A Brief History of the Private Life of Elizabeth II (31 page)

Soap operas are hugely popular. Their fans number in the millions. People empathise with, sympathise with and emulate the characters. The public does not like the fictitious
families to be too perfect, or always happy and successful. There must be tension, conflict and weakness in order to add excitement and keep blandness and boredom at bay. The plots must contain
familiar elements without becoming tediously predictable. Where there are crises to overcome and problems to solve, viewers are assured that the lives they see on the screen are much like their own
– or perhaps worse, which encourages a feeling of relieved complacency. Like any soap opera, old characters depart and new ones are introduced. In Windsor, as in Walford, children grow up,
problems are resolved, disasters are averted or survived, and the story continues. There are financial crises, generational differences and tragic deaths. It is not, in fact, that the Royal Family
is like a soap opera but that a soap opera is like
them
. Theirs is the story of all of us, writ large. They are what we would like to be, or perhaps don’t want to be, but they are a
mirror-image of us. The ups and downs of the Royal Family ensure interest. If there were no interest, they would be in danger of extinction.

Despite her age the Queen continues to be busier than anyone her years should expect to be, and is actually becoming more so. In 2010 she carried out 444 official engagements, of which 57 were
overseas. In 2011, because of her grandson’s wedding and her husband’s 90th birthday, her diary was even fuller. Her historic visit to the Irish Republic in May served to underline both
her personal magnetism and her continuing value as a symbol of goodwill. When she laid a wreath at a memorial to Irish patriots, her hosts were deeply touched. ‘All Ireland missed a
heartbeat,’ reported the
Irish Independent
, ‘when they saw her take a step back and bow her head.’ She won more respect for beginning a speech with some words in gaelic.
Those who met her described Her Majesty as ‘full of life, full of fun’, and a young woman gushed, with regard to
the Queen and the Duke, that ‘for their age,
they’re really bubbly and chatty’. Her gestures will have been premeditated and her speeches written for her, but the making of them was what counted, and by showing a warm, spontaneous
nature during less formal moments, she added a further dimension to Anglo-Irish relations. ‘Britain’s ultimate diplomatic weapon’ indeed.

In July 2009, Her Majesty – like her father King George and her great-grandmother Victoria – instituted a medal bearing her name. The Elizabeth Cross is not, like the others, an
award for gallantry. It is not given to those who perform heroic deeds but to those – and there are sadly a great many of them – whose next of kin have been killed on operations or by
acts of terrorism. Perhaps the biggest class of recipients will be the wives of servicemen, and the design is therefore distinctly feminine. A brooch rather than a medal, it has no ribbon and is
modest in size. It will prove a highly suitable monument to a reign that has witnessed such tragedy in Northern Ireland, the Middle East and Afghanistan.

The Queen’s own death is something she has always contemplated with equanimity. Devout in her Christian beliefs, she has no qualms about passing on to what Victoria called ‘a more
equal world’, though as Alan Bennett has her remark in his play
An Englishman Abroad
: ‘I suppose, for someone like me, heaven will be a bit of a come-down.’ Plans for her
eventual funeral have been in readiness ever since she came to the throne, though this is standard for all senior royals. They are updated annually by a committee, and known by the code-name
‘London Bridge’. (The Queen Mother’s funeral arrangements were ‘Tay Bridge’, and Prince Philip’s are ‘Forth Bridge’.) Once approved by this, the
details are sent to the groups that would be affected: the City of Westminster, the Ministry of Defence and, naturally, the police. This is necessary because of what would be involved: the inviting
of Heads of State from all over the world, the need to accommodate the international media, the deployment of troops and the closing off of parts
of central London. The
Queen’s executors need not worry over where she will be buried or what the inscription on her tomb will say. All of that has long-since been settled. She has chosen her coffin, and apparently
took great pleasure in fine-tuning the arrangements. It is a curious fact that Royals often do enjoy planning their own funerals. Lord Mountbatten had worked out in exhaustive detail how his was to
be conducted.

When the Queen’s funeral actually takes place – when ‘London Bridge’ is put into effect – the outpouring of affection will be massive. It will be on a scale not
witnessed in Britain since the death of Victoria, and – since we are a more emotional people than the late-Victorians – probably greater. It will be a bigger event than anything in more
recent times except, perhaps, the funeral of Gandhi.

When King George VI died the Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, laid a wreath on which were the simple words: ‘For Valour’. This is the motto engraved on the Victoria Cross. For the
King’s daughter, whose overwhelming personal attribute has been undaunted, persistent personal courage, no lesser tribute would do.

Is Elizabeth II the best monarch Britain has ever had? It is difficult to say, for such a judgement must be conditional. There have been others who fitted the spirit of their age and who
displayed the qualities necessary to lead the country through difficult or even catastrophic times. There is, in any case, no British Mount Rushmore on which the best few are represented. It is
something of a cheap journalistic trick to say that the Queen’s reign has been one of ‘unprecedented change’, for there is no era in modern history that has seen anything
other
than furious, ceaseless change, and contemporaries no doubt always thought of this as ‘unprecedented’. What cannot be denied is that since the Second World War,
Britain’s position as a great power has collapsed with the loss of Empire and the shrinking of its ability to influence world affairs. This has meant that, to an extent no one could have
foreseen, the
burden of maintaining national prestige has fallen upon her shoulders. She has succeeded in carrying that burden for 60 years without making a single error, and
that is a monumental attainment. Her calming influence, her tact and wisdom, her ability to make friends for Britain and to preside over the Commonwealth (an organisation that would almost
certainly not still exist were it not for her devotion) have gained for her, and by extension her country, a continuing status. For the country this will rise and fall according to circumstance.
For Queen Elizabeth it is something that time is very unlikely to erode. She has been blessed by Fortune with a temperament suited to her unique role, a series of good advisors, a supportive
husband who has made his own contribution to history, and a reign that has lasted long enough for her to build great achievements. By any yardstick, and in any aspect of her life and work, she is a
truly great figure, and those of us who are her subjects will always have good reason to be thankful that we have been New Elizabethans. The moment it has ended, her reign will be seen as a golden
age – a time of stability and prosperity and creativity. Rather from awaiting that signal for an outburst of nostalgia, we would be wise to appreciate now the time in which we live.

 
FURTHER READING

Bradford, Sarah –
Elizabeth
, QPD (Quality Paperbacks Direct), London, 1996

Colville, John – T
he New Elizabethans, 1952–1977
, William Collins, 1977

Clark, Brigadier Stanley, OBE –
Palace Diary
, Geo. Harrap, 1958

Crawford, Marion –
Happy and Glorious
, George Newnes, 1953

Crawford, Marion –
The Little Princesses
, Cassell & Co., 1950

Dimbleby, Jonathan –
The Prince of Wales
, Little, Brown & Co., 1994

Duncan, Andrew –
The Reality of Monarchy
, William Heinemann, 1970

Edwards, Anne –
The Queen’s Clothes
, Express/Elm Tree Books, 1976

Fisher, Graham and Heather –
The Queen’s Life
, Robert Hale, 1976

Hall, Unity –
Philip: The Man Behind the Monarchy
, Michael O’Mara Books, 1987

Harris, Leonard –
Long to Reign Over Us?
, William Kimber, 1966

Harris, Marion –
The Queen’s Windsor
, The Kensal Press, 1985

Hoey, Brian –
The Royal Yacht Britannia
, Patrick Stephens Ltd, 1995

Hoey, Brian –
Her Majesty: Fifty Regal Years
, Harper Collins, 2002

Jay, Antony –
Elizabeth R
., BBC Books, 1992

Kenny, Mary –
Crown and Shamrock
, New Island, Ireland, 2009

Kiggell, Marcus, and Blakeway, Denys –
The Queen’s Story
, Headline, 2002

Longford, Elizabeth –
Elizabeth R
., Weidenfeld & Nicholson, 1983

Morrah, Dermot –
The Work of the Queen
, William Kimber, 1958

Nickolls, L.A. –
The Queen’s Majesty
, Macmillan, 1957

Noakes, Michael & Vivien –
The Daily Life of the Queen
, Ebury Press, 2000

Oakey, David –
The Queen’s Year: A Souvenir Album
, Royal Collection Publications, 2010

Piggott, Peter –
Royal Transport
, The Dundrun Group, Toronto, 2005

Pimlott, Ben –
The Queen: A Biography of Elizabeth II
, John Wiley & Sons, 1997

Prokashka, Frank –
The Eagle and the Crown: Americans and the British Monarchy
, Yale University Press, 2008

The Royal Tour: A Souvenir Album
, Royal Collection Publications, 2009

Shawcross, William –
Queen Elizabeth, The Queen Mother: The Official Biography
, Macmillan, 2009

Whiting, Audrey –
Family Royal
, W. H. Allen, 1982

 
INDEX

A

Abdication crisis
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Aga Khan
ref1

Ajca, Mehmet Ali
ref1

Albert, Prince
ref1

Alice, Princess of Greece
ref1

Altrincham, Lord
ref1

Andrew, Prince
see
York, Andrew, Duke of

Andrews, Anthony
ref1

Anglican Church
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Anne, Princess Royal

birth
ref1

and Queen’s Coronation
ref1

passion for riding and eventing
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

education
ref1
,
ref2

character
ref1

marriage
ref1
,
ref2

attempted kidnap of
ref1

created Princess Royal
ref1

It’s A Royal Knockout
ref1

Olympic sportswoman
ref1

divorce
ref1

apartheid
ref1
,
ref2

Armstrong-Jones, Antony
see
Snowdon, Earl of

Ascot Week
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5

ATS (Auxiliary Territorial Service)
ref1

Aureole (Queen’s horse)
ref1

Australia

Queen visits
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

constitutional crisis
ref1

republicanism
ref1

Charles and Diana visit
ref1

B

Badminton
ref1

Baillie-Grohman, Vice-Admiral Harold
ref1

Ball, Ian
ref1

Balmoral
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5

‘Balmoral test’
ref1

Queen’s honeymoon at
ref1

BBC

Christmas broadcasts
ref1
,
ref2

Royal Family
ref1

Elizabeth R
ref1

Diana’s
Panorama
interview
ref1

Beatles
ref1

Beaton, Jim
ref1

Beatrice, Princess
ref1

Benenden
ref1

Benn, Anthony Wedgwood (Tony)
ref1

Bennett, Alan
ref1

Berlin Wall
ref1

Blair, Tony
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Blitz
ref1
,
ref2

Blunt, Anthony
ref1

Boston, Massachusetts
ref1

bouquets
ref1

Brabourne, Lord
ref1

Bradley, Omar
ref1

Brazil
ref1

Britannia Royal Naval College, Dartmouth
ref1

British Empire

Princess Elizabeth’s broadcast to
ref1

dissolution of
ref1

British Guiana
ref1

Broadlands
ref1

Bryan, John
ref1

Buckingham Palace

Princess Elizabeth moves to
ref1

wartime bombing of
ref1
,
ref2

Queen moves to
ref1

garden parties
ref1

Queen’s office
ref1

opens to the public
ref1

daily routine at
ref1

Buckingham Palace Guide Troop
ref1

Burgess, Guy
ref1

Burmese (Queen’s horse)
ref1
,
ref2

C

Callaghan, James
ref1

Cambridge University
ref1
,
ref2

‘Camillagate’
ref1

Canada
ref1

visits to
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

separatist movement
ref1
,
ref2

Casson, Hugh
ref1

Ceausescu, Nicolae
ref1

centenarian telegrams
ref1

Channon, Sir Henry ‘Chips’
ref1

Charles, Prince of Wales

birth
ref1

childhood and upbringing
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

and Queen’s Coronation
ref1

education
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

emergency appendectomy
ref1

closeness to Queen Mother
ref1

sensitivity
ref1
,
ref2

relationship with parents
ref1
,
ref2

investiture as Prince of Wales
ref1
,
ref2

walkabouts
ref1

coordinates Silver Jubilee celebrations
ref1

meets and marries Lady Diana Spencer
ref1

character
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

married unhappiness
ref1

‘war of the Waleses’
ref1
,
ref2

public criticisms of
ref1

Camillagate
ref1

public humiliation
ref1

agrees to pay income tax
ref1

Dimbleby interview
ref1

admits adultery
ref1

divorce
ref1

marries Camilla Parker Bowles
ref1

Charteris, Martin
ref1
,
ref2

Cheam school
ref1

Child, Sir Hill
ref1
,
ref2

Children’s Hour
ref1

Christmas broadcasts
ref1
,
ref2

Churchill, Winston
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
,
ref8

Civil List
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Clarence House
ref1
,
ref2

class politics
ref1

Clinton, Bill
ref1

Cold War
ref1
,
ref2

Colville, Sir John
ref1
,
ref2

Colville, Commander Richard
ref1

Commonwealth
ref1
,
ref2

postwar changes
ref1
,
ref2

Princess’s broadcast to
ref1

Commonwealth Games
ref1

Commonwealth Heads of Government Conference
ref1
,
ref2

Communist Bloc, collapse of
ref1

Concorde
ref1
,
ref2

Connaught, Duke of
ref1

corgis
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Cornwall, Camilla, Duchess of
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5

Coronation Chicken
ref1

Coronation Coach
ref1

coronations

George VI
ref1
,
ref2

Queen
ref1

televising of
ref1

Coty, René
ref1

Court Circular
ref1

Coventry
ref1

Crawford, Marion
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7

Crossman, Richard
ref1

Crown jewels
ref1

D

Dad’s Army
ref1

Daley, Janet
ref1

Davis, George
ref1

debutantes, presentation of
ref1

Derby (horse race)
ref1

Diana, Princess of Wales
ref1
,
ref2

marriage
ref1
,
ref2

qualities
ref1

unhappiness
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

celebrity status
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

friendship with Sarah Ferguson
ref1

Diana: Her True Story
ref1

bulimia and self-harming
ref1

‘war of the Waleses’
ref1
,
ref2

divorce
ref1

ex-Royal
ref1
,
ref2

Panorama
interview
ref1

public affection for
ref1

death of
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4

Dimbleby, Jonathan
ref1

divorce, public attitudes towards
ref1
,
ref2

Douglas-Home, Alec
ref1

Dunfermline (Queen’s horse)
ref1

dynastic marriages
ref1

E

Eden, Anthony
ref1

Edward the Confessor
ref1

Edward, Prince
see
Wessex, Edward, Earl of

Edward, Prince of Wales
see
Windsor, Edward, Duke of

Edward VII
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4

Edward VII
(TV)
ref1

Edward VIII
see
Windsor, Edward, Duke of

Eisenhower, Dwight D.
ref1
,
ref2

Eliot, T.S.
ref1

Elizabeth I
ref1
,
ref2

Elizabeth II, Queen

CHARACTER & ATTITUDES

charm
ref1
,
ref2

economy of speech and emotion
ref1
,
ref2

mystique
ref1

sense of service
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4

dutifulness
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5

tidiness
ref1
,
ref2

wit and humour
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4

awareness of protocol
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5

shyness and reserve
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5

non-confrontational nature
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4

professionalism
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

apparent aloofness
ref1
,
ref2

dislike of facial hair on men
ref1
,
ref2

considerate of staff
ref1
,
ref2

hospitality
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

voice and diction
ref1
,
ref2

talent for mimicry
ref1

thriftiness
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

apolitical
ref1
,
ref2

political awareness
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

courage
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6

ability to judge the public mood
ref1
,
ref2

timelessness
ref1
,
ref2

fixed tastes and habits
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

food and drink preferences
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4

Christian beliefs
ref1

FINANCES

Civil List
ref1
,
ref2

Philip’s comments on
ref1
,
ref2

income tax exemption
ref1
,
ref2

Parliamentary Enquiries
ref1

public criticisms of
ref1

Queen’s personal wealth
ref1

Windsor Castle fire
ref1

agrees to pay income tax
ref1

decommissioning of
Britannia
ref1

INTERESTS

outdoor activities
ref1

politics
ref1
,
ref2

reading
ref1

horses
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
,
ref8

dogs
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

jigsaw puzzles and crosswords
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

television
ref1

art and antiques
ref1
,
ref2

PERSONAL LIFE

clothes and style
see
wardrobe

family tragedies and adversities
ref1

never interviewed
ref1

birth
ref1
,
ref2

early public interest in
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

early years
ref1

first public appearance
ref1

biographies
ref1
,
ref2

‘Lilibet’
ref1

family homes
ref1

childhood amuseuments
ref1
,
ref2

education and training
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5

and the Abdication crisis
ref1
,
ref2

childhood expeditions
ref1

moves to Buckingham Palace after father’s accession
ref1

and George VI’s coronation
ref1

wartime life
ref1

first broadcast
ref1

theatricals
ref1

Colonel of the Grenadier Guards
ref1

Councillor of State
ref1
,
ref2

joins the ATS
ref1

driving abilities
ref1
,
ref2

first public speech
ref1

marriage speculation
ref1
,
ref2

21st birthday
ref1

‘Commonwealth’ speech
ref1

first married home
ref1

birth of Charles
ref1

in Malta
ref1

birth of Anne
ref1

first transatlantic flight
ref1

and Margaret’s relationship with Townsend
ref1

birth of Andrew
ref1

birth of Edward
ref1

Christmas celebrations
ref1

church attendance
ref1

motherhood beliefs
ref1

Silver Jubilee
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4

Scottish cruise
ref1

grandchildren
ref1

good health
ref1
,
ref2

intruder at Buckingham Palace
ref1

annus horribilis
ref1

appearance
ref1
,
ref2

and the death of Diana
ref1

50th wedding anniversary
ref1
,
ref2

Golden Jubilee
ref1
,
ref2

80th birthday celebrations
ref1

daily routine
ref1

president of Sandringham Women’s Institute
ref1

correspondence
ref1

‘London Bridge’ (funeral arrangements)
ref1

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