This revealing selection from the Queen's papers provides essential clues to her character, tracing her development from shy princess to the formidable and uncompromising grande dame of Europe. How did she feel on hearing that she had become queen? How close was she to her eldest grandchild, who became Kaiser Wilhelm II? Why was she so reluctant to yield the crown to her son and heir, the future King Edward VII? What did she really think of Gladstone and Disraeli? These questions and many more are answered clearly and candidly in the Queen's own words. Victoria's passionate adoration of Prince Albert is evident throughout her journals, and later extracts give a touching insight into her feelings of loneliness and susceptibility after his death. Illustrated with some of the Queen's own drawings, this book presents an absorbing account of one of the most remarkable personalities of the nineteenth century.
The expansion and industrial growth marked reign of Victoria, queen of Great Britain and Ireland from 1837 and empress of India from 1877, and her strict moral code influenced 19th-century society.
Alexandrina Victoria from 20 June 1837 until her death. People know her 63 years and seven months as the Victorian era, a period of cultural, political, scientific, and military change within the United Kingdom. She was the last monarch of the house of Hanover.
Victoria wrote an average of 2,500 words a day during her adult life. From July 1832, she kept a detailed journal, which eventually encompassed 122 volumes, until her death. After death of Victoria, survivors appointed Beatrice, her youngest daughter and a princess, as her literary executor. Beatrice transcribed and edited the diaries, covering accession of her mother onward, and she burned the originals in the process. Despite this destruction, much of the diaries still exist. In addition to edited copy of Beatrice, Lord Reginald Baliol Brett Esher transcribed the volumes from 1832 to 1861 before Beatrice destroyed them.
I was mostly struck by how very "Un-Victorian" Queen Victoria seemed to me, especially in her later years.
It is clear she does not much care for babies or motherhood, and she is embittered by having to be weighed down with pregnancy and breastfeeding when she'd much rather go and fulfill her duties as Queen. In a letter to her daughter, who is about to give birth for the first time, she writes, for example:
"What you say of the pride of giving life to an immortal soul is very fine, dear, but I own I cannot enter into that; I think much more of our being like a cow or a dog at such moments."
Her exchanges reveal a strong and brilliant woman, passionate in youth, embittered in mature age, but always most conscientious in her duties toward her country. I really loved the exchanges between her and her uncle Leopold, King of Belgium, in her early years. I learned a few things from him! All the letters between her and her family members were very interesting to me.
I love love love my girl Queen Victoria! It was wonderful to read her own words and, through them, observe her maturing from a young, sometimes silly, impressionable Queen to a major force to be reckoned with on the European stage.
A very interesting book. Victoria, who became Queen at the age of 17, wrote over 2500 words a day almost her entire life! Her writing is fascinating, and I loved correlating her letters and journal entries with the history I know, but I ended up learning a lot more history through these writings. I started it when the second season of the PBS series "Victoria" began last month, and I suspect that there is a lot of dramatic fiction in the TV series. For example, she mentioned her visits to Scotland frequently, but she never mentioned getting lost there with Albert and spending the night in a farmer's hut. Still, both the series and the book are wholly enjoyable, and I recommend the book to anyone who wants to get to know Victoria better, from her own words.
A fascinating collection of excerpts of Queen Victoria's letter and journal. I glossed over the duller letters to and about the politics and reveled in the more personal writing about family and life and her emotions.
Quite an interesting read, it's always nice to see the letters/journals of these historical figures. My complaint would be that the editor does not provide a lot of historical background information, which makes some of the letters/ journal entries difficult to understand.
3.5 stars. Queen Victoria and Prince Albert's love story is just inspiring to me. I first heard about them when I rented the movie "The Young Victoria." It said that movie was based on the Queen's actual journals. I set out to find a book where I could read the Queen's own words about her and Prince Albert's life and thus found this book. I also quite enjoyed the entries about her children and the letters written to her children. My only complaint was that I wish the book was entirely chronological as opposed to being arranged in chapters. Those chapters were chronological, but then the next chapter would jump back a few years that I had already read in the previous chapter, so it would get a bit confusing. I entered quite a few quotations from the book on the detials page that I thought were so thought provoking and poignant.
Queen Victoria wrote an average of 2500 words per day her entire adult life. If all her writing was to be published it would take up over 700 volumes (60 million words). Hibbert did an admirable job of selecting letters and journal entries which would enlighten us the most regarding her reign and her personal views. There was much insight about her family relationships, but I have a great deal of trouble keeping track of them all! (My fault since I'm not well-versed (yet!) in British history and politics.) I will continue to read additional books to learn more about her family and of that time period. It's fascinating!