[Queen Victoria by Lytton Strachey]@TWC D-Link book
Queen Victoria

CHAPTER II
18/60

The Princess's reply has been praised as an early example of a tact which was afterwards famous.

But she was a very truthful child, and perhaps it was her genuine opinion.
III In 1827 the Duke of York, who had found some consolation for the loss of his wife in the sympathy of the Duchess of Rutland, died, leaving behind him the unfinished immensity of Stafford House and L200,000 worth of debts.

Three years later George IV also disappeared, and the Duke of Clarence reigned in his stead.

The new Queen, it was now clear, would in all probability never again be a mother; the Princess Victoria, therefore, was recognised by Parliament as heir-presumptive; and the Duchess of Kent, whose annuity had been doubled five years previously, was now given an additional L10,000 for the maintenance of the Princess, and was appointed regent, in case of the death of the King before the majority of her daughter.

At the same time a great convulsion took place in the constitution of the State.


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