Annotation:Prince Adolphus' Fancy: Difference between revisions
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He was a popular prince, but not universally admired. One woman who visited him in Hanover when he was a young man thought he was "extremely handsome, tall and finely formed with fair complexion and regular features, charming manners and a flow of amusing conversation." Caroline, Princess of Wales, remarking on him somewhat later was less enamored: “The Duke of Cambridge looks like a sergeant, and so vulgar with his ears full of powder." Queen Victoria did not get along well with Adolphus, her uncle. The Duke's public popularity benefited from the fact that his life (unlike so many of his family) was scandal-free, and that he lived within his means. | He was a popular prince, but not universally admired. One woman who visited him in Hanover when he was a young man thought he was "extremely handsome, tall and finely formed with fair complexion and regular features, charming manners and a flow of amusing conversation." Caroline, Princess of Wales, remarking on him somewhat later, was less enamored: “The Duke of Cambridge looks like a sergeant, and so vulgar with his ears full of powder." Queen Victoria did not get along well with Adolphus, her uncle. The Duke's public popularity benefited from the fact that his life (unlike so many of his family) was scandal-free, and that he lived within his means. | ||
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Latest revision as of 00:50, 3 February 2023
X:1 T:Prince Adolphus Fancy M:C| L:1/8 R:Country Dance B:Preston's Twenty-Four Country Dances for the Year 1794 (No. 240, p. 100) Z:AK/Fiddler's Companion K:D a3f d2d2|efge fgfd|a3f d2d2|cdec d2D2:| |:AdAd BdBd|AdAd dfaf|AdAd BdBd|dfaf d2D2:|]
He was a popular prince, but not universally admired. One woman who visited him in Hanover when he was a young man thought he was "extremely handsome, tall and finely formed with fair complexion and regular features, charming manners and a flow of amusing conversation." Caroline, Princess of Wales, remarking on him somewhat later, was less enamored: “The Duke of Cambridge looks like a sergeant, and so vulgar with his ears full of powder." Queen Victoria did not get along well with Adolphus, her uncle. The Duke's public popularity benefited from the fact that his life (unlike so many of his family) was scandal-free, and that he lived within his means.
"Prince Adolphus Fancy" was aptly named, for he was a skilled amateur violinist and was fond of music. In later years, he was apt to join in impromptu at musical parties, either singing or on his violin.