The Lost Diary of Queen Victoria’s Undermaid. Alex Parsons
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Название: The Lost Diary of Queen Victoria’s Undermaid

Автор: Alex Parsons

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Книги для детей: прочее

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isbn: 9780008191443

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СКАЧАТЬ Spring 1837

       Buckingham Palace

      Made it! What can one say about my new boss, our esteemed monarch, William one-vee? Well, to put it kindly, our dear King looks about a hundred years old and his eyes stick out like a frog’s. He has zillions of children by an actress called Mrs Jordan and none at all by his wife, the rather dotty Queen Adelaide. Setting an example to the lower orders indeed!

      The heir to the throne of England is his niece, Princess Victoria, who lives with her pushy mama in Kensington Palace. Princess Victoria is exactly the same age as me and she keeps a diary. I think this is an omen.

      Meanwhile down at the palace laundry I get to wash the king’s drawers. They are not a pretty sight. He has three hundred pairs of fine linen underpants with holes in the front so he doesn’t have to take all his clothes off when he goes for a piddle. The Queen has the same number of roomy drawers, trimmed with pintucks and lace.

      As everybody knows, ladies’ drawers are not stitched together, otherwise we’d have to rummage about in an unseemly way under layers of petticoats every time nature called.

      The head laundry maid told me that pants were named after a Christian martyr called Saint Pantalone. I have to take an interest in these things or I’d go mad.

       Buckingham Palace

      It’s been all go here. King William died on the 20th June, and now we have a new monarch. A mere slip of a girl (that’s a polite way of saying she’s short). She’s the same age as me but she’s ruling the country and I’m washing the sheets. There is no justice.

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      All the talk in the servants’ hall is who the young Queen will marry. To my mind she seems a little over-friendly with Lord Melbourne, her Prime Minister, in spite of the fact he’s as old as the hills. According to the underfootman, he’s had a lot to put up with in his life. His wife, Lady Caroline Lamb, was completely unhinged and got up to all kinds of wild things with a very naughty poet called Lord Byron. The under-footman was trying to demonstrate some of the wilder things to me, when the housekeeper came in. She was not convinced that we were only playing at being Lord Byron and Lady Lamb, thus demonstrating our loyalty to Lord Melbourne.

      I have been told to watch my step. The underfootman is called Brian and he is very handsome.

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       Buckingham Palace

      What a day! The gun salutes started at 4am and no one’s had a wink of sleep since. Today the Queen was crowned in Westminster Abbey. It has been a wonderful day, the whole of the country has taken the young Queen to their hearts. Not surprising, considering what our last three kings were like. Sir Somebody Something described them as ‘an imbecile, a profligate and a buffoon’. I’ve asked around and apparently that means a madman, a ladies’ man, and a fool. Why don’t people say what they mean?

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      Apparently the Coronation didn’t go quite as smoothly as planned, and that’s probably because nobody planned it. Nobody understood the long, boring service and no-one noticed when the Archbishop turned over two pages at once.

      All the Lords of the Realm had to go up to the Queen and kiss her hand. Lord Rolle, who is eighty-two and very frail, tottered up the altar steps, overbalanced with the weight of his robes, and fell over backwards. It’s a day he’ll not forget in a hurry!

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      A couple of the Lords started in on the champagne and cucumber sandwiches before the ceremony was over and were seen staggering about with their coronets over their noses and their stockings wrinkled round their ankles. One day, someone’s going to invent stockings that stay up, just you wait and see.

      After the Coronation celebrations were over, the new Queen rushed up the stairs to her room in the Palace to give her little spaniel, Dash, a bath. There’s no telling how excitement takes people, is there? I think, if I’d just been crowned Queen, I’d be bathing in milk, swigging down the champers and inviting all my friends over to party, party, party.

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       Buckingham Palace

      After all the excitement, life goes on. I don’t get to see much of Queen Vic, actually. She doesn’t visit the laundry and I’m not exactly invited to tea in the Grand Saloon. Most of what I know I get from QV’s Maids of the Bedchamber when they bring me the hampers of dirty linen to scrub. It’s the gossip – and Brian the underfootman – that keeps me going. Take this week for instance. QV is not having a good time.

      She’s got a problem with her mother, the Duchess, who is plotting behind her daughter’s back to be the power behind the throne, along with her ‘financial adviser’ (ho ho) Sir John Conroy. QV has started a rumour that Sir John is having an affair with one of the Ladies in Waiting. So you can imagine the atmosphere at the dinner table.

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      She’s got a problem with her relations, who all turn out to be kings of Holland and Belgium and other such places, and all want favours from her while they fight with each other.

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      She’s got a problem with her weight. She’s getting distinctly plump and being so short, it shows. Her drawers are a size larger than they used to be. I should know. Lord M is trying to get her to take some exercise, but she says she won’t and queens don’t do what they don’t want to do. She may live to regret this.

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      She’s got an even bigger problem with Lord Melbourne. The thing is she’s so dependent on him. She thinks everybody at the Palace (apart from Lord M СКАЧАТЬ