Empress said:
It jsut seems to me that in the majority of the photos she is not smiling, and almose never does she look as happy as her husband. One would think that she would smile and show her love. But I can understand if she is trying to be stoic and show a proper persona for a royal.
I, of course don't know Mary at all but I've been a much interested reader of the translation of the interviews she gave when she was engaged (Thank you again for translating and posting the contents here). Thus I formed my personal view of the princess and somehow her public appearance seem to fit.
She said herself that she is a rather private person and she appears to be a very serious character by nature. In my opinion, this is one of the attraction this girl offered the prince, as it is quite rare to find somebody who is really interested in you as a person, seriously interested but not much in the brimmings of your background. I wouldn't wonder if the sailing was the thing that brought them together as there is few things that tell you more about a person's character and how you interact together then to go sailing together for a longer trip. There simply is no place for vanity, laziness adn egoism on board a small ship. If you don't fit in with the crew you never get another invitation. As both are sailors, I presuem they both knew it and knew what they had found.
Mary appeared to me as being serious, reliable, caring and energetic - which is great if you do not only seek a lover but a companion and partner to share a burden which is not only enormous due to the history and tradition it carries but due to the everyday duties when it comes to people you are responsible for. Mary, in my opinon, was a first-class choice because she seems to be a person very dedicated to duty. She will probably never walk out of her marriage and her duties as Cp and future queen.
But - she appeared to be a person who has difficulties in deciding. Because she sticks to her final and basic decisions and does not seek the easy way out. That adds quite a burden to any decision, but imagine what that meant when it came to the decision of marrying Frederick.
I've seen this character trait of being insecure in the evaluation of your choices often in people who lost a parent while still in their formative years. IIRC correctly she was 15 when her mother died, which changed the way her family was working. There was no knowing that there would be another wife for their father, so during this time Mary had to take over more and different responsibilities within the family while at the same time the loss of a mother/confidante left a serious open space in her life.
In addition she has been the daughter of immigrants to Australia. While Australian and Scottish life do seem related when you watch it form the outside, I believe it is a cultural clash none-the-less between one of the most conservative parts of Europe and Australia. Growing up in an immigrant's household might be a source for insecurity as well. A Scottish dad in mourning who as a single parent raises a daughter in her teens is bound to be less relaxed and less free than the parents of other kids of the same age.
So for me the picture of a thirty-year-old woman emerged with a lot of depth and a lot of insecurities. She took her time deciding if she wanted to be with Frederick and she behaved in a way that she had as much possibilities in her final decision as possible.
Now she took the decision and now tries to feel secure. Which is difficult as best. But Royal protocol always was a means to cope with life for people who had contact with Royals. Protocol and etiquette was not invented to make life more difficult as it created differences but as a way to deal with differences in social position and standing. men simply were not equal till protocol was invented, it was the other way round: protocol is nothing but a fixed and thus secure code to live together.
Mary acknowledged that in her interviews when she talked about the fact that as a couple she and Frederick cannot simply travel into a foreign country but that the authorities have to be alerted first and the rules of protocol have to be worked out and followed. This is not for her and Frederick's benefit but for the people who are not asked if they want to deal with Fred and Mary but are forced to deal with them because these two decide they want to travel there. It is the way others deal with their being Royal that asks for rules to help both parties.
Mary seems to be a very correct and honorable woman. Thus, I guess, the rules of protocol appear to her as guidelines she wants to follow. If she appears aloof though it, then it's because she is still pretty new to the codex. Once she actually feels more secure in her new "Royal" skin, I'm sure she will loosen up.