Read Royal Romances: Sex, Scandal, and Monarchy Online
Authors: Kristin Flieger Samuelian
Tags: #Europe, #Modern (16th-21st Centuries), #England, #0230616305, #18th Century, #2010, #Palgrave Macmillan, #History
threw the nation into a constitutional crisis, the Prince’s capacity for
deception became the equivalent of his father’s mysterious illness—an
event that everyone knew and speculated about but that no one talked
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about publicly. His secret marriage to Maria Fitzherbert was a decep-
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tion that cut two ways. He was probably deceiving a woman who
was functionally his mistress into believing that he would stand by a
marriage that was both unconstitutional and illegal. He was certainly
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deceiving his Whig friends, particularly Fox, when he assured them
and allowed them to assure others that the marriage had never taken
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place. For both of these parties, believing meant being cozened. By
the end of 1788, however, not many people believed in either the
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King’s sanity or his son’s bachelorhood.
The King’s Illness and the Crisis
of Representation
On October 17, 1788, King George became ill. His original symp-
toms were severe pain in his abdomen and limbs, difficulty in breath-
ing, rapid and irregular heartbeat, occasionally dark or discolored
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urine, and a skin rash. As the weeks progressed, he developed chronic
insomnia and began to exhibit signs of mental derangement. He
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talked rapidly and without cessation for hours; he slept rarely; he was
extremely agitated, sometimes violent, and he was increasingly delu-
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sional. He believed that London was under threat of a catastrophic
flood and that he needed to retrieve a valuable manuscript from
the coming deluge; he believed that he was married to the Queen’s
Lady of the Bedchamber, Lady Pembroke, and he attacked his eldest
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son (Macalpine and Hunter 14–25, 41, 79; Ayling 331–32, 334).
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By December, seven physicians attended the King, none of whom
could satisfactorily explain the cause of his illness or offer a plausible
prognosis.
The King’s illness was baffling. The symptoms ranged all over his
body, comprehending his pulmonary, circulatory, digestive, and ner-
vous systems. His mental derangement seemed at first to accompany
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his physical symptoms but continued and increased after most of those
had improved, making it difficult to establish whether the King was
ill or mad. For a century and a half after his death, most historians
believed it was the latter. In the 1960s, however, two psychiatrists,
Ida Macalpine and Richard Hunter, posited that the King’s diffuse
set of symptoms might all be traced to the rare hereditary metabolic
disorder known as porphyria. They suggested that the illness had
come into the House of Hanover by way of the Stuarts, beginning
with Mary, Queen of Scots, and that the King passed it to several
of his offspring, including the Prince of Wales. Royal biographers
embraced the theory, although the reactions of the medical commu-
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nity ranged between caution and skepticism. The diagnosis explained
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a great deal, but the data was partial and easily misinterpreted. More
recently, however, John C. Röhl, Martin Warren, and David Hunt
have argued that the evidence, while circumstantial, is still compel-
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ling, although they acknowledge that it must always remain a ten-
tative diagnosis. Information taken from letters and diaries of the
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royal family and their physicians suggests not only that the King had
an illness for which porphyria provided a remarkably comprehensive
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explanation but also that he passed on his condition to almost all
of his thirteen surviving children, who suffered from symptoms that
are traceable to variegate porphyria. These included “spasms, colic
and cramps, sharp headaches, lameness and brachial weakness, pain
in the chest, back and side, biliousness, vomiting and constipation,
breathlessness, irregularity of the pulse, inflammation and fragility
of the skin, mental disturbance and, in one or two cases, discoloured
urine” (
Purple Secret
103).14 Porphyria was not identified as a meta-
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bolic disorder, however, until the 1930s.15 Although some contem-
poraries (Walpole among them) traced at least a few of these common
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symptoms to a family malady, only the King appeared to suffer from
derangement.16
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A king who, at fifty, was mysteriously ill and then apparently mad
posed problems not only of interpretation and diagnosis. His medical
attendants knew that their reports would affect the Queen’s and the
nation’s peace of mind, as well as the health of the economy. The King
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became ill in mid-October; by mid-November the stocks were falling
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(Macalpine and Hunter 34, Ayling 336), and the opposition Whigs
began agitating for the establishment of a regency. Consequently, his
doctors were more cautious in reporting on the King’s illness than
they were in treating it.17 They knew that the Queen, the Prince of
Wales, the ministers, and the nation were scrutinizing everything they
wrote with competing interests. They were, moreover, “frightened by
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W a n d e r i n g R o y a l s
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and of their unmanageable sovereign and his unpredictable behav-
iour,” and by the worry that he “was likely to see their reports in the
papers—if not at the time then surely if he recovered.” And “above all
else loomed the remorseless fact that they did not . . . know what was
the matter with their patient” (Macalpine and Hunter 38–39). The
physicians issued no public bulletins about the King’s health for the
first month of his illness. When they appeared,18 reports were brief
and noncommittal, stating, for example, that His Majesty had had a
“restless” night or that he continued to suffer from “fever,” a catchall
term for rapid pulse, agitation, or delirium.19
The Prince convened a meeting of cabinet ministers on
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November 27. The ministers took statements from the King’s physi-
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cians, who then met with the Privy Council on December 3. When
Parliament reassembled the next day each House established a com-
mittee to examine the doctors separately. By the time of the first
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examination by the Commons, the team of physicians included
Dr. Francis Willis, the celebrated “mad-doctor,” who was, from first
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to last, optimistic about the King’s recovery. The doctors gradually
formed two groups: those who thought the King’s malady incur-
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able—a case of insanity—and those who maintained his derange-
ment was due to his physical illness and would subside when that
did. In contemporary terms, the question was whether the King suf-
fered from “consequential” or from “original” madness. And on this
question the case for a regency hung: “ ‘Original Madness,’ otherwise
mania or insanity, was considered not amenable to art, spontaneous
recovery from it was uncommon and its course was therefore pro-
longed; whereas ‘Consequential Madness,’ delirium and derange-
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ment, could be expected to subside with the underlying condition”
(Macalpine and Hunter 57). Willis maintained that the King’s mad-
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ness was consequential. His chief opponent was Dr. Richard Warren,
physician to the Prince of Wales, who, not surprisingly, took the posi-
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tion most favorable to the establishment of an unlimited regency.
Although more cautious than Willis, Warren gave answers that were
equivocal but could easily be interpreted as inclining toward a diag-
nosis of original madness. In private, he was more direct. As early
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as mid-November, he wrote in a letter to the staunchly Whig Lady
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Spencer, mother of the Duchess of Devonshire, “
Rex noster insanit
”
(quoted in Ayling 333).
The regency crisis raised problems of representation. Information
was fought over, corrected, and sometimes reversed before being
released to the public.20 One of the more memorable instances of
public doublespeak was Fox’s speech before the House of Commons
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on December 10. His efforts to bring about a regency that he hoped
would establish the primacy of his party led him to argue passion-
ately for hereditary monarchy—the “express . . . right” of the “Heir
Apparent” to “assume the reins of government, and exercise the
power of sovereignty” (
History and Proceedings
12–13). This was
an odd position for a leader of the radical Whigs, a supporter of
American independence and Catholic emancipation, and a lifelong
opponent of monopolist monarchy. Fox had greeted with enthusiasm
Dunning’s famous motion before the same House, eight years earlier,
that “The influence of the Crown has increased, is increasing, and
ought to be diminished” (Mitchell 33), and his short-lived coalition
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with Lord North in 1783–84 had been grounded on the principle
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that executive power and the royal prerogative should be checked and
managed by the legislature. He was one of the least likely members
to champion the inherent and inherited right of monarchs to govern,
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and Pitt and the other Tories made much political capital out of this
backpedaling in the debates that followed. Fox had, of course, solid
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pragmatic reasons for saying what he said. If the Prince were made
regent with the power to choose his ministers, the Whigs would be in
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power, and he was certain of a position in the new cabinet, most likely
as Chancellor of the Exchequer.
For Fox, the advancement of his political interests meant depend-
ing on a patronage system he had spent his career fighting, while try-
ing to obscure his about-face. It also meant defending the abilities of
a Prince as unfit to govern as his ailing father. When Pitt declared on
December 16 that “he was ready to acknowledge the greatest and best
qualities in the present Heir Apparent” (
History and Proceedings
48),
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he was making a statement similar to Fox’s a week earlier that there was
“a great prospect and a strong probability of [the King’s] recovery”
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(14). Neither speaker was saying what he believed.21 Behind public
assertions of confidence in either the King or the Prince lay the fear
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that neither option was viable. Both the monarch in situ and the heir
apparent were possibly incapacitated—the former by a mysterious ill-
ness that was looking increasingly like permanent insanity, the latter
by a reputation for irresponsibility and insolvency that was, at age
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twenty-six, looking more like a permanent state than an extended
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adolescence.22
By the time of his father’s illness, the Prince had been in mounting
debt for all of his adult life.23 His extravagance, heavy drinking, and
multiple mistresses were common knowledge.24 Of greater political
concern was the possibility that he had secretly married a Catholic
widow, in defiance of the Constitution and his father’s mandate.
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