Lord Dalhousie begs permission to take leave of your Majesty, and has the honour to subscribe himself, with deep devotion, your Majesty's most obedient, most humble and faithful Subject and Servant,
Dalhousie.
Footnote 16: It has been, however, freely alleged that the failure to repress acts of insubordination in the administration of Lord Dalhousie was a contributory, if not the direct, cause of the events of 1857. See post, [p. 223], and Walpole's History of England from the Conclusion of the Great War in 1815, ch. xxvii., and authorities there referred to.
Queen Victoria to Viscount Palmerston.
LORD CLARENDON'S INSTRUCTIONS
Buckingham Palace, [? March] 1856.
The Queen returns these letters to Lord Palmerston. She entirely concurs in Lord Palmerston's general views of the question, but at the same time she thinks—as circumstances, which are beyond our control, may so vary from day to day or even from hour to hour—that Lord Clarendon should receive full powers to act according to what may appear to him to be best and wisest at the time, even if it should not be in strict accordance with what we originally contemplated and must naturally wish. Such a power would certainly not be misplaced in Lord Clarendon's hands; his firmness, and his sense of what this country expects, are too well known to lead us to doubt of his permitting anything but what would really be for the best of this country, and for the maintenance of the Alliance.
Queen Victoria to Viscount Palmerston.
THE PEACE NEGOTIATIONS
Buckingham Palace, 6th March 1856.