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“ SEA KING’S DAUGHTER”

QUEEN ALEXANDRA’S WEDDING LAST SURVIVOR OF CHOIR. Britain has lost one who sang at King Edward's wedding in 1863. Only the oldest people can remember the wonders of that wedding. Tennyson had written his famous poem of welcome to the “ Sea king’s daughter from over the sea.” and tales of Alexandra’s beauty had reached every cottage in the land. The Prince of Wales, afterwards Edward VII, was a popular young man. Everybody was pleased. The excitement to see the fairy talc princess was enormous, and it is not bard to imagine the elation with which the choir of the Chapel Royal St. James's looked forward to their share. They went down to Windsor for the ceremony. Sheldon Hcpworth was then 14, just on the verge of being too grown-up for a choir boy. He saw, and could never forget, all the lovely pageantry of the marriage. • Princess Alexandra was dressed in "a white crinoline and wore a wreath oforange blossom and a veil like a white mist. The men wore brilliant uniforms and robes of knightly orders. The choir boy who saw these things and lived into the present year was educated at St. Paul’s School and became a solicitor. He served in the old Volunteers for 34 years, and three of his five sons gave their lives in the Great War. He was 84 when he died lately. Now that Colonel Hcpworth has died Mr Frederick Willis, chairman of the Old Choristers of St. George’s, Windsor, says that he is the last survivor of the choir which, sang at Queen Alexandra’s wedding.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ODT19330624.2.146

Bibliographic details

Otago Daily Times, Issue 21988, 24 June 1933, Page 20

Word Count
266

“SEA KING’S DAUGHTER” Otago Daily Times, Issue 21988, 24 June 1933, Page 20

“SEA KING’S DAUGHTER” Otago Daily Times, Issue 21988, 24 June 1933, Page 20