Hannah Pakula’s work on this book is beyond doubt a truly masterpiece. The exquisite and thorough research that went into this in-depth 600-page biography along with its engaging and absorbing writing style is quite simply fascinating. Brilliantly written and highly documented, Hannah tells us the story of Vicky, Princess Royal of England, daughter of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom.
Raised within the British court, Vicky was reared by her German father, Prince Albert, whose liberal-mindedness and far-sighted ideas would one day be expected to come to fruition in Germany through his daughter, who was to be in charge of fostering them in her future adopted country .
With a lot of knowledge under her belt instilled by her father, at the age of 17 Vicky was married and sent off to Germany to carry out a mission. Yet Vicky was met with trouble ever since the very first moment she set foot in German soil and little did she know what lay ahead of her.
A forced marriage that proved to be a happy one, Vicky was lucky enough that the man who was thrust upon her by her parents was someone whom she truly loved, which was quite unusual at that time, especially amongst royals. Had it been the opposite, I do not know what would have become of her. (And yes, it was indeed forced as her parents started plotting their daughter’s future when she was still a child just for the sake of England!).
I would like to clarify that this is not an intimate or personal biography based on the book’s title. This huge volume not only does deal with Vicky’s life, but also with everything that was going on in Germany as well as in Europe during the mid to late nineteenth century. Thus, be prepared to wade through topics which can be kind of tedious to read such as: the origin of the House of Hohenzollern, the history of Prussia, the Schleswig Wars, the Austro-Prussian and Franco-Prussian wars which led to the unification of the country as well as Bismarck’s rise to power, the whole political turmoil and instability of the late XIX century which gradually sowed the seeds of the First World War and so on. I understand that as the wife of the future Kaiser Vicky’s life revolved around Germany’s politics but still, I think the author devoted too many pages to such topics and at some point it got boring as she veers off the subject matter which is Vicky herself. Details such as the weapons used in battle, the soldiers’ advancements, the countless generals who headed up each army etc, were of little importance and could have been summed up in a few lines rather than writing whole chapters of it.
Hannah did also a great job in including excerpts from Vicky’s correspondence with the Queen, which gives us a more insightful account into the close mother-daughter relationship. Reciprocally, Vicky and Victoria exchanged throughout their lives an innumerable amount of letters through which both gave vent to their thoughts, feelings, frustrations and also discussed all kinds of topics, whether they were politics, child rearing or just mere gossip. There were times I had a lump in my throat as I read these letters since I got to see how self-absorbed and self-centred Queen Victoria was as a mother, expecting her daughter to live up to her wishes at all times from the other side of the channel.
Another “person” whom half of the book is dedicated to is none other than Bismarck. I know that the role he played in politics and the unification of the country is crucial to fathom all the facts but again, I found it quite unnecessary to sneak his whole biography, from his youth until his death, into Vicky’s own story.
A genius at stirring up trouble, Bismarck invariably jumped at the chance to discredit Vicky and took it upon himself to drive a wedge between Wilhelm and his mother and certainly, he succeeded in doing so. And that wedge never healed.
A troubled mother-son relationship that got off the wrong foot ever since the very first minute Wilhem came into the world, little did Vicky know all the difficulties she would have to come up against on account of her eldest son’s actions.
I do not think that Vicky really ever came to terms with Willy’s disability. Her main duty as future queen was to produce a healthy, robust heir to the throne but, sadly, things did not turn out as expected. Having the feeling that she had produced “damaged goods”, so to speak, Vicky lived until her last days with a feeling of guilt, which was emphasised by her son himself and the Prussian court.
Probably attributable to the environment in which he was brought up and the people he was surrounded by, such as the likes of Bismarck and his grandfather, the future Kaiser grew to become a warmonger and a despot who would one day prompt and instigate the outbreak of WWI and unavoidably put an end to the House of Hohenzollern.
Once he became Emperor he was resolved to wipe Vicky off the map and cut her off from the court forever. Willy’s hatred towards his mother knew no bounds and he still had the nerve to speak ill and make mockery of her even after the latter’s death. She was fortunate enough not to live to see what was looming large in a years’ time.
As much as she tried to integrate herself into the Prussian society, Vicky was not really socially well-liked as she was more English than ever. Shamelessly treated and frowned upon by the Prussian Court, Vicky was looked on as way too revolutionary and liberal for her husband and considered a danger for the country as empress-to-be. Their in-laws and her own son despised her with all their might. Fritz’s mother, Augusta, I think, was the most disgusting and deplorable human being ever to exist. Bismarck spent all his chancellorship contriving ways to trample upon her and he undoubtedly got a kick out of it in doing so. Yet Vicky, plucked up courage, never gave up and fought back against all her foes.
As a like-minded couple, Vicky and her husband were determined to usher in a new era in Germany through liberalism when they were to ascend the throne. Nonetheless, when it was finally time for Fritz to step into his father’s shoes, the Crown Prince’s life was drawing to a close as he was suffering from cancer. His days were numbered, and their dreams far from being feasible. After having spent all their lives biding their time, they hardly ruled for just 99 days. Sadly, their accomplishments were few and far between, if none.
In the wake of her husband’s death, once she became reconciled to the fact that there was little, if nothing, she could do as a powerless dowager empress, Vicky dedicated her life to bettering and improving her adopted country’s welfare by setting up hospitals, nurseries, charities and fighting for women’s rights. But Vicky’s final years were no better than those of her husband as she herself, too, was diagnosed with cancer. She lived out the rest of her days in her castle which was built in Fritz’s honour, until her death at the age of 60. Vicky’s life ended as tragically as that of her husband’s, with a heart-rending and ill-fated end.
As I was reading I couldn’t help thinking “what would have happened if…” so many times. I have no doubt that history would most likely have been different and many an event could have been avoided had Vicky and Fritz ruled sooner and had Wilhelm I, Bismarck and Wilhem II never come to power or rather existed.
It took me about three months to finish this book but it was really worth it as I have certainly learnt a great deal. I highly recommend it to anyone interested not only in Vicky herself and the British-German Royal Family but also to those interested in the 19th century history that leads up to WWI.
Vicky, thanks to books like this, you will never be forgotten.