Page:The Letters Of Queen Victoria, vol. 2 (1908).djvu/28

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10
HONOURS FOR LORD ELLENBOROUGH
[chap. xiii

January 1820, when I was called by a messenger to Sidmouth, my care for you has been unremitting, and never has there been a cloud between us. . . . A thing which often strikes me, in a very satisfactory manner, is that we never had any bitter words, a thing which happens even with people who are very lovingly together; and the little row which we had in 1838 you remember well, and do not now think that I was wrong.[1] De pareilles relations sont rares; may they ever continue!

I cannot leave this more serious topic without adding that though you were always warm-hearted and right-minded, it must strike yourself how matured every kind and good feeling is in your generous heart. The heart, and not the head, is the safest guide in positions like yours, and this not only for this earthly and very short life, but for that which we must hope for hereafter. When a life draws nearer its close, how many earthly concerns are there that appear still in the same light? and how clearly the mind is struck that nothing has been and is still of real value, than the nobler and better feelings of the heart; the only good we can hope to keep as a precious store for the future. What do we keep of youth, beauty, richness, power, and even the greatest extent of earthly possessions? Nothing!... Your truly devoted Uncle, Leopold R.


Sir Robert Peel to Queen Victoria.

Whitehall, 5th May 1844

Sir Robert Peel, with his humble duty to your Majesty, and believing that he is acting in accordance with your Majesty’s own opinion, begs leave to submit to your Majesty that it may be advisable that he should by the present mail inform Lord Ellenborough that it is your Majesty’s intention to confer on him, at a very early period, as a mark of your Majesty’s approval of Lord Ellenborough’s conduct and services in India, the rank of an Earl and the Grand Cross of the Bath.

Lord Ellenborough may be at liberty (should your Majesty approve) to notify this publicly in India—and thus make it known that the general line of policy recently pursued has had the full sanction of your Majesty, and will not be departed from.

These were the honours conferred upon Lord Auckland.

If they were conferred on the instant, it might rather seem a

  1. See Letters of Queen Victoria and the King of the Belgians, ante, vol. i. pp. 116-120.