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festival, and her health was toasted by a million merry circles of loyal Englishmen.
Almost on that very day, King William the Fourth, then in the seventy-second year of his age, was stricken with mortal sickness.
He lingered four weeks, and then expired.
It was on a fine morning in June, as early as five o'clock, that the Archbishop of Canterbury communicated the intelligence to Victoria, and saluted her as Queen of England.
Later in the day, the Ministry, the Privy Councillors, and a hundred of the principal nobility, assembled in Kensington Palace to witness the formal proclamation of the youthful queen.
“We publish and proclaim,” shouted the herald, “that the high and mighty Princess Alexandrina Victoria is the only lawful and liege Lady, and, by the grace of God, Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Defender of the Faith.”
Until this moment, it is said, the young queen had maintained her self-possession; but on hearing these tremendous words, the realization of so many hopes and fond imaginings, she threw her arms about her mother's neck and sobbed.
She recovered herself in a few moments, and then the Duke of Sussex, the youngest son of George the Third, and the head of the English nobility, advanced to pay his homage by bending the knee.
Her good sense and good feeling revolted against an absurdity so extreme.
“Do not kneel, uncle,” she said, “for I am still Victoria, your niece.”
Her bearing on this most trying occasion was eminently becoming; and, a few weeks later, when she prorogued Parliament in person, and spoke the royal speech from the throne of the House of Lords, she conciliated every heart by her modesty and self-possession.
There was a circle of relations in Germany for whom these events possessed the deepest interest.
The letter which
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