Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom personally created the Sun Never Sets Empire and ushered in the Victorian era.
She was so dedicated to Britain that she even went to war abroad.
The British people are real beneficiaries, and they naturally worship her very much and worship her as a god.
Victoria is a king and a woman with strong emotional needs.
After the death of her husband Albert, her valet John Brown, who was 7 years younger than her, became her emotional sustenance.
Victoria is the queen, and her marriage is not simply a marriage, it is related to the interests of all parties, and she herself cannot fully decide.
Her mother and uncle arranged for her to marry her cousin, Prince Albert, who was 3 months younger.
Although the marriage was a political marriage, both parties were very satisfied.
Albert is handsome and knowledgeable, and he captures her heart as soon as he meets Victoria.
Victoria is petite and delicate, with clear eyebrows, and a unique and powerful aura, which makes Albert, who has hated women since childhood, fall in love at first sight.
Albert was very ambitious and wanted to take all of Europe into his own hands, so he let Victoria keep having children, hoping to achieve his goal by marriage.
Victoria has not stopped since she got married, either pregnant or having children, and has given birth to 9 children in 17 years.
Victoria hates pregnancy, and when she is pregnant, she always thinks of herself as an animal like a rabbit or a guinea pig.
She also dislikes babies, thinks they are ugly, and has little affection with her children.
Most of her feelings are poured into her husband, trusting and relying on him incomparably, adoring him, and obeying his words.
Albert laid out well, and his 9 children grew up marrying other European royal families, but unfortunately he could not wait for the day when he would control all of Europe.
In 1861, Albert contracted typhoid fever and died after struggling for several weeks, at the age of 42.
Albert is Victoria's spiritual pillar, and when he left, Victoria was so grief-stricken that she didn't even have the heart to deal with national affairs, and she didn't want to contact people.
She changed her previous style of dressing and always wore a black dress.
Because she couldn't relieve the pressure and pain in her heart, she was already a foodie, completely let go of herself, began to overeat, and her figure became fatter and fatter like a blown balloon.
Victoria had a Scottish valet by her side, John Brown.
Queen Brown is 7 years old, straightforward, honest, uncultured, and her father is a farmer.
He was a good horse technician and worked as a groom in the castle of Balmoral Castle.
Albert admired Brown very much, and when he was alive, the couple went to Balmoral Castle for a vacation, Brown was always on the sidelines.
In the good memories of the two in the past, Marv Brown is an indispensable figure.
In order for Victoria to recover from the loss of her husband sooner, Brown was sent to her side.
At first, the two chatted about Prince Albert, and in reminiscing about the past, Victoria slowly came out of the trough of her mood.
Victoria and her children did not have a good relationship, and Brown stayed by her side, enlightened her, comforted her, made her happy, and gradually entered her heart.
Victoria and Brown's relationship became an open secret for the royal family.
The fact that the high-ranking queen got together with a lowly servant was a scandal for the royal family to talk about.
Victoria's children hated Brown, but there was nothing they could do about him.
I could only watch him and his mother go back and forth, intimate and ambiguous, and watch him walk around the palace in his father's favorite sneakers.
When there was no one else in private, Victoria's children, out of anger, called Brown "Mama's stallion."
There is no impermeable wall in the world, and after the story of Victoria and the valet Brown spread, Victoria was often nicknamed "Mrs. Brown".
Victoria and Brown are said to have been secretly married, and someone later discovered their marriage certificate.
The royal family would never allow such a thing to disgrace their ancestors, and immediately destroyed the marriage certificate when they knew of the existence of it.
Victoria wrote to friends about Brown with praise, praising him as an upright, kind, big-hearted, loving, and outstanding man.
Brown accompanied Victoria for 19 years, during which time the two were never separated.
After Brown's death, Victoria wrote to a friend that she was very sad and sad, once again suffering the loss of her husband, and once again being widowed.
In honor of Brown, Victoria erected a one-man-tall statue dedicated to him.
She also wanted to write a biography for Brown.
For a servant who spends so much time on it, anyone with a discerning eye can see that the relationship between the two is not ordinary.
Victoria was carried away by love, but the housekeeper next to her was still very sober and dissuaded her in time and let her destroy the manuscript.
After Brown, little Victoria was 44 years old, and the tall and handsome Indian servant Karim came to Victoria.
Like Brown, Victoria didn't want to be separated from Karim for a moment, and she had to take him with her when she visited abroad.
Even if we meet every day, we have to write him countless letters every day.
With Karim's company, Victoria completed a domineering and amorous life.
Victoria's father died young, her mother watched her particularly closely when she was young, and she had few contacts and few friends.
When she grew up, she had an indifferent relationship with her mother, especially dependent on the people around her, longing to be loved, longing for love.
After taking the throne at the age of 18, Victoria became particularly dependent on Prime Minister Melbourne, and the two spent five or six hours together every day, talking together, eating together and riding horses together.
The two were too close, and rumors soon spread about the two, and some even called Victoria "Mrs. Melbourne" in public.
When the tall and handsome Russian Crown Prince Alexander II traveled to Britain, he spent a happy time with Victoria.
Victoria couldn't control her heart, fell in love with each other, and finally failed to come together due to political factors.
Mother and uncle wanted Victoria and cousin Albert to marry.
Victoria hates others for arranging her life, but after meeting Albert himself, she is impressed by his demeanor, and finally enters into marriage together.
Victoria has loved many people in her life, and her favorite should be her cousins Albert and Brown.
After Victoria's death in 1901, in accordance with her last wish, the coffin contained many of Prince Albert's belongings.
Many of Brown's letters to her were also placed in the coffin.
A strand of Brown's hair and a photograph were placed in the palm of her left hand, and on her left ring finger was the wedding ring that Brown had given him when he was alive.
The lack of love in childhood made Victoria long to be loved, and love ran through her life, became her spiritual pillar, and became an indispensable part of her life.