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In January 1901,
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Britain and the Empire mourned the passing of an era.
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For more than six decades,
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Queen Victoria had stamped her presence on the throne
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with a dignified and sober authority.
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Now, few could imagine life without her.
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People were dreading the death of Queen Victoria.
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Partly because she was a fixture of everybody's lives,
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but also because they were rather worried
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about the kind of king her son would make.
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You know, would this man be a worthy successor?
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There had been very little evidence that he would.
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There was a very strong feeling that he wasn't up to much.
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He was nicknamed Edward the Caresser as opposed to Edward the Confessor.
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There was a lot of talk that he was a vulgar philistine
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and he would be quite incapable of the gravitas and the mastery
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that you needed to be king.
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King Edward VII, known to the family as Bertie,
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couldn't have had a more different public image from that of his mother.
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Fat, 59 years old, and with a reputation for frivolity,
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Bertie had been pursued by scandal
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and written off as an idle, playboy Prince.
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Basically, nobody thought he was going to be a good king.
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Not even Bertie, actually -
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it's widely attested that he was depressed at the time he became king,
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because he thought nobody would respect him and he wasn't going to manage.
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So it was a very inauspicious start.
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Before he'd even been crowned, it seemed the new king was on the verge of a nervous breakdown.
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But Edward VII's popular touch would turn out to be his secret weapon.
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The man of whom many predicted disaster
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turned out to be the king who reinvented monarchy
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for the modern age.
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In the 1840s, Queen Victoria and her consort Prince Albert
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embarked on a mission.
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Under the reign of their predecessors,
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the high-living Hanoverians,
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the monarchy had become a byword for corruption and immorality.
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Victoria and Albert believed that if it was to survive in an era of revolution,
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the Royal Family must become a model of public duty and immaculate private morality.
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Albert and Victoria were very aware of this sort of Hanoverian hangover,
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this moral legacy from the Regency days.
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The irony was, Victoria was a highly sexed individual
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and enjoyed her sex life,
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and revelled in it and explored it and wrote about it.
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But they knew that the symbol of monarchy
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had to be a far more moral endeavour.
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Central to Victoria and Albert's plans
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was their first son and heir, Bertie, Prince of Wales.
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To groom the boy for kingship,
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they subjected him to a gruelling programme of moral and intellectual enlightenment.
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Prince Albert had an idea
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that princes had to be kind of super-people.
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And he developed this educational regime for his children,
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whereby pretty much every waking moment
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was stuffed with improving educational experiences
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from the age of about three.
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Constantly impressed on Bertie was the fact that he was going to be king
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and he had to be good and he had to achieve
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and everything had to be improving.
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And it was suffocating.
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His whole day was parcelled out half hour by half hour into lessons
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from early in the morning until six o'clock at night.
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And he behaved appallingly.
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He behaved like the sort of legendary naughty boy.
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He stood in the corner and stamped and screamed,
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he behaved as abominably as he possibly could. He refused to work.
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"Today I had to do some arithmetic with the Prince of Wales.
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"Immediately the pencil was flung to the end of the room.
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"The stool was kicked away.
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"The Prince was very rude, throwing stones in my face."
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Bertie's parents were in despair.
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"I never in my life met such a thorough and cunning lazybones.
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"It does grieve me when it is my own son,
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"and that he might be called upon at any moment
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"to take over the reins of a country where the sun never sets.
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"His intellect, alas, is weak.
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"He listens to nothing you tell him, but seems in a sort of dreaminess,
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"which alarms us for his brain."
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Victoria and Albert are pretty upset, anxious and confused
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by their son's refusal to respond to this educational plan.
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They bring in a phrenologist, a man called George Coombe.
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Phrenology was this sort of mid-19th century pseudo-science
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that declared that if you felt the bumps on a person's head,
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then you could determine something about their character,
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about the way they were put together.
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Now, Combe felt all over young Bertie's head
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and declared that his centres of self esteem were too highly developed.
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"The boy is a nervous and excitable child with little power of endurance
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"or sustained action in any direction."
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"The brain is feeble and abnormal,
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"making him liable to fits of passion and obstinacy.
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Despite Bertie's lack of academic promise,
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at the age of 17 he was packed off to university.
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The Prince took every opportunity to give his royal minders the slip
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and applied himself enthusiastically
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to the study of gambling, horses and strong cigars.
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Bertie desperately wanted friends.
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He really wanted to meet boys of his own age.
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That's what he really wanted, he wanted friendship.
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He's not ever allowed to sort of rub shoulders with people
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as equals of his own age. He never goes anywhere near a school.
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And even when he goes to university, Albert is terribly careful to ensure
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that he is secluded, so he is brought up very much in isolation.
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And this for him was really difficult,
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because he was by nature an incredible extrovert.
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Despairing of his son's academic abilities, in 1861 Prince Albert
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decided to knock his son into shape with a taste of military life.
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Bertie was ordered to attend an army camp in Ireland.
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But if Albert hoped boot camp would be the making of his son,
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he was to be disappointed.
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Soon after Bertie's arrival,
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fellow officers smuggled a friendly young actress by the name of Nellie Clifden into his sleeping quarters.
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The Prince recorded the momentous event in his personal diary.
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"6th September, NC, first time.
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"9th September, NC, second time.
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"10th September, NC, third time."
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Temptation comes, and he's ready for it.
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He is brimming over with the desire to share the delights
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of this beautiful woman that pretty well is put in his bed.
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And when his father hears about this, of course horror strikes him.
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Bertie is weak in spirit and flesh
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and you have this terrible tension between the ideals of monarchy
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and this ideal of this bourgeois, mid-Victorian industrious, dutiful monarchy
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and what Bertie likes to get up to in the barracks.
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It's both an attack upon on their ideal of family but also crucially, I think,
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Albert is very worried that it is undermining politically of the monarchy.
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"I write to you with heavy heart
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"on a subject that has caused me the deepest pain.
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"I knew that you were thoughtless and weak,
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"but I could not think you depraved."
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Bertie couldn't have chosen a worse time to be caught in the act.
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His father, Prince Albert,
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already suffering the early symptoms of typhoid fever, was crushed with worry.
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When he died soon afterwards at Windsor castle, it was Bertie who took the blame.
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In the Queen's eyes he was a martyr
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who had died because of the wickedness of his son.
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He'd sacrificed his life
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and she never altogether forgave the Prince of Wales
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for what she saw as this appalling misdemeanour
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which led to the death of her beloved Albert.
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Albert's death has a profoundly negative affect
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on the relationship between Bertie and Victoria.
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Victoria was completely, well, shocked,
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and blames Bertie for Albert's death.
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Victoria, she says, "Whenever I see Bertie, I shudder.
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"I can't bear to have him in the room. I can't bear to be near him".
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The Prince had never enjoyed a warm relationship with his mother.
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For the next 40 years it would be positively frosty.
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To keep her son and heir from further trouble,
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the Queen now resorted to a desperate remedy - marriage.
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The royal houses of Europe were scoured for a suitable partner.
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The winning candidate was the beautiful, albeit penniless,
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Alexandra of Denmark.
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In the 18-year-old princess,
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it seemed the matchmakers had found the perfect bride.
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Alexandra was in fact an ideal wife for the Prince of Wales.
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Compared with the starchy correctness and the infinite tedium
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of Victoria's court,
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the Danish Royal court was a delight for the Prince of Wales
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because they took everything cheerfully.
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Their idea of relaxation was romps and practical jokes and jolly songs.
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It was said about the Danish Royal Family
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that nobody was ever allowed to read a book,
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and if they saw you reading a book in the sitting room
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they'd all run up after you and go, "boo!"
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And that was really not all right, they wanted to be galloping around
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and playing parlour games and throwing wet towels at each other.
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In 1863 the 21-year-old Prince of Wales
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married his fun-loving Danish bride.
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For the wedding photograph,
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Queen Victoria arranged for Albert to join them,
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to make sure that nobody had too much fun.
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Installed in their opulent marital home, Marlborough House,
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the newlyweds quickly became the centre of London's high society.
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Amid a ceaseless round of dances, dinner parties and entertainments,
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Bertie's true personality could now flourish.
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He knew that he wasn't clever like his father.
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He knew that he wasn't authoritative like his mother.
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What he had was a charm, an easy way of dealing with people.
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People found him good company.
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He was well behaved, he knew what to say.
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He was a good person to be sitting next to at dinner.
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It was an arranged marriage, and that was made completely plain.
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But I think that Alex, right from the start,
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fell in love with him,
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and in a way she remained in love with him for the rest of her life.
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She said to one of Bertie's sisters,
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"You think I'm marrying your brother because of his position,
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"but if he was a cowboy, I'd marry him just the same."
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The once lonely, isolated youth now had what he'd always craved,
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friendship, fun and the unquestioning devotion of a beautiful woman.
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But as the Royal Family's most senior male representative,
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he also had unfulfilled ambitions.
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The Prince of Wales felt, as the heir to the throne,
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he ought to be playing a prominent part in the affairs of state.
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And he was in fact very ready to do so. He was a man of considerable ability, great energy.
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The trouble was that his mother felt that he was irresponsible,
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frivolous and incapable a playing a serious role.
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Bertie thought what he wanted to do
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was to have access to government papers, particularly to Foreign Office dispatches,
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because he was always interested in foreign policy and saw that as his special area.
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Every time he asked for access to dispatches, what he always asked for was the key.
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There was a particular gold key that opened the box of secret papers
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from the Foreign Office, and that's what he wanted.
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And Queen Victoria, whenever he asked, Queen Victoria would say no,
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he can't have access, he's too indiscreet.
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Edward said late in his mother's life that everyone had an eternal father,
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but he himself was blessed with an eternal mother.
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The sort of remark, in fact,
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that the present Prince of Wales might actually make.
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And, of course, there is this permanent tension between the Prince of Wales,
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who is heir to the throne, and the person who's actually occupying it.
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Frustrated in his ambition by his mother,
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relations between Bertie and his wife
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also began to come under pressure.
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Three children in the first four years of marriage
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had taken the early sparkle out of married life.
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Eight months into her third pregnancy,
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the Princess fell gravely ill with rheumatic fever.
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The crisis was a turning point in the marriage.
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It really played, I think, to his worst, his least likeable qualities.
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It's said that they had to send three telegrams
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to get him to come away from the races to come to her sickbed,
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and when he did come he didn't want to stay.
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Bertie's reaction is not good.
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And he goes out night after night,
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saying he'd be back and she waits up and waits up
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and he says he'll be back at midnight, but he doesn't come back until three,
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and she's meanwhile weeping. You know, very dependent on him.
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The illness took a heavy physical toll on the Princess, leaving her lame and increasingly deaf.
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It had also opened up deep, underlying tensions in her relationship with the Prince.
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I think that he was mixed up, selfish and perhaps a self-obsessed figure.
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I think the trouble partly was that Bertie's conflicted
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because he was forced to marry her and he resented that.
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I mean, 21, forced into an arranged marriage,
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no time sow his wild oats, all of that kind of stuff.
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But on the other hand, he actually is very fond of her,
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so that he treats her badly but at the same time he loves her.
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It's quite complicated, I think.
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Over the coming years, Alexandra would increasingly retreat from society life
241
00:16:16,895 --> 00:16:19,495
behind the gates of her Sandringham home...
242
00:16:20,495 --> 00:16:26,935
..While Bertie turned elsewhere to satisfy his emotional and physical needs.
243
00:16:26,935 --> 00:16:29,415
There's no doubt he liked the company of women,
244
00:16:29,415 --> 00:16:31,855
and there's no doubt he had lots of mistresses.
245
00:16:31,855 --> 00:16:35,255
There are all these stories about him going off to Paris
246
00:16:35,255 --> 00:16:38,055
and going to brothels where there were lovely ladies.
247
00:16:44,055 --> 00:16:47,815
He would haunt the Cafe Anglais, where orgies were said to occur.
248
00:16:47,815 --> 00:16:52,735
He would visit the Moulin Rouge, where one of the dancers said...
249
00:16:52,735 --> 00:16:55,295
"Hello Wales, will you pay for my champagne?"
250
00:16:55,295 --> 00:16:57,615
And he did pay for her champagne.
251
00:16:58,735 --> 00:17:04,815
There was this very celebrated brothel called Le Chabanais, where Bertie visited.
252
00:17:04,815 --> 00:17:09,215
There is a chair that was in that brothel
253
00:17:09,215 --> 00:17:13,175
that was displayed to people as Bertie's chair.
254
00:17:15,015 --> 00:17:20,175
And it's something that has been designed to allow a man
255
00:17:20,175 --> 00:17:24,495
to indulge in the sexual practices that he wanted to
256
00:17:24,495 --> 00:17:27,856
without breaking into a sweat really.
257
00:17:27,856 --> 00:17:30,296
He was at one point known as Kingky,
258
00:17:30,296 --> 00:17:33,496
which is kind of awful, isn't it?
259
00:17:33,496 --> 00:17:37,016
He would sit in this most incredible bath
260
00:17:37,016 --> 00:17:41,736
that had this sort of swan-necked, mythological figure
261
00:17:41,736 --> 00:17:46,216
and he would sit in this bath with a with a lady of his choice,
262
00:17:46,216 --> 00:17:49,416
not with water in there, but with champagne.
263
00:17:49,416 --> 00:17:52,896
And I guess they would both sit there and listen to the sound
264
00:17:52,896 --> 00:17:55,056
of his father spinning in his grave.
265
00:17:57,056 --> 00:18:01,896
Bertie's frequent trips to the Continent allowed him to indulge his peccadilloes
266
00:18:01,896 --> 00:18:04,536
at a safe distance from his wife, his mother
267
00:18:04,536 --> 00:18:07,136
and the prying eyes of the British press.
268
00:18:08,896 --> 00:18:13,576
But the Prince had also begun to play dangerous games closer to home.
269
00:18:13,576 --> 00:18:15,616
And in 1870,
270
00:18:15,616 --> 00:18:19,696
his secret life was exposed in a most shocking public manner.
271
00:18:21,816 --> 00:18:23,896
My great-great-grandmother
272
00:18:23,896 --> 00:18:26,736
was rather bubbly and rather frivolous,
273
00:18:26,736 --> 00:18:30,336
but obviously rather amusing company.
274
00:18:30,336 --> 00:18:32,496
Everyone seems to have loved her.
275
00:18:32,496 --> 00:18:34,056
She was very popular.
276
00:18:35,536 --> 00:18:39,016
In 1869, the Prince of Wales began a flirtation
277
00:18:39,016 --> 00:18:41,937
with the 21-year-old Lady Harriet Mordaunt,
278
00:18:41,937 --> 00:18:44,737
wife of a prominent Member of Parliament.
279
00:18:44,737 --> 00:18:47,817
He would pay her these afternoon visits.
280
00:18:47,817 --> 00:18:49,777
He would arrive in a hansom cab.
281
00:18:49,777 --> 00:18:54,337
He didn't come in his own carriage, so he obviously wanted to be discreet.
282
00:18:54,337 --> 00:19:00,017
Instructions were given to the servants that no-one else was to be admitted if they came to call.
283
00:19:00,017 --> 00:19:03,377
The visits usually lasted for about an hour and a half.
284
00:19:03,377 --> 00:19:07,817
There was certainly time to get up to mischief, if that's what they wanted to do.
285
00:19:10,097 --> 00:19:11,937
In the summer of 1869,
286
00:19:11,937 --> 00:19:16,817
Harriet's husband, a keen sportsman, went on a fishing trip to Norway.
287
00:19:18,057 --> 00:19:19,857
Bertie took the opportunity
288
00:19:19,857 --> 00:19:24,177
to enjoy Harriet's company at her country residence, Walton Hall.
289
00:19:25,177 --> 00:19:27,537
What they couldn't have known
290
00:19:27,537 --> 00:19:31,737
was that 1869 was a miserable year for the Norwegian salmon.
291
00:19:33,737 --> 00:19:35,897
Sir Charles was back.
292
00:19:35,897 --> 00:19:41,137
Sir Charles cuts short his holiday, arrives back unexpectedly
293
00:19:41,137 --> 00:19:45,897
he sees his wife driving around two white ponies,
294
00:19:45,897 --> 00:19:50,057
which Sir Charles had actually earlier bought from the Prince of Wales.
295
00:19:50,057 --> 00:19:53,258
And watching as they sort of prance around
296
00:19:53,258 --> 00:19:55,698
is the Prince of Wales himself.
297
00:19:55,698 --> 00:19:59,218
Sir Charles flies into the most appalling rage
298
00:19:59,218 --> 00:20:03,778
and instructs his gardener to take off these beautiful white ponies
299
00:20:03,778 --> 00:20:05,098
and shoot them,
300
00:20:05,098 --> 00:20:08,818
and he forces his wife to watch as they're shot.
301
00:20:08,818 --> 00:20:11,498
GUNSHOTS
302
00:20:12,658 --> 00:20:15,098
Bertie beat a hasty retreat.
303
00:20:15,098 --> 00:20:18,698
Soon afterwards, a tearful Harriet confessed
304
00:20:18,698 --> 00:20:23,418
to "sinning with the Prince of Wales and other men, often and in open day."
305
00:20:24,698 --> 00:20:29,658
Sir Charles was furious and vowed to divorce her.
306
00:20:29,658 --> 00:20:34,618
Bertie faced disgrace in the witness box of a public divorce trial.
307
00:20:34,618 --> 00:20:37,538
The case was front page news.
308
00:20:37,538 --> 00:20:40,898
But the Prince still had one supporter.
309
00:20:40,898 --> 00:20:45,298
Recently discovered letters reveal Princess Alexandra, at least,
310
00:20:45,298 --> 00:20:48,218
refused to see any ill in her husband.
311
00:20:52,018 --> 00:20:56,618
"My sweet Minny, I have to mention to you a terrible scandal
312
00:20:56,618 --> 00:20:59,938
"which has shocked everybody here more than words can tell.
313
00:20:59,938 --> 00:21:03,578
"It is a man, Charles Mordaunt, a terrible brute,
314
00:21:03,578 --> 00:21:05,779
"who wants to be separated from his wife,
315
00:21:05,779 --> 00:21:10,739
"who accused herself to be unfaithful, and mentioned my Bertie as her lover!
316
00:21:10,739 --> 00:21:15,459
"To see one's husband being accused in such a scandalous, mean way
317
00:21:15,459 --> 00:21:17,779
"is nearly more than one can bear."
318
00:21:19,299 --> 00:21:21,859
This was the first time for many centuries
319
00:21:21,859 --> 00:21:26,299
that the heir to the throne had appeared in court.
320
00:21:26,299 --> 00:21:28,899
I mean, this in itself was shocking,
321
00:21:28,899 --> 00:21:31,339
and the nature of the case was shocking, too.
322
00:21:31,339 --> 00:21:35,259
It opened a window. It was a revelation to the public
323
00:21:35,259 --> 00:21:38,419
of the goings on in the Prince of Wales's circles.
324
00:21:38,419 --> 00:21:41,379
I think it was a real crisis to Victorian public opinion,
325
00:21:41,379 --> 00:21:43,419
and it really did threaten the monarchy.
326
00:21:43,419 --> 00:21:48,099
The Tory politician Lord Stanley noted:
327
00:21:48,099 --> 00:21:51,419
"Another trial like that would create a Republican Party
328
00:21:51,419 --> 00:21:53,699
"bent on putting an end to the monarchy.
329
00:21:53,699 --> 00:21:57,059
"His folly almost amounts to insanity.
330
00:21:57,059 --> 00:21:59,659
"No warning seems to have any effect."
331
00:22:02,379 --> 00:22:08,059
On 23rd February 1870, a packed courtroom heard the Prince deny
332
00:22:08,059 --> 00:22:11,339
any impropriety with Lady Mordaunt.
333
00:22:11,339 --> 00:22:16,380
But the damage to the Prince and the Crown's reputation had been done.
334
00:22:17,900 --> 00:22:21,460
As for Harriet, a worse fate awaited her.
335
00:22:21,460 --> 00:22:24,340
Her family are thrown into a complete panic
336
00:22:24,340 --> 00:22:28,500
by the prospect of this sort of very lurid case.
337
00:22:28,500 --> 00:22:31,620
But her father decides that the thing to do
338
00:22:31,620 --> 00:22:33,860
is to say that Harriet's insane.
339
00:22:35,380 --> 00:22:39,540
They were very keen to preserve the family honour,
340
00:22:39,540 --> 00:22:42,900
and although you might think that it's a rather odd way to go about it
341
00:22:42,900 --> 00:22:45,860
by establishing you've got a lunatic in the family,
342
00:22:45,860 --> 00:22:49,580
somehow that was considered preferable to the fact
343
00:22:49,580 --> 00:22:52,380
that you had this very promiscuous young woman.
344
00:22:53,900 --> 00:22:57,180
Lady Harriet was committed to a lunatic asylum.
345
00:22:57,180 --> 00:23:01,300
She died there 36 years later.
346
00:23:01,300 --> 00:23:03,980
It's an absolutely appalling story.
347
00:23:03,980 --> 00:23:07,340
It is like something straight out of Wilkie Collins,
348
00:23:07,340 --> 00:23:09,940
a true gothic horror story.
349
00:23:09,940 --> 00:23:15,020
The fate of a young woman who steps out of line was very grim indeed,
350
00:23:15,020 --> 00:23:20,540
if that suited society and the men around her.
351
00:23:21,580 --> 00:23:26,100
Bertie's reckless behaviour had contributed to the ruin of a young woman
352
00:23:26,100 --> 00:23:30,941
and tarnished of the monarchy's image at a time of growing Republican sentiment.
353
00:23:32,861 --> 00:23:35,501
The jeers Bertie suffered in public
354
00:23:35,501 --> 00:23:38,341
were as nothing to the roasting he was about to receive
355
00:23:38,341 --> 00:23:39,941
from his mother.
356
00:23:40,941 --> 00:23:45,021
"He really is more and more careless,
357
00:23:45,021 --> 00:23:47,301
"being dragged into the dirt and mixed up
358
00:23:47,301 --> 00:23:51,261
"in one of the most disgusting and scandalous trials on record."
359
00:23:53,781 --> 00:23:58,181
Victoria was appalled to learn that the Prince of Wales was behaving badly.
360
00:23:58,181 --> 00:24:01,581
But on the other hand, the other side of it
361
00:24:01,581 --> 00:24:06,381
was that the more intelligence she could accumulate of Bertie's bad behaviour,
362
00:24:06,381 --> 00:24:10,221
the more she could say, well, he's absolutely not fit to be King.
363
00:24:10,221 --> 00:24:13,061
You know, he's a wastrel, he's completely no good.
364
00:24:13,061 --> 00:24:16,621
I must stay with all the power, he cannot be trusted.
365
00:24:16,621 --> 00:24:19,821
Queen Victoria wasn't very good at sharing responsibility.
366
00:24:19,821 --> 00:24:22,461
She didn't even like doing it with Albert very much,
367
00:24:22,461 --> 00:24:24,581
who she absolutely adored.
368
00:24:24,581 --> 00:24:29,901
So, she really did her best to try and prevent him from having
369
00:24:29,901 --> 00:24:34,821
any kind of serious duty, and some of the heads of the administrations
370
00:24:34,821 --> 00:24:36,621
that she dealt with agreed.
371
00:24:36,621 --> 00:24:40,261
Disraeli didn't want a sensitive document of any sort
372
00:24:40,261 --> 00:24:43,022
to be put into Bertie's hands, and he was probably right.
373
00:24:43,022 --> 00:24:47,982
Because when he was given things, he had the tendency to kind of pass them around at dinner parties
374
00:24:47,982 --> 00:24:50,062
and ask the guests what they thought.
375
00:24:50,062 --> 00:24:52,982
You know, this wasn't really very useful behaviour.
376
00:24:54,502 --> 00:24:56,942
Bertie grew increasingly disgruntled
377
00:24:56,942 --> 00:24:59,422
at his mother's refusal to share power.
378
00:24:59,422 --> 00:25:03,542
He poured out his anger in a letter to his private secretary.
379
00:25:05,062 --> 00:25:10,102
"The game is not to let me see any interesting or important dispatches.
380
00:25:10,102 --> 00:25:13,862
"This has been going on for years under successive governments
381
00:25:13,862 --> 00:25:17,462
"and it would be far better if the Foreign Office sent me no more,
382
00:25:17,462 --> 00:25:20,422
"which is preferable to the rubbish they do send."
383
00:25:24,182 --> 00:25:27,862
Because he's not trusted with this kind of material,
384
00:25:27,862 --> 00:25:30,142
he is more or less infantilised.
385
00:25:30,142 --> 00:25:35,862
Cartoons of the period will depict him as a baby in a pram.
386
00:25:35,862 --> 00:25:39,462
He's not going to be allowed to involve himself much
387
00:25:39,462 --> 00:25:41,582
in the serious business of state,
388
00:25:41,582 --> 00:25:44,502
so he turns pleasure into a serious business
389
00:25:44,502 --> 00:25:46,342
and commits himself to that.
390
00:25:46,342 --> 00:25:49,662
So that the complexities of his social diary
391
00:25:49,662 --> 00:25:52,342
and what parties he's going to
392
00:25:52,342 --> 00:25:54,623
actually in a way take the place
393
00:25:54,623 --> 00:25:58,903
of sitting there with a red box going through the documents.
394
00:25:58,903 --> 00:26:04,343
And it's almost as if his energies are diverted into that.
395
00:26:07,703 --> 00:26:11,823
As youth gave way to an increasingly corpulent middle age,
396
00:26:11,823 --> 00:26:15,543
the Prince threw himself body and soul into a life of leisure.
397
00:26:17,303 --> 00:26:20,783
He lived an extraordinary raffish existence.
398
00:26:20,783 --> 00:26:25,383
First of all there was the food, and he had... I mean, by modern standards
399
00:26:25,383 --> 00:26:29,103
Edwardian gluttony was simply something to amaze you.
400
00:26:29,103 --> 00:26:33,543
Huge breakfasts, mid-morning meals,
401
00:26:33,543 --> 00:26:36,823
eight-course lunches, tea,
402
00:26:36,823 --> 00:26:41,903
and 12-course dinners, and then sandwiches before you go to bed.
403
00:26:41,903 --> 00:26:47,543
But in the meantime, he would go out and he would attend the music hall.
404
00:26:47,543 --> 00:26:53,783
He would go to cockpits, he would go to billiard rooms that were showing pornographic photographs.
405
00:26:53,783 --> 00:26:55,703
He would go to brothels.
406
00:26:55,703 --> 00:26:59,543
A moment would not go by when he was not diverted.
407
00:26:59,543 --> 00:27:03,583
Bertie did have this sort of gargantuan appetite for everything.
408
00:27:03,583 --> 00:27:07,904
I think a lot of it does come out of having this miserable childhood
409
00:27:07,904 --> 00:27:10,824
where he feels that things are constantly denied him.
410
00:27:13,064 --> 00:27:17,064
When he wasn't devouring a favourite midnight feast of cold roast chicken,
411
00:27:17,064 --> 00:27:20,544
Bertie continued to work his way through a series of mistresses,
412
00:27:20,544 --> 00:27:25,784
including model turned actress, Lily Langtree, and Jennie Churchill,
413
00:27:25,784 --> 00:27:28,864
mother of a pushy young lad named Winston.
414
00:27:30,624 --> 00:27:35,064
Then, at the age of 48, something odd happened.
415
00:27:35,064 --> 00:27:38,624
Perhaps for the first time in his life, Bertie fell in love.
416
00:27:41,064 --> 00:27:43,504
Daisy Warwick was the original It girl.
417
00:27:43,504 --> 00:27:48,504
A combination of beauty and charm all rolled into one.
418
00:27:48,504 --> 00:27:53,224
She was one of those society beauties that had their likeness
419
00:27:53,224 --> 00:27:57,824
put onto these little cards, and you could buy them in the shops.
420
00:27:57,824 --> 00:28:02,104
Daisy, Countess of Warwick was 20 years younger than the Prince of Wales,
421
00:28:02,104 --> 00:28:05,904
fabulously rich and thoroughly scandalous.
422
00:28:05,904 --> 00:28:09,984
At her grand homes, Warwick Castle and Easton Lodge in Essex,
423
00:28:09,984 --> 00:28:13,584
she was famous for hosting lavish entertainments.
424
00:28:13,584 --> 00:28:19,025
Daisy Warwick was incredibly extravagant. She spent money like there was no tomorrow.
425
00:28:19,025 --> 00:28:25,345
She had her own railway branch built to bring guests to her house, luxury everywhere,
426
00:28:25,345 --> 00:28:32,665
and these were the famously racy house parties where Daisy sort of organised adultery really.
427
00:28:32,665 --> 00:28:35,825
There would be flowers on your dressing table,
428
00:28:35,825 --> 00:28:38,305
there were buttonholes for the men,
429
00:28:38,305 --> 00:28:41,305
there were printed lists of who was there for dinner,
430
00:28:41,305 --> 00:28:43,385
and who you were to take in to dinner.
431
00:28:43,385 --> 00:28:45,665
You didn't touch each other,
432
00:28:45,665 --> 00:28:49,385
but there were ways of little notes being left by the candles
433
00:28:49,385 --> 00:28:53,945
saying, "Come and see me, I'm in room...whatever."
434
00:28:53,945 --> 00:29:00,545
It was at one such house party in 1886 that Bertie was introduced to the Countess.
435
00:29:02,305 --> 00:29:05,905
Although their 10-year affair would become common knowledge,
436
00:29:05,905 --> 00:29:10,225
documentary evidence of the relationship has been scarce.
437
00:29:10,225 --> 00:29:11,785
Until now.
438
00:29:11,785 --> 00:29:15,945
The affair with Daisy Warwick was incredibly intense,
439
00:29:15,945 --> 00:29:21,105
but until recently nobody actually knew what went on between them.
440
00:29:21,105 --> 00:29:25,825
It was a puzzle because there was absolutely no evidence at all.
441
00:29:25,825 --> 00:29:29,225
But then, looking at the diary that Bertie kept,
442
00:29:29,225 --> 00:29:34,026
I suddenly realised there was a symbol that I didn't understand
443
00:29:34,026 --> 00:29:38,066
which seems to be occurring increasingly frequently,
444
00:29:38,066 --> 00:29:39,786
sometimes twice a day.
445
00:29:41,306 --> 00:29:44,066
Bertie's diaries reveal the philandering Prince
446
00:29:44,066 --> 00:29:46,266
was using code to cover his tracks.
447
00:29:46,266 --> 00:29:48,306
A letter D written backwards,
448
00:29:48,306 --> 00:29:52,546
signifying his increasingly frequent liaisons with Daisy.
449
00:29:54,706 --> 00:29:57,186
It's possible to see from this to see very clearly
450
00:29:57,186 --> 00:29:59,866
that this was an incredibly intense relationship.
451
00:29:59,866 --> 00:30:01,786
He would meet Daisy twice a day.
452
00:30:01,786 --> 00:30:04,546
He'd have tea with her every day when she was in London.
453
00:30:04,546 --> 00:30:08,226
He'd meet her in the morning, they'd have intimate suppers in the evening.
454
00:30:08,226 --> 00:30:12,866
He called her, "My darling Daisy wife." It was a sort of second marriage.
455
00:30:15,266 --> 00:30:19,866
I think she could fairly be described as the the love of his life.
456
00:30:19,866 --> 00:30:22,506
He wrote to her several times a day,
457
00:30:22,506 --> 00:30:25,786
he saw her all the time and went to stay with her.
458
00:30:25,786 --> 00:30:29,866
I think he was strongly, strongly devoted to her.
459
00:30:33,666 --> 00:30:38,146
"My own lovely little Daisy, tomorrow I go to the races.
460
00:30:38,146 --> 00:30:41,226
"I have two horses running, but I fear they are not any good.
461
00:30:41,226 --> 00:30:44,987
"Don't forget, my darling, to expect me from five on Sunday next.
462
00:30:44,987 --> 00:30:47,027
"I only wish it could be before.
463
00:30:47,027 --> 00:30:51,547
"Goodnight and God keep you, my adored little Daisy."
464
00:30:53,387 --> 00:30:56,587
Bertie's wife, Princess Alexandra
465
00:30:56,587 --> 00:30:58,907
had long since learned to turn a blind eye
466
00:30:58,907 --> 00:31:02,267
to her husband's stable of mistresses.
467
00:31:02,267 --> 00:31:07,307
But in the Countess of Warwick, she had come up against a real rival.
468
00:31:09,187 --> 00:31:10,667
Daisy Warwick
469
00:31:10,667 --> 00:31:14,707
was unlike the professional beauties and slightly marginal society ladies.
470
00:31:14,707 --> 00:31:19,867
Daisy Warwick was right in the middle of the court, a court insider.
471
00:31:19,867 --> 00:31:23,707
She was the mistress with whom Alex couldn't cope
472
00:31:23,707 --> 00:31:27,147
because she threatened Alex's whole world.
473
00:31:27,147 --> 00:31:31,227
Alexandra becomes increasingly distant and she punishes Bertie
474
00:31:31,227 --> 00:31:33,267
by going abroad and by staying abroad.
475
00:31:33,267 --> 00:31:35,147
She goes and stays with her family.
476
00:31:35,147 --> 00:31:40,747
She cables back laconically, "I'm so sorry, have got delayed."
477
00:31:40,747 --> 00:31:46,307
Doesn't show any indication of coming back. This was public humiliation for Bertie.
478
00:31:46,307 --> 00:31:50,947
Bertie had brought his relationship with the Princess to breaking point.
479
00:31:50,947 --> 00:31:53,587
Alexandra needn't have worried.
480
00:31:53,587 --> 00:31:57,988
The Prince's prodigious energies had begun to fail him
481
00:31:57,988 --> 00:31:59,628
in one crucial area.
482
00:31:59,628 --> 00:32:02,868
We know Bertie's health was poor at the time of his relationship
483
00:32:02,868 --> 00:32:03,948
with Daisy Warwick.
484
00:32:03,948 --> 00:32:07,548
And it's also true that in his diary,
485
00:32:07,548 --> 00:32:11,988
Bertie does talk about electrical treatment.
486
00:32:13,508 --> 00:32:16,388
Now what could this be?
487
00:32:16,388 --> 00:32:22,428
One of the things that a male patient might have visited a doctorto be cured for
488
00:32:22,428 --> 00:32:25,188
was impotence problems.
489
00:32:25,188 --> 00:32:28,548
Because it was thought that a shock of electricity
490
00:32:28,548 --> 00:32:33,468
could restore the body's sort of vital energy.
491
00:32:34,588 --> 00:32:37,708
For Daisy, I think the physical side of their relationship
492
00:32:37,708 --> 00:32:38,988
was hugely important.
493
00:32:38,988 --> 00:32:41,068
I think that she loved sex.
494
00:32:41,068 --> 00:32:47,068
She always worrying about it and wanting to meet people.
495
00:32:47,068 --> 00:32:51,268
I found a draft of her letters that said she "mated naturally
496
00:32:51,268 --> 00:32:53,828
"with physical strength or beauty."
497
00:32:55,748 --> 00:32:59,708
Beauty had never been an attribute Bertie could lay claim to.
498
00:32:59,708 --> 00:33:02,868
Now his strength was in question.
499
00:33:02,868 --> 00:33:06,628
In 1898, the still highly-charged Countess
500
00:33:06,628 --> 00:33:09,509
fell pregnant by another man.
501
00:33:09,509 --> 00:33:11,349
To Alexandra's delight,
502
00:33:11,349 --> 00:33:15,549
Daisy wrote to the Prince, ending the 10-year affair.
503
00:33:15,549 --> 00:33:18,029
Her letter is long-since destroyed.
504
00:33:18,029 --> 00:33:21,349
But Bertie's reply is on record.
505
00:33:22,909 --> 00:33:27,309
"My lovely little Daisy, you could not help, my loved one,
506
00:33:27,309 --> 00:33:30,829
"writing to me as you did, though it gave me a pang.
507
00:33:30,829 --> 00:33:33,629
"I gave your letter to the Princess.
508
00:33:33,629 --> 00:33:35,469
"She was moved to tears,
509
00:33:35,469 --> 00:33:38,349
"and said that out of evil, good would come."
510
00:33:42,109 --> 00:33:46,709
The Prince of Wales once again faced an empty existence,
511
00:33:46,709 --> 00:33:48,709
but all that was about to end.
512
00:33:50,989 --> 00:33:53,829
The Queen's health was failing.
513
00:33:55,349 --> 00:33:56,589
In January 1901,
514
00:33:56,589 --> 00:34:00,949
Bertie was summoned to Osborne House on the Isle of Wight.
515
00:34:00,949 --> 00:34:05,309
For the first time in his life, he entered his mother's bedroom.
516
00:34:06,829 --> 00:34:09,749
When she saw Bertie, her eldest son,
517
00:34:09,749 --> 00:34:15,029
in whom for a great deal of her life she had not been best pleased,
518
00:34:15,029 --> 00:34:17,349
I don't think he expected to receive
519
00:34:17,349 --> 00:34:21,270
quite the warmth that some of his siblings got.
520
00:34:21,270 --> 00:34:23,550
But she completely opened her arms to him,
521
00:34:23,550 --> 00:34:27,870
by saying "Bertie" and pulling him forward and hugging him.
522
00:34:27,870 --> 00:34:29,830
And he was reduced to tears.
523
00:34:31,790 --> 00:34:34,550
The reconciliation had come too late.
524
00:34:34,550 --> 00:34:38,830
Minutes later his mother lapsed into unconsciousness and died.
525
00:34:38,830 --> 00:34:43,310
The moment Bertie had been waiting for all his life had arrived.
526
00:34:50,790 --> 00:34:54,110
The accession of an overweight 59-year-old philanderer
527
00:34:54,110 --> 00:34:57,430
hardly thrilled the public imagination.
528
00:34:58,950 --> 00:35:03,550
Few sovereigns have come to the throne with lower expectations.
529
00:35:03,550 --> 00:35:05,910
But from his first command as King,
530
00:35:05,910 --> 00:35:10,390
Bertie was determined to send a signal of intent to his doubters.
531
00:35:12,790 --> 00:35:17,150
He must have recognised that his sense of insecurity
532
00:35:17,150 --> 00:35:21,550
was also reflected by the whole nation's and Empire's view
533
00:35:21,550 --> 00:35:25,830
that he was not quite up to job as she, his mother, had been.
534
00:35:26,950 --> 00:35:30,750
And when he went down to join the yachts that were lined up
535
00:35:30,750 --> 00:35:35,111
to take Queen Victoria's body back from the Isle of Wight to Portsmouth,
536
00:35:35,111 --> 00:35:36,791
he looked up in the rigging
537
00:35:36,791 --> 00:35:39,751
and saw that the Royal Standard was flying at half mast.
538
00:35:39,751 --> 00:35:42,631
And he asked the captain why that was the case,
539
00:35:42,631 --> 00:35:46,311
and the captain, perplexed, said, "Well, the Queen is dead."
540
00:35:46,311 --> 00:35:49,391
And he said "No, the King is alive."
541
00:35:50,711 --> 00:35:54,311
And I think that was a sort of florid way where,
542
00:35:54,311 --> 00:35:59,511
with the spectacular nature of using a symbol,
543
00:35:59,511 --> 00:36:02,711
he was able to show that no, this show goes on.
544
00:36:07,911 --> 00:36:10,071
On January 21st, 1901,
545
00:36:10,071 --> 00:36:12,751
Bertie followed the late Queen's funeral cortege
546
00:36:12,751 --> 00:36:17,831
on its journey towards its final resting place at Windsor.
547
00:36:17,831 --> 00:36:22,111
But even as the King bade farewell to his mother, Bertie was determined
548
00:36:22,111 --> 00:36:28,551
to break with the traditions of her reign and forge his own distinctive brand of monarchy.
549
00:36:30,071 --> 00:36:31,831
After the death of Prince Albert,
550
00:36:31,831 --> 00:36:35,071
Queen Victoria had led an increasingly reclusive existence
551
00:36:35,071 --> 00:36:37,151
behind the walls of Windsor Castle
552
00:36:37,151 --> 00:36:40,151
and her forbidding Highland retreat, Balmoral.
553
00:36:44,072 --> 00:36:46,432
These 20 seconds of film footage,
554
00:36:46,432 --> 00:36:50,272
showing Victoria taking a carriage ride at Balmoral,
555
00:36:50,272 --> 00:36:53,392
are one of the rare glimpses into royal life
556
00:36:53,392 --> 00:36:55,672
the Queen was prepared to allow.
557
00:36:57,192 --> 00:37:02,832
There was great and growing deal of concern about Victoria's withdrawal from public life.
558
00:37:02,832 --> 00:37:07,712
Obviously, her mourning was profound and everyone respected that,
559
00:37:07,712 --> 00:37:09,912
but when it went on, and on, and on
560
00:37:09,912 --> 00:37:12,832
and she didn't open Parliament, she didn't appear,
561
00:37:12,832 --> 00:37:17,992
it fed into a growing Republican move within Britain.
562
00:37:17,992 --> 00:37:22,832
There were these royals taking salaries and not doing the job.
563
00:37:22,832 --> 00:37:29,072
In the 1870s, Britain came closer to becoming a Republic than at any time
564
00:37:29,072 --> 00:37:32,752
in the 18th, 19th or 20th centuries.
565
00:37:32,752 --> 00:37:35,632
The Queen had become extremely unpopular.
566
00:37:35,632 --> 00:37:39,832
She was viewed as being a kind of selfish, extravagant figure,
567
00:37:39,832 --> 00:37:43,952
just sulking in her castle, doing nothing for the country.
568
00:37:46,392 --> 00:37:51,992
In stark contrast to his mother, the Prince of Wales couldn't have been more visible.
569
00:37:53,512 --> 00:37:59,393
Bertie's response to this criticism was basically to say that the monarch needs to be seen in public.
570
00:37:59,393 --> 00:38:05,353
To go and open hospitals, lay foundation stones, to cut tapes,
571
00:38:05,353 --> 00:38:10,033
to launch ships - all of the things that members of the Royal Family do today.
572
00:38:10,033 --> 00:38:14,433
By doing these things, I think Bertie was conscious that he was fighting back.
573
00:38:14,433 --> 00:38:18,113
That this was a new role that the monarchy must perform.
574
00:38:19,953 --> 00:38:21,913
Installed in Buckingham Palace,
575
00:38:21,913 --> 00:38:24,313
and free from his mother's apron strings,
576
00:38:24,313 --> 00:38:26,913
the new King threw himself into preparations
577
00:38:26,913 --> 00:38:28,513
for a dazzling coronation
578
00:38:28,513 --> 00:38:32,313
that would put the Royal Family back at heart of national life.
579
00:38:35,353 --> 00:38:39,673
But Bertie's lack of experience in dealing with affairs of state
580
00:38:39,673 --> 00:38:40,953
soon began to tell.
581
00:38:44,193 --> 00:38:49,593
He was completely overwhelmed with all the things, all his projects, all the things that he wanted to do.
582
00:38:49,593 --> 00:38:52,073
The work itself was something completely new.
583
00:38:52,073 --> 00:38:55,633
All these boxes full of documents that he had no training of going through.
584
00:38:55,633 --> 00:38:59,393
He read everything. He hadn't learnt how to delegate at all.
585
00:38:59,393 --> 00:39:03,633
All the sort of detail, even down to what tune the soldiers played
586
00:39:03,633 --> 00:39:07,793
outside his window at Windsor Castle, he had to decide everything.
587
00:39:07,793 --> 00:39:11,234
He is overwhelmed by all this responsibility.
588
00:39:14,354 --> 00:39:17,674
Dangerously overweight, and chain smoking cigars,
589
00:39:17,674 --> 00:39:22,714
the King appeared to be sinking beneath the burden of responsibility.
590
00:39:22,714 --> 00:39:26,194
Doctors began to fear for his health.
591
00:39:26,194 --> 00:39:29,794
"I saw the King every morning in his bedroom at nine.
592
00:39:29,794 --> 00:39:33,714
"I found him surrounded by letters, telegrams and papers
593
00:39:33,714 --> 00:39:35,794
"which covered the whole bed.
594
00:39:35,794 --> 00:39:38,154
"He was evidently greatly perturbed
595
00:39:38,154 --> 00:39:43,074
"and drew attention to the litter around him with a gesture of despair."
596
00:39:45,114 --> 00:39:48,474
He begins to do things like eating far too much.
597
00:39:48,474 --> 00:39:54,154
I mean, he'd always eaten far too much, but to eat in a sort of bulimic way, sort of stuff.
598
00:39:54,154 --> 00:39:56,874
Alexandra complained that at meals he just stuffed.
599
00:39:56,874 --> 00:40:01,074
He never sort of chewed, he just stuffed himself with food.
600
00:40:01,074 --> 00:40:05,554
So he does seem at the beginning to be going through a kind of mental crisis.
601
00:40:07,074 --> 00:40:11,554
The King's mental crisis was about to trigger a national drama.
602
00:40:13,074 --> 00:40:15,554
A few days before the coronation ceremony,
603
00:40:15,554 --> 00:40:19,354
the King collapsed with abdominal pains.
604
00:40:19,354 --> 00:40:22,595
Doctors diagnosed acute appendicitis,
605
00:40:22,595 --> 00:40:26,755
a potentially fatal condition at the turn of the 20th century.
606
00:40:26,755 --> 00:40:29,835
The top doctors are called in to deal with it.
607
00:40:29,835 --> 00:40:32,595
It's a guy called Frederick Treves,
608
00:40:32,595 --> 00:40:38,315
the man who looked after the Elephant Man at the hospital in Whitechapel.
609
00:40:38,315 --> 00:40:44,075
Here, called in to deal with another sort of 19th century monster,
610
00:40:44,075 --> 00:40:50,755
Bertie, who is lumbering around in pain, in this sort of dyspeptic agony.
611
00:40:50,755 --> 00:40:55,515
You know, this organ is swelling inside him and demanding attention
612
00:40:55,515 --> 00:40:58,195
and causing him the most exquisite pain.
613
00:40:58,195 --> 00:41:03,195
The royal surgeon insisted that the coronation be delayed.
614
00:41:03,195 --> 00:41:05,915
The King raged.
615
00:41:05,915 --> 00:41:09,035
"The coronation cannot be postponed.
616
00:41:09,035 --> 00:41:12,075
"I cannot and will not disappoint the people.
617
00:41:12,075 --> 00:41:14,715
"I will go the Abbey at any cost.
618
00:41:14,715 --> 00:41:18,995
"I will go to the Abbey if I die there."
619
00:41:18,995 --> 00:41:22,115
Being crowned, having the holy oil poured on him,
620
00:41:22,115 --> 00:41:25,155
this was an enormously important event for him.
621
00:41:25,155 --> 00:41:28,315
The thing that he had been waiting for all his life,
622
00:41:28,315 --> 00:41:33,996
much as Prince Charles has been waiting for his mother to depart this life so that he can become King.
623
00:41:33,996 --> 00:41:39,876
This was the purpose in life, and so when he got ill and the coronation,
624
00:41:39,876 --> 00:41:43,796
all the plans had been made, all the invitations had been sent,
625
00:41:43,796 --> 00:41:45,876
all the china had been produced,
626
00:41:45,876 --> 00:41:50,236
the dishcloths, everything had been ready, and he got ill.
627
00:41:50,236 --> 00:41:52,916
And so he was determined to try and keep it up.
628
00:41:54,436 --> 00:41:56,316
The assumption of power,
629
00:41:56,316 --> 00:42:01,036
after having waited for so long, is incredibly important to him.
630
00:42:01,036 --> 00:42:03,756
But Treves presents him with an ultimatum.
631
00:42:03,756 --> 00:42:06,356
He says, if you don't postpone the coronation
632
00:42:06,356 --> 00:42:09,236
you will be going to Westminster Abbey in a box.
633
00:42:10,996 --> 00:42:13,836
Finally the King gave way.
634
00:42:13,836 --> 00:42:15,636
At noon on 24th June,
635
00:42:15,636 --> 00:42:18,716
he climbed onto an operating table in Buckingham Palace
636
00:42:18,716 --> 00:42:21,756
and submitted to the surgeon's knife.
637
00:42:24,316 --> 00:42:26,956
The flags are all up, it's all been paid for
638
00:42:26,956 --> 00:42:30,156
and everybody is made to wait while the King undergoes
639
00:42:30,156 --> 00:42:32,876
this very difficult and dangerous operation.
640
00:42:32,876 --> 00:42:36,236
You know, a lot of people died of appendicitis in this period.
641
00:42:36,236 --> 00:42:40,996
This is a new procedure, and it doesn't go well.
642
00:42:42,836 --> 00:42:47,157
The King stops breathing. The King turns blue in the face.
643
00:42:48,677 --> 00:42:53,517
And you can imagine the whole Empire holding its breath at this moment,
644
00:42:53,517 --> 00:42:58,797
because this man has been waiting for decades to be the king of this country
645
00:42:58,797 --> 00:43:02,157
and it looks as if he's not going to get his chance
646
00:43:02,157 --> 00:43:04,917
to prove what he's capable of doing.
647
00:43:11,717 --> 00:43:13,757
The doctors did their job.
648
00:43:13,757 --> 00:43:15,797
Bertie WOULD go to the Abbey,
649
00:43:15,797 --> 00:43:17,517
not in a box,
650
00:43:17,517 --> 00:43:21,117
but the golden state coach of his ancestor, King George III.
651
00:43:22,797 --> 00:43:25,317
On 9th August 1902,
652
00:43:25,317 --> 00:43:29,117
the one-time prodigal prince was crowned King Edward VII
653
00:43:29,117 --> 00:43:32,077
in a dazzling display of pomp and pageantry.
654
00:43:34,277 --> 00:43:39,357
Edward VII expected the ceremony to be delivered absolutely perfectly.
655
00:43:39,357 --> 00:43:43,917
He watched every detail of it with care and concern.
656
00:43:43,917 --> 00:43:46,437
He wanted to send a message to the whole Empire
657
00:43:46,437 --> 00:43:50,557
that they had a new emperor with all the panoply he could muster.
658
00:43:50,557 --> 00:43:54,637
And he looked into the great dressing-up box of British history
659
00:43:54,637 --> 00:43:58,758
and he opened all the files and papers going back in time
660
00:43:58,758 --> 00:44:02,358
to conjure a coronation of fabulous splendour
661
00:44:02,358 --> 00:44:05,918
in order to deliver utter impact.
662
00:44:09,558 --> 00:44:14,238
Bertie was very much ahead of his time as monarch because he was one of the first to understand
663
00:44:14,238 --> 00:44:18,278
that if the monarchy was to survive in the 20th century,
664
00:44:18,278 --> 00:44:19,918
it must be ornamental.
665
00:44:19,918 --> 00:44:24,878
It must be something that people could identify with, that they could see.
666
00:44:24,878 --> 00:44:26,878
He is becoming the kind of monarch
667
00:44:26,878 --> 00:44:29,398
that England needed in the 20th century.
668
00:44:30,918 --> 00:44:32,198
Almost overnight,
669
00:44:32,198 --> 00:44:35,958
Edward VII transformed the public face of the monarchy.
670
00:44:35,958 --> 00:44:38,918
Now he set about sweeping away the physical evidence
671
00:44:38,918 --> 00:44:40,798
of Queen Victoria's reign.
672
00:44:42,718 --> 00:44:46,758
Determined to bring light into his mother's fusty apartments,
673
00:44:46,758 --> 00:44:49,878
he hired technicians to install electric lights
674
00:44:49,878 --> 00:44:53,958
and theatre designers to transform Buckingham Palace
675
00:44:53,958 --> 00:44:55,998
into a sea of white and gold.
676
00:44:58,078 --> 00:45:02,078
Bertie embarks on a full scale clear-out.
677
00:45:02,078 --> 00:45:03,678
He marches around,
678
00:45:03,678 --> 00:45:08,078
pictures of Albert, pictures of her dogs, all of it is swept aside.
679
00:45:08,078 --> 00:45:12,479
All the old clutter that Victoria had accumulated is swept aside
680
00:45:12,479 --> 00:45:15,319
and the place is made into a palace.
681
00:45:18,759 --> 00:45:22,559
This was a statement about what he thought the monarchy should be.
682
00:45:27,039 --> 00:45:31,959
That it must be grandly, some people would say slightly vulgarly,
683
00:45:31,959 --> 00:45:35,439
but it must be grand, and it must give a sense of theatre.
684
00:45:37,119 --> 00:45:39,759
Edward VII realised that, on its own,
685
00:45:39,759 --> 00:45:42,159
the restoration of traditional ceremonial
686
00:45:42,159 --> 00:45:44,359
wasn't enough to preserve the monarchy.
687
00:45:48,319 --> 00:45:50,799
In an era of rapid social change,
688
00:45:50,799 --> 00:45:54,559
Bertie believed the Crown should move with the times.
689
00:46:01,759 --> 00:46:04,279
Edward VII was very much aware
690
00:46:04,279 --> 00:46:10,639
that the monarchy needed to reach out beyond the aristocracy to other classes.
691
00:46:10,639 --> 00:46:13,559
In a way, he is the first democratic king.
692
00:46:13,559 --> 00:46:19,759
He didn't judge people on the basis of your position in Burke's Peerage.
693
00:46:19,759 --> 00:46:25,960
He was somebody who invited Americans, Jews, people like that
694
00:46:25,960 --> 00:46:29,640
who might not have been welcomed in the most blue blooded circles.
695
00:46:32,480 --> 00:46:35,760
With trades unions and the Labour movement on the march,
696
00:46:35,760 --> 00:46:41,480
the People's King even extended the hand of friendship to sworn enemies of the Crown.
697
00:46:41,480 --> 00:46:43,960
He wants to be a symbol of unity.
698
00:46:43,960 --> 00:46:49,640
For example, there's a story about him meeting Keir Hardie, the Labour MP,
699
00:46:49,640 --> 00:46:53,560
who at the time was the absolute bete noire of all royalty
700
00:46:53,560 --> 00:46:56,200
and all the aristocracy and the Tory Party,
701
00:46:56,200 --> 00:47:00,600
because he was highly critical of privilege and very vociferous about saying so.
702
00:47:00,600 --> 00:47:02,880
And Edward VII meets Keir Hardie
703
00:47:02,880 --> 00:47:07,680
and he is extraordinarily charming and polite to this class enemy.
704
00:47:07,680 --> 00:47:11,480
And one of his friends looks at him and says rather sarcastically,
705
00:47:11,480 --> 00:47:13,560
"Well, you were very nice to him."
706
00:47:13,560 --> 00:47:16,800
And Edward turns to him very quickly and very sharply says,
707
00:47:16,800 --> 00:47:20,680
"No, you don't understand. I mean to be King of all the people."
708
00:47:22,560 --> 00:47:26,240
To the surprise of many of his contemporaries,
709
00:47:26,240 --> 00:47:30,560
Edward VII was proving himself a more than capable monarch.
710
00:47:30,560 --> 00:47:34,841
But much as he relished his new public responsibilities,
711
00:47:34,841 --> 00:47:38,721
the King saw no reason to change the private habits of a lifetime.
712
00:47:38,721 --> 00:47:42,561
Even at the sacred moment of his coronation,
713
00:47:42,561 --> 00:47:47,481
the King signalled his intent with his unconventional choice of guests.
714
00:47:47,481 --> 00:47:51,001
Pride of place in the Abbey was given to a special box
715
00:47:51,001 --> 00:47:57,281
for his lady friends past and present, including new mistress Alice Keppel.
716
00:47:57,281 --> 00:48:01,961
He made sure that all the women who were important to him,
717
00:48:01,961 --> 00:48:04,161
some of whom he slept with,
718
00:48:04,161 --> 00:48:08,881
were close at hand at this prime moment of his life.
719
00:48:08,881 --> 00:48:11,681
He made sure that those women,
720
00:48:11,681 --> 00:48:14,961
without trying put out his wife in any way,
721
00:48:14,961 --> 00:48:19,721
were accorded a position around him whenever he could provide that.
722
00:48:19,721 --> 00:48:23,721
And no less so than at the coronation.
723
00:48:23,721 --> 00:48:27,881
Edward VII was made like that. He loved his Queen,
724
00:48:27,881 --> 00:48:31,281
he adored his children, but he just needed a little bit of extra.
725
00:48:32,801 --> 00:48:38,241
Edward VII worked out for himself a new style of monarchy
726
00:48:38,241 --> 00:48:44,881
which involved a lot of public appearances, doing the ceremonial job perfectly.
727
00:48:44,881 --> 00:48:51,242
And yet at the same time, he drew a very, very strict line between that and his private life.
728
00:48:51,242 --> 00:48:54,082
I think he had this very realistic idea,
729
00:48:54,082 --> 00:48:58,362
in a way much more realistic than putting the whole Royal Family on show,
730
00:48:58,362 --> 00:49:01,362
of saying, "I'm King, I will do my job as King,
731
00:49:01,362 --> 00:49:05,042
"but the deal is that I'm allowed a private life."
732
00:49:06,562 --> 00:49:09,482
For the rest of his life, the King continued to enjoy
733
00:49:09,482 --> 00:49:15,482
all the luxuries of his position, with Mrs Keppel never far from his side.
734
00:49:15,482 --> 00:49:19,522
Queen Alexandra had little choice but to put up with her husband's behaviour.
735
00:49:19,522 --> 00:49:22,442
But nobody else seemed to mind much,
736
00:49:22,442 --> 00:49:26,842
and in 1903 the King's passion for beautiful women
737
00:49:26,842 --> 00:49:30,442
would even prove the key to his greatest political triumph.
738
00:49:32,842 --> 00:49:39,602
In the early years of the 20th century, one issue dominated British foreign policy over all others.
739
00:49:39,602 --> 00:49:44,362
Germany under the King's troublesome nephew, Kaiser Wilhelm,
740
00:49:44,362 --> 00:49:47,842
was building up its armed forces at terrifying speed.
741
00:49:52,002 --> 00:49:57,522
As Prince of Wales, Bertie had been blocked in his ambition to influence foreign and military affairs.
742
00:49:58,162 --> 00:50:03,803
Now he was determined to put his inside family knowledge to good use.
743
00:50:03,803 --> 00:50:08,523
The Kaiser is a very difficult man and very paranoid.
744
00:50:08,523 --> 00:50:12,323
Bertie understood that in a kind of intuitive way.
745
00:50:12,323 --> 00:50:15,963
Bertie understood very clearly it was not going to be possible for him
746
00:50:15,963 --> 00:50:18,803
to restrain Germany, or anybody to restrain Germany.
747
00:50:18,803 --> 00:50:20,483
And he also understood
748
00:50:20,483 --> 00:50:24,563
that the Kaiser was never going to be a reliable friend,
749
00:50:24,563 --> 00:50:26,363
so he saw,
750
00:50:26,363 --> 00:50:31,563
and saw incredibly clearly that war was a real danger.
751
00:50:31,563 --> 00:50:32,963
He didn't want war.
752
00:50:32,963 --> 00:50:36,603
But he felt if war was going to come, Britain must be prepared.
753
00:50:38,243 --> 00:50:40,963
Britain needed allies.
754
00:50:40,963 --> 00:50:43,843
Finding them wasn't going to be easy.
755
00:50:43,843 --> 00:50:49,323
The recent war in South Africa against the Boers had made Britain highly unpopular in Europe.
756
00:50:52,363 --> 00:50:53,603
But the King had a plan.
757
00:50:55,043 --> 00:51:02,883
In May 1903, he set out on a mission of diplomacy to one of the favourite haunts of his youth, Paris.
758
00:51:06,363 --> 00:51:09,003
Bertie didn't tell them his plans.
759
00:51:09,003 --> 00:51:13,524
He makes this a completely secret agenda.
760
00:51:13,524 --> 00:51:16,124
He didn't even tell his secretaries.
761
00:51:16,124 --> 00:51:20,364
And when the Royal train arrives and Bertie gets out at the station,
762
00:51:20,364 --> 00:51:24,044
he's met with incredibly hostile French crowds.
763
00:51:24,044 --> 00:51:27,484
Bertie turns up in Paris, a place where the British
764
00:51:27,484 --> 00:51:32,404
are incredibly unpopular at the time, and when he arrives he's booed.
765
00:51:33,924 --> 00:51:37,444
There are newspaper editorials saying "Go back to England"
766
00:51:37,444 --> 00:51:43,724
and basically listing every English insult since the burning of Joan of Arc.
767
00:51:44,884 --> 00:51:53,684
Faced with a French mob, the English King's love of Parisian culture and women was about to pay dividends.
768
00:51:53,684 --> 00:52:01,124
He goes to the theatre, and the audience in the theatre is incredibly unfriendly and sullen.
769
00:52:01,124 --> 00:52:07,844
And to the dismay of the French police, the King insists during the interval on going into the foyer
770
00:52:07,844 --> 00:52:11,844
and he spots an actress, and he goes up to her.
771
00:52:11,844 --> 00:52:14,484
And kisses her hand and says,
772
00:52:14,484 --> 00:52:19,684
"Mademoiselle, when I last saw you in London you were superb."
773
00:52:21,804 --> 00:52:25,285
Edward really does have a magic touch.
774
00:52:25,285 --> 00:52:29,245
Immediately the rumour mill in Paris puts this about,
775
00:52:29,245 --> 00:52:32,365
he'd been incredibly charming to this famous actress.
776
00:52:32,365 --> 00:52:36,965
The next day he walks out into the crowds, he shakes hands,
777
00:52:36,965 --> 00:52:41,085
he says how he loves Paris, he looks happy,
778
00:52:41,085 --> 00:52:44,405
and he charms the pants off the French.
779
00:52:44,405 --> 00:52:48,285
The mood changes like this, you know, it just flips.
780
00:52:50,205 --> 00:52:53,525
Suddenly, there's outbursts of cheering wherever he goes.
781
00:52:53,525 --> 00:52:58,845
There's a real sense that he is one of them.
782
00:52:58,845 --> 00:53:00,925
You need to remember,
783
00:53:00,925 --> 00:53:03,685
no English politician spoke French like that.
784
00:53:03,685 --> 00:53:07,685
none of them knew Paris like that and that is critically important
785
00:53:07,685 --> 00:53:10,405
in causing a huge change in French opinion.
786
00:53:10,405 --> 00:53:14,125
The King's weakness for French wine, women and song
787
00:53:14,125 --> 00:53:19,125
had helped him pave the way for a crucial strategic alliance with the old enemy.
788
00:53:20,565 --> 00:53:23,565
There's a sort of French love of an English Milord,
789
00:53:23,565 --> 00:53:30,965
I mean, Milord is what they called English, upper class aristocrats who came to Paris to have a good time.
790
00:53:30,965 --> 00:53:36,566
And as Prince of Wales, Edward VII had come a lot in the '80s and '60s and '70s
791
00:53:36,566 --> 00:53:40,886
and was famous for his great enjoyment of the theatre,
792
00:53:40,886 --> 00:53:43,686
and also his use of French brothels.
793
00:53:43,686 --> 00:53:48,566
And I'm sure that Milord reputation
794
00:53:48,566 --> 00:53:52,326
didn't do him any harm when he came back in 1903 as King.
795
00:53:53,966 --> 00:53:58,686
Next, Bertie threw his support behind admirals arguing
796
00:53:58,686 --> 00:54:04,886
for a new generation of warships, the Dreadnoughts, to keep pace with the German naval threat.
797
00:54:08,886 --> 00:54:12,006
The King was, if anything, ahead of his ministers
798
00:54:12,006 --> 00:54:18,206
in realising how vitally important it was that the British Navy must, at all costs, be built up.
799
00:54:18,206 --> 00:54:22,566
And I think that the King made a very serious contribution
800
00:54:22,566 --> 00:54:26,526
in pressing his ministers to build new, better ships,
801
00:54:26,526 --> 00:54:28,126
to look to the future.
802
00:54:30,166 --> 00:54:35,246
It was a future the 69-year-old King would not live to see.
803
00:54:35,246 --> 00:54:39,486
The 12-course dinners and the trademark cigars were catching up with him.
804
00:54:41,206 --> 00:54:44,646
Already seriously ill with chronic emphysema,
805
00:54:44,646 --> 00:54:48,326
in 1910 the King suffered a series of heart attacks.
806
00:54:50,367 --> 00:54:54,767
As he slipped in and out of consciousness at Buckingham Palace,
807
00:54:54,767 --> 00:54:56,567
he was joined by two women -
808
00:54:56,567 --> 00:55:00,607
his long-suffering wife, Queen Alexandra,
809
00:55:00,607 --> 00:55:03,527
and his mistress, Alice Keppel.
810
00:55:09,887 --> 00:55:16,807
Alexandra remained devoted to Bertie, very close to him throughout his life.
811
00:55:16,807 --> 00:55:18,727
After Bertie's death,
812
00:55:18,727 --> 00:55:22,167
the undertakers were always making appointments
813
00:55:22,167 --> 00:55:24,047
to come and put the body into a coffin
814
00:55:24,047 --> 00:55:27,487
and it was always announced in The Times that this was going to happen.
815
00:55:27,487 --> 00:55:31,407
And day after day, Alexandra would say, "No, I can't bear to part with him."
816
00:55:31,407 --> 00:55:37,487
People who came said that for the first time she had Bertie to herself.
817
00:55:39,367 --> 00:55:43,727
For eight days the Queen clung to her husband.
818
00:55:43,727 --> 00:55:46,847
But even in death, Bertie was a People's King.
819
00:55:48,367 --> 00:55:50,927
In recognition of his unique popularity,
820
00:55:50,927 --> 00:55:54,527
it was decided that his body would lie in state at Westminster
821
00:55:54,527 --> 00:55:56,607
for the public to pay its respects.
822
00:55:56,607 --> 00:56:00,167
The first British Monarch ever to do so.
823
00:56:01,808 --> 00:56:06,368
I think only when King Edward VII died
824
00:56:06,368 --> 00:56:11,728
did the British people realise how much they liked having him around.
825
00:56:13,488 --> 00:56:16,648
He'd been around for so long,
826
00:56:16,648 --> 00:56:19,048
and then suddenly he'd gone,
827
00:56:19,048 --> 00:56:22,248
and so they surged out in their hundreds of thousands
828
00:56:22,248 --> 00:56:25,528
to show they mourned his passing.
829
00:56:30,288 --> 00:56:35,048
Queues of people, humble people, poor people,
830
00:56:35,048 --> 00:56:39,088
they snaked round Westminster, something like seven mile queues.
831
00:56:40,688 --> 00:56:44,888
This really does show to a much greater extent than when Queen Victoria died,
832
00:56:44,888 --> 00:56:49,648
just how successful he had been in making this connection
833
00:56:49,648 --> 00:56:52,408
between the monarchy and the people.
834
00:56:55,488 --> 00:57:02,328
He is this sort of libertine figure. He does seem like a fragment of an earlier age.
835
00:57:02,328 --> 00:57:05,728
You can imagine him careering about 18th century London
836
00:57:05,728 --> 00:57:07,808
with a big wig on and a beauty spot.
837
00:57:07,808 --> 00:57:13,889
And I think in a way, although he seems to be the absolute opposite of his father,
838
00:57:13,889 --> 00:57:18,809
he also seems like the right man for the job in the early part of the 20th century.
839
00:57:20,329 --> 00:57:26,689
Edward VII's creation of a modern public monarchy, together with his fast-living lifestyle,
840
00:57:26,689 --> 00:57:32,969
earned him the affection of his people, and raised the Royal Family to new levels of popularity.
841
00:57:34,489 --> 00:57:38,569
His vision of monarchy as a showy theatre of pageantry
842
00:57:38,569 --> 00:57:40,289
continues to this day.
843
00:57:49,409 --> 00:57:54,689
But the example the King set in his personal life would be rejected.
844
00:57:54,689 --> 00:57:59,329
Bertie's descendants would attempt, with mixed results,
845
00:57:59,329 --> 00:58:03,969
to return to the family values of his mother, Queen Victoria.
846
00:58:09,009 --> 00:58:12,369
Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd
847
00:58:12,369 --> 00:58:14,409
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77412
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