[Queen Victoria by Lytton Strachey]@TWC D-Link bookQueen Victoria CHAPTER VII 21/40
"The Queen," she told Lord Granville, "is completely exhausted by the anxiety and suspense, and misses her beloved husband's help, advice, support, and love in an overwhelming manner." She was so worn out by her efforts for peace that she could "hardly hold up her head or hold her pen." England did not go to war, and Denmark was left to her fate; but how far the attitude of the Queen contributed to this result it is impossible, with our present knowledge, to say.
On the whole, however, it seems probable that the determining factor in the situation was the powerful peace party in the Cabinet rather than the imperious and pathetic pressure of Victoria. It is, at any rate, certain that the Queen's enthusiasm for the sacred cause of peace was short-lived.
Within a few months her mind had completely altered.
Her eyes were opened to the true nature of Prussia, whose designs upon Austria were about to culminate in the Seven Weeks' War.
Veering precipitately from one extreme to the other, she now urged her Ministers to interfere by force of arms in support of Austria.
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