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Very soon the public learned that there was to be a double wedding at Kew.

The Duke of Clarence had been accepted by Princess Adelaide of Saxe-Coburg Meiningen who was very beautiful and thirty years younger than he was, so it seemed likely that they would be able- to provide the country with its heir. But just in case they were unable to, the Duke of Kent had chosen for his bride Mary Louisa Victoria, a widow of the Prince of Leiningen.

In the Queen’s drawing room overlooking the gardens, the double wedding took place— two middle-aged bride grooms with young wives; at least Mary Louisa Victoria was not old and Adelaide was thirty years younger than the Duke of Clarence.

It was to Clarence and Adelaide that everyone looked for the heir; neither of the husbands was in love with his wife nor the wives with their husbands; the great purpose behind these marriages was to get an heir quickly, and they knew it.

They were fired with ambition, all four of them; and when the Duke of Kent looked at his comely plump widow he was certain that he and she had as much chance as William and this pretty young girl from Saxe-Coburg Meiningen.

And the Prince Regent as he led the congratulations when the ceremony was over was sentimentally dreaming of a bride with whom he would defeat the ambitions of these four people; a beautiful woman— a combination of Perdita Robinson, Maria Fitzherbert, Lady Jersey and Lady Hertford— yet subtly different from any of them— young, tender, adoring. He would marry her and together they would produce a son who would be heir to the throne.

There was time yet if only— But here he was back to that perpetual and frustrating matter.

He must be rid of her soon.

She reasoned with Elizabeth but Elizabeth for once opposed the Queen who at length agreed because she knew that the Regent would be on his sister’s side and would say that if she wished to marry she should do so.

So the marriage took place.

The ceremony in the throne room was very formal and the Queen felt very sad to lose yet another daughter.

The Prince Regent was unable to attend the ceremony because he was ill, and there was no doubt that Charlotte’s death had upset him greatly. He would be well again, thought the Queen, if only he could be rid of that odious woman. If it were his marriage we were celebrating to a young and fertile woman how pleased I should be! Marriage was in the air. The Princesses saw no reason why their brothers should be married and not they. All this time, they had lived under the direction of the Queen, not allowed to stray very far from the closest supervision as though they were children. Their youth was past. Charlotte had married the Prince of Würtemberg and in spite of the mystery which surrounded her husband’s first wife appeared to be living happily; Amelia had died at the age of twenty-seven, unmarried.

It was so unfair, said the Princesses, never to have been given a chance of marriage.

Mary announced that she would marry her cousin, the Duke of Gloucester. He was a little simple and known as ‘Silly Billy’ but she did not care about that. She was past forty anyway and was going to seize this last chance.

The Prince Regent had never been averse to his sisters marrying. Had he been in control earlier he would have done his best to find husbands for them. It was the King who had hated the thought of their marrying. So now no obstacle was put in her way.

Princess Elizabeth was determined not to be left out and when an opportunity came from Homburg she made up her mind to take it. The Prince of Homburg was very fat— but Elizabeth was by no means slim. ‘And at least, she said to Mary, ‘he is a husband.’

The Queen was against the marriage. She saw her daughters disappearing one by one. She had grown so accustomed to having them all about her; and they had made up to a very large extent for the trouble her sons had caused her.

The waters of Bath had done little to alleviate the Queen’s illness and although she had attempted to ignore this during the various marriage celebrations she knew that she was very ill indeed.

I’m getting old, she thought. I’m seventy-five and have had my life. I must expect now to prepare myself to go. She wished that she could have been with the King. He would have been most sympathetic. But he, poor sad man, was living through his clouded days at Windsor and he would not understand if she talked to him. And if he did, it would only upset him.

He never loved me, she thought; but he had some affection for me. He respected me. He knew that like him I tried to do my duty. She thought she would go to Windsor in any case because she would like to be near him; but first of all she would go to Kew. Dear little Kew, the palace which she had loved more than any because it had been like home to her. Yes, it was fitting that she should first go and say goodbye to Kew.

She was comforted in some degree to be there again— the dear Green and the Strand and those houses where the members of the household had lodged because there had been no room for them in the Queen’s Lodge. Oh, those little rooms, the numerous cupboards and cubby holes! How draughty it had been in the passages and the rooms had always been overheated. The chapel had been icy too. In the winter everyone had caught cold there. Why did she love the place? Because it was unlike a royal palace, because it was homely, because it would always be ‘dear little Kew’. Here— the children had been young.

The Prince of Wales— a bad boy— creeping out of his apartments after dusk to meet young women in the garden. He had always been a source of delight and trouble to her: her first-born, her, favourite. Now, thank God, they had at last come to an understanding.

She would be loath to leave Kew. She would not say this to anyone but she felt that if she did so, she would never see it again.

She was glad that the Princess Royal seemed to be making a success of her marriage, and Elizabeth wrote happily from Homburg. The girls should have been married before. But the King would not have it and she must confess that she encouraged him in this because she wanted them about her. The sons, they had been unable to control. They had gone off and had their matrimonial adventures— disastrous ones— but the girls had been denied those opportunities. And now Elizabeth and Mary as well as Princess Royal were married, but none of them young, It was no use regretting now. What was done was done.

She was ill— seriously ill at dear little Kew. She was aware of her daughters, Mary and Augusta, constantly at her bedside. The Prince Regent came too. He held her hand and wept, and she was happy.

More than anyone in the world she had loved him. The period when they had hated each other and had worked so violently against each other seemed now like a temporary madness which had come to her and to which he had responded, It was love really, she told herself. I wanted him to love me and I was jealous because he loved others more, and so I pretended to hate him and I behaved as though I did. But that was all past and now he was with her, at her bedside, holding her hand.

Sophia was not there because Sophia was ill. Otherwise she would have been with her sisters.

Her sons came to visit her and she was vaguely aware of them: the new bridegrooms whose wives might well give birth to an heir to the throne.

But in her heart she hoped George would be the one to do this. If they could get rid of that woman— She knew how that matter occupied the mind of her dearest one.

All through the week the Prince Regent’s carriage was seen going to and from Kew, and it was recognized that the Queen was nearing her end; and on a dark November day her family gathered in her bedroom for the physicians had warned them that the end was very near.