
The Last Princess
Description
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She would eventually marry Prince Henry of Battenberg in 1885, but only after overcoming her mother's opposition to their union. Beatrice remained Queen Victoria's favourite among her five daughters, and became her mother's constant companion and later her literary executor, spending the years that followed Victoria's death in 1901 editing her mother's journals and voluminous correspondence.
Matthew Dennison's elegantly written biography restores Beatrice to her rightful place as a key figure in the history of the Victorian age, and paints a touching and revealing portrait of the life and family of Britain's second-longest-reigning monarch.
Reviews / Votes
Emotionally sympathetic and beautifully written, its detail meticulous... Confidant and disarmingly impressive debut' * Daily Telegraph * An engrossing tale of a mother and daughter who were also a queen and her subject * Good Book Guide * Beautifully written * Tatler * Readable and empathetic biography * Independent *More details
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Content
- Intro
- By the Same Author
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Author's Note
- Epigraph
- Family Trees
- 1: 'It is a fine child'
- 2. 'The most amusing baby we have had'
- 3: 'Paroxysms of despair'
- 4: 'The bright spot in this dead home'
- 5: 'Beatrice is quite well'
- 6: 'A nervous way of speaking and laughing'
- 7: 'Auntie Beatrice sends you many loves'
- 8: 'Youngest daughters have a duty to widowed mothers'
- 9: 'The flower of the flock'
- 10: 'A good, handy, thoughtful servant'
- 11: 'She is my constant companion'
- 12: 'Dear Beatrice suffered much from rheumatism'
- 13: 'If only she could marry now'
- 14: The Handsomest Family in Europe
- 15: 'Many daughters have acted virtuously, but thou excelleth them all'
- 16: 'The fatal day approaches'
- 17: 'There now burnt a bewitching fiery passion'
- 18: 'Capital fun'
- 19: 'A simple life, with no great incidents'
- 20: 'Blighted happiness'
- 21: 'I have taken up my life again'
- 22: 'I. can hardly realize what life will be like without her'
- 23: 'I have my dear Mother's written instructions'
- 24: 'Osborne. is like the grave of somebody's happiness'
- 25: 'Please God the young couple may be very happy'
- 26: 'Days of overwhelming anxiety'
- 27: 'The older one gets the more one lives in the past'
- 28: 'She struggled so hard to "carry on"'
- Plate Section 1
- Plate Section 2
- Notes
- Chapter One: 'It is a fine child'
- Chapter Two: 'The most amusing baby we have had'
- Chapter Three: 'Paroxysms of despair'
- Chapter Four: 'The bright spot in this dead home'
- Chapter Five: 'Beatrice is quite well'
- Chapter Six: 'A nervous way of speaking and laughing'
- Chapter Seven: 'Auntie Beatrice sends you many loves'
- Chapter Eight: 'Youngest daughters have a duty.'
- Chapter Nine: 'The flower of the flock'
- Chapter Ten: 'A good, handy, thoughtful servant'
- Chapter Eleven: 'She is my constant companion'
- Chapter Twelve: 'Dear Beatrice suffered much.'
- Chapter Thirteen: 'If only she could marry now'
- Chapter Fourteen: The Handsomest Family in Europe
- Chapter Fifteen: 'Many daughters.'
- Chapter Sixteen: 'The fatal day approaches'
- Chapter Seventeen: 'There now burnt a. fiery passion'
- Chapter Eighteen: 'Capital fun'
- Chapter Nineteen: 'A simple life.'
- Chapter Twenty: 'Blighted happiness'
- Chapter Twenty-One: 'I have taken up my life again'
- Chapter Twenty-Two: 'I. can hardly realize.'
- Chapter Twenty-Three: 'I have my dear Mother's. instructions'
- Chapter Twenty-Four: 'Osborne. is like the grave.'
- Chapter Twenty-Five: 'Please God.'
- Chapter Twenty-Six: 'Days of overwhelming anxiety'
- Chapter Twenty-Seven: 'The older one gets.'
- Chapter Twenty-Eight: 'She struggled so hard.'
- Bibliography
- Primary sources
- Secondary sources
- About the Author
- An Invitation from the Publisher
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