Her Majesty the Queen. From a photograph by Hughes & Mullins.
                                From Rosa Nouchette Carey, 
                                    Twelve Notable Good Women of the XIX
                                        Century.

Queen Victoria

Milestones

1819
Birth
Kensington Palace
1837
Vocation
Accession
1840
Marriage
Wedded to Prince Albert
1861
Ordeal
Death of Prince Albert
1887
Recognition
Golden Jubilee
1901
Death

Queen Victoria: Performing Mixed Emotions Again and AgainRead more...

Alison Booth

Rosa Nouchette Carey begins her four-chapter, seventy-seven page biography of "Her Majesty the Queen" with excessive signals of authority. After redundant chapter titles, "Childhood and Youth," "Victoria the Good," comes an epigraph by Wordsworth, praising the auspicious birth of Victoria. It is actually an excerpt—ten tetrameter lines of the "Quartet"—of Wordsworth's "Ode on the Installation of His Royal Highness Prince Albert as Chancellor of the University of Cambridge in 1847," a kind of fairytale musical (15). The "Quartet" ends with Time's prophecy that Victoria will be that rare sovereign who enjoys the blessing of love. Wordsworth's occasional poem, a court masque guided by divine allegories, anticipates the spirit of this ponderous, royalist biography. But this is also a biography set in recent national history, as signalled by a second epigraph, from the historian Thomas Macaulay:

Interpretive version of Rosa Nouchette Carey's short biography informed by essays in Remaking Queen Victoria.