ILLUSTRATIONS

[Queen Victoria]
[Claremont]
[The Coronation of Queen Victoria]
[Kensington Palace]
[Duchess of Kent]
[Elizabeth Fry]
[Rowland Hill]
[Father Mathew]
[George Stephenson]
[Wheatstone]
[St. James's Palace]
[Prince Albert]
[The Queen in Her Wedding-Dress]
[Sir Robert Peel]
[Daniel O'Connell]
[Richard Cobden]
[John Bright]
[Lord John Russell]
[Thomas Chalmers]
[John Henry Newmann]
[Balmoral]
[Buckingham Palace]
[Napoleon III]
[The Crystal Palace, 1851]
[Lord Ashley]
[Earl of Derby]
[Duke of Wellington]
[Florence Nightingale]
[Lord Canning]
[Sir Colin Campbell]
[Henry Havelock]
[Sir John Lawrence]
[Windsor Castle]
[Prince Frederick William]
[Princess Royal]
[Charles Kingsley]
[Lord Palmerston]
[Abraham Lincoln and his son]
[Princess Alice]
[The Mausoleum]
[Dr. Norman Macleod]
[Prince of Wales]
[Princess of Wales]
[Osborne House]
[Sir Robert Napier]
[Mr. Gladstone]
[Lord Beaconsfield]
[Lord Salisbury]
[General Gordon]
[Duke of Albany]
[Duchess of Albany]
[Sydney Heads]
[Robert Southey]
[William Wordsworth]
[Alfred Tennyson]
[Robert Browning]
[Charles Dickens]
[W. M. Thackeray]
[Charlotte Brontë]
[Lord Macaulay]
[Thomas Carlyle]
[William Whewell, D.D.]
[Sir David Brewster]
[Sir James Y. Simpson]
[Michael Faraday]
[David Livingstone]
[Sir John Franklin]
[John Ruskin]
[Dean Stanley]
["I was sick, and ye visited me"]
[Duke of Connaught]
[The Imperial Institute]
[Duke of Clarence]
[Duke of York]
[Duchess of York]
[Princess Henry of Battenberg]
[Prince Henry of Battenberg]
[The Czarina of Russia]
[H. M. Stanley]
[Dr. Fridtjof Nansen]
[Miss Kingsley]
[J. M. Barrie]
[Richard Jefferies]
[Rev. J. G. Wood]
[Dean Church]
[Professor Huxley]
[Professor Tyndall]
[C. H. Spurgeon]
[Dr. Horatius Bonar]
[Sir J. E. Millais, P.R.A.]
[Sir Frederick Leighton, P.R.A.]
[Wesley preaching on his father's tomb]
[Group of Presidents No. 1]
[Centenary Meeting at Manchester]
Key to Centenary Meeting
[Wesleyan Centenary Hall]
[Group of Presidents No. 2]
[Sir Francis Lycett]
[The Methodist Settlement, Bermondsey. London, S.E.]
[Theological Institution, Richmond]
[Theological Institution, Didsbury]
[Theological Institution, Headingley]
[Theological Institution, Handsworth]
[Kingswood School, Bath]
[The North House, Leys School, Cambridge]
[Queen's College, Taunton]
[Wesley College, Sheffield]
[Children's Home, Bolton]
[Westminster Training College and Schools]
[Group of Presidents No. 3]

Claremont

CHAPTER I
THE GIRL-QUEEN AND HER KINGDOM

Rather more than one mortal lifetime, as we average life in these later days, has elapsed since that June morning of 1837, when Victoria of England, then a fair young princess of eighteen, was roused from her tranquil sleep in the old palace at Kensington, and bidden to rise and meet the Primate, and his dignified associates the Lord Chamberlain and the royal physician, who "were come on business of state to the Queen"—words of startling import, for they meant that, while the royal maiden lay sleeping, the aged King, whose heiress she was, had passed into the deeper sleep of death. It is already an often-told story how promptly, on receiving that summons, the young Queen rose and came to meet her first homagers, standing before them in hastily assumed wrappings, her hair hanging loosely, her feet in slippers, but in all her hearing such royally firm composure as deeply impressed those heralds of her greatness, who noticed at the same moment that her eyes were full of tears. This little scene is not only charming and touching, it is very significant, suggesting a combination of such qualities as are not always found united: sovereign good sense and readiness, blending with quick, artless feeling that sought no disguise—such feeling as again betrayed itself when on her ensuing proclamation the new Sovereign had to meet her people face to face, and stood before them at her palace window, composed but sad, the tears running unchecked down her fair pale face.

The Coronation of Queen Victoria