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Volu m e II - Purdue University Calumet

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only secures her husband‟s social status; it demonstrates her health, and therefore, the health of the family.<br />

While Patmore and Ruskin demonstrate the traditional views and roles of Victorian women, Victoria<br />

herself challenged this traditional view and encouraged society to see women as powerful and independent<br />

beings.<br />

When Victoria succeeded William IV in 1837 at the age of eighteen she was unaware that she<br />

would be one of the most beloved monarchs in English history. Throughout her long and successful reign,<br />

the British people referred to her as “the mother of the nation” (Cagna 378) and “England‟s Good Angel”<br />

(Cagna 383). As a wife and mother she emulated the Victorian feminine ideal and she represented the<br />

model of domesticity. The public was able to love and respect Victoria for her adherence to the domestic<br />

ideal, and therefore, accepted her as their matriarch. Victoria, in a letter to her Uncle Leopold, said that<br />

“„[the British press] say[s] no Sovereign was more loved than I am . . . and that from our happy domestic home—<br />

which gives such a good example‟” (Arnstein 57). This suggests that the British public loved Victoria<br />

because she upheld the domestic ideal and, she continued to portray herself as the traditional angel in the<br />

house throughout her reign.<br />

As an angel in the house, Victoria portrayed her family as the epitome of the domestic ideal. The<br />

lithograph, "The Royal Family at Home (1843)" depicts Victoria and Albert playing and frolicking with<br />

their children, and they appear to be carefree and blissfully happy. Through photographs, lithographs, and<br />

other forms of propaganda, Victoria consciously portrayed herself as exemplifying the Victorian feminine<br />

ideal. Therefore, the British public, and certainly Wilkie Collins, thought of Victoria as a traditional, and<br />

not a progressive woman. Therefore, while Victoria occupied the most powerful position in England, her<br />

views concerning women‟s rights were highly traditional and conservative. She doubted women‟s<br />

leadership capabilities, for she said, “„I am every day more convinced that we women, if we are to be good<br />

women, feminine and amiable and domestic, are not fitted to reign; at least it is contre gr that they drive<br />

331

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