Mermaid1962
Majesty
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- Sep 14, 2007
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The Windsors were shallow people living shallow lives.
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I have to admit the notion of Edward and Wallis as glamorous swans really cracked me up! They had the social conscience of a pair of turkeys, and I cannot imagine that the war would have cramped their style any. King? Boring job. Way too much like hard work. Let's have another bottle of champers to make it go away, what?Yes, I think Edward and Wallis would have acted like glamorous swans versus the less interesting George VI and his plain missus.
There is an arugment that had she taken on that sort of role the King may have even relented and felt that as she was working the way a wife of a Prince of the Realm should behave that she might have been given the HRH later in life but as she, and he, did nothing but complain they didn't deserve any consideration.
George VI made it very clear throughout his reign he would not reconsider his decision to withhold royal rank from The Duchess under any circumstances. He felt his brother had acknowledged his wife's unsuitability to become a member of the royal family by abdicating the throne.
In his mind, if Wallis became HRH The Princess Edward upon marriage, then there was no reason why she shouldn't have become Queen in 1936. And that was the end of it.
The Queen Mother did blame Wallis but I think it was easier to blame Wallis than to blame Edward, of whom the Queen Mother was quite fond of back in the day.
Am I right in thinking that the Queen Mother indirectly blamed Wallis Simpson for her husband's premature death? ?
But on some level I think the royals, Bertie and Elizabeth included, didn't think Wallis really loved Edward. They thought she was using him, and that she would abandon him once she found someone she preferred or he was no longer of use to her. I don't think that was the case at all and looking back we now know their marriage lasted, and the love letters made their relationship seem very strong. But at the time, the royals thought Wallis was this horrible manipulative gold digger.
That also explains why Elizabeth softened to Wallis in her later years.
Even today, it would be a stretch to think such a woman would be accepted in Britain as Queen Consort.
Yes, exactly. You could chalk it down to an attempt on the Queen Mother's part to blame something less intangible than smoking, as it was only just becoming accepted at the time that smoking caused lung cancer. Looks like there was no love lost between these two! No wonder.The Queen Mother was quite direct about it, actually. She was supposed to have referred to Wallis as "the woman who killed my husband." Granted, George VI died of lung cancer; but I have no doubt that the stress of the abdication and war leadership might have hastened the disease's progress.
That's quite naive on his part. I think exile was the only way the RF could deal with him. Anything high-profile that he did in England would have threatened the stability of the monarchy. It wasn't like they could let him go around opening schools or what have you.Edward really thought he would have the opportunity to go back to England after a period of exile.
That's quite naive on his part. I think exile was the only way the RF could deal with him. Anything high-profile that he did in England would have threatened the stability of the monarchy. It wasn't like they could let him go around opening schools or what have you.
I wonder how instrumental the Queen Mother was in preventing members of the RF from attending the wedding and in preventing Wallis Simpson from becoming an HRH. It certainly took a long time for the RF to drop the grudge.
I assumed that his returning would have risked some sort of constitutional crisis, or at least undermined the monarchy. Then again, he kept a low profile politically after the abdication, so maybe it was just the fact that he was persona non grata with his brother and the Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother. His relationship with his mother also soured in his later years. Maybe he thought his relationship with the rest of his family wouldn't go so badly.He truely thought he would be allowed back after things had calmed down and I think his brother would have let him back but his mother and wife would not have.
Now which QM? Because at the time of the abdication Mary of Teck was mother to the Queen, but i'm guessing you mean Queen Elizabeth, QM.
At the time of the abdication, Mary of Teck was Queen Mother as mother of the King, not mother of the Queen. The Countess of Strathmore was the mother to the Queen.
I assumed that his returning would have risked some sort of constitutional crisis, or at least undermined the monarchy. Then again, he kept a low profile politically after the abdication, so maybe it was just the fact that he was persona non grata with his brother and the Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother. His relationship with his mother also soured in his later years. Maybe he thought his relationship with the rest of his family wouldn't go so badly.
George VI forbade members of the RF from attending the wedding. He was also angered by the Duke of Windsor asking him for more money. David was not on the Civil List so George VI payed him an allowance. Very complicated relationship there.
Hmmm. Slight reassessment. Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother never really forgave Wallis I think, but the royal family in general softened toward her a little bit. The Queen Mother did send Wallis flowers when the latter became ill, but refused to visit her. The Duchess of Windsor stayed in Buckingham Palace when the Duke of Windsor was buried. Also, in 1967 the two attended a ceremony celebrating the centenary of Mary of Teck's birth.
As far as I know this has never been satisfactorily explained. There was a period after the Abdication where the Duke of Windsor was regularly complaining to the new King about his need for more money and it became very aggravating. The Duke had also invested in some Canadian oil wells but these were not the financial sucess he had hoped for. On the other hand the Duke and Duchess paid a peppercorn rent for their house in Paris.Edward had been Prince of Wales for what 20 plus years...he should have had some more money put to the side. But he did buy Wallis some very valuable and beautiful jewelry.