NEWS OF THE WEEK.
[From the Spectator, September 9.] Holyrood Palace was fitted up, people observe, to afford the Queen two nights’ lodging ; for her stay was no longer, and she quitted Edinburgh without either drawingroom or levee. In the course of her sojourn, the successor of Elizabeth visited the apartments of Mary Queen of Scots, preserving a strict incognito, for the better because more free contemplation. What thoughts might rush across the royal brain ?—the ill-fate of the thoughtless woman, wandering among fanatics and rude soldiers, whose coarseness merged in fanaticism ; the hated husband, the imbecile progeny —link between the Victoria of the nineteenth and the glorious Elizabeth of the sixteenth century* Many a material for a royal sermon —even the apocryphal stain of blood, whose imputed indebility provoked the English bagman’s indignation on behalf of his forbidden "detergent elixir." No detergent elixir can cleanse the blot from that page of bigotry and cruelty ; but a healthy faith can draw flowers of consolation even from the ground fertilized with blood. Before the royal lady had rapt herself from the eyes of the loyal Edinburghers, Prince Albert was seen in his duty as aesthetical commissioner-general, laying the first stone of the new Scottish National Gallery on the Mound, and delivering one of his neat oral compositions —which always contain some sterling thought—on the independent condition of the useful arts in Scotland at this day compared with the time of the Union, and the growing influence of the fine arts. And so from art in modern Athens to nature at Balmoral. -
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZSCSG18510122.2.13
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
New Zealand Spectator and Cook's Strait Guardian, Volume VII, Issue 571, 22 January 1851, Page 4
Word count
Tapeke kupu
260NEWS OF THE WEEK. New Zealand Spectator and Cook's Strait Guardian, Volume VII, Issue 571, 22 January 1851, Page 4
Using this item
Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi
No known copyright (New Zealand)
To the best of the National Library of New Zealand’s knowledge, under New Zealand law, there is no copyright in this item in New Zealand.
You can copy this item, share it, and post it on a blog or website. It can be modified, remixed and built upon. It can be used commercially. If reproducing this item, it is helpful to include the source.
For further information please refer to the Copyright guide.