Tuesday 8 January 2013

the childhood of Queen Victoria.

In the book the childhood of Queen Victoria  we find Charles James Blomfield .
As we know he was the brother in law of Jerome Nicholas Vlieland.
As Sarah Heath and Anne Maria Heath were sisters .
The second name Blomfield in the (now) American Vlieland family is after him.
And he provided William Heath Vlieland with the prayer book.
The book is written by a descendant of Charles Blomfield
DOROTHY FRANCES BLOMFIELD GURNEY.
click to read the ebook 

here is a part from this book .

Charles James Blomfield, who was a great 
personal friend of Dr. Kaye's, was born on the 
anniversary of the Restoration, May 24, 1786, 
at Bury St. Edmunds. His grandfather, James 
Blomfield, came from Ouseden to Bury in 1760, 
and there started a school, which afterwards 
numbered among its pupils many illustrious 
men. The Bishop's father, Charles Blomfield, 
succeeded his father James in the management 
of the school, and educated his son there till he 
was eight years old, when he sent him to the 
Bury Grammar School, where he remained for 
ten years. When asked as a boy what he 
intended to become, Dr. Blomfield's invariable 
answer was, " I mean to be a Bishop." 

At the age of eighteen he went up to Trinity 
College, Cambridge, and there had to compete 
with men whose educational advantages had 
been greater than his own. In order to keep 
himself up to the mark he spent half the night 
in reading, and never quite recovered from the 
effects of this overwork. 

He won successively Browne's Prize for a 

2o8 CHILDHOOD OF QUEEN VICTORIA 

Latin ode in 1805, the Craven University 
Scholarship, for which the great classical 
scholar, Person, examined him, in 1806, and 
in the same year Browne's Prize for a Greek 
ode on the death of Lord Nelson. This was 
followed in 1808 by his obtaining the place 
of Third Wrangler, and afterwards winning what 
was then the highest honour in classics the 
University had to give, the Chancellor's Classical 
Medal. He crowned his academical honours 
by winning the College Prize for a speech on 
William III., and the Members' Prize for a 
Latin dissertation in 1809. H G was elected 
Fellow of Trinity in the same year, and immedi- 
ately began to prepare his edition of j>Eschylus, 
at one time a celebrated translation, now super- 
seded by the works of later writers. 

Dr. Blomfield was a man of few and staunch 
friendships rather than of universal popularity. 
Among his circle of intimates were Professor 
Monk, afterwards Bishop of Gloucester, Baron 
Aldersen, Chief-Baron Pollock, Sharpe and 
Hustler of Trinity, the younger Rennell, and his 
own gifted and brilliant brother, Edward Valen- 
tine Blomfield, poet, painter, and scholar, who 

CHARLES JAMES BLOMFIELD BISHOP OF LONDON 

THE BISHOPS' REPORT 209 

died while still a young man. These were all men 
of great learning and high character, congenial 
to Blomfield's fastidious taste and mind, but of 
the younger school of scholarship, which included 
Kaye, afterwards Bishop of Lincoln. Blomfield 
soon found himself in collision with such dis- 
tinguished scholars as Samuel Parr, Charles 
Burney, and Butler, of Shrewsbury, but in the 
end he won their admiration for the distinction 
and elegance of his work. 

In March 1 80 1 Blomfield was ordained deacon, 
and entered priests' orders in due time, when he 
took the curacy of Chesterford, of which place 
he afterwards became rector. He was presented 
to the living of Quarrington, in Lincolnshire, by 
Lord Bristol in October, and in November he 
married Anna Maria, daughter of W. Heath, 
Esq., of Hemblington, Norfolk. By her he had 
several children, but, with the exception of one 
daughter, all died in infancy. There being no 
house at Quarrington, he lived at Chesterton till, 
in December 1811, Earl Spencer made him 
Eector of Dunton, in Buckinghamshire, to 
which he removed. He gave up the curacy 
of Chesterton, but retained Quarrington, thus 


210 CHILDHOOD OF QUEEN VICTORIA 

becoming one of the class of pluralists against 
whom he afterwards waged war. While at 
Dunton he took pupils, and had the sons of 
several celebrated men under his charge. 

His literary work was not neglected during 
this period ; he published several editions of the 
Classics, and wrote constantly for the Museum 
Criticum, The Quarterly Review, and other 
periodicals. For Dr. Kaye he had the warmest 
admiration both as a man and a scholar, and he 
kept up a constant correspondence with his 
greatest friend, Professor Monk. 

In the summer of 1817 Lord Bristol pre- 
sented him with the benefices of Great and 
Little Chesterfield, which were more valuable 
than the living of Dunton. Since his curacy of 
these parishes there had been two incumbents, 
the second of whom had for his curate the 
Princess Victoria's tutor, then Mr. Davys, who 
had done much to improve the schools. 

In December 1819 he married, for the second 
time, Dorothy, daughter of Charles William 
Cox, Esq., and widow of Thomas Kent, Esq., 
barrister, by whom he had eleven children. It 
was a union of unbroken happiness and affec- 



THE BISHOPS' REPORT 211 

tion. In 1820 Lord Bristol procured Blomfield 
the valuable living of St. Botolph's, Bishops- 
gate. He was allowed to retain Chesterford, 
but resided principally in London, and at the 
request of his parishioners, who said they had 
always had a Doctor for their rector, he took 
his D.D. at Cambridge by Royal Letter. 

He now began a life of great activity, and in 
1822 won a fresh token of approval from the 
Bishop of London in the appointment to the Arch- 
deaconry of Colchester. He held office for little 
more than two years, and was led by its duties to 
take fresh interest in ecclesiastical law, a subject 
in which he was more learned than most clergy. 
But the work of Bishop Blomfield while rector 
of Bishopsgate, by which he will be best re- 
membered, is the publication in 1824 of his 
" Manual of Family Prayers," which obtained 
an immense circulation both in England and 
America. The custom of family prayers had 
fallen into general disuse, and Bishop Blomfield 
may almost be said to have revived it. 

The see of Chester, one of the least-paid and 
hardest-working bishoprics, falling vacant in 
1824, it was offered by Lord Liverpool to 

212 CHILDHOOD OF QUEEN VICTORIA 

Archdeacon Blomfield. He accepted it, and 
was consecrated Bishop by Archbishop Vernon 
Harcourt and the Bishops of London and 
Exeter in Whitehall Chapel on June 2oth. On 
hearing of his promotion one of the Grammar 
School boys at Bury wrote the following witty 
epigram : 

" Through Chester-ford to Bishop's-gate 

Did Blomfield safely wade ; 
Then leaving ford and gate behind 
He's Chester's Bishop made." 

The new Bishop speedily became a power 
in the diocese. Parts of it, notably West- 
morland, then under the jurisdiction of Chester, 
were in a very neglected condition, and the 
Bishop's sharp enforcement of order and de- 
cency did not make him beloved by the laxer 
brethren. He also introduced the custom of 
Bishops preaching at ordinations, raised the 
tone and standard of examination for Holy 
Orders in no small degree, and fought hard 
against non-resident clergy, and against the 
disgraceful habit of intoxication prevalent 
amongst them. 

When in London he was constantly attending 



THE BISHOPS' REPORT 213 

Committees, such as the Society for the Propaga- 
tion of the Gospel and for Promoting Christian 
Knowledge, and was always to be found in his 
place in the House of Lords when any subject 
relating to the Church or the spiritual welfare 
of the people was in question. The Bishop 
was a born statesman, and Daniel Webster, the 
American orator, thought him the finest speaker 
of his day in Great Britain. He never spoke 
but on subjects pertaining to his office, but his 
first speech, an impromptu answer to the attacks 
of Lord Holland upon the Established Church 
in the debate on the Catholic Emancipation 
Bill, gained him an attentive hearing on every 
occasion when he rose in the House. 

The death of Archbishop Manners -Sutton 
promoted Bishop Howley to Canterbury, and 
left the See of London open for Dr. Blomfield, 
to whom it was offered by the Duke of Wel- 
lington in July 1828. The new Bishop entered 
upon onerous duties. The population of Mid- 
dlesex had increased from 818,129 in 1801 to 
1,358,200 in 1831, and there had been no cor- 
responding increase of churches or clergy. This 
crying want he set himself to supply by starting 



214 CHILDHOOD OF QUEEN VICTORIA 

a scheme for building fifty new churches in 
London, a scheme which he assisted by his 
great influence and by large gifts of money. 
He also fought steadily against the secularisa- 
tion of education, and was one of the promoters 
of King's College, founded for the purpose of 
counteracting that tendency. 

The Bishop was a warm supporter of the 
Reform Bill, and was one of the Commissioners 
for inquiring into the Poor Laws. He was also 
called on to play a prominent part in the legis- 
lation of the Established Church in Ireland. 
One of Sir Robert Peel's first acts, when he 
succeeded to office in 1824, was to organise a 
new Commission for the rearrangement of dio- 
ceses and benefices in order to augment the 
poorer livings and increase the number of the 
clergy. Bishop Blomfield used his power as an 
influential member of the Commission to for- 
ward his church-building scheme, for which he 
resigned much valuable Church patronage, and 
himself built and endowed out of his private 
income a church at Hammersmith. The Quar- 
terly Review speaks of his " almost super- 
human exertions " in this direction, and indeed 



THE BISHOPS' REPORT 215 

a serious illness in 1836 had already given a 
warning that they were beyond his strength. 

The year 1837 saw the accession of Queen 
Victoria to the throne. Bishop Blomfield 
preached the Coronation sermon, as he had 
done that of King William IV. and Queen 
Adelaide, on both occasions at the request of 
the Archbishop of York, whose proper function 
it was. 

The next year found him urging a fund for 
endowing additional bishoprics in the Colonies 
in a letter to which the first Australian Bishop 
pays this tribute : " It will entitle his name to 
veneration in this hemisphere as long as the 
sun and moon shall endure." There is no doubt 
that the Bishop gave the first impetus to the 
exertions of Churchmen on behalf of the spiri- 
tual needs of Greater Britain. 

The remaining years of Bishop Blomfield's 
life were embittered and harassed by struggles 
and attacks from within the Church itself. He 
stood, as a passionately devoted son of the Re- 
formed Anglican Church, midway between the 
Calvinists on the one hand, and the Latinising 
party on the other, defending her from both, and 



216 CHILDHOOD OF QUEEN VICTORIA 

making to himself many enemies. An accident 
which happened to him at Osborne a bad fall 
on the polished floor of one of the passages 
began the final breaking-up of his health. It 
was followed by a slight attack of paralysis, and 
though he retained all his mental vigour, his 
nerves suffered, and he lost some of his habitual 
cheerfulness. He worked, however, as hard as 
ever for reforms in the Church and the bettering 
of the condition of the poorer classes. In 1850 
he brought a Bill into the House for the trans- 
ference of the powers of the Committee of Coun- 
cil to the Upper House of Convocation. He 
made a great speech on this occasion, but the 
Government was too strong for him, and the 
Bill was rejected. 

Eitualistic disturbances pressed so hardly on 
him at this time that he writes on December 
31, 1850, "This year ends in troubles ;" how- 
ever, the year 1851 saw the subsidence of the 
controversy, and the remainder of the Bishop's 
life was comparatively peaceful and uneventful. 

From this time onwards his health steadily 
failed, and he spent the greater part of his 
summer vacations abroad, taking great delight 



THE BISHOPS' REPORT 217 

in travelling and in beautiful scenery. In 
October 1855 he had another paralytic seizure, 
from which he never really recovered, indeed 
his condition was so helpless in the following 
year that he asked to resign his office. For 
this there was no precedent, and a short Bill 
was introduced into the House under the title 
of "The Bishops pf London and Durham Re- 
tirement Bill," the aged Bishop of Durham 
having also begged to retire from his bishopric. 
This Bill was passed in the end of July, and 
Bishop Blomfield signed his resignation in the 
library at Fulham, where he had been carried 
on his couch, in presence of his family, the 
Registrar, his private secretaries, and his Ap- 
paritor. He took a touching farewell of them, 
and of the diocese with which he had been 
connected for over fifty years. 

The greatest sympathy and regret, together 
with the warmest appreciation of his labours, 
was shown him both privately and publicly. 
He lingered on, a hopeless invalid, till August 
1857, and died at Fulham Palace on the 5th of 
that month. 

Dr. Davys, who was a personal friend of 



218 CHILDHOOD OF QUEEN VICTORIA 

both Bishop Kaye and Bishop Blomfield, had 
suggested them as examiners of the Princess ; 
and the Duchess wrote, as we have seen, to 
invite them to Kensington for the purpose of 
reporting upon her daughter's progress. 

Upon the receipt of her letter, the Bishops 
went down to Kensington, and we find this 
entry in Bishop Blomfield's diary for March 
20, 1830 : 

" Went with the Bishop of Lincoln to Ken- 
sington, and examined the Princess Victoria in 
Scripture, Catechism, English History, Latin, 
Arithmetic the result very satisfactory." 

The picture of the fatherless little child 
destined to such high place, standing before 
two of the greatest scholars of their day, is a 
touching one ; and one is reminded, in all 
reverence, of that greater Child as He stood 
among the learned Jewish doctors, "both hear- 
ing and asking them questions," and of how 
He, when grown to manhood, " took a little 
child and set him in the midst of them." One 
can imagine that the two grave men would be 
very gentle and courteous to their little future 
Queen. Bishop Kaye's was a face and smile 



THE BISHOPS' REPORT 219 

to win any child's heart, and we have the testi- 
mony of one of Bishop Blomfield's daughters 
that he was well fitted for the task before him. 

" One of my earliest recollections," she writes, 
" of my father, is his teaching me Latin, when 
I was between five and six years old. A Latin 
lesson with a little girl of six must often have 
been trying to the patience of a scholar ; but 
neither at that time, nor at any of the many 
lessons in Latin and Greek which he gave me 
in after years, do I recollect ever hearing from 
him one angry or impatient word. As I grew 
older I learnt to reckon the hour or half-hour 
spent with him before breakfast, as one of the 
happiest in the day. He used to take great 
pains in instructing his elder children, not only 
in Latin and Greek, but in a knowledge of the 
Scriptures, and of the doctrines and articles of 
our Church. When we were younger, we used 
to repeat the Catechism, and texts or passages 
of Scripture to him on Sunday afternoon or 
evening." 

She goes on to speak of " pleasant hours 
spent in the garden, in which he took such 
pride and delight ; these and many other such 



220 CHILDHOOD OF QUEEN VICTORIA 

quiet domestic pictures, in which he, with his 
bright, loving look and kind words, is ever the 
central figure, rise before me when I try to 
recall him to my mind as he was in his own 
home." 

The examination of Princess Victoria resulted 
in the following report from the Bishops : 

"MADAM, In obedience to your Eoyal Highness's 
commands, we have considered the course which has 
been pursued for the last four years in the education 
of the Princess Victoria, as described in the papers 
transmitted to us, with particular reference to the 
important circumstances pointed out in the communi- 
cation with which your Eoyal Highness was at the 
same time pleased to honour us ; and we have now 
most respectfully to state to your Eoyal Highness our 
entire approval of that course both as to the choice 
of subjects and the arrangement of Her Highness's 
Studies. 

"We have also, in compliance with your Eoyal 
Highness's directions, examined the Princess herself, 
with a view to ascertain her proficiency in the various 
branches of knowledge to which her attention has 
been directed, and we feel great satisfaction in inform- 
ing your Eoyal Highness that the result of that exami- 
nation has been such as, in our opinion, amply to 
justify the plan of instruction which has been adopted. 


THE CHILDHOOD OF QUEEN VICTORIA 
BY MRS. GERALD GURNEY 
(DOROTHY FRANCES BLOMFIELD) 
Dorothy Blomfiled also wrote several wellknown hymns


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