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Simon Schama: A History of Britain (Special Edition) (2010)

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Spring 1851. The word "Victorian" enters the English language and a very small woman enters a very big building. She's four foot eleven, yet somehow she fills it. The moment, so pregnant for the future, seems holy. Victoria is herself flooded with religious awe. Neither she nor anyone else has ever seen anything like this building before, a greenhouse the size of a palace, with the difference that this is, from the beginning, a people's palace. A popular magazine calls it the Crystal Palace. Its grandest spaces are filled not with courtiers and flunkeys, but steam pumps and locomotives, a huge showcase for Britain's industrial empire.

Just three years before, in 1848, Europe had been torn apart by revolutions. The government had feared the same would happen here. As it turned out, other countries had war and revolution, we had the Great Exhibition. Other countries had barricades, we had the cheerful queue for the turnstiles. In an era haunted by fears of overpopulation, this was one of the greatest mass movements of people in all of European history. Six million came to see the show of shows. In 1848, industrial machinery had seemed to be the enemy of ordinary men and women, the gaping mechanical jaws into which countless lives were fed, to be spat out again as cotton cloth or nails.

Technology, the prophets of doom had warned, was an engine of inhumanity, driving working people to desperation or revolt. But inside the glittering glasshouse, someone seemed to have waved a magic wand over the mechanical brutes, turning them from ogres to busy, friendly giants, happy to be gazed at on a family outing - not least by the first family of the land, assembled amidst the hardware. After all, Papa, Prince Albert, the moving force behind the exhibition, was the first prince in European history to wear his connection with the world of business as a badge of pride, not shame.

But what about Mama? As the mother of a rapidly expanding family, Victoria might have been expected to know that if the cult of progress was to make Britain not just a great nation, but a good one, be a home maker, not a home breaker, it would fall to our women to see us through the painful change to an industrial society safe and sound. But, of course, hers was no ordinary family, and, despite the family photos, Queen Victoria was not exactly Mrs Average. The age which would bear her name would see transformations in women's lives which Victoria could never have imagined in the dazzling springtime of her reign. Whether she'd welcome them, whether she'd even understand them, whether they'd sweep past her and her glass palace, well, that remained to be seen.

In 1837, when she became queen, Victoria was only 18. She was as pure as a rosebud, which seemed a welcome change from the decidedly impure reigns of her uncles George IV and William IV, addicted to the pleasures of the bed and the table, and indifferent to the hardships endured by the mass of their subjects. Unlike the uncles, Victoria had been brought up a model of virginal moderation and self denial. No Regency pampering for her.
At one point, she and her mother, the Duchess of Kent, were forced to move out of Kensington Palace to save money. So, Victoria's nursery years were spent at bracingly ordinary places like Ramsgate and Sidmouth.

Much later in life, for some reason, Victoria looked back on her childhood as a time of sadness and loneliness. It's true that, like many middle-class and aristocratic children, she was subjected to an evangelical regime of prayers and constant self examination. She kept a behaviour book, full of solemn and self-critical entries. This one, for August 1832, reads: "Very, very, very" - underlined - "terribly" - underlined - "naughty". But could Christian betterment, the driving force of her generation, be taken from self improvement to bettering the life of her people? That was the question. On her first excursion in England's heart of industrial darkness, the teenage princess would see what she was up against.

Near Birmingham, she travelled through the landscape of a British inferno - sooty and sulphurous. But the view from the coach was the closest Victoria got to the bleak reality of smokestack Britain. In any case, there was something else on her mind - her upcoming date with history. All those tombs, crowns and thrones, was she ready? The moment would arrive all too soon, in the small hours of June 20, 1837, the teenage princess in her nightgown, woken by the arrival of the Lord Chamberlain and the Archbishop of Canterbury. At her coronation, on June 28, 1838, the young queen showed what she was made of... carrying the immense weight of the robes and regalia with aplomb.

But she also managed something more important than dignity - a glimpse of humanity. When the 87-year-old Lord Rolle tottered as he tried to mount the steps of the throne to do homage, Victoria's kind-hearted instinct was to rise and go down the steps to meet him. Everyone noticed. She was young, but not precocious. She knew she needed help and was wise enough to ask for it from someone superbly able to give it - the Whig Prime Minister,
Lord Melbourne. He won Victoria's confidence by the simple but inspired tactic of never, ever talking down to her, never treating her like a child in need of protection.

Instead, he treated her like an adult, sophisticated enough to enjoy his worldly wisdom, his political gossip and even his off-colour jokes. Under his guidance, Victoria's confidence and her public persona blossomed. She was, of course, the most desirable catch in Europe. Victoria's mother had thrown banquets and balls to ensure Victoria met the most eligible princes... ...including her Saxe-Coburg cousins, Ernest and Albert. It may well have been
her uncle Leopold who, in the spring of 1839, first made the suggestion to Victoria that she might like to marry Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg. Like all young women, she probably initially found the subject a bit embarrassing, but once she had got used to it,  helped by that handsome, or as she put it, "angelic German head", she pretty much ran the show, virtually grabbing hold of her curly-haired intended and sprinting for the altar.

It was Victoria who supplied the ring... asked Albert for a lock of his hair... and wallowed in the kissing sessions. But if she sometimes seemed determined to wear the trousers in the marriage, there were also other times, especially right after the wedding, when Victoria simply melted away into the amazed bliss of conjugal love. Victoria and Albert's passion for each other was a strictly private matter. But for countless numbers of Britons in the suffocatingly overcrowded industrial cities, like Manchester, bedroom privacy was an unimaginable luxury. Manchester was the very best and the very worst taken to terrifying extremes; a new kind of city in the world, the chimneys of industrial suburbs greeting you with columns of smoke. 200,000 drones packed into the hive to make money for the lords of Cottonopolis.

An American visitor, taken to Manchester's black spots, saw: And thanked God for not having been born poor in England. The cotton mills were brutally demanding task masters. Whole families spent almost all of their working hours tending to the machinery. Children were given menial but dangerous jobs, like scavenging cotton fluff from beneath the moving machinery. As bad as all this was, it was even worse when there were no jobs at all. In the first years of Victoria's reign, hands were being laid off in tens of thousands. It would be a woman, Elizabeth Gaskell, who would be the whistle blower, the first of Victoria's sisters to stick her neck out.

Amazingly, her blazing protest took the genteel form of a novel. But what a book. When "Mary Barton" was published in 1848, nobody, not even Charles Dickens, had gone as far as Gaskell in looking dead-on at the grim reality of industrial misery. The middle-class wife of a Unitarian preacher, Gaskell took herself right into the lower depths of the city, to the gin palaces and open sewers, dark reeking alleys, where skin-and-bones children played among the rats. In "Mary Barton" you didn't just see, you heard working-class Manchester in the pages of literature for the very first time.

To most of her readers, it must have been a language more foreign than French or German.  By the time you'd finished "Mary Barton", one word, struck like a hammer over and over again, would have lodged in your memory. That word was "clemmed" - starved. You say it, and you call up the entire knife-edge world of struggling to survive that Elizabeth Gaskell had created. Elizabeth Gaskell believed that honest graphic social reporting could make a difference. She wrote to her cousin: One of Gaskell's fans, the social philosopher Thomas Carlyle, thought it was pointless to try and improve a system so fundamentally inhuman as industrialisation.

For Carlyle, there was only one route to salvation: Britain must turn aside from the machine, and summon up the spirit of the Christian centuries of the Middle Ages, the last time we'd taken it for granted that faith was more  important than money. To bring about this great conversion from Babylon to Jerusalem, nothing less would do than a Christian revolution in building. And no one was more convinced of this than the greatest of the Gothic revivalists - Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin. A new generation of churches would be in the front line in the war to save Victorian souls. Pugin was never happy just to sound off, though. He believed, with all the fervour of the old faith, that a properly beautified church was the very face of Heaven.

And before he died, brutally early, at the age of 40, he made sure, especially here at the Church of St Giles in Cheadle, Staffordshire, to let some people see how gloriously colourful it could be. But however spiritually nourishing this might have been, it wasn't going to put bread on the tables of the needy millions. Victoria's first decade as queen was also a time of economic hardship for many of her subjects. A slump in foreign trade had led to mass layoffs in industrial cities. Bread was an unaffordable luxury for the unemployed, who blamed the corn laws for keeping cheap imported wheat out of Britain. Working-class anger and desperation was close to boiling point.

For middle-class reformers, the answer was easy - all we need to do is get rid of the corn laws and all will be well. But the militant spokesmen of the working people weren't convinced. They wanted more. Only a truly popular government, a democracy in fact, would do something about their distress. They set out their demands in a people's charter, a new Magna Carta for the modern age. It demanded the right to vote for all men, secret ballots, annual parliaments. How to get them? Moral force if we may, physical force if we must.

In the climate of fear and hatred, people had to decide just where their loyalty lay. If you were on the right side of the tracks, if you owned one of the great spinning mills, like this one in Ancoats, you would think the Chartists were just a mob, misled by demagogues. Besides, whoever said capitalism was a funfair? As long as you kept your hands off the market, well, the market, sooner or later, would right itself. And the poor, the people who worked here, who were hungry now, would be feeding off the fat of the land tomorrow.

On April 10, 1848, a monster Chartist petition, signed by nearly two million men and women, so huge it would take two hackney cabs to get it to parliament, was brought to London. Around 150,000 Chartists with banners and green, red and white rosettes converged on Kennington Common for the biggest political rally in British history. The government was ready for them. London was turned into a huge armed camp, with mounted guards, guns and even cannon posted at critical sites like the Tower of London and the Bank of England.

Soldiers were posted on The Mall to prevent access to Buckingham Palace, but the royal family had fled to the Isle of Wight. Faced with this immense display of strong armed force, the leader, newspaper owner and MP, Fergus O'Connor, had no choice. He gave orders that nobody should provoke the troops, however goaded, for the result would have been a bloodbath. Some of the younger firebrands thought it was a sell-out. But what was Fergus O'Connor supposed to have done? Unleashed his people's army on the queen's soldiers, only to get them mown down? And what good would that have done the cause of the working people of Britain?

Besides, just look at this photograph of the meeting on the common. The very first political photograph in our history. Not exactly about to storm the barricades, are they? It may have ended for the moment the threat of the kind of revolution that had spread through European capitals in 1848 happening here, too. But the dream of so many working people for somewhere decent to live, enough to eat, for a share in the Victorian bonanza, was as urgent as ever. If they weren't going to get it by armed revolt, they would get it in the British way - in small but decisive steps, by coming together in self-sufficient communities.

This is all that survives intact of those little pipedreams - one of the cottages of the Chartist Land Company settlement at Great Dodford in Worcestershire. Founded in 1845, the Land Company was the brainchild of none other than Fergus O'Connor. It bought land, which it divided among its members into smallholdings, meant to take people out of the industrial slums and back to the rural world of their forefathers. They'd get a few acres to grow
their own food and make a small living. "Do or Die" was the motto of the incoming settlers to places like Great Dodford, and their work was no picnic - breaking soil, planting hedges, making roads, with no certain outcome.

But some of them were determined to make a go of it, especially women. Ann Wood, for example, who lived in a cottage very much like this one, was just an Edinburgh charlady, but one with enough Scottish thrift and determination to save up 150 to put down for a lot at Great Dodford. That gave her the pick of the crop. And, after settling at number 36, along with her two daughters, Ann did well enough at any rate to lead a long life, dying at 86. So, when all the sound and fury had ebbed away, what seemed to count for most was making a home, not a revolution.

Prince Albert himself understood this. In the year of the Great Exhibition, he commissioned and had built model lodgings for the working class. Later they were rebuilt at Kennington, on the very site of the Chartist revolution that wasn't. And, as the boom years of the 1850s replaced the hungry 40s, Britain had never seemed so middle-class, starting with the monarchy. The many photographic visiting cards circulating the country showed the queen and Prince Albert, not on their aristocratic high horse, but acting out the rituals of middle-class life. Respectable, reliable, even a little boring. Queen Victoria was to have nine children in all, and never had Britain had a monarch who went to such lengths to advertise her domestic pleasures to the nation.

The stroll in the park. The romp with the children. The sing-song round the tree at Christmas. And, on the Isle of Wight, a modest seaside getaway, Osborne House. Designed by Albert and relished by Victoria as an idyllic retreat from the pressures of rule. It was here at last that Albert, who'd been kept from meaningful public work, got his desk sitting beside hers, from which he could direct his campaign to make industrial Britain a better as well as a richer place. To see them together beavering away, you'd suppose it was a perfect partnership. But not so perfect that this couple, in every other respect so mutually devoted, were spared all arguments. They had their spats,
just like the rest of us.

For her part, too, Victoria wasn't above letting rip when she got too worked up. Single people, she'd occasionally let it be known, were often much better off than unhappily married couples, forced to stay together by convention.  Astonishingly, this echoed exactly the kind of thing coming from the mouth and pen of two of the most daring critics of the Victorian conventions of marriage - John Stuart Mill and Harriet Taylor, husband and wife for seven years, tortured lovers in a peculiar Victorian way for a lot longer, and the joint authors of "On the Subjection of Women". This was, don't forget, an age in which a woman's property automatically passed to her husband when they got married.

Husbands had the right to beat their wives, as long as the cane was no thicker than their thumb, and to lock them up for refusing sex. In 1830, the philosopher John Stuart Mill went to a dinner party which changed his life forever. He was struck dumb by the vision of a swan throat and dark enormous eyes. They belonged to Harriet Taylor, writer, poet and unhappily married wife. Between the soup and the port, John and Harriet were swept away by an instantaneous knowledge that they'd found their true soul mates. But being two serious intellectuals, Mill and Taylor's forbidden love couldn't just be a selfish private passion.

It had to be thought out loud as a public issue. Their situation made only too clear the hypocrisy of the loveless Victorian marriage. Surely there was another way out than adultery or suffering misery in silence. What had to be done was to expose marriages as the property transaction they often were, and then use education and law to enlighten and protect women. Taylor and Mill would have to wait 19 years for a chance to practise what they preached. In 1849, Harriet's unloved husband  finally died, freeing the way for her to marry John Stuart Mill. But not before he formally renounced all the rights the law gave him over his wife's property and person.

Their happiness was short-lived. Harriet Taylor died of TB in November 1858. But there would be an epitaph. All their ideas poured into "On the Subjection of Women", their book, that Mill published in 1869. Happy and equal marriages were no longer its only concern. Women, who made up half the workforce of Britain, should have pay equal to their labour. And, most breathtakingly of all, they should have the vote. It was a book whose ideals gave powerful momentum to the Women's Movement. After the Second Reform Act in 1867, almost all male householders had the vote, which made the fact that female householders hadn't seem glaringly unfair.

Mill, himself an MP, had tried to argue their case, and even won the support of 73 other MPs. The vote was lost, of course, but the words had been spoken, and they were heard especially loudly in Mrs Gaskell's Manchester. The breakthrough had been made, a democracy worth the name could not be just for men. Queen Victoria may have had her doubts about unhappy marriages, but this was a violation of God's ordering of right relations between the sexes. She let it be known in no uncertain terms what she thought of: There was fit and proper work for women to do, Victoria allowed, but only the kind which used the qualities of tenderness which God had given to their sex.

Nurses, for example, were rightly called sisters and matrons. But was it quite right for the queen's own nephew to call one of them Mammy? Florence Nightingale may well have garnered the reputation, back in Britain, among civilians, as the Angel of Mercy in the Crimea, but the woman whom surviving soldiers most adored, and for the very good reason that she saw them through the worst,  was the most forgotten and the most unlikely of Victoria's sisters. And her name was Mary Seacole. Mary Seacole was West Indian, the daughter of a Scotsman and a Jamaican woman.

Largely self-taught, her Caribbean remedies became famous after they'd been shown to stop violent dysentery and to bring yellow fever and cholera victims back from death's door. When Britain joined the Crimean War in 1854, she tried to volunteer her services at the front. But Mary didn't exactly fit the profile of middle-class nurses. She was turned down by the likes of Nurse Nightingale. So Mary got herself to the Crimea under her own steam and with her own funds. And once there, she did something truly extraordinary. Mary Seacole built her "British Hotel" right on the front line, and it doubled both as a refectory, feeding the boys going into action, and a recovery station for the sick and wounded. Every morning, she'd make great vats of nutritious food, like rice pudding, saddle up a pair of mules and ride into the heart of the action looking for wounded, to whom she'd dole out food, hot tea, medicine, but most of all, motherly love.

Mortars would whiz past the big old woman trundling along the lines. After the war was over, the soldiers f๊ted her at a charity gala. She'd become, briefly, an "Eminent Victorian". Suppose, though, that women drawn to help the sick went one stage further and dreamed of being a doctor? That was a different story. In 1860, Elizabeth Garrett enrolled as a surgical nurse at Middlesex Hospital, but her sights were set higher. In between the swabs and the bedpans, she was looking carefully at surgical operations, and she was also cutting up body parts in her bedroom.

This improvised education made her bold enough to take the hospital's medical, not nursing exams, and when the time came to publish the results, one E Garrett had come top. Ordered to keep the outrage secret, she went public instead. Nine years later, the French gave her an MD. And in 1874, the first medical college expressly for women was set up in London. For Victoria, the mere idea of slips of girls looking at, much less cutting up
the naked bodies of dead men was an unthinkable indecency. But no doctor was of any help to her in the greatest crisis of her life.

For in 1861, the same year that Elizabeth Garrett cut her way into medicine, Albert contracted typhoid, which, after a few months of horrifyingly swift deterioration, ended in his death in December. Everything in those last weeks became suddenly invested with an almost religious significance. Here, for example, is the last book read to Albert, Scott's "Peveril of the Peak", and on the flyleaf the queen has written: "This book was read up to the mark on page 81 to my beloved husband "during his fatal illness "and within three days of its terrible termination." You turn to page 81 and here's how it reads: "He heard the sound of voices, "but they ceased to convey any impression to his understanding; "and in a few minutes, he was faster asleep "than he'd ever been in the whole course of his life." Victoria buried her beloved Albert in the Italianate mausoleum she built here at Frogmore in Windsor Great Park.

Albert's death threw Victoria into a paroxysm of grief. Not for her the stoical acceptance of the inscrutable will of the Almighty. She had lost not only her co-ruler, but her helpmate, and vanished, too, was her domestic idyll. At the abyss of her misery, she must have thought that all chance of contentment had gone. Death was an immense presence in Victorian life, perhaps because it was the one conquest denied to the soldiers and engineers and captains of industry who seemed to be able to conquer everything else. If they couldn't stop their loved ones from going to their graves, they could at least create the illusion in marble and photographs that they were still alongside those who mourned them.

This, in her distraught, inconsolable grief, Victoria knew how to do. With religious devotion, she set out Albert's shaving equipment every morning... and fresh evening clothes and a clean towel every evening. Missing his physical presence, she slept with his nightgown by her side. The exuberant headstrong young woman shrank into the hard shell of the forbidding inconsolable widow, for whom the least sign of merriment was a betrayal of Albert's sainted memory. She seemed, in a way which no one accustomed to the strong-minded queen could ever have imagined, somehow no longer in charge of either herself or of the country. Victoria's sense of moral calling, so strong from the beginning of her reign, had become so dependent on Albert the Good's judgement that now that he was gone, she seemed at a loss about how and where to exercise it.

It never occurred to her that women alone, either as widows or spinsters, might be able to do good by themselves, to make a life, even a career, on their own. If she wanted to see how this could be done, all she needed to do was to take her pony trap  a mile or two down the road from Osborne to Freshwater, to visit someone who, though neither widow nor spinster, was very much her own woman. The photographer Julia Margaret Cameron. Since Victoria was herself an avid collector of photographs, she might have been curious about this eccentric half-French woman's notorious dark room. For Julia Cameron, photography was not just an amateur hobby.

The poetic lyricism of her photographs disguises the hard need she had to make some money. Worse, she seemed perversely to glory in the male mess of camera work. Flouncing around in a converted hen house that was her studio, her dresses and hands stained with black silver nitrate, conscripting men and women models like a recruiting sergeant major and bellowing terrifyingly at them if they moved before they were told. Needless to say, the men who ran the Royal Photographic Society refused to take her seriously. What they meant, of course, was that a soft woman couldn't be expected to master machinery, chemicals, the hard technology of the job, let alone make a professional career out of it, despite Julia's obvious success at both.

But some of the most powerful and intelligent of the great and good - Tennyson... Carlyle... and the astronomer Sir John Herschel, who had obediently posed, were not deceived by the poetic light of her work. They embraced her as the greatest portraitist of her age. Julia's triumph in making a profession as an artist must have been noticed by all the young women of the 1870s and '80s who wanted more for themselves than just a destiny as wife and mother. After Girton College, the first Oxbridge college for women, opened its doors near Cambridge in 1873, they had, for the first time, somewhere that would educate them, liberate them, if they chose, from middle-class domesticity.

But even as they drank in knowledge behind the red walls of Girton, some of those young women longed to get beyond the cloister. The old ways of women's useful work - teaching, preaching, nursing - were no longer enough. Nor was just being an educated designer of the House Beautiful. They were drawn instead, as Elizabeth Gaskell was a generation earlier, to the ugliness everywhere in a Britain feeling once more the strain of economic crisis.
Some of them even decided to make that new home in the places most shocking to their parents' generation - in the slums of the industrial cities, to steep themselves in the dirt and anger of their poor abused sisters... to face up to harsh truths, the kind spelled out by the young George Bernard Shaw.

The bravest of this new generation could even face head-on the most unpalatable truths, like that link between breeding and destitution.  Annie Besant was the kind of do-gooder clergyman's wife unthinkable a generation  earlier, and still unthinkable to the likes of the queen. Annie Besant had scandalised the country by publishing contraception advice for working people. Such impertinence would not go unpunished, however, and Annie found herself the victim of a court order. She lost custody of her daughter to her former husband, an unforgiving time for women judged as unfit mothers. But nothing would stop her crusading. Searching round for a woman's cause, Annie found one in the teenage match girls who worked amidst phosphorus fumes for Bryant and May in East London.

They were paid just between four and ten shillings a week, and if they had dirty feet or an untidy bench they were fined, taking more money out of their already pathetic wages. Most horrifying of all, the girls ran the constant risk of contracting the hideously disfiguring "phossy" jaw, since Bryant and May persisted in the use of phosphorus, which other match companies had given up. At the same time, the company was paying huge dividends to its shareholders, a disproportionate number of whom, Annie enjoyed revealing, were the clergy.

Annie wrote an article about the plight of the match girls for her campaigning newspaper, The Link. And together with fellow socialist campaigner Herbert Burrows, she distributed copies of it at the gates of the factory. The owners of Bryant and May threatened the girls with instant dismissal if they didn't sign a document repudiating the article and the journalists. But, instead of signing, the girls went en masse to Annie and Burrows with their story. They told her: A strike committee was formed. Besant and Burrows promised to pay the wages of any girl dismissed for their action.

George Bernard Shaw volunteered as the cashier of the strike fund. 1,400 girls came out. The company eventually settled and Annie Besant and the girls were triumphant. She was hailed as the working girls' champion  and was immediately sought after by all sorts of other women aggrieved at their treatment. In 1888, Annie campaigned for election to the Tower Hamlets School Board in a dogcart festooned with red ribbons. She won, in a landslide victory, polling 15,000 votes. Even before they had the vote, women showed they could, and would, win local elections. Queen Victoria was not, in fact, blind to the miseries which so appalled the young women social workers of the 1880s and 1890s.

Shaken by some of the revelations in "The Bitter Cry of Outcast London", she actually pressed Gladstone's government to spend more of its time on the problem of housing, and her insistence produced a Royal Commission. But, whether she wanted to see it or could have seen it, there were, in the warm Jubilee summer of 1887, two Britains. Nearly a third of able-bodied men were unemployed. Now, thousands of the jobless were also homeless,
sleeping rough in parks or squares, some of them even in open coffins - the undead of underclass Albion.

But, of course, the queen was kept well away from all that. What she saw were 30,000 poor schoolchildren in Hyde Park, who each got a meat pie, a piece of cake and an orange to celebrate the great day of her Jubilee. It was the kind of thing which brought a smile - yes, a smile - on the face of the old queen. It would be like this for the rest of her life - the country bathed in summer evening light, the faces well-scrubbed and dutiful. The old lady, at last, something like the contented matriarch, the grandmother of the Empire, the thrones of Europe filled with her offspring.

There was, of course, someone missing from this national family photo. In the Abbey, amidst all the splendour, Victoria suddenly felt a pang. Victoria would have to wait another 14 years, until 1901, before she would be reunited with him: Her long-suffering secretary, Frederick Ponsonby, said there was nothing Victoria enjoyed so much as arranging funerals and her own was no exception. She ordered a white lying-in-state and funeral for herself. In her hands was a silver crucifix, her white dress decorated with cheerful sprays of spring flowers. There was a touch of Miss Havisham about this, the 80-year-old flower-bedecked virgin bride.

But not jilted by her beloved, going to join him. When Albert's memorial effigy had been ordered from the sculptor Marochetti in 1862, Victoria insisted on hers being made at the same time, and with her appearance as it was when he had been taken from her, so that they would be reunited, at least in marble, at the same age, in the glowing prime of their union. The trouble was, no one could remember where they'd put the statue made 40 years before. It had, in fact, been walled up in one of the cavities of a renovated room in Windsor Castle.

Eventually, it was found and laid next to Albert as per the queen's orders. And there she is, as if the clocks had stopped along with the heart of the Prince Consort. But they hadn't, of course. Victoria might lie by her beloved dressed as a medieval princess, but he, of all people, had known it had been progress which had been the mainspring of her reign. Albert had done his best to see that it had been a force for goodness as well as greatness,
that the surging movement of the machine age would be held in check by the moral anchorage of the Victorian home.

The women of Britain, Victoria's sisters and daughters, were supposed to be grateful for this, to bask in the warmth of the hearth they tended. But those cosy fires kindled yearnings that couldn't be contained by a placid domesticity. Those little liberators - the cheque book, the latchkey and the bicycle - beckoned over the doorstep and into the street. And you couldn't tell any longer just how the girls would turn out. Riding with the body of the queen from London to Windsor was the widow of one of her Viceroys of India - Lady Lytton. Just eight years later, her daughter, Constance, in prison as a suffragette, would make her statement about the future of women in Britain... ...by carving, with a piece of broken enamel from a hairpin... ...the letter V into the flesh of her breast. But it wasn't V for Victoria. It was V for Votes.

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Simon Schama: A History of Britain (Special Edition) (2010)

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Spring 1851. The word "Victorian" enters the English language and a very small woman enters a very big building. She's four foot eleven, yet somehow she fills it. The moment, so pregnant for the future, seems holy. Victoria is herself flooded with religious awe. Neither she nor anyone else has ever seen anything like this building before, a greenhouse the size of a palace, with the difference that this is, from the beginning, a people's palace. A popular magazine calls it the Crystal Palace. Its grandest spaces are filled not with courtiers and flunkeys, but steam pumps and locomotives, a huge showcase for Britain's industrial empire.

Just three years before, in 1848, Europe had been torn apart by revolutions. The government had feared the same would happen here. As it turned out, other countries had war and revolution, we had the Great Exhibition. Other countries had barricades, we had the cheerful queue for the turnstiles. In an era haunted by fears of overpopulation, this was one of the greatest mass movements of people in all of European history. Six million came to see the show of shows. In 1848, industrial machinery had seemed to be the enemy of ordinary men and women, the gaping mechanical jaws into which countless lives were fed, to be spat out again as cotton cloth or nails.

Technology, the prophets of doom had warned, was an engine of inhumanity, driving working people to desperation or revolt. But inside the glittering glasshouse, someone seemed to have waved a magic wand over the mechanical brutes, turning them from ogres to busy, friendly giants, happy to be gazed at on a family outing - not least by the first family of the land, assembled amidst the hardware. After all, Papa, Prince Albert, the moving force behind the exhibition, was the first prince in European history to wear his connection with the world of business as a badge of pride, not shame.

But what about Mama? As the mother of a rapidly expanding family, Victoria might have been expected to know that if the cult of progress was to make Britain not just a great nation, but a good one, be a home maker, not a home breaker, it would fall to our women to see us through the painful change to an industrial society safe and sound. But, of course, hers was no ordinary family, and, despite the family photos, Queen Victoria was not exactly Mrs Average. The age which would bear her name would see transformations in women's lives which Victoria could never have imagined in the dazzling springtime of her reign. Whether she'd welcome them, whether she'd even understand them, whether they'd sweep past her and her glass palace, well, that remained to be seen.

In 1837, when she became queen, Victoria was only 18. She was as pure as a rosebud, which seemed a welcome change from the decidedly impure reigns of her uncles George IV and William IV, addicted to the pleasures of the bed and the table, and indifferent to the hardships endured by the mass of their subjects. Unlike the uncles, Victoria had been brought up a model of virginal moderation and self denial. No Regency pampering for her.
At one point, she and her mother, the Duchess of Kent, were forced to move out of Kensington Palace to save money. So, Victoria's nursery years were spent at bracingly ordinary places like Ramsgate and Sidmouth.

Much later in life, for some reason, Victoria looked back on her childhood as a time of sadness and loneliness. It's true that, like many middle-class and aristocratic children, she was subjected to an evangelical regime of prayers and constant self examination. She kept a behaviour book, full of solemn and self-critical entries. This one, for August 1832, reads: "Very, very, very" - underlined - "terribly" - underlined - "naughty". But could Christian betterment, the driving force of her generation, be taken from self improvement to bettering the life of her people? That was the question. On her first excursion in England's heart of industrial darkness, the teenage princess would see what she was up against.

Near Birmingham, she travelled through the landscape of a British inferno - sooty and sulphurous. But the view from the coach was the closest Victoria got to the bleak reality of smokestack Britain. In any case, there was something else on her mind - her upcoming date with history. All those tombs, crowns and thrones, was she ready? The moment would arrive all too soon, in the small hours of June 20, 1837, the teenage princess in her nightgown, woken by the arrival of the Lord Chamberlain and the Archbishop of Canterbury. At her coronation, on June 28, 1838, the young queen showed what she was made of... carrying the immense weight of the robes and regalia with aplomb.

But she also managed something more important than dignity - a glimpse of humanity. When the 87-year-old Lord Rolle tottered as he tried to mount the steps of the throne to do homage, Victoria's kind-hearted instinct was to rise and go down the steps to meet him. Everyone noticed. She was young, but not precocious. She knew she needed help and was wise enough to ask for it from someone superbly able to give it - the Whig Prime Minister,
Lord Melbourne. He won Victoria's confidence by the simple but inspired tactic of never, ever talking down to her, never treating her like a child in need of protection.

Instead, he treated her like an adult, sophisticated enough to enjoy his worldly wisdom, his political gossip and even his off-colour jokes. Under his guidance, Victoria's confidence and her public persona blossomed. She was, of course, the most desirable catch in Europe. Victoria's mother had thrown banquets and balls to ensure Victoria met the most eligible princes... ...including her Saxe-Coburg cousins, Ernest and Albert. It may well have been
her uncle Leopold who, in the spring of 1839, first made the suggestion to Victoria that she might like to marry Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg. Like all young women, she probably initially found the subject a bit embarrassing, but once she had got used to it,  helped by that handsome, or as she put it, "angelic German head", she pretty much ran the show, virtually grabbing hold of her curly-haired intended and sprinting for the altar.

It was Victoria who supplied the ring... asked Albert for a lock of his hair... and wallowed in the kissing sessions. But if she sometimes seemed determined to wear the trousers in the marriage, there were also other times, especially right after the wedding, when Victoria simply melted away into the amazed bliss of conjugal love. Victoria and Albert's passion for each other was a strictly private matter. But for countless numbers of Britons in the suffocatingly overcrowded industrial cities, like Manchester, bedroom privacy was an unimaginable luxury. Manchester was the very best and the very worst taken to terrifying extremes; a new kind of city in the world, the chimneys of industrial suburbs greeting you with columns of smoke. 200,000 drones packed into the hive to make money for the lords of Cottonopolis.

An American visitor, taken to Manchester's black spots, saw: And thanked God for not having been born poor in England. The cotton mills were brutally demanding task masters. Whole families spent almost all of their working hours tending to the machinery. Children were given menial but dangerous jobs, like scavenging cotton fluff from beneath the moving machinery. As bad as all this was, it was even worse when there were no jobs at all. In the first years of Victoria's reign, hands were being laid off in tens of thousands. It would be a woman, Elizabeth Gaskell, who would be the whistle blower, the first of Victoria's sisters to stick her neck out.

Amazingly, her blazing protest took the genteel form of a novel. But what a book. When "Mary Barton" was published in 1848, nobody, not even Charles Dickens, had gone as far as Gaskell in looking dead-on at the grim reality of industrial misery. The middle-class wife of a Unitarian preacher, Gaskell took herself right into the lower depths of the city, to the gin palaces and open sewers, dark reeking alleys, where skin-and-bones children played among the rats. In "Mary Barton" you didn't just see, you heard working-class Manchester in the pages of literature for the very first time.

To most of her readers, it must have been a language more foreign than French or German.  By the time you'd finished "Mary Barton", one word, struck like a hammer over and over again, would have lodged in your memory. That word was "clemmed" - starved. You say it, and you call up the entire knife-edge world of struggling to survive that Elizabeth Gaskell had created. Elizabeth Gaskell believed that honest graphic social reporting could make a difference. She wrote to her cousin: One of Gaskell's fans, the social philosopher Thomas Carlyle, thought it was pointless to try and improve a system so fundamentally inhuman as industrialisation.

For Carlyle, there was only one route to salvation: Britain must turn aside from the machine, and summon up the spirit of the Christian centuries of the Middle Ages, the last time we'd taken it for granted that faith was more  important than money. To bring about this great conversion from Babylon to Jerusalem, nothing less would do than a Christian revolution in building. And no one was more convinced of this than the greatest of the Gothic revivalists - Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin. A new generation of churches would be in the front line in the war to save Victorian souls. Pugin was never happy just to sound off, though. He believed, with all the fervour of the old faith, that a properly beautified church was the very face of Heaven.

And before he died, brutally early, at the age of 40, he made sure, especially here at the Church of St Giles in Cheadle, Staffordshire, to let some people see how gloriously colourful it could be. But however spiritually nourishing this might have been, it wasn't going to put bread on the tables of the needy millions. Victoria's first decade as queen was also a time of economic hardship for many of her subjects. A slump in foreign trade had led to mass layoffs in industrial cities. Bread was an unaffordable luxury for the unemployed, who blamed the corn laws for keeping cheap imported wheat out of Britain. Working-class anger and desperation was close to boiling point.

For middle-class reformers, the answer was easy - all we need to do is get rid of the corn laws and all will be well. But the militant spokesmen of the working people weren't convinced. They wanted more. Only a truly popular government, a democracy in fact, would do something about their distress. They set out their demands in a people's charter, a new Magna Carta for the modern age. It demanded the right to vote for all men, secret ballots, annual parliaments. How to get them? Moral force if we may, physical force if we must.

In the climate of fear and hatred, people had to decide just where their loyalty lay. If you were on the right side of the tracks, if you owned one of the great spinning mills, like this one in Ancoats, you would think the Chartists were just a mob, misled by demagogues. Besides, whoever said capitalism was a funfair? As long as you kept your hands off the market, well, the market, sooner or later, would right itself. And the poor, the people who worked here, who were hungry now, would be feeding off the fat of the land tomorrow.

On April 10, 1848, a monster Chartist petition, signed by nearly two million men and women, so huge it would take two hackney cabs to get it to parliament, was brought to London. Around 150,000 Chartists with banners and green, red and white rosettes converged on Kennington Common for the biggest political rally in British history. The government was ready for them. London was turned into a huge armed camp, with mounted guards, guns and even cannon posted at critical sites like the Tower of London and the Bank of England.

Soldiers were posted on The Mall to prevent access to Buckingham Palace, but the royal family had fled to the Isle of Wight. Faced with this immense display of strong armed force, the leader, newspaper owner and MP, Fergus O'Connor, had no choice. He gave orders that nobody should provoke the troops, however goaded, for the result would have been a bloodbath. Some of the younger firebrands thought it was a sell-out. But what was Fergus O'Connor supposed to have done? Unleashed his people's army on the queen's soldiers, only to get them mown down? And what good would that have done the cause of the working people of Britain?

Besides, just look at this photograph of the meeting on the common. The very first political photograph in our history. Not exactly about to storm the barricades, are they? It may have ended for the moment the threat of the kind of revolution that had spread through European capitals in 1848 happening here, too. But the dream of so many working people for somewhere decent to live, enough to eat, for a share in the Victorian bonanza, was as urgent as ever. If they weren't going to get it by armed revolt, they would get it in the British way - in small but decisive steps, by coming together in self-sufficient communities.

This is all that survives intact of those little pipedreams - one of the cottages of the Chartist Land Company settlement at Great Dodford in Worcestershire. Founded in 1845, the Land Company was the brainchild of none other than Fergus O'Connor. It bought land, which it divided among its members into smallholdings, meant to take people out of the industrial slums and back to the rural world of their forefathers. They'd get a few acres to grow
their own food and make a small living. "Do or Die" was the motto of the incoming settlers to places like Great Dodford, and their work was no picnic - breaking soil, planting hedges, making roads, with no certain outcome.

But some of them were determined to make a go of it, especially women. Ann Wood, for example, who lived in a cottage very much like this one, was just an Edinburgh charlady, but one with enough Scottish thrift and determination to save up 150 to put down for a lot at Great Dodford. That gave her the pick of the crop. And, after settling at number 36, along with her two daughters, Ann did well enough at any rate to lead a long life, dying at 86. So, when all the sound and fury had ebbed away, what seemed to count for most was making a home, not a revolution.

Prince Albert himself understood this. In the year of the Great Exhibition, he commissioned and had built model lodgings for the working class. Later they were rebuilt at Kennington, on the very site of the Chartist revolution that wasn't. And, as the boom years of the 1850s replaced the hungry 40s, Britain had never seemed so middle-class, starting with the monarchy. The many photographic visiting cards circulating the country showed the queen and Prince Albert, not on their aristocratic high horse, but acting out the rituals of middle-class life. Respectable, reliable, even a little boring. Queen Victoria was to have nine children in all, and never had Britain had a monarch who went to such lengths to advertise her domestic pleasures to the nation.

The stroll in the park. The romp with the children. The sing-song round the tree at Christmas. And, on the Isle of Wight, a modest seaside getaway, Osborne House. Designed by Albert and relished by Victoria as an idyllic retreat from the pressures of rule. It was here at last that Albert, who'd been kept from meaningful public work, got his desk sitting beside hers, from which he could direct his campaign to make industrial Britain a better as well as a richer place. To see them together beavering away, you'd suppose it was a perfect partnership. But not so perfect that this couple, in every other respect so mutually devoted, were spared all arguments. They had their spats,
just like the rest of us.

For her part, too, Victoria wasn't above letting rip when she got too worked up. Single people, she'd occasionally let it be known, were often much better off than unhappily married couples, forced to stay together by convention.  Astonishingly, this echoed exactly the kind of thing coming from the mouth and pen of two of the most daring critics of the Victorian conventions of marriage - John Stuart Mill and Harriet Taylor, husband and wife for seven years, tortured lovers in a peculiar Victorian way for a lot longer, and the joint authors of "On the Subjection of Women". This was, don't forget, an age in which a woman's property automatically passed to her husband when they got married.

Husbands had the right to beat their wives, as long as the cane was no thicker than their thumb, and to lock them up for refusing sex. In 1830, the philosopher John Stuart Mill went to a dinner party which changed his life forever. He was struck dumb by the vision of a swan throat and dark enormous eyes. They belonged to Harriet Taylor, writer, poet and unhappily married wife. Between the soup and the port, John and Harriet were swept away by an instantaneous knowledge that they'd found their true soul mates. But being two serious intellectuals, Mill and Taylor's forbidden love couldn't just be a selfish private passion.

It had to be thought out loud as a public issue. Their situation made only too clear the hypocrisy of the loveless Victorian marriage. Surely there was another way out than adultery or suffering misery in silence. What had to be done was to expose marriages as the property transaction they often were, and then use education and law to enlighten and protect women. Taylor and Mill would have to wait 19 years for a chance to practise what they preached. In 1849, Harriet's unloved husband  finally died, freeing the way for her to marry John Stuart Mill. But not before he formally renounced all the rights the law gave him over his wife's property and person.

Their happiness was short-lived. Harriet Taylor died of TB in November 1858. But there would be an epitaph. All their ideas poured into "On the Subjection of Women", their book, that Mill published in 1869. Happy and equal marriages were no longer its only concern. Women, who made up half the workforce of Britain, should have pay equal to their labour. And, most breathtakingly of all, they should have the vote. It was a book whose ideals gave powerful momentum to the Women's Movement. After the Second Reform Act in 1867, almost all male householders had the vote, which made the fact that female householders hadn't seem glaringly unfair.

Mill, himself an MP, had tried to argue their case, and even won the support of 73 other MPs. The vote was lost, of course, but the words had been spoken, and they were heard especially loudly in Mrs Gaskell's Manchester. The breakthrough had been made, a democracy worth the name could not be just for men. Queen Victoria may have had her doubts about unhappy marriages, but this was a violation of God's ordering of right relations between the sexes. She let it be known in no uncertain terms what she thought of: There was fit and proper work for women to do, Victoria allowed, but only the kind which used the qualities of tenderness which God had given to their sex.

Nurses, for example, were rightly called sisters and matrons. But was it quite right for the queen's own nephew to call one of them Mammy? Florence Nightingale may well have garnered the reputation, back in Britain, among civilians, as the Angel of Mercy in the Crimea, but the woman whom surviving soldiers most adored, and for the very good reason that she saw them through the worst,  was the most forgotten and the most unlikely of Victoria's sisters. And her name was Mary Seacole. Mary Seacole was West Indian, the daughter of a Scotsman and a Jamaican woman.

Largely self-taught, her Caribbean remedies became famous after they'd been shown to stop violent dysentery and to bring yellow fever and cholera victims back from death's door. When Britain joined the Crimean War in 1854, she tried to volunteer her services at the front. But Mary didn't exactly fit the profile of middle-class nurses. She was turned down by the likes of Nurse Nightingale. So Mary got herself to the Crimea under her own steam and with her own funds. And once there, she did something truly extraordinary. Mary Seacole built her "British Hotel" right on the front line, and it doubled both as a refectory, feeding the boys going into action, and a recovery station for the sick and wounded. Every morning, she'd make great vats of nutritious food, like rice pudding, saddle up a pair of mules and ride into the heart of the action looking for wounded, to whom she'd dole out food, hot tea, medicine, but most of all, motherly love.

Mortars would whiz past the big old woman trundling along the lines. After the war was over, the soldiers f๊ted her at a charity gala. She'd become, briefly, an "Eminent Victorian". Suppose, though, that women drawn to help the sick went one stage further and dreamed of being a doctor? That was a different story. In 1860, Elizabeth Garrett enrolled as a surgical nurse at Middlesex Hospital, but her sights were set higher. In between the swabs and the bedpans, she was looking carefully at surgical operations, and she was also cutting up body parts in her bedroom.

This improvised education made her bold enough to take the hospital's medical, not nursing exams, and when the time came to publish the results, one E Garrett had come top. Ordered to keep the outrage secret, she went public instead. Nine years later, the French gave her an MD. And in 1874, the first medical college expressly for women was set up in London. For Victoria, the mere idea of slips of girls looking at, much less cutting up
the naked bodies of dead men was an unthinkable indecency. But no doctor was of any help to her in the greatest crisis of her life.

For in 1861, the same year that Elizabeth Garrett cut her way into medicine, Albert contracted typhoid, which, after a few months of horrifyingly swift deterioration, ended in his death in December. Everything in those last weeks became suddenly invested with an almost religious significance. Here, for example, is the last book read to Albert, Scott's "Peveril of the Peak", and on the flyleaf the queen has written: "This book was read up to the mark on page 81 to my beloved husband "during his fatal illness "and within three days of its terrible termination." You turn to page 81 and here's how it reads: "He heard the sound of voices, "but they ceased to convey any impression to his understanding; "and in a few minutes, he was faster asleep "than he'd ever been in the whole course of his life." Victoria buried her beloved Albert in the Italianate mausoleum she built here at Frogmore in Windsor Great Park.

Albert's death threw Victoria into a paroxysm of grief. Not for her the stoical acceptance of the inscrutable will of the Almighty. She had lost not only her co-ruler, but her helpmate, and vanished, too, was her domestic idyll. At the abyss of her misery, she must have thought that all chance of contentment had gone. Death was an immense presence in Victorian life, perhaps because it was the one conquest denied to the soldiers and engineers and captains of industry who seemed to be able to conquer everything else. If they couldn't stop their loved ones from going to their graves, they could at least create the illusion in marble and photographs that they were still alongside those who mourned them.

This, in her distraught, inconsolable grief, Victoria knew how to do. With religious devotion, she set out Albert's shaving equipment every morning... and fresh evening clothes and a clean towel every evening. Missing his physical presence, she slept with his nightgown by her side. The exuberant headstrong young woman shrank into the hard shell of the forbidding inconsolable widow, for whom the least sign of merriment was a betrayal of Albert's sainted memory. She seemed, in a way which no one accustomed to the strong-minded queen could ever have imagined, somehow no longer in charge of either herself or of the country. Victoria's sense of moral calling, so strong from the beginning of her reign, had become so dependent on Albert the Good's judgement that now that he was gone, she seemed at a loss about how and where to exercise it.

It never occurred to her that women alone, either as widows or spinsters, might be able to do good by themselves, to make a life, even a career, on their own. If she wanted to see how this could be done, all she needed to do was to take her pony trap  a mile or two down the road from Osborne to Freshwater, to visit someone who, though neither widow nor spinster, was very much her own woman. The photographer Julia Margaret Cameron. Since Victoria was herself an avid collector of photographs, she might have been curious about this eccentric half-French woman's notorious dark room. For Julia Cameron, photography was not just an amateur hobby.

The poetic lyricism of her photographs disguises the hard need she had to make some money. Worse, she seemed perversely to glory in the male mess of camera work. Flouncing around in a converted hen house that was her studio, her dresses and hands stained with black silver nitrate, conscripting men and women models like a recruiting sergeant major and bellowing terrifyingly at them if they moved before they were told. Needless to say, the men who ran the Royal Photographic Society refused to take her seriously. What they meant, of course, was that a soft woman couldn't be expected to master machinery, chemicals, the hard technology of the job, let alone make a professional career out of it, despite Julia's obvious success at both.

But some of the most powerful and intelligent of the great and good - Tennyson... Carlyle... and the astronomer Sir John Herschel, who had obediently posed, were not deceived by the poetic light of her work. They embraced her as the greatest portraitist of her age. Julia's triumph in making a profession as an artist must have been noticed by all the young women of the 1870s and '80s who wanted more for themselves than just a destiny as wife and mother. After Girton College, the first Oxbridge college for women, opened its doors near Cambridge in 1873, they had, for the first time, somewhere that would educate them, liberate them, if they chose, from middle-class domesticity.

But even as they drank in knowledge behind the red walls of Girton, some of those young women longed to get beyond the cloister. The old ways of women's useful work - teaching, preaching, nursing - were no longer enough. Nor was just being an educated designer of the House Beautiful. They were drawn instead, as Elizabeth Gaskell was a generation earlier, to the ugliness everywhere in a Britain feeling once more the strain of economic crisis.
Some of them even decided to make that new home in the places most shocking to their parents' generation - in the slums of the industrial cities, to steep themselves in the dirt and anger of their poor abused sisters... to face up to harsh truths, the kind spelled out by the young George Bernard Shaw.

The bravest of this new generation could even face head-on the most unpalatable truths, like that link between breeding and destitution.  Annie Besant was the kind of do-gooder clergyman's wife unthinkable a generation  earlier, and still unthinkable to the likes of the queen. Annie Besant had scandalised the country by publishing contraception advice for working people. Such impertinence would not go unpunished, however, and Annie found herself the victim of a court order. She lost custody of her daughter to her former husband, an unforgiving time for women judged as unfit mothers. But nothing would stop her crusading. Searching round for a woman's cause, Annie found one in the teenage match girls who worked amidst phosphorus fumes for Bryant and May in East London.

They were paid just between four and ten shillings a week, and if they had dirty feet or an untidy bench they were fined, taking more money out of their already pathetic wages. Most horrifying of all, the girls ran the constant risk of contracting the hideously disfiguring "phossy" jaw, since Bryant and May persisted in the use of phosphorus, which other match companies had given up. At the same time, the company was paying huge dividends to its shareholders, a disproportionate number of whom, Annie enjoyed revealing, were the clergy.

Annie wrote an article about the plight of the match girls for her campaigning newspaper, The Link. And together with fellow socialist campaigner Herbert Burrows, she distributed copies of it at the gates of the factory. The owners of Bryant and May threatened the girls with instant dismissal if they didn't sign a document repudiating the article and the journalists. But, instead of signing, the girls went en masse to Annie and Burrows with their story. They told her: A strike committee was formed. Besant and Burrows promised to pay the wages of any girl dismissed for their action.

George Bernard Shaw volunteered as the cashier of the strike fund. 1,400 girls came out. The company eventually settled and Annie Besant and the girls were triumphant. She was hailed as the working girls' champion  and was immediately sought after by all sorts of other women aggrieved at their treatment. In 1888, Annie campaigned for election to the Tower Hamlets School Board in a dogcart festooned with red ribbons. She won, in a landslide victory, polling 15,000 votes. Even before they had the vote, women showed they could, and would, win local elections. Queen Victoria was not, in fact, blind to the miseries which so appalled the young women social workers of the 1880s and 1890s.

Shaken by some of the revelations in "The Bitter Cry of Outcast London", she actually pressed Gladstone's government to spend more of its time on the problem of housing, and her insistence produced a Royal Commission. But, whether she wanted to see it or could have seen it, there were, in the warm Jubilee summer of 1887, two Britains. Nearly a third of able-bodied men were unemployed. Now, thousands of the jobless were also homeless,
sleeping rough in parks or squares, some of them even in open coffins - the undead of underclass Albion.

But, of course, the queen was kept well away from all that. What she saw were 30,000 poor schoolchildren in Hyde Park, who each got a meat pie, a piece of cake and an orange to celebrate the great day of her Jubilee. It was the kind of thing which brought a smile - yes, a smile - on the face of the old queen. It would be like this for the rest of her life - the country bathed in summer evening light, the faces well-scrubbed and dutiful. The old lady, at last, something like the contented matriarch, the grandmother of the Empire, the thrones of Europe filled with her offspring.

There was, of course, someone missing from this national family photo. In the Abbey, amidst all the splendour, Victoria suddenly felt a pang. Victoria would have to wait another 14 years, until 1901, before she would be reunited with him: Her long-suffering secretary, Frederick Ponsonby, said there was nothing Victoria enjoyed so much as arranging funerals and her own was no exception. She ordered a white lying-in-state and funeral for herself. In her hands was a silver crucifix, her white dress decorated with cheerful sprays of spring flowers. There was a touch of Miss Havisham about this, the 80-year-old flower-bedecked virgin bride.

But not jilted by her beloved, going to join him. When Albert's memorial effigy had been ordered from the sculptor Marochetti in 1862, Victoria insisted on hers being made at the same time, and with her appearance as it was when he had been taken from her, so that they would be reunited, at least in marble, at the same age, in the glowing prime of their union. The trouble was, no one could remember where they'd put the statue made 40 years before. It had, in fact, been walled up in one of the cavities of a renovated room in Windsor Castle.

Eventually, it was found and laid next to Albert as per the queen's orders. And there she is, as if the clocks had stopped along with the heart of the Prince Consort. But they hadn't, of course. Victoria might lie by her beloved dressed as a medieval princess, but he, of all people, had known it had been progress which had been the mainspring of her reign. Albert had done his best to see that it had been a force for goodness as well as greatness,
that the surging movement of the machine age would be held in check by the moral anchorage of the Victorian home.

The women of Britain, Victoria's sisters and daughters, were supposed to be grateful for this, to bask in the warmth of the hearth they tended. But those cosy fires kindled yearnings that couldn't be contained by a placid domesticity. Those little liberators - the cheque book, the latchkey and the bicycle - beckoned over the doorstep and into the street. And you couldn't tell any longer just how the girls would turn out. Riding with the body of the queen from London to Windsor was the widow of one of her Viceroys of India - Lady Lytton. Just eight years later, her daughter, Constance, in prison as a suffragette, would make her statement about the future of women in Britain... ...by carving, with a piece of broken enamel from a hairpin... ...the letter V into the flesh of her breast. But it wasn't V for Victoria. It was V for Votes.

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BBC Life (David Attenborough-Narrated Version) [Blu-ray] (2010)


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Ours is truly a blue planet. Water covers most of the world's surface. Here we are the outsiders. But under the waves one group thrives. Fish are masters of the waters. And sailfish are the fastest of them all. Their speed makes them one of the ocean's most fearsome predators. Off the coast of Mexico, 30 sailfish have surrounded a ball of sardines. To catch their prey requires more than speed alone. In the tightest turns, fins maintain stability. Their sickle-shaped tail powers them forwards and that extraordinary dorsal fin helps intimidate their prey.

To the naked eye, the action is too fast, slowed, their challenge becomes clear. Just picking a target is hard enough. Knocking it off balance, separates it from the shoal. This requires extraordinary skill. Not every attempt is successful. But as more sailfish join in, when one misses another takes its place. The shoal of sardines is methodically wiped out. Sailfish are top predators, very little threatens them. But for the majority of fish this is not the case.
For most fish the open ocean is extremely dangerous. And some go to extraordinary lengths just to survive.

Flying fish. Free of the water they soar on elongated fins, leaving their predators far behind. A flight of fish. Escaping predators is not the only test facing the flying fish. They must also protect their developing young. These flying fish are searching for the one thing that will make this possible. In such a vast ocean it's not easy. They're in luck. A palm frond. It's a tiny island adrift in a huge ocean. And like an island it offers shelter, not for the flying fish, but for their eggs. The females lay eggs on the raft, where the males fertilise them. The first fish spawn and this triggers the others to start.

Soon thousands join the melee. Innumerable strands of eggs are laid. The raft starts to tilt under their weight. The best place to lay eggs is right inside the frond. For some the attempt proves fatal and living fish become entombed. The raft starts to sink under the weight of so many eggs. But this is far from a disaster. Sinking away from the surface actually improves the eggs' chances of survival. In just a few days, having been safely hidden in the depths, they'll hatch out. Other fish protect their offspring in different ways. Some go to far greater lengths to care for them. The shallow waters of southern Australia are home to many strange creatures. It's a fairytale world of sea horses.....stargazers.....and stingrays. But none compare with the beauty of the weedy sea dragon. The dragon's tiny fins beat frantically to prevent the current from sweeping it away.

It's the beginning of spring, the season when sea dragons begin their courtship. And in the evening light, they start to dance. In a graceful duet, each partner mirrors the actions of the other. Darkness will soon draw a veil over the pair but they will dance on, into the night. Two months later, and the result of their courtship is revealed. It's the male and he's the one that's carrying the eggs, with rows and rows of them embedded in his tail. That night the female transferred her eggs to him. Since then, the male alone has cared for them.

By carrying them with him he's kept them safe. And now it's time for his efforts to be rewarded. The eggs are ready to hatch. In the calm of a summer morning a baby sea dragon, with yolk sac still attached, is born. The weed bed shelters older dragons that are already able to feed themselves. Although these dragons were well cared for by their father, now they must find their own way in the world. There are fish, however, which provide their young with a safe refuge for far longer. The south western Pacific. A convict fish and it's something of a marine architect. Underground it has created a labyrinth of tunnels. This adult never ventures out of its burrow, what it eats is a mystery. But it doesn't live here alone. At another entrance faces peer out.

Juvenile convict fish. Unlike their parent, the youngsters are not tied to the burrow. And as they start to emerge, a trickle becomes a flood of fish. There are thousands of them. And they all help with the chores. Many hands make light work. The young fish swarm together. Thousands of mouths gulping plankton. What the adults eat must somehow involve these youngsters. Whether the young feed their parents by regurgitating food or through some other mechanism, we just don't know. Whatever the answer, the youngsters provide their parents with a meal and in return get a roof over their heads. Producing young is just one challenge. Finding food and somewhere to live are further trials fish must face.

The Californian coast, a wide range of species live here. But all this life means competition for living space is intense. Old shells are highly prized. And this one is occupied by a sarcastic fringehead. These fish are exceptionally quarrelsome, they have to be, to defend their living space. An octopus. Inadvertently it's wandered into the fringehead's territory and that can't be tolerated. The octopus's impressive jab holds the fringehead at bay. There is more to this behaviour than being bad-tempered. The fringehead needs to defend its patch if it is to get enough to eat and the octopus was competition.

Crabs are not the easiest of mouthfuls. Because of the shortage of living space there are constant boundary disputes, especially with other fringeheads and this one has got too close. Despite the most extravagant threats... ..neither is prepared to back down. Success, and it's quick to get back to its shell. A fringehead can never drop its guard, there's too much competition. Some fish have moved to places where they have fewer rivals. A mudskipper a fish that spends most of its life out of the sea. It can walk on land and breathe air. Its life is very different from that of most fish. A fish out of water maybe, but they thrive here in Japan. So what's made this upheaval worthwhile? The answer lies in the mud. As the tide retreats it exposes mudflats. Sunlight hits the rich silt and tiny plants and animals flourish there. All food for a mudskipper. But life on land is not without problems, it's hard work to find a mate.

Jumping high above the mud will get you noticed. With eyes perched on top of their heads the mudskippers keep a look out for both friend and foe. And males fight those who intrude on their territory. They must also take care not to dry out in the sun. Rolling in the ooze keeps the skin cool and moist. For this smaller species, a better option is to retreat underground. So he digs himself a tunnel down into the mud. His heap of spoil is an indication of the extent of his excavations. With the tide flooding the tunnel twice a day, maintenance is a real burden. The tunnel is more than a refuge from the sun, it serves another very important purpose. The tunnel is actually U-shaped and at the far end is a sealed chamber, the walls of which are lined with eggs.

The eggs are kept in air as it's richer in oxygen than the water. The problem is the air that's trapped here won't last for long. So the male travels to the open end of the tunnel to gulp fresh air. Back he goes down his tunnel where he releases it into the egg chamber. Replenishing the oxygen on which the eggs depend. He will repeat this hundreds and hundreds of times until his young hatch. This lifestyle is very demanding, yet the mudskipper has found a way around every problem. The harsh challenges of life in the ocean have encouraged other fish to leave the sea. Not for land, but for fresh water. Hawaii is the remotest island chain on the planet.

These pools look the perfect place for a fish to live, secluded and free from competition and predators. Yet few contain fish, for one very considerable reason. Surely no fish could swim up this. But one fish comes from the ocean, intent on colonising these streams. It's a tiny goby and it's a rock climber. With pelvic fins fused into a disc, which acts like a sucker, all the goby needs is a film of water to climb through. The pioneer is soon followed by many others, possibly following its scent trail. They clamber on, ever upwards against the flow. Drops of water fall like bombs. False leads waste crucial energy. Some must rest. For others, the effort is just too much. Many die in their attempt to reach to top. Against all the odds a few heroic individuals do make it to the top.

They find themselves in a near-perfect fish habitat... ..where the gobies can feed and grow and breed in peace. In time their own young will be swept downstream and out to sea and the cycle will begin all over again. Fresh water presents particular challenges for fish. Nutrients can be in very short supply in spring water, so here fish must take every chance they can to find food. The rain that falls on these Kenyan hills percolates through the rocks.
Finally emerging as crystal clear pools. Pools that are home to fish including barbel. The fish share these waters with all sorts of creatures... ..including hippopotamus. These giant vegetarians are no threat to the fish, in fact they're key to their survival here.

After a night of grazing on land, these hippos return to spend the daylight hours in the cooling waters. And the barbel come to meet them. Soon each hippo is trailed by a shoal of fish, waiting for their breakfast. Hippo droppings. But it's not just the hippo's dung the fish are interested in. When the hippos reach one particular spot in the pool, they stand still and wait. And the fish start to clean them... ..removing ticks, parasites and other tasty morsels. To the fish the hippos are a mobile cafeteria. The hippos seem to be enjoying the sensation. The only thing that interrupts the feast is the need to take an occasional breath.

Cleaning the hippo's skin was just the hors d'oeuvre. Now it's time for the main course. So, in addition to providing skin care, the fish look after the hippos' dental hygiene. It's an arrangement that suits both parties. But perhaps it is the fish that are the overall winners. For, thanks to the hippos, they are able to feed on the abundant vegetation that would otherwise be beyond their reach, growing around their pool, on land. Providing a cleaning service is clearly a good way of getting a meal. And there is cleaning to be done in the sea as well. The life of this wrasse is centred on removing parasites from other reef fish.....including predatory jacks.

Normally they would snap up such a little fish, but this is an established relationship and both sides know the rules. With so many jacks and only a few wrasse in attendance, not all the jacks are going to get cleaned. But all this life attracts other predators. Silvertip sharks. The reef provides shelter for the smaller fish, but the jacks remain exposed. Yet this may be a chance for the jacks to solve their cleaning problem. They've spotted an opportunity.
Sharks have skin like sand paper. And bumping into the sharks' flanks helps the jacks to rid themselves of parasites and dead skin. Perhaps the jacks find this a more effective alternative to the cleaner fish. And soon swarms of jacks pursue the sharks.

All itching to have a scratch. Unsurprisingly all this attention bothers the sharks and they head back to the blue water, leaving the residents of the reef to resume life as normal. Coral reefs are the richest habitats on Earth. It's not surprising that, with so many different kinds of animals living so closely together, some extraordinary relationships have evolved. A clownfish, a small and defenceless resident of the reef. It seems to have picked a tough place to live, amongst the tentacles of a sea anemone.

Each tentacle is armed with paralysing stings that can kill a fish. Yet the clown fish are totally immune. For this pair, the anemone is like a castle. So long as they stay surrounded by the tentacles, they're safe and so this is where they choose to lay their eggs. After carefully selecting the site, work begins on preparing the surface. Both fish share in the labour, though it's the larger female who decides when all is ready. Lines and lines of tiny eggs are stuck to the rock and then fertilised. They're laid so close to the anemone they will be safe. And for the next seven days they'll receive constant care.....much of which is provided by the male.

His seemingly obsessive concern for the eggs is for good reason. His position in the anemone is far from secure. The female watches his every move, she's in charge here and if his efforts don't match up to her standards, she'll get rid of him. In line to take over are a host of immature clown fish.....each waiting to move up the hierarchy. For the male the best way to stay in the female's favour is by lavishing care on the eggs. So he focuses all his efforts on keeping them clean and healthy. The eggs grow rapidly and soon their tiny beating hearts are visible. It seems he's done a good job. Clown fish can hide away within an anemone. But most fish don't have this option.

For some, the only way of avoiding danger is by hiding amongst their own kind.....in shoals. Packed close together, no one anchovy stands out. By sensing and reacting to the movements of their immediate neighbours, thousands can move as one. For a predator, picking out an individual becomes nearly impossible. The shoal's unity is its strength. Yet each fish is acting from selfish motives. Moving together, the fish confuse the sea lions so much that they leave to look elsewhere for a smaller, less tricky target. The sheer size of the shoal defeated the sea lions, but there are fish that can overcome such strategies. Off the coast of South Africa this huge shoal of sardines is shadowed by a ragged tooth shark.

Other sharks join the menacing escort. The shoal has been driven into the shallows by a cold ocean current. And this gives the sharks an opportunity. Hundreds have moved into position. Sharks have a special sense, they can detect the electrical signals their prey gives off when it moves. It's a sixth sense that can give them an edge. But with hundreds of thousands of fish crammed into the shallows, the sharks now need only rely on their speed and agility. As the first shark starts to hunt in earnest, a feeding frenzy breaks out.

The shoal's defences are weakened, there isn't enough space to manoeuvre. And the sharks can gorge themselves. Despite the casualties, the shoal is so vast that the sharks have little effect on its size. Fish not only come together in great shoals for defence, but at other critical times in their lives, when they're ready to spawn. These events only occur for a few days each year. Snapper are normally solitary, but they've travelled here from hundreds of miles away to gather off the coast of Belize. Along this one reef, cubera, dog and mutton snapper form huge shoals. 60 metres down, there is an eerie coolness to the scene. But things are about to hot up. It's the evening of the full moon, the tides are just right. A great column of fish leaves the bottom. As they rise through the water, small groups break free of the shoal.

Each burst is led by a female, with the males racing behind. As she sheds her eggs, they add their sperm to the mix. By synchronising the time when they gather together, the maximum numbers of fish can join in this mass spawning. Millions of fertilized eggs are released, cast into the ocean currents... ..and straight into a dangerous world. Whale sharks, the largest fish on Earth. Each shark might weigh ten tonnes yet they feed on the tiniest
creatures, including snapper eggs. Life is being created, sustained and destroyed simultaneously in one huge event. The struggle for life, encapsulated into a single moment. The oceans are perilous places to live, yet fish have developed the most extraordinary means for survival.

Their astounding diversity, the product of millions of years of evolution, has enabled them to triumph. Dominating the one habitat that we have so far failed to make our own. Filming under water raised all sorts of problems for the Life team. Not least of which was that they were only able to experience the underwater world for as long as the air on their backs or in their lungs held out. But over three years the team were lucky enough to capture on film
some extraordinary moments in the lives of fish. The waters off the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico are a rich hunting ground for Sailfish. Cameraman Rick Rosenthal has teamed up with sport fishing Captain Anthony Mendillo to try and film the hunting behaviour of these amazing animals. It's fish! Feeding birds lead them to the sailfish. Right here.Right here.

Getting to the bait balls and into the water quickly is key, before the feast is consumed. Get ready. Everybody hang on. Let's go swimming, now, now. Go on get in there. It's all very well telling Rick to hurry but these fish are capable of swimming at over 60 miles an hour. Just keeping up with them is hard enough. Getting right in amongst the action is vital, but Rick has to try to avoid becoming part of it. Bills nearly one metre long, scything through the water at break neck speed are guaranteed to get the heart racing. But Rick holds his nerve as the sailfish pick off sardine after sardine right in front of him. Almost as soon as it started, it was all over. That was a wild feed show out there today.

Really wild. Must have been 50 sailfish if there was...Or 49, but very aggressive fish, very hungry, everybody on the move and I had to just keep kicking and kicking and kicking and kicking and kicking and kicking to keep in the action, because after a while the sardine patch was eaten up to just a little sliver and then it was over. Nearly 2,000 miles away on the other side of the Caribbean another crew is taking a slightly different approach. They are trying to film flying fish. The team sets out at dawn on the Hog Snapper, a commercial fishing boat. Conditions are in stark contrast to the gleaming sport fishing boat in Mexico. There's Doug he's ready for action, look. They are hoping to use a local fisherman's expertise to put them in the right place at the right time. Yeah, Roger that. All you catching there's food. You catching dinner, lunch and breakfast. It's not a big boat and the crew's bedroom has now become the kitchen. We're having fried bacon and fried egg this morning.

Fried bacon and fried eggs. I'm the trainee chef and I don't...So I don't get to wear the white wellies. Rather than racing around the ocean chasing the action, the flying fish team have to sit it out and wait for the fish to come to them. Flying fish will spawn onto debris in the water and the team tie on to a floating palm frond to try and make sure they're close by in case the action begins. And sure enough, they don't have long to wait. Thousands of fish have massed below the surface, all intent on reaching the frond. And the frond is not the only thing that they're trying to lay their eggs on. The weight of the eggs sinks the palm frond and puts an end to the spawning and to the crew's filming. Well, it's moments like that we do the job for.

Everything was right. The light was right, blue water, the four tonnes of flying fish all going mental. Thanks, Barry.You're welcome. But now the fish's attention is turned to something bigger. Their spawning directly onto the boat. Barry is worried as he drags up a huge sheet of eggs. Gotta bring it on the boat and check it out. I cleaned this off like five minutes a go. Right? Right now the problem is this, there's too many flying fish... Too many...around us.
If we moor through the nights with the lights on and stuff, more and more will keep coming and what they're doing is they're actually laying on the boat now, so the boat has become their object and that is not good.

So basically you're worried that if we just stay on this drift we're gonna sink the boat. Five hours from now that'll 3,000 pounds.Yeah, yeah. In the back here, it will sink the boat. OK, so we've got to leave this area. Yeah, we can't stay here. Just five minutes of spawning has produced this. The team have no option but to move on. The next day the search for flying fish begins all over again. This time the team want to film the fish doing what they're famous for. We've got some lovely shots from the spawning but now the really hard bit of trying to get them flying. Gonna be, gonna be a good challenge. The fish are around, but they're all too far off to film. The action is impressive this morning, unpredictable but impressive but it's distant, it's not happening next to the boat today.

They're either being chased off or they're just not interested. Look! Look, look! Ah it's loads. Ay, ay, ay! The next day the crew decides to try a different approach. All right, lets go. Now they're just where they need to be, but it puts them directly in the firing line. I guess that's one! Despite being bombarded, their strategy is paying off. That was amazing, we spent a long time in that wee boat today. Thanks. But the last two hours were just off the scale.
We were just getting shot after shot. We need... Can't wait to watch it on the big monitor but it felt really good. And Doug is right, it worked. Flying fish taking to the air and flying. Slowed down 40 times. By working with people more used to catching fish than filming them the Life team have been able to gain a unique insight into the hidden world of fish.


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