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

CHAPTER IX
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Without her the heaped-up banquet of 1890 would have lost its distinctive quality--the comfortable order of the substantial unambiguous dishes, with their background of weighty glamour, half out of sight.
Her own existence came to harmonise more and more with what was around her.

Gradually, imperceptibly, Albert receded.

It was not that he was forgotten--that would have been impossible--but that the void created by his absence grew less agonising, and even, at last, less obvious.
At last Victoria found it possible to regret the bad weather without immediately reflecting that her "dear Albert always said we could not alter it, but must leave it as it was;" she could even enjoy a good breakfast without considering how "dear Albert" would have liked the buttered eggs.

And, as that figure slowly faded, its place was taken, inevitably, by Victoria's own.

Her being, revolving for so many years round an external object, now changed its motion and found its centre in itself.


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