When I was a freshman, I read "Queen Victoria", a very peaceful book, from being born alone to dying lonely, so that I felt that her love with Prince Albert was equally calm. In fact, they are really calm, they love to the depths, and they are naturally like flowing water.
As the royal family, they have indeed fulfilled their obligation to establish a model family. In fact, I prefer Prince Albert. This man with curly brown hair is delicate and gentle, with a will of steel. I still inadvertently turn to the only quote from the biography of Queen Victoria, which was the letter written by Baron Christian Frederick Stockmar to Prince Albert in 1840:
Errors, Misunderstandings, Obstacles and People Their good wishes are contrary and disturbing, but they should be viewed realistically-that is, they are regarded as natural phenomena of life. They reflect one aspect of life, the dark one. In order to defeat them decently, your mind must be self-disciplined, self-educated, and self-enlightened; you should have a strong, self-sustaining character and the necessary iron heart.
Fortunately Albert, amidst the loneliness of a country that her wife does not know how to be a prince, there is also a Baron Stockmar who has always supported and educates him to be strong. Obviously, Stokemar’s surname was omitted from the beginning to the end in this movie, and he was called a baron, and he was portrayed as a tool to help the king control Prince Albert.
In short, this story that happened 200 years ago touched me with tenderness. A moving life is not too bad, is it.
View more about The Young Victoria reviews