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Queen Mother revealed to be a lively and caring teenager in touching letters written to wounded soldier

July 4, 2016
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Touching letters written by the Queen Mother to a wounded solider she helped care for during World War I will go up for auction at Dreweatts & Bloomsbury Auctions next month. The handwritten cards, addressed to Private James Harding, show King George V's future wife to be a warm and generous teenager, who would play cards with the men as they recuperated at her family home, Glamis Castle, when it served as a military hospital.

In the six letters, Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, as she was then, recalls games she used to play with Private Harding and his fellow soldiers, and also include poems and photographs – "I'm so glad you like the photo, personally I think it's dreadful!" she commented on one portrait she sent.

queen mother© Photo: Getty Images

A series of letters written by a young Elizabeth are going up for auction

According to biographer William Shawcross, Private Harding and his companions would play tricks on Elizabeth during their time at Glamis Castle. "There was 'wild laughter' when she got the Queen of Spades time after time – and she discovered that they had been passing it under the table to give to her," he wrote in his book, Queen Elizabeth: the Queen Mother.

In one of the letters, dated 29 November, 1916, 16-year-old Elizabeth refers to one such card game she played with Private Harding and a Private Nix. "I enjoyed them very much, even tho' I was treated very badly by you and Nix!" she wrote.

queen mother1© Photo: Getty Images

Elizabeth pictured on the day of her engagement to the Duke of York, later King George V

The second letter, dated 22 December, 1916, includes a poem she penned about the tricks he played on her: "I sometimes go into the Ward/ And play a game or two/ And if I get the Queen of Spades/ T'is only due to you / Private Harding/ Are you not ashamed and sorry/ That cheating should go on?"

The correspondence also demonstrates Elizabeth's caring side. In the fifth letter, dated 13 September 1919, she expresses concern that Private Harding cannot find a job after the end of the war. "It seems to be very difficult now," she wrote. "I wonder what sort of job you want? I might by chance hear of one that you'd like, though you'd probably want to be in Edinburgh. I do hope something will turn up."

The final letter, written three months later, is a reply to the news that Harding had found a position. "I can't tell you how pleased I am to hear the good news!" she wrote.

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