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

CHAPTER IV
44/91

He discussed in detail various public questions, and, in particular, gave the Queen a great deal of advice in the matter of appointments.

This advice was followed.

Lord Melbourne recommended that Lord Heytesbury, who, he said, was an able man, should be made Ambassador at Vienna; and a week later the Queen wrote to the Foreign Secretary urging that Lord Heytesbury, whom she believed to be a very able man, should be employed "on some important mission." Stockmar was very much alarmed.

He wrote a memorandum, pointing out the unconstitutional nature of Lord Melbourne's proceedings and the unpleasant position in which the Queen might find herself if they were discovered by Peel; and he instructed Anson to take this memorandum to the ex-Minister.

Lord Melbourne, lounging on a sofa, read it through with compressed lips.


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