[Queen Victoria by Lytton Strachey]@TWC D-Link bookQueen Victoria CHAPTER VIII 2/46
Mr.Gladstone had been the disciple of her revered Peel, and had won the approval of Albert; Mr.Disraeli had hounded Sir Robert to his fall with hideous virulence, and the Prince had pronounced that he "had not one single element of a gentleman in his composition." Yet she regarded Mr.Gladstone with a distrust and dislike which steadily deepened, while upon his rival she lavished an abundance of confidence, esteem, and affection such as Lord Melbourne himself had hardly known. Her attitude towards the Tory Minister had suddenly changed when she found that he alone among public men had divined her feelings at Albert's death.
Of the others she might have said "they pity me and not my grief;" but Mr.Disraeli had understood; and all his condolences had taken the form of reverential eulogies of the departed.
The Queen declared that he was "the only person who appreciated the Prince." She began to show him special favour; gave him and his wife two of the coveted seats in St.George's Chapel at the Prince of Wales's wedding, and invited him to stay a night at Windsor.
When the grant for the Albert Memorial came before the House of Commons, Disraeli, as leader of the Opposition, eloquently supported the project.
He was rewarded by a copy of the Prince's speeches, bound in white morocco, with an inscription in the royal hand.
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