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

CHAPTER VIII
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"The Almighty," he wrote, "seems to sustain and spare me for some purpose of His own, deeply unworthy as I know myself to be.

Glory be to His name." The Queen, however, did not share her new Minister's view of the Almighty's intentions.

She could not believe that there was any divine purpose to be detected in the programme of sweeping changes which Mr.Gladstone was determined to carry out.

But what could she do?
Mr.
Gladstone, with his daemonic energy and his powerful majority in the House of Commons, was irresistible; and for five years (1869-74) Victoria found herself condemned to live in an agitating atmosphere of interminable reform--reform in the Irish Church and the Irish land system, reform in education, reform in parliamentary elections, reform in the organisation of the Army and the Navy, reform in the administration of justice.

She disapproved, she struggled, she grew very angry; she felt that if Albert had been living things would never have happened so; but her protests and her complaints were alike unavailing.
The mere effort of grappling with the mass of documents which poured in upon her in an ever-growing flood was terribly exhausting.


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