Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 19 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 76499 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 75 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 16 Queen 14 Princess 14 Majesty 14 England 13 Prince 13 Lord 13 Duke 12 Sir 11 King 10 Victoria 10 Royal 10 Albert 9 Duchess 7 Windsor 7 Parliament 7 London 7 Leopold 7 House 6 Palace 6 Kent 6 John 5 Palmerston 5 Mr. 5 Minister 5 Lady 5 Government 5 George 5 Court 5 Coburg 4 illustration 4 english 4 Wales 4 Melbourne 4 India 4 God 4 France 3 great 3 british 3 William 3 Russell 3 General 3 Emperor 3 Earl 3 Consort 3 Cabinet 2 sidenote 2 life 2 War 2 WINDSOR 2 Viscount Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2389 time 2380 year 2346 day 1708 man 1695 letter 1383 life 1245 country 1172 people 1160 child 1017 hand 973 place 910 duty 893 death 833 room 829 part 816 visit 802 war 781 queen 777 thing 772 way 759 subject 747 power 694 opinion 693 illustration 687 position 685 feeling 675 marriage 664 state 657 party 654 heart 632 one 628 question 626 work 618 son 616 morning 613 nothing 591 daughter 587 moment 587 interest 586 course 582 family 581 mother 571 order 571 friend 566 view 542 lady 540 head 539 character 538 person 534 word Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 23104 _ 8210 Queen 6435 Lord 4100 Prince 3869 Majesty 2486 Victoria 2004 Sir 1844 King 1842 Princess 1734 Duke 1653 Melbourne 1601 Albert 1585 England 1320 ii 1310 Palmerston 1256 i. 1184 John 1158 Government 1000 Duchess 997 Footnote 970 Royal 939 Mr 909 House 846 iii 774 Mr. 770 Emperor 681 Lady 678 Robert 675 Parliament 673 Viscount 666 George 663 France 650 Palace 635 General 633 London 629 Russell 608 de 576 Peel 572 Earl 567 Windsor 551 William 542 Minister 533 Kent 530 Leopold 517 Cabinet 491 God 465 Wales 446 India 445 Belgians 443 Court Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 11518 it 10739 he 8458 i 7675 she 3969 you 3584 him 3180 they 2766 we 2710 her 2254 me 2133 them 928 us 875 himself 611 herself 339 themselves 317 itself 248 one 222 myself 115 yourself 83 ourselves 46 mine 38 yours 28 his 25 hers 24 je 21 ours 17 theirs 17 thee 12 oneself 4 thy 4 ''em 3 ye 3 ''s 2 yourselves 2 thyself 2 samson:-- 2 où 2 ii 2 i''m 2 bookshelf 2 au 1 windsor-- 1 thou 1 that_''--her 1 peel,--i 1 one?--breaks 1 nine 1 il 1 iii.--i 1 i''d Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 49674 be 18980 have 4163 do 2817 say 2796 make 2407 see 2365 take 2116 go 2075 give 2049 come 1536 think 1514 write 1493 know 1266 receive 1074 feel 1055 find 999 become 957 seem 949 tell 933 leave 919 pageheade 861 look 840 bring 798 send 771 pass 768 follow 715 hear 711 show 692 bear 674 wish 658 get 652 hold 635 appear 623 present 599 return 593 speak 589 call 572 hope 563 stand 563 remain 559 believe 556 ask 555 carry 537 die 522 read 516 keep 508 put 501 meet 489 consider 464 begin Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 8118 not 3773 so 3618 very 3042 great 2550 more 2132 much 2120 most 2002 well 1829 only 1790 now 1749 good 1657 first 1609 little 1467 then 1457 up 1408 other 1367 long 1278 old 1243 last 1233 out 1214 many 1157 as 1156 own 1060 never 1031 such 1026 young 1025 ever 1010 still 921 also 918 dear 911 too 902 even 892 royal 873 same 843 again 816 high 803 new 797 here 785 always 725 quite 715 once 678 afterwards 662 present 662 down 661 few 651 early 630 public 626 just 616 however 605 poor Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 425 good 284 great 269 least 254 most 155 dear 146 high 97 eld 61 slight 60 early 44 bad 40 young 37 happy 34 fine 29 large 26 warm 26 strong 24 low 24 deep 22 late 21 near 20 noble 19 Most 16 wise 16 old 16 full 15 pure 14 small 13 bright 12 grand 11 rich 10 proud 10 fair 10 close 9 true 9 keen 9 brave 8 sincere 8 simple 8 long 8 handsome 8 c'' 8 bitter 7 wild 7 sure 7 poor 7 pleasant 7 mighty 7 manif 7 hard 7 dark Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1866 most 72 well 37 least 2 youngest 2 worst 2 farthest 1 plainest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 www.gutenberg.org 4 www.gutenberg.net Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/42386/42386-h/42386-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/42386/42386-h.zip 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/24780 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/20023 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/files/28649/28649-h/28649-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/files/28649/28649-h.zip 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/1/3/1/0/13103/13103-h/13103-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/1/3/1/0/13103/13103-h.zip Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 92 _ see _ 34 melbourne is very 31 _ is _ 19 queen is very 18 melbourne does not 17 _ was _ 16 queen has just 14 _ are _ 14 queen does not 11 melbourne is much 10 _ has _ 10 queen did not 9 _ feel _ 9 queen was present 9 queen was very 9 queen wishes lord 8 _ do _ 8 _ had _ 8 albert was very 8 majesty was pleased 8 queen has not 8 queen is anxious 8 queen is much 8 queen was much 8 year was out 7 _ did _ 7 _ have _ 7 majesty does not 7 majesty was not 7 melbourne is not 6 melbourne feels certain 6 melbourne has not 6 melbourne was not 6 prince was very 6 queen had not 6 queen is sure 6 queen was not 6 time went on 6 victoria was much 5 _ am _ 5 _ is not 5 _ think _ 5 _ was not 5 _ were _ 5 government is not 5 majesty is aware 5 majesty is well 5 majesty was graciously 5 prince was not 5 princess was not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 melbourne has no doubt 3 melbourne has not yet 2 albert was no leopold 2 government had no wish 2 letters are not so 2 man was no longer 2 melbourne was not only 2 palmerston did not even 2 palmerston is not aware 2 prince was not merely 2 princess was not yet 2 queen had not long 2 victoria had no misgivings 2 victoria was not only 1 _ are not very 1 _ came not unwillingly 1 _ did not _ 1 _ do not _ 1 _ is not equal 1 _ takes no part 1 _ was not nervous 1 _ was not there 1 albert was not satisfied 1 albert was not yet 1 child was not only 1 country did not foolishly 1 country is not _ 1 day was not fine 1 duchess was not altogether 1 duchess was not very 1 duke was not only 1 england are not prepared 1 england seems not unlikely 1 england was not more 1 england were not quite 1 government are not commensurate 1 government has no chance 1 government has no official 1 government has not yet 1 government is not only 1 government was no more 1 john had no objection 1 john has not yet 1 john was not at 1 king had not many 1 king has not even 1 letter does not even 1 life was not all 1 life was not happy 1 lives were not worth A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 9947 author = Anonymous title = Queen Victoria Story of Her Life and Reign, 1819-1901 date = keywords = Albert; Consort; Duchess; Duke; England; India; Kent; London; Lord; Majesty; Prince; Princess; Queen; Sir; Victoria; british; illustration summary = CHAPTER III.--Marriage--Family Habits--Birth of Princess Royal--Queen''s Institute--Jubilee--Death of Duke of Clarence--Marriage of Princess May. CHAPTER IX.--The Queen as an Artist and Author--In her Holiday When we come to look into the lives of the Queen and Prince-Consort, we First Meeting with Prince Albert--Death of William IV.--Accession of Queen ''Poor little Queen!'' said Carlyle, with a shake of his head at the time, death.'' The Queen and Prince Albert went everywhere together; to church, Prince Albert''s care for the Queen in these circumstances was like that of took place at Osborne, and the Queen and Prince-Consort were greatly country, the Queen and the prince took the earliest opportunity of The Queen in Mourning--Death of Princess Alice--Illness of Prince of letters printed in the Life of the Prince-Consort, the Queen took the of the Queen and prince; when Her Majesty came forward and said, with a id = 16965 author = Browne, E. Gordon (Edgar Gordon) title = Queen Victoria date = keywords = Albert; Duke; England; God; King; London; Lord; Parliament; Prince; Princess; Queen; Royal; Victoria; great; life; time summary = foes, and her country took its place in the front rank of Great Powers. an age of great men and women, a New England. took place in public; where little children of tender years were Four days later the Queen went in State to dissolve Parliament, and the Queen was able during the early years of her reign to develop Queen said, "He is the first King of France who comes on a visit to The Queen loved her life here even more than the Prince, and every Their life there during the years 1848-61 is described by the Queen The death of the Queen''s'' mother came as a great shock to the Prince Queen''s, "to place all his time and powers at her command." Every Prince Albert and Queen Victoria, both of whom he knew and admired. The last years of the Queen''s life were destined to be saddened id = 43995 author = Goodrich, Samuel G. (Samuel Griswold) title = Peter Parley''s Visit to London, During the Coronation of Queen Victoria date = keywords = Abbey; CHAPTER; Majesty; Parley; Peter; Queen; Royal; Soult summary = "WELL, my little friends, here is your old acquaintance, Peter Parley, PARLEY SEES THE QUEEN, AND RELATES SOME ANECDOTES OF HER MAJESTY. Queen, which Peter Parley took good care to remember because he knew "This little anecdote warmed old Peter Parley''s heart towards the young "''Here is an anecdote which I heard at a Missionary Meeting, Mr. Parley,'' said Major Meadows, ''and I assure you it told with great "THERE was one anecdote of the Queen from which Peter Parley derived "Peter Parley was pleased to find, on our arrival at the Abbey, that her Majesty approached, was, Peter Parley was assured, great beyond PARLEY CONTINUES HIS DESCRIPTION OF THE CORONATION IN WESTMINSTER ABBEY. "''Marshal Soult,'' said Major Meadows, ''is a very singular man, Mr. Parley, and like many of Napoleon''s generals, rose from the very "Peter Parley is one of those who hope the time is now come when the id = 6469 author = Greenwood, Grace title = Queen Victoria, her girlhood and womanhood date = keywords = Albert; Buckingham; Coburg; Consort; Court; Duchess; Duke; Emperor; Empress; England; God; Kent; King; Leopold; London; Lord; Majesty; Palace; Parliament; Prince; Princess; Queen; Royal; Victoria; Wales; Windsor; english; little summary = King''s stand, and saw Her Majesty the Queen, and the young Princess solemn by the fact that while it was going on the great bell of St. Paul''s was tolling for the dead King,--the young Queen was dressed very On Lord Mayor''s Day, the Queen went in state to dine with her brothermonarch, the King of "Great London Town." It was a memorable, magnificent Queen, the Duchess of Kent, Prince Albert, and the usual Court ladies and Old homes and new--A visit from the King of France--The Queen and Prince Queen or Prince Albert at first; but the time came when he, as a Minister Letter of Prince Albert''s--Another attempt on the Queen''s Life--The Prince Albert went in her place and took the Princess Royal One day the Queen, Prince, and Princess Royal, A little later, the Queen and Prince made a visit to their daughter in id = 11020 author = Housman, Laurence title = Angels and Ministers, and Other Victorian Plays date = keywords = CHAMBERLAIN; DIST; JULIA; KATHARINE; LAURA; LORD; MARTHA; MORLEY; MRS; Mr.; PARNELL; queen summary = and poetry, and things like that, where, maybe, he knows a bit more than I do (though he didn''t know his Burns so well as a man ought that thinks to great man; but he''s got too many ideas for my liking, far too many! But, Madam, there is almost nothing to tell: politics, like the rest You mustn''t forget things like that, you know. LAURA (_her character showing_.) I didn''t ask anyone''s leave to come. (_She goes and begins to take a look round, and Julia takes up her Yes. That went the day before, so you got it in time. face--and make it look a little less like the defeat they know it to be! You haven''t given yourself a very good character, coming here, my man; but My dear, I said "a year ago." That means before the case came stands for so many things that he values--that he thinks good for the id = 13103 author = Keeling, Anne E. title = Great Britain and Her Queen date = keywords = Britain; Church; Conference; Dr.; Duke; England; France; Government; India; John; London; Lord; Majesty; Methodism; Mr.; Prince; Princess; Queen; Sir; Sovereign; Wesleyan; british; english; great; illustration summary = early days in the royal child, the single darling hope of the nation. the splendid show of her coronation a half-year later awakened great faithful service ended ere the Queen had reigned eight years. For some years after her marriage the Queen''s private life shows like Lord Aberdeen, who did not hope very great things from the war which authorities in India; while the Queen and the Prince shared Lord prosperity for many ensuing years, for a time of great trial The New Connexion and Methodist Free Church Conferences also The great change just described, being the work of the ministers in Great Britain, Education, Home Missions, Methodism in Scotland, The success of London Methodism in late years is largely due to the Methodist circles; and that year great meetings were held in City The establishment of "week-day schools" in connexion with this great philanthropic work in connexion with the great Methodist missions in id = 43428 author = Law, Ernest title = Kensington Palace, the birthplace of the Queen being an historical guide to the state rooms, pictures and gardens date = keywords = Anne; Duchess; Duke; Gallery; George; III; Kensington; Kent; King; Lord; Majesty; Mary; Palace; Princess; Queen; Royal; Sir; William; Wren; illustration summary = The State Rooms of Kensington Palace, and likewise Queen Anne''s [Illustration: KENSINGTON PALACE AND GARDENS IN THE REIGN OF QUEEN PAINTED CEILING OF THE QUEEN''S DRAWING ROOM 88 to the State Rooms of Kensington Palace, now open by command of the Kensington Palace, built by William and Mary, occupied by Queen Anne as Two years later, in these very same state rooms of Kensington Palace Most of the future Queen''s early years were passed at Kensington Palace was formally proclaimed Queen of Great Britain and Ireland at St. James''s Palace, when a salute was fired in the Park, and she appeared at of the old gardens appurtenant to the Palace, laid out by Queen Anne. Pictures in Queen Anne''s Private Dining Room. Pictures in Queen Anne''s Private Dining Room. Painted Ceiling of Queen Caroline''s Drawing Room. Queen Anne formal gardens about Kensington Palace. room, having, it appears, been so used at one time by Queen Victoria, id = 38627 author = Martin, Theodore, Sir title = Queen Victoria as I Knew Her date = keywords = England; Helps; Majesty; Martin; Prince; Princess; Queen; Sir; Wales; Windsor; life summary = from the Queen, in which Her Majesty wrote: "She thinks it most 1867, she writes, "The Queen thanks Mr Martin for his two kind letters," It is the Queen''s great aim to follow the Prince''s "The Queen has received Mr Martin''s _most_ kind letter of the "The Queen rejoices to think that the great character of her dear "The Queen hopes Mr Martin will find a good place in the _Life_ for the my _Life_ of the Prince, I made the Queen such amends as I might by my The Queen thanks Mr Martin for his last letters, and is "The Queen thanks Sir Theodore Martin for his kind letter, as well that, in a letter to me next day (11th August), she wrote: "The Queen public life of the Queen. last year of the Queen''s life. "The Queen sends Mr Martin to-day a volume of the beloved Prince''s and id = 42386 author = Maxwell, Herbert, Sir title = Sixty Years a Queen: The Story of Her Majesty''s Reign date = keywords = Bill; Britain; Cabinet; Collection; Commons; Disraeli; Duke; England; General; Gladstone; Government; Great; House; India; Ireland; Irish; John; Jubilee; June; King; London; Lord; Majesty; Minister; Mr.; Palace; Palmerston; Parliament; Photograph; Prince; Princess; Queen; Royal; Russell; Sir; Victoria; Wales; War; british; illustration; sidenote summary = On July 17 the Queen went in State to the House of Lords to prorogue [Illustration: GENERAL POST OFFICE--NEW NORTH BUILDING. House, when Lord John Russell moved for a grant of £50,000 a year to the in the House of Lords, and the most momentous measure of Queen THE QUEEN, PRINCE CONSORT, AND PRINCESS ROYAL, AT WINDSOR CASTLE, Free Church--Affairs of British India--First Sikh War--Battles Free Church--Affairs of British India--First Sikh War--Battles Turkish Fleet--Resignation of Lord Palmerston--Great Britain and Turkish Fleet--Resignation of Lord Palmerston--Great Britain and [Sidenote: Great Britain and France Declare War with Russia.] Great Britain was represented by Lord John Russell and France by M. In assuming the chief command of the British Army in this war, Lord of Lord Derby--Irish Land Legislation--National Education--Army of Lord Derby--Irish Land Legislation--National Education--Army On the very next day British troops under Lord "To Her Majesty VICTORIA, Queen of Great Britain and Ireland, id = 39603 author = McGilchrist, John title = The Public Life of Queen Victoria date = keywords = Albert; CHAPTER; Coburg; Court; Duchess; Duke; England; George; House; Kent; King; Leopold; Lord; Majesty; Palace; Parliament; Prince; Princess; Queen; Royal; Sir; Victoria; William; Windsor; sidenote; visit summary = Queen''s Regard for Prince Albert--Visit of the Czar branch of this great Saxon house, from which the Queen and the Prince Romantic Career of Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg, the Queen''s Romantic Career of Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg, the Queen''s State--Reverence for the Lord''s Day. Greatly to the regret of the inhabitants of Kensington, the Queen, with The Queen went in great state to the City on Lord Mayor''s Day, November 9. all Her Majesty''s subjects present shouted, "God Save Queen Victoria!" the On the day after the departure of the Princes, the Queen wrote letters to the Prince became a subject of Queen Victoria. for Her Majesty, Prince Albert, the Queen Dowager, and the Duchess of Queen and Prince Albert proceeded to Cowes, where a Royal squadron was The Queen as an Author--"The Early Years of the Prince The Queen as an Author--"The Early Years of the Prince id = 1265 author = Strachey, Lytton title = Queen Victoria date = keywords = Albert; Baron; Coburg; Court; Crown; Duchess; Duke; England; English; Government; House; John; King; Lady; Lehzen; Leopold; Lord; Majesty; Melbourne; Minister; Mr.; Palmerston; Prime; Prince; Princess; Queen; Sir; Stockmar; Victoria; Windsor summary = Princess Victoria, at that time seventeen years of age. years as if the great cause of English liberalism hung upon the life of society--came to an end when she was eleven years old and Prince Leopold time did his best to prevent the visit of the young Coburg princes to that had kept Prince Leopold in England during the critical years which Queen interviewed her Ministers; and at Lord Melbourne''s suggestion he the Prince of Wales the Princess Alice appeared, and a year later the King and Guizot on the one side, and the Queen, the Prince, and Lord But on that, the Prince noted, "the Queen interrupted Lord John Queen''s letter to Lord Palmerston. supported by both the Prince and the Queen--that the royal Houses of Victoria was the Queen of England, The Married Life of Queen Victoria. The Letters of Queen Victoria. Life of Her Majesty Queen Victoria. The Life of Queen Victoria, id = 37153 author = Strachey, Lytton title = Queen Victoria date = keywords = Albert; Baron; Crown; Duchess; Duke; England; English; Greville; Ibid; John; King; Lady; Leopold; Letters; Lord; Majesty; Martin; Melbourne; Minister; Mr.; Palmerston; Prime; Prince; Princess; Queen; Sir; Stockmar; Victoria; Windsor summary = [Frontispiece: QUEEN VICTORIA, PRINCE ALBERT AND THE ROYAL FAMILY. QUEEN VICTORIA, PRINCE ALBERT AND THE ROYAL FAMILY. QUEEN VICTORIA AND THE PRINCE CONSORT IN 1860 The Duke of York, whose escapades in times past with Mrs. Clarke and the army had brought him into trouble, now divided his life long married to the Princess Royal of Prussia, a lady who rarely went In 1803 he married the Princess Victoria, at that time seventeen years later the Queen wrote to the Foreign Secretary urging that Lord no wish to support Prince Leopold, and, though Albert and Victoria had Queen Isabella''s hand, Prince Leopold of Coburg; and at the same time time insane.'' Victoria, in an agitated letter, urged Lord John to [Illustration: QUEEN VICTORIA AND THE PRINCE CONSORT IN 1860.] _The Married Life of Queen Victoria_. _The Letters of Queen Victoria_. _Life of Her Majesty Queen Victoria_. id = 35922 author = Thompson, Francis title = Victorian Ode for Jubilee Day, 1897 date = keywords = England; thy summary = The long Victorian line that passed with printless tread. Came on disranked; Song''s hand was in his hair, Came they that kept our England''s sea-swept hem, And those great dead of the Victorian line. For England feels them in her blood like wine. Their thews it is, England, that lift thy sword, They are the splendour, England, in thy song, And this, O England, is thine All Souls'' Day. And let thy vales make haste to be more green And let thy trees clap all their leafy hands, And let thy flowers be gladder far of hue And like our spirits cast forth lively gleams: And let this day hear only peaceful din. Thou art the fear of England to her foemen, And this thy glorious day is England''s; who Thy story is the tale of England''s years, And, for the perfect evening of thy day, Feastest, but with thy hand upon the sword, id = 6910 author = Tytler, Sarah title = Life of Her Most Gracious Majesty the Queen — Volume 1 date = keywords = Albert; Buckingham; Cambridge; Coburg; Court; Duchess; Duke; Earl; England; France; George; God; House; James; Kensington; Kent; King; Lady; Leopold; London; Lord; Majesty; Mary; Melbourne; Palace; Parliament; Prince; Princess; Queen; Royal; Sir; St.; State; Victoria; William; Windsor; english summary = or mother; when royal babies are brought up, like Queen Victoria, to speak people passed before the King and Queen, and another great dinner and The Queen and the Prince were only one whole day holding state by There is a story told of the Queen and Prince Albert''s early visits to gathering crowd, the Queen and the Prince went on to the Duchess of Kent uncle of the Queen and of Prince Albert, and father of the King Consort of toasts to his Majesty the King of Prussia, the Queen and Prince Albert before Prince Albert and the King followed the Queen, she did not sit, but Queen Victoria, Prince Albert, and all the royal family in the country, the Queen wrote of the Princess Royal and the Prince of Wales, "seems such occasion the Queen and the Prince took their little four-year-old daughter id = 7086 author = Tytler, Sarah title = Life of Her Most Gracious Majesty the Queen — Volume 2 date = keywords = Albert; Alice; August; Balmoral; Cambridge; Coburg; Consort; Court; Duchess; Duke; Emperor; Empress; England; George; House; Kent; King; Lady; Leopold; London; Lord; Louis; Majesty; Osborne; Palace; Prince; Princess; Prussia; Queen; Royal; Sir; St.; Wales; Windsor; english summary = The Queen and Prince Albert returned to Windsor on the evening of Queen, with the five royal children around her, the Prince of Wales The Duke led the Queen round the garden, while Prince Albert conducted Queen, Prince Albert, and their suite left Buckingham Palace, in State On the day after the Queen and Prince Albert''s arrival in the The Queen and Prince Albert came privately with their children, early the Queen and Prince, when her Majesty came forward and said with a The Queen, the Prince, with many of the royal family, the Court, the DEATH OP LORD RAGLAN--VISIT OF THE QUEEN AND PRINCE ALBERT TO THE DEATH OP LORD RAGLAN--VISIT OF THE QUEEN AND PRINCE ALBERT TO THE The Queen was present, driving with Princess Alice, Prince Arthur, and This year the Queen and the Prince, with the Princesses Alice and Queen and the Prince, their second son and the Princesses Alice and id = 20023 author = Victoria, Queen of Great Britain title = The Letters of Queen Victoria : A Selection from Her Majesty''s Correspondence between the Years 1837 and 1861. Volume 1, 1837-1843 date = keywords = Aberdeen; Albert; Aunt; Belgians; CASTLE; Cabinet; Duchess; Duke; Earl; England; Footnote; France; General; George; Government; House; John; King; Lady; Leopold; Lord; Majesty; Melbourne; Minister; Niece; October; Palmerston; Parliament; Peel; Prince; Princess; Queen; Robert; Royal; Russell; Secretary; Sir; Uncle; Victoria; Viscount; WINDSOR; dearest summary = position--The Queen and Sir Robert Peel--Lord Melbourne''s opinion of The Queen has received Lord Melbourne''s communication, and thinks, The Queen received Lord Melbourne''s two letters yesterday evening, and Lord Melbourne has the pleasure of wishing your Majesty a happy and Lord Melbourne presents his humble duty to your Majesty, and thinks Lord Melbourne presents his humble duty to your Majesty, and thinks Lord Melbourne presents his humble duty to your Majesty, and feels The Queen thinks Lord Melbourne may possibly wish to know how she The Queen hopes Lord Melbourne received her letter last night. The Queen hopes Lord Melbourne is able to read her letters; if ever The Queen has just received Lord Melbourne''s letter; and wishes to Lord Melbourne reads with great satisfaction your Majesty''s expression Lord Melbourne has this morning received your Majesty''s letter of The Queen thanks Lord Melbourne for his kind letter, received the day id = 28649 author = Victoria, Queen of Great Britain title = The Letters of Queen Victoria : A Selection from Her Majesty''s Correspondence between the Years 1837 and 1861. Volume 3, 1854-1861 date = keywords = Aberdeen; Albert; Army; Austria; BUCKINGHAM; Belgians; Bill; CASTLE; Cabinet; Canning; Clarendon; Commons; Derby; Duke; Earl; Emperor; England; February; Footnote; Foreign; France; French; General; Gladstone; Government; House; India; Italy; John; King; Lord; Majesty; Minister; Napoleon; PALACE; Palmerston; Parliament; Prince; Princess; Queen; Royal; Russell; Russia; Secretary; Sir; Victoria; Viscount; WINDSOR; War summary = of Lord Palmerston for the Duke of Newcastle as Secretary for War. Sir Charles Napier, who, previously to his departure with the Baltic The Queen has received Lord Aberdeen''s letter of this day. The Queen thanks Lord John Russell for his letter received this The Queen received Lord John Russell''s letter last night. The Queen has this moment received Lord John Russell''s letter and The Queen has received Lord John Russell''s letter of to-day in The Queen wishes Lord Palmerston to read this letter to the Cabinet. The Queen wishes Lord Palmerston to show this letter to the Cabinet. The Queen has received Lord John Russell''s letter of yesterday. The Queen has received Lord John Russell''s letter of yesterday. The Queen has just received Lord John Russell''s letter. The Queen has just received Lord John Russell''s letter. The Queen has just received Lord John Russell''s letter. The Queen has just received Lord John Russell''s letter. id = 20430 author = Winnington Ingram, Arthur F. (Arthur Foley) title = The After-glow of a Great Reign Four Addresses Delivered in St. Paul''s Cathedral date = keywords = Christ; God; Jesus; Queen; great summary = We stand to-day like men who have just watched a great sunset. produce truth in the inward parts--a consciousness and love of God. And then, thirdly, _learn truth like a lesson_. believe, into what has been called, "God''s great Convalescent Home" in attractive things in the world; thirdly--a rainbow is God''s appointed rainbow round the throne of God. And we shall now understand that the But because it is so produced, the rainbow round the throne of God wins Thirdly, the rainbow round the throne of God speaks of hope. come, so the tempted one at home or at work, looks upon the rainbow rainbow round the throne of God is still awful, for it reminds us of of innocence, of pure home life, which constituted a beautiful rainbow Let us take home, then, these four great lessons from the character of life, The rainbow of purity round the throne of the heart, and In the