href="#Footnote_204_204" class="fnanchor">[204]</a> “were all up in arms at the
-Government not being formed on more Liberal principles, or rather with
-more of the Whig Party. They are disappointed at the Peelites joining,
-and at under people of that party keeping their places, so that, in a
-manner, there are hardly any places to fill up. They press, therefore,
-very much for a Whig in the Duchy of Lancaster, so as to make the
-Peelite division in a greater minority.” But the anger of the Tories
-could scarcely be kept within bounds. They argued that, as Aberdeen and
-Newcastle had not been evicted from office till after they had pretty
-nearly succeeded in setting the War Department in order, their
-successors would not only have a comparatively easy task, but would also
-win all the glory and prestige of finishing a victorious war. Lord Derby
-had missed a golden opportunity by refusing to form a Ministry; nay, he
-had done something that was still more damaging to them. In his
-explanation to the House of Lords he admitted that he could not govern
-without the aid of the Peelites. This implied that, having tried his
-colleagues in the work of administration, he had so little confidence in
-their capacity, that he did not dare to trust to them alone. “Disraeli,”
-writes Lord Malmesbury, “is in a state of disgust beyond all control. He
-told me he had spoken his mind to Lord Derby, and told him some very
-disagreeable truths.”<a name="FNanchor_205_205" id="FNanchor_205_205"></a><a href="#Footnote_205_205" class="fnanchor">[205]</a> No sooner had the new Cabinet been formed
-than it was seen that another effort would be made to break it up. What
-was to be done with Mr. Roebuck’s Committee of Investigation? It was
-somewhat unconstitutional to vest it with the functions of the
-Executive, and Palmerston, on the 16th of February, appealed to the
-House not to appoint the Committee, or at least to suspend its judgment
-till the new Ministry had time to reform the War Department. Mr. Roebuck
-denied that the Ministry was really a new one, and insisted on the
-appointment of the Committee. The Peelites objected to the Committee as
-a dangerous and unconstitutional precedent. Palmerston agreed with them,
-but, like the majority of the Cabinet, he felt that to resist was to
-court another defeat in the House of Commons; and so he decided to
-yield. Sir James Graham, Mr. Sidney Herbert, and Mr. Gladstone
-accordingly tendered their resignations, and in a fortnight after it was
-formed the new Ministry was wrecked. On the 28th Sir George Cornewall
-Lewis took Mr. Gladstone’s place as Chancellor of the Exchequer, Lord
-John Russell re-entered the Cabinet as Colonial Secretary, and Sir C.
-Wood succeeded Sir J. Graham as First Lord of the Admiralty. “Things
-have gone mad here, the political world is quite crazy, and the Court is
-the only institution which does not lose its tranquil bearing”&mdash;thus<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_631" id="page_631">{631}</a></span>
-wrote Prince Albert to the Dowager-Duchess of Coburg in the midst of the
-agitation caused by the second Ministerial crisis of 1855.</p>
-
-<p>Meantime much had been done by Lord Aberdeen, the Duke of Newcastle, and
-Prince Albert, to improve the condition of the army at the seat of war.
-The railway from Balaclava to the camp was being pushed on rapidly;
-reinforcements were pouring in steadily. On the 13th of March Sir J.
-Burgoyne writes that “the men are beginning to look tolerably hearty and
-cheerful again.” A Sanitary Commission, organised by Lord Shaftesbury,
-had been despatched to aid the medical staff, and there was little for
-the new Ministers to do but to follow the path which Aberdeen and
-Newcastle had, by their toil and self-sacrifice during the recess,
-smoothed for them. The Queen, like the Peelites, was of opinion that the
-Roebuck Commission could do very little good, and, by diverting the
-attention of the officials from the work in hand, might do a great deal
-of harm. It was the expression of an angry desire to punish somebody,
-and, as Prince Albert said, it could not hope to find the right person,
-“because he does not exist.”<a name="FNanchor_206_206" id="FNanchor_206_206"></a><a href="#Footnote_206_206" class="fnanchor">[206]</a> If any one was to blame, it was the
-Duke of Wellington, who had left the country with a loose aggregate of
-battalions which was in no true sense an organised army&mdash;without leaders
-trained and practised in the duties of general officers; without a
-reserve, a general staff, field commissariat, ambulance, or baggage
-corps; without training in the combined use of infantry, cavalry, and
-artillery, with their various systems of supply and transport; in fact,
-without any effective instrument whatever for waging war at a distance
-from England. In vain did the Committee endeavour to fix the blame for
-the disasters in the Crimea on somebody. Mr. Roebuck soon found that an
-examination of the Duke of Newcastle would rather tend to clear than to
-damage his reputation, and then the inevitable scapegoat was sought in
-the Queen’s husband. When Mr. Roebuck consulted the Duke privately on
-the subject, his Grace told him that the only really valuable advice he
-and Lord Aberdeen got was from Prince Albert. He added that the Queen’s
-health had suffered dreadfully from her anxiety about the troops, and
-that it was therefore absurd to imagine that the Prince had been
-conspiring to wreck the expedition. The Sebastopol Committee was a
-failure. It did not succeed in saddling any one with a definite
-responsibility for the sufferings of the army; nay, the Chairman (Mr.
-Roebuck), in speaking to a resolution censuring the Aberdeen Ministry
-for their management of the war, freed the Duke of Newcastle, Mr. Sidney
-Herbert, and Sir J. Graham, the heads of the incriminated Departments,
-from blame.<a name="FNanchor_207_207" id="FNanchor_207_207"></a><a href="#Footnote_207_207" class="fnanchor">[207]</a> The only severe censure was that passed on Lord<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_632" id="page_632">{632}</a></span> Raglan
-for continuing Mr. Ward as purveyor for the hospital at Scutari after he
-had been pronounced unfit for his post.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_116" id="ill_116"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_632.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_632.jpg" width="256" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>MR. SIDNEY HERBERT (AFTERWARDS LORD HERBERT OF LEA).</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It had been agreed, partly on the advice of the Queen, to enter a new
-Conference at Vienna for the purpose of patching up a peace. To get rid
-of Lord John Russell, he was sent there by Lord Palmerston as the
-representative of England; and it was whilst he was on his way that he
-was offered and accepted the Colonial Secretaryship, vacated by the
-resignation of Mr. Sidney Herbert.<a name="FNanchor_208_208" id="FNanchor_208_208"></a><a href="#Footnote_208_208" class="fnanchor">[208]</a> The basis of the Conference was
-the protocol containing the “Four Points” which had been accepted in
-principle by Russia on the 16th of<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_633" id="page_633">{633}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_117" id="ill_117"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_633.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_633.jpg" width="333" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE WINTER PALACE, ST. PETERSBURG.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>November, 1854, though Nesselrode in his despatch of 26th August to
-Prince Gortschakoff, the Russian Ambassador at Vienna, had rejected
-them. On the 2nd of March, the chief figure in the tragic drama of the
-war passed suddenly from the scene. The failure of his plans in the
-Crimea had broken the imperious spirit and proud heart of the Czar, and
-he died with words of thanks to his army on his lips. “Tell my dear
-Fritz” (the King of Prussia), he said to the Czarina with his last
-breath, “to continue the friend of Russia, and faithful to the last
-words of papa”&mdash;faithful, that is, to the principles of the Holy
-Alliance. The old monarchies and the old conservatism of Europe thus
-lost their most powerful champion, and a seventh part of the globe found
-a new master. The Emperor Nicholas was succeeded by his son, Alexander
-II., who immediately proclaimed his intention of following out loyally
-the policy which his father had inherited with his crown. On the 10th of
-March, Nesselrode intimated to the Russian Agents abroad that the young
-Czar would enter the Vienna Conference “in a sincere spirit of concord.”
-And as it was only possible to secure the neutrality of Austria by
-keeping alive negotiations for peace, Russia had a powerful motive for
-continuing them. But at the meetings<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_634" id="page_634">{634}</a></span> of the Conference Prince
-Gortschakoff refused to accept the plan for giving effect to the Third
-Point. It proposed to destroy Russian preponderance in the Black Sea, by
-binding her and Turkey never to have there more than “four ships, four
-frigates, with a proportionate number of light vessels and of unarmoured
-vessels exclusively adapted to the transport of troops.” Russia, as an
-alternative, suggested that ships of war of all nations might have free
-access through the Dardanelles or Bosphorus to the Black Sea, or, if it
-were preferred, that the Sultan might admit the vessels of the Western
-Powers, or of Russia, in such numbers as he pleased. This would, of
-course, enable the Western Powers to check Russian preponderance. But it
-would also involve the right of Russia to send ships to the
-Mediterranean. To that the Western Powers would not consent, and so the
-Conference was at an end. At this stage Count Buol suggested a
-compromise. Why not, he asked, solve the difficulty by applying the
-principle of counterpoise? One way of doing that obviously would be to
-establish an actual equilibrium between the Black Sea fleets of Turkey
-and Russia&mdash;the Sultan having the right to open the straits to the ships
-of his allies if threatened with attack. M. de Drouyn Lhuys and Lord
-John Russell did not consider that their instructions permitted them to
-accept this compromise. But they both privately expressed their personal
-approval of it, and promised to urge the Governments of France and
-England to assent to it. The French Emperor and the British Cabinet
-rejected it. M. Drouyn de Lhuys accordingly resigned office&mdash;whereas
-Lord John Russell remained in the Cabinet. But he had the amazing
-indiscretion after this to advocate the prosecution of the war in an
-extravagant speech,<a name="FNanchor_209_209" id="FNanchor_209_209"></a><a href="#Footnote_209_209" class="fnanchor">[209]</a> whereupon the Austrian Government revealed the
-fact that at Vienna he had said peace might be honourably made on the
-basis of Count Buol’s compromise. No English Minister in our time has
-ever placed himself in a more humiliating position. Not a word could be
-said in his defence. All he himself could say was that he was afraid he
-might embarrass his colleagues if he retired, or if he let it be known
-that he thought they were carrying on war, when peace might honourably
-be concluded. The outcry against his dishonesty was so loud, that he
-resigned as soon as Sir E. B. Lytton gave notice of a motion in the
-House of Commons condemning his conduct.</p>
-
-<p>The failure of the Conference gave rise to heated debates in Parliament,
-in which the Government was attacked by a curious combination of
-Parties. The House of Lords with singular want of patriotism and dignity
-encouraged Lyndhurst to vilipend Prussia and sneer at Austria, at the
-very moment when it was vital to our diplomatic success to conciliate
-these Powers. His violent speeches prove that, despite his eloquence, he
-lacked the one quality necessary to justify his interference in any
-debate on Foreign Affairs. He was utterly incapable of appreciating the
-difference between the interests of England and France, and those of
-Austria in the negotiations&mdash;the difference between<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_635" id="page_635">{635}</a></span> the interests and
-the prepossessions of actual and contingent belligerents. But all this
-criticism of the Conference, even from the point of view taken by
-rhetorical mischief-makers like Lyndhurst, failed to lay bare the one
-blunder in strategy which the Plenipotentiaries had perpetrated.<a name="FNanchor_210_210" id="FNanchor_210_210"></a><a href="#Footnote_210_210" class="fnanchor">[210]</a>
-The House of Commons, it must be allowed, came out of the debates more
-creditably than had been expected. The Tories, led by Mr. Disraeli,
-seemed to keep their heads cool, and scrupulously refrained from
-clamouring for war because Russia had rejected the Third Point. They
-refused to support the Radicals, who were for moving an Address to the
-Crown virtually binding the Government to accept the Austrian proposals.
-But they condemned the Ministers for the ambiguity of their policy in
-reference to these proposals, and brought forward a motion assuring the
-Crown that the House would support the Executive to the utmost in
-prosecuting war till peace was obtained. The combative Whigs would have
-committed Parliament to a declaration that the reduction of the naval
-power of Russia in the Black Sea, was the essential condition of peace.
-In the end, a motion, which was the Tory proposal with the implied
-censure on the Ministry cut out, was carried. But all through the
-debate, Peelites, Tories, and Radicals condemned the suggestion to limit
-the naval power of Russia by Treaty. And they were right, for, as Mr.
-Gladstone is reported to have said in conversation, it was a proposal
-“to slap Russia on the face without tying her hands.” It was, in fact,
-an attempt to inflict on Russia a perpetual indignity without reducing
-her real power, which was not naval but military. Mr. Disraeli and Lord
-Robert Cecil&mdash;afterwards Lord Salisbury&mdash;considered it an impolitic
-scheme for the humiliation of Russia, and the ablest debaters pointed
-out that it was one which Russia would ever be tempted to violate,
-whilst the Powers had now no check on her save that of chronic war. Yet
-it was for the sake of forcing this indignity on Russia, who had now
-yielded every demand we made when we invaded the Crimea, that the war
-was prolonged! From this moment, it is not too much to say, that the war
-was no longer a hateful but an unavoidable incident of State policy. It
-was the consummation of a hideous crime against humanity, for which Lord
-Palmerston and his colleagues were directly responsible.<a name="FNanchor_211_211" id="FNanchor_211_211"></a><a href="#Footnote_211_211" class="fnanchor">[211]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_636" id="page_636">{636}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_118" id="ill_118"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_636.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_636.jpg" width="320" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>GRAND RECEPTION ROOM, WINDSOR CASTLE</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>When Lord John Russell excused himself for first recommending the
-Austrian compromise, and then backing out of his opinion and advocating
-war, he said mysteriously that something had come to his knowledge which
-altered his views. It was suggested at the time by Mr. Disraeli that
-Lord John was overawed by the objections of the Emperor of the French to
-the compromise. Even had that been the case, it would not have justified
-him in remaining in the Cabinet, seeing that the Emperor’s Minister, who
-was in<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_637" id="page_637">{637}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_119" id="ill_119"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_637.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_637.jpg" width="242" height="293" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE HUNDRED STEPS, WINDSOR CASTLE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">like case, had resigned rather than hold himself responsible for an
-indefensible war. It is, however, possible to account for Lord John’s
-conduct more easily by attributing it to sycophancy than to treachery,
-for it is a regrettable fact that when the Austrian project was laid
-before the Queen by Lord Clarendon, she used all her influence to quash
-it. She wrote to him a curt note saying:&mdash;“How Lord John Russell and M.
-Drouyn can recommend such proposals to our acceptance is beyond her (the
-Queen’s) comprehension.” Then she encloses a brief memorandum from
-Prince Albert, in which he says:&mdash;“To limit the Russian naval power to
-that existing in 1853 would therefore be simply to perpetuate and
-legalise the preponderance of Russia in the Black Sea, a proposal which
-can neither be made nor accepted as a development of the Third
-Point.”<a name="FNanchor_212_212" id="FNanchor_212_212"></a><a href="#Footnote_212_212" class="fnanchor">[212]</a> It is unfortunate that such clear thinkers as the Queen and
-her husband did not observe that what Austria fixed was merely the
-maximum and not the minimum limit, that by mutual agreement Russia and
-Turkey might cut down their ships from six to one if they chose, and
-that even the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_638" id="page_638">{638}</a></span> maximum could be always counterbalanced by Turkey. Yet
-Prince Albert would insist that a proposal which automatically
-established an equilibrium was one to perpetuate a preponderance! It is
-only fair to the memory of the late Emperor of the French to say that,
-according to Sir Theodore Martin’s admissions, the first strong and
-contemptuous rejection of the Austrian compromise came from the Queen;
-that when Napoleon III. first considered the matter he hesitated before
-endorsing the views which Palmerston and his colleagues meekly accepted
-from the Court. What renders the policy of the Court&mdash;or rather of Baron
-Stockmar, who inspired it&mdash;at this stage unintelligible is, that a month
-afterwards it actually pressed upon the Cabinet a proposal for
-organising a great League of the Powers to defend Turkey diplomatically
-against Russia. This proposal was made on the ground that it was
-impossible to inflict on Russia such losses as would force her to submit
-to humiliating terms.<a name="FNanchor_213_213" id="FNanchor_213_213"></a><a href="#Footnote_213_213" class="fnanchor">[213]</a></p>
-
-<p>Nor was this the only instance which can be adduced of mistaken
-interference on the part of the Court. When Palmerston succeeded in
-forming his Government, he pledged himself to follow out the foreign
-policy of Lord Aberdeen. Aberdeen’s friends had publicly declared that
-the terms which we sought to impose on Russia were needlessly
-humiliating, and that in the Austrian compromise there was an ample
-basis for a fair settlement, and a good reason for continuing
-negotiations at Vienna. It was a matter of notoriety that Aberdeen
-himself shared these views, and there were many who complained
-querulously that if they had not destroyed his Ministry, the Vienna
-Conference would not have been abortive. In these circumstances Prince
-Albert, knowing Aberdeen’s devotion to the Queen, wrote to him
-complaining especially about Mr. Gladstone’s speech on Mr. Disraeli’s
-motion of the 24th of May. For the rejection of that motion had not
-ended the controversy. Sir F. Baring’s amendment, which was finally
-carried, was coming up for discussion on the 4th of June, and the Court
-evidently did not desire a repetition of speeches containing
-unanswerable arguments against<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_639" id="page_639">{639}</a></span> abandoning negotiations for peace.<a name="FNanchor_214_214" id="FNanchor_214_214"></a><a href="#Footnote_214_214" class="fnanchor">[214]</a>
-Aberdeen, in fact, is summoned in this letter to the Palace to be
-lectured. He is warned that the conduct of his party has displeased the
-Queen, and he is warned in a tone only to be justified by the close
-relations of personal friendship, which bound him to the Court, and the
-Court to him.</p>
-
-<p>The Queen and Prince Albert, however, utterly failed to gag the Peelites
-in the debate, or browbeat them into approving of the continuance of a
-bloody and wasteful war, when an honourable peace could be obtained by
-patient diplomacy. To his honour it must be stated that Sir James
-Graham,<a name="FNanchor_215_215" id="FNanchor_215_215"></a><a href="#Footnote_215_215" class="fnanchor">[215]</a> Lord Aberdeen’s representative in the House of Commons,
-delivered a speech which was even much more damaging and convincing than
-Mr. Gladstone’s. Nobody attempted to answer it except Mr. Roebuck. His
-tirade of invective sprang from a delusion that Graham was willing to be
-satisfied with paltry concessions as the result of a great war. As he
-afterwards confessed, he was completely misled by the ferocity with
-which Lord John Russell in this debate condemned as worthless the very
-settlement which he had vainly urged his colleagues to accept as
-satisfactory. In truth, there is some reason to suspect that the
-harassing toil of winter, the prolonged and exhausting anxieties of a
-sad and pitiless war, had temporarily blunted Prince Albert’s keen
-perceptions. Had this not been the case he would hardly have delivered
-at the Trinity House banquet in June, the famous speech in which he said
-that “Constitutional Government is under a heavy trial”&mdash;as if the
-failure of obsolete leaders in the field, or the stupid bigotries and
-moral cowardice of place-hunters in council, proved that Constitutional
-Government was a dubious experiment. At a moment when the Queen’s
-personal interference with the Foreign Policy of her Government, usually
-so wise, prudent, and beneficial, had led to bad results, it was
-maladroit on the part of Prince Albert to gird at Constitutional
-Government. Very little reflection should have served to show the Court
-that it was only under the Muscovite autocracy that blunders in war and
-statecraft, <i>more</i> ghastly even than our own, could possibly be
-perpetrated.</p>
-
-<p>When the Conference at Vienna closed, Austria, as might have been
-foreseen, refused to join England in carrying on the war. On the other
-hand, the King of Sardinia had, on 26th January, entered into a military
-convention with the Allies, and, in return for their guarantee of his
-territory, engaged to send an army of 15,000 men to the Crimea.</p>
-
-<p>The war in 1855 was carried on under more favourable conditions than in
-the previous year. Reinforcements were sent out quickly. The
-commissariat,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_640" id="page_640">{640}</a></span> sanitary, and transport services were put into effective
-working order. On the 17th of February, the Turks under Omar Pasha
-gallantly repelled a Russian attack on Eupatoria&mdash;a feat which revived
-the drooping spirits of the Allies, and restored confidence in the
-fighting power of the Osmanli. The news of this defeat was peculiarly
-humiliating to the Czar, whose contempt for the Turk was unbounded, and
-his bitter vexation at being beaten by a despised enemy, perhaps had
-some effect in undermining the vitality of his iron constitution. The
-bombardment of Sebastopol began again in April&mdash;but, though the allied
-trenches were pushed closer and closer to the fortress, no serious
-impression was made on it. The English troops were eager for action, but
-Canrobert’s weakness and irresolution held Lord Raglan back.<a name="FNanchor_216_216" id="FNanchor_216_216"></a><a href="#Footnote_216_216" class="fnanchor">[216]</a></p>
-
-<p>On the 19th of May Canrobert resigned in favour of Pélissier&mdash;a soldier
-with a name stained by barbarous atrocities in Africa, but still a man
-of energy and determination. In a moment of happy inspiration it was
-determined to intercept the supplies which the enemy was drawing from
-his Circassian provinces; and on the 22nd of May an expedition of 3,800
-English, 7,500 French, and 5,000 Turks, under Sir George Brown and
-General d’Autemarre, left for Cape Takli at the south-west extremity of
-the Straits of Kertch. It arrived there on the 24th. The Russians
-evacuated Kertch on the 25th, destroying before they left vast
-quantities of food and forage. The troops penetrated as far as Yenikale,
-and Captain Lyons, with his little fleet of steamers, advancing up the
-Sea of Azov, destroyed not only many ships but a large amount of stores.
-This expedition was cleverly planned, and it destroyed supplies
-sufficient for an army of 100,000 men for four months. It returned on
-the 12th of June. Writing to Stockmar on the 17th of June Prince Albert
-says, “At the seat of war everything is going on well.... Pélissier is a
-<i>trouvaille</i>, energetic, and determined. Oddly enough, they are in Paris
-(I mean Louis Napoleon is) very much dissatisfied since our successes,
-‘low’ about our prospects, anxious, &amp;c. I am at a loss to know why.” The
-fact is, that the war was more unpopular in France than ever, since the
-rejection of the Austrian compromise at Vienna, and the Emperor’s
-proposal to go out to the Crimea, and command in person alarmed Persigny
-and the Bonapartists as to the safety of the Imperial <i>régime</i>. Failure
-meant ruin, and failure was on the cards.<a name="FNanchor_217_217" id="FNanchor_217_217"></a><a href="#Footnote_217_217" class="fnanchor">[217]</a> Yet, on the 7th of June,
-the Allies had met with a brilliant success. The French stormed the
-Mamelon, and the English the Gravel Pits&mdash;an outwork in front of the
-Redan. But the two formidable works&mdash;the Malakoff and Redan&mdash;were yet to
-be taken, and in an evil moment Lord Raglan was<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_641" id="page_641">{641}</a></span> persuaded by Pélissier
-to sanction a combined attack on these strong-holds. The ablest
-practical soldiers in the British camp declared that the Redan could not
-be taken by direct assault, though it must fall if the Malakoff were
-captured. Raglan was of that opinion himself. But he yielded to his
-French colleague, and the result of the combined attack on both places
-was a painful failure. French and English were alike repulsed, and the
-loss of life which this blunder caused was sickening to contemplate.
-“Cries of ‘Murder!’<span class="lftspc">”</span> writes Mr. Russell, the <i>Times</i> correspondent,
-“from the lips of expiring officers have been echoed through the camp,
-but they have now died away in silence, or in the noise of active
-argument and discussion.”<a name="FNanchor_218_218" id="FNanchor_218_218"></a><a href="#Footnote_218_218" class="fnanchor">[218]</a> Heartbroken by this defeat, Lord Raglan
-took to his bed and died on the 28th of June.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_120" id="ill_120"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_641.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_641.jpg" height="205" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>VIEW IN THE CRIMEA: THE PALACE WORONZOW, ALUPKA.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The shock of Raglan’s death silenced at the time all just criticism on
-his career. The most that can be said for him is said by Lord Malmesbury
-in his “Memoirs of an Ex-Minister.” “I knew him well,” he writes, “and
-cannot recollect a finer character. He was the Duke’s right-hand man
-through the Peninsular war, and was greatly esteemed by him. Handsome
-and high-bred in person, and charming in society, he was one of the most
-popular of its members. He was remarkable for his coolness under fire,
-and St. Arnaud, in his famous despatch after the battle of the Alma,
-says of him: ‘Il avait toujours ce même calme qui ne le quitte jamais.’<span class="lftspc">”</span>
-It is,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_642" id="page_642">{642}</a></span> alas! not given to every man to wield the Arthurian brand
-Excalibur, and whatever he may have been in the Peninsula under
-Wellington, in the Crimea, Raglan was almost as incompetent as St.
-Arnaud, Canrobert, and Menschikoff. His blunders were as follows: (1),
-According to Sir T. Martin, he approved of the invasion of the Crimea in
-utter ignorance of the ground, when the campaign was proposed by the
-French Emperor.<a name="FNanchor_219_219" id="FNanchor_219_219"></a><a href="#Footnote_219_219" class="fnanchor">[219]</a> (2), He consented to invade the Crimea <i>after</i> he
-had discovered that it was a mad project, and when the discretionary
-clause in his instructions from the Duke of Newcastle gave him an
-opportunity of remonstrating with the Cabinet. (3), He invaded the
-Crimea without an organised Transport Corps. (4), His blunders at the
-Alma, Balaclava, and Inkermann have been already noted. (5), Till
-pressure was put on him by Prince Albert, he concealed the miserable
-state of the army from the Government. (6), By neglecting to make a road
-between Balaclava and his camp he brought all the miseries of the winter
-of ’54-’55 on his troops. (7), By attacking the Redan when he knew quite
-well it was impossible to capture it, he doomed his troops to useless
-and avoidable slaughter. No defence has been made for him except on the
-last two counts of the heavy indictment against him. He did not make a
-road from Balaclava to the camp, says Mr. Kinglake, because he had not
-enough men at his disposal. This is an explanation rather than a
-defence. His first duty as a general was to connect his camp with his
-base. If he was unable to do that, he ought to have abandoned his
-position. But is not Mr. Kinglake’s defence just a little absurd, taken
-in connection with the Homeric episodes of the war? Had anybody enough
-men to do anything great or valuable in the Crimea? Campbell had not
-enough men to turn the tide of battle, in our favour at the Alma. But he
-did it. He had not enough men to save our base at Balaclava&mdash;but he
-saved it. Scarlett and Cardigan had not enough men to break through the
-Russian columns in “the Valley of Death”&mdash;but they broke through them.
-The Duke of Cambridge had not enough men to hold his ground at
-Inkermann&mdash;but he and his Guards held it, till it was positively soaked
-and saturated with their blood. Mr. Kinglake’s advocacy, indeed,
-provokes one to say that scarcity of men never kept Lord Raglan back
-from any enterprise, when, as at Balaclava and the Redan, the only
-attainable end was the purposeless butchery of his battalions. The
-feeble attack on the Redan has been justified on the ground that, as
-Pélissier was determined to assault the Malakoff, and was certain to be
-beaten, he was<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_643" id="page_643">{643}</a></span> equally certain to attribute his defeat to the timidity
-of the English, unless they co-operated with him. It is, however, the
-business of an English general to win battles for his country&mdash;not to
-lose them in deference to the childish petulance of a foreign colleague.
-At the same time, it must be admitted that Raglan was greatly
-embarrassed from the first by his French coadjutors, and it is because
-some of his errors sprang from enforced concessions to their views, that
-these have been omitted from the present catalogue of his blunders. The
-truth is, that Lord Raglan was really a diplomatist, and his diplomatic
-ability was essential to the consolidation of our military alliance with
-France in the field. That was the sole justification for his appointment
-as Commander-in-Chief. His personal courage&mdash;rivalling that of
-antiquity, said St. Arnaud&mdash;was the only soldierly quality he possessed.
-“He was a very perfect gentle knight,” too sweetly graceful for the rude
-ravishment of war, or the weary travail of a siege. His generosity of
-heart, his charm of manner, his exquisite tact, his serene temper, his
-chivalrous sense of honour, his high and courtly bearing, rendered him
-worthy of</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“The goodliest fellowship of famous knights,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Whereof this world holds record”&mdash;<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">though not worthy to hold the post to which he was appointed in the
-Crimea. But if he was not a great general, he was a great gentleman; and
-so, when he passed away, the hand of censure fell very lightly on his
-career.</p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXII" id="CHAPTER_XXXII"></a>CHAPTER XXXII.<br /><br />
-<small>ROYALTY AND THE WAR.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>Financing the War&mdash;The Queen’s Opinion of War Loans&mdash;A Dreadful
-Winter&mdash;Distress in the Country&mdash;The “Devil” in Devonshire&mdash;Bread
-Riots&mdash;War Loans and a War Budget&mdash;The Queen and the Wounded
-Soldiers&mdash;Her Condemnation of “the Hulks”&mdash;Presentation of War
-Medals in Hyde Park&mdash;Visit of the Emperor and Empress of the
-French&mdash;A Plot to Capture the Queen&mdash;Councils of War at
-Windsor&mdash;The Grand Chapter of the Order of the Garter&mdash;Imperial
-Compliments&mdash;Napoleon III. in the City&mdash;At the Opera&mdash;The Queen’s
-Birthday Gift to the Emperor&mdash;Scarlet Fever at Osborne&mdash;Prorogation
-of Parliament&mdash;A Court Intrigue with Dom Pedro of Portugal&mdash;The
-Queen Visits Paris&mdash;Her Reception at St. Cloud&mdash;The Ball at the
-Hôtel de Ville&mdash;Staring at the “Koh-i-noor”&mdash;At the Tomb of the
-Great Emperor&mdash;Prince Bismarck’s Introduction to the Queen&mdash;Home
-again&mdash;Lord Clarendon on the Queen’s Visit to Paris&mdash;How the Prince
-of Wales Enjoyed himself&mdash;At Balmoral&mdash;The Bonfire on Craig
-Gowan&mdash;Sebastopol Rejoicings&mdash;“A Witches’ Dance supported by
-Whisky”&mdash;Courtship of the Princess Royal&mdash;Prince Frederick William
-of Prussia&mdash;His Proposal of Marriage&mdash;Attacks of the <i>Times</i>&mdash;Visit
-of Victor Emmanuel&mdash;His Reputation in Paris&mdash;Memorial of the
-Grenadier Guards&mdash;Fresh Charges against Prince Albert&mdash;His
-Vindication of the Crimean Officers.</p></div>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="smcap">Early</span> in 1855 her Majesty became anxious, not to say nervous, as to the
-plans that were to be adopted for financing the war. Her personal
-prepossessions were all in favour of Mr. Gladstone’s policy&mdash;which was
-that of meeting expenditure out of current revenue. But then the cost of
-the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_644" id="page_644">{644}</a></span> campaign was now so enormous that it was impossible to increase
-taxation so as to cover it. The winter had been severe. Though the end
-of December and the first thirteen days of January had been like summer,
-during the night of the 13th, says Sir F. Hastings Doyle, “the wind
-shifted suddenly to the N.N.E., and a savage frost came on which lasted
-at least two months without intermission or abatement.”<a name="FNanchor_220_220" id="FNanchor_220_220"></a><a href="#Footnote_220_220" class="fnanchor">[220]</a> Outdoor
-workers found themselves without employment. Gangs of hungry-eyed
-labouring men began to parade the streets of London, levying black-mail
-on well-to-do householders. Ultimately mobs of roughs attacked and
-plundered the bakers’ and chandlers’ shops in the East End on the 21st
-and 22nd of February, and in Liverpool, where some 15,000 riverside
-labourers were out of work, terrible scenes of riot and outrage were
-enacted. It was a time when the abstraction of capital from the country
-by raising a war loan would be a slight evil, compared with that which
-might follow from the imposition of heavy war taxes on a discontented
-and suffering industrial population. It was therefore decided that the
-cost of the war should be met by a loan.</p>
-
-<p>Sir George Cornewall Lewis brought forward his Budget on the 30th of
-April. He could estimate for a prospective revenue of £63,000,000. This,
-however, still left him with a deficit of £23,000,000, which he raised
-(1), by a Three per Cent. Loan of £16,000,000; (2), by an addition to
-taxation which brought in £4,000,000; (3), by raising £3,000,000 on
-Exchequer Bills. “The additional taxes,” Sir George Lewis wrote to his
-friend Sir E. Head, “were, however, assented to without resistance by
-the House, who feared a larger addition to the Income Tax, and thought
-that if they objected to my proposition, taxes which they disliked still
-more would be substituted.” As for the loan, the Money Market, he says,
-“was in a state favourable for such an operation; for at present there
-is an abundance of money, but a want of profitable investment for the
-purpose of trade.”<a name="FNanchor_221_221" id="FNanchor_221_221"></a><a href="#Footnote_221_221" class="fnanchor">[221]</a> The loan of £2,000,000 to Sardinia was
-sanctioned without much demur, but the loan of £5,000,000 to Turkey was
-violently objected to&mdash;especially by the Tories and Cobdenites. It was
-raised under the joint guarantee of France and England&mdash;an arrangement
-which many people thought might create disputes between the guarantors.
-Lord Palmerston, in fact, only carried the loan through by a vote of 135
-to 132. Lord Aberdeen’s followers opposed the transaction, and their
-opposition was resented by the Queen, who had already concluded and
-ratified the arrangement with the French Emperor for guaranteeing the
-loan.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_645" id="page_645">{645}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_121" id="ill_121"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_645.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_645.jpg" width="336" height="319" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE WOUNDED SOLDIER’S TOAST&mdash;“THE QUEEN!”</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In other respects, however, the relations of the Court to the war were
-less open to criticism. It has already been stated how her Majesty
-toiled with her own hands to aid those who were striving to mitigate the
-sufferings of the army during the Crimean winter. She wrote a letter to
-the Commander-in-Chief on the subject that touched the heart of every
-soldier in camp or hospital. Mr. Augustus Stafford, in the debate on Mr.
-Roebuck’s motion in the House of Commons (26th of January), thrilled his
-audience by telling them how he saw a wounded man, after hearing the
-letter read, propose the Queen’s health in a draught of bark and
-quinine. Mr. Stafford said to him it was a bitter cup for a loyal toast;
-to which the man replied, with a smile, “Yes, and but for these words of
-the Queen I could not have got it down.” Nor was her Majesty less
-assiduous in her attention to the wounded, when their haggard and
-mournful contingents began to return. On the 3rd of March she went down
-to Chatham<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_646" id="page_646">{646}</a></span> with her husband and her two eldest sons to inspect the
-Military Hospital at Fort Pitt and Brompton. The wounded men who could
-crawl from their beds were drawn up on the lawn, each bearing a card
-with a description of his name, services, and wounds. Along this gaunt
-array the Queen passed, sad-eyed and thoughtful, speaking a few kind and
-cheering words to the sufferers whose wounds or services especially
-attracted her notice. Contemporary reports of course stated that the
-Sovereign was well pleased with the manner in which those poor men were
-treated. But two days afterwards she sent a sharp letter to Lord
-Panmure, which showed that she had been using her eyes to good purpose
-during her inspection. He must, she says, have some really serviceable
-military hospitals built for the sick without delay. The poor men at
-Fort Pitt were well treated; but, she complains, “the buildings are
-bad&mdash;the wards more like prisons than hospitals, with the windows so
-high that no one can look out of them&mdash;and the most of the wards are
-small, with hardly space to walk between the beds.” Her criticisms on
-the dining arrangements are trenchant; and then she goes on to argue
-that though Lord Panmure’s plan of building hulks may do very well at
-first, it will not do for any length of time. “A hulk,” she contends,
-“is a very gloomy place, and these poor men require their spirits to be
-cheered, as much as to have their physical sufferings attended to. The
-Queen is particularly anxious on this subject, which is, she may truly
-say, constantly in her thoughts, as, indeed, is everything connected
-with her beloved troops, who have fought so bravely and borne so
-heroically all their sufferings and privations.”<a name="FNanchor_222_222" id="FNanchor_222_222"></a><a href="#Footnote_222_222" class="fnanchor">[222]</a></p>
-
-<p>“I myself,” said Queen Elizabeth to her troops at Tilbury, “will be your
-general and your judge, and the rewarder of every one of your virtues in
-the field.” If Queen Victoria has never either in statecraft or power
-attained the position held by that leonine woman, she did not fail to
-emulate her in her devotion to the gallant men who bled and died for
-England in the desolate Chersonese. The Queen’s visit to the hospital at
-Chatham, and her reception there by the soldiers, prompted her to take
-the unusual course of suggesting to Lord Clarendon, on the 22nd of
-March, that she should with her own hands present war medals to the
-officers and men who were at home disabled or on leave. On the 18th of
-May a Royal daïs was accordingly put up in the centre of the Horse
-Guards parade ground, with barriers enclosing from the crowd of
-spectators, a space for the heroes of the ceremony. At eleven o’clock
-the Queen, Prince Albert, and their family appeared, and at a signal the
-soldiers who were to be decorated stood before her. They passed along in
-single file, each handing a card recording his name and services to an
-officer, who delivered it to the Queen. She then presented each hero
-with his medal, saying a kindly word to every man as he went by. It was
-a strange and impressive spectacle. Gaunt, pallid forms, maimed and</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_122" id="ill_122"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_646a.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_646a.jpg" width="347" height="512" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE QUEEN DISTRIBUTING THE CRIMEAN MEDAL AT THE
-HORSEGUARDS PARADE GROUND.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_647" id="page_647">{647}</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="nind">mutilated, hobbled along on crutches&mdash;or staggered forward, aided by
-walking-sticks&mdash;and for officers and men alike the Queen had words of
-sympathy that drew tears from many an eye. From the highest Prince of
-the blood&mdash;the Duke of Cambridge was the first to step forward for his
-medal&mdash;to the humblest private, writes the Queen to King Leopold, “all
-received the same distinction for the bravest conduct in the severest
-actions, and the rough hands of the brave and honest private soldier
-came for the first time in contact with that of their Sovereign and
-their Queen. Noble fellows! I feel as if they were my own children; my
-heart beats for them as for my nearest and dearest.”<a name="FNanchor_223_223" id="FNanchor_223_223"></a><a href="#Footnote_223_223" class="fnanchor">[223]</a> Captain
-Currie, of the 14th, was so feeble that he almost failed to reach the
-daïs on his crutches, and his condition profoundly touched the heart of
-the Queen. Captain Sayer, of the 23rd Fusiliers, could not be lifted out
-of his chair, so the Queen bent over him gracefully and pinned his medal
-to his breast, with a few words of comfort and hope. Colonel Sir T.
-Troubridge, of the 7th Fusiliers, who, when he had both his feet shot
-away at Inkermann, refused to leave his command till the battle was won,
-was also unable to leave his chair. When the Queen gave him his medal
-she whispered in his ear that she would reward his courage by making him
-one of her own aides-de-camp, whereupon he answered, “I am now amply
-repaid for everything.” It was a scene which moved the hearts of all who
-took part in it, with the exception, perhaps, of the brusque and
-churlish Secretary of State for War. Lord Malmesbury says, “After the
-ceremony, Lady Seymour, whom I met, told me that Mrs. Norton, talking
-about it to Lord Panmure, asked, ‘Was the Queen touched?’ ‘Bless my
-soul, no!’ was the reply. ‘She had a brass railing in front of her, and
-no one could touch her.’ Mrs. Norton then said, ‘I mean was she moved?’
-‘Moved!’ answered Lord Panmure, ‘she had no occasion to move.’ Mrs.
-Norton then gave it up in despair.”<a name="FNanchor_224_224" id="FNanchor_224_224"></a><a href="#Footnote_224_224" class="fnanchor">[224]</a></p>
-
-<p>When the Emperor of the French first hinted at his intention of going to
-the Crimea, the idea frightened everybody. His own <i>entourage</i>, knowing
-his ignorance of the art of war, and convinced that defeat meant ruin
-for him and for them, were in despair. The Queen, too, was alarmed,
-because she foresaw infinite danger from the scheme. The Emperor would
-naturally desire to take supreme command of both armies, whereas the
-English people would not permit British troops to serve under a foreign
-sovereign, whose antecedents were doubtful, and whose friendship was
-uncertain. The French and English Governments therefore privately
-suggested to the Queen that she should now invite the Emperor and
-Empress to pay their promised visit to England, hoping that the Queen’s
-influence might be used for the purpose of preventing him from
-proceeding to the seat of war.<a name="FNanchor_225_225" id="FNanchor_225_225"></a><a href="#Footnote_225_225" class="fnanchor">[225]</a> The invitation was<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_648" id="page_648">{648}</a></span> accepted, and
-the rooms in Windsor which had been occupied by the Czar Nicholas and
-King Louis Philippe were set apart for the Imperial guests.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_123" id="ill_123"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_648.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_648.jpg" width="332" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>WINDSOR CASTLE FROM THE BROCAS.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>At noon on the 16th of April, after some mishaps in the dense fog which
-shrouded the Channel, the Imperial yacht reached the Admiralty Pier at
-Dover, where Prince Albert was waiting to receive his guests. The Prince
-went on board, shook hands with the Emperor, and then going down to the
-cabin reappeared with the Empress on his arm. They landed amidst
-complimentary salvoes of artillery from the castle, the salutes of the
-military, and the ringing cheers of the crowd. The Royal party then
-proceeded to London, and when they arrived at the Bricklayers’ Arms
-Station, they found dense masses of people assembled to welcome them.
-Their route lay along the line of streets leading to the Great Western
-station, where they took train for Windsor. Lord Malmesbury writes in
-his Diary, “Lady Ossulton, Lady Manners, my wife and I went to Lord
-Carrington’s house in Whitehall to see the Emperor of the French pass.
-The weather was beautiful and bright, the streets were choked with
-people. The <i>cortège</i> made its appearance at 6.15 p.m.; there were but
-six open carriages, four of them escorted by a squadron of Life Guards,
-and a good many outriders in scarlet liveries. They passed very slowly
-at a walk<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_649" id="page_649">{649}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_124" id="ill_124"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_649.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_649.jpg" width="358" height="512" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE QUEEN INVESTING THE EMPEROR OF THE FRENCH WITH THE
-ORDER OF THE GARTER.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_650" id="page_650">{650}</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="nind">and were enthusiastically cheered the whole way from the South Eastern
-to the Great Western terminus.... On going up St. James’s Street, the
-Emperor was seen to point out to the Empress the house where he formerly
-lived in King Street. This was at once understood by the crowd, who
-cheered louder than ever. On passing the Horse Guards the Emperor stood
-up in his carriage and saluted the colours, and was of course immensely
-cheered.”<a name="FNanchor_226_226" id="FNanchor_226_226"></a><a href="#Footnote_226_226" class="fnanchor">[226]</a> At Windsor the excitement was intense, and the Queen was
-on tiptoe of expectation. Referring to the arrival of the visitors, she
-writes, “I cannot say what indescribable emotions filled me&mdash;how much
-all seemed like a wonderful dream. These great meetings of sovereigns,
-surrounded by very exciting accompaniments, are always very
-agitating.”<a name="FNanchor_227_227" id="FNanchor_227_227"></a><a href="#Footnote_227_227" class="fnanchor">[227]</a> Her Majesty advanced and the Emperor kissed her hand.
-She saluted him once on each cheek, and then, as she says, “embraced the
-very gentle, very graceful, and evidently very nervous Empress.” The
-Duke of Cambridge and the Prince of Leiningen and the Royal children
-were presented&mdash;“Vicky (now Princess Imperial of Germany) with very
-alarmed eyes making very low curtesies.” In the Throne Room other
-presentations followed. At dinner, however, the Emperor put the Queen
-quite at her ease. He assumed the soft, low voice and the melancholy
-manner of the hero of some romance of mystery. They talked about the
-war&mdash;the Queen gently dissuading him from going to the Crimea, he
-mournfully expressing his apprehension of disasters unless he went out,
-and complaining of the blunders of the generals. Next morning (the 17th)
-the subject was renewed during a long walk after breakfast. This time
-the Empress was eager in pressing the Emperor to proceed to Sebastopol,
-where, she said with truth, he was perhaps safer than in Paris. In the
-afternoon the Royal Family and their Imperial guests reviewed the
-Household troops, surrounded by gay crowds, full of effusive enthusiasm
-for our Allies. At dinner they discussed the manifold iniquities of
-Austria, and mourned over her decadence, because she would not fight to
-vindicate a plan for reducing the Russian navy in the Black Sea to six
-ships instead of eight. At night there was a ball in the Waterloo
-Room&mdash;an odd place in which to find the granddaughter of George III.
-dancing with the nephew of Napoleon I. The sombre memories of the hall,
-however, did not prevent the Queen’s guest from dancing, as she herself
-records, “with great dignity and spirit.” Next morning (the 18th) at
-breakfast the Emperor received a telegram announcing the death of M.
-Ducos, the Minister of Marine,<a name="FNanchor_228_228" id="FNanchor_228_228"></a><a href="#Footnote_228_228" class="fnanchor">[228]</a> and at eleven o’clock a grand
-Council of War was held in the Emperor’s rooms, at which those present
-were Prince Albert,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_651" id="page_651">{651}</a></span> Lords Palmerston, Panmure, Hardinge, and Cowley,
-Sir Charles Wood, Sir John Burgoyne, Count Walewski, and Marshal
-Vaillant. “Something should be done somewhere, and by somebody in the
-Crimea,” seems to have been the resolution to which the council came.
-Though unanimous in urging the Emperor not to go there, it failed to
-convince him that he ought to stay at home. In the afternoon Prince
-Albert, when out walking with the Emperor, submitted a plan of his own
-for reorganising the Allied Forces, which the Emperor approved. It was
-sent on to Palmerston, Panmure, Hardinge, and Burgoyne, and they
-resolved to draw up a memorandum on the subject for the next Conference.</p>
-
-<p>The Council of War of the 18th sat on from 11 till 2 p.m., and at 4 p.m.
-a Grand Chapter of the Order of the Garter was held in the Throne
-Room&mdash;the Emperor being invested with the insignia of the Order&mdash;in all
-the pomp and circumstance of Royal State. The Queen sat at the head of
-the table with a vacant chair on her right hand; Garter King-at-Arms
-summoned each Knight in the order of his creation, beginning with the
-Marquis of Exeter and ending with Lord Aberdeen. The Prelate of the
-Order read the new statute dispensing with existing statutes in favour
-of the Emperor of the French, who was then introduced by Prince Albert
-and the Duke of Cambridge. The Queen and the assembled Knights stood up
-to receive the Emperor, who passed on and sat in the chair on the
-Queen’s right hand. Her Majesty having proclaimed the Emperor’s
-election, the King-at-Arms presented the Garter to the Queen, who,
-assisted by her husband, buckled it on the Emperor’s left leg, after
-which she placed the riband over his Majesty’s left shoulder, the
-Chancellor of the Order pronouncing the admonition. The accolade was
-then presented to the new Knight, and the ceremony was over. “It is one
-bond the more,” said the Emperor as he walked with the Queen to his
-apartments&mdash;“I have given my oath of fidelity to your Majesty and to
-your country.” But all the world knows, neither bond nor oath was strong
-enough to prevent him from subsequently intriguing with Russia against
-England, when the Congress of Paris met to settle the questions raised
-by the sudden termination of the Crimean War. Yet, the Imperial
-flatteries served the purpose of the moment, for the Queen wrote, “These
-words are very valuable from a man like him, who is not profuse in
-phrases, and who is very steady of purpose.”<a name="FNanchor_229_229" id="FNanchor_229_229"></a><a href="#Footnote_229_229" class="fnanchor">[229]</a> After dinner her
-Majesty seems to have been chiefly amused by Marshal Vaillant’s
-confidential conversation with her, in which he manifested great terror
-lest the Emperor would take command of the Army in the Crimea. In the
-evening there was an orchestral concert. “The Queen, Emperor, and
-Empress,” writes Lord Malmesbury, “with the Royal Family, their suites,
-and those invited to the banquet, entered soon after ten, and seated
-themselves without speaking to any one. As soon as music was over the
-company passed before the Queen and Emperor.... The Queen had arranged
-everything herself, made out the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_652" id="page_652">{652}</a></span> lists of invitations for both parties
-at Windsor, and the concert for to-morrow at Buckingham Palace. Very
-few, except Cabinet Ministers, are asked twice. Even Lady Breadalbane,
-who is one of the Court, was invited only for the evening party last
-night, and had to sleep at a pastrycook’s, there being no room at the
-Castle.”<a name="FNanchor_230_230" id="FNanchor_230_230"></a><a href="#Footnote_230_230" class="fnanchor">[230]</a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_125" id="ill_125"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_652.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_652.jpg" width="320" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE WATERLOO ROOM, WINDSOR CASTLE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Next day (the 19th) the Emperor and Empress had to visit the City, and
-hosts and guests seemed alike sad and nervous when the Royal party set
-forth. There was just a chance that some sufferer from the crime of
-December, 1851, might wreak his vengeance on the perpetrator of it. The
-Lord Mayor and Corporation, however, gave their guests a splendid
-reception. London decked itself forth with loyal bunting. Crowds cheered
-the Emperor and Empress on their way, and the town rang with “<i>Partant
-pour la Syrie</i>,” which dismal air Cockneydom in those days preferred to
-the “Marseillaise,” as the symbol of the French alliance, and, perhaps,
-also as being less trying to the nerves of its guest.<a name="FNanchor_231_231" id="FNanchor_231_231"></a><a href="#Footnote_231_231" class="fnanchor">[231]</a> The
-Corporation gave their Imperial visitor a sumptuous banquet. With
-characteristic delicacy of taste they served him with sherry, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_653" id="page_653">{653}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_126" id="ill_126"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_653.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_653.jpg" width="320" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE ROYAL AND IMPERIAL VISIT TO THE CRYSTAL PALACE: THE
-PROCESSION DOWN THE NAVE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">they produced proudly, because it was from the famous butt that had been
-bought for £600 by Napoleon I. in his palmy days. In the evening the
-Imperial visitors went with the Queen to the opera, where <i>Fidelio</i> was
-played. “We literally drove through a sea of human beings,” writes the
-Queen, “cheering and pressing near the carriage.”<a name="FNanchor_232_232" id="FNanchor_232_232"></a><a href="#Footnote_232_232" class="fnanchor">[232]</a> When the Royal
-party appeared after the first act was over, the audience in Her
-Majesty’s Theatre rose and hailed them with deafening cheers, the Queen
-leading the Emperor and Prince Albert the Empress forward, so as to
-emphasise the fact that they were especially the objects of this
-demonstrative greeting.<a name="FNanchor_233_233" id="FNanchor_233_233"></a><a href="#Footnote_233_233" class="fnanchor">[233]</a> Next day, the 20th of April, was the
-Emperor’s birthday. When the Queen congratulated him in the morning it
-seems he looked confused, because for the moment he had forgotten all
-about the event. He, however, kissed her hand gratefully when she
-presented him with her gift&mdash;a little<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_654" id="page_654">{654}</a></span> pencil-case&mdash;and was much touched
-with the other present he received&mdash;“two violets, the flower of the
-Bonapartes&mdash;from Prince Arthur.”<a name="FNanchor_234_234" id="FNanchor_234_234"></a><a href="#Footnote_234_234" class="fnanchor">[234]</a> Amidst great crowds cheering most
-enthusiastically the Royal party drove to the Crystal Palace. They went
-through the building in perfect privacy, and then walked on to the
-balcony to see the fountains play. But when they returned to luncheon
-they found that quite a crowd of sightseers had been admitted, and were
-lining the avenue of the nave. It was a trying moment. The rows of
-spectators through which the Royal party had to walk were almost
-touching them, and Emperor and Empress both dreaded assassination. The
-Queen, nervous as she was, courageously took the Emperor’s arm, feeling
-sure her presence would protect him; and so the day passed without any
-unpleasantness. In the evening there was another meeting of the Grand
-Council of War, the Queen being present. Again the Council failed to
-decide on a plan of operations. But it was admitted that they could come
-to an agreement as to the stake to be played for in the game of war, and
-this agreement, under seven heads, was drawn up by Prince Albert, and
-signed by Marshal Vaillant and Lord Panmure.<a name="FNanchor_235_235" id="FNanchor_235_235"></a><a href="#Footnote_235_235" class="fnanchor">[235]</a> Next day (the 21st)
-the guests left amidst tender farewells on both sides. At Lady
-Malmesbury’s dinner-party that day, Lord Adolphus Fitzclarence told the
-company that the leave-taking was very affecting. “Everybody cried&mdash;even
-the <i>suite</i>. The Queen’s children began, as the Empress had been very
-kind to them, and they were sorry to lose them, and this set off the
-Maids of Honour.”<a name="FNanchor_236_236" id="FNanchor_236_236"></a><a href="#Footnote_236_236" class="fnanchor">[236]</a> The Emperor’s last words to the Queen were, “I
-believe that having spent my birthday with your Majesty will bring me
-good luck, that and the little pencil-case you gave me.”<a name="FNanchor_237_237" id="FNanchor_237_237"></a><a href="#Footnote_237_237" class="fnanchor">[237]</a> The Queen
-wrote in her Diary, “I am glad to have known this extraordinary man,
-whom it is certainly impossible not to like when you live with him, and
-not even to a considerable extent to admire.... I believe him to be
-capable of kindness, affection, friendship, and gratitude.” Prince
-Albert’s admiration, on the other hand, was not quite so unqualified,
-and the Queen notes that he preferred the Empress to the Emperor. When
-the Emperor returned to Paris he found that his reception in England had
-done much to increase his <i>prestige</i>. But he also discovered that he
-must abandon his intention of going to the Crimea. On the 25th of April
-he communicated this welcome news to the Queen in a letter abounding
-with engaging expressions of gratitude, for her kindness and hospitality
-to him and his Imperial consort.</p>
-
-<p>On the 28th of June Prince Albert writes to Stockmar saying, “Uncle
-Leopold comes on Tuesday with Philippe and Carlo, and by the end of the
-week we purpose to get away from the thoroughly used-up air of London.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_655" id="page_655">{655}</a></span>
-The political folly and the levity of parties and the press, amidst the
-terrible mass of business, makes our head reel.”<a name="FNanchor_238_238" id="FNanchor_238_238"></a><a href="#Footnote_238_238" class="fnanchor">[238]</a> When these
-visitors reached Osborne they found the Queen depressed and sorrowful.
-Scarlet fever had attacked the Princes Arthur and Leopold and the
-Princess Louise, and her Majesty was naturally afraid lest her young
-Belgian relatives might be smitten also. Fortunately this peril was
-avoided, and the Queen, encouraged by the approaching prorogation of
-Parliament, gradually regained her cheerfulness. She had suffered from
-intense anxiety during the Session, and it was with a deep sense of
-relief that she found herself able to prorogue both Houses by Commission
-on the 14th of August. The Speech from the Throne dwelt on the
-advantages derived from cementing the French alliance. The Legislature
-was also congratulated on having passed several useful measures&mdash;amongst
-which those establishing local self-government in the metropolis,
-sanctioning the formation of Limited Liability Companies, and abolishing
-the stamp duty on newspapers, may be mentioned.</p>
-
-<p>The allusion to the French alliance was made with skill and tact. “You
-will come to Paris this summer,” said the Emperor to the Queen when he
-was bidding her farewell at Windsor. “Yes,” she replied, “if my public
-duties do not prevent me.” These duties it was now obvious would in no
-way prevent her, and it was therefore determined that the Queen and her
-husband should spend eight days with the Emperor and Empress. The visit
-was to begin on the 18th of August, and before that day came round the
-British fleet in the Baltic and the allied armies in the Crimea had won
-some slight successes, which rendered the war a little less unpopular
-than it had been in France. Still, despite the victory at Tchernaya, it
-was unpopular. France, according to Frenchmen, was spending blood and
-treasure for English interests. The alliance between the two countries
-was giving England the time and experience needed to improve her
-defective military system&mdash;leaving her in relation to France stronger
-than ever. As for the political parties&mdash;Legitimists, Orleanists, and
-Democrats&mdash;they looked on the Queen’s visit with hostility, because it
-was meant to strengthen the hands of a usurper, whom they all hated. The
-visit therefore was not made under auspicious circumstances. Just before
-the Queen started on this journey the King of Portugal arrived at
-Osborne, and on the 4th of August the Prince tells Stockmar how they had
-to lodge him on their yacht, to keep him out of danger from scarlet
-fever&mdash;the two eldest children in the Royal Family having alone escaped
-the malady. Many visits were interchanged, however, between the King and
-the Queen and Prince Albert. The Queen, indeed, at the request of her
-Ministers, had agreed to persuade King Pedro to join us in the war, a
-proposal which he, however, very sensibly rejected.<a name="FNanchor_239_239" id="FNanchor_239_239"></a><a href="#Footnote_239_239" class="fnanchor">[239]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_656" id="page_656">{656}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was in the early dawn of Saturday, the 18th of August, that the Queen
-and Prince Albert, accompanied by the Prince of Wales and the Princess
-Royal, embarked at Osborne, and, escorted by a steam squadron, proceeded
-to Boulogne, where they arrived at one o’clock in the afternoon. Salutes
-of cannon from the heights, volleys of musketry from the troops, and
-enthusiastic cheers from the people greeted the visitors. When the Royal
-yacht came to the pier the Emperor hastened on board, saluted the Queen,
-kissing her hand and both cheeks, and then shook hands with Prince
-Albert, the Prince of Wales, and the Princess Royal. The Queen and her
-family drove to the station, the Emperor and Marshal Magnan riding on
-each side of her carriage. They took train to Paris, where they were
-cordially received. From the terminus of the Strasbourg Railway to the
-Palace of St. Cloud the houses were all in festal array, and 200,000
-National Guards formed a double line for five miles along the route.
-This brilliant display was somewhat lost on the Queen, for her arrival
-was delayed till seven in the evening. She, however, had the pleasure of
-seeing Paris under the flare of illumination, and when she approached
-the Arc de Triomphe her escort carried blazing torches, which gave a
-strange picturesque effect to the scene. She was welcomed to the Palace
-of St. Cloud, which had been set apart for her, by the Empress and the
-ladies and high officers of the household; and Prince Albert describes
-their reception by the people as “splendid” and “enthusiastic.” The
-Queen says in her Diary, “I felt bewildered but enchanted&mdash;everything is
-so beautiful.” Sunday, the 19th, was devoted to a quiet morning drive
-with the Emperor, who was in high spirits over the Crimean news, and to
-church-going&mdash;service being held in one of the rooms of the palace by
-the chaplain to the British Embassy. Then there was a charming drive in
-the afternoon to Neuilly, and later on a dinner-party, at which
-Canrobert appeared, almost fresh from the Crimean trenches. He sat next
-the Queen, and was surprised to find that she was nearly as well
-acquainted with the details of the war as he was himself. On Monday, the
-20th, the Emperor escorted his guests to breakfast&mdash;“the coffee quite
-excellent, and all the cookery very plain and very good,” writes the
-Queen, and served “on a small round table as we have at home.” A visit
-to the Exhibition of Fine Arts, luncheon at the Elysée, a long drive
-through the chief streets of Paris, and a theatrical performance in the
-evening (at the Palace) of the <i>Demoiselles de St. Cyr</i>, formed the
-programme. Tuesday, the 21st, was dedicated to a visit to the Palace of
-Versailles and the Trianon, associated with mournful memories of Marie
-Antoinette and the ladies of her court, who used to retire at times to
-this retreat to play at Arcadian simplicity. In the evening, after
-dinner, the Queen and her hosts went to the Opera, where her Majesty’s
-reception was most cordial and gratifying. The notabilities of Parisian
-society were there, and they were all charmed with the easy, cheerful,
-high-spirited bearing of the Queen. On Wednesday, the 22nd, she visited
-the Exhibition of Industry, remarking that the English exhibits of china
-were the most striking. Then she drove to<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_657" id="page_657">{657}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_127" id="ill_127"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_657.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_657.jpg" height="254" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE QUEEN AT THE FÊTE IN THE FOREST OF ST. GERMAIN.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">the Tuileries, and accepted an invitation from the Préfet and the
-Municipality of Paris to a ball at the Hôtel de Ville. The Queen, Prince
-Albert, the Prince of Wales, and Princess Royal next drove through Paris
-<i>incognito</i>, and in the evening were entertained at a great dinner, at
-which eighty guests were present. At this dinner the Queen and the
-Emperor talked long and earnestly over the Anglo-French alliance&mdash;he
-telling her that Drouyn de Lhuys had suggestively reminded him how Louis
-Philippe became unpopular because of his alliance with England; the
-Queen retorting that it was not Louis Philippe’s friendship with
-England, but his insincerity and treachery, which caused his fall. On
-Thursday, the 24th, the Louvre was visited, and in the evening the Queen
-attended the ball at the Hôtel de Ville&mdash;the opening quadrille being
-danced by her Majesty, the Emperor, Prince Albert, the Princess
-Mathilde, Prince Napoleon, Lady Cowley, Prince Aldebert of Bavaria, and
-Mdle. Haussmann, daughter of the Prefect of the Seine. The scene was
-brilliant beyond conception. It was a triumph of decorative art having,
-as the Queen said, “all the effect of the Arabian Nights.” Picturesque
-Arabs from Algeria at one part of the proceedings came forward and did
-homage to the Emperor and his guests, staring admiringly at the
-Koh-i-noor which the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_658" id="page_658">{658}</a></span> Queen wore in her diadem. The Royal party made the
-tour of the rooms, tarrying for a little in the <i>Salle du Trône</i>, where
-Robespierre was wounded and Louis Philippe proclaimed; and where the
-Emperor gallantly said to the Queen, “This occasion will banish from us
-all sad remembrances.” On Friday, the 24th, the Queen visited a second
-time the Palais d’Industrie, lunched at the École Militaire, and
-witnessed a review of the troops. Their smart uniforms, her Majesty
-writes, “are infinitely better made and cut than those of our soldiers,
-which provokes me much.” After this the Queen drove to the Hôtel des
-Invalides, to visit the tomb of the first Emperor. As she stood before
-the coffin leaning on the Emperor’s arm, by a strange coincidence, while
-the organ of the church was pealing forth the solemn strains of the
-English National Anthem, a dreadful thunder storm broke overhead. At
-dinner the Emperor and Queen that day entertained each other with
-complaints about the incapacity of their generals in the Crimea, and in
-the evening another visit, but not in State, was paid to the Opera. On
-Saturday, the 24th, the Queen attended a hunt in the forest of St.
-Germain, where she was received by the local <i>curé</i> and a bevy of
-village maidens, one of whom broke down in the middle of her
-complimentary address to the visitors, though when the <i>curé</i> prompted
-her, greatly to the Queen’s amusement, she went on glibly to the end. In
-the evening there was a grand State Ball at Versailles, the Empress, as
-she appeared at the head of the grand staircase, says the Queen,
-“looking like a fairy queen or nymph,” and surprising even the Emperor
-into exclaiming, “<i>Comme tu es belle!</i>” (“How lovely you are!”) After a
-splendid display of fireworks there was dancing, and many distinguished
-guests were presented to the Queen, amongst others Count Bismarck, then
-Prussian Minister to Frankfort. But he did not make himself agreeable to
-her Majesty, for when she expressed her admiration for Paris as a
-beautiful city, he replied, “Yes, even more beautiful than St.
-Petersburg”&mdash;a very significant indication of his strong pro-Russian
-sympathies. On Sunday, the 26th, Prince Albert’s birthday was quietly
-celebrated, and the Queen and Emperor had some serious talk over the
-persecution of her friends&mdash;the Orleans Princes and Princesses&mdash;in the
-course of which she very frankly and honestly explained to the Emperor
-the precise nature of her relations to them. Monday, the 27th, was
-devoted to leave-takings and the journey home. At Boulogne there was an
-inspection of troops and the camps of Hensault and Ambleteuse were
-visited, and late at night the Queen steamed away in her yacht from
-Boulogne Harbour. “<i>Adieu, Madame, au revoir</i>,” to which I replied, “<i>Je
-l’espère bien</i>”&mdash;these, according to the Queen, were the parting words
-which passed between her and her Imperial host. By half-past eight next
-morning her Majesty reached Osborne, finding her younger sons waiting on
-the beach to welcome her home.</p>
-
-<p>The Queen was deeply impressed, she says, with the Emperor’s quietness,
-gentleness, and simplicity of manner. She felt encouraged to confide in
-him<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_659" id="page_659">{659}</a></span> without reserve, and was greatly charmed by his kindness and
-attention to her children, and his admiration for Prince Albert. The
-Prince, however, did not quite share the Queen’s enthusiasm for their
-host, though he admitted that the Emperor had great powers of
-fascination when he chose to exert them. Lord Clarendon, who was
-Minister in attendance on her Majesty, told Mr. Greville that during
-this visit “the Queen was delighted with everything, and especially with
-the Emperor himself, who, with perfect knowledge of women, had taken the
-surest way to ingratiate himself with her. This it seems he began when
-he was in England, and followed it up at Paris. After her visit the
-Queen talked it all over with Clarendon, and said ‘it is very odd; but
-the Emperor knows everything I have done, and where I have been ever
-since I was twelve years old; he even recollects how I was dressed, and
-a thousand little details it is extraordinary he should be acquainted
-with.’ She has never before been on such a social footing with anybody,
-and he has approached her with the familiarity of their equal positions,
-and with all the experience and knowledge of womankind he has acquired
-during his long life, passed in the world and in mixing in every sort of
-society. She seemed to have played her part throughout with great
-propriety and success. Old Jérôme<a name="FNanchor_240_240" id="FNanchor_240_240"></a><a href="#Footnote_240_240" class="fnanchor">[240]</a> did not choose to make his
-appearance till just at the last moment, because he insisted on being
-treated as a king, and having the title of ‘Majesté’ given him&mdash;a
-pretension Clarendon would not hear of her yielding to.... Clarendon
-said nothing could exceed the delight of the Queen at her visit to
-Paris, at her reception, at all she saw, and that she was charmed with
-the Emperor. They became so intimate, and she on such friendly terms
-with him, that she talked to him with the utmost frankness, and even
-discussed with him the most delicate of all subjects&mdash;the confiscation
-of the Orleans property, telling him her opinion upon it. He did not
-avoid the subject, and gave her the reasons why he thought himself
-obliged to take that course; that he knew all this wealth was employed
-in fomenting intrigues against his government, which was so new that it
-was necessary to take all precautions to avert such dangers. She replied
-that even if this were so, he might have contented himself with
-sequestrating the property and restoring it when he was satisfied that
-all danger on that score was at an end. I asked Clarendon what he
-thought of the Emperor himself, and he said that he liked him and that
-he was very pleasing, but he was struck with his being so indolent and
-so excessively ignorant. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_660" id="page_660">{660}</a></span> Prince of Wales was put by the Queen under
-Clarendon’s charge, who was desired to tell him what to do in public,
-when to bow to the people, and whom to speak to. He said that the
-Princess Royal was charming, with excellent manners and full of
-intelligence. Both the children were delighted with their <i>séjour</i>, and
-very sorry to come away. When the visit was drawing to a close, the
-Prince said to the Empress that he and his sister were both very
-reluctant to leave Paris, and asked if she could not get leave for them
-to stay there a little longer. The Empress said she was afraid this
-would not be possible, as the Queen and Prince Albert would not be able
-to do without them; to which the boy replied, ‘Not do without us! don’t
-fancy that, for there are six more of us at home, and they don’t want
-<i>us</i>.’<span class="lftspc">”</span><a name="FNanchor_241_241" id="FNanchor_241_241"></a><a href="#Footnote_241_241" class="fnanchor">[241]</a></p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 397px;">
-<p><a name="ill_128" id="ill_128"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_660.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_660.jpg" height="440" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>MAP OF CRATHIE AND BRAEMAR.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Writing to the Dowager Duchess of Coburg from Osborne, on the 30th of
-August, Prince Albert says&mdash;“We purpose making an escape on the 5th
-(September) to our mountain home, Balmoral. We are sorely in want of the
-moral rest, and the bodily exercise.” Balmoral was reached on the 7th,
-and “the new house,” though not finished, was found to be quite
-habitable, and “very comfortable.” The Queen was charmed with its
-appearance, and the home-like welcome she received from her dependants,
-an old shoe being<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_661" id="page_661">{661}</a></span> thrown after her for luck when she entered the Hall.
-And truly it brought luck&mdash;for in two days afterwards Deeside was ruddy
-with the blaze of the bonfire which was lit on Craig Gowan heights to
-celebrate the fall of Sebastopol. The bonfire had been prepared the year
-before, when the false news of the fall of Sebastopol had arrived, and
-the wind had blown it down on Inkermann Day (5th of November). It was
-again built up, and on the evening of the 10th, writes Prince Albert to
-Stockmar, “it illuminated all the peaks round about, and the whole
-scattered population of the valleys understood the sign, and made for
-the mountain, where we performed towards midnight a veritable Witches’
-Dance, supported by whisky.”<a name="FNanchor_242_242" id="FNanchor_242_242"></a><a href="#Footnote_242_242" class="fnanchor">[242]</a></p>
-
-<p>In the same letter the Prince writes, “Prince Fritz William comes here
-to-morrow evening. I have received a very friendly letter from the
-Princess of Prussia.” This, says Sir Theodore Martin, made Stockmar’s
-heart beat fast. He was the recognised matrimonial agent of the House of
-Coburg, and one of his cherished projects was to arrange a marriage
-between the young and handsome heir of the Prince of Prussia and the
-Princess Royal, who, of all the Queen’s children, was in an especial
-degree his favourite. The young Prussian Prince was indeed the only
-possible suitor in Europe whose prospects rendered him worthy to mate
-with a daughter of England. The Queen felt that the day would come when
-he would be Heir-Apparent not to the Crown of Prussia, but to the
-Imperial Throne of the German Empire. His family was one of the
-wealthiest in Europe. His father, afterwards the German Emperor, was a
-very dear and valued friend of the Queen and her husband, and the young
-Prince Fritz himself had all those qualities of mind and heart which
-Prince Albert desired to see in the husband of his eldest child. But the
-affair was one of some delicacy, because the Queen abhorred the idea of
-what she called “a political marriage;” indeed, as she was on somewhat
-unfriendly terms with the King of Prussia, and as Prussia was hated and
-despised by the English people at the time, the alliance was, from a
-political point of view, far from desirable. Her Majesty, moreover, had
-no intention of sanctioning any engagement which might be objectionable
-to her daughter, and the ultimate decision, therefore, lay with the
-Princess herself, who at the time knew nothing of the hopes or fears
-that centred round her. The gossip of Society had connected her name
-with that of Prince Frederick William. But on the Queen’s return from
-France at the end of August Prince Albert told Lord Clarendon there was
-no truth in these rumours.<a name="FNanchor_243_243" id="FNanchor_243_243"></a><a href="#Footnote_243_243" class="fnanchor">[243]</a> On the 20th of September the Prince laid
-his proposal of marriage<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_662" id="page_662">{662}</a></span> before the Queen and her husband, and they
-accepted it so far as they were concerned, but asked him not to speak to
-the Princess on the subject till after her confirmation. The Princess
-was only sixteen years of age at the time, and the Queen was of opinion
-that there should be no thought of marriage till the following spring,
-when her daughter would have passed her seventeenth birthday. On the
-23rd Prince Albert writes to Stockmar, telling him that “Victoria is
-greatly excited. Still, all goes smoothly and prudently,” and that the
-young Prince is “really in love” with the little lady, “who does her
-best to please him.” The Crown Prince and Princess of Prussia, he says,
-“are in raptures at the turn the affair has taken.” But when a handsome
-young Prince is “really in love” with a charming young Princess who
-“does her best to please him,” and they are both living in the free,
-unrestrained intercourse of English family life in a romantic Highland
-retreat, it is hardly practicable to prevent them from coming to an
-understanding. The Prussian Prince seems to have appealed successfully
-to the Queen’s good nature, and he soon obtained leave to make his
-proposal to the Princess before his visit came to an end. “During our
-ride up Craig-na-ban,” writes the Queen, in “The Leaves from a Journal,”
-“he (Prince Fritz) picked up a piece of white heather (the emblem of
-good luck), which he gave to her (the Princess Royal), and this enabled
-him to make an allusion to his hopes and wishes as they rode down Glen
-Girnoch.” The lady consented, and the happy pair were betrothed. “The
-young people,” writes Prince Albert to Stockmar, on the 2nd of October,
-“are passionately in love with each other, and the integrity,
-guilelessness, and disinterestedness of the Prince are quite touching.”</p>
-
-<p>“Our Fritz,” as the Prince was affectionately called, was no idle youth
-of fashion. He was already Colonel of the 1st Foot Guards, and a
-thorough soldier.<a name="FNanchor_244_244" id="FNanchor_244_244"></a><a href="#Footnote_244_244" class="fnanchor">[244]</a> In every branch of the Army he had gone through a
-hard apprenticeship, as may be seen from the peremptory instructions
-which had been issued when he was ordered to serve with Colonel von
-Griesheim’s Dragoons. He had to master every elementary detail of drill
-and organisation, and his knowledge was tested by stern judges.<a name="FNanchor_245_245" id="FNanchor_245_245"></a><a href="#Footnote_245_245" class="fnanchor">[245]</a>
-Col. von Griesheim gives the following account of an interview he had
-with Prince Fritz’s mother in the autumn of 1854:&mdash;“Prince Frederick
-William,” he says, “was then twenty-three. He was a young man of notably
-amiable manners. I received orders to wait upon his mother the Princess
-at the Palace, when she told me<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_663" id="page_663">{663}</a></span> that she wished to speak to me as the
-new Commander of the Regiment, and I must do her the justice to say that
-she did not allow her motherly love for a son, or her anxiety to secure
-his personal comforts, to stand in the way of his duty. On the contrary,
-she begged me that I would in no way unduly spare the Prince, but insist
-on his learning his profession in every branch, so that he might be in a
-position to judge what was the real amount of labour which a military
-life entailed. She also desired that in non-military matters no special
-external respect might be shown him, expressing, at the same time, her
-confidence that neither I nor my brother-officers would abuse the
-relationship in which we were placed. She was sure I should not forget
-that it was the training of our future king that was entrusted to me,
-and that I should recognise the obligation of setting things in their
-true light, that a true judgment might be formed concerning them. The
-Princess was proceeding to talk over a number of incidental matters
-when, quite unaccompanied, the Prince of Prussia came into the room. He
-looked surprised, and said, ‘Ah! I see the new Commander is receiving
-the orders of the dear mamma.’ He laughed good-humouredly, and holding
-out his hand with the cordiality peculiar to him, added that I did not
-need any instruction from him, and that the length of time he had known
-me was a guarantee that the Prince was in good hands. Turning to his
-wife he smiled, and said in an undertone, “I trained Griesheim, and now
-he shall train our son.’<span class="lftspc">”</span><a name="FNanchor_246_246" id="FNanchor_246_246"></a><a href="#Footnote_246_246" class="fnanchor">[246]</a></p>
-
-<p>Prince Frederick William had thoroughly fulfilled the hopes of his
-parents and his tutor, and he was precisely the type of man likely to
-win favour in Prince Albert’s eyes. It was, therefore, with supreme
-disgust that the Queen and her husband discovered an attempt would be
-made to prejudice public opinion against the marriage. The engagement
-was not to be announced till after Easter. And yet the <i>Times</i> began to
-attack the Queen, Prince Albert, and the Prussian Court, for bringing
-about such an alliance. The country was told that the Princess Royal was
-being sacrificed to “a paltry German dynasty,” and Prince Fritz was
-jeered at as a poor creature, who would have to pick up a livelihood in
-the Russian service, and “pass these years which flattering anticipation
-now destines to a Crown, in ignominious attendance as a General Officer
-on the levee of his Imperial master, having lost even the privilege of
-his birth, which is conceded to no German in Russia.” Malignity as well
-as ignorance inspired this abuse, for it was at that time the cue of a
-certain section of polite society to hold Prince Albert up to odium on
-every possible occasion as a tool of the despotic European Courts. As a
-matter of fact, the young Prince’s sympathies were with the Opposition
-rather than with the Government in Prussia, and he was in the habit of
-seeking Prince Albert’s advice as to how he should steer his course in
-the stormy sea of Prussian politics. Very sound and wise guidance did
-the Prince get from his future father-in-law, who viewed with delight
-and hopefulness his<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_664" id="page_664">{664}</a></span> assiduous efforts to fit himself for his high
-destiny. “In another way,” he writes to the young Prince, “Vicky is also
-busy; she has learned much in various directions.... She now comes to me
-every evening from six to seven, when I put her through a kind of
-general catechising, and, in order to give precision to her ideas, I
-make her work out certain subjects by herself, and bring me the results
-to be revised. Thus she is now engaged in writing a short compendium of
-Roman history.”<a name="FNanchor_247_247" id="FNanchor_247_247"></a><a href="#Footnote_247_247" class="fnanchor">[247]</a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_129" id="ill_129"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_664.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_664.jpg" height="352" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE WOOING OF THE PRINCESS ROYAL.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>On the 30th of November the King of Sardinia, accompanied by Count
-Cavour, arrived in London to visit the Queen and Prince Albert. A
-rough,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_665" id="page_665">{665}</a></span> frank, good-humoured cavalry officer, passionately devoted to
-field sports, and fired with an ardent love of Italy and a bitter hatred
-of all foes of Italian Unity&mdash;such was our ally, Victor Emmanuel. He had
-been preceded by his social reputation in Paris, which was, in truth,
-such as to make the Queen somewhat nervous. Lord Malmesbury, writing in
-his Diary on the 29th of November, says, “The King of Sardinia, who is
-here (Paris), is as vulgar and coarse as possible.”<a name="FNanchor_248_248" id="FNanchor_248_248"></a><a href="#Footnote_248_248" class="fnanchor">[248]</a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_130" id="ill_130"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_665.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_665.jpg" width="258" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>COUNT CAVOUR.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>However, his Majesty was received with much kindness by the English
-people, and on the day after his arrival the Queen and Prince took him
-to see Woolwich Arsenal and the Hospitals, only too well filled with
-wounded Crimean soldiers. The Artillery Parade on the Common was viewed
-by the King with great delight. On Monday, the 3rd of December, Prince
-Albert<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_666" id="page_666">{666}</a></span> accompanied his Royal guest to Spithead, where they inspected
-the fleet and went over the old <i>Victory</i>, and a new ship of war, to be
-named after his Majesty. On Tuesday, the 4th, Victor Emmanuel visited
-the City of London in State, where he met with an effusive welcome, that
-greatly impressed him. The reply to the Address presented to him by the
-Corporation, which was delivered by the King&mdash;though “writ in choice
-Italian” for him by his crafty mentor, Cavour&mdash;pledging him to support
-us to the last in our struggle with Russia if the peace negotiations
-then going on failed, vastly increased his popularity. Next day he was
-invested by the Queen with the Order of the Garter, and on Thursday he
-left at five o’clock in the morning for Boulogne. It was bitterly cold
-and bleak, yet, to the surprise of Cavour, the Queen was up betimes to
-bid her guest farewell, with all the cordiality of a true English
-hostess. Many good stories, most of which will not bear repetition here,
-were told of this visit. “I was presented,” writes Lord Malmesbury on
-the 5th of December, “to the King of Sardinia by Prince Albert, who told
-him that I was an ‘<i>Ancien Ministre d’Affaires Etrangères</i>.’ ‘<i>A quelle
-époque?</i>’ answered the King. I said, ‘In 1852, under Lord Derby’s
-Government.’ The King replied, ‘<i>Que faites-vous à présent?</i>’ To which
-the Prince said, ‘<i>II fait de l’opposition, car il faut toujours faire
-quelque chose dans ce pays</i>.’ ‘<i>Ah</i>,’ replied the King, ‘<i>donc vous êtes
-opposé à mon voyage en Angleterre, et à mon alliance</i>.’<span class="lftspc">”</span><a name="FNanchor_249_249" id="FNanchor_249_249"></a><a href="#Footnote_249_249" class="fnanchor">[249]</a> Lord
-Clarendon, says Mr. Greville, “gave me an account of his conversations
-both with the King and Cavour. He thinks well of the King, and that he
-is intelligent, and he has a very high opinion indeed of Cavour, and was
-especially struck with his knowledge of England, and our institutions
-and constitutional history. I was much amused after all the praises that
-have been lavished on Sardinia for the noble part she has played, and
-for taking up arms in so <i>unselfish</i> a manner, that she has, after all,
-a keen view to her own interests, and wants some solid pudding as well
-as so much empty praise.” In fact, Sardinia wanted some territorial
-advantage, which, of course, in view of our relations with Austria at
-the time, England could not obtain for her. Hence Victor Emmanuel
-complained that after spending 40,000,000 francs on the war, he had
-nothing to show his people for it.<a name="FNanchor_250_250" id="FNanchor_250_250"></a><a href="#Footnote_250_250" class="fnanchor">[250]</a> “The King and his people,”
-writes Mr. Greville, “are far better satisfied with their reception here
-than in France, where, under much external civility, there was very
-little cordiality, the Emperor’s intimate relations with Austria
-rendering him little inclined towards the Piedmontese. Here the Queen
-was wonderfully cordial and attentive. She got up at five in the morning
-to see him depart. His Majesty appears to be frightful in person, but a
-great, strong, burly, athletic man, brusque in his manners, unrefined in
-his conversation, very loose in his conduct, and eccentric in his
-habits. When he was at Paris his talk in<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_667" id="page_667">{667}</a></span> society amused or terrified
-everybody, but here he seems to have been more guarded. It was amusing
-to see all the religious societies hastening with their addresses to
-him, totally forgetting that he is the most dissolute fellow in the
-world; but the fact of his being excommunicated by the Pope and his
-waging war with the ecclesiastical power in his own country covers every
-sin against morality, and he is a great hero with the Low Church people
-and Exeter Hall. My brother-in-law said he looked at Windsor more like a
-chief of the Heruli or Longobardi than a modern Italian prince, and the
-Duchess of Sutherland said that of all the Knights of the Garter she had
-seen, he was the only one who seemed as if he would have the best of it
-with the Dragon.”<a name="FNanchor_251_251" id="FNanchor_251_251"></a><a href="#Footnote_251_251" class="fnanchor">[251]</a> If Clarendon expressed to Mr. Greville great
-admiration for the Sardinian Monarch, he must have been of a singularly
-forgiving disposition. For Lord Malmesbury says that when Prince Albert
-presented Lord Clarendon to his Majesty as the Secretary of State for
-Foreign Affairs, Victor Emmanuel remarked, “<i>J’ai entendu parler de
-vous</i>,” adding, “<i>C’est fini</i>,” which, says Lord Malmesbury, in plain
-English meant&mdash;“Be off. I’ve nothing more to say to you.”<a name="FNanchor_252_252" id="FNanchor_252_252"></a><a href="#Footnote_252_252" class="fnanchor">[252]</a></p>
-
-<p>On the 6th of October, 1854, the Queen had issued a Royal Warrant for
-regulating promotion and retirement in the army, which now caused her
-much vexation. The warrant enabled lieutenant-colonels, after three
-years’ service, to become by right full colonels. This privilege was
-confined to line regiments, and the officers of the Guards accordingly
-sent a memorial to the Crown begging that it should be extended to them
-also. Prince Albert, as Colonel of the Grenadiers, had signed their
-petition, and in the middle of December the <i>Times</i> attacked him with
-great acrimony for pampering the Guards, and charged him with using his
-influence over the Queen for purposes of military jobbery. The old
-story, accusing the Prince of interfering with the army and of having
-intrigued to become Commander-in-Chief, was vamped up again. It has
-already been seen that these accusations were absolutely false, and the
-impossibility of contradicting them publicly gave her Majesty great
-pain. She knew nothing about the Guards’ memorial, and all the Prince
-knew about it was that he had signed it as a matter of formality,
-because it was only through him as their colonel, that the officers of
-his regiment could, according to the regulations, forward any petition
-to the Government. The memorial was dealt with by the Secretary of
-State, Lord Panmure, who, as a matter of fact, did <i>not</i> grant its
-prayer. That the Prince sometimes interfered with military
-administration was quite true. When the War Department broke down he
-toiled hard to help the Duke of Newcastle to set it on its legs again.
-When the Queen began to fret over the meagreness of Raglan’s despatches,
-he showed the Department how to draw up a series of forms that would
-compel Raglan to keep the Secretary of State fully aware from day to<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_668" id="page_668">{668}</a></span>
-day of the state of the Crimean army. When the Prince of Prussia wrote
-to him warning him that the conduct of the English officers in the
-Crimea, who were supposed to be deserting their posts “on urgent private
-affairs,” was bringing disgrace on the name of England, Prince Albert
-did what ought to have been done by Lord Panmure, when the story was
-promulgated in the press&mdash;that is to say, he sifted the facts, and gave
-the lie direct to the slanderous fable.<a name="FNanchor_253_253" id="FNanchor_253_253"></a><a href="#Footnote_253_253" class="fnanchor">[253]</a> To these attacks the Prince
-had become indifferent; but they irritated the Queen, who resented their
-injustice, and chafed against her powerlessness to give them public
-denial.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_131" id="ill_131"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_668.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_668.jpg" height="223" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>BALACLAVA: AT PEACE.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>From a Drawing made Twenty-Five Years after the Crimean War.</i>)</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_669" id="page_669">{669}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_132" id="ill_132"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_669.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_669.jpg" width="334" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>CATHCART’S HILL, CRIMEA.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXXIII"></a>CHAPTER XXXIII.<br /><br />
-<small>THE END OF THE WAR.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>Lord Raglan’s Successor&mdash;“Take Care of Dowb”&mdash;Lord Panmure’s
-Nepotism&mdash;The Crisis of the War&mdash;Gortschakoff’s Last Struggle&mdash;The
-Battle of the Tchernaya River&mdash;France and the War&mdash;A Despondent
-Court&mdash;Divided Counsels among the Allies&mdash;The Bridge of Rafts&mdash;The
-Grand Bombardment&mdash;French Attack on the Malakoff&mdash;British Attack on
-the Redan&mdash;Why the Attack Failed&mdash;The “Hero of the
-Redan”&mdash;Pélissier’s Message to Simpson&mdash;Appeal to Sir Colin
-Campbell&mdash;Evacuation of the Redan&mdash;Fall of Sebastopol&mdash;Retreat of
-the Russians to the North Town&mdash;Paralysis of the Victors&mdash;The
-Queen’s Anger&mdash;Her Remonstrances with Lord Panmure&mdash;A New
-Commander-in-Chief&mdash;Taking Care of “Dowb”&mdash;Codrington Chosen&mdash;The
-Wintry Crimean Watch&mdash;Diplomatic Humiliation of Palmerston&mdash;France
-Negotiates Secretly Terms of Peace with Austria&mdash;Palmerston’s
-Indignant Remonstrances&mdash;The Queen Objects to Prosecute the War
-Alone&mdash;The Surrender of Palmerston&mdash;He Abandons the Turks&mdash;An
-Unpopular Peace&mdash;The Tories Offer to Support the Peace&mdash;The Queen
-and the Parliament of 1856.</p></div>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="smcap">When</span> Lord Raglan died, General Simpson, who had been his chief of the
-staff, was appointed to succeed him. It is enough to say that Simpson
-was infinitely less capable than his predecessor; but, on the other
-hand, he was a good-natured, pliable man, not likely to be troublesome
-to the authorities at home. Mr. Alfred Varley, the eminent electrician,
-told Colonel Hope, V.C., that when Lord Panmure’s despatch appointing
-General Simpson to the chief command was received, the message ended
-with the mysterious order&mdash;“Take care of<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_670" id="page_670">{670}</a></span> Dowb.” Mr. Varley, who was on
-duty, thinking “Dowb” was some unknown Russian general who had been
-suddenly discovered by Lord Panmure, requested that the message should
-be repeated. It turned out, however, that “Dowb” was merely an
-abbreviation of Dowbigging, and that Dowbigging was one of Lord
-Panmure’s relatives, whom he, as a Minister, pledged to suppress the
-nepotism that had ruined the army, thus authoritatively recommended to
-the good offices of the new Commander-in-Chief.<a name="FNanchor_254_254" id="FNanchor_254_254"></a><a href="#Footnote_254_254" class="fnanchor">[254]</a> “Take care of
-Dowb,” from that day till now, has indeed been the shibboleth of jobbery
-and corruption in all branches of the Queen’s service. Thus, though the
-crisis of the war had now come, it was only too obvious that little
-could be expected from an army led by a feeble and subservient general,
-and directed from home by an “administrative reformer” of Lord Panmure’s
-type.</p>
-
-<p>On the 21st of July, General Simpson reported that his trenches were
-within two hundred yards of the Redan, which had been greatly
-strengthened since the last assault, and that they could not be pushed
-farther. The loss of life in the trenches was so enormous, that the
-assault could not be long delayed&mdash;and yet, till Pélissier took the
-Malakoff, it was madness to attack the Redan. On the other hand,
-overwhelming reinforcements were being poured in from Russia, and, on
-the 16th of August, Prince Gortschakoff made a bold attempt to raise the
-siege. He crossed the Tchernaya river, and attacked the French and
-Sardinians, but was hurled back with great loss. This came as glad
-tidings to the Queen, who had heard with apprehension that the French
-were beginning to cry out against the war, and that they were
-complaining that France was simply a tool in the hands of England. The
-victory of the Tchernaya and the Queen’s visit to Paris silenced these
-murmurs for a time. Prince Albert, however, was still despondent, for no
-progress was made after this battle; and his letters from the Crimea
-warned him that another winter campaign would yet have to be undertaken.</p>
-
-<p>The months of July and August produced in England a fresh crop of
-censures in the newspapers. It was even suggested that, by way of
-counteracting divided counsels among the allies, the siege should be
-entirely left to the French, while the English, Sardinians, and Turks
-should sally forth and attack the Russian army of observation in the
-field. In September, the beginnings of a bridge of rafts between the
-north and south sides of Sebastopol were seen, and, on the 5th of
-September, the grand bombardment, preliminary to the assault on the
-Malakoff and Redan, commenced&mdash;the French opening four miles of
-cannonade at a given signal. A terrific hail of shot and shell was
-almost continuously poured upon the hapless city till the 8th, when the
-moment for the assault arrived. Pélissier was to hoist the tricolour on
-the Malakoff when it was taken, and that was to be the signal for the
-British attack on the Redan. For many hours a savage contest raged
-round<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_671" id="page_671">{671}</a></span> and on the Malakoff, but in the end the French captured the
-stronghold. The British storming force of 1,000 men, with small covering
-and ladder parties, then rushed forward to the outworks of the Redan. In
-crossing the space of two hundred yards that intervened between their
-trenches and the fortress, they were swept by a terrific fire, under
-which they fell like swathes of corn before the reaper. The troops&mdash;for
-the most part weedy young recruits&mdash;soon became demoralised, and many of
-them had actually to be kicked into action by their sergeants. Somehow
-they forced their way over the ramparts&mdash;a confused undisciplined mob in
-a pitiful state of disorganisation. One figure alone stands out in this
-scene of murky strife in heroic grandeur&mdash;that of Colonel Windham. He
-strove with furious energy to rally the scattered remnants of regiments
-which were mixed up with each other, and to hurl them against the inner
-breastwork. But as at the Alma, there were no supports at hand, and
-Windham sent messenger after messenger imploring Codrington to hurry
-them on. His entreaties were unheeded, partly because some of the
-messengers were shot, partly because Codrington, like most of the
-English generals in the Crimea, did not seem to consider that slender
-storming parties needed strong and instant support. At last Windham,
-enraged at the useless and sickening slaughter of his men, determined to
-go himself and force his chief to send the stormers succour. “Let it be
-known,” he said to Captain Crealock, “in case I am killed, why I went
-away.” He passed through the zone of fire in safety, reached Codrington,
-and, whilst vainly arguing with him, he saw that the day was lost. The
-subalterns and sergeants he had left behind&mdash;for most of the superior
-officers were killed or wounded&mdash;could no longer hold the men to their
-deadly work. First one, then another, and then a small group, were seen
-to creep through the gaps in the Redan. Then a mad rush of
-terror-stricken soldiers, yelling and shrieking in panic, proclaimed
-that Windham’s mission was useless, and that the fight was over. As for
-the Commander-in-Chief, where was he all the time? Cowering in a safe
-corner of the trenches, where he could see little of the fight! There
-Pélissier’s messenger found him when he came to ask if he would not
-immediately assail the Redan again. “The trenches were,” according to
-Simpson’s despatch, “subsequently to this attack, so crowded with
-troops, that I was unable to organise a second assault.”</p>
-
-<p>General Simpson might as well have doomed his men to sudden death as
-send such a slender column as had been repulsed, to storm the Redan.
-This, then, is the sum of the matter. The first assault failed because
-the stormers were too few; the second was not attempted, lest they might
-have been too many! Ultimately, Simpson did what he ought to have done
-in the first instance; that is to say, he fell back on Sir Colin
-Campbell and the Scottish Brigade.<a name="FNanchor_255_255" id="FNanchor_255_255"></a><a href="#Footnote_255_255" class="fnanchor">[255]</a> But<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_672" id="page_672">{672}</a></span> when his Highland scouts
-went to reconnoitre during the night, they found the place deserted. The
-losses on our side were frightful, especially in officers and sergeants.
-Of the 2,447 stormers who were killed and wounded, 1,435 belonged to the
-Light Division; in fact, owing to Simpson’s imbecility in sending a mere
-handful of men to the attack, and Codrington’s inexcusable neglect to
-hurry on supports, we sacrificed more men in failing to carry the Redan,
-than Wellington lost when he captured Badajoz.<a name="FNanchor_256_256" id="FNanchor_256_256"></a><a href="#Footnote_256_256" class="fnanchor">[256]</a> During the night the
-Russians set fire to the town. Crossing the bridge of rafts, the enemy
-fled to the northern side of the harbour, leaving us in possession, not
-of Sebastopol, but, as Gortschakoff said, of a heap of blood-stained
-ruins.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_133" id="ill_133"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_672.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_672.jpg" width="330" height="273" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>FRENCH ATTACK ON THE MALAKOFF.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_673" id="page_673">{673}</a></span></p><p>On Sunday, the 9th of September, the news that Sebastopol had fallen
-was proclaimed through England. And so the siege that had gone on for
-the best part of a year, which had involved the construction of seventy
-miles of trenches, and the expenditure of 1,500,000 shells, came to an
-end&mdash;gloriously for the French with victory at the Malakoff,
-ingloriously for England with ignominious defeat at the Redan. On the
-29th of September, the Russians were repulsed at Kars; but on the 28th
-of November, the neglected and famine-stricken garrison, whose heroic
-defence under General Fenwick Williams was one of the most brilliant
-episodes of the war, had to surrender. The occupation of Kinburn and the
-bombardment of Sweaborg were the only successes won by us at sea.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_134" id="ill_134"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_673.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_673.jpg" height="316" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>GENERAL TODLEBEN.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>When Sebastopol fell, it was not the Russians but Generals Simpson and
-Pélissier who were paralysed by the catastrophe. The Allies, in fact,
-seemed to sit helplessly looking on, and gave the enemy time to render
-his position on the north side of the city almost impregnable. Thus once
-more the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_674" id="page_674">{674}</a></span> besiegers became the besieged, and found themselves in even a
-more perilous position than that which they held before the fall of the
-city. The Queen was greatly distressed to hear that all our sacrifices
-had been in vain, and that Simpson and Pélissier were even more
-incompetent than Raglan and Canrobert.<a name="FNanchor_257_257" id="FNanchor_257_257"></a><a href="#Footnote_257_257" class="fnanchor">[257]</a> At last her Majesty’s
-impatience could no longer be controlled, nor her irritation concealed.
-On the 2nd of October she wrote to Lord Panmure saying, “there may be
-good reasons why the army should not move, but we have only one.... When
-General Simpson telegraphed before that he must wait to know the
-intentions and plans of the Russians, the Queen was tempted to advise a
-reference to St. Petersburg for them.” And the intensely provoking thing
-was that if the Allies had only threatened a landing between Eupatoria
-and Sebastopol after the fall of the city, the Russians would have been
-compelled to evacuate the Crimea.<a name="FNanchor_258_258" id="FNanchor_258_258"></a><a href="#Footnote_258_258" class="fnanchor">[258]</a></p>
-
-<p>Naturally the Queen began to press the War Office to appoint a new
-Commander-in-Chief, and then Ministers began to “take care of Dowb.”
-There was but one great military reputation not made&mdash;for it had been
-made long before&mdash;but somewhat enhanced in the Crimea. It was that of
-Sir Colin Campbell, the only leader on whom even a shred of the mantle
-of Wellington or Moore had fallen. The soldiers had confidence in no
-other; in fact, he was the only divisional commander in the army who had
-a native genius for war. But he had no “interest,” and had he been
-appointed, his iron will and stubborn character would have soon asserted
-themselves over the foolish counsels of Pélissier. A strong, competent
-man without “interest” was in Lord Panmure’s eyes an objectionable
-person. So he looked elsewhere for a successor to General Simpson.
-Happening accidentally to hear from Mr. Greville of Colonel Windham’s
-exploit at the Redan, Panmure suddenly resolved to appoint him
-Commander-in-Chief. Mr. Greville was naturally amazed at this proposal,
-and suggested that it would be better to try Windham first with a
-Division before they put him over the heads of his seniors. Simpson,
-however, was eager to come home; time pressed, and Campbell, having no
-connection with “Dowb,” was of course impossible. As for Codrington, his
-failure and bungling at the Redan ought to have rendered him impossible
-also, but on the other hand he was not quite so incompetent as Simpson,
-and he had “interest.” Finally, Prince Albert’s advice was taken, and
-thus Codrington, as the candidate who “divided the authorities least,”
-was appointed to the chief command. But the troops were divided into two
-<i>corps d’armée</i>, the command of which was offered<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_675" id="page_675">{675}</a></span> to the two senior
-generals over whose heads Codrington had been passed. One of these, Sir
-Colin Campbell, in bitterness of heart returned to England, firmly
-determined to quit a service, which had rewarded half a century of
-brilliant achievement with contemptuous neglect. The Queen, however,
-came to hear of this, and touched with some twinge of remorse, sent for
-the old man, and in the course of an interview with him persuaded him to
-alter his intentions. She spoke to him of her anxiety as to the fate of
-the army, and as a personal favour to herself, requested him to go back
-to the Crimea. The rough, war-worn veteran in an instant forgot the
-wrongs of a lifetime. Tears glistened in his eyes, as he assured the
-Queen, in the broad provincial <i>patois</i>, which he always spoke when
-under the excitement of battle or deep emotion, that he would return
-immediately, and as for his rank&mdash;well, “if the Queen wished it, Colin
-Campbell was ready for her sake to serve under a corporal.” To the
-credit of her Majesty it must be remembered that this was the last time
-Campbell was neglected. If it took him forty-six years’ hard, thankless
-toil to rise to a Lieutenant-Colonelcy, in eight years he became a Field
-Marshal.</p>
-
-<p>But besides keeping an idle wintry watch on the plateau before
-Sebastopol, there was no work in store for the army in the Crimea. The
-victories won by the sword were now about to be neutralised by the pen,
-and for Lord Palmerston the supreme moment of humiliation and failure
-was close at hand. The corner-stone of his foreign policy, it will be
-remembered, was the French alliance. If that proved to be unstable, the
-policy itself was <i>ab initio</i> a fatal blunder. And the French alliance
-broke down at the critical moment when England, full of confidence in
-her reorganised army, expected that the war would be prosecuted till her
-disgraceful defeats at the Redan were triumphantly avenged. France, as
-has been repeatedly said, was sick of the war&mdash;a fact which Palmerston
-never had the moral courage to face. The war had now served the
-Emperor’s purpose, for the victory of the Malakoff had glorified the
-dynasty. Napoleon III., therefore, resolved to desert his ally, and in
-October Palmerston learnt with dismay that 100,000 French troops were to
-be immediately withdrawn from the Crimea.<a name="FNanchor_259_259" id="FNanchor_259_259"></a><a href="#Footnote_259_259" class="fnanchor">[259]</a> What was still more
-serious, as Prince Albert says in a letter to Stockmar, the French were
-now demanding territorial compensation either in Poland, Italy, or the
-left bank of the Rhine. This last demand was particularly alarming to
-the Queen, who, in the spring, had warned Clarendon of its probable
-consequences. “The first Frenchman,” she says, in her letter of the 15th
-of April, “who should hostilely approach the Rhine, would set the whole
-of Germany on fire.” But in November, Palmerston’s policy compelled
-Englishmen to drink the cup of humiliation to the lees. Napoleon III.,
-ignoring England, secretly negotiated with Austria the terms of peace
-which were to be offered to Russia, and these were then transmitted to
-the British Government, by<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_676" id="page_676">{676}</a></span> Count Walewski, with an intimation that
-England must accept them as they stood. Palmerston, angry at being thus
-duped and slighted, sent a violent remonstrance to France, declaring
-that England would carry on the war alone rather than accept such
-terms.<a name="FNanchor_260_260" id="FNanchor_260_260"></a><a href="#Footnote_260_260" class="fnanchor">[260]</a> The Emperor himself, however, wrote to the Queen advising
-her to give way, and explaining why he could not consent to extort any
-further sacrifices from France, for what he contemptuously called “the
-microscopical advantages” which were the objects of Lord Palmerston’s
-policy. The Queen in her reply says, “I make, then, full allowance for
-your Majesty’s personal difficulties, and refuse to listen to any
-wounded feelings of <i>amour propre</i> which my Government might be supposed
-to entertain at a complete understanding having been come to with
-Austria&mdash;an understanding which has resulted in an arrangement being
-placed cut and dry before us, for our mere acceptance, putting us in the
-disagreeable position of either having to accept what we have not even
-been allowed fully to understand (and which, so far as Austria is
-concerned, has been negotiated under influences dictated by motives, and
-in a spirit which we are without the means of estimating), or to take
-the responsibility of breaking up this arrangement, of losing the
-alliance which is offered to us, and which is so much wanted,<a name="FNanchor_261_261" id="FNanchor_261_261"></a><a href="#Footnote_261_261" class="fnanchor">[261]</a> and
-even of estranging the friendly feeling of the ally who advocates the
-arrangement itself.”<a name="FNanchor_262_262" id="FNanchor_262_262"></a><a href="#Footnote_262_262" class="fnanchor">[262]</a> One member of the Cabinet, Sir George
-Cornewall Lewis, doubtless expressed the feeling of all his colleagues
-when he told Mr. Greville that they felt they had no alternative but to
-submit with a good grace. To this, says Mr. Greville, he “added an
-expression of his disgust at the pitiful figure we cut in the affair,
-being obliged to obey the commands of Louis Napoleon, and after our
-insolence, swagger, and bravado, to submit to terms of peace which we
-had just rejected; all which humiliation, he justly said, was the
-consequence of our plunging into war without any reason, and in defiance
-of all prudence and sound policy.” He might have added that it was the
-inevitable result of plunging into war with a treacherous ally, on whose
-fidelity Palmerston was senseless enough to stake the fortunes of the
-Empire, and the sceptre of his Sovereign. The Queen personally
-considered the terms which were thus thrust on England far from
-adequate; still she set her face against Palmerston’s first proposal to
-continue the war for the sake of winning prospective victories. After
-some trivial modifications the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_677" id="page_677">{677}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_135" id="ill_135"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_677.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_677.jpg" width="504" height="332" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE THRONE ROOM, ST. JAMES’S PALACE. (<i>From a Photograph
-by H. N. King.</i>)</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_678" id="page_678">{678}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Franco-Austrian conditions were accepted by the British Government,
-transmitted by Austria to Russia, and accepted by her on the 16th of
-January, 1856. “Think,” said Sir George Lewis to Mr. Greville, “that
-this is a war carried on for the independence of Turkey, and we, the
-allies, are bound to Turkey by mutual obligations not to make peace but
-by common consent and concurrence. Well, we have sent an offer of peace
-to Russia, of which the following are among the terms: We propose that
-Turkey, who possesses one-half of the Black Sea Coast, shall have no
-ships, no ports, no arsenals in that sea; and then there are conditions
-about the Christians who are the subjects of Turkey, and others about
-the mouths of the Danube, to which part of the Turkish dominions are
-contiguous. Now in all these stipulations so intimately concerning
-Turkey, for whose independence we are fighting, Turkey is not allowed to
-have any voice whatever, nor has she ever been allowed to be made
-acquainted with what is going on except through the newspapers, where
-the Turkish Ministers may have read what is passing, like other people.
-When the French and Austrian terms were discussed in the Cabinet, at the
-end of the discussion some one modestly asked whether it would not be
-proper to communicate to Musurus (the Turkish Ambassador in London) what
-was in agitation, and what had been agreed upon, to which Clarendon said
-he saw no necessity for it whatever.”<a name="FNanchor_263_263" id="FNanchor_263_263"></a><a href="#Footnote_263_263" class="fnanchor">[263]</a> But Palmerston by this time
-had abandoned the Turks&mdash;indeed, he now became quite moderate, not to
-say humble in his tone&mdash;permitting Clarendon to adopt or reject his
-suggestions as he chose. This sudden docility naturally improved his
-position at Court. “Palmerston,” writes Mr. Greville, “is now on very
-good terms with the Queen, which is, though he does not know it, greatly
-attributable to Clarendon’s constant endeavours to reconcile her to him,
-always telling her everything likely to ingratiate Palmerston with her,
-and showing her any notes or letters of his calculated to please
-her.”<a name="FNanchor_264_264" id="FNanchor_264_264"></a><a href="#Footnote_264_264" class="fnanchor">[264]</a></p>
-
-<p>The Prime Minister and his colleagues it seems were surprised that
-Russia assented so readily to the terms of peace, and were for a time
-nervous as to the verdict of the English people. “All peaces are
-unpopular,” wrote Sir George Lewis to Sir Edmund Head, “and all peaces,
-it seems to me, are beneficial, even to the country which is supposed to
-be the loser. How greatly England prospered after the peace of 1782, and
-France after the peace of 1815! I suppose that this peace, if it takes
-place, will be no exception to the general rule.”<a name="FNanchor_265_265" id="FNanchor_265_265"></a><a href="#Footnote_265_265" class="fnanchor">[265]</a> Fortunately, the
-Court supported the Ministry in acting with the other Powers, and Mr.
-Disraeli and Lord Stanley privately informed the Cabinet, that they
-would accept any peace which was sanctioned by the Crown. Thus the Queen
-and her Ministers were enabled to meet the Parliament of 1856 with some
-measure of confidence.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_679" id="page_679">{679}</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXXIV"></a>CHAPTER XXXIV.<br /><br />
-<small>PEACE AND PARLIAMENT.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>Opening of Parliament&mdash;A Cold Speech from the Throne&mdash;Moderation of
-Militant Toryism&mdash;Mr. Disraeli’s Cynical Strategy&mdash;The Betrayal of
-Kars&mdash;The Life Peerage Controversy&mdash;Baron Parke’s Nickname&mdash;More
-Attacks on Prince Albert&mdash;Court Favouritism among Men of
-Science&mdash;The Congress of Paris&mdash;How France Betrayed
-England&mdash;Walewski’s Intrigues with Orloff&mdash;Mr. Greville’s Pictures
-of French Official Life&mdash;Snubbing Bonapartist Statesmen&mdash;Peace
-Proclaimed&mdash;Popular Rejoicings&mdash;A Memento of the Congress&mdash;The
-Terms of Peace&mdash;The Tripartite Treaty&mdash;The Queen’s Opinion of the
-Settlement&mdash;Parliamentary Criticism on the Treaty of
-Paris&mdash;Stagnation of Public Life in England&mdash;The Queen’s “Happy
-Family” Dinner Party&mdash;A little “Tiff” with America&mdash;The Restoration
-of H.M.S. <i>Resolute</i>&mdash;The Budget&mdash;Palmerston’s Tortuous Italian
-Policy&mdash;The Failure of his Domestic Policy&mdash;The Confirmation of the
-Princess Royal&mdash;Robbery of the Royal Nursery Plate&mdash;Prince Alfred’s
-Tutor&mdash;Reviews of Crimean Troops&mdash;Debates on the Purchase
-System&mdash;Lord Hardinge’s Tragic Death&mdash;The Duke of Cambridge as
-Commander-in-Chief&mdash;Miss Nightingale’s Visit to
-Balmoral&mdash;Coronation of the Czar&mdash;Russian Chicanery at Paris&mdash;A Bad
-Map and a False Frontier&mdash;Quarrel between Prussia and
-Switzerland&mdash;Quarrel between England and the Sicilies&mdash;Death of the
-Queen’s Half-Brother&mdash;Settlement of the Dispute with Russia&mdash;“The
-Dodge that Saved us.”</p></div>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="smcap">Parliament</span> was opened by the Queen in person on the 31st of January,
-1856, vast crowds flocking to Westminster for the purpose of testifying
-their interest in the negotiations for peace. The Royal speech was a
-brief and business-like summary of the events that had led up to these
-negotiations, and it announced measures for assimilating the mercantile
-law of England and Scotland, simplifying the law of partnership, and
-reforming the system of levying dues on merchant shipping. Complaint was
-made that the references to the achievements of the army were cold and
-unsympathetic, as if the speech were that, not of a Sovereign, but of a
-Minister, and Lord Derby was perhaps right in saying that had her
-Majesty been left to the promptings of her heart, her Address would not
-have been open to this objection. Those who had observed the warm
-womanly sympathy she had shown to the wounded soldiers, or who had
-witnessed her agitation when she decorated the maimed Crimean heroes,
-knew well that had she been free to speak as she felt, she would have
-uttered eloquent words of thanks and praise to cheer the troops still
-keeping watch and ward in the Crimea.</p>
-
-<p>The general feeling expressed in both Houses of Parliament was that, if
-we had determined to prosecute the war till Russia sued for peace, we
-should certainly have obtained more honourable terms than those which
-had been now accepted by us. But Mr. Disraeli wisely curbed the
-bellicose spirit of his party, and declared that to continue the war
-merely for the sake of adding lustre to our arms, would bring us no
-honour. From being vindicators of public law we should in that case sink
-to the level of “the gladiators of history.” Policy as well as prudence
-forced moderation on militant Toryism. Mr. Disraeli in a letter to Lord
-Malmesbury, written on the 30th of November, 1855, says,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_680" id="page_680">{680}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_136" id="ill_136"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_680.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_680.jpg" width="312" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>VIEW IN THE CRIMEA: JALTA.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“it seems to me that a Party that has shrunk from the responsibility of
-conducting a war, would never be able to carry on an Opposition against
-a Minister for having concluded an unsatisfactory peace, however bad the
-terms.”<a name="FNanchor_266_266" id="FNanchor_266_266"></a><a href="#Footnote_266_266" class="fnanchor">[266]</a> Lord Derby’s determination to refuse office when Lord
-Aberdeen fell from power, therefore doomed the Opposition to meek
-inactivity. “We are off the rail of politics,” said Mr. Disraeli in the
-letter just quoted, “and must continue so as long as the war lasts.”
-Hence one can have no difficulty in agreeing with Sir Theodore Martin
-when he asserts, that “it was only to be expected of a statesman like
-Mr. Disraeli, that he should refrain from embarrassing by a word the
-Ministers on whom devolved the difficult duty of protecting the national
-interests and honour, in negotiating terms of peace.”<a name="FNanchor_267_267" id="FNanchor_267_267"></a><a href="#Footnote_267_267" class="fnanchor">[267]</a> There was no
-division on the Address. But Lord Derby attacked the Government for the
-abandonment of Kars, in deference, he insinuated, to the wishes<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_681" id="page_681">{681}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_137" id="ill_137"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_681.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_681.jpg" width="254" height="327" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>MISS NIGHTINGALE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">of the French Emperor, who feared that the war in Asia Minor would
-dangerously enhance British prestige in that region. On the 28th of
-April Mr. Whiteside also raised a debate on the subject in the House of
-Commons, but the Tory party was so unwilling to follow its leaders, that
-Lord Derby regretted the matter had ever been stirred. The discussion
-merely established the facts that Lord Stratford had cruelly neglected
-to press General Williams’ appeals for reinforcements on the Porte, that
-the Government had culpably neglected to give Williams the money
-(£100,000) which would have provisioned Kars. But as the fortress was to
-be restored to the Turks, and as General Williams was to be consoled
-with a baronetcy, the House of Commons thought the matter had better
-drop, and Mr. Whiteside’s motion was lost by a majority of 303 to 176.
-Much more serious was the defeat inflicted on the Government on another
-subject which deeply interested the Queen&mdash;that of Baron Parke’s life
-peerage.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_682" id="page_682">{682}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Writing on the 9th of January, 1856, in his Diary, Lord Campbell says,
-“Bethell, the Solicitor-General, has made Baron Parke a peer. The
-judicial business of the House of Lords could not go on another session
-as it did last. Pemberton Leigh was first offered a peerage, and I wish
-much that he had accepted it, but he positively refused to be
-<i>pitchforked</i>. I don’t know that anything less exceptional could be done
-than applying next to Baron Surrebutter.”<a name="FNanchor_268_268" id="FNanchor_268_268"></a><a href="#Footnote_268_268" class="fnanchor">[268]</a> At the Lord Chancellor’s
-levee on the first day of Hilary Term, Lord Campbell asked him if there
-was any truth in the story that Parke’s peerage was to be for life. On
-hearing that it was, Lord Campbell replied, “Then sorry am I to say that
-I must make a row about it.” At first he thought that the grant of a
-life peerage was not illegal&mdash;for Coke asserted its legality&mdash;but merely
-unconstitutional. When, however, Lord Campbell studied the precedents,
-he became convinced that “no life peerage had been granted to any man
-for more than 400 years, and that there was no authenticated instance of
-a peer ever having sat and voted in the House of Lords having in him a
-life peerage only&mdash;the life peerages relied upon being superinduced on
-pre-existing peerages, <i>e.g.</i>, De Vere, Earl of Oxford (a title which
-had been in his family since the Conquest), was created by Richard II.
-Marquis of Dublin for life.” Lord Campbell goes on to say, “My eyes were
-opened. The power of the Crown to give a right to vote in the House must
-depend on the exercise of the power; and no one <i>had</i> voted in right of
-a peerage for life more than <i>of a peerage granted during the pleasure
-of the King</i>&mdash;for the granting of which there was at least one
-precedent.”<a name="FNanchor_269_269" id="FNanchor_269_269"></a><a href="#Footnote_269_269" class="fnanchor">[269]</a></p>
-
-<p>When Sir Theodore Martin says that “the right of the Crown to create a
-life peerage with a right to sit in Parliament” was “scarcely disputed
-in the discussions which arose,” his anxiety to exaggerate the Queen’s
-prerogative has led him into a grave error. As Lord Campbell says, “It
-was not necessary to resort to the doctrine of desuetude,” for “the
-non-exercise of a prerogative, ever since the Constitution was settled,
-afforded a strong inference that it had never lawfully existed.” The
-fact is that the arguments in favour of recognising the right of the
-Crown to create a peer for life, with the right of voting in the House
-of Lords, would have been equally good for creating a peer with a
-similar right, during the Sovereign’s pleasure. A peer who could at any
-moment be deprived of his rank and senatorial privileges would, of
-course, either be a creature of the Court or the minion of the Minister.
-Lord Lyndhurst, therefore, had little difficulty in carrying a motion
-referring Baron Parke’s Letters Patent to a Committee of Privileges,
-which reported against the right asserted by the Crown. The Government
-yielded, and Sir James Parke was finally created an hereditary peer in
-the ordinary way, under the title of Lord Wensleydale.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_683" id="page_683">{683}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The rebuff was annoying to the Queen; all the more that it led to a
-fresh series of attacks on Prince Albert. He was accused of having
-attempted to extend the Queen’s prerogative with the ulterior object of
-packing the House of Lords with certain scientific men who were supposed
-to be Court favourites.<a name="FNanchor_270_270" id="FNanchor_270_270"></a><a href="#Footnote_270_270" class="fnanchor">[270]</a> In his “Memoirs,” according to Mr.
-Greville, General Grey “told his brother, the Earl, that his Royal
-Highness knew nothing of the matter till after it had been settled.” The
-truth is that nobody was cognisant of the affair except the Lord
-Chancellor, Lord Granville, and Lord Palmerston. Mr. Greville says,
-“George Lewis told me that the life peerage had never been brought
-before the Cabinet, and he knew nothing of it till he saw it in the
-<i>Gazette</i>,”<a name="FNanchor_271_271" id="FNanchor_271_271"></a><a href="#Footnote_271_271" class="fnanchor">[271]</a> which illustrates the thoughtless manner in which Lord
-Palmerston allowed himself to be committed to a step, that roused public
-jealousy against the Crown and the Court. Lord Malmesbury also states,
-that when Lord Derby was dining one day with the Queen, she told him
-that if she had had any idea that the question would have created such a
-disturbance, she would never have dreamt of granting Parke his life
-peerage.<a name="FNanchor_272_272" id="FNanchor_272_272"></a><a href="#Footnote_272_272" class="fnanchor">[272]</a></p>
-
-<p>Fortunately the negotiations for peace were now proceeding apace at
-Paris. The Queen had written a letter to the French Emperor, which Lord
-Clarendon had delivered to him, earnestly insisting on the necessity of
-unity of action between France and England at the Congress of the
-Powers. The Emperor told Lord Clarendon it was “a charming letter;” but
-in spite of his flattering account of it, the influence of France from
-first to last was turned against England in the discussions between the
-plenipotentiaries. Possibly this was due to the constitutional indolence
-and weakness of the Emperor, who permitted Walewski to manage matters
-his own way, and as for Walewski, he betrayed Lord Clarendon at every
-opportunity. Napoleon III. was really in the hands of his <i>entourage</i>,
-and they were to a great extent in the hands of Russia.<a name="FNanchor_273_273" id="FNanchor_273_273"></a><a href="#Footnote_273_273" class="fnanchor">[273]</a> Lord
-Cowley, indeed, informed Mr. Greville that Walewski privately made known
-to Orloff, the Russian plenipotentiary, not only the points he must
-yield, but those as to which he might safely defy Lord Clarendon with
-the open or secret support of France.</p>
-
-<p>“The signing of the Treaty of Peace with Russia,” writes Lord
-Malmesbury<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_684" id="page_684">{684}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_138" id="ill_138"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_684.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_684.jpg" height="314" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE EMPEROR OF AUSTRIA.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">on the 30th of March, “was announced by the firing of cannon from the
-Tower and Horse Guards. Numbers collected in the streets, but no
-enthusiasm was shown.”<a name="FNanchor_274_274" id="FNanchor_274_274"></a><a href="#Footnote_274_274" class="fnanchor">[274]</a> In fact, when the terms became known there
-was much popular disappointment, and the <i>Sun</i> newspaper actually
-appeared in deep mourning over our national humiliation. On the next
-morning a great crowd assembled in front of the Mansion House. At ten
-o’clock the Lord Mayor, attended by the Sheriffs, the Sword-bearer,
-Mace-bearer, and City Marshal, advanced to the stone balcony, and amidst
-loud cheers read a despatch from the Home Secretary informing him that
-the Treaty was signed. At noon the Lord Mayor<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_685" id="page_685">{685}</a></span> proceeded in state to the
-Royal Exchange, where a great number of ladies had mingled with the
-crowd, and read the despatch again.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_139" id="ill_139"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_685.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_685.jpg" width="383" height="277" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE CONFERENCE OF PARIS, 1856.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>And what were the terms of peace? The Powers admitted Turkey to
-participate in all the advantages of the public law of Europe, and they
-agreed that in any future dispute with the Porte, the matter must be
-submitted to arbitration before force was used by either side. The
-Sultan was bound by the Treaty to communicate to the Powers a firman
-improving the condition of his Christian subjects, but this instrument,
-it was stipulated, gave the Powers no<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_686" id="page_686">{686}</a></span> collective or individual right to
-interfere between Turkey and her Christian subjects. The Black Sea was
-neutralised&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, all ships of war were excluded from it, and the
-establishment of arsenals on its coasts was prohibited. But the Euxine
-was declared free to the trading vessels of all nations, and the Powers
-were at liberty to keep a few armed ships of light draught for police
-duty on the neutralised sea. The navigation of the Danube was declared
-free. Russia ceded Bessarabia to Turkey. The privileges and immunities
-of Wallachia, Moldavia, and Servia were guaranteed, but the Sultan was
-permitted to garrison the latter province. Russia and Turkey were bound
-to restore to each other the conquests they had respectively made in
-Asia. On the invitation of France the Congress was asked to consider the
-position of Greece, the Roman States, and the two Sicilies. It was also
-asked to condemn the licence of the Belgian Press, and to formulate new
-rules for maritime warfare. These discussions came to naught, but it was
-agreed by the “Declarations of Paris” that privateering should be
-abolished; that, with the exception of contraband, an enemy’s goods must
-be free from capture under a neutral flag, a neutral’s goods being also
-respected under an enemy’s flag; and that “paper blockades” should not
-be recognised, <i>i.e.</i>, a blockade to be effective must in future be
-maintained by a force strong enough to cut off access to the coasts of
-an enemy.<a name="FNanchor_275_275" id="FNanchor_275_275"></a><a href="#Footnote_275_275" class="fnanchor">[275]</a> It will be observed that there was nothing in this
-instrument to provide means for punishing Russia if she broke it. Hence,
-on the 15th of April, France, Austria, and England signed what was
-called the Tripartite Treaty, binding each other jointly or severally to
-go to war against any Power that violated the Treaty of Paris. This
-compact was treated like a dead letter when Russia attacked Turkey in
-1877. “The peace,” said Prince Albert in a letter to Stockmar, “is not
-such as we could have wished, still infinitely to be preferred to the
-prosecution of the war, with the present complication of general
-policy.” That was in truth the verdict of the country. Comparing the
-terms with those which we might have obtained at Vienna in 1855, it was
-a humiliating settlement for England, in no way justifying the
-continuance of the war after the battle of Inkermann. Comparing them
-with the terms which the Czar might have obtained before the invasion of
-the Crimea, the settlement was humiliating to Russia.</p>
-
-<p>In Parliament the debates on the Treaty were on the whole favourable to
-the Government. Complaint was, however, made that no effective steps had
-been taken to protect Turkey from Russian aggression in Asia Minor; that
-the Circassians had been abandoned; that Lord Clarendon in the Congress
-had not protested with enough warmth against the attacks made on the
-Belgian Press; that no definite provision had been made to prevent
-Russia from<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_687" id="page_687">{687}</a></span> building war-ships at Nicolaieff; that the government of
-the Principalities had been left an open question; and that by the
-Declarations rights of search at sea, which were extremely useful to a
-naval power during war, were surrendered. It is true that, by agreeing
-to abolish privateering, England sacrificed what may be called her right
-of fighting with naval volunteers; and it seems as if the American
-doctrine&mdash;namely, that to the merchant whose ships are plundered, it
-matters little whether the mischief is done by a man-of-war or a
-privateer&mdash;is sensible. On the other hand, it was obvious that England
-could not carry on a naval war for a year on the principle that free
-ships did not make free goods, without coming into collision with every
-neutral State in the world. But to all objections there was, of course,
-one answer. No better terms could be got unless England was prepared to
-carry on the war alone. Yet, as a matter of fact, Russia had suffered so
-severely during the winter, that it is probable she might have been more
-complaisant at Paris, had Lord Clarendon been firmer, and had Napoleon
-III. not perfidiously played into her hands.</p>
-
-<p>The solitary result of the Crimean War, says Mr. Spencer Walpole, was to
-“set back the clock for some fourteen years.”<a name="FNanchor_276_276" id="FNanchor_276_276"></a><a href="#Footnote_276_276" class="fnanchor">[276]</a> Still he seems to
-think that it “was perhaps worth some sacrifice, to prove that England
-was still ready to strike a blow for a weak neighbour whom she believed
-to be oppressed.” This would have been a gain had it added to English
-prestige. But the war really diminished that prestige. M. De
-Tocqueville, after returning from a Continental tour, said to the late
-Mr. Senior, “I heard universal and unqualified praise of the heroic
-courage of your soldiers, but at the same time I found spread abroad the
-persuasion that the importance of England had been overrated as a
-military power properly so called&mdash;a power which consists in
-administering as much as in fighting, and, above all, that it was
-impossible (and this had never before been believed) for her to raise
-large armies, even under the most pressing circumstances. I never heard
-anything like it since my childhood. You are supposed to be entirely
-dependent on us.... A year ago we probably overrated your military
-power. I believe that now we most mischievously underrate it. A year ago
-nothing alarmed us more than a whisper of the chance of a war with
-England. We talk of one now with great composure. We believe that it
-would not be difficult to throw 100,000 men upon your shores, and we
-believe that half that number would walk over England or Ireland.”<a name="FNanchor_277_277" id="FNanchor_277_277"></a><a href="#Footnote_277_277" class="fnanchor">[277]</a></p>
-
-<p>After peace had been proclaimed, public life in England stagnated for a
-time, and party rancour temporarily disappeared. Ministers and
-Ex-Ministers met in society on the friendliest terms, and Lord
-Malmesbury describes a dinner party which the Queen gave on the 7th of
-May in honour of Baron Brunnow, at which the leaders of both factions
-were present&mdash;“the happy family I call them,” says the Queen in a letter
-to King Leopold. “Lord John Russell was<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_688" id="page_688">{688}</a></span> there,” says Lord Malmesbury,
-“and very civil to me, as when I arrived he crossed the room to come to
-speak to me&mdash;a thing he never did before. He began by saying ‘You gave
-it them well last night,’<a name="FNanchor_278_278" id="FNanchor_278_278"></a><a href="#Footnote_278_278" class="fnanchor">[278]</a> and seemed quite delighted at the
-Government being bullied.... I had to take Lady Clarendon to dinner. She
-was at first very cross, but I ended by laughing her out of her bad
-humour.”<a name="FNanchor_279_279" id="FNanchor_279_279"></a><a href="#Footnote_279_279" class="fnanchor">[279]</a> A slight ripple on the calm waters was due to the
-suspension of diplomatic relations with the United States. In raising
-recruits under the Foreign Enlistment Act, it seems some overzealous
-British agents had given the American Government not unreasonable cause
-to complain that we were violating their law during the war. The dispute
-became acute, when the British Minister to the United States was
-requested to leave Washington&mdash;but the quarrel was not a serious one.
-“The Americans,” Prince Albert informs Stockmar on the 16th June, “have
-sent away our Minister, but accompanied the act with such assurances of
-friendship and affection, and of their perfect readiness to adjust all
-points of difference in conformity with our wishes, that it will be
-difficult to give theirs his <i>congé</i> in return.” As a matter of fact the
-British Government apologised, and on the 16th of March, 1857, Lord
-Napier was received at Washington as Mr. Crampton’s successor. In truth
-there was no real ill-feeling at all between the two nations&mdash;and of
-this a curious proof was given at the end of the year. H.M.S. <i>Resolute</i>
-which had been attached to the last Arctic expedition had been abandoned
-in the ice. Some American explorers found her adrift and took her to the
-United States. There she was re-fitted at the expense of the Government,
-and sent back to England as a present to the Queen. When <i>Resolute</i> made
-her appearance at Cowes, the Queen insisted on going in person, on the
-16th of December, to receive the gift. Her courteous reception of the
-American officers touched them deeply, and Lord Clarendon informed her
-Majesty that Mr. Dallas, the American Minister, told him, his countrymen
-were quite overwhelmed with the kindness which they had everywhere
-received.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Palmerston’s unwearied attention to business, and his popularity
-after peace had been proclaimed, almost silenced criticism on his
-domestic policy. It had been supposed that the Budget would tempt the
-Opposition to attack him, because the Chancellor of the Exchequer had a
-dismal story to tell when the House of Commons met after Whitsuntide.
-The expenditure for the past year had come to £88,428,355, or
-£22,723,854 in excess of the revenue. In fact, during the three years
-ending with 1856 the war had cost England<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_689" id="page_689">{689}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_140" id="ill_140"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_689.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_689.jpg" width="519" height="336" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>VISIT OF THE QUEEN AND PRINCE ALBERT TO THE “RESOLUTE.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_690" id="page_690">{690}</a></span>”</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>£77,588,000. After making the most cautious estimates, Sir George
-Cornewall Lewis said that for the coming year, on the basis of existing
-taxation, his expected revenue would fall short of his anticipated
-expenditure by £7,000,000. As no new taxes were to be levied, he was
-compelled to find the money by borrowing, and, of course, no remission
-of taxation could in such circumstances be looked for. The House
-sanctioned the scheme of the Chancellor of the Exchequer, but he was
-warned that in future reduced estimates would be demanded.</p>
-
-<p>More than one attempt was made by Mr. Disraeli to assail the Italian
-policy of Lord Palmerston. That policy was somewhat tortuous, for whilst
-the English Foreign Office was perpetually encouraging Sardinia to
-protest against the Austrian occupation of North Italy, England had,
-with Austria and France, become a party to the Tripartite Treaty
-guaranteeing the execution of the Treaty of Paris. Mr. Disraeli argued
-that it was inconsistent to stir up Sardinia and the discontented
-populations of Italy against Austria, at a time when we had by the
-Tripartite Treaty virtually bound ourselves in a close alliance with the
-Austrian Empire. The tyrannical Government of Sicily also elicited
-remonstrances from England, against which Russia protested, on the
-ground that we had no right to interfere between King “Bomba” and his
-subjects. But no enthusiasm was roused on these subjects&mdash;in fact, the
-country did not desire a change of Government at the time, and every
-effort to weaken the Ministry was therefore futile. Yet the home policy
-of the Ministry was a signal failure. They succeeded in assimilating the
-mercantile law of England and Scotland; but their first Bill to amend
-the law of partnership was abandoned in March. A second one was
-introduced, and abandoned in July. A Bill for the amendment of the Poor
-Law met the same fate. The Bill to regulate lunatic asylums in Ireland,
-and a Bill to relieve merchant vessels of tolls and dues were also
-abandoned. Ministers were equally unfortunate with their Divorce Bill,
-and with their Bills to establish jurisdiction over wills, and to check
-the criminal appropriation of trust property. Their Church Discipline
-Bill was rejected by the Lords. The Bills to reconstruct the Irish Court
-of Chancery and the Insolvency Court were dropped.<a name="FNanchor_280_280" id="FNanchor_280_280"></a><a href="#Footnote_280_280" class="fnanchor">[280]</a> The Jury Bill,
-Juvenile Offenders Bill, and Dublin Police Bill were also given up. The
-Civil Servants’ Superannuation Bill, the London Municipal Reform Bill,
-the Bill for the local management of the metropolis, a burial Bill, a
-vaccination Bill, a Bill dealing with the Queen’s College in Ireland,
-and a Scotch education Bill were all abandoned. A Bill enabling two
-Bishops to retire on handsome terms was passed, though the arrangement
-was denounced as simoniacal, and the County Police Bill also became law.
-But the legislative failures of the Government showed that it had no
-firm hold over the House of Commons, and that its position was safe,
-merely because<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_691" id="page_691">{691}</a></span> the nation was not in a mood for change so soon after
-its energies had been exhausted in a costly and inglorious war.
-Moreover, Parties were still disorganised. Lord John Russell’s isolation
-and the position of the Peelites being disturbing factors in the
-situation. Mr. Gladstone and Mr. Disraeli, however, began to draw nearer
-and nearer to each other, Lord Stanley being regarded as the connecting
-link between them, and some of the Whigs, a little alarmed at the
-prospect of a hostile coalition, began to hint that Palmerston would be
-wise to attract the Peelites back to his standard. The fact is, the war
-left the country profoundly disgusted with Party government. Sir James
-Graham told Mr. Greville that hitherto the party system had been
-efficient for government, because patronage had been “the great
-instrument for keeping parties together.” Peel, however, broke up the
-old party system in 1846, and now, said Sir James Graham, “between the
-Press, the public opinion which the Press had made, and the views of
-certain people in Parliament, of whom Gladstone is the most eminent and
-strenuous, patronage was either destroyed or going rapidly to
-destruction.”<a name="FNanchor_281_281" id="FNanchor_281_281"></a><a href="#Footnote_281_281" class="fnanchor">[281]</a> To some extent the Queen shared these views, but in
-the event of any mishap leading to Palmerston’s resignation, the idea of
-the Court was to organise a coalition under Clarendon. Parliament was
-prorogued on the 29th of July.</p>
-
-<p>Outside politics the life of the Queen during 1856 was not very
-eventful. On the 20th of March the confirmation of the Princess Royal
-brought together an interesting family gathering at the private chapel
-at Windsor. Prince Albert led the princess in, and was followed by the
-Queen and King Leopold of Belgium. The officers of State, and of the
-household, and most of the members of the Royal Family, were present,
-and the Bishop of Oxford, Lord High Almoner, read the preface, the
-Archbishop of Canterbury performing the ceremony. Several guests were
-present, and in describing the event to Stockmar the Prince dwells with
-some pride on the fact that the Princess came through the ordeal of Dean
-Wellesley’s preliminary examination a few days before with great
-success.<a name="FNanchor_282_282" id="FNanchor_282_282"></a><a href="#Footnote_282_282" class="fnanchor">[282]</a> The choice of the Navy as Prince Alfred’s profession had
-now been made, and in April the Queen and Prince Albert, after much
-anxious thought, selected a tutor for their son. He is described by the
-Prince in one of his letters as “a distinguished and most amiable<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_692" id="page_692">{692}</a></span> young
-officer of Engineers ... one Lieutenant Cowell, who was Adjutant of Sir
-Harry Jones at Bomarsund and before Sebastopol.... He is only
-twenty-three, and has had a high scientific training. By this a great
-load has been taken off my heart.”<a name="FNanchor_283_283" id="FNanchor_283_283"></a><a href="#Footnote_283_283" class="fnanchor">[283]</a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_141" id="ill_141"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_692.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_692.jpg" height="260" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>PORTSMOUTH.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>During the spring of the year the wounded from the Crimea had been
-pouring in. In February the Queen presented Miss Florence Nightingale
-with a jewel, somewhat resembling the badge of an Order of Knighthood,
-for her services at Scutari. On the 16th of April her Majesty went to
-Chatham with her husband to visit these victims of the war. She passed
-through the wards much affected by the sight of some of the more ghastly
-wounds, speaking kind and comforting words of sympathy to those who had
-suffered most severely. The Camp at Aldershot was also visited on the
-18th of April, and 14,000 troops were reviewed, her Majesty riding along
-the line whilst the men presented arms. Next morning was a field day,
-and the Queen appeared on the ground on horseback, wearing a
-Field-Marshal’s uniform, with the Star of the Garter over a dark-blue
-riding-habit. On the 23rd of April the splendid fleet<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_693" id="page_693">{693}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_142" id="ill_142"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_693.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_693.jpg" height="344" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>SIR DE LACY EVANS.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">at Spithead was reviewed. The spectacle was one of surpassing
-magnificence, and upwards of 100,000 persons witnessed it, crowding
-every spot from which a view could be obtained between Fort Monckton and
-Southsea Castle. The Solent was alive with yachts and craft of all
-kinds, decked with bunting, which fluttered gaily in the light breeze.
-The Queen’s yacht left Portsmouth Harbour at noon, steamed down and
-returned through the double line of war-ships. As the yacht rounded the
-<i>Royal George</i> and <i>Duke of Wellington</i> they opened a Royal salute, and
-their yards were suddenly manned, as if by magic, with seamen, each
-trying to cheer louder than his comrade. This manœuvre was repeated in
-succession by every ship in the fleet, and the effect was imposing and
-impressive. A mimic attack on Southsea Castle followed, and at night<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_694" id="page_694">{694}</a></span>
-the whole fleet was suddenly and simultaneously illuminated with blue
-lights from yards and portholes.</p>
-
-<p>“Our army,” Prince Albert wrote, in April, “has begun to return, and it
-will require redoubled exertions to keep up its organisation.” In fact,
-already an active party in the Cabinet had begun to demand heavy
-retrenchment on military expenditure. The Queen had long been convinced
-that hurried retrenchments led to wasteful panic expenditure, and was
-very much concerned when she heard what was being mooted in the
-Ministry. Hence she wrote to Lord Palmerston expressing her strong
-feeling that retrenchment should be moderate and gradual. “To the
-miserable reductions of the last thirty years,” she says, “is entirely
-owing our state of helplessness when the war began;” and surely, she
-urged, Ministers were not going to forget the lesson taught by our
-sufferings in the Crimea. What, however, was most seriously wanted was a
-new military system which would properly utilise the money already voted
-for the army, and prevent it from being jobbed into the hands of
-incompetent persons with powerful family interest. Sir De Lacy Evans, on
-the 4th of March, made an effort to persuade the House of Commons to
-abolish the purchase system, which he described as “a stain upon the
-service and a dishonour to England,” and Lord Goderich warmly advocated
-the application of some effective tests of competence to candidates for
-commissions. But though everybody sympathised with Evans, nobody would
-help him to carry out his ideas. In the abstract, said Lord Palmerston,
-purchase was bad. No one would propose such a system if we were
-establishing an army for the first time. It existed only in the British
-army, but, then, it did exist, and it had existed so long that it was
-hard to get rid of it without injustice to individuals,<a name="FNanchor_284_284" id="FNanchor_284_284"></a><a href="#Footnote_284_284" class="fnanchor">[284]</a> and great
-expenditure in compensation. Yet the highest estimate made of the value
-of commissions did not exceed £8,000,000&mdash;less than half the sum voted
-every year by the House of Commons for the troops; and even that sum
-would have had to be paid, not at once, but over a long series of years,
-under any scheme, to release an army which had been pawned to its
-officers. Prince Albert, in conjunction with Lord Hardinge, drew up a
-plan for a new military organisation, which, however, did not touch
-questions of patronage or promotion. On the 19th of May the Queen laid
-the foundation stone of the great military hospital at Netley, the first
-of the kind in England, and an institution which we owe entirely to her
-Majesty. “Loving my dear, brave army as I do,” she writes to King
-Leopold, “and having seen so many of my poor sick and wounded soldiers,
-I shall watch over this work with maternal anxiety,”<a name="FNanchor_285_285" id="FNanchor_285_285"></a><a href="#Footnote_285_285" class="fnanchor">[285]</a> A visit from
-Prince Frederick William of Prussia brought sunshine into the Royal
-household, and gladdened the heart of the Queen’s eldest daughter, who
-was supremely happy at once again meeting her betrothed. It was during
-this visit that the Princess met with an accident, on the 25th of June,
-that<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_695" id="page_695">{695}</a></span> might have ended fatally. She was sitting at her table in
-Buckingham Palace, reading a letter, when the sleeve of her dress caught
-fire from a candle. Luckily Miss Hildyard and Miss Anderson (who were in
-the room at the time) promptly rolled the Princess in the hearthrug and
-extinguished the flames, though her arm was severely burnt from below
-the elbow to the shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>On the 8th of July the Queen again went to Aldershot to review a great
-body of Crimean troops, the Royal party including the King of the
-Belgians and Prince Oscar of Sweden. Unfortunately the weather somewhat
-marred the grandeur of the spectacle, but it became fair enough ere the
-day was done to admit of the regiments forming in three sides of a
-square round the Queen’s carriage. Then the officers who had been under
-fire, with four men from each company and troop, stepped forward, and
-her Majesty, rising, addressed them a few words of welcome and thanks.
-She told them to say to their comrades that she had herself watched
-anxiously over their difficulties and hardships, and mourned with deep
-sorrow for the brave men who had fallen in their country’s cause. When
-she ceased to speak, the cry of “God save the Queen” burst forth from
-every lip. The air was black with helmets, bearskins, and shakoes, which
-the men tossed up with delight. Flashing sabres were waving and glancing
-along the lines, and on every hillside crowds caught up the cheering
-that rose from the serried and glittering ranks of the army. Unhappily
-the day was saddened by a strange and melancholy occurrence. Lord
-Hardinge was seized with a fit whilst talking to the Queen. “He fell
-forward,” says Prince Albert, “upon the table before which he was
-standing. I assisted him to the nearest sofa, where he at once resumed
-what he was saying with the greatest clearness and calmness, merely
-apologising that he had made such a disturbance. When he was moved to
-London it was found his right side was paralysed.” Next day the Guards
-and Highlanders arrived, and were received by the Queen and enthusiastic
-crowds in the Park. “They marched past in fours,” writes Lord
-Malmesbury, “preceded by their colonels on horseback and their bands, in
-heavy marching order. Certainly they looked as if they had done work;
-their uniforms were shabby, many having almost lost all colour, their
-bearskins quite brown, and they themselves, poor fellows, though they
-seemed happy, and were laughing as they marched along, were very thin
-and worn.”<a name="FNanchor_286_286" id="FNanchor_286_286"></a><a href="#Footnote_286_286" class="fnanchor">[286]</a> Lord Hardinge’s career was now closed. On the 9th of
-July he resigned, and on the 24th of September he died. On the 12th of
-July the Cabinet accordingly advised the Queen to appoint her cousin,
-the Duke of Cambridge, Commander-in-Chief, in succession to Lord
-Hardinge, and her Majesty was gratified to find that the arrangement was
-one which was highly popular with the troops. Thus the intention of
-Wellington was fulfilled, and the army again passed under the direct
-command of a Prince of the Blood Royal.</p>
-
-<p>The Prince and Princess of Prussia paid a visit to England in August,
-arriving on the 10th and leaving on the 29th, by which time the Court
-had<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_696" id="page_696">{696}</a></span> retired to Osborne. On the 30th, after spending two days in
-Edinburgh, the Queen and her family arrived at Balmoral. “We found the
-house finished,” writes the Queen in her Diary, “as well as the offices,
-and the poor old house gone!”<a name="FNanchor_287_287" id="FNanchor_287_287"></a><a href="#Footnote_287_287" class="fnanchor">[287]</a> It was a stormy, tempestuous holiday,
-but the Queen made the best of it. On the 21st of September Sir James
-Clark introduced Miss Florence Nightingale to the Queen, who was greatly
-charmed with her, and with whom her Majesty held grave consultations as
-to the reforms that were needed in military hospitals. The coronation of
-the Czar at Moscow, on the 7th of September, was attended by Lord
-Granville as the Queen’s representative, and when his reports reached
-Balmoral, Prince Albert, in a letter to Stockmar, said that they
-regarded these as “an apotheosis and homage paid to the vanquished, and
-which cannot fail to inspire both worshipper and worshipped with
-dangerous illusions in regard to the real state of things.”</p>
-
-<p>The Queen was now getting alarmed as to the carrying out of the Treaty
-of Peace. She saw Russia making strenuous efforts to separate France and
-England. Instead of restoring Kars to the Turks, the Russians demolished
-the fortifications, and prolonged their military occupation of the
-country in defiance of the Treaty of Paris. They tried to filch Serpent
-Island at the mouth of the Danube, under the pretext that it was inside
-the new line of their frontier. They sought to push their new frontier
-as far south as Lake Jalpuk, because the Powers, misled by a faulty map,
-had permitted them to retain the Moldavian town of Bolgrad.<a name="FNanchor_288_288" id="FNanchor_288_288"></a><a href="#Footnote_288_288" class="fnanchor">[288]</a> In each
-case the Emperor of the French was inclined to support the Russian
-claim. The British fleet was therefore ordered to occupy the Black Sea
-till the deadlock was ended, and when Chreptovitch, the new Russian
-ambassador, threatened to leave England because this step had been
-taken, Lord Palmerston coolly told him “the sooner he did so the
-better,” if he did not mean to give England satisfaction.<a name="FNanchor_289_289" id="FNanchor_289_289"></a><a href="#Footnote_289_289" class="fnanchor">[289]</a></p>
-
-<p>The King of Prussia now began to press the Queen to interfere in a
-quarrel between him and the Swiss Republic. Neuenburg or Neufchâtel, by
-dynastic inheritance, had come into the possession of Frederick I. in
-1707. In 1806 it was ceded to Napoleon, who gave it to Berthier, the
-most diplomatic of his generals. After the Great Peace it was granted an
-oligarchic constitution,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_697" id="page_697">{697}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_143" id="ill_143"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_697.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_697.jpg" height="369" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>VIEW IN BERNE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">and received as a Canton into the Swiss Confederation, but its vassalage
-to the House of Hohenzollern was formally acknowledged. In 1848 the
-Republican citizens of Neuenburg broke the bond that tied them to the
-Prussian crown, and though the Protocol of London of the 24th May, 1852,
-recognised the Prussian claim to the Province, the Province ignored the
-Protocol of London. In the autumn of 1856 the Prussian party in
-Neuenburg attacked the Republicans, but the Swiss Federal troops
-ruthlessly suppressed the rising, and not only killed twelve royalists,
-but had the audacity to throw a hundred others into prison, simply
-because they were loyal to their feudal lord. The King of Prussia
-objected to their being put on trial, and demanded their surrender, but
-it was a far cry from Berlin to Berne, and the stubborn Switzers paid no
-heed to his demands. Napoleon III. menaced them in vain. Austria, always
-pleased to see Prussia humbled in Germany, threw obstacles in the way of
-Prussian troops marching through the territory of the Confederation to
-coerce Switzerland, and Napoleon did not<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_698" id="page_698">{698}</a></span> dare to outrage French opinion
-by letting them march through Alsace-Lorraine. In England, Palmerston
-smiled grimly over the embarrassment of Russia’s most faithful ally. He
-said to the Hanoverian Minister in London when Prussia was threatening
-coercion, “the Prussians will incur much expense, and in January
-Switzerland will condemn the captives and then amnesty them; <i>donc la
-farce sera finie, et la Prusse y sera pour les frais</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_290_290" id="FNanchor_290_290"></a><a href="#Footnote_290_290" class="fnanchor">[290]</a></p>
-
-<p>Nor was this the only anxiety at Court. King “Bomba’s” misgovernment in
-southern Italy, and his brutal treatment of persons arbitrarily arrested
-on suspicion of disloyalty, were provoking revolution. An outbreak in
-the south must lead to a rising in the north, which in turn must involve
-France and Sardinia in war with Austria. England and France, finding
-their remonstrances disregarded by the Neapolitan Government, withdrew
-their legations from Naples in October, and ordered the fleet to make a
-demonstration in the bay. This step was sanctioned by the Queen not
-without some misgiving, because to suspend diplomatic relations with a
-State because its internal government is not to our liking, was to
-establish a dangerous diplomatic precedent. It evoked from Russia a
-cutting remonstrance, which, however, Lord Palmerston had to accept as
-best he could.</p>
-
-<p>On the 19th of October the Court returned to Windsor, and on the 17th of
-November, Stockmar, in response to a pressing appeal to come and advise
-the Queen in the midst of her growing difficulties, paid her what was
-destined to be his last visit. He found her heavily stricken with grief
-because of the death of her half-brother, Prince Leiningen, on the 13th.
-“We three,” (the Prince, the Princess Hohenlohe, and the Queen), she
-writes to King Leopold, “were very fond of each other, and never felt or
-fancied that we were not real <i>Geschwister</i> (children of the same
-parents). We knew but <i>one</i> parent&mdash;<i>our</i> mother.”<a name="FNanchor_291_291" id="FNanchor_291_291"></a><a href="#Footnote_291_291" class="fnanchor">[291]</a> The last day of
-the year brought with it one consolation. The Conference in Paris had
-settled our dispute with Russia, and a map was signed by the
-plenipotentiaries which met the requirements of the Czar, without giving
-Russia strategical advantages which she had tried to obtain.<a name="FNanchor_292_292" id="FNanchor_292_292"></a><a href="#Footnote_292_292" class="fnanchor">[292]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_699" id="page_699">{699}</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXV" id="CHAPTER_XXXV"></a>CHAPTER XXXV.<br /><br />
-<small>TWO LITTLE WARS AND A “PENAL DISSOLUTION.”</small></h2>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>The Queen’s New Year Greeting to Napoleon III.&mdash;A
-Gladstone-Disraeli Coalition&mdash;A “Scene” in the Carlton Club&mdash;Mr.
-Disraeli’s Attack on Lord Palmerston’s Foreign Policy&mdash;The Queen
-Consents to Reduce the Income Tax&mdash;A Fallacious Budget, with
-Imaginary Remissions&mdash;The Persian War&mdash;General Outram’s
-Victories&mdash;Unpopularity of the War&mdash;Making War without Consulting
-Parliament&mdash;The Rupture with China&mdash;A “Prancing Proconsul”&mdash;The
-Bombardment of Canton&mdash;Defeat of Lord Palmerston, and his Appeal to
-the Country&mdash;A Penal Dissolution&mdash;Abortive Coalition between the
-Peelites and Tories&mdash;Mr. Gladstone and the Intriguers&mdash;Split in the
-Peelite Party&mdash;Palmerston’s Victory at the Polls&mdash;The Rout of the
-Manchester School&mdash;The Lesson of the Election&mdash;Opening of the New
-Parliament&mdash;The Work of the Session&mdash;Mr. Gladstone’s Obstruction of
-the Divorce Bill&mdash;The Settlement of the Neufchâtel Difficulty&mdash;The
-Question of the Principalities&mdash;Visit of the French Emperor to the
-Queen.</p></div>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="smcap">Writing</span> on New Year’s Day in 1857, Lord Malmesbury says in his Diary,
-“The Conference opened yesterday on the questions of Bolgrad and the
-Isle of Serpents, which the Russians falsely claim as being included in
-the Treaty of Peace. The Swiss are making energetic preparations for
-resisting the threatened invasion of Neufchâtel by Prussia; whilst
-England and France are using their utmost exertions to prevent a war.
-England has declared war against Persia, and Admiral Seymour has
-bombarded Canton to avenge an insult offered to our flag.”<a name="FNanchor_293_293" id="FNanchor_293_293"></a><a href="#Footnote_293_293" class="fnanchor">[293]</a> The
-Queen, in a letter conveying her greetings to the Emperor of the French,
-also observes, mournfully, that “the New Year again begins amid the din
-of warlike preparation;” and there was undoubtedly a feeling of
-disappointment in England that the Peace of Paris had not brought peace
-to the world. Yet the general condition of the country was prosperous.
-Crime, however&mdash;especially fraud and murder&mdash;had increased shockingly,
-and severe moralists in Pall Mall went about predicting that Parliament
-must now devote a Session to social legislation&mdash;especially penal
-legislation&mdash;so as to purge a corrupt people of its wickedness. But the
-corrupt people, much to the Queen’s regret, was of quite another
-opinion&mdash;and so were the political factions. The constituencies were
-beginning to murmur against taxation. Now that war was over, they
-demanded sweeping reductions in the income and other taxes, which
-involved the diminution of the army and navy to such slender dimensions,
-that her Majesty felt certain they would be as unfit to cope with a
-sudden emergency as they were when the Crimea was invaded. As for the
-factions, they were determined to turn out the Government, which they
-knew existed solely on the credit Palmerston had obtained by carrying on
-war when the nation wanted it, and ending it when the nation was getting
-sick of the struggle. The Queen was hostile to any abrupt change of
-Government at a time when she could see no means of replacing
-Palmerston’s Cabinet by a stronger one, and she viewed with
-disapprobation the subterranean intrigues<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_700" id="page_700">{700}</a></span> which were going on between
-the Tories and the Peelites. That Mr. Gladstone and Mr. Disraeli were
-attempting, through the medium of Lord Stanley, to form a Coalition, was
-known at the Court; nay, it was even said that Mr. Gladstone was to take
-the leadership of the Tory Party in the House of Commons. Sir William
-Jolliffe, the Tory Whip, when pressed on the point in December, 1856,
-told Mr. George Byng that this was “not true at present; that he could
-not say what might or might not happen hereafter, but that he (Mr.
-Gladstone) could not be accepted as a leader, and must, in any case,
-first serve in the ranks.” Only a short time before that some of the
-younger members of the Party had visited the drawing-room of the Carlton
-Club with the amiable intention of throwing Mr. Gladstone out of the
-window. That they had now modified their repugnance to him indicates how
-keen their hunger for office had grown. But that the Tory Party was
-disorganised through Mr. Disraeli’s unpopularity, and also because Lord
-Palmerston’s policy, though Liberal abroad, was really too Conservative
-at home to be successfully attacked, is clear from a letter which Lord
-Derby wrote to Lord Malmesbury on the prosperity of the Conservatives at
-the close of 1856.<a name="FNanchor_294_294" id="FNanchor_294_294"></a><a href="#Footnote_294_294" class="fnanchor">[294]</a></p>
-
-<p>Parliament was opened on the 3rd of February, 1857, and the Queen’s
-Speech naturally referred to the wars and rumours of war that filled the
-air. Law Reform and the Bank Act were the only subjects of domestic
-interest dwelt upon. Mr. Gladstone and Mr. Sidney Herbert now appeared
-almost anxious to join Lord Derby; and the Tories, on their part, were
-quite prepared to support Mr. Gladstone in demanding that the Income Tax
-be reduced to 5d. in the current year, and abolished altogether in 1860,
-as had been agreed on in 1853.<a name="FNanchor_295_295" id="FNanchor_295_295"></a><a href="#Footnote_295_295" class="fnanchor">[295]</a> Mr. Disraeli’s attack, on the other
-hand, was directed against the Foreign Policy of the Government. He
-complained that at the very time Lord Clarendon was encouraging the
-hopes of Count Cavour and of Italy at the Congress of Paris, France had
-signed a Secret Treaty guaranteeing to Austria her Italian provinces,
-and had signed it by the advice of England. Lord Palmerston denied the
-existence of this Secret Treaty. But he admitted that in 1854, when
-there was some hope that Austria would take part in the war, an
-agreement was made to the effect that should Russia raise an
-insurrection in North Italy, France would help Austria to put it down,
-if Austrian armies were actually co-operating with the Allies against
-Russia. In the Upper House, Lord Aberdeen voted for the amendment to the
-Address with many of the Tories&mdash;a somewhat unusual thing for an
-ex-Premier to do&mdash;and this, along with Mr. Gladstone’s cordial support
-of Mr. Disraeli, was taken to be a sign that the Peelites desired to
-coalesce with the Opposition. Lord John Russell, who was a kind of
-political Ishmaelite,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_701" id="page_701">{701}</a></span> also spoke bitterly about the abortive
-demonstration of the fleet at Naples, which had drawn upon us insulting
-remonstrances, and had not coerced King Ferdinand into good behaviour.
-On the 17th of February Mr. Disraeli compelled Lord Palmerston to admit
-that “a military convention,” if not a Secret Treaty, between France and
-Austria <i>had</i> been signed, but only as a temporary arrangement. When,
-however, Mr. Disraeli persisted in saying it was a Secret Treaty, and
-that on the face of it there was no limit to the period of its
-operation, Palmerston lost his temper, a circumstance so extraordinary
-that it convinced the House he had been again caught tripping.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_144" id="ill_144"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_701.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_701.jpg" height="206" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>OLD WINDSOR LOCK.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>From a Photograph by Taunt and Co., Oxford.</i>)</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>After many harassing consultations, the Queen felt that it was
-impossible for the Cabinet to resist the growing agitation against the
-Income Tax. The coalition between Mr. Gladstone and Mr. Disraeli was too
-ominous to be disregarded; and so, on the 10th of February, she wrote to
-King Leopold, “We think we shall be able to reduce the Income Tax and
-yet maintain an efficient navy, and the <i>organisation</i> of the army,
-which is even more important than the number of the men.”<a name="FNanchor_296_296" id="FNanchor_296_296"></a><a href="#Footnote_296_296" class="fnanchor">[296]</a> When Sir
-George Cornewall Lewis brought in his Budget on the 13th of February, it
-was found that he reduced the Income Tax from 1s. 4d. to 7d. in the
-pound; but of course this was still 2d. above the peace limit fixed in
-1853. The complaint of the Opposition was that the Government imposed
-that 2d. merely to promote what Mr. Disraeli called the “turbulent and
-aggressive policy” abroad by which Lord Palmerston diverted the
-attention of<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_702" id="page_702">{702}</a></span> the country from its own affairs at home.<a name="FNanchor_297_297" id="FNanchor_297_297"></a><a href="#Footnote_297_297" class="fnanchor">[297]</a> Mr.
-Gladstone attacked the Budget all along the line. Sir George Lewis, he
-said, pretended to remit £11,000,000 of taxation. But of that sum
-£4,470,000 were war taxes, which necessarily dropped when war was over,
-and though Sir George brought the tea duty down from 1s. 9d. to 1s. 7d.
-on the lb., and on sugar from 20s. per cwt. to 18s. 4d., that still
-raised from tea and sugar £1,400,000 more than the old peace duties drew
-from them. The real remission, then, was not £11,000,000, but
-£3,184,000. The faults of the Budget were obviously two. It virtually
-ignored the pledge of the Government in 1853 to abolish the Income Tax
-in 1860. Instead of cutting down expenditure so as to render it possible
-to keep that pledge, it increased expenditure above the peace limit, so
-as to make it impossible to surrender the Income Tax.<a name="FNanchor_298_298" id="FNanchor_298_298"></a><a href="#Footnote_298_298" class="fnanchor">[298]</a> The accepted
-financial policy of the country had been to grant an Income Tax during
-peace solely to enable the Government to remit taxes on articles of
-popular consumption. It was granted merely to give an elastic revenue
-time to recover from sudden remissions of indirect taxation. Sir George
-Lewis, however, still kept the tax above the peace limit, and his small
-reductions on the tea and sugar duties left them standing above the
-peace limit also. Moreover, he maintained his expenditure on a scale
-which created deficits that rendered the continuance of the Income Tax,
-without compensating remissions of indirect taxes, inevitable. In fact,
-Sir George Lewis may be said to have introduced the vicious principle of
-modern finance, by which a temporary Income Tax is insidiously converted
-into a permanent one, and by which, under cover of extraordinary
-disbursement during a war, the country is left after peace is declared
-with a residue of that outlay clinging to the estimates, as ordinary and
-permanent annual expenditure. The Budget, however, was carried through
-in a slightly modified form, but the sudden dissolution of Parliament in
-March compelled Sir George Lewis to levy his new taxes not on a
-descending scale for three years, but for the ensuing year only. With a
-view to the popular vote to which Lord Palmerston was about to appeal,
-Sir George then surrendered 2d. of the tea duty, which brought it down
-to 1s. 5d. on the pound. But he made no adequate provision for the
-Persian war, or the war with China. His alteration of the tea duty of
-course rendered<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_703" id="page_703">{703}</a></span> his surplus a myth, and his Budget, with an inflated
-expenditure, went forth, as Mr. Gladstone complained, with a deficiency
-of ways and means. In fact, on the eve of an appeal to the
-constituencies, a prudish Chancellor of the Exchequer “went to the
-country” with a profligate electioneering Budget.</p>
-
-<p>Mention has been already made of a “little war” that was being waged
-with Persia. It had sprung out of the irrepressible desire of the Shah
-to hold Herat, and from the traditional belief of the Foreign Office
-that when Herat was in Persian hands, “the key of India” was in the
-pockets of the Czar.<a name="FNanchor_299_299" id="FNanchor_299_299"></a><a href="#Footnote_299_299" class="fnanchor">[299]</a> In 1851 Persia had promised that she would not
-meddle with Herat if the Afghans did not attempt to seize it. But the
-Governor of Candahar advanced on the coveted city, whose ruler appealed
-to Persia for protection. The Indian Government admitted that there was
-no danger to India in Persia responding to this appeal. The Foreign
-Office, however, suspended diplomatic relations with the Court of
-Teheran.<a name="FNanchor_300_300" id="FNanchor_300_300"></a><a href="#Footnote_300_300" class="fnanchor">[300]</a> Persia then agreed to retire from Herat when the Afghans
-withdrew, and negotiations went on in a dilatory fashion till the
-Crimean War broke out, when the Czar urged Persia to resist and become
-his ally. The Shah’s Prime Minister held his Imperial master back, and
-Mr. Thomson, a typical representative of the Foreign Office in Persia,
-by way of further conciliating the friendly Premier, appointed as First
-Secretary of the British Legation, a disreputable person who had been
-dismissed from the Persian service, and whose family were among the most
-active enemies of the anti-Russian Minister. The Minister refused to
-receive this individual&mdash;Meerza Hashim by name. By way of compensating
-him Mr. Murray, who succeeded Mr. Thomson, appointed him British agent
-at Shiraz, a place where we had no right to have an agent at all, but
-where, by the courtesy of the Persian Government, we had been allowed to
-have one.<a name="FNanchor_301_301" id="FNanchor_301_301"></a><a href="#Footnote_301_301" class="fnanchor">[301]</a> The Persian Premier then threatened to arrest Meerza
-Hashim. As a matter of fact, he arrested his wife, and maliciously
-insinuated in a despatch, when Mr. Murray demanded her release, that he
-had compromised himself with the lady. Murray accordingly struck his
-flag and demanded an apology, whereupon Persia issued a manifesto
-declaring that the Afghans were advancing on Herat, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_704" id="page_704">{704}</a></span> threatening to
-seize that fortress. In July, 1856, a British force was ordered to
-proceed from Bombay to occupy the island of Karrack and the city of
-Bushire. By this time the Crimean War was over, and Persia could get no
-aid from her Russian ally. A Persian ambassador therefore was sent to
-Paris to negotiate for peace, but he broke his journey at Constantinople
-to arrange the terms with Stratford de Redcliffe. Whilst there, news
-came that Persia had captured Herat. Stratford demanded its evacuation,
-and the dismissal of the Prime Minister. This latter demand the Persian
-Envoy rejected. The English Government therefore went on with the war.
-It was, however, declared by the Indian Government that war was waged
-for the recovery of Herat, which Persia had offered to evacuate, whereas
-the British Government, in their declaration, stated that their object
-was the dismissal of the Persian Premier,<a name="FNanchor_302_302" id="FNanchor_302_302"></a><a href="#Footnote_302_302" class="fnanchor">[302]</a> who had foiled the
-attempt of Russia to drag the Shah into the Crimean War. The Expedition,
-led by General Outram, occupied Karrack and captured Bushire. But these
-victories did not really determine the issue. In England the war had
-become unpopular. Palmerston had begun it, and carried it on without
-consulting the House of Commons, by the simple expedient of using the
-revenues of India to meet its expenses. This was a source of supplies
-which the House, of course, could not control. At the beginning of the
-Session it was currently rumoured that the Government would soon be
-called to account for a proceeding which the Representative Chamber was
-bound to view with jealousy and suspicion.</p>
-
-<p>These mutterings of hostility alarmed Palmerston, for he had already
-determined to dissolve Parliament and appeal to the country against the
-condemnation which the House of Commons had passed on his policy in
-China. Whilst, as yet, the full bearing of his Persian policy was
-imperfectly understood by the constituencies, he hastened to make peace,
-and Persia, after her defeats, was not disposed to be obstinate. But the
-Shah refused to dismiss his Prime Minister, and Palmerston was
-accordingly fain to withdraw his demand, and be content with an apology
-for the imputations which had been cast on Mr. Murray’s character. Such
-was the inglorious end of a war which is one of the least creditable
-events in Lord Palmerston’s career. As might be expected, when the
-General Election was over, and the new Parliament met, Ministers were
-fiercely attacked for declaring and prosecuting the war
-unconstitutionally without consulting the House of Commons. The country
-was now fully alive to the danger that lurked in such a monstrous
-extension of the Queen’s prerogative as would permit her to use the
-revenues of India, which the House of Commons could not control, for
-carrying on war outside the Indian Empire. The only real control which
-the people have over the Crown is their power to stop supplies for the
-army. The Persian War, however, proved that the Crown could draw
-supplies and troops from India, without any Parliamentary sanction
-whatever. Palmerston’s policy had thus put into<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_705" id="page_705">{705}</a></span> the hands of the Queen
-a deadlier weapon of despotism than either the Tudors or the Stuarts had
-dared to wield. But the attack, damaging as it was, failed to upset the
-Ministry; though the House, in 1858, at Mr. Gladstone’s suggestion,
-forced the Government to accept a clause in the India Bill which
-disallowed such pretensions on the part of the Crown.<a name="FNanchor_303_303" id="FNanchor_303_303"></a><a href="#Footnote_303_303" class="fnanchor">[303]</a></p>
-
-<p>But at the beginning of the Session of 1857 it was not Persia but China
-that really engrossed the attention of the country. A dispute between
-Sir John Bowring, Governor of Hong Kong, and the Chinese authorities at
-Canton, raised an issue which made it easy for the Peelites to unite
-with the Tories, and the Cobdenites with both.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_145" id="ill_145"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_705.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_705.jpg" width="223" height="225" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>SIR JOHN BOWRING.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Chinese War of 1857 occupies an unique place in the events of the
-Victorian epoch, because it was a war which was provoked by a member of
-the Peace Society. In October, 1856, the Chinese authorities arrested
-twelve Chinamen on board a native lorcha called the <i>Arrow</i>, on a charge
-of piracy. The British Consul, asserting that the <i>Arrow</i> was a British
-ship, contended very properly that the accused should have been demanded
-from him. Nine of the Chinamen were released. Sir John Bowring thereupon
-insisted on the release of the other three, and an apology within
-forty-eight hours, on pain of immediate<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_706" id="page_706">{706}</a></span> reprisals. The three men were
-released; but the Chinese Governor courteously refused to apologise,
-because, he said, as the <i>Arrow</i> was <i>not</i> a British ship, no wrong had
-been done to the British flag. This was literally true, for Sir J.
-Bowring, as everybody now admits, was utterly mistaken as to the
-nationality of the lorcha. The courtesy of the Chinese in surrendering
-the prisoners in deference to an illegal demand, which Bowring had
-couched in terms of offensive arrogance, was rewarded next day by the
-bombardment of the luckless commercial city of Canton&mdash;a barbarous act
-which could be justified by the laws neither of God nor of man. In fact,
-“a prancing pro-Consul,” to use a famous phrase of Sir William
-Harcourt’s, had virtually usurped the prerogative of the Crown, and
-levied war on a foreign Government on his own responsibility. Instead of
-recalling Bowring and the British Consul, Lord Palmerston, without
-giving the matter much thought, identified himself with their
-proceedings, though many Members of his Cabinet, notably Lord Granville
-and Mr. Labouchere, who afterwards were forced to defend Bowring in
-Parliament, personally disapproved of his conduct.<a name="FNanchor_304_304" id="FNanchor_304_304"></a><a href="#Footnote_304_304" class="fnanchor">[304]</a> But Ministers
-virtually abandoned the case of the <i>Arrow</i> when the controversy grew
-hot. “As usual,” writes Mr. Morley, “they shifted the ground from the
-particular to the general; if the Chinese were right about the <i>Arrow</i>
-they were wrong about something else; if legality did not exactly
-justify violence, it was at any rate required by policy; Orientals
-mistake justice for fear; and so on through the string of well-worn
-sophisms, which are always pursued in connection with such
-affairs.”<a name="FNanchor_305_305" id="FNanchor_305_305"></a><a href="#Footnote_305_305" class="fnanchor">[305]</a> The real truth, as the Tory leaders said in the debates
-in both Houses of Parliament, was that Bowring’s vanity had been hurt
-because the Chinese had refused to receive him in Canton. When he sent
-Admiral Sir M. Seymour to bombard the port he tacked on to his original
-ultimatum a demand that foreigners should be freely admitted to the
-city, on the ground that this privilege, though ceded by the Treaty of
-1846, had never been granted. Admitting that his interpretation of this
-disputed point in the Treaty was correct, neither he nor Lord Palmerston
-had any right to force that interpretation on China by war. Their duty
-was to have acted in concert with the Governments of France and the
-United States, who were equally interested in the question, and in this
-way to exhaust the resources of diplomacy, before appealing to the
-arbitrament of the sword. Every Member of both Houses of Parliament who
-was not an infatuated partisan of Lord Palmerston’s took this view of
-the case; and when Mr. Cobden, on the 26th of February, brought forward
-a motion condemning the policy of the Government, he carried it, after a
-debate which lasted many nights, by a majority of sixteen.<a name="FNanchor_306_306" id="FNanchor_306_306"></a><a href="#Footnote_306_306" class="fnanchor">[306]</a> In the
-House of Lords the Government repelled the attack, on the 27th of
-February, by a majority of<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_707" id="page_707">{707}</a></span> thirty-six; and had the division been taken
-on the same night in the Commons, the majority, after Cobden’s and
-Russell’s speeches, would have been so enormous that Palmerston would
-hardly have dared to ask the Queen to dissolve Parliament. But he
-adroitly delayed matters, held a meeting of his Party, harangued them,
-and threatened them with a dissolution, and so, by the 4th of March,
-when the division was taken, the majority against him dwindled to
-sixteen. On the 5th of March, Ministers announced that Parliament would
-be dissolved and the sense of the country taken on the issue. The
-antipathy of the Queen to “penal dissolutions,” indeed, to any
-dissolution of Parliament, if it can be avoided, was overcome by Lord
-Palmerston representing that the majority against him was exceedingly
-small&mdash;that it was made up of a coalition of factions, whose leaders,
-agreeing only on one point, could not possibly form a stable Government.
-On the other hand, from a General Election a Government of some kind
-would be evolved with a solid working majority, an advantage of supreme
-importance in the eyes of the Sovereign.</p>
-
-<p>Then the game of intrigue began. Lord Malmesbury was sent to Mr. Sidney
-Herbert to negotiate an alliance between the Tories and the Peelites,
-his proposal being, says Lord Malmesbury, “that we should not take a
-hostile part towards each other’s candidates.” By this arrangement it
-was supposed that no personal enmities would be made, and the difficulty
-of organising an actual coalition, if such should be deemed necessary,
-would therefore be minimised.<a name="FNanchor_307_307" id="FNanchor_307_307"></a><a href="#Footnote_307_307" class="fnanchor">[307]</a> Mr. Herbert rejected these overtures,
-because the Peelites had become so much divided in opinion and so weak
-in influence, that his desire was to see them dispersed. Lord Malmesbury
-then sounded Mr. Gladstone at the Carlton Club. “He had,” writes his
-lordship, “seen Sidney Herbert, who told him of our interview, and
-Gladstone said he quite disagreed with his views, and had told him
-so.... His leanings are apparently towards us, but he was quite of my
-opinion that no sort of agreement should be made beyond the one I had
-proposed.”<a name="FNanchor_308_308" id="FNanchor_308_308"></a><a href="#Footnote_308_308" class="fnanchor">[308]</a> In fact, Mr. Gladstone and Mr. Herbert had very nearly
-quarrelled over the matter. Writing to Sir George Lewis on the 16th of
-March, the late Mr. A. Hayward says, “Gladstone and S. Herbert have come
-to an explanation which has ended very like the lovers’ separation in
-Little’s poems:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">‘You may down <i>that</i> pathway rove,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">While I shall take my way through <i>this</i>.’<br /></span>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_708" id="page_708">{708}</a></span></div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">Sidney Herbert takes the Liberal and Gladstone the Derbyite turn. I know
-no one who will follow Gladstone’s lead in the matter, except, perhaps,
-Lord A. Harvey.”<a name="FNanchor_309_309" id="FNanchor_309_309"></a><a href="#Footnote_309_309" class="fnanchor">[309]</a></p>
-
-<p>As a rule in England, the Minister who dissolves Parliament and appeals
-to the country is beaten. The General Election of 1857 was a startling
-exception to that rule. For Palmerston it was a complete victory. For
-his opponents it was not a defeat&mdash;but a rout. Cobden, Bright, Gibson,
-Fox, and Miall were rejected by the very men whose fortunes they had
-made by their Free Trade policy. As Mr. Morley says, “nothing had been
-seen like it since the disappearance of the Peace Whigs in 1812, when
-Brougham, Tierney, Lamb, and Horner all lost their seats.”<a name="FNanchor_310_310" id="FNanchor_310_310"></a><a href="#Footnote_310_310" class="fnanchor">[310]</a> The
-Peelites suffered almost as cruelly. The Conservative ranks were sadly
-thinned, for twenty-four counties were won by the Ministry; in fact, the
-<i>Times</i> declared, that the Tories would “never again, as a party, become
-candidates for office.”<a name="FNanchor_311_311" id="FNanchor_311_311"></a><a href="#Footnote_311_311" class="fnanchor">[311]</a> The “Manchester School” lost its
-supporters, (1), because it had got the reputation of factiously
-opposing all Governments; (2), because the manufacturers, enriched by
-Free Trade, had ceased to be Radical; and (3), because they thought that
-when Palmerston forced Bowring into Canton at the point of the bayonet,
-cotton goods would go in with him. The Peelites were beaten (1), because
-they were divided among themselves; and (2), because they were a small
-faction, and in a General Election a small faction generally is crushed
-in the collision between the great parties. The Tories lost adherents
-(1), because the farmers resented their support of an amendment moved by
-their natural enemy, Mr. Cobden; and (2), because rumours were spread
-abroad by Lord Palmerston’s agents that they were about to coalesce with
-Mr. Gladstone, who represented the principles of “the traitor Peel.”
-Lord Palmerston triumphed (1), because his only Liberal rival, Lord John
-Russell, had alienated the country by his tortuous disloyalty to two
-Ministries, and incurred the hatred of the Dissenters by his defence of
-Church Rates; (2), because his personal popularity, after bringing the
-wars with Russia and Persia to an end, was unbounded; and (3), because
-he and his satellites poured forth speeches, inflated with cheap and
-vulgar “patriotic” claptrap, to such an extent that even Mr. Greville
-says in his “Memoirs” that he was “disgusted at the enormous and
-shameful lying with which the country is deluged.”<a name="FNanchor_312_312" id="FNanchor_312_312"></a><a href="#Footnote_312_312" class="fnanchor">[312]</a> England,
-moreover, was involved in a war with China, and after all Palmerston was
-the only political leader who had proved that he could carry on a war
-with least discredit to the country.<a name="FNanchor_313_313" id="FNanchor_313_313"></a><a href="#Footnote_313_313" class="fnanchor">[313]</a> The election was,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_709" id="page_709">{709}</a></span> therefore,
-a personal one. Constituents did not scrutinise closely the principles
-or capacity of candidates, so long as they promised to support Lord
-Palmerston,<a name="FNanchor_314_314" id="FNanchor_314_314"></a><a href="#Footnote_314_314" class="fnanchor">[314]</a> and so numbers of Parliamentary Reformers crept
-unnoticed into the House. But in such cases the loyalty of a majority
-lasts no longer than the popularity of the leader. Let him make one
-false step that forfeits popularity, and then his supporters desert him,
-disinterring what they call their “principles” from buried election
-addresses to justify their “new departure.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_146" id="ill_146"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_709.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_709.jpg" width="320" height="258" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>CHINESE LORCHAS IN THE CANTON RIVER.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It was unfortunate that neither the Queen nor Prince Albert recognised
-this fact, and that they both imagined that Palmerston’s
-principles&mdash;which, in domestic policy, were reactionary and
-illiberal&mdash;were as popular as Palmerston himself. The only true and just
-criticism of this historic Election, which sent 189 new Members to the
-House of Commons, and for a time broke the old parties to pieces, was
-passed by the Duke of Newcastle. Writing to Mr. Hayward on the 10th of
-April, he says:&mdash;“I come to the conclusion that Palmerston will be
-disappointed with his new Parliament. The gain to<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_710" id="page_710">{710}</a></span> <i>Liberal opinion</i> is
-very great, and the Derby party is for the present smashed; but in these
-gains are to be found Palmerston’s disadvantages. Nobody <i>can</i> fear the
-alternative of a Derby Ministry, and if Palmerston <i>rises</i> to the
-occasion he will soon find his popularity gone and his Government in
-danger. It is all nonsense to suppose that the China vote has really
-influenced the decision of the country; but there is a question which
-alone Palmerston cares about (and that in an <i>adverse</i> sense), which has
-gained ground everywhere, and is now established as the question of the
-day&mdash;Reform of Parliament; and I have no belief in a <i>good</i> measure
-coming from unwilling men; and <i>how</i> unwilling are the influential men
-in the present Cabinet my former association with them pretty well
-informs me.”<a name="FNanchor_315_315" id="FNanchor_315_315"></a><a href="#Footnote_315_315" class="fnanchor">[315]</a></p>
-
-<p>From this Election the history of the Queen’s reign enters on a fresh
-phase. Underlying every party intrigue and combination there is
-henceforth to be detected an irrepressible though concealed antagonism
-between the Parliamentary Reformers and their opponents. In England, it
-is a curious fact that political parties always exhaust their ingenuity
-in veiling the real issue between them. When a Government is punished by
-dismissal, it is not dismissed for the blunder it has committed, but
-because it has done, or refused to do, something else, which is hardly
-hinted at in public, but which has offended a powerful body of its
-supporters. Palmerston was a Minister whose ardent, impetuous
-temperament, and confidence in his own dexterity, rendered him prone to
-commit blunders. A Minister of that type can go on blundering with
-impunity so long as he is supposed to be trustworthy on the one great
-question which lies closest to the hearts of that section of his
-supporters, who are prepared to sacrifice him for their cause. But
-whenever they discover that he is not to be trusted, they take advantage
-of his first mistake to combine with his enemies and overthrow him. In
-the new Parliament of 1857, it was therefore clear that Palmerston’s
-personal ascendency would last till the party of Parliamentary Reform
-discovered that they had absolutely nothing to expect from him, save
-open or concealed hostility. It was because the Queen did not grasp this
-fact that she was startled to find, a few months after Parliament met,
-how rapidly Palmerston’s popularity was waning. Prince Albert also,
-strangely enough, mistook the verdict of the country in 1857, as being
-one cast solely against “the peace-at-any-price people.”<a name="FNanchor_316_316" id="FNanchor_316_316"></a><a href="#Footnote_316_316" class="fnanchor">[316]</a></p>
-
-<p>On the 7th of May the House of Commons began the business of the new
-Session. On that day the Lord Chancellor read the Queen’s Speech, which,
-contrary to general expectation, did not contain any reference to
-Parliamentary Reform. It was, says Lord Malmesbury, “the lamest
-production,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_711" id="page_711">{711}</a></span> even for a Queen’s Speech, I ever read.”<a name="FNanchor_317_317" id="FNanchor_317_317"></a><a href="#Footnote_317_317" class="fnanchor">[317]</a> However, it
-gave a soothing account of foreign affairs, and intimated not only that
-the main stipulations of the Treaty of Paris had been carried out, and
-that the Neufchâtel difficulty was in a fair way of being settled, but
-it announced the signature of a Treaty of Peace with Persia. The only
-subject for regret in our foreign relations was, of course, the war with
-China. The legislative programme was meagre in the extreme, for the only
-important Bills promised were, one relating to the jurisdiction of the
-Ecclesiastical Courts over wills and divorce, and another to check
-fraudulent breaches of trust. The Address was carried with very little
-debate, the Radicals being satisfied to let the question of
-Parliamentary Reform sleep, because Lord Palmerston promised that during
-the recess the Cabinet would give the subject serious consideration. It
-was, in truth, a dull and uneventful Session.</p>
-
-<p>But a slight fillip of interest was imparted to it by the revival of the
-old controversy as to the admission of Jews to Parliament. The election
-of Baron Rothschild as one of the Members for the City of London
-compelled the Government to deal with the matter, and Lord Palmerston
-brought forward a Bill, on the 15th of May, to alter the law relating to
-Parliamentary Oaths, and remove from the statute book one of the last
-relics of mediæval bigotry. Although it was bitterly opposed by many
-Tories, such as Sir F. Thesiger and Mr. Whiteside, the Bill passed the
-House of Commons, but only to be thrown out by the House of Lords. Lord
-John Russell then tried to solve the problem by bringing in a Bill to
-extend the operation of the Act, 1 and 2 Vict. cap. 106, giving a
-discretion as to the forms on which certain oaths are administered. But
-while this Bill was in progress it was proposed to free the Jews from
-their Parliamentary disabilities by applying to their case the
-provisions of the Act 5 and 6 William IV. cap. 62. This Act was passed
-to enable a solemn declaration to be substituted for an oath in certain
-instances. The only question was whether the Act could be stretched so
-as to include the oath imposed on Members of Parliament. On Lord John
-Russell’s motion a Select Committee was appointed to inquire if the Act
-applied to Parliamentary Oaths, but in due time they reported that it
-did not. This virtually ended the controversy for the Session, and Lord
-John Russell could only give notice that he would renew the agitation
-next year.</p>
-
-<p>Undoubtedly the legal and social reforms proposed by the Government in
-1857 were those which created most excitement in the country. The
-Ecclesiastical Courts had been long threatened with extinction, and at
-last the Government dealt them a fatal blow. Bills were introduced in
-May transferring to purely secular tribunals their Testamentary
-Jurisdiction and the greater part of their control over the Marriage
-Laws, and though the establishment of the new Court of Probate was not
-much opposed, the Divorce Bill was fiercely debated. Members who were
-under sacerdotal influence attacked this measure with<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_712" id="page_712">{712}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_147" id="ill_147"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_712.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_712.jpg" width="331" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE CASCADE: VIRGINIA WATER.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">the utmost ferocity. Indeed, it was not opposed, but factiously
-obstructed, clause by clause and line by line, Mr. Gladstone being the
-most energetic of its opponents.<a name="FNanchor_318_318" id="FNanchor_318_318"></a><a href="#Footnote_318_318" class="fnanchor">[318]</a> It was, however, passed, and
-undoubtedly the Government won some credit in the country by the
-pertinacity with which they piloted this embarrassing measure through
-both Houses of Parliament. “I am very glad,” writes Lord Campbell, in
-his Journal, “that the Divorce Bill finally passed the Commons framed
-almost exactly according to the recommendations of the commission over
-which I had the honour to preside, preserving the law as it has
-practically subsisted for two hundred years: that a husband who has
-conducted himself properly may obtain a dissolution of the marriage for
-the adultery of the wife, and that a wife may obtain a dissolution of
-the marriage for the adultery of the husband, attended by incest, or any
-aggravation which renders it impossible for the connubial union to
-continue; the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_713" id="page_713">{713}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_148" id="ill_148"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_713.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_713.jpg" width="516" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>PLAN OF WINDSOR CASTLE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_714" id="page_714">{714}</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="nind">law being now to be administered by a regular judicial tribunal, instead
-of the injured parties being obliged to petition the Legislature for
-private Acts of Parliament to dissolve the marriage. We are assailed on
-the one hand by those who hold that, according to divine law, marriage
-cannot be dissolved even for adultery, and on the other by those who
-think that for this purpose no distinction should be made between the
-sexes,<a name="FNanchor_319_319" id="FNanchor_319_319"></a><a href="#Footnote_319_319" class="fnanchor">[319]</a> and that in all cases the wife should be entitled to a
-divorce on proof of any breach of the marriage vow by the husband. But I
-think the true principle is, that the marriage ought only to be
-dissolved when it is impossible for the injured party to <i>condone</i>, and
-that Divine Providence has constituted an essential difference in this
-respect between the adultery of the husband and the adultery of the
-wife. I would rather run the risk of cases of great hardship occurring,
-when it would seem desirable that women should be released from the
-tyranny of profligate and brutal husbands, than give too great a
-facility to divorce, which has a tendency most demoralising.”<a name="FNanchor_320_320" id="FNanchor_320_320"></a><a href="#Footnote_320_320" class="fnanchor">[320]</a></p>
-
-<p>Another measure of sound reform, with which Lord Campbell honourably
-associated his name, gave rise to a curious incident, towards the end of
-the Session, in the House of Commons. “Since I returned from circuit,”
-says Lord Campbell, in his Diary, “my chief business has been to watch
-the progress through the House of Commons of my Bill for checking the
-trade in obscene publications by allowing them to be seized in the
-<i>depôts</i> of the dealers. Brougham had hardly ventured to oppose the Bill
-as it passed through the Lords, but afterwards he wrote a violent
-article against it in the <i>Law Magazine</i>, and he put up Roebuck to
-assail it in the House of Commons. The Bill, being in Committee
-yesterday (July 12th), I showed myself in the Peers’ Gallery to watch
-its fate, and that I might be consulted, if necessary, during the
-debate. Roebuck contented himself with reading a letter which he had
-received from Brougham, pointing out the danger of country justices
-perverting the Bill for the punishment of poachers; and it went through
-the Committee with the amendments which I had suggested and assented to.
-The Speaker then sent me a message by the Chancellor of the Exchequer
-complaining that I had appeared in the House <i>to overawe their
-deliberations</i>, like Cardinal Wolsey and Charles I., and that it would
-become his duty to protest against such an unconstitutional
-proceeding.”<a name="FNanchor_321_321" id="FNanchor_321_321"></a><a href="#Footnote_321_321" class="fnanchor">[321]</a></p>
-
-<p>Brief mention must also be made of the Fraudulent Trusts Bill, as one
-of<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_715" id="page_715">{715}</a></span> the Ministerial achievements during the Session of 1857. Several
-glaring cases of embezzlement on the part of trustees had recently
-occurred, and yet it was found that the existing criminal law could not
-reach the guilty parties. Sir Alexander Cockburn, before his elevation
-to the Bench, had promised to deal with this scandal, and now his
-successor, Sir Richard Bethell, afterwards Lord Westbury, fulfilled that
-promise. The object of his Bill was simply to make trustees of
-settlements, directors of companies, and other persons invested with a
-fiduciary character, criminally responsible for frauds, or for the
-misappropriation of the funds entrusted to their care. The Bill passed
-both Houses. The only serious opposition it met with was from Lord St.
-Leonards, who dreaded lest its severity might deter honest and
-substantial men from serving as trustees.</p>
-
-<p>These were among the chief results of the brief but useful Session of
-1857, which was prorogued on the 28th of August. Up to midsummer the
-House of Commons dozed through halcyon days, only too well pleased to do
-the bidding of its master. Lord John Russell was meek, Mr. Gladstone was
-an absentee, the Tories were discouraged, and the Radicals were docile.
-To go to a division at this time on any question was to rush to
-ignominious defeat. But about the middle of July the House began to show
-signs of a quickened life. The debates on the Persian War roused the
-combatant spirit of the Opposition; Mr. Gladstone reappeared, as
-Ministers knew to their cost when the Divorce Bill was obstructed; and
-it was remarked that even Palmerston’s most subservient followers no
-longer hesitated to cheer Mr. Roebuck or Mr. Disraeli, when they made an
-exceptionally clever attack on the Ministry. In August the shadow of the
-Indian Mutiny darkened the prospects of the Government, and when
-Parliament was prorogued there was some ill-concealed grumbling among
-the captious critics of the Court, because the Queen went to Scotland at
-a time when the British Empire in India was in dire peril. But on the
-whole, Palmerston’s <i>prestige</i> was not materially impaired. His domestic
-programme, modest as it was, had been successfully carried out.
-Moreover, for the first time in his career, his relations with the Court
-had been put on a satisfactory footing. On this point Mr. Greville
-records an interesting conversation with Lord Clarendon, who told him
-that the Queen had treated Palmerston during the Session with unreserved
-confidence. Palmerston, on the other hand, found it expedient to treat
-the Queen with a deference and attention which had produced a favourable
-change in her sentiments towards him. Mr. Greville says, “Clarendon told
-me that Palmerston had lately been ailing in a way to cause some
-uneasiness.... Clarendon talked one day to the Queen about Palmerston’s
-health, concerning which she expressed her anxiety, when Clarendon said
-she might indeed be anxious, for it was of the greatest importance to
-her, and if anything happened to him he did not know where she could
-look for a successor to him, that she had often expressed her great
-desire to have a <i>strong</i> Government,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_716" id="page_716">{716}</a></span> and that she had now got one,
-Palmerston being a strong Minister. She admitted the truth of it.
-Clarendon said he was always very earnest with her to bestow her whole
-confidence on Palmerston, and not even to talk to others on any subjects
-which properly belonged to him, and he had more than once (when,
-according to her custom, she began to talk to him on certain things),
-said to her, ‘Madam, that concerns Lord Palmerston, and I think your
-Majesty had better reserve it for your communications with him.’ He
-referred to the wonderful change in his own relations to Palmerston,
-that seven or eight years ago Palmerston was full of hatred and
-suspicion of him, and now they were the best of friends, with mutual
-confidence and goodwill, and lately, when he was talking to Palmerston
-of the satisfactory state of his relations to the Queen, and of the
-utility it was to his government that it should be so, Palmerston said,
-‘And it is likewise a very good thing that she has such boundless
-confidence in her Secretary for Foreign Affairs, when after all there is
-nothing she cares about so much.’<span class="lftspc">”</span><a name="FNanchor_322_322" id="FNanchor_322_322"></a><a href="#Footnote_322_322" class="fnanchor">[322]</a></p>
-
-<p>And yet it cannot be said that in foreign affairs Lord Palmerston had
-won any conspicuous triumph for British diplomacy. The dispute with
-Persia did not end gloriously for England. It is true that the
-controversy over Neufchâtel, in which the Queen, owing to her close
-relations with the Royal Family of Prussia, was deeply interested,
-terminated happily.<a name="FNanchor_323_323" id="FNanchor_323_323"></a><a href="#Footnote_323_323" class="fnanchor">[323]</a> But on the other hand, the vexed question of
-the Danubian Principalities was still open, and it was almost certain
-that it would lead to the diplomatic humiliation of England.</p>
-
-<p>The future government of the two Principalities was left by the Congress
-of Paris to be settled by the Treaty Powers. Russia desired their union
-under a Native prince. France and Sardinia desired their union under a
-foreign prince, fearing that a Native ruler would soon become a mere
-satrap of the Czar. Turkey and Austria desired to keep the
-Principalities separate, and this view was warmly supported by Lord
-Palmerston and Lord Clarendon. At the Congress of Paris, France had
-insidiously suggested to Austria that she should take the
-Principalities, the object being to justify new territorial arrangements
-on the Rhine in French interests. After that proposal was rejected, the
-French Emperor drew closer and closer to Russia; but when the General
-Election gave Palmerston a solid majority, Russia became effusively
-civil to England. When, however, England persisted in acting with
-Austria and the Porte, thereby resisting territorial changes, which
-could only be made<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_717" id="page_717">{717}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_149" id="ill_149"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_717.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_717.jpg" width="264" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE DUKE OF CAMBRIDGE.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>From a Photograph by Bassano.</i>)</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">at the expense of Austrian and Turkish interests,<a name="FNanchor_324_324" id="FNanchor_324_324"></a><a href="#Footnote_324_324" class="fnanchor">[324]</a> the French
-Emperor took umbrage at our diplomacy. But Persigny’s influence was
-successfully exerted to hold him true to the Anglo-French alliance,
-Persigny’s chief argument being that a war with England would so
-convulse France that, in the general confusion, the Bonapartist dynasty
-might disappear. Napoleon III., therefore, determined to pay the Queen a
-private visit, and, though her Majesty was not anxious to receive him,
-she consented to do so, in the hope and belief that<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_718" id="page_718">{718}</a></span> personal
-communications between the two sovereigns might serve some useful
-purpose.</p>
-
-<p>When this visit was paid, in August, the controversy over the
-Principalities had become very serious. The Moldavian elections had
-returned a majority of Separatists, and the French complained that this
-result was due to the influence of English agents over the
-constituencies. France, Russia, and Sardinia, in fact, threatened to
-suspend diplomatic relations with Turkey unless the elections were
-annulled. The Eastern Question, in short, had once more been re-opened,
-and Europe was thus brought to the brink of war. The French Emperor, the
-Queen, and Prince Albert freely interchanged their ideas on the question
-at Osborne, whilst at the same time the French and English
-Ministers&mdash;namely, Persigny, Walewski, Palmerston, and
-Clarendon&mdash;carried on a series of conferences. The grievance of the
-Emperor was that, though Turkey had promised France to annul the
-elections, at the last moment she had, at the instigation of Lord
-Stratford de Redcliffe, broken her promise. The Porte had admitted that
-they were thus in the wrong, but had excused their conduct by saying
-that they acted under pressure from England and the English Ambassador.
-The annulment of the elections was now with France a point of honour;
-and as Persigny had failed to bring Palmerston and Clarendon to reason
-on the point, his Majesty had resolved to appeal to the Queen. The Queen
-and her husband seem to have met the Emperor’s arguments with Lord
-Stratford’s counter-statement, but in vain. The end of their conference
-was a victory for France on the main point at issue. Lord Stratford was
-to be ordered to reverse his course, and to call on the Porte to annul
-the elections. “Lord Palmerston,” writes Lord Malmesbury on the 14th of
-August, “has given way on the question of the Principalities, so the
-Emperor has gained his point by his visit to Osborne. The dispute arose
-on the question of the union of the Principalities, which France,
-Russia, Prussia, and Sardinia supported. England, Austria, and Turkey
-opposed the union; and the elections in Moldavia having been in favour
-of England, the French, Russians, &amp;c., accused the English Government of
-having influenced them unfairly, and demanded that they should be
-annulled. The Porte refused this, upon which the Ambassadors of France,
-Prussia, and Sardinia struck their flags. The Emperor Napoleon, instead
-of wasting time in useless correspondence, came over himself, and the
-question was settled at once. I do not pretend to judge whether
-Palmerston was right or wrong, but his defeat must have cost him a
-bitter pang. Louis Napoleon’s Ministers have been completely won over by
-the Russians, especially Walewski.”<a name="FNanchor_325_325" id="FNanchor_325_325"></a><a href="#Footnote_325_325" class="fnanchor">[325]</a> The Queen was certainly of a
-different opinion. She thought that Palmerston had succeeded in
-effecting a compromise, and not a capitulation. Prince Albert was also
-distinctly under the impression that whilst England surrendered on the
-question of the elections, France had surrendered on the question of
-uniting the Principalities. A Memorandum was drawn up on 9th of August,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_719" id="page_719">{719}</a></span>
-embodying some arrangement of this sort, but Walewski refused to sign
-it, upon the ground, says Sir T. Martin, “that the Emperor’s Government
-desired to keep the satisfaction to be obtained from the Porte and the
-arrangement subsequently to be made respecting the Principalities
-distinct from each other, and, also because, were he to sign the
-Memorandum, it would appear that France had made a concession on the
-latter point for the purpose of inducing the Sultan to agree on the
-former.” He also appears to have stated that it was not necessary to
-sign the document, because “amongst men of honour writing was
-unnecessary.” In May, 1858, at the second Congress of Paris, it was
-discovered that writing in this case was extremely necessary. When the
-British Plenipotentiaries contended that the French Emperor had yielded
-on the point of the union of the Principalities, His Majesty denied that
-he had done anything of the sort. The only concession he ever made,
-according to his account, was that he would not insist on their being
-ruled over by a foreign prince&mdash;a detail of secondary consequence. It
-seems also to have been admitted on our side that we had agreed to
-recognise the administrative union of the provinces, so that the
-misunderstanding may have arisen out of a quibble over the terms
-“administrative” and “political” union.</p>
-
-<p>During this visit, Lord Malmesbury tells us that extraordinary
-precautions were taken by the Queen for the Emperor’s protection.
-“Eighty detectives were sent down from London, besides French police.
-The strictest guard was kept round the Palace and over the island.
-Besides this, a number of men-of-war’s boats guarded the shore, and did
-not allow a single boat to approach.”<a name="FNanchor_326_326" id="FNanchor_326_326"></a><a href="#Footnote_326_326" class="fnanchor">[326]</a> From a memorandum of their
-conversations which Prince Albert drew up, it is obvious that the
-settlement of the question of the Principalities was not the sole object
-of Napoleon’s journey to Osborne. He broached a great many insidious
-proposals for a redistribution of European territory, also for a
-revision of the Treaties of 1815, but they were all coldly and
-sceptically received. He even suggested a wild scheme for converting the
-Mediterranean into an European lake. “Spain might have Morocco, Sardinia
-a part of Tripoli, England Egypt, Austria a part of Syria&mdash;<i>et que sais
-je</i>,” writes Prince Albert, in describing this suggestion;<a name="FNanchor_327_327" id="FNanchor_327_327"></a><a href="#Footnote_327_327" class="fnanchor">[327]</a> the
-first step being a friendly understanding with England on the subject.
-As his Majesty had told the Prince he was soon to have an interview with
-the Russian Czar, it need hardly be said that no encouragement was given
-by the Queen to these extraordinary projects. In truth, neither the
-Queen nor her Ministers were at this moment in a mood for entering on an
-adventurous foreign policy. The Indian Empire had been shaken to its
-centre by the revolt of the Bengal Army, a revolt known in history as
-the great Indian Mutiny, and the causes of which must now be traced.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_720" id="page_720">{720}</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXXVI"></a>CHAPTER XXXVI.<br /><br />
-<small>THE INDIAN MUTINY.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>The Centenary of Plassey&mdash;Rumours of Rebellion&mdash;Causes of the
-Mutiny&mdash;The Annexation of Oudh&mdash;Lord Dalhousie’s Indian Policy&mdash;Its
-Disturbing Effect on the Minds of the Natives&mdash;The Royal Family of
-Delhi&mdash;The Hindoo “Sumbut”&mdash;The Discontent of the Bengal Army&mdash;The
-Grievances of the Sepoy&mdash;The Greased Cartridges&mdash;The Mystery of the
-“Chupatties”&mdash;Mutiny of the Garrison at Meerut&mdash;The March to
-Delhi&mdash;Sir Henry Lawrence at Lucknow&mdash;The Tragedy of
-Cawnpore&mdash;Death of the Commander-in-Chief&mdash;Who took Delhi?&mdash;Sir
-John Lawrence in the Punjab&mdash;The Saviour of India&mdash;Lord Canning at
-Calcutta&mdash;First Relief of Lucknow&mdash;Despatch of Sir Colin
-Campbell&mdash;Second Relief of Lucknow&mdash;Savage Fighting at the
-Secunder-baugh&mdash;The Queen’s Letter to Sir Colin Campbell&mdash;His
-Retreat to Cawnpore&mdash;His Management of the Campaign&mdash;Windham’s
-Defeat at the Pandoo River&mdash;Sir Colin Campbell’s Victory over the
-Gwalior Army.</p></div>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="smcap">With</span> the exception of the Sicilian Vespers, no revolt ever smote a great
-Empire so unexpectedly as the Indian Mutiny. Gaily was the centenary of
-Plassey celebrated at a banquet in London on the 23rd of June, though
-the sultry air of India was even then laden with rumours of a
-wide-spreading rebellion. A few casual allusions to these reports were
-made in both Houses of Parliament, but July brought with it the rush of
-rising waters in the dull ears of the nation, when news of the
-atrocities of Meerut and the rebel march on Delhi startled the country
-from its apathy.</p>
-
-<p>To the end of time historians will probably differ as to what it was
-that caused the Indian Mutiny. Some have laid stress on considerations
-of general policy. Others have attributed the catastrophe to special
-acts of administration. The acts of administration were, however, but
-the sparks that exploded the forces of revolution, which had been slowly
-accumulating in the country. To understand the origin of the Indian
-Mutiny one must understand the administration of Lord Dalhousie, and
-fairly estimate the last acts of his viceregal career. Of these none had
-a more serious effect on the minds of the Native Courts than the
-annexation of Oudh. Inasmuch as Dalhousie was personally a strong
-opponent of annexation, the presumption is that the step, objectionable
-as it seems, was inevitable. Oudh was misgoverned by a vicious but
-feeble-minded Prince, and the people were tortured not only by his
-besotted tyranny, but by the exactions of a corrupt aristocracy. At the
-same time, the Kings of Oudh had long been trusty allies of the East
-India Company, who had borrowed money from them, protected them against
-their mutinous subjects, and used their territory as a recruiting ground
-for the Sepoy army. One-half of Oudh had been given to the Company, by
-the Treaty of 1801, on condition that a British army should be
-maintained in the country for the support of the reigning dynasty.
-Attempts had been made&mdash;notably by Lord<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_721" id="page_721">{721}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_150" id="ill_150"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_721.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_721.jpg" height="321" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE BARRACKS AT MEERUT.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Auckland&mdash;to evade this obligation, but they were made in vain. After
-the first Sikh war, Lord Hardinge had warned the King of Oudh that the
-Company could no longer tolerate misrule in his territory, and
-Dalhousie, in 1848, had sent Colonel Sleeman to reconstruct, if
-possible, its internal administration. The task was a hopeless one, and
-in 1851 Sleeman reported<a name="FNanchor_328_328" id="FNanchor_328_328"></a><a href="#Footnote_328_328" class="fnanchor">[328]</a> that there was no choice but to assume the
-whole government of the kingdom. Dalhousie shrank from taking this step,
-and in 1854, when Sleeman resigned, Sir James Outram was appointed as
-his successor, and asked to report on the whole case. Outram, though a
-firm anti-annexationist, confirmed Sleeman’s statements. He admitted
-that the duty imposed on the Indian Government by the Treaty of 1801
-rendered it necessary to have recourse to extreme measures. As a warm
-advocate for maintaining Native States so long as they had any vitality,
-it was, said Outram, painful and distressing to him to confess that in
-continuing to uphold the sovereign power of an effete and incapable
-dynasty we were inflicting infinite misery on 5,000,000 of people.<a name="FNanchor_329_329" id="FNanchor_329_329"></a><a href="#Footnote_329_329" class="fnanchor">[329]</a>
-Unfortunately, the Treaty of 1801 had stipulated that all improvements
-in the administration of Oudh must be carried out by Native officers
-under British advice. It was impossible, therefore, to transfer the
-administration of Oudh<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_722" id="page_722">{722}</a></span> to the servants of the Company, and equally
-impossible to expect reforms from the servants of the King. Lord
-Dalhousie’s notion was that the Treaty of 1801 should be
-“denounced”&mdash;that the King should be told he must either sign a fresh
-one, handing over the administration of his country to the Indian
-Government, or forego the protection of the British force, which stood
-between him and a revolution. Dalhousie ignored the fact that the
-withdrawal of our troops from Oudh logically involved the retrocession
-of that half of the kingdom which was given to us as payment for their
-services, and yet there can be little doubt that had his demand been
-pressed, the King of Oudh would have yielded. Dalhousie’s advisers
-differed in their views, and in the end the Court of Directors settled
-the matter by ordering the Governor-General to annex the country,
-depriving the King of revenues, rank, power, and authority, and
-allotting a suitable pension to him and his successors.<a name="FNanchor_330_330" id="FNanchor_330_330"></a><a href="#Footnote_330_330" class="fnanchor">[330]</a> Dalhousie’s
-plan, on the other hand, was to assume the administration, but not to
-extinguish the dynasty of Oudh, and it was with reluctance that he
-carried out the policy of his masters. The country was annexed by Sir
-James Outram on the 7th of February, 1856, the King’s private property
-being confiscated and sold. These are the essential facts of the case,
-and it is easy to pass judgment on them. No Treaty conferred on the
-Company the shadow of a right to do more than secure for the people of
-Oudh good government. As it was quite possible to do that without
-destroying and degrading the dynasty, the seizure of Oudh was simply an
-act of rapine.<a name="FNanchor_331_331" id="FNanchor_331_331"></a><a href="#Footnote_331_331" class="fnanchor">[331]</a> As the Kings of Oudh had been noted all over India
-for their staunch loyalty to the English in India, every Native prince
-regarded the annexation of Oudh as a menace to his throne. At every
-Native Court it was whispered that to be loyal to England was simply to
-invite ruin. Thus the last act of Dalhousie’s viceregal reign sowed the
-seeds of suspicion, distrust, and even hatred in the hearts of the
-Native dynasties.</p>
-
-<p>But the whole policy of this great and vigorous ruler, by a curious
-irony of fate, had steadily prepared the minds of the Indian races for a
-revolution. Dalhousie had covered India with railways, canals, roads,
-and telegraphs. He had introduced a cheap postal system by which a
-letter from Peshawur to Cape Comorin, or from Assam to Kurrachee, was
-carried for three farthings&mdash;one-sixteenth of the old charge. He had
-reformed the Civil Service, he had improved education and prison
-discipline, he had passed laws that went to the root of family life,
-such as those permitting Hindoo widows to marry again, and relieving
-persons who changed their religion from forfeiture. As for his wars and
-his annexations, he had the “tyrant plea, necessity.” When<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_723" id="page_723">{723}</a></span> leaving
-Calcutta he said mournfully, and with a trace of misgiving, as he looked
-back on his brilliant achievements, “I have played out my part, and
-while I feel that in my case the principal act in the drama of my life
-is ended, I shall be content if the curtain should now drop on my public
-career.” But the great work done by Dalhousie had not been done without
-friction between the paramount power and its subjects and vassals. It
-was, indeed, thought in England that Dalhousie handed India over to Lord
-Canning in a state of profound tranquillity. Yet, looking deeper than
-the surface, says an able writer on Indian history, “there were latent
-causes of uneasiness which largely pervaded the minds of the Native
-classes of all ranks and creeds.”<a name="FNanchor_332_332" id="FNanchor_332_332"></a><a href="#Footnote_332_332" class="fnanchor">[332]</a> Dalhousie’s system of progressive
-education was detested by Hindoo and Moslem alike, because it undermined
-the whole fabric of their faith. The Moslem youth, it is true, did not
-frequent the English schools. But young Hindoos flocked to them with an
-eager thirst for knowledge, and they went to the missionary seminaries,
-where Christianity was taught, quite as freely as to State schools,
-where its teaching was prohibited. In their homes, they spoke of what
-they were taught to their parents, who regarded the whole system of
-English education as a diabolical device for corrupting the faith and
-morals of their children. This suspicion was strengthened and confirmed
-by the aggressive proselytism of the missionaries, to whose zeal one of
-the soundest and best informed of Native civilians has directly traced
-the origin of the Mutiny. The entire scheme of Dalhousie’s policy was
-based on the assumption that the Natives would greet with loyalty and
-gratitude the new era of progress that he ushered in. On the contrary,
-as Colonel Meadows Taylor says, “the material progress of India was
-unintelligible to the Natives in general. A few intelligent and educated
-persons might understand the use and scope of railways, telegraphs,
-steam-vessels, and recognise in them the direction of a great Government
-for the benefit of the people; but the ancient listless conservativism
-of the population at large was disturbed by them. ‘The English,’ it was
-said, ‘never did such things before, why do they do so now? These are
-but new devices for the domination of their will, and are aimed at the
-destruction of our national faith, caste, and customs. What was it all
-to come to? Was India to be like England? The earlier Company’s servants
-were simple but wise men, and we respected them; we understood them and
-they us; but the present men are not like them; we do not know them, nor
-they us.’ No one cared, perhaps, very much for such sentiments, and
-few&mdash;very few&mdash;English heard them; but they will not have been forgotten
-by those who did.”<a name="FNanchor_333_333" id="FNanchor_333_333"></a><a href="#Footnote_333_333" class="fnanchor">[333]</a> The Directors of the East India Company had,
-prior to Dalhousi<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_724" id="page_724">{724}</a></span>e’s time, rigidly enforced on their servants a policy
-of benevolent neutrality to the religious beliefs and social prejudices
-of India. The government of the Company in its best days might have been
-bad. But it was successful because it was, on the whole, popular, and it
-was popular because it was intensely conservative. Ardent progressive
-officials were repressed, whereas under Dalhousie their passion for
-innovation had free scope and disastrous encouragement.</p>
-
-<p>Nor was Oudh the only centre of Court intrigues against the British
-<i>raj</i>. The question of settling the position of the Royal Family of
-Delhi, the last representatives of the old Emperors of India, had been
-much debated in Dalhousie’s reign. When Lord Canning went to India, in
-1856, it was again taken up, and a final decision given on the points
-raised. The heir-apparent, Prince Fukhr-ood-deen, who had agreed to
-evacuate the Palace, died on the 10th of July, 1856, and it was supposed
-he had been poisoned. The Queen, Zeenut Mahál, immediately began to
-intrigue for the purpose of procuring the recognition of her son as
-heir-apparent, and the King of Delhi petitioned the Government of India
-to this effect. But the petition could not have been granted without a
-breach of the Mohammedan law, and so Mirza Korash, the next in legal
-succession to Fukhr-ood-deen, was recognised as heir to the throne. But
-whereas, in the case of Fukhr-ood-deen, the recognition of the
-Government was the result of a compact or bargain between independent
-authorities, in the case of Mirza Korash it took the form of an Imperial
-decree, conferring rank and dignity on a vassal prince. The Royal Family
-of Delhi resented the whole arrangement. “Remembering the old relations
-between the Company and the Empire, the immense benefits originally
-conferred on them, and the admitted position of the Company as servants
-of the State, it was,” writes Colonel Taylor, “only natural they should
-now be accused of perfidy. The efforts and intrigues of the spirited
-Queen and several of the princes were now redoubled, locally as well as
-in foreign quarters; and India, especially the North-West Provinces,
-became filled with the most alarming rumours.”<a name="FNanchor_334_334" id="FNanchor_334_334"></a><a href="#Footnote_334_334" class="fnanchor">[334]</a></p>
-
-<p>Along with these there spread extraordinary tales of the decaying power
-of England&mdash;tales which fawning courtiers poured into the willing ears
-of Native princes, and with which embittered malcontents regaled the
-Native servants of the Company. The sudden collapse of Palmerston’s
-militant policy in the Crimea and in Persia convinced every enemy of
-England in India that the omens were propitious for a revolt against
-English rule. It was also an untoward coincidence that the year 1857-58
-was the Hindoo “Sumbut” 1914, and the centenary of Plassey. But when
-that crowning victory was won, the astrologers had declared that the
-<i>raj</i>, or rule, of the Company would last only for a century. Astrology
-so dominates Indian life, that the people have a trick of fulfilling, by
-their unconscious action, the prophecies of their soothsayers; and he
-who predicts a successful insurrection on a given date has himself<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_725" id="page_725">{725}</a></span>
-furnished one of the strongest encouragements for its organisation. The
-Sumbut 1914, therefore, could not arrive without suggesting to the
-Indian mind that an opportunity for throwing off the yoke of England had
-come. One of the stereotyped ceremonies of New Year’s Day is the public
-recital of the almanack for the year in every Indian village. Hence, in
-1857, every Hindoo villager was solemnly warned that wise men, who, a
-century ago, held infallible commune with the stars, foretold that in
-this fateful year the British <i>raj</i> must end.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_151" id="ill_151"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_725.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_725.jpg" height="213" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>SIR JAMES OUTRAM.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Unfortunately, the base on which the empire of the Company had rested
-for a century was at this critical period extremely insecure. India was
-won and India was held, not by English, but by Native soldiers. The
-British Empire was, therefore, built up on the fidelity of the Sepoy,
-and the Sepoy had become dissatisfied with his masters, especially in
-Bengal.<a name="FNanchor_335_335" id="FNanchor_335_335"></a><a href="#Footnote_335_335" class="fnanchor">[335]</a> The army of Bengal had not only been prone to mutiny, but
-Napier had denounced its lack of discipline, and there were fewer
-Europeans in it in proportion to Natives, than in the armies of Bombay
-or Madras.<a name="FNanchor_336_336" id="FNanchor_336_336"></a><a href="#Footnote_336_336" class="fnanchor">[336]</a> The Crimean War had drained the life-blood from the
-British battalions in Bengal; and whereas six English regiments were
-usually stationed between Calcutta and Allahabad,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_726" id="page_726">{726}</a></span> when Lord Dalhousie
-left the country there were only two. Obviously, if the Sepoy was not to
-be trusted, the whole fabric of empire in India was in such
-circumstances resting on a rotten foundation, and although officers of
-experience refused to doubt the loyalty of their men, the spirit of
-mutiny was most certainly abroad in the Bengal army. The Sepoy had
-grievances, and the Government had not sense enough to redress them.
-These grievances were two in number. (1), When a Sepoy in the old days
-marched to the conquest of a province he got increased pay and
-allowances; but in recent times, when the province was annexed, it was
-considered British territory, and the pay and allowances of the
-Company’s mercenary forces were reduced to the scale of home service.
-Conquests, therefore, while they imposed more work on the army,
-practically reduced its pay. (2), Another cause of discontent was the
-“General Service Order” of 1856. The Sepoy was originally enlisted for
-service in India only. He could not be sent across the sea; in fact,
-only low caste men dared cross “the black water.” During the first
-Burmese War the Sepoys had to be marched round the Indian frontier to
-the enemy’s territory; and when the second Burmese War broke out, the
-38th Native Infantry refused to embark for Rangoon. Of course, though
-they should not have been asked to go without having been previously
-“sounded” on the subject, refusal in their case was tantamount to
-mutiny. Dalhousie could not, however, legally punish them, so he sent
-them to Dacca, where they were decimated, not by courtmartials, but by
-cholera. Thus the Sepoy argued that he must in future choose between his
-caste or a pestilential station, if he refused to serve across the sea.
-But while the Sepoys were brooding over this dilemma in 1856, the
-Governor-General promulgated the “General Service Order” to the effect
-that no more Sepoys should be enlisted who would not take an oath to
-cross the sea if called on to do so, and veteran officers, who had grown
-grey in the Company’s service predicted that this Order would make
-mischief in the army. And so it did. To the Sepoy, his service under the
-Company was a source of pride, profit, and even of valuable civil
-privileges.<a name="FNanchor_337_337" id="FNanchor_337_337"></a><a href="#Footnote_337_337" class="fnanchor">[337]</a> To him it was as great a grievance to issue an Order of
-this sort, as it would be to the English aristocracy to attach
-conditions to military service, which should render it impossible for a
-gentleman to hold the Queen’s Commission. The individual Sepoy, no
-doubt, was not touched by the Order. But then his sons and grandsons,
-whom he expected to become Sepoys, were. The army was thus closed to
-every Native, unless they were prepared to submit to loss of caste. In
-fact, a lucrative profession was, by Lord Canning’s Order, made the
-monopoly of low-caste natives. Unfortunately, too, most of the recruits
-were drawn from Oudh, the annexation of which had been a scandal, and
-which was swarming with disbanded soldiers, who had been in the personal
-service of the deposed King.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_727" id="page_727">{727}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Thus we had, in 1857, the following conditions prevailing in India: (1),
-A popular belief was current in every village that the last year of the
-British <i>raj</i> had come; (2), The Native Courts were suspicious that the
-annexation of Oudh was an indication of the fate that was in store for
-them; (3), The high-caste Natives, whether in the army or in civil life,
-were suspicious that the Government desired to defile their caste, and
-sap the foundations of their religion.<a name="FNanchor_338_338" id="FNanchor_338_338"></a><a href="#Footnote_338_338" class="fnanchor">[338]</a> The country was therefore in
-such an inflammable condition that the first spark that fell on it would
-produce an explosion. By an extraordinary act of stupidity the
-Government not only struck this spark, but fanned it into flame.</p>
-
-<p>The Crimean War caused the British Army to substitute the rifle for the
-old smooth-bore musket popularly called “Brown Bess.” In 1856 it was
-determined to serve out Enfield rifles to the Indian Army, and in doing
-this no heed was paid to Sepoy prejudices. The cartridge of the new
-weapon could not be rammed home unless it were previously greased. But,
-then, no Hindoo can touch the fat of ox or cow without loss of caste,
-which is worse than loss of life, and no Moslem can touch pigs’ fat
-without moral defilement. Yet no steps were taken to exclude these
-substances from the grease for the Indian cartridges! A rumour
-accordingly flew round the bazaars that in order to attack Hindoo and
-Moslem alike the two objectionable fats had been mixed in the grease.
-This story was traced to a curious source. One day a low-caste man at
-Dumdum, near Calcutta, asked a Sepoy to give him a draught of water from
-his <i>lotah</i>. The Sepoy refused, loftily observing that the vessel would
-be polluted if a low-caste man touched it with his lips. The Lascar
-replied, with a sneer, that the Sepoy would soon lose his own caste, for
-the Government were making cartridges greased with defiling fats, which
-he would have to bite in loading his rifle. The Sepoy, horror-stricken
-at this tale, told it to his comrades. It flew from mouth to mouth, and
-soon the Native Army of Bengal lay under the blight of a hideous
-panic&mdash;every man going about his duty haunted by a dread of
-soul-destroying defilement.<a name="FNanchor_339_339" id="FNanchor_339_339"></a><a href="#Footnote_339_339" class="fnanchor">[339]</a> The men, half-crazy with fear, met of
-nights to concert measures for their protection, and at Barrackpore
-incendiary fires broke out. General Hearsey, who was in command, warned
-the Government of what was going on, and orders were given that
-ungreased cartridges should be issued&mdash;the men lubricating them with
-whatever substance they chose to apply.<a name="FNanchor_340_340" id="FNanchor_340_340"></a><a href="#Footnote_340_340" class="fnanchor">[340]</a> But no sooner had one
-suspicion been banished from the Sepoy mind than another took its place.
-A glazed paper was used for the ungreased cartridges, whereupon a new
-rumour flew round to the effect that the glaze was produced by fat.
-General Hearsey<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_728" id="page_728">{728}</a></span> harangued his men, assuring them on his honour that
-their suspicions were wrong, and they seemed satisfied; though, as
-events showed, they were by no means satisfied.</p>
-
-<p>A detachment of the 34th was sent from Barrackpore to Berhampore. They
-carried the tale about the glazed paper with them, and communicated the
-fresh panic to the 19th Native Infantry at that station. The day after
-the men of the 34th arrived the 19th Regiment had blank cartridges
-served to them, which by some mistake had been made out of two different
-kinds of paper. The men at once suspected that the new defiling
-cartridges had been mixed with the old ones, so that their caste might
-be destroyed, and they refused to take their percussion caps. Colonel
-Mitchell, instead of reasoning with his Sepoys as Hearsey had done, flew
-into a paroxysm of passion&mdash;which simply confirmed their suspicions.
-Mitchell, in fact, mistook fear for mutiny, and it was in vain that the
-Native officers, who of course knew the real state of the case, implored
-him to keep his temper with his men. That night the 19th mutinied.
-Mitchell had no European troops, but he closed round the mutineers with
-two other Native regiments&mdash;cavalry and artillery&mdash;and then, sending for
-the Native officers of the 19th, stormed at them in impotent fury. They
-assured him that their men were only in a panic, and that if the cavalry
-and artillery were withdrawn they would return to duty. The cavalry and
-artillery were withdrawn, and the 19th went back to its quarters loyally
-enough.</p>
-
-<p>Though Mitchell’s indiscretion drove the 19th into revolt, it had
-unquestionably revolted. Lord Canning, therefore, was bound to punish
-it, and he decided that the regiment must be disarmed and disbanded. But
-he had no British troops to spare for this purpose. He accordingly had
-to wait from the end of February till the end of March for the arrival
-of an English regiment from Burmah to disarm the 19th, who were marched
-down to Barrackpore to be broken up. On the 29th of March, two days
-before the disbandment of the 19th Native Infantry, Private Mungul Pandy
-of the 34th, in a fit of drunken fanaticism, attempted to get up a
-mutiny among his comrades. He shot the horse of the Adjutant, Lieutenant
-Baugh, who was cut down in trying to seize him. Only one man of the
-quarter-guard responded to the order to arrest the mutineer, who was
-finally captured, tried, and hanged on the 22nd of April. Evil
-communications had passed between the 19th and the 34th, and it was
-found that, though the Sikhs and Moslems in the regiment were loyal, the
-Hindoos were mutinous to a man. Yet nothing was done to punish the 34th.
-The discharged men of the 19th, however, carried the story of their
-wrongs to their homes in Oudh and Bundelkund, and soon it came to be
-believed that not only were the cartridges greased, but, in order to
-produce a general pollution of the Natives, which would destroy all
-caste, “that the public wells, and the flour, and ghee (a clarified
-butter sold in the bazaars), had been defiled by ground bone-dust and
-the fat of cows and pigs, while the salt had been sprinkled with cows’
-and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_729" id="page_729">{729}</a></span> hogs’ blood.”<a name="FNanchor_341_341" id="FNanchor_341_341"></a><a href="#Footnote_341_341" class="fnanchor">[341]</a> Viceregal proclamations were issued to
-contradict these rumours and reassure the people, but in vain. The
-North-West Provinces had now become smitten with the terror which
-hovered over India, and the Commander-in-Chief suggested that the
-<i>depôt</i> at Umballa might be broken up before the rifle practice began at
-the annual training. Lord Canning, believing that his proclamations had
-lulled the rising storm, refused to sanction this step. Fires next broke
-out at Umballa, as at Barrackpore&mdash;the officers alleging that Sepoys,
-who were as yet “undefiled,” set fire to the huts of those who had
-accepted the defiling cartridges, and that the latter retaliated. Oudh
-soon became affected, and in May Sir Henry Lawrence had to disarm the
-7th Irregular Native Infantry at Lucknow.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_152" id="ill_152"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_729.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_729.jpg" width="336" height="294" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>CAWNPORE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the North-West Provinces the famous “chupatties” began to make their
-appearance. They consisted of small baked cakes, and they were passed on
-from hand to hand, from hamlet to hamlet, spreading a strange
-excitement<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_730" id="page_730">{730}</a></span> wherever they went. The circulation of the “chupatties” was
-evidently a signal of some sort, and yet, though Native society was
-shaking with revolutionary tremors, nothing happened. At last an event
-occurred which precipitated a general catastrophe. At Meerut eighty-five
-men of the 3rd Native Cavalry had been tried and doomed to ten years’
-hard labour on the roads for refusing to bite their cartridges. They
-were paraded and punished before the other Native regiments, who seem to
-have been irritated, rather than overawed. Next day (10th May), the 3rd
-Cavalry forced the gates of the gaol and released their comrades. The
-men of the 20th and 11th Regiments flew to arms, shot every European
-they met, set fire to their huts, and marched on to Delhi. Why, it will
-be asked, was this revolt not quelled, seeing that a strong English
-force was stationed at Meerut? The outbreak, it is true, occurred during
-church hours on a Sunday; but even this hardly explains why General
-Hewitt, who was in command, permitted the mutineers to pursue their
-march to the city of the Mogul Emperors. There they proceeded, as if by
-concert, to the King, who espoused their cause. The people of the city
-rose and massacred the Europeans. The Native regiments in Delhi&mdash;the
-38th, 54th, and 74th&mdash;joined the mutineers one by one, and though the
-arsenal was held for a time by Lieutenant Willoughby, with Lieutenants
-Raynor and Forrest, and six other Englishmen, they blew it up when it
-was no longer tenable. The Mutiny was now a war of liberation. It had a
-King for a rallying-point, and an Imperial city for a capital.</p>
-
-<p>The North-West had by this time fallen from the feeble hands of Colvin
-into the grasp of the rebels. In Gwalior the British Resident, by his
-personal ascendency, held Scindia to his loyalty, though Scindia’s army
-revolted. But for George Lawrence, Rajpootana would have been lost. As
-for Oudh, there the struggle was becoming tragic. On the eve of the
-insurrection this province, seething with sedition, was put under the
-rule of Sir Henry Lawrence. Lucknow, with 700,000 inhabitants, was a
-hotbed of treason, and the success of the mutineers at Meerut agitated
-them profoundly. At the end of May the Sepoys in Lucknow rose and
-marched away to Delhi, leaving Lawrence with a handful of Europeans to
-hold a rebellious city. Cawnpore is forty miles south of Lucknow, and
-there General Wheeler and another devoted band were similarly situated.
-On the night of the 21st of May, Wheeler and the English
-population&mdash;about a thousand souls&mdash;withdrew into a kind of temporary
-fortress which he had created, and which he defended by some 210 men. At
-Cawnpore, in May, 1857, there was residing a young Mahratta noble, Nana
-Sahib by name, whose popular manners had rendered him a favourite in the
-English community. He had been the adopted heir of the last Peishwa of
-Berari, and his grievance against the Government was that Dalhousie
-refused to let him enjoy the pension guaranteed to the Peishwa and his
-successors. Nana Sahib had spent a season in London to press his claims,
-and had been most hospitably received. His agent, Azin Oolla Khan,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_731" id="page_731">{731}</a></span> had
-returned to India after visiting the Crimea, and bearing to his master
-tales which were partially true, of the defeats and humiliations which
-England had suffered during her war with Russia. Nana Sahib had been
-busy with plots against the English <i>raj</i> for many years, and his agents
-were ubiquitous. In Oudh they had been especially active, for they had
-taken every advantage of the mistakes of an over-zealous
-Commissioner&mdash;Mr. Coverley Jackson&mdash;to fan the flame of discontent in
-that province. Yet Wheeler trusted the Nana Sahib so implicitly that he
-put the treasury of Cawnpore in the charge of his personal retinue lest
-his own Native troops might fail him. On the 4th of June General
-Wheeler’s Sepoys revolted, joined Nana Sahib’s retinue in plundering the
-treasury, and then, laden with spoil, set out for Delhi. But the Nana’s
-idea was to win empire for himself rather than for a degenerate
-descendant of the Mogul dynasty. He therefore persuaded the rebels to
-return, and besiege the English garrison at Cawnpore. On the twentieth
-day of the siege he sent one of his prisoners, an old lady named
-Greenway, to General Wheeler, offering the beleaguered English a safe
-conduct to Allahabad if they would surrender. The offer was accepted. On
-the 27th of June the survivors&mdash;men, women, and children, about 450 in
-all&mdash;marched to the boats which had been prepared for them. As soon as
-they had embarked Nana Sahib treacherously opened fire on them, and
-converted an exodus into a massacre. One hundred and twenty-two captives
-were taken, and imprisoned in a house till the 15th of July, when they
-were butchered. Next morning their bodies, some still quivering with
-life, were thrown into a well. When tidings of this ghastly crime
-reached Europe, the nation was for a moment horror-stricken, but only
-for a moment. A cry of rage broke forth from the British people, and the
-Government hastened to send avenging reinforcements to the East. They
-could not, however, arrive in time to save Cawnpore, and when it fell,
-the rebels closed round Henry Lawrence at Lucknow. Two days after the
-siege began a stray shot mortally wounded him, and, after thirty-six
-hours of intense agony, one of the noblest hearts in India had ceased to
-beat for ever.</p>
-
-<p>“It is evident,” said the Queen, in a letter to Lord Palmerston,
-commenting on these events, “from a comparison of the news with the map,
-that whereas hitherto the seat of the mutiny was Oudh, Delhi, and the
-Upper Ganges, to which localities all troops have been despatched, it
-has now broken out in their rear, cutting them off from the base of
-operations, viz., Calcutta, and that it has reached the gates of the
-seat of Government itself.” The North-West and Oudh were, in fact, lost.
-In the former province, a Mogul King held sway at Delhi, whilst Colvin
-was clinging to Agra with feeble hands. In Oudh, Nana Sahib, the viper
-of the insurrection, was installed at Cawnpore; whilst a small band of
-Englishmen, bewailing the loss of their heroic leader, stood desperately
-at bay at Lucknow. In six months, the Empire which had been created in a
-century, was shattered and in<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_732" id="page_732">{732}</a></span> ruins. Yet the English clung to these
-ruins with the tenacity of despair, and what they had lost they were
-determined to re-conquer. Fortunately, they had in India what they
-lacked in the Crimea, two leaders who were alike competent to translate
-a high resolve into prompt action. These were Lawrence at Lahore, and
-Canning at Calcutta.</p>
-
-<p>When the Mutiny first broke out General Anson was Commander-in-Chief of
-the Forces in India. It was said that he was a mere amateur soldier, and
-that in Simla he had accordingly found a congenial Capua. Family
-interest had sent him at one bound from the Turf some years before to
-the command of one of the Presidency armies. When the
-Commandership-in-Chief of the Indian Armies fell vacant, family interest
-had again secured the post for him. Had he been a man of capacity and
-energy the Mutiny would have been stamped out when it was feebly
-sporadic. After it became what Canning called “epidemic,” the task of
-repression was harder. Whether Anson would have risen to the level of
-his responsibilities the world will never know now, because he died in a
-fortnight after he began to grapple with the crisis.<a name="FNanchor_342_342" id="FNanchor_342_342"></a><a href="#Footnote_342_342" class="fnanchor">[342]</a> His slender
-force was then taken in hand by Sir H. Barnard, who pressed on to the
-South, and who reached Alipore on the 5th of June, where he effected a
-junction with Sir Archdale Wilson, who had marched from Meerut. On the
-8th Barnard drove the rebels from their entrenchments at Budlee Serái,
-four miles north of Delhi, where he repeated Raglan’s experiment in the
-Crimea&mdash;that of besieging a fortress, whose garrison was really
-besieging him. On the 5th of July Barnard died, to be succeeded by Reed,
-who in turn was succeeded by Wilson on the 17th of July. All four were
-sluggish generals, and it was well that John Lawrence, at Lahore, acted
-on them like a goad. Englishmen will not readily forget his famous
-telegram to Anson in May when he heard that the General was about to
-entrench himself at Umballa&mdash;“Clubs are trumps&mdash;not spades?” A vain
-controversy has arisen as to who can claim credit for the capture of
-Delhi; whether it was due to Wilson’s slow but cautious tactics, or to
-the engineering skill of Taylor, or the demoniac energy of Nicholson, or
-the dashing enterprise of Chamberlain, who brought succours from the
-Punjab. The man who really took the rebel stronghold was not a soldier
-but a civilian, for it was John Lawrence, at Lahore, and not any of the
-generals before Delhi, who was the bulwark of the war.<a name="FNanchor_343_343" id="FNanchor_343_343"></a><a href="#Footnote_343_343" class="fnanchor">[343]</a></p>
-
-<p>When the Mutiny broke out the Punjab was&mdash;by the prompt action of
-Lawrence’s subordinates who disarmed sulking troops, and stamped out the
-germs of mutiny whenever and wherever they were visible&mdash;saved and
-secured.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_733" id="page_733">{733}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_153" id="ill_153"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_733.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_733.jpg" width="260" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>LORD LAWRENCE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>After this Delhi seemed to him to be the very keystone of the
-insurrection. To take it there was no risk too great to run&mdash;no hazard
-too perilous to undergo.<a name="FNanchor_344_344" id="FNanchor_344_344"></a><a href="#Footnote_344_344" class="fnanchor">[344]</a> Though his own position at Lahore was
-dangerous enough, he threw himself on the people, and staked everything
-on the fidelity of the Sikhs. He summoned the old gunners of the Khálsa
-from their fields. The low-caste “Muzbis” he converted into sappers. The
-fierce chieftains, who had fought against us in ’48 and ’49, together
-with their followers, he hurried on to the rebel city, thereby stripping
-his province of local leaders who might have organised a rising. “From,
-the Punjab arsenals,” says one of Lawrence’s critics, “the siege-trains
-were equipped; from the Punjab districts vast amounts of carriage were
-gathered and despatched systematically<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_734" id="page_734">{734}</a></span> with their loads to Delhi; from
-the Punjab treasuries the sinews of war were furnished. Men were raised
-by tens of thousands to replace the Sepoys&mdash;raised, indeed, in such
-numbers that&mdash;as constantly comes out in Lawrence’s correspondence&mdash;the
-dread was for a long time never absent from his mind lest this might be
-overdone, and new danger might arise from the Punjabis becoming
-conscious of their strength.”<a name="FNanchor_345_345" id="FNanchor_345_345"></a><a href="#Footnote_345_345" class="fnanchor">[345]</a> What wonder, then, that in England as
-in India, where it was admitted that the fall of Delhi broke the neck of
-the insurrection, all men who knew the circumstances of the case, who
-knew how he had to stimulate laggards,<a name="FNanchor_346_346" id="FNanchor_346_346"></a><a href="#Footnote_346_346" class="fnanchor">[346]</a> strengthen faint hearts,
-overcome jealousies, sweep away obstructions&mdash;“all greeted Sir John
-Lawrence by acclamation as the man who had done more than any single man
-to save the Indian Empire”?<a name="FNanchor_347_347" id="FNanchor_347_347"></a><a href="#Footnote_347_347" class="fnanchor">[347]</a> And justly. For had the great and
-warlike Sikh nation, in the midst of which Lawrence stood like a lion at
-bay, risen against the British <i>raj</i>, “all would have been lost save
-honour.” He saw, in fact, that the Khálsa banner must be carried into
-our own lines, otherwise it would be swept into the lines of the enemy;
-and it was this inspiration of genius that really saved India. Delhi
-fell before the attacks of the reinforced army, after six days’
-fighting, on the 20th of September, and on the 21st the Mogul king was
-captured by Captain Hodson (“Hodson of Hodson’s Horse”), who next day
-shot, with his own hand, his two sons, and hung up their bodies in the
-most public place in the city.<a name="FNanchor_348_348" id="FNanchor_348_348"></a><a href="#Footnote_348_348" class="fnanchor">[348]</a></p>
-
-<p>The fall of Delhi was not the end, but the beginning of the end, of the
-Mutiny. Oudh had to be recovered, and if it be said that Lawrence
-captured Delhi, it is but right to say that Canning wrested Oudh from
-the grasp of the insurgents. His position in Calcutta was an
-embarrassing one. A terrible panic had paralysed those round him. Though
-they seemed able to do nothing but clamour for vengeance and for
-blood;<a name="FNanchor_349_349" id="FNanchor_349_349"></a><a href="#Footnote_349_349" class="fnanchor">[349]</a> yet in the whirlwind of their passion Canning stood
-“steadfast as a pillar in a storm.” He was one of those who at such a
-moment “attain the wise indifference of the wise” to everything save the
-paramount demands of practical duty. He sent to Bombay, Madras, and
-Ceylon for reinforcements. He intercepted at Singapore the force that
-was on its way to China to support Lord Elgin, who had been<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_735" id="page_735">{735}</a></span> sent to
-supersede Sir John Bowring,<a name="FNanchor_350_350" id="FNanchor_350_350"></a><a href="#Footnote_350_350" class="fnanchor">[350]</a> and he armed Henry and John Lawrence
-with absolute power in Oudh and the Punjab. On the 23rd of May, Neill
-brought to Calcutta the first of the reinforcements from Madras.
-Havelock followed with two regiments from Persia, superseding Neill; and
-after him came Outram, who was to supersede Havelock and succeed Henry
-Lawrence as Chief Commissioner in Oudh. Outram, however, refused to
-deprive Havelock of the honour of relieving Lucknow, and accompanied him
-merely in his civil capacity. On the 17th, Havelock forced his way to
-the scene of the massacre at Cawnpore, where the sickening relics of
-Nana Sahib’s crime were still visible. Onwards his Army of Vengeance
-swept with hungry hearts to Lucknow, which they entered on the 25th of
-September, after a great variety of perilous adventure. When the
-imprisoned garrison, who had long been listening with strained ears for
-the beat of the English drums, met their rescuers, the scene was
-inexpressibly touching. The Highlanders, usually the most stolid and
-least emotional of our troops, had become dangerously excited after they
-entered Cawnpore; and, in the engagements on the march to Lucknow, they
-had fought, contrary to their wont, more like savages than civilised
-men. But when they marched into Lucknow their hearts softened. Oblivious
-of discipline and decorum, they rushed from their ranks, shaking hands
-with the ladies, lifting up the little children in their brawny arms,
-and passing them along from hand to hand, to be pressed to rough and
-bearded lips. Outram now took over the supreme command; but, finding
-himself again surrounded by the enemy in overwhelming numbers, he
-decided not to withdraw from the city. Lucknow had therefore to be
-relieved again.</p>
-
-<p>The death of Anson, and the startling development of the insurrection in
-midsummer, together with the pressing appeals of the Queen, roused the
-Cabinet to action. They sent out reinforcements, and on the 11th of July
-decided to appoint Sir Colin Campbell as Anson’s successor. When asked
-by Lord Panmure when he could start, Campbell answered, laconically,
-“To-morrow;” and, as a matter of fact, with little more than the kit of
-a common soldier, the veteran did start next night.<a name="FNanchor_351_351" id="FNanchor_351_351"></a><a href="#Footnote_351_351" class="fnanchor">[351]</a> On the 17th of
-August he arrived at Calcutta, and toiled without ceasing to organise an
-army. The greatest military historian of our time has said that Campbell
-had a genuine and natural love for war, and he was one of those whose
-hearts beat stronger in the hour of battle than at any other moment of
-their lives. But he loved victory better than combat; and when he
-fought, he fought to win. Hence the extraordinary pains he took with his
-preparations, and the time he spent, or, as some of his panic-stricken
-critics in Calcutta said, wasted, in making arrangements which would
-virtually guarantee success. It was not till the 27th of<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_736" id="page_736">{736}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_154" id="ill_154"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_736.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_736.jpg" width="340" height="254" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>SCENE AT THE FIRST RELIEF OF LUCKNOW.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>October that he left Calcutta. On the 9th of November he got to
-Cawnpore; and then by a brilliant forced march on the 12th he reached
-the Alumbaugh&mdash;a summer palace of the kings of Oudh&mdash;from which he was
-able to signal his arrival to Outram. A gallant civilian&mdash;Mr.
-Kavanagh&mdash;contrived, in disguise, to make his way from Lucknow through
-the enemy’s lines to the relieving force, and told the story of Outram’s
-defence, an achievement, as Lord Canning said, without a parallel in
-history, save Numantia and Saragossa. On the 14th Sir Colin Campbell
-moved on the city. On the 16th he attacked the chief stronghold of the
-rebels&mdash;the Secunder-baugh. The 93rd Highlanders and a regiment of Sikhs
-forced their way in through a narrow breach, and then, finding that the
-Sepoy garrison could not escape, they massacred them. The Highlanders
-here fought with uncontrollable ferocity, neither asking nor giving
-quarter. “<i>Cawnpore</i>, you&mdash;&mdash;!” was the cry of rage with which each man
-drove his bayonet home into the heart of his foe; and, excited by their
-example, the Sikhs strove only too successfully to emulate the barbarity
-of their Scottish comrades. For three terrible hours did the men of the
-93rd satiate their passion for vengeance; and when they emerged from the
-place with tartans soaked in blood, they left it packed high<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_737" id="page_737">{737}</a></span> and close
-with corpses&mdash;hardly a single rebel escaping to tell the tale. On the
-17th of November Campbell had fought his way to the Residency, and
-Lucknow was rescued a second time.</p>
-
-<p>The victory was hailed in England with pride and delight. The Queen sent
-a letter to Sir Colin Campbell, congratulating him. “The Queen,” she
-writes, “has had many proofs already of Sir Colin Campbell’s devotion to
-his Sovereign and his country, and he has now greatly added to that debt
-of gratitude which both owe him. But Sir Colin must bear one reproof
-from his Queen, and that is, that he exposes himself too much. His life
-is most precious, and she entreats that he will neither put himself
-where his noble spirit would urge him to be&mdash;foremost in danger&mdash;nor
-fatigue himself so as to injure his health.”<a name="FNanchor_352_352" id="FNanchor_352_352"></a><a href="#Footnote_352_352" class="fnanchor">[352]</a> Her Majesty’s caution
-was hardly needed. Sir Colin Campbell was a general who never exposed
-himself or his troops to unnecessary danger. But when necessary, he
-would spend his own and their blood as recklessly as if it were water.
-It has been noticed that his brilliant victories in India were all won
-with little loss of life.<a name="FNanchor_353_353" id="FNanchor_353_353"></a><a href="#Footnote_353_353" class="fnanchor">[353]</a> The explanation is that his plans were
-just the opposite of those pursued in the Crimea&mdash;that is to say, he
-never wasted his men in futile assaults, or hurled them against
-fortifications bristling with cannon, till his own artillery&mdash;an arm in
-which he was always strong&mdash;had demoralised the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>Having removed the women, children, sick, and wounded, Campbell retraced
-his steps to attack the rebel army concentrated at Cawnpore&mdash;his heart
-saddened, and the lustre of his triumph dimmed by the death of the
-heroic Havelock. At Cawnpore, General Windham, who commanded the rear
-guard, had foolishly allowed himself to be outflanked by Tantia Topee, a
-commander of great skill and courage. Windham’s blunder not only gave
-the enemy possession of Cawnpore, but put the whole English force, whose
-communications were thus threatened, in the greatest peril. Campbell, by
-forced marches, came to the rescue on the 29th of November. Having sent
-on his convoy to Calcutta, he attacked the rebels, under Nana Sahib and
-Tantia Topee, on the 5th of December; and, on the 7th, there was not a
-vestige of the 25,000 insurgents composing the Gwalior army to be seen
-for miles round Cawnpore.<a name="FNanchor_354_354" id="FNanchor_354_354"></a><a href="#Footnote_354_354" class="fnanchor">[354]</a> As the year 1857 closed, it was felt that
-the worst of the crisis in India was over.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_738" id="page_738">{738}</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXXVII"></a>CHAPTER XXXVII.<br /><br />
-<small>THE ROYAL MARRIAGE.</small></h2>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>Birth of Princess Beatrice&mdash;Death of the Duchess of Gloucester&mdash;A
-Royal Romance&mdash;Franco-Russian Intrigues&mdash;The Art Treasures
-Exhibition at Manchester&mdash;Announcement of the Marriage of the
-Princess Royal&mdash;Prince Albert’s Views on Royal Grants&mdash;The
-Controversy on the Grant to the Princess Royal&mdash;Visit of the Grand
-Duke Constantine&mdash;The Christening of Princess Beatrice&mdash;Prince
-Albert’s Title as Prince Consort Legalised&mdash;The First Distribution
-of the Victoria Cross&mdash;Opposition to the Order&mdash;The Queen’s Visit
-to Manchester&mdash;Departure of the Prince of Wales to Germany&mdash;The
-Queen and the Indian Mutiny&mdash;Her Controversy with Lord
-Palmerston&mdash;Sudden Death of the Duchess of Nemours&mdash;The Marriage of
-the Princess Royal&mdash;The Scene in the Chapel&mdash;On the Balcony of
-Buckingham Palace&mdash;The Illuminations in London&mdash;The Bride and
-Bridegroom at Windsor&mdash;The Last Adieus&mdash;The Departure of the Bride
-and Bridegroom to Germany.</p></div>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="smcap">It</span> was when the country was passing through the crisis of Palmerston’s
-“penal dissolution” that a Princess was added to the Royal circle&mdash;soon
-to be diminished by the migration of her eldest sister to a home of her
-own in a foreign land. The little Princess was born on the 14th of
-April, and in a letter to King Leopold the Queen says: “She is to be
-called Beatrice, a fine old name borne by three of the Plantagenet
-Princesses, and her other names will be Mary (after poor Aunt Mary),
-Victoria (after Mama and Vicky, who, with Fritz Wilhelm, are to be the
-sponsors) and Feodore.”<a name="FNanchor_355_355" id="FNanchor_355_355"></a><a href="#Footnote_355_355" class="fnanchor">[355]</a> On the 19th Prince Albert tells his
-stepmother that the Queen was already able to leave her room, and her
-recovery, therefore, could not have been retarded by the political
-excitement and agitation of the times.</p>
-
-<p>As the month ended, however, sorrow fell on the Royal household. On the
-30th of April the Duchess of Gloucester died&mdash;the “Aunt Gloucester” to
-whom the Queen and her husband in their letters make so many
-affectionate references. This Princess was the last child of George
-III., and of all his family the best beloved. The story of her life was
-in itself a romance, the pathos of which accounts for the Queen’s
-frequent allusions to her nobility and unselfishness of character.
-During her girlhood at Windsor the Princess Mary, as she was called, won
-the hearts of the people by her quiet, unobtrusive philanthropic work
-among the poor. She and her cousin, the Duke of Gloucester, fell in love
-with each other, but when he attained the age of twenty-one their
-romance was cruelly and abruptly ended. The Princess Charlotte was born,
-and it was decreed that the Duke of Gloucester must remain single, so
-that he might marry her if no eligible foreign prince claimed her hand.
-The Princess Mary and the Duke of Gloucester waited in suspense for
-twenty weary years&mdash;for she refused to encourage any other suitor. In
-1814 a rift appeared in this cloud that overhung their lives. The Prince
-of Orange, it was said, was about<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_739" id="page_739">{739}</a></span> to wed the Princess Charlotte, and
-the ladies of the Court noticed how the pining Princess Mary suddenly
-began to look bright and happy. But the projected alliance with the
-Prince of Orange was abandoned, and the Princess Mary began to droop
-again. A few months, however, put an end to the long probation of the
-Royal lovers. Leopold of Coburg married the Princess Charlotte, and
-Court gossips chronicle the fact that when she came down the steps of
-Carlton House after the ceremony, the Princess Mary rushed forward and
-fell weeping into her arms. She was married to the Duke of Gloucester in
-1816, and it may be noticed that they refused to ask Parliament for any
-increase of income. During their lives they had devoted themselves to
-benevolent work, and had not only learned the value of money, but how to
-make their means serve their wants. Their married life was so arranged
-that they not only lived on their private incomes, but won a great and
-well-merited reputation for their wide and generous charity. The sweet
-and gentle nature of the Duchess, to which the strange story of her life
-imparted an additional charm, had ever a strong fascination for the
-Queen.</p>
-
-<p>The triumph of Palmerston at the General Election had an immediate
-effect upon those Franco-Russian intrigues for the settlement of the
-Danubian Principalities which had given the Queen some uneasiness. The
-approaching visit of the Grand Duke Constantine to Paris had been
-commented on severely by the English press, and the Emperor of the
-French, in writing to the Queen to congratulate her on the birth of the
-Princess Beatrice, attempted to explain away the significance of the
-visit. Lord Clarendon suggested that Prince Albert should reply to this
-letter, telling the Emperor quite frankly why England was jealous of the
-advances of Russia to France. An alliance between France and England,
-said the Prince in his letter, could have no basis save the mutual
-desire to develop as much as possible Art, Science, Letters,
-Commerce&mdash;in a word, everything that is meant by Civilisation. But as
-for an alliance with Russia, on what basis could that be raised? What
-interest had Russia in Progress? What was there in common between modern
-France and modern Russia? A Franco-Russian alliance, therefore, could
-have no foundation but that of political interest&mdash;and hence the
-prospect of it alarmed the free States of Europe.</p>
-
-<p>Prince Albert’s reception at Manchester, where he opened the great Art
-Treasures Exhibition on the 5th of May, delighted the Queen. But of all
-the incidents of his tour, perhaps none pleased her more than the manner
-in which his speech at the unveiling of her statue in the Peel Park of
-that city was criticised by the public. In his address he alluded to the
-devotion of the people to their Queen, and spoke of it as the outcome of
-their attachment to the Sovereign “as the representative of the
-institutions of the country.” The phrase struck the popular fancy, and
-to the Queen it seemed the formula of her position and her life. Two
-days later the Court removed to Osborne, where the Queen gradually
-recovered from the depression<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_740" id="page_740">{740}</a></span> of spirits under which she had sunk after
-the death of the Duchess of Gloucester.</p>
-
-<p>On the 16th of May the Prussian <i>Official Gazette</i> announced the
-forthcoming marriage of the Princess Royal and Prince Frederick William,
-and on the 19th the same announcement was made to Parliament by a Royal
-Message. In this Message the Queen expressed her confidence that the
-nation would make a suitable provision for her eldest daughter, and it
-is worth recording that at the outset the Cabinet were a little
-uncertain as to the reception which such a Message would meet with.
-Perhaps that was why Lord Palmerston, in moving the Address in reply to
-it, took pains to tell Parliament that, quite apart from the personal
-interest which Englishmen felt in this affair, it held out political
-prospects “not undeserving the attention of the House.” Family alliances
-tended, he argued, to mitigate the asperities which from time to time
-spring from diversities of national interests. “Therefore,” he added, “I
-trust that this marriage may also be considered as holding out an
-increased prospect of goodwill and of cordiality among the Great Powers
-of Europe.”</p>
-
-<p>But in those days the Representatives of the people, were more jealous
-guardians of the public purse than they are now, and on both sides of
-the House there was a strong feeling against increasing public
-expenditure. The competition then was in economy&mdash;not as now in profuse
-extravagance. There were three views current on the subject. One was
-that of Prince Albert, who thought that the time had come when
-Parliament should settle finally what provision ought to be made for
-members of the Royal Family on their marriage, so as to avoid the
-necessity of frequent eleemosynary appeals to Parliament. He held, and
-as it now seems rightly, that the feeling of the country at the time ran
-in favour of treating the Queen’s children generously. In one of his
-letters to Baron Stockmar he says, “Seeing how marked was the desire to
-keep questions relating to the Royal Family aloof from the pressure of
-party conflict, and to have them settled, I believe it would have been
-an easy matter to have carried through the future endowments of them
-all, according to the Chancellor of the Exchequer’s and Palmerston’s
-original plan, which was subsequently dropped by the Cabinet.”<a name="FNanchor_356_356" id="FNanchor_356_356"></a><a href="#Footnote_356_356" class="fnanchor">[356]</a> Then
-there was the Ministerial view, which was that the Princess should be
-voted a dowry and an annuity; and the Radical view, which was that the
-nation should not be burdened with an annuity, but that whatever was
-voted to the lady should be a lump sum, so that when the vote was passed
-the Princess would cease to be a yearly charge on the country she was
-leaving. Mr. Roebuck gave expression to this last view, even before the
-Chancellor of the Exchequer laid his proposal before the House&mdash;which
-was that the annuity should be £8,000, and the marriage portion £40,000.
-The majority of the House, however, desired to come to a unanimous vote
-on the subject, and they laughed at Sir George Lewis’s grave citations
-from Blackstone and his precedents from the reign of George II. Still
-more<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_741" id="page_741">{741}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_155" id="ill_155"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_741.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_741.jpg" height="361" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE HASTINGS CHANTRY, ST. GEORGE’S CHAPEL, WINDSOR.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">heartily did they laugh when he explained how the Queen had recently
-been forced to bear very large expenses of a public nature, alluding
-particularly to the visit to the Emperor Napoleon&mdash;“a visit,” said Sir
-George, solemnly, “which was purely for public and State purposes, and
-not for her individual pleasure.”<a name="FNanchor_357_357" id="FNanchor_357_357"></a><a href="#Footnote_357_357" class="fnanchor">[357]</a> No doubt the visits of George IV.
-to Hanover, Ireland, and Scotland were paid for by the State. But it was
-as ridiculous to cite such a bad precedent as that, as to go back for
-others to the reign of George III., when Parliament at different times
-voted a total sum of £3,297,000 to pay the debts of the Royal Family.
-The truth is, that the Sovereign cannot be held exempt from the ordinary
-liabilities of exalted rank and station. Every person who accepts a high
-public office is in the habit, now and then, of drawing on his private
-income to enable him to discharge his public duties with greater
-efficiency&mdash;in fact, this liability is simply one of the incidents of
-great estate in every aristocratic country. But, unfortunately, the
-Queen had on her accession surrendered her Crown revenues to Parliament
-for a fixed annuity, on the more or less formal understanding that
-Parliament would provide for her children when they settled in life. So
-that the House of Commons felt there was really no choice in the matter,
-save to vote the grant, and if possible, out of respect for the Queen,
-vote it unanimously.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_742" id="page_742">{742}</a></span> Mr. Roebuck withdrew his opposition, but on the
-report of the vote in Supply, Mr. Coningham, Member for Brighton,
-entered a protest against the principle of voting annuities to the Royal
-Family, and moved the reduction of the vote in this instance from £8,000
-to £6,000 a year. The motion was lost by 328 to 14. Mr. Maguire and Sir
-J. Trelawny, supported by Mr. Coningham, then argued that the annuity
-was enough, and moved that there be no dowry granted. They were beaten
-by a vote of 361 to 18, and here the matter ended. “We have,” writes
-Prince Albert to Stockmar, “established a good precedent, not merely for
-the grant itself, but for the way and manner in which such grants should
-be dealt with.”<a name="FNanchor_358_358" id="FNanchor_358_358"></a><a href="#Footnote_358_358" class="fnanchor">[358]</a> This opinion he would perhaps have recast had he
-lived to see the painful position in which the Royal Family have again
-and again been placed by repeated applications of the precedent.</p>
-
-<p>Just before the Court left Osborne, the Grand Duke Constantine paid the
-Queen his long expected visit. He arrived on the 30th and left next
-night, after going with her Majesty to see the fleet at Spithead. His
-visit was not quite a pleasant one for the Queen and Lord Palmerston.
-The Grand Duke, to their surprise, spoke with almost cynical candour of
-the Crimean War; indeed, it was not till his visit that the Queen had
-brought home to her effectually the murderous mistakes of that campaign.
-He told her about Menschikoff’s blundering, and showed her how
-Sebastopol was at the mercy of the Allies after the Battle of the Alma,
-because there were only two battalions in the city; and further indulged
-in many cheering reminiscences of a similar sort, especially in
-reference to the attacks on the Redan. But as he had just come from
-Paris, one wonders if he told his English hosts how it was that the
-Emperor discovered that the Malakoff was the weak point in the defences
-of the town.<a name="FNanchor_359_359" id="FNanchor_359_359"></a><a href="#Footnote_359_359" class="fnanchor">[359]</a> On the 3rd of June the Court returned to Windsor, and
-the Queen went to Ascot Races, and admired the beautiful mare, Blink
-Bonny, which was brought out for her inspection.<a name="FNanchor_360_360" id="FNanchor_360_360"></a><a href="#Footnote_360_360" class="fnanchor">[360]</a> The first Handel
-Festival at the Crystal Palace, however, provided a stronger attraction
-than Ascot for the Queen and her husband, and her visit to it is
-described in glowing terms by contemporary chroniclers. It was the
-precursor of these great festivals which have since become world-famous,
-and on the 17th, when the Queen was present, <i>Judas Maccabæus</i> was given
-by 2,500 performers.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_743" id="page_743">{743}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The christening of the Princess Beatrice took place in the private
-chapel of Buckingham Palace on the 16th of June, and among the visitors
-and guests the Archduke Maximilian of Austria was one of the most
-prominent. He had become betrothed to the Princess Charlotte of Belgium,
-a young and beautiful princess, to whom the Queen was deeply attached.
-It was a love match, but the lives of the young people, radiant at the
-outset with sunshine, were darkened at the end by the gloom of an awful
-tragedy. In an evil moment the Archduke permitted the French Emperor to
-lure him into his wild project for establishing a Transatlantic-Latin
-Empire as a counterpoise to the Anglo-Saxon Republic of the West. He was
-crowned Emperor of Mexico in 1863, and deposed and shot by order of the
-President of the Mexican Republic in 1867. His unhappy consort passed
-the rest of her existence in the living death of insanity.</p>
-
-<p>On the 25th of June the Queen conferred on her husband, by Royal Letters
-Patent, the title of Prince Consort, which, however, had already been
-given to him by the people, who never called him anything else. Still it
-had been a popular, not a legal title, and Prince Albert could claim no
-other precedence than what was accorded to him by courtesy. Moreover,
-when he went abroad, although he held a kingly position in England, he
-ranked merely as a younger Prince of Saxe-Coburg Gotha, and foreigners
-raised difficulties about the precedence that should be given to him. “I
-should have preferred its being done by Act of Parliament,” wrote the
-Queen to King Leopold, in reference to the legalising of the new title,
-“and so it may still be at some future period; but it was thought better
-on the whole to do it now in this simple way”&mdash;namely, by Letters
-Patent.</p>
-
-<p>On the 26th, her Majesty presided over one of the most interesting
-functions of her reign&mdash;the first distribution of the Victoria Cross, or
-Cross of Valour, to the men who had earned it by personal prowess in
-war. It is a curious fact that till this period no English sovereign
-ever decorated an Englishman for being brave. Courage in England is so
-common and cheap, said Mr. Bright once, that it can be bought easily for
-less than a shilling a day. Nay, there were some generals, like Colin
-Campbell, who objected strongly to decorations being conferred for
-valour&mdash;because, as Campbell said, you might as well decorate a woman
-for being chaste as an English soldier for being brave.<a name="FNanchor_361_361" id="FNanchor_361_361"></a><a href="#Footnote_361_361" class="fnanchor">[361]</a> But contact
-with the French Army had altered the old-fashioned English ideas on the
-subject,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_744" id="page_744">{744}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 410px;">
-<p><a name="ill_156" id="ill_156"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_744.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_744.jpg" width="205" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE VICTORIA CROSS.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">and the spectacle of private soldiers in the Crimea wearing the Legion
-of Honour on their breasts had created a feeling in favour of some kind
-of decoration which would be open to all ranks of the army. The Order of
-the Bath could not be granted for mere bravery&mdash;it was granted for
-bravery combined with exceptional skill and talent. But then, as the
-private soldier had no chance of displaying any quality in war save
-courage, it was obvious that the new Order must seek a basis in
-individual heroism alone. The Queen, struck by the episodical incidents
-of the Crimean War, was strongly of opinion in 1856 that exceptional
-deeds of personal valour should have more distinctive recognition than
-the war medal which every man received, however slight might have been
-his share in the campaign. In that year, therefore, she instituted, by
-the Royal Warrant of January 29th, 1856, the Order of the Victoria
-Cross. The decoration was to be given to soldiers or sailors who had
-performed some signal act of valour or devotion to their country in face
-of the enemy&mdash;and a small pension of £10 a year was to be attached to
-the Cross. It was not until late in 1857 that a list of persons
-qualified for admission to the Order could be drawn up, and when it was
-submitted to the Queen she resolved to decorate them with her own hands.
-Public interest in the ceremony on the 26th of June was intense. At an
-early hour crowds of well-dressed sightseers swarmed into Hyde Park,
-where a vast amphitheatre of seats, capable of accommodating 12,000
-persons had been erected. In the centre stood a simple table, on which
-were laid the bronze Maltese crosses&mdash;their red and blue ribbons being
-the only patches of colour that caught the eye. In front, a body of
-4,000 troops, consisting of the <i>corps d’élite</i> of the army&mdash;Guards,
-Highlanders, Royal Marines, the Rifle Brigade, Enniskillens, and
-Hussars, Artillery and Engineers&mdash;was drawn up. Between them and the
-Royal Pavilion stood the small group of heroes&mdash;sixty-two in number&mdash;who
-were to be decorated. At 10 a.m. the Queen, the Prince Consort, Prince
-Frederick William of Prussia, and a brilliant train, rode into the Park.
-The Queen, mounted on a gallant and spirited roan, and wearing a scarlet
-jacket, black skirt, and plumed hat, rode up to the table, but did not
-dismount. One by one each hero was summoned to her presence, and bending
-from her saddle, her Majesty<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_745" id="page_745">{745}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_157" id="ill_157"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_745.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_745.jpg" width="380" height="510" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE QUEEN DISTRIBUTING THE VICTORIA CROSSES IN HYDE
-PARK.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_746" id="page_746">{746}</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="nind">pinned the Cross on his breast with her own hands, whilst the Prince
-Consort saluted him with grave and respectful courtesy. As each soldier
-or sailor was decorated, the vast concourse of spectators cheered and
-clapped their hands&mdash;whether he were an officer whose breast was already
-glittering with stars and orders, or a humble private or Jack Tar whose
-rough tunic carried no more resplendent embellishment than the ordinary
-war medal. But of all the cheers none were heartier than those which
-were given for a man who, when called out, stepped forward arrayed in
-what was then the grotesque and pacific garb of an ordinary policeman.</p>
-
-<p>The Art Treasures Exhibition at Manchester, which had been opened in May
-by the Prince Consort, had become amazingly popular. It was the first of
-its kind seen in England, and the great difficulty which its organisers
-had to overcome was the reluctance of private collectors to lend works
-of art for exhibition. But for the Queen and Prince Albert it is
-probable this obstacle would never have been surmounted,<a name="FNanchor_362_362" id="FNanchor_362_362"></a><a href="#Footnote_362_362" class="fnanchor">[362]</a> and hence
-it was but natural that her Majesty should desire to visit the
-collection. Her reception at Manchester, on the 30th of June, was
-enthusiastic, a crowd of a million people welcoming her, as she said
-herself, with “kind and friendly faces.” The display of Prussian flags,
-and the complimentary allusions to her husband and to her eldest
-daughter’s approaching marriage, appear to have touched her deeply. At
-the Exhibition, her Majesty knighted the Mayor, as she observes, “with
-Sir Harry Smith’s sword, which had been in four general actions,” and on
-the 2nd of July she left for Buckingham Palace, where she gave a great
-musical party in the evening. The next event of importance in the
-home-life of the Queen was the departure of the Prince of Wales to
-Königswinter, where it had been arranged he was to carry on his studies.
-He left in high spirits, and with the Queen’s anxious adieus, on the
-26th of July, accompanied by young Mr. Frederick Stanley&mdash;now Lord
-Stanley of Preston&mdash;General Grey, Sir H. Ponsonby, and his tutors. Mr.
-Gladstone’s son, Mr. C. Wood, son of Lord Halifax, and the present Lord
-Cadogan, were also selected by the Queen and Prince Consort to join him
-as companions in his studies.</p>
-
-<p>From this time till the tide of war in India turned in our favour, the
-Queen’s attention seems to have been absorbed by the crisis in our
-Eastern Empire. Her political work was apparently concentrated in a
-persistent effort to induce the Cabinet not only to hurry out
-reinforcements, but to replace them by increasing the establishment at
-home up to the full limit voted by Parliament, and for<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_747" id="page_747">{747}</a></span> which estimates
-had been taken. Lord Palmerston, on the other hand, in his light and
-airy way, refused to regard the Mutiny as serious, and persisted in
-sending out reinforcements in driblets, and then replacing them by
-driblets of recruits. The Queen very sensibly contended that the force
-absorbed by the Indian demand should “be replaced to its full extent and
-in the same kind,” whereas the Cabinet was replacing whole battalions by
-“handfuls of recruits added to the remaining ones.” It was in vain that
-the Minister met her with the usual stock platitudes&mdash;that neither the
-money nor the men could be got. The Queen replied that her project would
-actually be more economical than the confused and unmethodical devices
-of Palmerston and Panmure. The East India Company would find the money
-for the reinforcements, which could be applied to the creation of new
-battalions. But these could in turn absorb the old half-pay officers
-reduced from the War Establishment, who would then cease to be a burden
-on the Exchequer. As to the argument that the men could not be got, the
-Queen wrote to Lord Palmerston, “This is an hypothesis, and not an
-argument. Try, and you will see. If you do not succeed, and the measure
-is necessary, you will have to adopt means to make it succeed. If you
-conjure up the difficulties yourself you cannot, of course, succeed.”
-One fact may be mentioned as curiously illustrating the shallowness of
-understanding and feebleness of grasp with which Palmerston approached
-any great question of State to which Foreign Office <i>formulæ</i> could not
-be applied. He, or some one at his instigation, seems to have tried to
-frighten the Queen by warning her that the East India Company would
-object to keep up such a large addition to her army in India. The Queen,
-however, saw what Palmerston could not see&mdash;that the first shot fired in
-the rebellion had virtually eliminated the Company as a dominating
-factor in the Indian problem. “The Queen,” she writes to Palmerston,
-“thinks it next to impossible that the European force could again be
-decreased in India. After the present fearful experience the Company
-could only send back (home) Queen’s regiments, in order to raise new
-European ones of their own. This they cannot do without the Queen’s
-sanction, and she must at once make her most solemn protest against such
-a measure. It would be dangerous and unconstitutional to allow private
-individuals to raise an army of Queen’s subjects larger than her own in
-any part of the British dominions.” And at the close of the Memorandum,
-which she haughtily desires Palmerston to communicate to his colleagues,
-the tone becomes sharper as she sums up the net result of the bungling
-military policy of the Cabinet. “The present situation of the Queen’s
-army,” she writes, “is a pitiable one. The Queen has just seen, in the
-camp at Aldershot, regiments which, after eighteen years’ foreign
-service in most trying climates, had come back to England to be sent
-out, after seven months, to the Crimea. Having passed through this
-destructive campaign, they had not been home for a year before they are
-to go to India for perhaps twenty years! This is most cruel and unfair
-to the gallant men who devote their services to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_748" id="page_748">{748}</a></span> country, and the
-Government is in duty and humanity bound to alleviate their
-position.”<a name="FNanchor_363_363" id="FNanchor_363_363"></a><a href="#Footnote_363_363" class="fnanchor">[363]</a></p>
-
-<p>In August a flying visit to Cherbourg in her yacht convinced the Queen
-that the growing strength of this port as a place of arms was dangerous
-to England, and on her return she called the attention of the Cabinet to
-what she had seen, and demanded reports as to the precise state of the
-defences on the South coast of England. As usual, nobody could find the
-required information, and when it was obtained Lord Clarendon told the
-Prince Consort that nobody could read such an account of our
-shortcomings without immediately desiring to remedy them. September saw
-the Court at Balmoral, where the Queen’s holiday was sadly overcast by
-the Indian reports which came pouring in. As the Prince Consort said, in
-one of his letters to Stockmar, they were “tortured by the events in
-India, which are truly frightful!” The French Emperor’s courteous offer
-to pass our reinforcements through France brought some cheerfulness to
-the anxious Sovereign, not diminished by the friendly offer of two
-regiments from Belgium&mdash;which was, however, rejected by Lord Palmerston,
-who had sense enough to see that if England was to win at all she must,
-as he said, “win off her own bat.”</p>
-
-<p>On the 16th of October the Court returned to Windsor, the Queen having
-spent a night at Haddo House, where she went to visit her venerable
-friend, Lord Aberdeen. The sudden death of the Duchess of Nemours, first
-cousin of the Queen and Prince Consort, and wife of the second son of
-Louis Philippe, now threw the Court into mourning. “We were like
-sisters,” wrote Her Majesty to King Leopold, “bore the same name,
-married the same year, our children are the same age; there was, in
-short, a similarity between us, which, since 1839, united us closely and
-tenderly. Now one of us is gone&mdash;passed as a rose, full-blown and
-faded&mdash;from this earth to eternity, there to rest in peace and
-joy.”<a name="FNanchor_364_364" id="FNanchor_364_364"></a><a href="#Footnote_364_364" class="fnanchor">[364]</a> The commercial crisis of November caused Parliament to be
-summoned before the year closed, and December was spent in making
-preparations for the marriage of the Princess Royal.</p>
-
-<p>When the 19th of January, 1858, came round Buckingham Palace was full of
-guests&mdash;the King of the Belgians and his sons, the Prince and Princess
-of Prussia and their suites, being among the number. It was a brilliant
-scene of bustle and excitement, covers for eighty or ninety guests being
-laid daily at dinner. Four dramatic representations were given by
-command at Her Majest<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_749" id="page_749">{749}</a></span>y’s Theatre, where, writes the Queen, “We made a
-wonderful row of royalties, I sitting between dear uncle and the Prince
-of Prussia,” and where the audience cheered the young couple who were to
-be so soon united with a cordiality that brought tears to their parents’
-eyes. Balls, dinners, musical parties, celebrated the coming event at
-the Palace, till the 24th, which is recorded in the Queen’s Diary as
-“poor dear Vicky’s last unmarried day ... an eventful one, reminding me
-of my own.” Charming in its simplicity is the Queen’s description of the
-family delight over the wedding gifts; and the tearful “Good-night” of
-the 24th between the Princess and her parents is too sacred a subject
-for more than passing allusion. On the 25th, the eventful day of the
-wedding, the Queen writes, “I felt as if I were being married over again
-myself, only much more nervous, for I had not that blessed feeling which
-I had then, which raises and supports one, of giving myself up for life
-to him whom I loved and worshipped&mdash;then and for ever.” But the sun
-shone with happy omen as the morning advanced, and the wedding party,
-amidst cheering crowds, proceeded to the Chapel Royal at St. James’s
-Palace.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_158" id="ill_158"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_749.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_749.jpg" width="326" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>THE CRIMSON DRAWING-ROOM, WINDSOR CASTLE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>This interesting building had been put to strange uses in its time. It
-had been in turn a Roman Catholic chapel, a Protestant chapel, a
-guard-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_750" id="page_750">{750}</a></span>room, and a store-room, before it ended as a chapel reserved for
-Royal nuptials. Within its walls Queen Anne had married good-natured
-George of Denmark, and George III. the shrew of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. It
-was the scene of the wedding of the ill-fated Caroline of Brunswick and
-the “First Gentleman of Europe,” who, it may be remembered, had to be
-fortified with brandy ere he could undergo the ceremony. Here, also,
-William IV. wedded the amiable and gentle Queen Adelaide, and his
-successor plighted her troth to the husband of her heart. But not even
-on that occasion was the chapel the scene of a more brilliant pageant
-than when it witnessed the nuptials of the Princess Royal of England and
-the son of the Prince of Prussia. The dingy edifice, which Holbein’s
-admirers revere as a triumph of his genius, was now no longer dingy.
-Hangings of crimson silk, gleaming with gold fringe and tassels, gilded
-columns and scroll work, gold headings, and emblazoned shields and
-ciphers, dispelled the customary gloom from the building. The altar,
-too, was sumptuously equipped with quaint “services” of gold plate,
-illustrative of the Augustan age of English Art.</p>
-
-<p>The marriage procession was formed at Buckingham Palace. It consisted of
-more than twenty carriages, the first detachment of which conveyed the
-Princes and magnates of the House of Prussia. At a short interval the
-bridegroom and his suite followed; then the Queen and her family. When
-it arrived at St. James’s Palace the procession was received by the
-great officers of State, who conducted it to the chapel through the
-splendid apartments, rich in sombre decorations of Queen Anne’s reign.</p>
-
-<p>The Prince Consort and King Leopold were radiant in the bravery of Field
-Marshals’ uniforms, “the three girls,” writes the Queen, with quick
-feminine memory for the details of such an occasion, “in pink satin
-trimmed with Newport lace, Alice with a wreath, and the two others only
-with bouquets in their hair of cornflowers and marguerites; next the
-four boys in Highland dress.” As for the eight bridesmaids, they “looked
-charming in white tulle, with wreaths and bouquets of pink roses and
-white heather;” and “Mama” (the Duchess of Kent) “looking so handsome,”
-says the Queen, “in violet velvet trimmed with ermine and white silk and
-violet,” with “the Cambridges” and all the foreign Princes and
-Princesses, made up a brilliant party. The wedding procession was, in
-fact, formed in the Closet&mdash;the room in the Chapel which on Court days
-is reserved for the Royal Family and the families of Peers, “just as at
-<i>my</i> marriage,” writes the Queen, “only how small the <i>old</i> Royal Family
-has become!” Lord Palmerston carried the Sword of State “with easy grace
-and dignity,” says the <i>Morning Post</i>,<a name="FNanchor_365_365" id="FNanchor_365_365"></a><a href="#Footnote_365_365" class="fnanchor">[365]</a> “with a ponderous
-solemnity,” says the <i>Times</i>, in their respective accounts of the scene,
-and the Queen, with the “two little boys” on each side, and followed by
-her three daughters, walked after Lord Palmerston and the two elder
-Princes. Amidst</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p><a name="ill_159" id="ill_159"></a></p>
-<a href="images/ill_pg_750a.jpg">
-<img src="images/ill_pg_750a.jpg" width="535" height="341" alt="[Image unavailable.]" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>MARRIAGE OF THE PRINCESS ROYAL. (<i>See p. 751.</i>)</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_751" id="page_751">{751}</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="nind">beating drums and blaring trumpets, the procession entered the Chapel,
-the appearance of the Queen crowned with a glittering diadem, being
-greeted with a profound and reverential obeisance by the wedding guests
-as she swept on to her chair of State on the left of the altar. The
-entrance of the bride with her father and King Leopold sent a flutter of
-excitement through the throng. When the Princess appeared her face
-seemed pale, even in contrast with her snowy robe of rich moire antique.
-She passed the Queen with a deep bow, and as her eyes met those of the
-bridegroom, her cheeks suddenly flushed to deepest crimson. “My last
-fear of being overcome,” writes the Queen, “vanished on seeing Vicky’s
-quiet, calm, and composed manner.” The whole scene indeed recalled her
-own marriage, and her eyes glistened with tears as the sweet memories of
-her happy and busy life flitted through her mind. The ceremony was
-performed by the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Bishops of London,
-Oxford, and Chester. The Archbishop was “very nervous,” however&mdash;much
-more so than either bride or bridegroom, and the Queen records that he
-omitted some of the passages in the Service. When the ceremony was over,
-tender and affectionate congratulations passed between the married pair
-and their relations. The bride and her mother fell weeping into each
-other’s arms, and for a minute or so their agitation was manifestly
-beyond their control. The bridegroom then kissed the bride, who,
-escaping from his embrace, threw herself into the arms of her father,
-whom she kissed again and again. The Princess of Prussia embraced her
-son and kissed the Queen most affectionately; but the most touching
-greeting of all was that which passed between the bridegroom and his
-father, who seemed quite unnerved with emotion. The Prince clasped his
-father passionately to his heart, and then, as if recovering
-self-control, suddenly knelt down and reverently kissed his hand. These
-congratulations were repeated when the register was signed by all the
-Princesses and Princes present, including the Maharajah Duleep Sing.
-Through cheering crowds bride and bridegroom and the splendid train of
-wedding guests proceeded to Buckingham Palace, where the wedded pair and
-their parents appeared on the balcony and bowed their thanks to the
-kindly people who stood huzzaing outside. Then came the breakfast and
-the parting, which is “such sweet sorrow” to mother and daughter on such
-occasions. The married couple drove to Windsor, and at the railway
-station were met by the Eton boys, who dragged their carriage all the
-way to the Castle. London was one blaze of illuminations that night, and
-the rejoicings at the Palace closed with a State concert. Nothing
-pleased the Queen more than the demeanour of the populace. Their
-demonstrations of loyalty were purely spontaneous and utterly
-unaffected. So much was this the case that the foreign guests were
-amazed to find that the Government offices were the only buildings which
-were not illuminated; in fact, their gloomy darkness alone rendered the
-general illumination of London a little less brilliant than that which
-celebrated the Proclamation of Peace with Russia.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_752" id="page_752">{752}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On the 27th of January the Court removed to Windsor, where Prince
-Frederick William was invested with the Order of the Garter, and a
-dinner-party followed, at which the Duke of Buccleuch gratified the
-Princess with his reports of the enthusiastic loyalty of the crowds in
-London, among whom he had moved about <i>incognito</i> on the night of the
-wedding ceremony. Next day the whole family returned to London, and in
-the evening went to see Sheridan’s <i>Rivals</i> and the <i>Spitalfields
-Weaver</i> at Her Majesty’s Theatre, the Queen being greatly amused, as she
-herself records, by the drolleries of Wright, the low comedian, in the
-latter piece. On the 30th loyal addresses from the City of London and
-all the great towns came pouring in, and what the Prince Consort calls
-“a monster Drawing-Room” was held. On Monday the 1st of February the
-Queen writes in her Diary, “The last day of our dear child being with
-us, which is incredible, and makes me at times feel sick at heart,”<a name="FNanchor_366_366" id="FNanchor_366_366"></a><a href="#Footnote_366_366" class="fnanchor">[366]</a>
-and when the next day came round the Queen’s fortitude failed her.
-Mother and daughter sat weeping in each other’s arms, and when the
-“dreadful time,” as the Queen calls it, arrived, and they had to go down
-into the Hall, filled with weeping friends and sad-eyed servants, the
-scene was touching in the extreme. “Poor dear child,” writes the Queen,
-“I clasped her in my arms and blessed her, and knew not what to say. I
-kissed good Fritz, and pressed his hand again and again. He was unable
-to speak, and the tears were in his eyes.” But the final parting could
-be postponed no longer, and the Queen returned to her room in sorrow.
-Instead of driving from Buckingham Palace to the Bricklayers’ Arms
-Station by the shortest route, the Prince and Princess drove along the
-Strand, Fleet Street, Cheapside, and London Bridge. The houses and shops
-were profusely decked with flags, though the decorations were got ready
-in a hurry. The day was bitterly cold, and snow fell fast. Yet the
-inclement weather did not deter vast crowds from turning out to bid the
-newly-married pair “Good speed.” When the Prince Consort, who had
-accompanied his daughter and son-in-law part of the way, returned home,
-the Queen’s grief broke out again. Even the sight of “the darling baby”
-(Princess Beatrice) saddened her, for, as she writes, “Dear Vicky loved
-her so much, and only yesterday played with her.” As for the Prince
-Consort, he told the Princess, in one of his letters, that the void she
-had left was not in his heart only, but in his daily life. In fact,
-nothing save the cordial and brilliant reception which welcomed her in
-Germany could have consoled him for the loss of a daughter whom he
-proudly described to her husband as one who “had a man’s head and a
-child’s heart.”</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><p class="cb">FOOTNOTES:</p>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Morley’s Life of Cobden.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> Greville’s Journal, Vol. III. p. 290.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I. p. 243.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> Letter from the Queen to Lord Melbourne, cited by Sir T.
-Martin in the Life of the Prince Consort.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> This is not quite accurate. The details were arranged by
-Lord Clarendon; the plan, or original idea, of the visit was the
-Queen’s.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> Greville’s Journal of the Reign of Queen Victoria, Vol.
-III., p. 295.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> “This faithful and trusty valet nursed his dear master most
-devotedly through his sad illness in December, 1861, and is now always
-with me as my personal groom of the chambers or valet. I gave him a
-house near Windsor Castle, where he resides when the Court are there. He
-is a native of Coburg. His father has been for fifty years Förster at
-Fülbach, close to Coburg.”&mdash;<i>Footnote by the Queen.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> “Who was very active and efficient. He is now a
-page.”&mdash;<i>Footnote by the Queen.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> Greville’s Journal of the Reign of Queen Victoria, Vol.
-III., pp. 296, 297.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XXXVIII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> Greville’s Journal of the Reign of Queen Victoria, Vol.
-III. p. 335.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> Memorials of an Ex-Minister, by Lord Malmesbury, Vol. I.
-p. 261.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> This, of course, applies only to States within the
-European comity of nations. Semi-barbaric Asiatic or African
-States&mdash;<i>e.g.</i>, Turkey and Tunis&mdash;by special treaties or
-“capitulations,” surrendered to England extra-territorial jurisdiction
-over cases in which her subjects resident in their territories were
-concerned.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> The details of this intrigue, it is understood, were
-recorded by Mr. Greville, but the publication of them was withheld by
-the editor of his “Journal,” for reasons which may easily be guessed.
-The whole story will probably not be told during the lifetime of the
-Queen.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> Had the Bill passed, Lord Clarendon would have been Irish
-Secretary.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> See a curious letter of Croker’s in the third volume of
-“The Croker Papers.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> He was beaten only by a majority of 3.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> See the Queen’s letter to King Leopold, cited in Martin’s
-Life of the Prince Consort, Ch. XXXIX.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> It is commonly called “the Queen’s Reading Lamp,” but it
-may be said that Sir Theodore Martin is not quite correct in assuming
-that this type of lamp was introduced into England by Prince Albert. A
-similar lamp was in use in Cambridge long before the Prince came to this
-country, and was known as the “Cambridge Reading Lamp.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XXXI.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> <i>Punch</i>, Vol. XVIII., p. 229.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> Mr. Cobden always said that such a protest would have
-deterred Russia from stamping out Hungarian liberty.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> “One of our keepers since 1851. An excellent, intelligent
-man, much liked by the Prince. He, like many others, spit blood after
-running the race up that steep hill in the short space of time, and he
-has never been so strong since. The running up-hill has in consequence
-been discontinued. He lives in a cottage at the back of Craig Gowan
-(commanding a beautiful view) called Robrech, which the Prince built for
-him.”&mdash;<i>Note by the Queen in “Leaves from a Journal.”</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> The allusion here is to the Ritualists or Puseyites, or
-Tractarians, as they were called then.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> Morley’s Life of Cobden.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> Morley’s Life of Cobden.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> It is but right to say that Mr. Herries was now over
-seventy years of age, and had been virtually shelved for twenty years.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> According to Mr. Greville, it was Mr. Thomas Baring.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> Letters of the Right Hon. Sir George Cornewall Lewis,
-Bart., to various friends, edited by the Rev. Sir Gilbert Frankland
-Lewis, Bart., p. 240.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> Mr. Disraeli did not support the Tory opposition to the
-Jews.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> Greville’s Journal of the Reign of Queen Victoria, Vol.
-III., p. 407.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> The Editor of the <i>Times</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> Greville’s Journal of the Reign of Queen Victoria, Vol.
-III., p. 415.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_39_39" id="Footnote_39_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XLII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_40_40" id="Footnote_40_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_41_41" id="Footnote_41_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> Quoted by Sir Theodore Martin in his Life of the Prince
-Consort, Chap. XLII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_42_42" id="Footnote_42_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I. pp. 284 and 288.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_43_43" id="Footnote_43_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XLIII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_44_44" id="Footnote_44_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XLIV.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_45_45" id="Footnote_45_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a> <i>See</i> p. 479.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_46_46" id="Footnote_46_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> These were Morny (a natural son of the Prince-President’s
-mother, the Queen Hortense, by Count Flahault), Persigny, Fleury,
-Maupas, Marshal Mangan, and probably Rouher.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_47_47" id="Footnote_47_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> Correspondence and Conversations of Alexis de Tocqueville
-with Nassau William Senior, edited by W. C. M. Simpson, Vol. II., p. 5.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_48_48" id="Footnote_48_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> De Tocqueville’s Conversations and Correspondence with
-Nassau W. Senior, Vol. II., p. 6.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_49_49" id="Footnote_49_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a> Greville’s Journal of the Reign of Queen Victoria, Vol.
-III., p. 447.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_50_50" id="Footnote_50_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a> Lord Malmesbury’s Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I., p.
-309.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_51_51" id="Footnote_51_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> The corresponding office in our day is Secretary of State
-for India.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_52_52" id="Footnote_52_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52_52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a> Letters of the Right Hon. Sir George Cornewall Lewis,
-Bart., to various persons, edited by the Rev. Sir Gilbert Frankland
-Lewis, Bart., p. 251.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_53_53" id="Footnote_53_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53_53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a> Mr. Greville’s Journal of the Reign of Queen Victoria,
-Vol. III., p. 448.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_54_54" id="Footnote_54_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54_54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I., p. 332.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_55_55" id="Footnote_55_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55_55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a> On coming into office, Lord Derby announced that it was
-the mission of his Government to “oppose some barrier against the
-democratic influence that is continually encroaching, which would throw
-power nominally into the hands of the masses, but practically into the
-hands of the demagogues who lead them.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_56_56" id="Footnote_56_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56_56"><span class="label">[56]</span></a> This was the occasion, not the cause. The Americans and
-the French were beginning to show themselves in the Eastern seas.
-According to Mr. Arnold, it was because they were casting covetous eyes
-on the Delta of the Irawaddy that Lord Dalhousie determined to forestall
-them by annexing that region. <i>See</i> Arnold’s Administration of Lord
-Dalhousie, Vol. II., p. 14; Papers of the House of Lords, 1856, No.
-161.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_57_57" id="Footnote_57_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57_57"><span class="label">[57]</span></a> Lord Derby and Mr. Herries admitted that Lambert acted
-without instructions. Hansard, Vol. CXX., p. 656; Memoirs of Herries,
-Vol. II., p. 250; Parl. Papers relating to Burmah, 1852. Cobden also
-accused Fishbourne of provoking the Governor. <i>See</i> Cobden’s Political
-Writings, Vol. II., p. 57.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_58_58" id="Footnote_58_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_58_58"><span class="label">[58]</span></a> Life and Correspondence of Lord Palmerston, by the Right
-Hon. Evelyn Ashley, Vol. II., p. 247.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_59_59" id="Footnote_59_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_59_59"><span class="label">[59]</span></a> Morley’s Life of Cobden, Chap. XX.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_60_60" id="Footnote_60_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_60_60"><span class="label">[60]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XLVI.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_61_61" id="Footnote_61_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_61_61"><span class="label">[61]</span></a> Morley’s Life of Cobden, Chap. XXI.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_62_62" id="Footnote_62_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_62_62"><span class="label">[62]</span></a> Spencer Walpole’s History of England. London: Longmans,
-Green, and Co. 1886. Vol. V., p. 43.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_63_63" id="Footnote_63_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_63_63"><span class="label">[63]</span></a> Reminiscences and Opinions of Sir Francis Hastings Doyle,
-Bart. London: Longmans, Green, and Co. 1886. Pages 321-330.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_64_64" id="Footnote_64_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_64_64"><span class="label">[64]</span></a> Hansard, Vol. CXXIII., p. 351.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_65_65" id="Footnote_65_65"></a><a href="#FNanchor_65_65"><span class="label">[65]</span></a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 411.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_66_66" id="Footnote_66_66"></a><a href="#FNanchor_66_66"><span class="label">[66]</span></a> Letters of the Right Hon. Sir George Cornewall Lewis,
-Bart., to Various Persons, p. 259.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_67_67" id="Footnote_67_67"></a><a href="#FNanchor_67_67"><span class="label">[67]</span></a> T. P. O’Connor’s Life of Lord Beaconsfield, p. 441;
-Hickman’s Beaconsfield, p. 183.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_68_68" id="Footnote_68_68"></a><a href="#FNanchor_68_68"><span class="label">[68]</span></a> Hansard, Vol. CXXIII., p. 1693.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_69_69" id="Footnote_69_69"></a><a href="#FNanchor_69_69"><span class="label">[69]</span></a> It is worth while to recall this fact. After the
-resignation of Mr. Gladstone in 1886, when the Tory Party attempted to
-form a Coalition Ministry under Lord Hartington as Premier, and Lord
-Salisbury as Foreign Secretary, the project was defended on the plea,
-that just as the Whigs in 1852 bought up a small but powerful faction of
-Peelites, by giving their leader the Premiership, so should the Tories
-in 1886 buy up the small but powerful section of Liberal “Unionists” by
-putting Lord Hartington at the head of affairs. The argument, it will be
-seen, was based on a complete ignorance of party history and of the
-ideas and policy of the Court in 1852, because it was for other reasons
-altogether that Lord Aberdeen was elevated to the Premiership.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_70_70" id="Footnote_70_70"></a><a href="#FNanchor_70_70"><span class="label">[70]</span></a> It was partly by Macaulay’s persuasion that Lord John
-permitted himself to be embalmed in history as the fourth Prime Minister
-of the century who, after serving as Premier, accepted an inferior rank.
-The other three were Sidmouth, Goderich, and Wellington. “Russell’s
-example,” says Mr. Spencer Walpole, “indicates that a man who has once
-served in the highest place had better refuse all subordinate offices.”
-Cf. Walpole’s History of England, Vol. V., p. 61; and Trevelyan’s Life
-of Macaulay, Vol. II., Chap. XIII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_71_71" id="Footnote_71_71"></a><a href="#FNanchor_71_71"><span class="label">[71]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXVII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_72_72" id="Footnote_72_72"></a><a href="#FNanchor_72_72"><span class="label">[72]</span></a> Letters of the late Sir G. C. Lewis, Bart., p. 260.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_73_73" id="Footnote_73_73"></a><a href="#FNanchor_73_73"><span class="label">[73]</span></a> Lord Malmesbury, who was at Balmoral at the time, is the
-authority for this statement. <i>Vide</i> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I.,
-p. 377.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_74_74" id="Footnote_74_74"></a><a href="#FNanchor_74_74"><span class="label">[74]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XLVI.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_75_75" id="Footnote_75_75"></a><a href="#FNanchor_75_75"><span class="label">[75]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I, p. 347.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_76_76" id="Footnote_76_76"></a><a href="#FNanchor_76_76"><span class="label">[76]</span></a> “Persigny,” writes Lord Malmesbury, “whose real name was
-Fialin, was one of those adventurers who looked forward with confidence
-to the success of Louis Napoleon’s fatalism and dreams of ambition, and
-proved it by the most absolute devotion, and, I must add, personal
-affection for his master, whom he always accompanied through his
-failures and imprisonments. Faithful to the Emperor, the Emperor was
-faithful to him, and loaded him with honours. He was a courageous and
-impetuous man, and his hot temper was against him as
-ambassador.”&mdash;Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I., p. 300.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_77_77" id="Footnote_77_77"></a><a href="#FNanchor_77_77"><span class="label">[77]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I., p. 310.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_78_78" id="Footnote_78_78"></a><a href="#FNanchor_78_78"><span class="label">[78]</span></a> Morley’s Life of Cobden, Chap. XXI.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_79_79" id="Footnote_79_79"></a><a href="#FNanchor_79_79"><span class="label">[79]</span></a> On hearing of the <i>coup d’état</i>, the Queen, <i>without
-waiting for Ministerial advice</i>, personally directed the Cabinet to
-follow a policy of strict neutrality. Lord John Russell replied: “Your
-Majesty’s directions respecting the state of affairs in Paris shall be
-followed.” Note that the relations of the Crown and the Minister were
-identical in this case with those which obtained under the Tudor
-Sovereigns. It is a curious instance of a policy being <i>initiated</i> by
-specific “directions” from the Queen in an age when, according to
-constitutional practice, the functions of the Crown are supposed to be
-limited to suggestion, criticism, and sanction.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_80_80" id="Footnote_80_80"></a><a href="#FNanchor_80_80"><span class="label">[80]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XLVII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_81_81" id="Footnote_81_81"></a><a href="#FNanchor_81_81"><span class="label">[81]</span></a> English Ambassador at Paris.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_82_82" id="Footnote_82_82"></a><a href="#FNanchor_82_82"><span class="label">[82]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I., p. 379.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_83_83" id="Footnote_83_83"></a><a href="#FNanchor_83_83"><span class="label">[83]</span></a> This person wielded an influence that few people suspected
-at the time. For example, in September, 1852, Lord Malmesbury, then
-Foreign Secretary, set a gang of police spies to watch the outraged
-victims of the <i>coup d’état</i> in London. Having put together all the
-information he could get, he illustrated the spirited foreign policy of
-the day by sending his private secretary and relative, Mr. George
-Harris, to convey this information secretly to Charles Louis Bonaparte.
-But that potentate did not deign to give Mr. Harris an interview. For
-three days he was kept dancing attendance, and at last by a private
-letter of introduction to an aide-de-camp of the President’s, he got
-access to Canrobert, Tascher, and Roquet, who loftily told him that in a
-week’s time perhaps he might have an audience. “Then,” writes Mr. Harris
-to Lord Malmesbury, “I returned to Paris, and called on Mrs. Howard,
-toadied and flattered her, stating that I was in a great hurry to get
-back to London, and only wanted to see his Highness the President for
-two minutes. She sent off an orderly at once, and before night, I
-received an invitation from Louis Napoleon to accompany him out shooting
-to say my say, at 5.30, and dine afterwards.”&mdash;Memoirs of an
-Ex-Minister, Vol. I., p. 346. That the Foreign Minister of England
-should act the part of a Bonapartist spy, is curious. That his relative
-and private secretary should have accepted the mission of a subordinate
-<i>mouchard</i>, and, in carrying it out, should have “toadied and flattered”
-a Parisian <i>cocotte</i> to get an audience from the Prince-President, gives
-one a quaint glimpse of diplomatic manners and customs in 1852.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_84_84" id="Footnote_84_84"></a><a href="#FNanchor_84_84"><span class="label">[84]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I., p. 379.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_85_85" id="Footnote_85_85"></a><a href="#FNanchor_85_85"><span class="label">[85]</span></a> The Imperial marriage took place&mdash;the civil ceremony on
-the 29th, and the religious ceremony on the 30th of January, 1853.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_86_86" id="Footnote_86_86"></a><a href="#FNanchor_86_86"><span class="label">[86]</span></a> Compare with such comments a passage in a letter written
-by Mr. Nassau Senior, to M. de Tocqueville. “Mrs. Grote tells me that
-you rather complain that the English papers approve the marriage, a
-marriage which you all disapprove. The fact is that we like the marriage
-because you dislike it. We are, above all things, desirous that the
-present tyranny should end as quickly as possible. It can end only by
-the general alienation of the French people from the tyrant; and every
-fault that he commits delights us, because it is a step towards his
-fall.”&mdash;Correspondence and Conversations of Alexis de Tocqueville, Vol.
-II., p. 34. Cf. also Palmerston’s opinion from another point of view.
-Ashley’s Life of Lord Palmerston, Vol. II., p. 7.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_87_87" id="Footnote_87_87"></a><a href="#FNanchor_87_87"><span class="label">[87]</span></a> Mr. Disraeli reckoned the revenue of 1852 at £51,625,000.
-It actually reached £53,089,000. He set down the expenditure at
-£51,164,000, whereas it came only to £50,782,000.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_88_88" id="Footnote_88_88"></a><a href="#FNanchor_88_88"><span class="label">[88]</span></a> Dowell’s History of Taxation, Vol. II., p. 322; Smith’s
-Wealth of Nations, Vol. III., p. 337.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_89_89" id="Footnote_89_89"></a><a href="#FNanchor_89_89"><span class="label">[89]</span></a> These bore interest at £1 10s. per cent., but were in
-future to bear interest at £2 15s. up to 1864, and £2 10s. up to 1891.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_90_90" id="Footnote_90_90"></a><a href="#FNanchor_90_90"><span class="label">[90]</span></a> Walpole’s History of England, Vol. V., p. 68.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_91_91" id="Footnote_91_91"></a><a href="#FNanchor_91_91"><span class="label">[91]</span></a> Students of financial history may be referred to Hansard,
-Vol. CXXL, p. 11, for Mr. Disraeli’s first Budget, and to Hansard, Vol.
-CXXV., pp. 818, 1355, 1399, and 1423, for Mr. Gladstone’s. Cf, also
-Report of the Commissioners of Inland Revenue, 1870.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_92_92" id="Footnote_92_92"></a><a href="#FNanchor_92_92"><span class="label">[92]</span></a> This was the principle which Mr. Fox and the “old Whigs”
-advocated.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_93_93" id="Footnote_93_93"></a><a href="#FNanchor_93_93"><span class="label">[93]</span></a> Walpole’s History of England, Vol. V., p. 45.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_94_94" id="Footnote_94_94"></a><a href="#FNanchor_94_94"><span class="label">[94]</span></a> Walpole’s History of England, Vol. V., p. 49.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_95_95" id="Footnote_95_95"></a><a href="#FNanchor_95_95"><span class="label">[95]</span></a> For facts bearing on this point, see Fawcett’s Manual of
-Political Economy, p. 490.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_96_96" id="Footnote_96_96"></a><a href="#FNanchor_96_96"><span class="label">[96]</span></a> In 1847 the Mint coined £5,000,000, in 1850 £11,000,000,
-and in 1858 only £1,200,000.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_97_97" id="Footnote_97_97"></a><a href="#FNanchor_97_97"><span class="label">[97]</span></a> Wheat which in June, 1853, stood at 45s. a quarter, on the
-25th of November went up to 72s. 9d. The 4-lb. loaf rose from 10½d.
-to 1s. Annual Register, Vol. XCV., p. 165.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_98_98" id="Footnote_98_98"></a><a href="#FNanchor_98_98"><span class="label">[98]</span></a> “You know,” said the Emperor on the 14th of January, to
-Sir Hamilton Seymour, “the dreams and plans in which the Empress
-Catherine was in the habit of indulging: these were handed down to our
-time; but, while I inherited immense territorial possessions, I did not
-inherit those visions&mdash;those intentions if you like to call them so.”
-And again on the 22nd of February, “I will not tolerate the permanent
-occupation of Constantinople by the Russians; having said this, I will
-say that it never shall be held by the English, or French, or any other
-great nation.” Secret Correspondence between Sir G. H. Seymour, British
-Chargé d’Affaires at St. Petersburg, and Her Majesty’s Government.
-Eastern Papers, Part V.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_99_99" id="Footnote_99_99"></a><a href="#FNanchor_99_99"><span class="label">[99]</span></a> Secret Correspondence, Eastern Papers, Part V., p. 204.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_100_100" id="Footnote_100_100"></a><a href="#FNanchor_100_100"><span class="label">[100]</span></a> Diplomatic Study of the Crimean War, from Russian
-Official Sources, Vol. I., p. 115.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_101_101" id="Footnote_101_101"></a><a href="#FNanchor_101_101"><span class="label">[101]</span></a> Consult on this subject Mr. Nassau Senior’s article in
-<i>North British Quarterly Review</i> for February, 1851, on “The State of
-the Continent.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_102_102" id="Footnote_102_102"></a><a href="#FNanchor_102_102"><span class="label">[102]</span></a> Louis Philippe, it must be stated in justice to Napoleon
-III., also claimed for the Latin Church the right of repairing the dome
-of the Holy Sepulchre in the Latin instead of the Byzantine form, a
-claim which was indescribably offensive to the Greek priests.&mdash;<i>North
-British Quarterly Review</i>, February, 1851.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_103_103" id="Footnote_103_103"></a><a href="#FNanchor_103_103"><span class="label">[103]</span></a> Dip. Stud. Crimean War, Vol. I., p. 134.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_104_104" id="Footnote_104_104"></a><a href="#FNanchor_104_104"><span class="label">[104]</span></a> Spencer Walpole’s History of England, Vol. V., p. 79.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_105_105" id="Footnote_105_105"></a><a href="#FNanchor_105_105"><span class="label">[105]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XI.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_106_106" id="Footnote_106_106"></a><a href="#FNanchor_106_106"><span class="label">[106]</span></a> Russian Ambassador in London.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_107_107" id="Footnote_107_107"></a><a href="#FNanchor_107_107"><span class="label">[107]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I., pp. 402, 403.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_108_108" id="Footnote_108_108"></a><a href="#FNanchor_108_108"><span class="label">[108]</span></a> Mr. Disraeli’s Speech at Manchester, April 3, 1872.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_109_109" id="Footnote_109_109"></a><a href="#FNanchor_109_109"><span class="label">[109]</span></a> See Count Nesselrode’s Memorandum embodying the views
-which, according to the Czar, were agreed on in the conversations he
-held with the Tory Ministers in 1844.&mdash;Eastern Papers, 1854, Part VI.
-This document, probably the one referred to by Lord Malmesbury, was
-transmitted to England on the Czar’s return to St. Petersburg, and
-deposited unchallenged in the secret archives of the Foreign Office.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_110_110" id="Footnote_110_110"></a><a href="#FNanchor_110_110"><span class="label">[110]</span></a> Eastern Papers, 1852, Part VI. pp. 10, 11.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_111_111" id="Footnote_111_111"></a><a href="#FNanchor_111_111"><span class="label">[111]</span></a> Afterwards Lord Strathnairn.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_112_112" id="Footnote_112_112"></a><a href="#FNanchor_112_112"><span class="label">[112]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I., pp. 387-389. It is
-right to state the fact as communicated to Lord Malmesbury by the French
-Emperor in conversation, because Mr. Walpole rather unfairly asserts
-that the Emperor of the French saw in Rose’s fear “a fresh excuse for
-embroiling France.”&mdash;Walpole’s History of England, Vol. V., p. 84.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_113_113" id="Footnote_113_113"></a><a href="#FNanchor_113_113"><span class="label">[113]</span></a> Russia argued that she might fairly exercise the same
-kind of protectorate that France had always asserted over Roman
-Catholics and England over Protestants in Turkey. Against this it was
-urged that there was a difference in degree between the two cases which
-amounted to a difference in kind, for, whereas the Catholic and
-Protestant subjects of the Sultan were only a few thousands, his Greek
-subjects were 12,000,000.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_114_114" id="Footnote_114_114"></a><a href="#FNanchor_114_114"><span class="label">[114]</span></a> Official Note of the Porte to the Powers, 28th of May.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_115_115" id="Footnote_115_115"></a><a href="#FNanchor_115_115"><span class="label">[115]</span></a> On the 1st of June Menschikoff’s Note of the 18th of May,
-intimating his withdrawal from Constantinople and threatening Turkey
-with coercion, arrived in London.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_116_116" id="Footnote_116_116"></a><a href="#FNanchor_116_116"><span class="label">[116]</span></a> It would have been also more candid at this juncture to
-have warned Russia that England would object to any actual invasion of
-the Principalities, before the resources of European diplomacy were
-exhausted.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_117_117" id="Footnote_117_117"></a><a href="#FNanchor_117_117"><span class="label">[117]</span></a> When these events had passed into history, Earl Russell,
-in his Recollections and Suggestions, said that, if he had been Premier
-in 1853, he would have insisted on Turkey accepting the Vienna Note. He
-was not Premier, but he was one of the leaders of the War Party in the
-Cabinet which supported Turkey in rejecting it. Lord Russell was, in
-fact, not the only statesman of the period who grew “wise after the
-event.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_118_118" id="Footnote_118_118"></a><a href="#FNanchor_118_118"><span class="label">[118]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XLVIII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_119_119" id="Footnote_119_119"></a><a href="#FNanchor_119_119"><span class="label">[119]</span></a> Prince Bismarck: an Historical Biography by Charles Lowe,
-M.A., Vol. I., p. 205.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_120_120" id="Footnote_120_120"></a><a href="#FNanchor_120_120"><span class="label">[120]</span></a> Eastern Papers, Part I., p. 169.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_121_121" id="Footnote_121_121"></a><a href="#FNanchor_121_121"><span class="label">[121]</span></a> In the 7th Article of the Treaty of Kainardji it is
-provided that “<i>The Sublime Porte promises to protect constantly the
-Christian religion and its Churches</i>, and also it allows the Ministers
-of the Imperial Court of Russia to make on all occasions representations
-as well in favour of the new Church at Constantinople, of which mention
-will be made in the 14th Article, as in favour of those who officiate
-therein.” The 14th Article provides that “it is permitted to the High
-Court of Russia, in addition to the chapel built in the house of the
-Minister, to construct in the Galata quarter, in the street called Bey
-Oglu, a public church of the Greek rite, which shall be always under the
-protection of the Ministers of that Empire, and shielded from all
-obstruction and all damage.” The first words in italics appear to give
-Russia the same general kind of pledge to protect the Greek Christians
-in Turkey, the insertion of which in the Vienna Note was supposed to
-vitiate it. The issue, however, was so close that diplomacy ought to
-have prevented the disputants from coming to blows.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_122_122" id="Footnote_122_122"></a><a href="#FNanchor_122_122"><span class="label">[122]</span></a> Ashley’s Life of Palmerston, Vol. II., p. 276.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_123_123" id="Footnote_123_123"></a><a href="#FNanchor_123_123"><span class="label">[123]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XLIX. Compare
-this with Lord Salisbury’s statement at the Guildhall banquet on the 9th
-of November, 1886, that England’s Eastern policy is to pledge herself to
-fight on the side of Austria, when Austria thinks fit to go to war. By
-substituting “Austria” for “Turkey” in the first two sentences of this
-important State Paper of the Queen’s, very interesting deductions might
-be drawn by students of Constitutional history.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_124_124" id="Footnote_124_124"></a><a href="#FNanchor_124_124"><span class="label">[124]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XLIX.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_125_125" id="Footnote_125_125"></a><a href="#FNanchor_125_125"><span class="label">[125]</span></a> Walpole’s History of England, Vol. V., p. 99.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_126_126" id="Footnote_126_126"></a><a href="#FNanchor_126_126"><span class="label">[126]</span></a> Lord Malmesbury says that it was Mr. Gladstone and Lord
-Aberdeen who begged Palmerston to come back.&mdash;Memoirs of an Ex-Minister,
-Vol. I., p. 418. But Prince Albert’s statement is the truer one, though
-it is not so palatable to those writers who have for a quarter of a
-century devoted themselves to the heroic idealisation of Palmerston’s
-character and career, and who at one time tried to persuade themselves
-that, as a condition of his return, he forced the Ministry to send a
-fleet to avenge Sinope. In the middle of September, however, Palmerston
-and Russell had already persuaded the Cabinet to warn Russia that any
-attack on the Turkish fleet would be met by the fleets of England and
-France. Palmerston resigned, however, on the 15th of December. Moreover,
-it has not been noticed by Palmerstonian partisans that Prince Albert’s
-statement is curiously confirmed by Sir George Cornewall Lewis. Writing
-to Sir E. Head on the 4th of January, 1854, he says:&mdash;“Since I last
-wrote to you there has been the strange escapade of Palmerston. He
-disliked the Reform Bill, partly as being too extensive to suit his
-taste. He therefore resigned solely upon this measure; but he probably
-expected that a threat of resignation would bring his colleagues to
-terms, and was surprised at being taken at his word. When he went out he
-found that the country took his resignation very coolly, and that he was
-so much courted by the Derbyites that he could not avoid becoming their
-leader in the House of Commons in the next Session. He could not hope to
-occupy a neutral place, and so, finding that his position was a bad
-one&mdash;that it was too late in life for him to set about forming a new
-party&mdash;he changed his mind, and intimated to the Government that he
-wished to return.”&mdash;Letters of the Right Hon. Sir George Cornewall
-Lewis, Bart., p. 275.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_127_127" id="Footnote_127_127"></a><a href="#FNanchor_127_127"><span class="label">[127]</span></a> Letter of Prince Albert to the Dowager-Duchess of Coburg,
-in Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XLVII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_128_128" id="Footnote_128_128"></a><a href="#FNanchor_128_128"><span class="label">[128]</span></a> Medical men may be interested to know that the Duke and
-Duchess transmitted it unconsciously “to the Duke of Brabant and Count
-of Flanders, whom they met on their way back to Coburg, and before they
-were aware they had taken the seeds of the illness from England with
-them.”&mdash;Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_129_129" id="Footnote_129_129"></a><a href="#FNanchor_129_129"><span class="label">[129]</span></a> Contrast this with the habits of the House in the time of
-Charles I., when it met at eight in the morning and rose at noon; and in
-Sir Robert Walpole’s time, when the mere suggestion of a Member that
-“candles be brought in” was regarded as phenomenal.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_130_130" id="Footnote_130_130"></a><a href="#FNanchor_130_130"><span class="label">[130]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort. See also a reference
-to the Grand Duchess Olga’s “Mission” in Lord Malmesbury’s Memoirs of an
-Ex-Minister, Vol. I., p. 404.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_131_131" id="Footnote_131_131"></a><a href="#FNanchor_131_131"><span class="label">[131]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XLVIII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_132_132" id="Footnote_132_132"></a><a href="#FNanchor_132_132"><span class="label">[132]</span></a> <i>Annual Register</i> for 1853.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_133_133" id="Footnote_133_133"></a><a href="#FNanchor_133_133"><span class="label">[133]</span></a> Ashley’s Life of Lord Palmerston, Vol. II., p. 13. For
-Lord Aberdeen’s answer to Palmerston’s bellicose special pleading, see
-Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. XLVIII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_134_134" id="Footnote_134_134"></a><a href="#FNanchor_134_134"><span class="label">[134]</span></a> This letter, dated the 14th of November, was not sent
-till it had been submitted to Lord Aberdeen and Lord Clarendon for their
-approval. The precedent should be noted, because, as Sir Hamilton
-Seymour told Count Nesselrode at the time, “these correspondences
-between sovereigns are not regular, according to our Constitutional
-notions.” At the same time, when personally addressed by a foreign
-sovereign, the Crown cannot, as a matter of courtesy, reply through a
-Minister of State. The course taken by the Queen in this instance is
-obviously the prudent one.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_135_135" id="Footnote_135_135"></a><a href="#FNanchor_135_135"><span class="label">[135]</span></a> Cobden’s Collected Writings, Vol. II., p. 269.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_136_136" id="Footnote_136_136"></a><a href="#FNanchor_136_136"><span class="label">[136]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. L.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_137_137" id="Footnote_137_137"></a><a href="#FNanchor_137_137"><span class="label">[137]</span></a> Letters of Sir G. C. Lewis, p. 276.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_138_138" id="Footnote_138_138"></a><a href="#FNanchor_138_138"><span class="label">[138]</span></a> It is only just to the memory of Mr. Cobden to state that
-towards the end of his career some suspicion of the truth crept into his
-mind. Speaking on the American Civil War, he said:&mdash;“From the moment the
-first shot is fired or the first blow struck in a dispute, then farewell
-to all reason and argument; you might as well reason with mad dogs as
-with men when they have begun to spill each other’s blood in mortal
-combat. I was so convinced of the fact during the Crimean War; I was so
-convinced of the utter uselessness of raising one’s voice in opposition
-to War when it has once begun, that I made up my mind that so long as I
-was in political life, should a war again break out between England and
-a great Power, I would never open my mouth upon the subject from the
-time the first gun was fired till the peace was made.”&mdash;Cobden’s
-Speeches, Vol. II., p. 314. See also Mr. John Morley’s masterly defence
-of the Cobdenites in 1854, in his Life of Cobden, Chap. XXII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_139_139" id="Footnote_139_139"></a><a href="#FNanchor_139_139"><span class="label">[139]</span></a> Count Nesselrode’s Despatch to the Russian Ambassador in
-England, dated the 16th of January, 1854.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_140_140" id="Footnote_140_140"></a><a href="#FNanchor_140_140"><span class="label">[140]</span></a> See Sir H. Seymour’s Despatch to Lord Clarendon, dated
-the 30th of January, 1854.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_141_141" id="Footnote_141_141"></a><a href="#FNanchor_141_141"><span class="label">[141]</span></a> Amongst other things, she demanded that some fresh
-arrangement should be made as to the right of asylum granted to
-political refugees in Turkey. This obviously pointed at Turkey’s refusal
-to surrender the Hungarian patriots after the Revolution of 1848 was
-suppressed; and, knowing the opinion of England on the subject, it was
-absurd to add such stipulations to new preliminaries of peace.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_142_142" id="Footnote_142_142"></a><a href="#FNanchor_142_142"><span class="label">[142]</span></a> Nesselrode, Orloff, and Kisseleff.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_143_143" id="Footnote_143_143"></a><a href="#FNanchor_143_143"><span class="label">[143]</span></a> “Russia, as I can guarantee, will prove herself in 1854
-<i>what she was in 1812</i>.... My conditions are known at Vienna.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_144_144" id="Footnote_144_144"></a><a href="#FNanchor_144_144"><span class="label">[144]</span></a> Observe <i>not</i> “a day,” as Kinglake has it.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_145_145" id="Footnote_145_145"></a><a href="#FNanchor_145_145"><span class="label">[145]</span></a> “L’Empereur ne juge pas convenable de donner aucune
-réponse à la lettre de Lord Clarendon.”&mdash;Eastern Papers. Consul
-Michele’s Despatch to Lord Clarendon, dated St. Petersburg, 19th March,
-1854.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_146_146" id="Footnote_146_146"></a><a href="#FNanchor_146_146"><span class="label">[146]</span></a> Mr. Kinglake blames the London Press, especially the
-<i>Times</i>, for manufacturing this passion. Mr. Cobden took much the same
-view. Educated people who were rich, but ignorant of geography and
-military history, however, all clamoured for war. “I have had the
-satisfaction of seeing the rascally Czar defeated by the unassisted
-Turks, and obliged to cross the Pruth. Now for Sebastopol!” Thus wrote
-Lord Campbell in his Journal on the 14th of August.&mdash;See Mrs.
-Hardcastle’s Life of John, Lord Campbell, Vol. II., p. 326.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_147_147" id="Footnote_147_147"></a><a href="#FNanchor_147_147"><span class="label">[147]</span></a> “In proposing success to the guest of the evening, he
-(Palmerston) made a speech in that vein of forced jocularity with which
-elderly gentlemen give the toast of the bridegroom at a wedding
-breakfast.”&mdash;Morley’s Life of Cobden, Chap. XXII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_148_148" id="Footnote_148_148"></a><a href="#FNanchor_148_148"><span class="label">[148]</span></a> Compare this with almost the identical expression in Mr.
-Bright’s speech in the House of Commons of the 13th of March, for
-delivering which Lord Palmerston jeered at him as “the honourable and
-<i>reverend</i> gentleman.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_149_149" id="Footnote_149_149"></a><a href="#FNanchor_149_149"><span class="label">[149]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_150_150" id="Footnote_150_150"></a><a href="#FNanchor_150_150"><span class="label">[150]</span></a> “For if the hostilities continue, if the Powers, released
-from all apprehension in Turkey, should be free either to pursue us on
-the evacuated territory, or to employ all their disposable forces in
-invading our European or Asiatic dominions, with a view to impose on us
-conditions which could not be accepted, it is evident that the demand
-made by Austria was that we should weaken ourselves morally and
-materially by a sacrifice wholly useless.”&mdash;Count Nesselrode’s Despatch
-to Count Buol Schauenstein of 29th of July, 1854.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_151_151" id="Footnote_151_151"></a><a href="#FNanchor_151_151"><span class="label">[151]</span></a> See Lord Clarendon’s Despatch to the Earl of
-Westmoreland, dated the 22nd of July, 1854.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_152_152" id="Footnote_152_152"></a><a href="#FNanchor_152_152"><span class="label">[152]</span></a> France explained this by demanding in the official
-<i>Moniteur</i> that the fleet of Russia in the Black Sea should be reduced
-in strength.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_153_153" id="Footnote_153_153"></a><a href="#FNanchor_153_153"><span class="label">[153]</span></a> Diplomatic Study of the Crimean War, Vol. II., p. 18.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_154_154" id="Footnote_154_154"></a><a href="#FNanchor_154_154"><span class="label">[154]</span></a> Orloff was sent by the Czar to extract from Austria a
-pledge of absolute neutrality. The Austrian Emperor asked if the Czar
-would promise not to cross the Danube or seize territory, and if he
-would evacuate the Principalities when war was over. Orloff said “No.”
-The Emperor then replied that Austria would preserve perfect freedom of
-action. Baron de Bulberg failed at Berlin to extract a similar pledge
-from Prussia.&mdash;Despatch of Lord Westmoreland to Lord Clarendon, dated
-8th February, 1854. Eastern Papers.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_155_155" id="Footnote_155_155"></a><a href="#FNanchor_155_155"><span class="label">[155]</span></a> “Ministers are preparing for war; the quarrel has now
-become an European quarrel and must have an European settlement. We ask
-for 20,000 more men for the army and navy; we propose to add £21,000,000
-to our expenditure, and is <i>this</i> an occasion on which you should potter
-over Blue-books?”&mdash;Sir James Graham’s speech, in reply to Mr. Layard, in
-the House of Commons on the 17th of February, 1854.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_156_156" id="Footnote_156_156"></a><a href="#FNanchor_156_156"><span class="label">[156]</span></a> Writing to Mrs. Cobden about this speech, Cobden says,
-“No enthusiasm of course; that I did not expect; but there was a feeling
-of interest throughout the House which is not bumptious or warlike to
-the extent I expected, and not disposed to be insolent to the ‘peace
-party.’ In fact, I find many men in the Tory Party agreeing with me.
-After I spoke, Molesworth took me aside and said he and Gladstone
-thought I never spoke better.”&mdash;Morley’s Life of Cobden, Chap. XXII. If
-the men who agreed with him privately had been bold enough to say so in
-public, there would have been no invasion of the Crimea.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_157_157" id="Footnote_157_157"></a><a href="#FNanchor_157_157"><span class="label">[157]</span></a> Life and Work of the Seventh Earl of Shaftesbury, K.G.,
-by Edwin Hodder, Vol. II., p. 465. Cassell and Co. (Limited). Palmerston
-was chief of the War Party in the Cabinet. Lady Palmerston was Lord
-Shaftesbury’s mother-in-law.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_158_158" id="Footnote_158_158"></a><a href="#FNanchor_158_158"><span class="label">[158]</span></a> Morley’s Life of Cobden, Chap. XXII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_159_159" id="Footnote_159_159"></a><a href="#FNanchor_159_159"><span class="label">[159]</span></a> The history of its publication is as follows: On the 13th
-of March Lord Derby drew the attention of the Peers (1) to “An Official
-Answer of the Emperor of Russia to a speech of Lord John Russell in the
-House of Commons,” published in the <i>St. Petersburg Journal</i>, wherein it
-was alleged that the English Cabinet had been frankly told at the outset
-what course the Czar desired to pursue in Turkey; (2) to statements in
-the <i>Times</i> to the effect that though an indignant refusal had been Lord
-John’s answer, yet the Czar had in 1844 attempted to gain over the
-Government of the day to his designs. Lord Derby called for the
-production of this Secret Correspondence, and as Russia, by her official
-reference to it, had virtually challenged its publication, it was in due
-course laid before both Houses of Parliament.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_160_160" id="Footnote_160_160"></a><a href="#FNanchor_160_160"><span class="label">[160]</span></a> The English case against Russia was that the Czar
-persisted in asserting an exceptional right of protecting the Greek
-Christians in Turkey under existing treaties. In Lord John Russell’s
-despatch of 9th of February, 1853, in which he expressed a disapproval
-of the Czar’s overtures to Sir Hamilton Seymour, he counselled
-forbearance, and then said: “To these cautions Her Majesty’s Government
-wish to add that, in their view, it is essential that the Sultan should
-be advised to treat his Christian subjects in conformity with the
-principles of equity and religious freedom, which prevail generally
-among the enlightened nations of Europe. The more the Turkish Government
-adopts the rules of impartial law and equal administration, the less
-will the Emperor of Russia find it necessary to apply that <i>exceptional
-protection</i> which His Imperial Majesty has found so burdensome and
-inconvenient, <i>though no doubt prescribed by duty and sanctioned by
-Treaty</i>.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_161_161" id="Footnote_161_161"></a><a href="#FNanchor_161_161"><span class="label">[161]</span></a> See <i>ante</i>, p. 582.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_162_162" id="Footnote_162_162"></a><a href="#FNanchor_162_162"><span class="label">[162]</span></a> Eastern Papers, Part VII., contain proofs of the
-deception perpetrated by the Coalition Government on Parliament as to
-the extent to which England might depend on the German States for
-support.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_163_163" id="Footnote_163_163"></a><a href="#FNanchor_163_163"><span class="label">[163]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LIII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_164_164" id="Footnote_164_164"></a><a href="#FNanchor_164_164"><span class="label">[164]</span></a> An appeal to fear rarely influences German statesmen. In
-1868, during the debate in the Customs Parliament at Berlin, the
-Separatist Party objected to the discussion of national politics, lest,
-as one of them said, they might provoke an attack from France.
-Bismarck’s retort was that “an appeal to fear had never yet found an
-echo in German hearts.”&mdash;Lowe’s Life of Bismarck, Vol. I., p. 458.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_165_165" id="Footnote_165_165"></a><a href="#FNanchor_165_165"><span class="label">[165]</span></a> Lowe’s Life of Bismarck, Vol. I., p. 206 (Cassell and
-Co.).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_166_166" id="Footnote_166_166"></a><a href="#FNanchor_166_166"><span class="label">[166]</span></a> It is due to Lord Clarendon to say that in a letter to
-Prince Albert (26th March) he expresses a shrewd suspicion of this
-danger. But the Prince, whose authority on the secret diplomacy of
-Germany no Cabinet Minister, except, perhaps, Palmerston, ever dared to
-question, promptly silenced his suspicions. On the 27th the Prince wrote
-to Clarendon, saying, “I don’t think that Austria has anything to fear
-from Prussia or Germany if she were to take an active part in the war
-against us.” That the Queen and her husband were mistaken or misinformed
-is proved by Mr. Lowe in his Life of Prince Bismarck, Vol. I., pp. 200,
-202, and 203.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_167_167" id="Footnote_167_167"></a><a href="#FNanchor_167_167"><span class="label">[167]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LIII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_168_168" id="Footnote_168_168"></a><a href="#FNanchor_168_168"><span class="label">[168]</span></a> He allowed for a force of 25,000 men at £50 a head, or a
-total of £1,250,000.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_169_169" id="Footnote_169_169"></a><a href="#FNanchor_169_169"><span class="label">[169]</span></a> Other estimates besides those for 25,000 men had to be
-provided for, <i>e.g.</i>, extraordinary expenditure on the Navy, Ordnance,
-and Commissariat Departments. In fact, the mere prospect of war had thus
-added, not £1,250,000, but £4,307,000 to the estimates of the coming
-year in the ordinary Budget <i>before</i> war was declared.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_170_170" id="Footnote_170_170"></a><a href="#FNanchor_170_170"><span class="label">[170]</span></a> Their real objection was that the conversion scheme
-caused Mr. Gladstone to take £8,000,000 from his Exchequer balances,
-which, however, had been kept perniciously high. Had this money been in
-hand, of course there would have been less need to levy a war tax. The
-conversion scheme had resulted in a small loss from changes in the Money
-Market, due to rumours of war and a bad harvest.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_171_171" id="Footnote_171_171"></a><a href="#FNanchor_171_171"><span class="label">[171]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LIII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_172_172" id="Footnote_172_172"></a><a href="#FNanchor_172_172"><span class="label">[172]</span></a> Pitt was first called “the Heaven-born Minister” by the
-loan-mongers of the City, because he tried to make war on loans instead
-of taxes. In 1792 he had a war deficit of £4,500,000 to meet. He raised
-a 4 per cent. loan in the City, for which they made him pay £4 3s. 4d.
-per cent.; in 1794 he borrowed £11,000,000 at £4 10s. 9d.; in 1795,
-£18,000,000 at £4 15s. 8d.; in 1796, £25,000,000 at £4 13s. 5d.; in
-1797, £32,500,000 at £5 14s. 10d.; in 1798, £17,000,000 at £6 4s. 9d.,
-and he had to give the usurers bonuses, commissions, and inducements to
-subscribe, which compelled him to add £34,000,000 of capital to the
-National Debt to get this £17,000,000. His system added £250,000,000 to
-our National Debt, for which the nation never really got a penny. In
-1797 Pitt, however, saw that the country must soon be drained of its
-resources by the loan-mongers, and he made convulsive efforts to escape
-from their clutches. He began to raise taxes to meet his war expenditure
-and pay the principal and interest of his debts. He first tried to raise
-£7,000,000, and only got £4,000,000 by assessed taxes. In 1798 he
-returned to the charge, and increased the Income Tax by 40 per cent.
-That year the revenue was £23,100,000. In 1806, when he died, he had
-raised it by successive turns of the screw to £50,900,000. In 1807 an
-addition of 10 per cent. to the Income Tax raised the revenue to
-£59,300,000. Up to 1816 it fluctuated between £60,000,000 and
-£70,000,000, but between 1806 and 1816 the war charges and the interest
-on the Debt were all paid out of current revenue. In fact, after 1797 it
-is clear Pitt and his successors resolved to exact any sacrifices from
-the people, rather than float war loans in the City.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_173_173" id="Footnote_173_173"></a><a href="#FNanchor_173_173"><span class="label">[173]</span></a> Lord Shaftesbury, in a letter to Lord Aberdeen, dated
-22nd of February, says that a conversation he held with the Prime
-Minister on the subject had “terrified” him. “It implied,” writes Lord
-Shaftesbury, “that the country had entered on a war which you could so
-little justify to your own conscience as to be unwilling, nay, almost
-unable, to advise the ordinance of public prayer for success on the
-undertaking. Why, then, have we begun it? You asked whether ‘the English
-nation would be brought to pray for the Turks?’ Surely, if they are
-brought to fight for them, they would be induced to pray for them in a
-just quarrel.”&mdash;Life and Work of Lord Shaftesbury, by Edwin Hodder, Vol.
-II., p. 466 (Cassell and Co.). See also Greville Memoirs&mdash;Third Part
-(Longmans), 1887.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_174_174" id="Footnote_174_174"></a><a href="#FNanchor_174_174"><span class="label">[174]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LIV.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_175_175" id="Footnote_175_175"></a><a href="#FNanchor_175_175"><span class="label">[175]</span></a> Russia held the Sulina mouth of the Danube by the Treaty
-of Adrianople, and, though she took toll of passing ships, had neglected
-the channel, greatly to the hindrance of navigation.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_176_176" id="Footnote_176_176"></a><a href="#FNanchor_176_176"><span class="label">[176]</span></a> Dundonald would have been appointed instead of Napier,
-had it not been that he insisted on destroying Cronstadt by an
-“infernal” machine which he had invented. Greville Memoirs&mdash;Third Part,
-p. 136 (Longmans), 1887.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_177_177" id="Footnote_177_177"></a><a href="#FNanchor_177_177"><span class="label">[177]</span></a> Kinglake’s History of the Invasion of the Crimea, Vol.
-II., p. 249 and p. 407.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_178_178" id="Footnote_178_178"></a><a href="#FNanchor_178_178"><span class="label">[178]</span></a> “His (Mr. Kinglake’s) attempt to throw all the credit or
-blame of the expedition to Sebastopol upon the Duke of Newcastle is a
-complete delusion. His story about the sleepy Cabinet may be partially
-true, but the plan of the expedition had been discussed by the Cabinet
-at repeated sittings, and the despatch in question only embodied a
-foregone conclusion.”&mdash;Letters of Sir George Cornewall Lewis, p. 426.
-Sir George Lewis was Lord Clarendon’s brother-in-law, and Editor of the
-<i>Edinburgh Review</i>. His letters, and the articles in the <i>Edinburgh</i> on
-public affairs at this time, are of high authority. See also a very
-conclusive answer to Mr. Kinglake by Sir Theodore Martin in a Note in
-his Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LIV.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_179_179" id="Footnote_179_179"></a><a href="#FNanchor_179_179"><span class="label">[179]</span></a> In a letter to Sir Edmund Head (29th December, 1854), the
-common-sense view of the case is pithily put by Sir George Cornewall
-Lewis as follows: “The fact is that the Government were urged into the
-Sebastopol adventure by popular clamour; that they undertook it with an
-imperfect knowledge of the difficulties of the enterprise; and that the
-military men anticipated that if the army could once be landed the place
-would speedily fall. This delusion was shared by all the world in
-September, and even October last; but now events have dispelled the
-illusion, the people forget their own mistake, and visit its
-consequences on the head of the War Minister.”&mdash;Sir G. C. Lewis’
-Letters, p. 288.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_180_180" id="Footnote_180_180"></a><a href="#FNanchor_180_180"><span class="label">[180]</span></a> Mr. Kinglake gives an entertaining description of a
-conversation between General Sir George Brown and Lord Raglan over the
-Ministerial order. Brown told his chief that they were all so ignorant
-about the Crimea that it was foolish to invade it; but that he had
-better obey, for refusal would only lead to his dismissal.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_181_181" id="Footnote_181_181"></a><a href="#FNanchor_181_181"><span class="label">[181]</span></a> But for Mr. Roberts the expedition must have been
-abandoned till the following spring. His services were contemptuously
-ignored, and he died heart-broken by the bitter ingratitude of the
-Government. He was an able officer&mdash;but without “interest.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_182_182" id="Footnote_182_182"></a><a href="#FNanchor_182_182"><span class="label">[182]</span></a> The attack on the central redoubt by Sir G. Brown’s Light
-Division was a confused rush by an armed mob. It failed because the Duke
-of Cambridge, who led the First Division, did not bring up his supports.
-But for the remonstrance of Sir Colin Campbell, one of his Brigadiers,
-he would even have made his Guards ignominiously retire and re-form at a
-critical moment in the advance, which would have spread panic, and lost
-the battle. De Lacy Evans and Campbell were the only commanders in this
-fight who seemed capable of handling troops in a workmanlike manner.
-Colonels Hood of the Grenadiers, and Ainslie of the 93rd Highlanders,
-also displayed skill.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_183_183" id="Footnote_183_183"></a><a href="#FNanchor_183_183"><span class="label">[183]</span></a> It is a melancholy satisfaction that the French Prince
-Napoleon proved himself to be as incapable as the English Royal Duke. He
-lost a regiment of his Zouaves who, getting tired of him, went away into
-the fray on their own account. One of Brown’s Brigadiers (Buller) also
-lost himself, and spent most of the day with his men in hollow square,
-waiting to receive imaginary cavalry.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_184_184" id="Footnote_184_184"></a><a href="#FNanchor_184_184"><span class="label">[184]</span></a> It is an amusing fact that Raglan’s van actually came on
-Menschikoff’s rear, as the lines of march intersected, and that neither
-General had the faintest idea of what the other was about.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_185_185" id="Footnote_185_185"></a><a href="#FNanchor_185_185"><span class="label">[185]</span></a> It may be pointed out that the works on the north side of
-the town, where the citadel was, commanded those on the south side.
-Raglan’s vaunted flank march had left the Russian garrison in the North
-Town open and safe communication with their base, and their army of
-observation in the field. He had given them ample time to make affluent
-use of this advantage. It was, therefore, a moral certainty that if we
-had taken the South Town after the bombardment of the 17th our position
-would not have been tenable. Though Cathcart and Campbell would have
-walked into it easily had they been allowed on the 25th of September,
-the failure of the bombardment of the 17th of October was thus probably
-a fortunate occurrence.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_186_186" id="Footnote_186_186"></a><a href="#FNanchor_186_186"><span class="label">[186]</span></a> The ships were also dreadfully <i>underhanded</i>&mdash;4,000 of
-their fighting force being on shore with the army.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_187_187" id="Footnote_187_187"></a><a href="#FNanchor_187_187"><span class="label">[187]</span></a> It may not be quite fair to blame Lord Raglan too much
-for this ridiculous manœuvre. At one time his partizans claimed for him
-the honour of planning it. But Prince Albert ascribed it to Sir John
-Burgoyne, and so did many others. Burgoyne’s own correspondence seems to
-show that the Prince was right. (Lieutenant-Colonel Wrottesley’s “Life
-and Correspondence of Sir John Burgoyne,” Vol. II., pp. 95-164.)</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_188_188" id="Footnote_188_188"></a><a href="#FNanchor_188_188"><span class="label">[188]</span></a> Receiving heavy masses of cavalry in this fashion was but
-a development of another piece of tactics which Campbell always used
-“contrary to the regulations.” That was advancing in line&mdash;as at the
-Alma&mdash;firing on dense masses of infantry all the time. This he learnt
-from Sir J. Cameron, colonel of the 6th Regiment, in the Peninsula.
-Oddly enough Cameron’s son commanded the Black Watch under Campbell in
-the Crimea, and he, too, had, “contrary to regulations,” taught his
-father’s tactics to his men. Colonel Hood, of the Grenadiers, had a
-glimmering of this idea at the Alma. But he did not venture to advance
-in line firing until the enemy’s column was demoralised. The Scottish
-Regiments used the manœuvre for the purpose of demoralising the enemy.
-But it should never be used except by troops of coarse nerve-fibre, in
-perfect training, and whom their leader can hold in hand as in a vice.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_189_189" id="Footnote_189_189"></a><a href="#FNanchor_189_189"><span class="label">[189]</span></a> The responsibility for this fearful butchery has been
-cast on Lord Lucan. He certainly lacked moral courage in obeying an
-order which nobody but a maniac would, in the circumstances, have
-issued. But Nolan’s insinuation that Lucan was afraid to attack forced
-the general’s hand. Nolan was a brave man, with a crazy fad as to the
-capacity of English cavalry to go anywhere and do anything. He had
-written a book to show that they could&mdash;and he was bitterly disappointed
-because the campaign had not been conducted so as to illustrate by
-practical experiments the soundness of his views. He took it on himself
-to ride in advance of the Brigade, with which he had nothing to do, and
-excite the men by voice and gesture, as if their own officers, who were
-personally responsible for their lives, were not fit to lead them. This
-would indicate that he was one of those meddlesome <i>aides-de-camp</i>,
-whose interference with operations in the field renders them the pest of
-British armies.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_190_190" id="Footnote_190_190"></a><a href="#FNanchor_190_190"><span class="label">[190]</span></a> The success of the Heavy Brigade was due to Scarlett
-attacking in line, when, to his surprise, he found he was riding with a
-slender force against enormous masses of Russian cavalry, and to the
-Russians perpetrating the atrocious blunder of halting to receive the
-fierce onset of the Scottish and Irish horsemen. Only a third of the
-Light Brigade were rescued from the “valley of death,” and they owe
-their lives to a brilliant and impetuous charge which a fiery squadron
-of French <i>Chasseurs d’Afrique</i> made on a Russian battery, that was
-cutting our troopers to pieces during their retreat.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_191_191" id="Footnote_191_191"></a><a href="#FNanchor_191_191"><span class="label">[191]</span></a> History of England, Vol. V., p. 125.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_192_192" id="Footnote_192_192"></a><a href="#FNanchor_192_192"><span class="label">[192]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I., p. 424.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_193_193" id="Footnote_193_193"></a><a href="#FNanchor_193_193"><span class="label">[193]</span></a> Stratford de Redcliffe was now for peace, because he
-found the war substituting French for Russian influence at
-Constantinople, and of the two he preferred the latter.&mdash;Greville
-Memoirs, Third Part (Longmans), 1887.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_194_194" id="Footnote_194_194"></a><a href="#FNanchor_194_194"><span class="label">[194]</span></a> The Croker Papers, Vol. III., p. 320. Lyndhurst, long
-after delivering his ferocious speech demanding that Sebastopol should
-be razed to the ground, had written to Croker for advice. “The political
-world is in a most complicated state,” says Lyndhurst in this letter,
-“and I feel quite at sea.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_195_195" id="Footnote_195_195"></a><a href="#FNanchor_195_195"><span class="label">[195]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LVII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_196_196" id="Footnote_196_196"></a><a href="#FNanchor_196_196"><span class="label">[196]</span></a> One of the most appalling cases was the death of Lord
-Jocelyn in Lady Palmerston’s drawing-room.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_197_197" id="Footnote_197_197"></a><a href="#FNanchor_197_197"><span class="label">[197]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LVIII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_198_198" id="Footnote_198_198"></a><a href="#FNanchor_198_198"><span class="label">[198]</span></a> Mr. Herbert’s policy was amply vindicated. The experiment
-succeeded so well that Miss Stanley, sister of the late Dean Stanley,
-was sent out afterwards with forty-seven nurses to reinforce Miss
-Nightingale’s staff.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_199_199" id="Footnote_199_199"></a><a href="#FNanchor_199_199"><span class="label">[199]</span></a> See a lively correspondence between Sir J. Graham and
-John Wilson Croker on this subject. Graham showed that the Admiralty was
-not to blame, but urged in excuse of “the poor idiot,” as Croker called
-him, who blundered at Balaclava, that “this was the first time coffee
-had ever been issued to a British army on foreign service.”&mdash;Croker
-Papers, Vol. III., p. 328.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_200_200" id="Footnote_200_200"></a><a href="#FNanchor_200_200"><span class="label">[200]</span></a> Financial Secretary to the War Office is now the name of
-this post.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_201_201" id="Footnote_201_201"></a><a href="#FNanchor_201_201"><span class="label">[201]</span></a> This change was brought about by Russell rudely turning
-out Lord Granville to make room for himself, and dismissing Mr. Strutt
-from the Duchy of Lancaster to make room for Lord Granville. Strutt got
-a Peerage as Lord Belper. Russell threatened to break up the Ministry if
-he did not get the Presidency of the Council, although there was no
-precedent&mdash;except a doubtful one in Henry VIII.’s reign&mdash;for appointing
-a commoner to the office. The Duke of Bedford told Mr. Greville that
-Lord John, being poor, was now determined to get an office carrying a
-high salary. The Duke had met his expenses, but was growing more miserly
-every day his colossal fortune was accumulating, and, says Mr. Greville,
-“he falls in very readily with his brother’s notion of taking an office
-for the sake of its emoluments.”&mdash;Greville Memoirs&mdash;Third Part, Vol. I.,
-p. 148 (Longmans), 1887.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_202_202" id="Footnote_202_202"></a><a href="#FNanchor_202_202"><span class="label">[202]</span></a> “Whatever may be the qualities of different Ministers, I
-am the bond by which they are united together. That once destroyed, the
-whole fabric falls.”&mdash;Letter of Lord Aberdeen to John Wilson Croker,
-explaining why the factions concentrated their hostility on him
-personally.&mdash;The Croker Papers, Vol. III., p. 348.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_203_203" id="Footnote_203_203"></a><a href="#FNanchor_203_203"><span class="label">[203]</span></a> Evelyn Ashley’s Life of Palmerston, Vol. II., p. 80.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_204_204" id="Footnote_204_204"></a><a href="#FNanchor_204_204"><span class="label">[204]</span></a> Palmerston wanted Lord Shaftesbury to be Chancellor of
-the Duchy. He had to withdraw his offer of the post, and in this letter
-Lady Palmerston explains why.&mdash;Life and Work of the Seventh Earl of
-Shaftesbury, K.G., by Edwin Hodder, Vol. II., p. 493 (Cassell and Co.).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_205_205" id="Footnote_205_205"></a><a href="#FNanchor_205_205"><span class="label">[205]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 8.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_206_206" id="Footnote_206_206"></a><a href="#FNanchor_206_206"><span class="label">[206]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXI.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_207_207" id="Footnote_207_207"></a><a href="#FNanchor_207_207"><span class="label">[207]</span></a> The opposition of the Peelites to the Committee on
-grounds of high policy and constitutional legality was soon justified.
-“Lord Stanley,” says Lord Malmesbury on the 3rd of March, “writes that
-Louis Napoleon objects strongly to the Committee of Inquiry into the
-War, and says if it takes place, though his army will still act on the
-same side as ours, it can no longer do so along with it. He is evidently
-alarmed at the laches of his own Ministers and generals being shown up
-to Europe and endangering his position.”&mdash;Memoirs of an Ex-Minister,
-Vol. II., p. 11. Little wonder that the investigation was “incomplete”
-and “inconclusive.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_208_208" id="Footnote_208_208"></a><a href="#FNanchor_208_208"><span class="label">[208]</span></a> Mr. Sidney Herbert succeeded Sir George Grey in this
-office when Palmerston reorganised the Coalition. Mr. Herbert went out
-with the Peelites a fortnight after the new Ministry was formed.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_209_209" id="Footnote_209_209"></a><a href="#FNanchor_209_209"><span class="label">[209]</span></a> Hansard, Vol. CXXXVIII., 1075.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_210_210" id="Footnote_210_210"></a><a href="#FNanchor_210_210"><span class="label">[210]</span></a> This was, of course, discussing and coming to a unanimous
-agreement with Russia at the very outset on the Second Point&mdash;the
-navigation of the Danube. This was the point in which Austria had had a
-vital interest. If it had been kept open to the last, she might have
-been more zealous in overcoming the difficulties as to the Third Point
-which wrecked the Conference.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_211_211" id="Footnote_211_211"></a><a href="#FNanchor_211_211"><span class="label">[211]</span></a> The proof of this is as follows: (1) The Turks would have
-taken the Austrian compromise, which, by the way, was the development of
-a suggestion made by the French Envoy, as the basis of a feasible plan
-for giving effect to the Third Point. (2) Lord John Russell&mdash;the most
-violent and bellicose of the anti-Russian Ministers&mdash;was in favour of
-it. (3) The position of Russia in the matter was officially
-misrepresented to the English people. Russia said her defeats were not
-such as to justify her as a Great Power in letting the Allies <i>force</i> on
-her a reduction of her Black Sea fleet. But she had no objection to any
-plan limiting her preponderance if it sprang from mutual negotiation
-between her and Turkey&mdash;acting as principals on an <i>equal footing</i>&mdash;to
-establish, by <i>mutual consent</i> a naval equilibrium in the Black Sea. (4)
-She did not absolutely exclude the idea of reducing her fleet as was
-falsely stated, not only in the English press, but in Parliament.
-Article 2 of Count Buol’s compromise provided that Turkey and Russia
-should “propose by common agreement to the Conference the effective
-<i>equality</i> of the naval forces which the two coast Powers will keep up
-in the Black Sea, and which shall <i>not exceed the actual number of
-Russian ships afloat in that Sea</i>.” (See Annual Register, Vol. XCVII.,
-pp. 214-217.) The use of the word “exceed” shows that the Article
-provided a <i>maximum</i> limit&mdash;not a minimum. It was simply foolish to
-argue, as representatives of the Government did, that negotiations for
-peace had to be abandoned because Russia refused to accept a practical
-and reasonable plan for preventing her from having more ships than
-Turkey in the Black Sea. The statement of facts on this subject by Sir
-T. Martin in Chap. LXIII. of his Life of the Prince Consort is as
-misleading as Mr. Spencer Walpole’s account of the Austrian Compromise
-(History of England, Vol. V., p. 135). Mr. Walpole says that Count
-Buol’s proposal was one “under which any addition to the Russian Fleet
-might be followed by the admission of a corresponding number of war
-vessels of the Allies into the Euxine.” This is not a correct summary of
-Article 2 of the Compromise.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_212_212" id="Footnote_212_212"></a><a href="#FNanchor_212_212"><span class="label">[212]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXIII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_213_213" id="Footnote_213_213"></a><a href="#FNanchor_213_213"><span class="label">[213]</span></a> “If,” writes Prince Albert in a Memorandum dated 3rd of
-May, 1855, “Austria, Prussia, and Germany will give the diplomatic
-guarantee for the future which I have here detailed, we shall consider
-this an equivalent for the material guarantee sought for in the
-limitation of the Russian Fleet.”&mdash;Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort,
-Chap. LXIII. But the odd thing to note is, that the Prince was one of
-those responsible, not perhaps for suspending, but for finally breaking
-up the Conference of Vienna, that had already adopted the principle of
-his plan. He and the Queen ignored the fact that it was already embodied
-in the Memorandum agreed to by the Conference, for giving effect to Ali
-Pasha’s project for more completely connecting Turkey with “the European
-equilibrium.” The Queen first coerced&mdash;for her note to Clarendon was a
-coercive instrument&mdash;Palmerston to abandon negotiations in Conference,
-because Russia would not submit to a humiliating material guarantee.
-Then Prince Albert suggests as a substitute for that a diplomatic
-guarantee, which Russia had already accepted, and which was a far less
-effective protection to Turkey than the Austrian compromise which the
-Queen imperiously condemned. The only original point in the Prince’s
-plan is the inclusion of Prussia. She had been excluded from the
-Conference in deference to the prejudices of those who hated peace
-negotiations, and who declared that she was a mendacious slave of the
-Czar.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_214_214" id="Footnote_214_214"></a><a href="#FNanchor_214_214"><span class="label">[214]</span></a> And yet on the day before the Prince wrote to Aberdeen he
-says, in a letter to Stockmar:&mdash;“The Vienna Conferences, which it would
-have been better to have left open, must now be closed, if only to <i>get
-the Ministry rest in Parliament</i>. Oh, Oxenstiern! Oh,
-Oxenstiern!”&mdash;Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXIV.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_215_215" id="Footnote_215_215"></a><a href="#FNanchor_215_215"><span class="label">[215]</span></a> Mr. Sidney Herbert was another Peelite who resisted
-Prince Albert’s intimidation.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_216_216" id="Footnote_216_216"></a><a href="#FNanchor_216_216"><span class="label">[216]</span></a> Canrobert’s neglect to seize the Mamelon Hill before the
-Russians crept into it on the 9th of March and fortified it, was one of
-the fatal blunders that protracted the siege.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_217_217" id="Footnote_217_217"></a><a href="#FNanchor_217_217"><span class="label">[217]</span></a> Lord Malmesbury records a conversation in his Diary with
-Persigny on this point. “Persigny strongly for peace, and says France is
-all for it.... He says, if the Emperor is to go to the Crimea, there
-must be peace at any price to prevent it. If not, the war ought to go
-on; but if the French army is lost then there will be a
-revolution.”&mdash;Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 16.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_218_218" id="Footnote_218_218"></a><a href="#FNanchor_218_218"><span class="label">[218]</span></a> The War, by W. H. Russell, p. 498. London: Routledge and
-Co., 1855.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_219_219" id="Footnote_219_219"></a><a href="#FNanchor_219_219"><span class="label">[219]</span></a> Napoleon III. was abjectly ignorant of military
-geography. At the council of 1854, said Persigny to Lord Malmesbury, his
-Majesty “announced the attack on Baltic.” Persigny asked if he meant
-Cronstadt. “No, of course not, it would require 100,000 men, <i>cavalry</i>
-included,” said the Emperor, loftily. “But,” replied Persigny,
-“Cronstadt is an island.” “No, it is not,” said the Emperor, as he went
-for a map. Everything, said Persigny, was done with the same ignorance
-and carelessness. Yet it was a campaign&mdash;devised by this charlatan
-against the opinion of his best officers, that Lord Raglan, according to
-Sir T. Martin, approved! See Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p.
-15.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_220_220" id="Footnote_220_220"></a><a href="#FNanchor_220_220"><span class="label">[220]</span></a> Reminiscences and opinions of Sir F. H. Doyle (Longmans,
-1886), p. 414. There was a terrible snow storm in Devonshire this year.
-It was made memorable by the footmarks of some creature which nobody
-could identify. These created a sort of panic in the West of England,
-for the people thought that the devil was abroad among them.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_221_221" id="Footnote_221_221"></a><a href="#FNanchor_221_221"><span class="label">[221]</span></a> Letters of Sir George Cornewall Lewis, p. 295. His
-additional taxes were, (1), 3s. per cwt. on sugar; (2), 1d. per pound on
-coffee, raising the duty from 3d. to 4d.; (3), 3d. per pound on tea,
-raising the duty from 1s. 6d. to 1s 9d.; (4), equalisation of duty on
-Scotch and English spirits, bringing the former from 6s. to 7s. 10d. per
-gallon; (5), increase of duty on Irish spirits from 4s. to 6s; (6),
-increase of 2d. on Income Tax, raising it from 1s. 2d. to 1s. 4d. in the
-£.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_222_222" id="Footnote_222_222"></a><a href="#FNanchor_222_222"><span class="label">[222]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXI. It was
-this letter that ultimately led to the founding of Netley Hospital.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_223_223" id="Footnote_223_223"></a><a href="#FNanchor_223_223"><span class="label">[223]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXIII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_224_224" id="Footnote_224_224"></a><a href="#FNanchor_224_224"><span class="label">[224]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 24.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_225_225" id="Footnote_225_225"></a><a href="#FNanchor_225_225"><span class="label">[225]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 12. Martin’s Life
-of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_226_226" id="Footnote_226_226"></a><a href="#FNanchor_226_226"><span class="label">[226]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 18. See also
-<i>Times</i>, 17th of April, 1855.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_227_227" id="Footnote_227_227"></a><a href="#FNanchor_227_227"><span class="label">[227]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_228_228" id="Footnote_228_228"></a><a href="#FNanchor_228_228"><span class="label">[228]</span></a> Ducos was personally hostile to England, though he
-pretended to be in favour of the alliance. Lord Malmesbury says that he
-and General Changarnier were the authors of a plan in 1851 for a
-piratical descent on the Isle of Wight, and for seizing the Queen’s
-person at Osborne. See Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. I., pp. 360 and
-396. General Cavaignac also thought at the time such a plan to be
-feasible in the event of a war with England.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_229_229" id="Footnote_229_229"></a><a href="#FNanchor_229_229"><span class="label">[229]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_230_230" id="Footnote_230_230"></a><a href="#FNanchor_230_230"><span class="label">[230]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 19.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_231_231" id="Footnote_231_231"></a><a href="#FNanchor_231_231"><span class="label">[231]</span></a> It was said to be composed by his mother, Queen
-Hortense.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_232_232" id="Footnote_232_232"></a><a href="#FNanchor_232_232"><span class="label">[232]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_233_233" id="Footnote_233_233"></a><a href="#FNanchor_233_233"><span class="label">[233]</span></a> Vast numbers had been unable to find seats&mdash;in fact, as
-much as £100 was given for a box. When the curtain rose, crowds of
-ladies and gentlemen in evening dress were seen packed closely together
-at the back of the stage behind the artists&mdash;a curious revival of the
-old practice, in virtue of which persons of quality and rank frequented
-this part of the house in preference to any other. Jenny Ney played
-“Leonora.” It was her first performance on the English stage. Tamberlik,
-Formes, Tagliafico, and Luchesi took the male parts.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_234_234" id="Footnote_234_234"></a><a href="#FNanchor_234_234"><span class="label">[234]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_235_235" id="Footnote_235_235"></a><a href="#FNanchor_235_235"><span class="label">[235]</span></a> No account of the Memorandum is given by Sir T. Martin,
-and probably it was a ceremonial rather than a serious document.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_236_236" id="Footnote_236_236"></a><a href="#FNanchor_236_236"><span class="label">[236]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 20.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_237_237" id="Footnote_237_237"></a><a href="#FNanchor_237_237"><span class="label">[237]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_238_238" id="Footnote_238_238"></a><a href="#FNanchor_238_238"><span class="label">[238]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXV.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_239_239" id="Footnote_239_239"></a><a href="#FNanchor_239_239"><span class="label">[239]</span></a> This resort to the dreaded instruments of “personal
-Government” and “Court intrigue” by Palmerston was adopted after
-diplomatic means had failed. Mr. Greville, in the Third Part of his
-“Journal,” gives an amusing description of how we touted for a
-Portuguese alliance in these days.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_240_240" id="Footnote_240_240"></a><a href="#FNanchor_240_240"><span class="label">[240]</span></a> It is not generally known that “Old Jérôme” really caused
-the Emperor to abandon his intention of going to the Crimea. Every
-argument pressed by his Ministers and the Queen failed to shake his
-determination. Part of his plan was to make Jérôme not Regent, but Chief
-of the Council of Ministers in his absence. The Ministers artfully
-persuaded Jérôme, who was a vain man, to refuse this office unless he
-were vested with the same despotic power as the Emperor. This frightened
-the Emperor, and he immediately gave up his Crimean expedition. See a
-conversation between Lord Cowley and Mr. Greville in the Greville
-Memoirs, Third Part, Vol. I., p. 263 (Longmans), 1887.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_241_241" id="Footnote_241_241"></a><a href="#FNanchor_241_241"><span class="label">[241]</span></a> Greville Memoirs, Third Part, Vol. I, pp. 283-286.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_242_242" id="Footnote_242_242"></a><a href="#FNanchor_242_242"><span class="label">[242]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXVII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_243_243" id="Footnote_243_243"></a><a href="#FNanchor_243_243"><span class="label">[243]</span></a> They crossed over from France on the 28th of August. Mr.
-Greville says, “While they were in the yacht crossing over, Prince
-Albert had told him (Clarendon) that there was not a word of truth in
-the prevailing report and belief that the young Prince of Prussia and
-the Princess Royal are <i>fiancés</i>, that nothing had ever passed between
-the parents on the subject, and that the union never would take place
-unless the children should become attached to each other.”&mdash;Greville
-Memoirs, Third Part, Vol. I., p. 287. On the 13th of September, however,
-Prince Albert writes to Stockmar, saying, “I have received a very
-friendly letter from the Princess of Prussia.” In this letter the
-Princess (now Empress of Germany) intimated the fact that her son came
-with the consent of his parents and the King of Prussia to sue for the
-hand of the Princess Royal.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_244_244" id="Footnote_244_244"></a><a href="#FNanchor_244_244"><span class="label">[244]</span></a> The Crown Prince of Germany&mdash;A Diary. London (Sampson
-Low), 1886.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_245_245" id="Footnote_245_245"></a><a href="#FNanchor_245_245"><span class="label">[245]</span></a> “The Officer in command is directed to arrange times so
-that the Prince may have ample opportunities of becoming acquainted with
-such various matters as horseshoeing, fencing, vaulting, limbering and
-unlimbering guns, and stable work, as well as the routine of lessons and
-singing in the schools.”&mdash;Extract from Von Griesheim’s Instructions. The
-Crown Prince of Germany&mdash;A Diary, p. 24.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_246_246" id="Footnote_246_246"></a><a href="#FNanchor_246_246"><span class="label">[246]</span></a> The Crown Prince of Germany&mdash;A Diary, p. 28.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_247_247" id="Footnote_247_247"></a><a href="#FNanchor_247_247"><span class="label">[247]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXVIII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_248_248" id="Footnote_248_248"></a><a href="#FNanchor_248_248"><span class="label">[248]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 37.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_249_249" id="Footnote_249_249"></a><a href="#FNanchor_249_249"><span class="label">[249]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 38.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_250_250" id="Footnote_250_250"></a><a href="#FNanchor_250_250"><span class="label">[250]</span></a> It is now known that Cavour suggested that Austria might
-be asked to retire from that part of Papal territory which she
-occupied.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_251_251" id="Footnote_251_251"></a><a href="#FNanchor_251_251"><span class="label">[251]</span></a> Greville Memoirs, Third Part, p. 303.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_252_252" id="Footnote_252_252"></a><a href="#FNanchor_252_252"><span class="label">[252]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol II., p. 38.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_253_253" id="Footnote_253_253"></a><a href="#FNanchor_253_253"><span class="label">[253]</span></a> “Exclusive of officers who have come back by reason of
-wounds, sickness, or promotion to the depôt battalions, only
-thirty-three out of an army of 52,000 men have come home on private
-affairs.”&mdash;Letter of Prince Albert to the Prince of Prussia. Martin’s
-Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXIX.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_254_254" id="Footnote_254_254"></a><a href="#FNanchor_254_254"><span class="label">[254]</span></a> See a curious letter on this subject from Colonel Hope,
-V.C., in the <i>Daily Chronicle</i> of 14th September, 1886, and a note
-appended to it from the pen of the Editor of that newspaper.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_255_255" id="Footnote_255_255"></a><a href="#FNanchor_255_255"><span class="label">[255]</span></a> Simpson was bitterly blamed for not asking Campbell’s
-Division of Guards and Highlanders, who were picked and seasoned
-soldiers, to assault in the first instance. Campbell, however, though he
-often exacted cruel sacrifices from his men, was parsimonious of blood,
-and it was said in the camp that he refused to attack till he had time
-to make the necessary preparations. Then he observed, grimly, he would
-not “attack, but ‘tak’ he Redan.” Codrington seems to have imagined that
-there was no need for all this caution. He attacked, but did not take,
-the fortress; in fact, to take it on his plan was an utter
-impossibility.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_256_256" id="Footnote_256_256"></a><a href="#FNanchor_256_256"><span class="label">[256]</span></a> That was partly due to the fact that our trenches were
-200 yards from the Redan. This space was enfiladed by a murderous fire
-when crossed by the stormers. The French, 20,000 strong, were only 20
-yards from the Malakoff. Simpson’s excuse for hastening the attack
-instead of pushing the trenches closer was that every day the French
-were losing 200 and we 60 men in the trenches.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_257_257" id="Footnote_257_257"></a><a href="#FNanchor_257_257"><span class="label">[257]</span></a> The Duke of Newcastle, who had gone to the seat of war to
-examine affairs on the spot, in a letter to Clarendon, says that Simpson
-seemed “never to be doing but always mooning. He has no plan, no
-opinion, no hope but from the chapter of accidents.” He thought
-Pélissier just as incompetent. “I believe,” he adds, “Pélissier’s
-officers have no confidence in him, and I know his soldiers dislike
-him.” Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXVII. The Sardinian De
-La Marmora was the only one of the Allied Commanders-in-Chief who had
-any marked ability.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_258_258" id="Footnote_258_258"></a><a href="#FNanchor_258_258"><span class="label">[258]</span></a> So the Russians afterwards said. This plan was proposed
-by Sir E. Lyons, but Pélissier laughed scornfully in his face when he
-suggested it, and poor Simpson, as usual, concurred with Pélissier.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_259_259" id="Footnote_259_259"></a><a href="#FNanchor_259_259"><span class="label">[259]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXVIII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_260_260" id="Footnote_260_260"></a><a href="#FNanchor_260_260"><span class="label">[260]</span></a> Evelyn Ashley’s Life of Lord Palmerston, Vol. II., p.
-322.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_261_261" id="Footnote_261_261"></a><a href="#FNanchor_261_261"><span class="label">[261]</span></a> The excuse for the Franco-Austrian intrigue was that the
-rejection of the terms by Russia bound Austria to join France and
-England in going on with the war. But of course Austria had taken pains
-to find out what terms Russia would accept before she gave her pledge,
-so that she never had the remotest intention of fighting on our side. As
-for the terms they were, as Mr. Greville puts it, but a second edition
-of the proposals which we had rejected at the Vienna Conference. There
-was, says Mr. Greville, this difference: “while on the last occasion the
-Emperor knocked under to us and reluctantly agreed to go on with the
-war, he is now determined to go on with it no longer, and requires that
-we should defer to his wishes.”&mdash;Greville Memoirs, Third Part, Vol. I.,
-p. 297.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_262_262" id="Footnote_262_262"></a><a href="#FNanchor_262_262"><span class="label">[262]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXVIII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_263_263" id="Footnote_263_263"></a><a href="#FNanchor_263_263"><span class="label">[263]</span></a> Greville Memoirs, Third Part, Vol. I., p. 310.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_264_264" id="Footnote_264_264"></a><a href="#FNanchor_264_264"><span class="label">[264]</span></a> Greville Memoirs, Third Part, Vol. I., p. 315.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_265_265" id="Footnote_265_265"></a><a href="#FNanchor_265_265"><span class="label">[265]</span></a> Sir G. C. Lewis’s Letters, p. 309.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_266_266" id="Footnote_266_266"></a><a href="#FNanchor_266_266"><span class="label">[266]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 37.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_267_267" id="Footnote_267_267"></a><a href="#FNanchor_267_267"><span class="label">[267]</span></a> Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXX. Sir Theodore, when
-he penned this, had not seen Mr. Disraeli’s cynical letter to Lord
-Malmesbury, otherwise he would probably not have added “such generosity
-among statesmen may always be counted on as a matter of course.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_268_268" id="Footnote_268_268"></a><a href="#FNanchor_268_268"><span class="label">[268]</span></a> This was a nickname which Serjeant Hayes had stuck to
-Parke on account of his prejudice in favour of fossilised forms and
-precedents.&mdash;Life of Lord Campbell, Vol. II., p. 388.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_269_269" id="Footnote_269_269"></a><a href="#FNanchor_269_269"><span class="label">[269]</span></a> Life of Lord Campbell, Vol. II., p. 340.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_270_270" id="Footnote_270_270"></a><a href="#FNanchor_270_270"><span class="label">[270]</span></a> Mr. Babbage, Dr. Lyon Playfair, and Sir R. Murchison, it
-was said, were to be the first batch of life scientific peers.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_271_271" id="Footnote_271_271"></a><a href="#FNanchor_271_271"><span class="label">[271]</span></a> Greville Memoirs, Third Part, Vol. II., p. 51.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_272_272" id="Footnote_272_272"></a><a href="#FNanchor_272_272"><span class="label">[272]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 43.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_273_273" id="Footnote_273_273"></a><a href="#FNanchor_273_273"><span class="label">[273]</span></a> Mr. Greville, writing on March 9, says, “Called on
-Achille Fould, who introduced me to Magne, Minister of Finance, said to
-be a great rogue. Everything here is intrigue and jobbery, and I am told
-there is a sort of gang, of which Morny is the chief, who all combine
-for their own purpose and advantage: Morny, Fould, Magne, and Rouher,
-Minister of Commerce. They now want to get out Billault, Minister of the
-Interior, whom they cannot entirely manage, and that minister is
-necessary to them on account of the railways, which are under his
-management.” Greville Memoirs, Third Part, Vol. II., p. 31. At a party
-at Lord Holland’s house in Paris, where a great many aristocratic ladies
-were present, Mr. Greville says that when MM. de Flahault and Morny were
-announced, “the women all jumped up like a covey of partridges and
-walked out of the room, without taking any notice of the men.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_274_274" id="Footnote_274_274"></a><a href="#FNanchor_274_274"><span class="label">[274]</span></a> The Treaty of Paris was signed on Sunday, March 30. Each
-of the fourteen plenipotentiaries originally intended to keep the pen
-with which he signed it as a <i>memento</i> of the occasion. They, however,
-yielded to the request of the Empress Eugenie, who begged that only one
-pen should be used, which should be retained by her as a souvenir. Only
-one was accordingly used. It was a quill plucked from an eagle’s wing,
-and richly mounted with gold and jewels.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_275_275" id="Footnote_275_275"></a><a href="#FNanchor_275_275"><span class="label">[275]</span></a> In 1870 the neutrality of the Black Sea was
-abandoned&mdash;Russia having declared she would no longer respect the Treaty
-on that point. After the last Russo-Turkish war, Russia took back
-Bessarabia. The “Declarations,” in fact, are the only portions of the
-Treaty that remain in force.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_276_276" id="Footnote_276_276"></a><a href="#FNanchor_276_276"><span class="label">[276]</span></a> History of England, Vol. V., p. 143.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_277_277" id="Footnote_277_277"></a><a href="#FNanchor_277_277"><span class="label">[277]</span></a> Correspondence of A. de Tocqueville with Mr. Nassau
-Senior, Vol. II., pp. 99, 101.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_278_278" id="Footnote_278_278"></a><a href="#FNanchor_278_278"><span class="label">[278]</span></a> This refers to Lord Malmesbury’s attack in the House of
-Lords on the Treaty of Peace.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_279_279" id="Footnote_279_279"></a><a href="#FNanchor_279_279"><span class="label">[279]</span></a> Continuing a year after this, Lord Malmesbury records his
-impressions of a conversation with Lady Ely on the famous “happy family”
-dinner of 1856. He says, “It looks as if her Majesty made up the dinner
-of these discordant materials for fun, and, from the same <i>malice</i>, made
-me take Lady Clarendon to dinner, as it was only two days after I had
-attacked Lord Clarendon in the House of Lords, and Lady Clarendon would
-not speak to me at first, but I ended by making her laugh. The Queen,
-who was opposite, was highly amused, and could hardly help laughing when
-Lady Clarendon at first would not answer me.”&mdash;Memoirs of an
-ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 67.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_280_280" id="Footnote_280_280"></a><a href="#FNanchor_280_280"><span class="label">[280]</span></a> Nobody regretted this, for they created a host of
-highly-paid place-holders. Mr. Disraeli declared that these measures
-were at first supposed to be an ingenious means of compensating Ireland
-for the failure of the Tipperary Bank.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_281_281" id="Footnote_281_281"></a><a href="#FNanchor_281_281"><span class="label">[281]</span></a> Greville Memoirs, Third Part. Vol. II., pp. 42-45.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_282_282" id="Footnote_282_282"></a><a href="#FNanchor_282_282"><span class="label">[282]</span></a> A few days before this event, on the 10th inst., the
-Royal Nursery was robbed. The Royal Household is, of course, under the
-control of the Lord Steward. One of his sub-departments is called “The
-Silver Pantry,” which has three yeomen, one groom, and six assistants
-attached to it. Yet, when the nursery plate had to be sent to Windsor,
-these gorgeous functionaries, with their staff of porters, horses,
-grooms, and carts, could not condescend to convey it. It was trusted to
-a common carrier, who unhappily, when on his way, stopped at a
-public-house for refreshments. He and his men were “only absent for five
-minutes,” but in that time a light spring cart had driven up to the
-carrier’s waggon, and when it drove away, the box containing the Royal
-nursery plate had vanished. The plate chest was found in Bonner’s Fields
-containing everything but the bullion. The knife-blades and packing,
-which latter consisted of women’s dresses, were found, but the plate was
-never traced.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_283_283" id="Footnote_283_283"></a><a href="#FNanchor_283_283"><span class="label">[283]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_284_284" id="Footnote_284_284"></a><a href="#FNanchor_284_284"><span class="label">[284]</span></a> De Lacy Evans’ proposal was referred to a mixed
-Commission of civilians and military men.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_285_285" id="Footnote_285_285"></a><a href="#FNanchor_285_285"><span class="label">[285]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_286_286" id="Footnote_286_286"></a><a href="#FNanchor_286_286"><span class="label">[286]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 49.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_287_287" id="Footnote_287_287"></a><a href="#FNanchor_287_287"><span class="label">[287]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_288_288" id="Footnote_288_288"></a><a href="#FNanchor_288_288"><span class="label">[288]</span></a> When the frontier was drawn, Count Orloff said to Lord
-Clarendon that he should take it as a favour if he would draw it a
-little farther south so as to include Bolgrad, which was the capital of
-some Russian military colonies in which the Czar was greatly interested.
-This was done as a matter of courtesy to the Czar, Orloff pointing to
-the position of Bolgrad on the map&mdash;a French map&mdash;and showing that it
-was such a long way from Lake Jalpuk, that the concession did not give
-Russia access to a Moldavian lake on which she might, perchance, one day
-build a threatening flotilla. After the Treaty was signed, it turned out
-that the place marked as Bolgrad on the French map was really Tabak, and
-that Bolgrad was actually far to the south of it, on the northern shore
-of Lake Jalpuk. The Russians therefore, insisting on the letter of the
-Treaty, claimed Bolgrad, on the left shore of the lake, leaving the
-right shore to Moldavia.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_289_289" id="Footnote_289_289"></a><a href="#FNanchor_289_289"><span class="label">[289]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 50.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_290_290" id="Footnote_290_290"></a><a href="#FNanchor_290_290"><span class="label">[290]</span></a> Lowe’s Bismarck, Vol. I., p. 218.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_291_291" id="Footnote_291_291"></a><a href="#FNanchor_291_291"><span class="label">[291]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXIII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_292_292" id="Footnote_292_292"></a><a href="#FNanchor_292_292"><span class="label">[292]</span></a> The French Emperor was pledged to support Russia against
-us. But after his return from Biarritz, he found political parties were
-using his disagreement with England to weaken the Anglo-French alliance,
-and discredit his foreign policy. The secret history of the transaction,
-however, was not creditable to Palmerstonian diplomacy. Lord Malmesbury
-writes on the 21st of November, “Persigny told me Walewski is in
-disgrace. The difficulty about Bolgrad and the Isle of Serpents arises
-from the Emperor having been entrapped into a promise by the Russians;
-but Persigny has suggested a solution, which has been accepted by the
-Emperor and our Government, namely, a Congress, which is to assemble,
-into which Sardinia is to be admitted, <i>on condition of voting against
-Russia</i>. Austria goes with England, and Prussia is of course excluded.
-This gives England a majority, and the Emperor an excuse for giving
-way.”&mdash;Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II, p. 53. Lord Clarendon, had,
-up till the beginning of December, refused to submit the dispute to a
-Congress, for the point which Russia raised about Bolgrad was simply a
-point of obvious chicanery which it was beneath the dignity of England
-to debate. Lord Palmerston and he yielded, however, and, as Mr. Greville
-says scornfully, by “this dodge saved us.”&mdash;Greville Memoirs, Third
-Part, Vol. II., p. 68.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_293_293" id="Footnote_293_293"></a><a href="#FNanchor_293_293"><span class="label">[293]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 55.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_294_294" id="Footnote_294_294"></a><a href="#FNanchor_294_294"><span class="label">[294]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 58. See also
-Greville Memoirs, Third Part, Vol. II., p. 69.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_295_295" id="Footnote_295_295"></a><a href="#FNanchor_295_295"><span class="label">[295]</span></a> The Duke of Beaufort and eighty Members of the Lower
-House, however, threatened to leave the Party if places in a Tory
-Government were given to the Peelites.&mdash;Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol.
-II., p. 57.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_296_296" id="Footnote_296_296"></a><a href="#FNanchor_296_296"><span class="label">[296]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXV.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_297_297" id="Footnote_297_297"></a><a href="#FNanchor_297_297"><span class="label">[297]</span></a> On the estimate of expenditure and revenue for 1856-1857
-there was a deficit of £10,000,000. To meet this Sir George Lewis had
-borrowed £7,499,000, and he had raised £1,000,000 in Exchequer Bills.
-The total receipts from all sources, said Sir George Lewis in his
-Statement (<i>Annual Register</i>, Vol. XCIX., p. 29), would, when the
-financial year closed, be £79,384,000, and the expenditure £78,000,000,
-leaving a surplus of £1,384,000. This was a wrong calculation. The net
-income of the year was £75,569,575, or, after deductions, £72,963,151,
-showing a deficit on the expenditure of the year of £3,254,604. For the
-coming year, 1857-1858, Sir George estimated his expenditure at
-£63,224,000, to which £2,000,000 had to be added for the service of war
-loans. The revenue he estimated at £66,365,000; so that he expected a
-surplus of £891,000.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_298_298" id="Footnote_298_298"></a><a href="#FNanchor_298_298"><span class="label">[298]</span></a> Quite apart from the cost of the Crimean War, Mr.
-Gladstone showed that £6,000,000 had been added to the <i>ordinary</i>
-expenditure of the country during the four years ending 1856-1857.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_299_299" id="Footnote_299_299"></a><a href="#FNanchor_299_299"><span class="label">[299]</span></a> Of course, Lord Beaconsfield before he died educated the
-Foreign Office up to the truth, which is, that “the key of India” is
-held in London&mdash;and that the defensible gates of India are those on our
-frontier which we can protect by our arms. But the amazing thing is that
-when the Foreign Office <i>did</i> believe that Herat was the “key of India,”
-they never would let it be held by a Power which, like Persia, was
-strong enough to keep it safe with British help. Persia was the natural
-ally of England against Russia. But every effort of the Indian
-Government to conciliate Persia has been thwarted by the Foreign Office.
-Since we abandoned her for the sake of the Russian alliance against
-Napoleon I., the English Foreign Office has exhausted the resources of
-its diplomacy in betraying, browbeating, and irritating her. And yet it
-is a fact, that without the goodwill of Persia, which enabled Russia to
-draw supplies from “the golden province of Khorassan,” Russia could
-never have marched from the Caspian to the gates of Merv.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_300_300" id="Footnote_300_300"></a><a href="#FNanchor_300_300"><span class="label">[300]</span></a> Correspondence respecting relations with Persia,
-Parliamentary Papers, 1857, pp. 21-39.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_301_301" id="Footnote_301_301"></a><a href="#FNanchor_301_301"><span class="label">[301]</span></a> This story of diplomatic blundering is told in the
-speeches of Mr. Layard and Lord Palmerston. Hansard, Vol. CXL., pp.
-1717-1722.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_302_302" id="Footnote_302_302"></a><a href="#FNanchor_302_302"><span class="label">[302]</span></a> Papers respecting Persia, p. 211.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_303_303" id="Footnote_303_303"></a><a href="#FNanchor_303_303"><span class="label">[303]</span></a> India under Lord Canning, by the Duke of Argyll, p. 72.
-See also 21 and 22 Vict., c. 106, Section 55. Lord Beaconsfield made
-another attempt to evade this section by bringing Indian troops to Malta
-during the Russo-Turkish War in 1877.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_304_304" id="Footnote_304_304"></a><a href="#FNanchor_304_304"><span class="label">[304]</span></a> Greville Memoirs, Third Part, Vol. II., p. 93.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_305_305" id="Footnote_305_305"></a><a href="#FNanchor_305_305"><span class="label">[305]</span></a> Life of Cobden, Chap. XXIV.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_306_306" id="Footnote_306_306"></a><a href="#FNanchor_306_306"><span class="label">[306]</span></a> The vote was 247 for, and 263 against, the Ministry. See
-Cobden’s Speeches, Vol. II., pp. 121-156, for his indictment.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_307_307" id="Footnote_307_307"></a><a href="#FNanchor_307_307"><span class="label">[307]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 63. Mr. Greville
-declares that Lord Derby and Mr. Disraeli had “made up their minds to
-coalesce with Gladstone and the Peelites on the first
-opportunity.”&mdash;Greville Memoirs, Third Part. Vol. II., p. 93. Lord
-Malmesbury says that at a private meeting of the Tory Party on the 4th
-of March, Lord Derby denied that he had coalesced with Mr. Gladstone,
-but refused to be dictated to by any member of the party as to “the
-course he should pursue with regard to any political personages
-whatever,” a declaration which was loudly cheered. The general opinion
-was that such a coalition, though the Tory leaders favoured it, would
-have split up the Tory Party.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_308_308" id="Footnote_308_308"></a><a href="#FNanchor_308_308"><span class="label">[308]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 64. Note that the
-attitude of the Peelites to the Tory Party curiously resembled that of
-the Liberal Unionists in 1887.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_309_309" id="Footnote_309_309"></a><a href="#FNanchor_309_309"><span class="label">[309]</span></a> Correspondence of Abraham Hayward, Q.C., from 1814 to
-1844. Edited by Henry E. Carlisle. 2 Vols. London, Murray, 1886.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_310_310" id="Footnote_310_310"></a><a href="#FNanchor_310_310"><span class="label">[310]</span></a> Life of Cobden, Chap. XXIV.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_311_311" id="Footnote_311_311"></a><a href="#FNanchor_311_311"><span class="label">[311]</span></a> Annual Summary of the <i>Times</i> for 1857. On the 24th of
-February, 1858, the Tories formed, Lord Derby’s second Government.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_312_312" id="Footnote_312_312"></a><a href="#FNanchor_312_312"><span class="label">[312]</span></a> Greville Memoirs, Third Part, Vol. II., p. 99.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_313_313" id="Footnote_313_313"></a><a href="#FNanchor_313_313"><span class="label">[313]</span></a> Lord Derby had shrunk from carrying on the Crimean War
-when Lord Aberdeen resigned.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_314_314" id="Footnote_314_314"></a><a href="#FNanchor_314_314"><span class="label">[314]</span></a> Even new Tory candidates, when they saw how the current
-of public opinion was setting, began to beg support by saying that if
-they had been in the House when the China vote was taken, they would
-have voted for Lord Palmerston.&mdash;See Greville Memoirs, Vol. II., p.
-100.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_315_315" id="Footnote_315_315"></a><a href="#FNanchor_315_315"><span class="label">[315]</span></a> Correspondence of Abraham Hayward, Q.C., Vol. I., pp.
-312, 313.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_316_316" id="Footnote_316_316"></a><a href="#FNanchor_316_316"><span class="label">[316]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXV. On the
-5th of March, 1858, he writes to Stockmar:&mdash;“Lord Palmerston’s sudden
-decline in popularity was a remarkable phenomenon.”&mdash;Martin’s Life of
-the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXXIV.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_317_317" id="Footnote_317_317"></a><a href="#FNanchor_317_317"><span class="label">[317]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 70.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_318_318" id="Footnote_318_318"></a><a href="#FNanchor_318_318"><span class="label">[318]</span></a> This was one of the first recorded cases of “obstruction”
-in the modern sense of the word. Mr. Parnell used, at one time, to
-justify his tactics by citing as a precedent Mr. Gladstone’s opposition
-to the Divorce Bill.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_319_319" id="Footnote_319_319"></a><a href="#FNanchor_319_319"><span class="label">[319]</span></a> That no such distinction should be made is the view which
-seems to be gaining ground now. The French Chamber adopted it in their
-Divorce Bill of 1886, and it has been adopted in the law of Scotland,
-where, as in France, paramours are not permitted to marry after divorce
-is granted. In England the marriage of paramours, outside the forbidden
-degrees of affinity and consanguinity, strongly condemned by Bishop
-Wilberforce in the debates on the Divorce Bill, is permissible. Though,
-as a concession to Wilberforce and his followers, it was enacted that a
-clergyman might refuse to perform the ceremony, the concession did not
-satisfy anybody.&mdash;See Life of Wilberforce, Vol. II., pp. 343-347.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_320_320" id="Footnote_320_320"></a><a href="#FNanchor_320_320"><span class="label">[320]</span></a> Life of Lord Campbell, Vol. II., p. 351.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_321_321" id="Footnote_321_321"></a><a href="#FNanchor_321_321"><span class="label">[321]</span></a> Life of Lord Campbell, Vol. II., p. 353.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_322_322" id="Footnote_322_322"></a><a href="#FNanchor_322_322"><span class="label">[322]</span></a> Greville Memoirs, Third Part, Vol. II., p. 3.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_323_323" id="Footnote_323_323"></a><a href="#FNanchor_323_323"><span class="label">[323]</span></a> This dispute was settled by a Conference which met at
-Paris on 5th March, 1857, France, Austria, England, and Russia being
-represented, Prussia and Switzerland being occasionally admitted with a
-consultative voice. Frederick William IV. resigned all his rights to
-Neufchâtel for a pecuniary indemnity, which he generously refused
-afterwards to take, and the royalist prisoners were set free. The
-severance of this province was as great an advantage to Prussia, as the
-separation of Hanover was to England.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_324_324" id="Footnote_324_324"></a><a href="#FNanchor_324_324"><span class="label">[324]</span></a> France and Sardinia would have made an Austrian
-occupation of the Principalities ground for demanding, by way of
-compensation, the retirement of Austria from Northern Italy.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_325_325" id="Footnote_325_325"></a><a href="#FNanchor_325_325"><span class="label">[325]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., pp. 78, 79.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_326_326" id="Footnote_326_326"></a><a href="#FNanchor_326_326"><span class="label">[326]</span></a> Memoirs of an Ex-Minister, Vol. II., p. 78.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_327_327" id="Footnote_327_327"></a><a href="#FNanchor_327_327"><span class="label">[327]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXIX.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_328_328" id="Footnote_328_328"></a><a href="#FNanchor_328_328"><span class="label">[328]</span></a> Sleeman’s Tour in Oudh, Vol. II., p. 353.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_329_329" id="Footnote_329_329"></a><a href="#FNanchor_329_329"><span class="label">[329]</span></a> Oudh Blue Book, p. 46.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_330_330" id="Footnote_330_330"></a><a href="#FNanchor_330_330"><span class="label">[330]</span></a> Oudh Blue Book, p. 235.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_331_331" id="Footnote_331_331"></a><a href="#FNanchor_331_331"><span class="label">[331]</span></a> If we go behind the facts and pretexts of the official
-case we can easily discern better though unstated reasons for the
-annexation of Oudh. After the annexation of Scinde and the conquest of
-the Punjab, Oudh was left protruding into British territory, so as to
-cut it into two parts. Oudh was in our way, and it was therefore taken.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_332_332" id="Footnote_332_332"></a><a href="#FNanchor_332_332"><span class="label">[332]</span></a> The History of India, by Meadows Taylor, p. 710.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_333_333" id="Footnote_333_333"></a><a href="#FNanchor_333_333"><span class="label">[333]</span></a> Curiously Mr. Cobden was among the few Englishmen who
-both knew and cared. In a letter to Mr. Bright, dated the 24th of
-August, 1857, he says, “From the moment that I had satisfied myself that
-a feeling of alienation was constantly increasing with both Natives and
-the English&mdash;we had some striking evidence to this effect before our
-Committee in 1853&mdash;I made up my mind that it must end in trouble sooner
-or later.”&mdash;Morley’s Life of Cobden, Chap. XXV.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_334_334" id="Footnote_334_334"></a><a href="#FNanchor_334_334"><span class="label">[334]</span></a> Meadows Taylor’s History of India, p. 713.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_335_335" id="Footnote_335_335"></a><a href="#FNanchor_335_335"><span class="label">[335]</span></a> India under Lord Dalhousie, by the Duke of Argyll, pp.
-57-60. Sir J. Kaye says that the Indian army consisted, in round
-numbers, of 300,000 men, of whom 40,000 were Europeans.&mdash;Kaye’s Sepoy
-War, Vol. I., p. 341. When Lord Canning reached India the Native army,
-as a matter of fact, consisted of 233,000, the Europeans of 45,000 men.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_336_336" id="Footnote_336_336"></a><a href="#FNanchor_336_336"><span class="label">[336]</span></a> Now we maintain in India one English to every two Native
-soldiers. Dalhousie maintained one English to every five Native
-soldiers.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_337_337" id="Footnote_337_337"></a><a href="#FNanchor_337_337"><span class="label">[337]</span></a> See on this curious subject Kaye’s Sepoy War, Vol. I.,
-and Appendix, p. 619.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_338_338" id="Footnote_338_338"></a><a href="#FNanchor_338_338"><span class="label">[338]</span></a> “The Mutiny would perhaps never have occurred if British
-officers, turning themselves into missionaries, had not fostered the
-notion that the Company was anxious to convert its subjects to
-Christianity.”&mdash;Walpole’s History of England, Vol. V., p. 430.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_339_339" id="Footnote_339_339"></a><a href="#FNanchor_339_339"><span class="label">[339]</span></a> Holmes’ Indian Mutiny, p. 82. India under Lord Canning,
-by the Duke of Argyll, p. 77.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_340_340" id="Footnote_340_340"></a><a href="#FNanchor_340_340"><span class="label">[340]</span></a> Parliamentary Papers. Mutinies in the East Indies, p. 1
-<i>et seq.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_341_341" id="Footnote_341_341"></a><a href="#FNanchor_341_341"><span class="label">[341]</span></a> Meadows Taylor’s History of India, p. 720.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_342_342" id="Footnote_342_342"></a><a href="#FNanchor_342_342"><span class="label">[342]</span></a> Anson first heard of the outbreak at Simla, on the 12th
-of May. He was at Umballa on the 15th. On the 27th he died of cholera at
-Kurnaul.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_343_343" id="Footnote_343_343"></a><a href="#FNanchor_343_343"><span class="label">[343]</span></a> Lawrence himself says modestly, in a letter to Lord
-Dalhousie (June 14th, 1858): “To Nicholson, Alec Taylor, of the
-Engineers, and Neville Chamberlain, the real merit of our success is
-due.” But this does some injustice to Colonel Baird Smith, who was
-Taylor’s chief, and who deserves credit for forcing Wilson on to attack
-the city.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_344_344" id="Footnote_344_344"></a><a href="#FNanchor_344_344"><span class="label">[344]</span></a> Life of Lord Lawrence, by R. Bosworth Smith, M.A., Vol.
-II., p. 30.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_345_345" id="Footnote_345_345"></a><a href="#FNanchor_345_345"><span class="label">[345]</span></a> <i>Quarterly Review</i> for April, 1883.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_346_346" id="Footnote_346_346"></a><a href="#FNanchor_346_346"><span class="label">[346]</span></a> “Whilst the siege was in progress, Wilson had, “more than
-once,” says Nicholson, in one of his letters to Lawrence, spoken of
-withdrawing the guns. Nicholson, who was the Roland and Hotspur of the
-war, and Lawrence’s trustiest lieutenant, says of Wilson, “Had he
-carried out his threat I was quite prepared to have appealed to the army
-to set him aside and elect a successor.” Three days after penning that
-letter this fiery Bersekir fell mortally wounded, leading the stormers
-of the Cashmere Bastion. Wilson, feeling it difficult to maintain the
-occupation of the city, wanted to withdraw. When this was communicated
-to Nicholson, he turned on his death-bed, convulsed with passion, and
-exclaimed, “Thank God, I have yet strength enough to shoot that man!”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_347_347" id="Footnote_347_347"></a><a href="#FNanchor_347_347"><span class="label">[347]</span></a> Life of Lord Lawrence, by R. Bosworth Smith, M.A., Vol.
-II., p. 225.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_348_348" id="Footnote_348_348"></a><a href="#FNanchor_348_348"><span class="label">[348]</span></a> The king died in prison three months afterwards. Hodson’s
-defence was that he feared a rescue.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_349_349" id="Footnote_349_349"></a><a href="#FNanchor_349_349"><span class="label">[349]</span></a> Lord Canning himself has described their
-conduct&mdash;especially that of the terror-stricken officers, “with swords
-by their sides”&mdash;as “disgraceful.”&mdash;Life of Sir H. Lawrence, p. 575.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_350_350" id="Footnote_350_350"></a><a href="#FNanchor_350_350"><span class="label">[350]</span></a> Elgin’s patriotism and generosity in surrendering these
-troops were justly extolled by Sir William Peel, the leader of the Naval
-Brigade, who said that the Chinese Expedition really relieved
-Lucknow.&mdash;Walrond’s Letters and Journals of Lord Elgin, p. 188.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_351_351" id="Footnote_351_351"></a><a href="#FNanchor_351_351"><span class="label">[351]</span></a> Shadwell’s Life of Lord Clyde, Vol. I., p. 405.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_352_352" id="Footnote_352_352"></a><a href="#FNanchor_352_352"><span class="label">[352]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXXII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_353_353" id="Footnote_353_353"></a><a href="#FNanchor_353_353"><span class="label">[353]</span></a> At Lucknow, after four days’ hard fighting, he had only
-122 killed and 414 wounded.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_354_354" id="Footnote_354_354"></a><a href="#FNanchor_354_354"><span class="label">[354]</span></a> Campbell’s retreat from Lucknow to Cawnpore was managed
-with consummate address. But it was censured. The defence of it is
-this:&mdash;(1), He had to relieve himself from the encumbrance of the women,
-children, sick, and wounded; (2), He had to save his communications,
-which Windham’s defeat at the Pandoo River had put at Tantia Topee’s
-mercy; (3), He could easily come back and take Lucknow; and (4), he was
-anxious to make an immediate impression on Rohilkund.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_355_355" id="Footnote_355_355"></a><a href="#FNanchor_355_355"><span class="label">[355]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXV. Feodore
-was the name of the Queen’s half-sister.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_356_356" id="Footnote_356_356"></a><a href="#FNanchor_356_356"><span class="label">[356]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXVI.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_357_357" id="Footnote_357_357"></a><a href="#FNanchor_357_357"><span class="label">[357]</span></a> As to precedents, the eldest daughter of George II.
-received a dowry of £80,000, and an annuity of £5,000. But when the
-Princess Royal, daughter of George III., married, she was voted a dowry
-of £80,000 without any annuity. The Irish Parliament had to vote her an
-annuity of £5,000.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_358_358" id="Footnote_358_358"></a><a href="#FNanchor_358_358"><span class="label">[358]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXVI.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_359_359" id="Footnote_359_359"></a><a href="#FNanchor_359_359"><span class="label">[359]</span></a> In the “Journal de Goncourt: Mémoires des la Vie
-Littéraire,” published in 1877, the secret history of the Emperor’s
-instructions to Pélissier is told. The Prussian Military Attaché at St.
-Petersburg sent to the King of Prussia, through MM. de Gerlach and
-Niebuhr, the secret details of the campaign. Manteufel, the King’s
-Foreign Minister, desirous of possessing this information which the King
-kept to himself, bribed certain persons who had access to these letters
-to copy them. Then the French hearing of the matter bribed Manteufel’s
-agents to let them have copies also. In this way Napoleon III.
-discovered that the Malakoff was the one vulnerable point in the
-defences, although the repulse of the 18th of June made most people
-think it was invulnerable.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_360_360" id="Footnote_360_360"></a><a href="#FNanchor_360_360"><span class="label">[360]</span></a> This year the great race at Ascot&mdash;that for the Gold Cup,
-which, by the way, was of silver&mdash;was won by Lord Zetland’s
-“Skirmisher.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_361_361" id="Footnote_361_361"></a><a href="#FNanchor_361_361"><span class="label">[361]</span></a> A story used to be told of one Scottish regiment that got
-into sad disgrace because of the contempt with which they treated the
-Cross of Valour. A goodly number of Crosses were allotted to it, for it
-had won exceptional distinction. The superior officers, on being asked
-to nominate recipients, said, “Oh, hand the thing over to the
-subalterns.” The subalterns said, “The sergeants would probably like to
-have the decorations at their disposal.” The sergeants said, “Oh, it
-would be best to let the men get them,” and the men, with grim humour,
-selected as bravest of the brave, two pioneers, whose duty it had been
-to go round with the “greybeards” when the regiment was in action, and
-serve out the regulation ration of whisky or rum, as the case might be.
-Was this the reason why no member of the Scottish Brigade figures in the
-<i>Annual Register’s</i> list of Victoria Crosses given in 1857?</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_362_362" id="Footnote_362_362"></a><a href="#FNanchor_362_362"><span class="label">[362]</span></a> The Queen promptly ordered the Royal Collections to be
-put at the disposal of the Exhibition. The Prince Consort suggested a
-plan for appealing to private collectors which had the desired effect.
-He said that collectors of rank would not shrink from refusing to lend
-works of Art when it was widely known that their refusal might mar a
-national purpose; and he advised the appeal to be based on the fact that
-though England invested more money in Art than any other country, she
-had done less than any other for Art education, which such an exhibition
-might easily be made to promote. He even sent them a practical proposal
-for drawing up a catalogue that would powerfully appeal to the
-sympathies of collectors, and to his suggestions the success of the
-undertaking was largely due.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_363_363" id="Footnote_363_363"></a><a href="#FNanchor_363_363"><span class="label">[363]</span></a> It may not be amiss to say that this stinging Memorandum
-was the Queen’s reply to a frivolous communication from Lord Palmerston.
-In it he met her growing remonstrances by saying that “measures are
-sometimes best calculated to succeed which follow each other step by
-step.” He further added, rather impudently, that “Viscount Palmerston
-may perhaps be permitted to take the liberty of saying that it is
-fortunate for those from whose opinions your Majesty differs, that your
-Majesty is not in the House of Commons, for they would have had to
-encounter a formidable antagonist in argument.”&mdash;Martin’s Life of the
-Prince Consort, Chap. LXXVIII.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_364_364" id="Footnote_364_364"></a><a href="#FNanchor_364_364"><span class="label">[364]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXXI.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_365_365" id="Footnote_365_365"></a><a href="#FNanchor_365_365"><span class="label">[365]</span></a> The <i>Post</i> was “inspired” by Lady Palmerston at this
-period.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_366_366" id="Footnote_366_366"></a><a href="#FNanchor_366_366"><span class="label">[366]</span></a> Martin’s Life of the Prince Consort, Chap. LXXXII.</p></div>
-
-</div>
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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