The Sunday Post (Inverness)

The inside story of ‘Mrs Brown’ and her loyal Scots ghillie John

- By Toby McDonald mail@sundaypost.com

No-one loved John more than I did or had a better friend than me

IT is the love affair across a social divide that has enthralled a nation for more than 100 years.

And now we can reveal what Queen Victoria really thought about her “heart’s best treasure” – the intense friendship she shared with Scottish ghillie John Brown.

It was a relationsh­ip that earned Her Majesty the nickname Mrs Brown – and was captured on- screen in the Oscar- nominated film of the same name, starring Dame Judi Dench and Billy Connolly.

Victoria’ s candid and startling view of her manservant is drawn from her own diary and papers and forms the basis of a new book about her relationsh­ip with Brown.

In language straight out of a Mills & Boon romantic novel the swooning Empress of India tells how the towering kilted gamekeeper swept her off her feet and carried her across a Highland glen in his “strong and powerful arms”.

However, the author of Victoria – The Queen, expert Julia Baird, faced a huge fight to tell the story.

She was only granted access to the royal papers that form its basis after the interventi­on of a former governor- general, Quentin Bryce, and fought censorship to publish her account.

Brown, who was seven years younger than the Queen, went to work at Balmoral aged 21 when Prince Albert first leased the castle in 1848.

The young Queen had been fond of the “invaluable Highland servant ”, who accompanie­d the royal party on climbing tours.

But their relationsh­ip changed shortly after the death of the Prince Consort at the age of 42 in 1861.

One diary entry – from October 7, 1863 – tells how Victoria had spent the day riding with her second and third daughters, Princesses Alice and Helena, stopping for tea before turning back home.

However, in “dark light” the Queen lost control and crashed to the ground.

Victoria wrote in her diary afterward that she had just a moment to think “whether we should be killed or not” but decided “there were still things I had not settled and wanted to”.

Victoria spent the next few days “helpless” in bed with raw meat on her black eye, nursing a sore neck and a sprained thumb that would remain crooked forever. It was pivotal moment as she rediscover­ed a zest for life – and the company of John Brown.

 ??  ?? The pair’s relationsh­ip blossomed at Balmoral.
The pair’s relationsh­ip blossomed at Balmoral.

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