Elizabeth the queen, p.62

Elizabeth the Queen, page 62

 

Elizabeth the Queen
Select Voice:
Brian (uk)
Emma (uk)  
Amy (uk)
Eric (us)
Ivy (us)
Joey (us)
Salli (us)  
Justin (us)
Jennifer (us)  
Kimberly (us)  
Kendra (us)
Russell (au)
Nicole (au)



Larger Font   Reset Font Size   Smaller Font  

  18. “my little lady”: Dean, p. 60.

  19. “I like my rooms to look really lived in”: Morrow, p. 65.

  20. “a bureaucrat’s dream”: Turner, p. 46.

  21. “rather personal to oneself”: E II R documentary.

  22. “a piece of 300 to 900 words”: Government chief whip to Mr. R. T. Armstrong, Feb. 22, 1975, National Archives, Kew.

  23. “low wattage”: Mr. Bernard Weatherill, His Humble Duty [to HMTQ], Parliamentary Proceedings from Monday 14th February to Friday 18th February, 1972, National Archives, Kew.

  24. “as well informed”: Morrow, p. 158.

  25. Michael Adeane estimated: Pimlott, p. 401. 72 “If I missed one once”: Confidential interview.

  26. “my way of meeting people”: E II R documentary.

  27. she reverted to her nursery ways: Morrow, p. 92.

  28. “She is not particular”: Confidential interview.

  29. In her first gesture of modernity: Jonathan Dimbleby, The Prince of Wales: A Biography, p. 22.

  30. “a final romp”: Dean, p. 172.

  31. “Why isn’t Mummy”: Ibid., p. 173.

  32. “For a real action man”: McDonald, The Duke documentary.

  33. “wielded over the Sovereign”: G. Lytton Strachey, Queen Victoria, p. 93.

  34. “The Monarchy changed”: Brandreth, p. 215.

  35. “Refugee husband”: Ibid., p. 147.

  36. “Philip was constantly being squashed”: Ibid., p. 218.

  37. “My father was considered pink”: Patricia Brabourne interview.

  38. “the House of Mountbatten now reigned”: Hugo Vickers, Elizabeth the Queen Mother, p. 311.

  39. “She was very young”: Patricia Brabourne interview.

  40. “I am the only man”: Pimlott, p. 185.

  41. “I’m nothing but a bloody amoeba”: Hugh Massingberd, Daydream Believer: Confessions of a Hero-Worshipper, p. 148.

  42. “that old drunk Churchill”: Ibid.

  43. “Churchill never forgave my father”: Patricia Brabourne interview.

  44. “save her a lot of time”: McDonald, The Duke documentary.

  45. “would submit entirely”: Dimbleby, p. 59.

  46. “she was not indifferent so much as detached”: Ibid.

  47. “her struggle to be a worthy head of state”: William Deedes interview (Jan. 20, 1998).

  48. “In the first five years she was more formal”: Confidential interview.

  49. she once attended a ball: New York Times, Feb. 8, 1996.

  50. “How much nicer”: Nancy Mitford, Love from Nancy: The Letters of Nancy Mitford, edited by Charlotte Mosley, p. 291.

  51. “must seem very blank”: Bradford, p. 169.

  52. “engulfed by great black clouds”: Victoria Glendinning, Edith Sitwell: A Unicorn Among Lions, p. 299.

  53. a small run-down castle: Author’s observations and tour by Nancy McCarthy.

  54. “How sad it looks”: Aberdeen Press and Journal, Jan. 9, 2009.

  55. “escape there occasionally”: Shawcross, QEQM, p. 670.

  56. “The point of human life”: Ibid., p. 769.

  57. “the great mother figure”: Beaton, Strenuous Years, p. 147.

  58. “like a great musical comedy actress”: Roy Strong interview.

  59. “pink cushiony cloud”: Cecil Beaton, The Unexpurgated Beaton: The Cecil Beaton Diaries as He Wrote Them, introduction by Hugo Vickers, p. 52.

  60. “They were great confidantes”: Dame Frances Campbell-Preston interview.

  61. “an Edwardian lady”: Ibid.

  62. “A lot of the importance”: Confidential interview.

  63. “The Queen Mother was always”: Confidential interview.

  64. The two women deferred to each other: Margaret Rhodes interview.

  65. “very much the Sovereign”: Nicolson, Vita and Harold, p. 405.

  66. “millions outside Westminster Abbey”: The Queen’s First Christmas Broadcast, Dec. 25, 1952, Official Website of the British Monarchy.

  67. “henceforth have, hold and enjoy”: Longford, Elizabeth R, p. 194.

  68. “not those of a busy”: Beaton, Strenuous Years, p. 120.

  69. “We took it for granted”: Gay Charteris interview.

  70. “quite inappropriate for a King”: Bradford, p. 184, citing 98th and 99th Conclusions, 18 and 20 Nov. 1952, National Archives, Kew.

  71. “What a smug stinking lot”: Michael Bloch, The Secret File of the Duke of Windsor, p. 279.

  72. “like a phoenix-time”: Pimlott, p. 193.

  73. “the emblem of the state”: Washington Post, June 3, 1953.

  74. She met several times: Canon John Andrew interview.

  75. “I’ll be all right”: Longford, Elizabeth R, p. 199.

  76. “All the deposed monarchs are staying”: Mini Rhea, with Frances Spatz Leighton, I Was Jacqueline Kennedy’s Dressmaker, p. 162.

  77. “and that takes a bit of arranging”: Deane Heller and David Heller, Jacqueline Kennedy, p. 81.

  78. “a great big, warm personality”: Beaton, The Strenuous Years, p. 143.

  79. “swathed in purple silk”: Baltimore Sun, June 3, 1953.

  80. “She was relaxed”: Anne Glenconner interview.

  81. “You must be feeling nervous”: Shawcross, Q and C, p. 182.

  82. “Ready, girls?”: Anne Glenconner interview.

  83. “plucked indiscriminately”: Baltimore Sun, June 3, 1953.

  84. “backwards and forwards”: Beaton, The Strenuous Years, p. 144.

  85. she gave a slight neck bow: British Pathé Coronation newsreel, Part 1, June 3, 1953.

  86. “Lord Cholmondeley had to do”: Anne Glenconner interview.

  87. “It was the most poignant moment”: Ibid.

  88. “Some small interest was generated”: Baltimore Sun, June 3, 1953.

  89. “The real significance”: John Andrew interview.

  90. “gentleness in levying taxes”: British Pathé Coronation newsreel, Part 2, June 3, 1953.

  91. “intense expectancy”: Beaton, The Strenuous Years, p. 144.

  92. “Look, it’s Mummy!”: Associated Press, June 2, 1953.

  93. “sadness combined with pride”: Beaton, The Strenuous Years, p. 143.

  94. “She used to say”: Frances Campbell-Preston interview.

  95. “never once did she lower”: Associated Press, June 2, 1953.

  96. “Oh ma’am you look so sad”: Anne Glenconner interview.

  97. “as a simple communicant”: Beaton, The Strenuous Years, p. 145.

  98. Before leaving the chapel: Anne Glenconner interview.

  99. “We were all running”: Ibid.

  100. “anchored them in her arms”: Beaton, The Strenuous Years, p. 147.

  101. “Elizabethan explorers”: William Manchester, Baltimore Sun, June 3, 1952.

  102. “the Coronation has unified”: Earl Warren, governor of California, to Dwight D. Eisenhower, report on coronation, June 30, 1953, Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library and Museum.

  103. Future prime minister John Major: William Shawcross, Queen and Country, BBC Four-Part Documentary Series, 2002.

  104. “It was a thrilling time”: Sir Paul McCartney interview.

  105. “he was never anointed”: Jeremy Paxman, On Royalty: A Very Polite Inquiry into Some Strangely Related Families, p. 125.

  106. “television lunch”: Baltimore Sun, June 3, 1953; Paul Johnson, Brief Lives: An Intimate and Very Personal Portrait of the Twentieth Century, p. 111.

  FIVE: Affairs of State

  1. “She would pull on all sorts”: Jean, the Countess of Carnarvon, interview.

  2. The Queen was driven down: Universal International Newsreel, June 6, 1953.

  3. “marvelous sport”: Longford, Elizabeth R, p. 239.

  4. “seemed to be just as delighted”: BBC Sport, June 2, 2003.

  5. “Winston of course”: Longford, Elizabeth R, p. 214.

  6. “Oh, racing”: Shawcross, Q and C, p. 70.

  7. “they spent a lot of the audience”: Mary Soames interview.

  8. “I could not hear”: Lascelles, p. 430.

  9. “mingled, with perfect facility”: Lytton Strachey, p. 33.

  10. “Not a bit of it”: Nicolson, Vita and Harold, p. 405.

  11. “What did you think”: Longford, Elizabeth R, p. 213.

  12. “in a frightful fury”: Ibid.

  13. “If it was a case of teaching”: Mary Soames interview.

  14. “rather rough on the Poles”: Gilbert, p. 810.

  15. “the strain”: Winston and Clementine Churchill, Winston and Clementine: The Personal Letters of the Churchills, edited by Mary Soames, p. 569.

  16. “fatigue”: Ibid., p. 570.

  17. writing a lighthearted letter: Gilbert, p. 852.

  18. “They want you”: Ibid., p. 884.

  19. “prevaricated continuously”: Clarissa Eden, Clarissa Eden: A Memoir from Churchill to Eden, p. 142.

  20. “a devilish bad equerry”: Lascelles, p. 211.

  21. “It is not necessary for you”: Longford, Elizabeth R, p. 119. 96 “She would not listen ever”: Mary Clayton interview.

  22. “Margaret was an awful tease”: Ibid.

  23. “The Queen never shows off”: Kenneth Rose interview.

  24. “unusual, intense beauty”: Kenneth Rose, Intimate Portraits of Kings, Queens and Courtiers, p. 273.

  25. “in a black hole”: Pimlott, p. 199.

  26. “deeply in love”: Lascelles, p. 398.

  27. “formidable obstacles”: Ibid.

  28. “fluff”: BBC, “On This Day,” October 31, 1955, news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday.

  29. “This is most important!”: Lascelles, p. 399.

  30. “employment abroad as soon as possible”: Ibid.

  31. “stood on the sidelines”: Obituary of Peter Townsend, The Independent, June 21, 1995.

  32. “the Queen, after consulting”: Lascelles, p. 400.

  33. He was scheduled to retire: Ibid., p. 405.

  34. “She strongly believed”: Elizabeth Anson interview.

  35. By one accounting: Longford, Elizabeth R, p. 206.

  36. “She sees herself fused”: Brian Mulroney interview.

  37. Sir Philip Moore, her private secretary: Oliver Everett interview.

  38. “The transformation of the Crown”: The Queen’s Speech at the Luncheon in the Guildhall to mark her Silver Jubilee, Tuesday 7th June 1977, Buckingham Palace Press Office.

  39. the Queen supervised the creation: Daily Telegraph, June 23, 2009.

  40. “looked so young and vulnerable”: Coward, p. 222.

  41. “the good of the world”: Gilbert, p. 942.

  42. Otherwise, Elizabeth II watched: Gaumont British Newsreel (Reuters), “Fiji Hails the Queen.”

  43. “Didn’t you LOVE this?”: Pamela Hicks interview.

  44. “The Queen suffered through that”: Ibid.

  45. “the Crown is not merely”: Queen Elizabeth II Christmas Broadcast, Dec. 25, 1953, Official Website of the British Monarchy.

  46. Two keen listeners: Vickers, Elizabeth the Queen Mother, p. 329.

  47. “He is intensely affectionate”: Shawcross, QEQM, p. 692.

  48. by one count, three quarters: Shawcross, Q and C, p. 59.

  49. “world’s sweetheart”: Pimlott, p. 222.

  50. “The level of adulation”: Brandreth, p. 181.

  51. “How moving & humble making”: Shawcross, QEQM, p. 691.

  52. “I remember her complaining”: Pamela Hicks interview.

  53. “never … a superfluous gesture”: Beaton, The Strenuous Years, p. 144. 103 “she has no intermediate”: Pimlott, p. 250.

  54. “The trouble is that unlike”: Daily Mail, Sept. 16, 2008, excerpt from Killing My Own Snakes, by Ann Leslie.

  55. “Don’t look so sad, sausage”: Longford, Elizabeth R, p. 209–10.

  56. “What meaneth then”: Morrow, p. 44.

  57. “One plants one’s feet”: Susan Crosland, Tony Crosland, p. 346.

  58. “It was almost like a lady’s prop”: Phil Brown interview.

  59. “is a very practical down-to-earth lady”: Confidential interview.

  60. “I watched the Queen open her handbag”: Confidential interview.

  61. “I’m always fascinated by their toes”: Morrow, p. 92.

  62. “a way of relieving the boredom”: Turner, p. 63.

  63. “Do come in, you have nothing to do”: Pamela Hicks interview.

  64. To a gathering of scientists: HRH the Prince Philip Duke of Edinburgh, Selected Speeches, 1948–1955, p. 82.

  65. Her attendants noticed: Pamela Hicks interview.

  66. “We were all pouring sweat”: Debbie Palmer interview.

  67. “There are certain people whose skin runs water”: Pamela Hicks interview.

  68. the new 412-foot royal yacht: Author’s observation; The Royal Yacht Britannia Official Guidebook.

  69. “country house at sea”: The Royal Yacht Britannia Official Guidebook, p. 17.

  70. “truly relax”: Ibid., p. 14.

  71. “You may find Charles much older”: Shawcross, QEQM, p. 692.

  72. “No, not you dear”: Holden, Charles Prince of Wales, p. 88.

  73. The private reunion was warm: Pamela Hicks interview.

  74. “enchanting”: Shawcross, QEQM, p. 692.

  75. “No, Not You Dear”: Anthony Holden, Charles: A Biography, p. 15.

  76. “One saw this dirty commercial river”: Gilbert, p. 976, citing Queen Elizabeth II reflections in Queen and Commonwealth, television documentary produced by Peter Tiffin, April 22, 1986.

  77. “seemed less truculent”: Eden, p. 168.

  78. “dragged out longer and longer”: Gilbert, p. 1124.

  79. The Queen remained patient: Ibid., p. 1115.

  80. “felt the greatest personal regrets”: Ibid., p. 1117.

  81. “young, gleaming champion”: Ibid., p. 1121.

  82. “never be separated”: Ibid., p. 1123.

  83. “wished to die in the House of Commons”: Ibid., p. 1124.

  84. “will ever, for me, be able to hold”: Ibid., p. 1127.

  85. “to keep Your Majesty squarely confronted”: Ibid.

  86. “the case was not a difficult one”: Ibid., p. 1125.

  87. “Well, Ma’am?”: Eden, p. 190.

  88. “the best looking politician”: Ibid., p. 122.

  89. “odd and violent temper”: Cynthia Gladwyn, The Diaries of Cynthia Gladwyn, edited by Miles Jebb, p. 198.

  90. “Anthony was telling her”: Eden, p. 215.

  91. “They were chatting away and laughing”: Clarissa Eden interview.

  92. “It is only by seeing him”: Daily Telegraph, Nov. 7, 2009.

  93. “COME ON MARGARET!”: Christopher Warwick, Princess Margaret: A Life of Contrasts, p. 197.

  94. In early October the Edens visited: Eden, p. 219.

  95. “high place”: The Times, Oct. 24, 1955.

  96. Although her sorrowful statement: BBC, “On This Day,” Oct. 31, 1955, news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday.

  97. “in a cottage”: Rose, p. 189.

  98. “selfish and hard and wild”: Bradford, p. 287.

  99. captured her in seven sessions: “1954 Sir William Dargie: Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II,” artistsfootsteps.com.

  100. “straight back … never slumped once”: Ibid.

  101. “a nice friendly portrait”: Laura Breen, “Dargie’s Wattle Queen,” reCollections: A Journal of Museums and Collections, Nma.gov.au.

 

Add Fast Bookmark
Load Fast Bookmark
Turn Navi On
Turn Navi On
Turn Navi On
Scroll Up
Turn Navi On
Scroll
Turn Navi On
183