[Queen Victoria by Lytton Strachey]@TWC D-Link bookQueen Victoria CHAPTER IX 42/64
The celebration of anniversaries grew to be an important branch of it--of birthdays and marriage days and death days, each of which demanded its appropriate feeling, which, in its turn, must be itself expressed in an appropriate outward form.
And the form, of course--the ceremony of rejoicing or lamentation--was stereotyped with the rest: it was part of the collection.
On a certain day, for instance, flowers must be strewn on John Brown's monument at Balmoral; and the date of the yearly departure for Scotland was fixed by that fact.
Inevitably it was around the central circumstance of death--death, the final witness to human mutability--that these commemorative cravings clustered most thickly. Might not even death itself be humbled, if one could recall enough--if one asserted, with a sufficiently passionate and reiterated emphasis, the eternity of love? Accordingly, every bed in which Victoria slept had attached to it, at the back, on the right-hand side, above the pillow, a photograph of the head and shoulders of Albert as he lay dead, surmounted by a wreath of immortelles.
At Balmoral, where memories came crowding so closely, the solid signs of memory appeared in surprising profusion.
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