But for his new experience of settling down as a husband William realized that he would have been restive. After a life at sea it was not easy to reconcile oneself to staying on land. He had hoped for a position in the Admiralty now that he had been made a Rear-Admiral but the Admiralty did not want him. He had a sense of duty which his brothers lacked, and was in fact more like his father than any of them.

He was often seen in the House of Lords and decided to take up the cause of the slave trade and work against the abolitionists. His speeches were long and verbose and when he rose to his feet a groan would go up throughout the chamber. He lacked the eloquence of the Prince of Wales, and his support of the slave trade brought him a certain amount of odium from those with more humane feelings.

‘I have seen the plantations,’ he had pointed out. ‘As a sailor I have visited these far off places. In Jamaica and America I have seen the system at work. To abolish the slave traffic will disrupt the plantations and will mean higher prices for certain commodities here.’

On and on and on with members promising themselves that when the Duke of Clarence was present they would make a point of slipping out.

William was no orator, no politician; and his understanding of state matters was not great. But because he wanted to be the family man, he must work. He was denied a place in his own profession, so he must do something.

He did not want to spend his time at the races, building extravagant residences like Carlton House and the Pavilion; he did not want to give fetes and balls. He wanted to live quietly and peacefully like a respectable country gentleman with one woman – as his father would have wished to do. But his father had his interest in the farm at Kew; he made his buttons; he had his duties as King of England, and much as he liked the homely life at Kew he must appear at St James’s when duty demanded that he should.

William, however – the third son – who, it was hardly likely would ever reach the throne, had had his career as a sailor brought to an end. He must do something. Therefore he decided to make his voice heard in the House of Lords.

Dorothy listened to his opinions, heard him rehearse his speeches. She knew the effect she was having on him. The gay young sailor he had been was being transformed into the uxorious husband; even his language had changed and the rather coarse oaths which he had picked up at sea were gradually disappearing. William was indeed settling down. And what could be more desirable than this cosy domesticity? Even George, the elegant adventurous Prince of Wales, had told William he envied him his peaceful existence.

William and Dorothy grew happier every day, and then Dorothy became pregnant.

During that spring Dorothy continued to play; her benefit was one of the most successful not only of hers but in the history of the theatre. She received £540 for one night’s performance and Sarah Siddons had only received £490.

William was delighted at her ability to earn money. When he remembered the pay he had received as a captain it seemed strange that his little Dorothy could earn so much in one single night.

‘And deserve every penny!’ he declared when he went back-stage to collect her.

There would be comments about this benefit in the press, he knew. The scribblers would sneer at him and suggest that Dorothy was keeping him. It rankled. He was constantly wanting to sue them. George had said he should try and forget it. It was the penalty of royalty; and if he had seen some of the lampoons on himself and Maria he would think these concerning himself and Dorothy very mild.

Then the irritation was forgotten, for Dorothy was ill. She had been working hard at the theatre and the pregnancy was proving a difficult one. Five months after conception she had a miscarriage.

William was in despair. He sent for the doctors. She would recover, he was told. She needed rest and care – that was all.

He was at her bedside throughout the day and night.

‘You must not fret, my darling. There will be more children… but only if you wish it.’

Dorothy was sad. She had wanted so much to have his child. And so she should, he assured her. But she must get really well first.

‘Oh, William,’ she said, ‘I feared I was going to die and I wondered what would become of the little girls.’

‘My darling, haven’t I given you my word to care for them? Besides, you have taken care of that.’

‘I worry about them, William. But this little one would have been yours, too. That would have been different.’

‘Don’t talk of such depressing things. You are going to get well. I am planning to take you to the Isle of Wight. The sea air is so beneficial. George swears by it. And I daresay you would like to see the children. I thought so. So I have told your sister to bring them here.’

They came with Hester. Dodee and Lucy happy to see their mother, Fanny taking in the details of Petersham Lodge.

‘Oh, Mamma,’ she whispered, ‘it’s so grand. When I grow up I want to live in a house like this.’

Fanny’s eyes hid secrets. What does she hear? wondered Dorothy. How could one shield children from the world? There was the gossip of servants, those pernicious paragraphs in newspapers.

But she must not fret. She must get well. William expected it of her.

George and Maria Bland came to see her and brought their twins – two healthy children; but Dorothy sensed Maria’s impatience with George. She was so much more successful than he was in the theatre and this was making a rift between them.

She was anxious. Since her mother’s death she had felt herself to be the guardian of the family and she could see trouble ahead for George.

Happiness was so elusive. How grateful she should be for William!

They did not go to the Isle of Wight for the Duchess of Cleveland offered them her house in Margate and they went there instead.

It was so pleasant to be by the sea and to live in the large and comfortable mansion as a simple country gentleman and his wife.

William was happy. His great task was to look after Dorothy; to make sure that she did not exert herself; it was, she believed, the happiest time of her life.

And when they returned to Petersham Lodge she did not take on any new engagements for a while. It was so comforting to be away from the competitive atmosphere of the theatre and while they remained out of the public eye the comments on them ceased to appear.

The Prince of Wales was the great target of attack on account of his debts, his love-affairs and the extravagant profligate life he led.

Dorothy was again pregnant and in the January of the year 1794 she gave birth to a boy.

He was big and healthy; and William was delighted with him. He carried him about the apartment insisting on calling everyone’s attention to his perfections; Dorothy from her bed smiled on them both. It was a picture of conjugal bliss.

They called the child George – after his uncle the Prince of Wales – and he was known from then on as George FitzClarence.

It was so pleasant to be simply a mother; and that was all she was for the following months. Her life was filled by William and the children, for she was soon driving over with young George to see the household at Richmond.

The three girls loved their half-brother, though Fanny was inclined to be jealous of him.

Why should he, silly little thing, be allowed to live in Petersham Lodge while they had to live in this little house with Aunt Hester?

Because Petersham House belonged to his father.

‘Oh, why wasn’t the Duke my father?’

How she wished that had been so. How happy she would be now if they were all William’s children. But life was not as simple as that. There was so much to be suffered before one reached happiness.

Sheridan called. He was in trouble. Drury Lane had not yet been rebuilt and he could not use the Haymarket this season because it was already leased to the Opera Company.

‘It’s the devil of a business,’ said Sheridan.

Dorothy was sure it was; but she could not greatly concern herself. Little George was proving to be a robust child, imperious and demanding. She adored him. So did William.

‘The New Drury Lane will be opening in April, I hope,’ said Sheridan. ‘Then, I trust you will do us the honour of coming back.’

‘The Duke insists that I take a long rest,’ she told him.

He grimaced and thought: We shall have to come along with some very attractive offers.

‘We shall doubtless open with an oratorio or something solemn,’ he told her, ‘and I hope for the attendance of Their Majesties.’

‘And the Prince of Wales?’

‘We don’t want a riot on the first night.’

‘Is he so unpopular?’

‘They’ve turned against him. That’s the mob all over. There was a time when he couldn’t put that charming nose of his into the streets without cries of Hurrah. It’s a different matter now. And then his Mamma and Papa are rather cross with him, you know. There’s always the big quarrel in progress. It’s handed down from generation to generation in the family.’

‘A pity,’ said Dorothy, and thinking of her beautiful little George she wondered how any mother could possibly quarrel with her son.

‘A great pity! There’s some anxiety because of the behaviour of our neighbours.’

‘Our neighbours?’

‘Across the Channel. Since they’ve cut off the heads of their King and Queen I don’t think those of ours rest any happier on their pillows.’