Shooting Victoria



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Paul Thomas Murphy

Pegasus Books









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“Hunchbacked Little Miscreant” Attacks Queen

     On the 3rd of July 1842, exactly 170 years ago today, John William Bean—a diminutive, hunchbacked, deeply depressed 17-year old boy—pointed a flintlock pistol at Queen Victoria and pulled the trigger. His pistol misfired; he was seized by the boy standing next to him, but in the subsequent excitement, he escaped—only to be captured that evening, when the Metropolitan Police rounded up virtually every male hunchbacked dwarf in London.

     Bean’s was the third attempt upon Victoria in two years, and it was his attempt that allegedly caused the Queen’s vexed Prime Minister, Robert Peel, to burst into tears when he met the Queen soon afterwards.

11:29 am, by shootingvictoria2 notes Comments

The Two Towers: Victoria and Elizabeth

     It’s official; the Daily Mail reports today that Parliament has agreed to rename the Clock Tower of the Houses of Parliament “The Elizabeth Tower” in honor of the present Queen. (This tower houses the famous “Big Ben”—which will retain its name.) The act mirrors the honor done early during her great-great-grandmonther Victoria’s reign, when the tower at the opposite end of Parliament was named “The Victoria Tower.”

     Conservative MP Tobias Ellwood, who first proposed the idea for the new name, said

     Of all the forty one monarchs who have reigned over England and the United Kingdom since William the Conqueror, only Her Majesty and Queen Victoria have reached this Diamond Jubilee landmark.

     She has travelled more widely than any other head of state in history, and is arguably the most respected and admired public figure in the world.

     It therefore seems entirely appropriate for Parliament to pay tribute to Her Majesty with a similar honour, and in symmetry, to that bestowed upon Queen Victoria, by dedicating part of the iconic Parliamentary estate in her name.

     Score another one for the queens!

     The towers are of course not identical to one another. Victoria is the taller, by 7 feet. And Elizabeth is the noisier.

(Source: Daily Mail)

04:46 pm, by shootingvictoria2 notes Comments

Arthur O’Connor’s Illness

One of the most intriguing aspects of my research for Shooting Victoria, I found, was that in delving deeper and deeper into the public records of the eight attempts, I found myself delving deeper and deeper, as well, into the minds of the Queen’s seven assailants—curious, complex, disturbed worlds, every one of them. And while I chose to avoid applying modern psychological science to their Victorian world in the book (finding that Victorian psychological science, with its entirely different nomenclature and its distinct underlying assumptions suited the task of attempting to explain their behavior quite well enough), I did find that some of them did present textbook cases of mental illnesses defined in twenty-first century terms. Young Edward Oxford (#1 of the seven), for example, would surely be diagnosed as bipolar if he were a teenager today. John William Bean (#3) clearly suffered what would in 2012 be diagnosed as clinical depression: he lived under that dark cloud his entire life, and in the end it killed him. Robert Pate (#5) would today be treated for his extreme obsessive-compulsive behavior. And Roderick Maclean —who conversed with God and believed the world leagued in a plot against him—would today certainly be medicated as a schizophrenic.

 

Of the seven, Arthur O’Connor—#6—presents the most complex case of mental aberration of all; the nature of his illness is much more difficult to label accurately in modern terms than any of the others. Symptoms, certainly, are apparent, and indeed O’Connor himself at various times attempted to set out the symptoms of his own illness. But accurately summing him up as falling into one specific category of insanity, modern or Victorian, is to my mind impossible. One obvious symptom of his illness was an extreme grandiosity, a need to be—often shifting to a belief that he was—the greatest of the great O’Connors. And once he made contact with Queen Victoria, he dared to believe that she would recognize his greatness, and, through her, the world would finally accord him the recognition he knew he deserved. On 11 June 1873, O’Connor, more than a year after his attempt and then in exile in Morpeth, New South Wales, Australia, wrote a long, personal—and excruciatingly poetic—letter to the Queen. The excerpt from this letter, above, shows O’Connor laying bare to his monarch his ambition: the Queen, he expected, would dismiss that half-poet Alfred, Lord Tennyson, from the poet laureateship, and appoint O’Connor in his place.   

 

The letter never reached the Queen; her Home Secretary at the time, Henry Bruce, made sure of that. In noting his reception of O’Connor’s letter, Bruce made his own diagnosis of the boy: “The man must be mad,” he wrote; “his self-conceit is intolerable.” O’Connor would spend nearly 50 years in a variety of asylums, his illness in almost all of them reduced simply to the effects of self-abuse. A closer study of his life (and his very few works)—a study at least begun in Shooting Victoria—suggests a much more complicated and interesting mind than that.  

01:35 pm, by shootingvictoria1 note Comments