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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #65787 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65787)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Bess of Hardwick and her Circle, by Maud
-Stepney Rawson
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Bess of Hardwick and her Circle
-
-Author: Maud Stepney Rawson
-
-Release Date: July 7, 2021 [eBook #65787]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Richard Tonsing, MWS, and the Online Distributed Proofreading
- Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from
- images generously made available by The Internet
- Archive/Canadian Libraries)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BESS OF HARDWICK AND HER
-CIRCLE ***
-
-
-
-
- BESS OF HARDWICK
- AND HER CIRCLE
-
-
-
-
- BY THE SAME AUTHOR
-
-
- A LADY OF THE REGENCY
- JOURNEYMAN LOVE
- THE APPRENTICE
- TALES OF RYE TOWN
- THE LABOURER’S COMEDY
- THE ENCHANTED GARDEN
- THE EASY-GO-LUCKIES
- THE STAIRWAY OF HONOUR
- HAPPINESS
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo by Richard Keene Ltd. Derby, after the painting at Hardwick
- Hall._
-
- _Elizabeth, Countess of Shrewsbury._
-]
-
-
-
-
- BESS OF HARDWICK
- AND HER CIRCLE
-
-
- BY
- MAUD STEPNEY RAWSON
-
-
- WITH THIRTY-EIGHT ILLUSTRATIONS
- INCLUDING A PHOTOGRAVURE FRONTISPIECE
-
-
- London: HUTCHINSON & CO.
- Paternoster Row ❧ 1910
-
-
-
-
- TO MY HUSBAND
-
-
-To you belongs, for many a reason, this, my first essay in history,
-which I have carried to its end with many misgivings, but with much
-delight in the matter itself.
-
-The orthodox may be affronted at two brief incursions into fiction which
-they will find in it. Let them skip these judiciously, magisterially.
-For my own part, I needed consolation at times for certain hard and
-bitter facts of the history. Therefore, since the way was sometimes
-long, and the wind, in my imagination, very cold—as it whistled in and
-out of the ruins of those manors and castles where the Scots Queen and
-her married gaolers dwelt, or as it drove the snow across the splendid
-grey façade of Hardwick (to say nothing of the draughts of the sombre,
-public research libraries)—I first drew my Countess down from her
-picture-frame to marshal her household, and then lured her child and her
-child’s lover after her to gladden your road and mine.
-
-And so I give you—besides all the thoughts which have gone to every
-scrap of writing I have ever done—these last, which curl and stiffen and
-again uncoil themselves about this hungry woman of Elizabethan days.
-Into her life and much-abused toil, we, who have neither gold nor heirs
-for whom to store it, can look together in love and pity.
-
-Thus even while we rejoice over our diminutive home, may we never forget
-to give thanks to the spirit of those who built the great houses which
-nourish the little ones, and who, in place of the “scarlet blossom of
-pain” that grows at great door and little, shall give to us in the end
-the perfect English rose.
-
- M. S. R.
-
- LITTLE ORCHARD,
- STREATLEY,
- BERKS.
-
-
-
-
- AUTHOR’S NOTE
-
-
-All complete letters herein quoted have been put into modern spelling.
-These, with the exception of one or two fragments and when the source is
-not otherwise indicated, have been selected from the transcripts in
-Lodge’s _Illustrations of British History_, from the originals amongst
-the Talbot, Howard, and Cecil MSS.
-
-The Author gratefully acknowledges the special permission of his Grace
-the Duke of Devonshire to include in this work reproductions of many of
-the fine pictures at Hardwick Hall, as well as a number of views of that
-noble building.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- I. THE RED-HAIRED GIRL 1
-
- II. THE MISTRESS BUILDER 11
-
- III. “A GREAT GENTLEMAN” 34
-
- IV. HUBBUB 52
-
- V. MAKE-BELIEVE 62
-
- VI. PLOT AND COUNTERPLOT 75
-
- VII. FAMILY LETTERS 99
-
- VIII. A CERTAIN JOURNEY 119
-
- IX. LOVE AND THE WOODMAN 133
-
- X. AFTERMATH 145
-
- XI. VARIOUS OCCURRENCES 161
-
- XII. MY LORD LEICESTER’S CURE 175
-
- XIII. THE DIVIDED WAY 193
-
- XIV. “BRUITS” 211
-
- XV. RUTH AND JOYUSITIE 223
-
- XVI. VOLTE FACE 236
-
- XVII. THE COIL THICKENS 251
-
- XVIII. “FACE TO FACE” 266
-
- XIX. HAMMER AND TONGS 279
-
- XX. FADING GLORIES 308
-
- XXI. HEIR AND DOWAGER 324
-
- XXII. ARABELLA DANCES INTO COURT 337
-
- XXIII. MY LADY’S MANSIONS 349
-
- INDEX 365
-
-
-
-
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- ELIZABETH COUNTESS OF SHREWSBURY (_Photogravure_) _Frontispiece_
-
- _To face page_
-
- HARDWICK OLD HALL 2
-
- SIR WILLIAM CAVENDISH 4
-
- HARDWICK OLD HALL: THE GIANTS’ CHAMBER 6
-
- SIR WILLIAM ST. LOE 16
-
- GEORGE TALBOT, EARL OF SHREWSBURY 38
-
- ELIZABETH COUNTESS OF SHREWSBURY 38
-
- MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS 64
-
- MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS’ APARTMENTS AND DUNGEONS AT TUTBURY,
- FROM THE NORTH-WEST 66
-
- WINGFIELD 70
-
- MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS’ BOWER, CHATSWORTH 72
-
- WILLIAM CECIL, LORD BURGHLEY 80
-
- THOMAS HOWARD, DUKE OF NORFOLK 86
-
- THE MANOR HOUSE, SHEFFIELD 90
-
- GILBERT TALBOT, SEVENTH EARL OF SHREWSBURY 100
-
- LADY MARGARET DOUGLAS, COUNTESS OF LENNOX 120
-
- ROBERT DUDLEY, EARL OF LEICESTER 178
-
- QUEEN ELIZABETH 182
-
- ELIZABETH COUNTESS OF SHREWSBURY 198
-
- GEORGE TALBOT, SIXTH EARL OF SHREWSBURY 202
-
- MARY CAVENDISH, COUNTESS OF SHREWSBURY 252
-
- HARDWICK HALL, SHOWING ENTRANCE GATEWAY 258
-
- STATUE OF MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS 310
-
- QUEEN ELIZABETH (_by Zucchero_) 316
-
- ARABELLA STUART AS A CHILD 330
-
- ARABELLA STUART 332
-
- HARDWICK HALL: THE PICTURE GALLERY FROM THE NORTH 336
-
- WELBECK ABBEY 340
-
- HARDWICK HALL: THE DINING-ROOM 342
-
- JAMES THE FIFTH 344
-
- TOMB OF ELIZABETH COUNTESS OF SHREWSBURY 346
-
- THE ENTRANCE HALL, HARDWICK HALL 348
-
- BOLSOVER CASTLE 352
-
- HARDWICK HALL: THE PICTURE GALLERY 354
-
- MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS (_by P. Oudry_) 356
-
- MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS’ BED, HARDWICK HALL 358
-
- HARDWICK HALL: THE PRESENCE-CHAMBER 360
-
- HARDWICK HALL FROM THE WEST GARDEN 362
-
-
-
-
- BESS OF HARDWICK
-
- AND HER CIRCLE
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
- THE RED-HAIRED GIRL
-
-
-Among the hills and dales of Derbyshire, that great county of august
-estates, there came into the world in the year 1520 a certain baby girl.
-Her father, John Hardwick of Hardwick House, and her mother Elizabeth,
-daughter of Thomas Leake of Hasland, in the same county, christened the
-child Elizabeth, naturally enough after her mother. Like the great Queen
-of England to whom she was senior, and with whom in after years she had
-so much traffic of a highly dramatic kind, this Elizabeth has come down
-to posterity under the shorter name of Bess.
-
-Derbyshire, always a great county, was specially important in her day.
-Far from London and Court it seemed like a little England within
-England. Its great families wove its life step by step, its varied
-landscape, its heights and dales rendered it an important strategical
-centre in the event of rebellion, and the roughness and slough of
-pack-road and cart-road made even local expeditions affairs of moment.
-The little red-haired baby girl inherited from her native soil, from her
-race, and from the neighbours about her all that sense of county
-importance, that desire to found, establish and endow a great family
-with great estates which her life developed to so remarkable a degree.
-That consciousness of county importance was inevitable in those days
-when families gave their names not only to their mansions, but to the
-hamlets or village which clustered round them. Bess of Hardwick was
-brought up amongst them all—the Hardwicks of Hardwick, the Barleys of
-Barley (or Barlow), the Pinchbecks of Pinchbeck, the Blackwalls of
-Blackwall, the Leakes, and the Leches. Not all of them were so very
-opulent. The Hardwicks, though not rich, were of honourable standing as
-county gentry, and the Barleys and Leakes were of the same social rank.
-John Hardwick could not afford to give his daughters large dowries, and
-consequently when my Lady Zouche, her aunt, took Bess into her household
-in London the parents were probably glad enough to embrace such a social
-chance for her. Up to this time she led naturally the life of the
-ordinary young gentlewoman of tender years, said her prayers, learnt to
-sew and embroider, and had seen something of the ordering of a household
-and the disposal of country produce, while she heard and treasured up
-such scraps of news as filtered through to her family and neighbours by
-letters and travellers who came to the houses about her, or such rumours
-as were bruited in the county town. She was but twelve years old when
-she made her entry at once into my Lady Zouche’s house and into history.
-We are told that she had reddish hair and small eyes, but no picture of
-her remains to give any idea of her appearance at this moment when she
-left her childhood behind her. Physique she must always have had, and
-with it tenacity and tact in furthering her own prospects. She was of
-the type in which the art of “getting on” is innate. London and my Lady
-Zouche’s excellent social position gave her her first chance.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby_
-
- HARDWICK OLD HALL
-
- Page 2
-]
-
-There is almost a touch of Becky Sharp in the way that this young girl,
-dowerless save for the forty marks of _dot_ allotted by John Hardwick to
-each of his daughters, settled down in that household. There came to
-London one of her Derbyshire neighbours—a youth of the Barley or Barlow
-family, named Robert. Under Lady Zouche’s roof he fell sick and the
-little niece helped to tend him. Whether he also fell in love, whether
-Mistress Hardwick the mother was minded to “settle” one at least of her
-girls early, or whether Lady Zouche was of a strong match-making
-tendency does not appear. But a marriage between the niece and the guest
-was arranged and quickly carried through. A strange pitiful affair it
-must have been—that London wedding between the red-haired child and the
-sickly young man—a ceremony trailing after it a sorry hope of happiness
-in the midst of physicking and nostrums, weakness and watching, until
-the death of the bridegroom before the bride had reached her fourteenth
-year. His death left no apparent gap in my Lady Zouche’s household and
-no mark upon history. But it bestowed on the child-wife the dignity of
-widowhood, and such importance, plus her forty marks, as attached to any
-property that Robert Barlow left her. The Barlows were not wealthy. Some
-of them in after years were in sore straits for a living. The State
-Papers show the existence of piteous letters from a certain Jane Barlow
-who writes in January, 1583, to her father, Alexander Barlow, “from a
-foreign land.” She is in extreme want, forced to borrow money to carry
-on her “business,” and assures him that the meanest servant he has
-“liveth in far better condition than she.” There is nothing to show that
-the Barlows applied to their relation “Bess” in after years for help.
-Such property as there was passed to her, and she travelled out of their
-ken into richer circles.
-
-In 1547, at the age of twenty-seven, a woman in the height of her powers
-and the perfection of her womanhood, with considerable knowledge of the
-world and a tremendous store of physical and mental vitality, she
-secured a second husband and a man of considerable means—Sir William
-Cavendish. He was the second son of Thomas Cavendish, and his family,
-like that of Bess, took its name from its hamlet or manor. Says the
-pompous Bishop Kennet of those days: “The Cavendishes, like other great
-Families of greatest Antiquity derived a Name from their Place of
-Habitation. A younger branch of the Germons, famous in Norfolk and
-Essex, settled at Cavendish in Suffolk, and from that Seat and Estate
-were soon distinguished by that Sirname.” Thomas Cavendish, like the
-father of Bess, was “a well-to-do but undistinguished Squire,” but his
-sons made names for themselves.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _From a photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, after the painting at
- Hardwick Hall_
- _By permission of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire_
-
- SIR WILLIAM CAVENDISH
-
- Page 4
-]
-
-In 1539 his son William was appointed one of the auditors of the Court
-of Augmentation. This Court, of which one at least of the members had
-been employed as a commissioner for the surrender of religious houses,
-was ostensibly founded to ensure the increase of the royal exchequer to
-such a point as would enable the sovereign duly to establish and
-strengthen the defences of the realm. Within a year Mr. Cavendish had so
-well played his cards and acquitted himself that he received from Henry
-VIII a grant of Church property—the lordships and manors of Northawe,
-Cuffley, and Childewicke in Hertfordshire. In 1548, the year after his
-marriage, he was further rewarded not only by the post of “Treasurer of
-the Chamber to the King” which, we are assured, was “a place of great
-trust and honour,” but the knighthood which brought his third wife the
-title that raised her above the majority of her fellow-gentlewomen. He
-did not bring her a virgin heart, for he had been twice married and
-twice a widower without male heir. But he conferred on her important
-social position, a great deal of land—additional prizes fell to his
-share in the way of lesser glebe properties, abbeys, and rectories,
-because his appointment in the royal exchequer kept him _au courant_ of
-the places which were being given or going cheap in the market—and she
-in her turn brought him the sons he doubtless so greatly desired.
-
-Never surely did a couple settle down so whole-heartedly or so
-harmoniously to the founding of a family, to the increase and
-consolidation of their patrimony. As to the first—their offspring—Sir
-William made a proud and careful list in writing, being, as Collins[1]
-says, “A learned and exact Person.” He had in all sixteen children,
-eight of whom were borne to him by “this beautiful and discreet Lady,”
-as Collins describes Bess Cavendish.
-
-The fact that his second wife’s name was also Elizabeth has at times
-given rise to misstatements with regard to the place and date of his
-third marriage, but he was careful to record this: “I was married to
-Elizabeth Hardwick, my third wife, in Leicestershire, at Brodgate, my
-Lord Marquess’s[2] House, the 20th of August, in the first yeare of King
-Ed. the 6, at 2 of the Clock after midnight.”
-
-Of the eight children of this marriage six survived. The others were
-Temperance, “my 10 childe and the second by the same woman,” and Lucrece
-the youngest. The surviving daughters were Frances Cavendish, the
-eldest, married to Sir Henry Pierrepoint, of Holme Pierrepoint, Notts;
-Elizabeth Cavendish, who espoused Charles Stuart, Earl of Lennox; and
-Mary, the youngest girl, who became the wife of Gilbert Talbot. Of the
-three sons, the eldest, Henry Cavendish, who settled later at Tutbury
-Castle, married Lady Grace Talbot; William Cavendish, who wedded
-successively Anne, daughter of Henry Kighley, of Kighley, and Elizabeth,
-daughter of Sir Edward Boughton, and to whom his adoring mother left
-Chatsworth; and Charles. Frances Cavendish by her marriage became the
-ancestress of the Earls and Dukes of Kingston, and (through a female
-heiress) of the Earls Manvers, inheritors of the Pierrepoint property.
-Her brother Henry, though he died young, was the ancestor of the Barons
-Waterpark; while William, duly knighted in time, was the first Earl of
-Devonshire and progenitor of that great ducal house. Mary, though her
-husband was but a younger son of the Talbot race, became eventually
-Countess of Shrewsbury on his unexpected accession to the title; while
-Charles, besides a knighthood, secured as bride one of the twin
-heiresses of the Barony of Ogle, by which means the possessions of
-Welbeck Abbey and other great estates were insured to the Cavendishes.
-All these matters, however, belong to the future. The present was
-all-important to the welfare of Sir William and his lady. A fast growing
-family must be provided for, and scattered estates meant waste of cost
-and labour. The clear, keen eyes of the newly-wedded Bess looked far
-into the future. She did not care for the notion of separation from her
-own lands and the unwieldy business of dealing with her husband’s
-estates in different parts of the South of England. At the time of their
-marriage he had sold the aforesaid manors in Hertfordshire,
-Lincolnshire, Cardigan, and Cornwall, in favour of others in Derbyshire,
-Nottingham, and Stafford. The county instinct of his wife asserted
-itself. Her heart was in Derbyshire where her own dowry was
-concentrated. She desired the transfer of her bridegroom’s interests and
-property thither. Her resolution and her vitality naturally carried the
-day, and Sir William sold all the rest of his southern estates and
-settled with her in a manor which had originally been built by her old
-county friends the Leeches (or Leches) of Leech—Chatsworth.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby_
-
- HARDWICK OLD HALL: THE GIANTS CHAMBER
-
- (So called from the two colossal figures, dubbed Gog and Magog, in
- raised plaster-work over the fireplace)
-
- Page 6
-]
-
-Gradually her great hobby asserted itself—the desire to build—and this
-constructive energy, as her story will show, went hand in hand with her
-master passion, the love of power and possession, to the end of her
-days. The mansion of the Leeches did not please her. It must be rebuilt
-for the glory of the Cavendishes. Her knight yielded to the wish. They
-set about the work quickly, living meanwhile, one supposes, in the
-original mansion. Hardwick Hall, it will be remembered, was not yet
-hers. John Hardwick, her father, had passed away in the nineteenth year
-of Henry VIII. That reign was at an end, and the reign of Edward VI
-drawing to its close. Hardwick House eventually became the portion of
-the red-haired daughter, some say through the will of her brother, who
-apparently died without heir. But for the moment the Cavendishes needed
-a fine house for domesticity on a large scale and old Chatsworth did not
-suffice them. Elizabeth Cavendish had plenty to do in founding her
-family. These were great and busy times for the great lady. Shoulder to
-shoulder husband and wife worked at their building, at their estate, at
-the management of their tenants, their parks and palings, their farms
-and holdings. The red-haired girl was in her element as matron and
-comptroller and lady bountiful. Fortune smiled on her enterprise, and
-when the crown of Edward VI descended to Mary of England, Sir William
-Cavendish still held securely his valuable post in the Exchequer.
-
-It is a fine English picture as one looks upon it, this married life of
-the Cavendishes—knight and lady amongst their babies, enlarging their
-county circle, increasing their county honours, holding intercourse with
-Court and capital, with market and county town.
-
-Here is a letter on domestic matters from Sir William to his lady
-showing his trust in her management of their joint affairs:—
-
-
- “To Bess Cavendish,
- “My Wife.
-
-“Good Bess, having forgotten to write in my letters that you should pay
-Otewelle Alayne eight pounds for certain oats that we have bought of him
-over and above twelve that I have paid to him in hand, I heartily pray
-you for that he is desirous to receive the rest at London to pay him
-upon the sight hereof. You know my store and therefore I have appointed
-him to have it at your hands. And thus fare you well. From Chatsworth
-the XIIIth of April.
-
- W. C.”
-
-
-And here is a characteristic letter from his good lady during her
-absence from home in 1552 to her man of affairs, in which she soundly
-takes him to task for discourtesy to her “sister Jane,” orders beer to
-be brewed against her own return, and issues commands for building and
-repairs:—
-
-
-“Francis, I have spoken with your master for the deals or boards that
-you wrote to me of; and he is content that you shall take some for your
-necessity by the appointment of Neusante, so that you take such as will
-do him no service about his building at Chatsworth. I pray you look well
-to all things at Chatsworth till my aunt’s coming home, which I hope
-shall be shortly, and in the meantime cause Broushawe to look to the
-smithy and all other things at Penteridge. Let the weaver make beer for
-me forthwith, for my own drinking and your master’s; and see that I have
-good store of it, for if I lack either good beer or good charcoal or
-wood I will blame nobody so much as I will do you. Cause the floor in my
-bedchamber to be made even, either with plaster, clay, or lime: and all
-the windows where the glass is broken to be mended: and all the chambers
-to be made as close and warm as you can. I hear that my sister Jane
-cannot have things that is needful for her to have amongst you: If it be
-true, you lack a great of honesty as well as discretion to deny her
-anything that she hath a mind to, being in my house; and then assure
-yourself I cannot like it to have my sister so used. Like as I would not
-have any superfluity or waste of anything, so likewise would I have her
-to have that which is needful and necessary. At my coming home I shall
-know more, and then I will think as I shall have cause. I would have you
-give to my midwife from me, and from my boy Willie and to my nurse from
-me and my boy, as hereafter followeth: first to the midwife from me ten
-shillings, and from Willie five shillings: to the nurse from me five
-shillings, and from my boy three shillings and four pence: so that in
-the whole you must give to them twenty-three shillings and four pence.
-Make my sister privy to it, and then pay it to them forthwith. If you
-have no other money, take so much of the rent at Penteridge. Tell my
-sister Jane that I will give my daughter something at my coming home:
-and praying you not to fail to see all things done accordingly, I bid
-you farewell. From London the 14th of November.
-
- “Your Mistress,
- “ELIZABETH CAVENDISH.
-
-“Tell James Crompe that I have received the five pounds and nine
-shillings that he sent me by Hugh Alsope.
-
- “to my servant Francis Whitfield,
- give this at Chatsworth.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
- THE MISTRESS BUILDER
-
-
-Upon this scene of household importance and intimate family life,
-making, if not for happiness in the fullest sense of the word, at any
-rate for prosperity and success, fell for a second time upon the married
-life of Bess Hardwick the great shadow. Sir William Cavendish, so
-accomplished in business, so doughty a husband, so excellent a host,
-died in 1557.
-
-His wife made a note of the event in her own hand:—
-
-
-“Memorandum, that Sir William Cavendish, Knight, my most dear and well
-beloved husband, departed this present life on Monday, being the 25th
-day of October, betwixt the hours of 8 and 9 of the same day at Night,
-in the year of our Lord God 1557, the dominical Letter then C. On whose
-soul I most humbly beseech the Lord to have mercy, and to rid me and his
-poor children out of our great misery.
-
- “ELIZABETH CAVENDISH.”
-
-
-This was probably the greatest grief of her life, and all her after
-energies were spent in furthering the welfare of her Cavendish children.
-
-Now followed a period of widowhood, during which no substantial or
-interesting episodes bring the lady’s name to the front. But she did not
-lose her hold over society and the Court. Nor did she lay aside her
-wise, worldly habits. She was still the grand dame—dispenser of
-charities, recipient of Court letters, mistress of masons and woodmen
-and grooms, resting securely upon her hoard like the dragon in German
-legend, assuring herself and the world, “I lie and possess, and would
-slumber.” But hers was not the nature to be quiescent very long. And she
-had incentive enough to action. She had six children to further in the
-world. Daughters must be married, sons must be brought into the charmed
-circle of the Queen, to run the gauntlet of suspicions, favours, and
-coldnesses from her and bear the jealousy and competition of others till
-the right opportunity came for advancement. Moreover, there was
-Chatsworth to complete—alone. At thirty-seven, gifted with excellent
-good looks, an indomitable will, and a constitution robust and healthy,
-it was not the moment for such a woman to permit either her schemes or
-her zest in life to collapse. So she keeps to her road, moving no doubt
-daily between the old Chatsworth and the new, the beloved fabric which
-for her was at once the mausoleum of her greatest happiness, the
-eloquent witness of her aspirations for her children, and a lasting
-memorial of her Cavendish ambitions. So one beholds her working onward,
-building for the future, impatient no doubt of the present. Fully
-accustomed now to take command of her life and affairs, she controls
-every item of the building of her new house. One can picture her easily
-enough walking or driving to and fro, while she issues commands for the
-felling of wood, signs orders for the selling of coals and stone, for
-the transplantation of trees, the manufacture of hangings, the transport
-of Derbyshire marbles, the employment of artificers in mosaic, and
-plaster and wood. She had built six Cavendishes, bone of her bone, flesh
-of her flesh, and now she was building a great and perfect house for
-them and theirs. In it she would reign, so long as she lived, supreme.
-One pictures her again and again—a vigorous, vital woman, in proper and
-dignified weeds, with shrewd and genial face in which the lines of
-intrigue and sorrow had not yet deepened, moving amongst her army of
-workmen, fully conscious of the country life about her, though possibly
-not playing for a while a very active part in it. But the old zest of
-living, the old desire of the world, the joys of which she had tasted
-only at brief intervals during the babyhood of her six children, were
-ineradicable. She had acres and gold, she needed a helpmeet more than
-many women. No country gentleman of sufficient importance presented
-himself for whom she would think it worth while to give up the pretty
-delight of being addressed as “my lady.” In this dilemma Fate brought
-her face to face with Sir William St. Lo.
-
-He was of excellent birth, and, like her second husband, a widower. His
-family was, of course, originally Norman. State papers show that a
-Margaret de St. Low or Laudo parted with certain rights in Cornish
-property in the reign of Henry III. By the seventeenth century the
-family seems to have concentrated in Gloucestershire, where it held the
-manor of Tormarton, twenty-two miles south of the county town. “Livery”
-of this manor, we read, was granted to William St. Loe by Elizabeth.
-
-William and his brother John had fought bravely in Ireland against
-Desmond. In 1536 the former—the family name is spelt variously as
-Seyntlow, Seyntloe, and Santclo—is mentioned in despatches. There is a
-vivid glimpse in various letters of an attack on the castle of “Carreke
-Ogunell.”[3] Says Lord Leonard Grey, writing to Henry VIII in England,
-“It was taken by assault by William Seyntloe and his men before scaling
-ladders could arrive.” But the writer is not quite sure if the success
-was due to “hope of fame or lack of victuals, for a halfpenny loaf was
-worth 12d., but there was none to be sold.” The castle has marble walls
-thirteen feet thick. It is the strongest Lord Leonard has ever seen. An
-Englishman could take it at a rush, in spite of the fact that besides
-being set in a fine moat, “in an island of fresh water,” the place was
-guarded with watch towers of hewn marble. But Lord Leonard does not
-think that any Irishman could have built it!
-
-Later there is mutiny and rumour of sore disruption in the English-Irish
-army. Young Captain St. Loe’s men forgather with discontented spirits,
-and the whole of his stalwart retinue of three hundred, “men of high
-courage and activity,” revolts so badly that, though he and his captains
-are cleared of all blame, it is necessary to “bend the ordnance” on the
-mutineers and proceed against them in “battle array.” Little wonder that
-the men, henchmen and yeomen, doubtless, of Gloucestershire, hated the
-campaign. Even Lord Leonard himself shared the destitution of the
-privates and was pinched for the lack of a loaf. “And so,” he goes on
-after his comment on the price of bread, “I among others lay in my
-harness, without any bed, almost famished with hunger, wet, and cold.”
-
-Fortune and personality carried William St. Loe onward. In the forties
-of the sixteenth century he appears as seneschal of Waterford, and
-complains bitterly of the way in which he is hampered in office by the
-Lord Chancellor in Ireland. The contention of his official companions,
-however, as given in a letter to the Court, describes him as “a good
-warrior, but unfit to administer justice.” Military disorder is stated
-to be the result, and if the complainants only “had the disposal of the
-farms Seyntlow now has” things would be very different. It is suggested
-that he is turning into a regular freebooter.... And so on.
-
-However this may be, we find the gentleman in 1557 not only safely
-established in England, but holding important Court posts with
-high-sounding titles. He is at once Grand Butler of England and captain
-of the Queen’s Guard. In these capacities Bess Hardwick, as Lady
-Cavendish, must have already met him. Had she not married him and had he
-lived long enough, she might have been committed to his tender mercies
-and guardianship in a very different sense. But at present her genius
-for intrigue only threw her into the apparently pleasant fetters of
-marriage. This “Grand Botelier,” this dashing swashbuckler who now rode
-at the head of the royal guards, and was in constant touch with the
-governor of the Tower, with the interior of which building she made
-acquaintance later, took her as his second wife. The whole thing seems
-to have been most amicable, affectionate, and excellent—amicable and
-affectionate on his part, excellent from her point of view. It did not
-interfere with his important duties; it did not necessarily nail her to
-the Court. Above all, it did not interfere with her building. Indeed, it
-gave her the more heart to it because the good captain would now assume
-by her side the duties of Derbyshire host. Moreover, he could help her
-materially in her building. She did not need his advice about
-architecture of course. But she saw that she could draw under her hand
-the dues of his manor in Gloucestershire for the glory of the
-Cavendishes and the surer foundation of her own comfort. The fine
-dashing soldier had children. Yet this was no serious block in her way.
-She might arrange it all, while leaving them not destitute but dependent
-on her wise financial dispositions. The marriage was duly solemnised and
-gave satisfaction. The Queen approved of my Lady St. Loe, and the more
-so because the latter did not wish to monopolise her bridegroom. There
-was enough at the Derbyshire estate to amuse her, and Sir William’s
-letters to her kept her advised of things “about” the Queen’s Majesty.
-Scottish affairs were brewing hotly. Elizabeth was but newly a queen.
-There were processions and enactments, enquiries, and excursions at
-Court. Bess Hardwick held the post of Lady of the Bedchamber, and
-naturally took the keenest interest in all that went on. Except through
-letters, reliable news did not filter at all to the wilds of the Peak
-and its lovely dales. But Sir William loved her and appreciated her
-deeply. In his affectionate letters he identifies her quaintly and
-sweetly with her house. “My honest, sweet Chatsworth” is one of the
-expressions. Elsewhere she is “My own, more dearer to me than I am to
-myself,” and in another letter he has seized her enthusiasm for
-management and construction, for he calls her “My own good servant and
-chief overseer.”
-
-Occasionally Bess wanted her “grand botelier” to herself, and it must
-have been hard for Sir William to tear himself away from the rich
-security and ease of the house. One of his letters from Court shows that
-he is in trouble with his Queen for delayed return.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, from the picture at Hardwick
- Hall_
- _By permission of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire_
-
- SIR WILLIAM ST. LOE
-]
-
-
-“She hath found great fault with my long absence, saying she would talk
-with me farther and that she would well chide me. Whereunto I answered,
-that when her highness understood the truth and the cause she would not
-be offended. Whereunto she says, ‘Very well, very well’; howbeit, hand
-of hers I did not kisse.”
-
-
-A portrait which hangs in the great gallery at Hardwick shows the writer
-of the following letters (quoted in Hunter’s _Hallamshire_) in his habit
-as he lived—a kindly fellow, but at this period not a man of power.
-
-_Sir William Saint-Loe to Lady Saint-Loe._
-
-
-“My own, more dearer to me than I am to myself, thou shalt understand
-that it is no small fear nor grief unto me of thy well doing that I
-should presently see what I do, not only for that my continual nightly
-dreams beside my absence hath troubled me, but also chiefly for that
-Hugh Alsope cannot satisfy me in what estate thou nor thine is, whom I
-regard more than I do William Seyntlo. Therefore I pray thee, as thou
-dost love me, let me shortly hear from thee, for the quieting of my
-unquieted mind, how thine own sweet self with all thine doeth; trusting
-shortly to be amongst you. All thy friends here saluteth thee. Harry
-Skipwith desired me to make thee and no other privy that he is sure of
-mistress Nell, with whom he is by this time. He hath sent ten thousand
-thanks unto thyself for the same: she hath opened all things unto him.
-To-morrow Sir Richard Sackville and I ride to London together; on
-Saturday next we return hither again. The queen yesterday, her own self
-riding upon the way, craved my horse; unto whom I gave him, receiving
-openly for the same many goodly words. Thus wishing myself with thyself,
-I bid thee, my own good servant and chief overseer of my works, most
-heartily farewell: by thine who is wholly and only thine, yea and for
-all thine while life lasteth. From Windsor the fourth of September by
-thy right worshipful master and most honest husband master Sir
-
- “WILLIAM SEYNTLO, esquire.
-
-“Commend me to my mother and to all my brothers and sisters, not
-forgetting Frank with the rest of my children and thine. The Amnar[4]
-saluteth thee and sayeth no gentleman’s children in England shall be
-better welcome nor better looked unto than our boys. Once again,
-farewell good honest sweet.
-
-“Myself or Greyves shall be the next messenger.
-
- “To my own dear wife at
- Chatsworth deliver this.”
-
-
-_Sir William Saint-Loe to Lady Saint-Loe._
-
-
-“My hap is evil, my time worse spent; for that my reward as yet is
-nothing more than fair words with the like promises. Take all in good
-part; and if I should understand the contrary, it would trouble me more
-than my pen shall express. I have leave to come and wait upon thee, I
-and my brother Clement, with two or three good fellows more: [we] had
-been with thee by this day if it had not been for our —— matter, the
-which I will not leave over rawly. I will forbear the answering of all
-particularities in thy last letter written unto me, for that God willing
-I will this next week be the messenger myself. Master Man came home the
-night before the date hereof. He putteth me in great hope of the matter
-you know of. Thus trusting that God provideth for us all things for the
-best, I end; committing thee and all thine which are mine unto his
-blessed will and ordinance. Farewell, my own sweet Bess. From Master
-Man’s house in Redcross Street, the 12th of October, by him who dareth
-not so near his coming home to term thee as thou art: yet thine
-
- “WILLIAM SEYNTLO.
-
-“My cousin Clarke saluteth thee, who was by me at the writing hereof.
-
- “To my own good wife at
- Chatsworth deliver this.
-
-
-In this letter he complains of the heavy charge for his hired Court
-apparel.
-
-_Sir William Saint-Loe to Lady Saint-Loe._
-
-
-“My honest sweet Chatsworth: I like the weekly price of my hired court
-stuff so evil that upon Thursday next I will send it home again, at
-which day the week endeth. I pray you cause such stuff as Mowsall left
-packed in a sheet to be brought hither by the next carrier: there be
-hand towels and other things therein that I must occupy when I shall lie
-at Whitehall. My men hath neither shirt nor any other thing to shift
-them until that come. Trust none of your men to ride any [of] your
-housed horses, but only James Cromp or William Marchington; but neither
-of them without good cause serve speedily to be done. For nags there be
-enough about the house to serve other purposes. One handful of oats to
-every one of the geldings at a watering will be sufficient so they be
-not laboured. You must cause some[one] to oversee the horsekeeper for
-that he is very well learned in loitering.
-
-“The Queen hath found great fault with my long absence saying that she
-would talk with me farther, and that she would well chide me. Whereunto
-I answered that when her highness understood the truth and the cause she
-would not be offended. Whereunto she said ‘Very well, very well.’
-Howbeit hand of hers I did not kisse.
-
-“The Lord Keeper hath promised me faithfully to be at both days’
-hearing; and that if either law or conscience be on my side I shall have
-it to my contentment. Vaughan is come unto town, but not yet Bagott.
-Stevens and we shall go through on Friday night next, at which time his
-brother will be here, who hath disbursed seven hundred of the twelve
-hundred pounds. I have an extreme pain in my teeth since Sunday dinner.
-Thus with aching teeth I end, praying the living [God] to preserve thee
-and all thine. Written at London, against my will where I am if other
-ways our matters might well be ended, this 24th of October:
-
-“Your loving husband with aching heart until we meet,
-
- “WILLIAM SEYNTLO.
-
-“If you think good, lease your fishing in Dove unto Agard. We are the
-losers of suffering it as we have done.
-
- “To my loving wife at Chatsworth
- give this with speed.”
-
-
-This next letter is from Sir George Pierrepoint in gratitude of her
-kindly offices. His family was afterwards closely connected with that of
-Bess of Hardwick, for her eldest daughter married Sir Henry Pierrepoint.
-
-_Sir George Pierrepoint to Lady Saint-Loe._
-
-
-“Right worshipful and very good Lady: after my heartiest manner I
-commend me to your Ladyship: even so pray you I may be to good Mr.
-Seyntloe: most heartily thanking you both for your great pains taken
-with me at Holme, accepting everything (though it were never so rudely
-handled) in such gentle way as you did; which doth and will cause me to
-love you the better while I live if I were able to do you other pleasure
-or service; and the rather because I understand your Ladyship hath not
-forgotten my suit to you at your going away as specially to make Mr.
-Sackville and Mr. Attorney my friends in the matter between Mr. Whalley
-and me, wherein he doeth me plain wrong (as I take it is my conscience)
-only to reap trouble and unquiet me. But I trust so much in God’s help,
-and partly by your Ladyship’s good means, and continuance of your
-goodness towards me, that he shall not overthrow me in my righteous
-cause. And touching such communication as was between us as at Holme, if
-your Ladyship and the gentlewoman your daughter like or be upon sight as
-well as I and my wife like the young gentlewoman, I will not shrink from
-it I said or promised; by the grace of God who preserve your Ladyship
-and my Master your husband long together in wealth, health and
-prosperity to his pleasure, and your gentle heart’s desire. From my poor
-house at Woodhouse the 4th of November 1561, by the rude lusty hands of
-your good Ladyship’s assuredly always to command.
-
- “GEORGE PIERREPOINT.
- “To the right worshipful and my
- singular good Lady, my Lady
- Sentloo at London this be delivered.”
-
-
-This other letter is highly typical for the good lady’s literary style
-and her attitude towards her employees. It is to James Crompe, her man
-of affairs.
-
-
-“Crompe, I do understand by your letters that Wortly saith he will
-depart at our Ladyday next. I will that you shall have him bound in an
-obligation to avoid[5] at the same day, for sure I will trust no more to
-his promise. And when he doth tell you that he is any penny behind for
-work done to Mr. Cavendish or me, he doth lie like a false knave: for I
-am most sure he did never make anything for me but two vanes to stand
-upon the house. I do very well like your sending sawyers to Pentrege and
-Medoplecke, for that will further my works: and so I pray you in any
-other thing that will be a help to my building, let it be done. And for
-Thomas Mason, if you can hear where he is, I would very gladly he were
-at Chatsworth. I will let you know by my next letter what work Thomas
-Mason shall begin at first, when he doth come. And as for the other
-mason which Sir James told you of, if he will not apply his work, you
-know that he is not the man for me; and the mason’s work which I have to
-do is not much, and Thomas Mason will very well oversee that work. I
-perceive Sir James is much misliked for his religion; but I think his
-wisdom is such that he will make small account of that matter. I would
-have you tell my aunt Lenecker that I would have the little garden which
-is by the new house made a garden this year. I care not whether she
-bestow any great cost thereof; but to sow it with all kinds of herbs and
-flowers and some pieces of it with mallows. I have sent you by this
-carrier three bundles of garden seeds all written with William
-Marchington’s hand; and by the next you shall know how to use them in
-every point.
-
-“From the Court the 8th of March,
-
- “Your mistress,
- “E. SEYNTLO.”
-
-
-The “Aunt Lenecker” (more correctly known as Lynacre) was a Leake and
-sister of Lady St. Loe’s mother. She seems to have lived for some years
-with her niece, possibly since her first widowhood.
-
-Nothing very exciting happened to the St. Loe couple in their short
-married life. When not at Court they paid visits, were entertained, or
-entertained their own visitors, as scraps of correspondence show. They
-must have had traffic already with the great family of Talbot—which,
-besides Sheffield Castle, owned so many large seats in Derby and
-Nottingham—and both of them naturally held intercourse with “Mr.
-Secretary Walsingham” and “Mr. Treasurer Cecil.”
-
-When Sir William St. Loe died—tolerably soon, alas!—Bess Hardwick had
-gone far with her building, social and actual. Her third widowhood found
-her richer, bolder, better known at Court, and able to play her part in
-an ever-widening circle of the powerful and prosperous.
-
-Such a lady would naturally make enemies. In 1567 she was slandered by
-Henry Jackson, an ex-scholar of Merton College, Oxford, the tutor of her
-children. Instantly the matter went to the Council, and the Council
-wrote in September to the Archbishop of Canterbury. “Lady St. Loo,
-widow, having retained as schoolmaster Henry Jackson ... is disturbed by
-scandalous reports raised against her family by him; you are to examine
-the matter thoroughly and speedily with the assistance of the
-Solicitor-General Mr. Oseley and Mr. Peter Osborne or other
-Ecclesiastical Commissioners, that the lady’s good name may be
-preserved; if he has unjustly defamed her he is to be severely
-punished,” runs the digest of the draft in the State MS. And immediately
-upon the conclusion of the examination the Queen herself intervenes on
-behalf of the lady “who has long served with credit in our Court,” and
-forthwith she commands the punishment of the wicked clerk: “extreme
-punishment, corporal or otherwise, openly or private, and that
-speedily.”
-
-Besides the danger of slander there was the trap of intrigue. Up to the
-present Bess Hardwick had kept clear of mischief, but, native curiosity
-apart, she could not, as Lady of the Bedchamber, help being often the
-recipient of the secrets of her friends. The romantic love story of Lady
-Catherine Grey, who held a similar Court post to herself, brought her
-into a tight place. For the benefit of those who do not recall the tale
-it shall be set forth again here.
-
-The Lady Catherine was the sister of Lady Jane Grey. By a curious
-combination of circumstances—the exclusion given by the will of Henry
-VIII to the posterity of Margaret of Scotland, the publication of the
-will of Edward VI, and the non-repeal of certain Acts of Parliament—it
-was judged that the right to the crown rested with the House of Suffolk.
-To this great house Lady Catherine was the heir. She was formally
-contracted in extreme youth to Lord Herbert, the son of the Earl of
-Pembroke. But the wise Earl, in dread of the acute complications which
-such a marriage might entail, arranged for a divorce. This probably
-affected the lady but little. She was young, she was attractive and
-romantic, she could meet cavaliers enough and to spare in the immediate
-circle of the Queen. But, as all the world knows, her Majesty, while she
-kept a dozen men languishing about her, was very loth to have any of her
-ladies wed. Love affairs must be very secret, lest the parties incurred
-her disfavour and the loss of benefits. As for Lady Catherine, her
-birth, as has been shown, rendered her a mark for all manner of
-suspicion. At Court she was the close companion of Lady Jane Seymour,
-daughter of the Duke of Somerset. This Lady Jane had a brother, no less
-than the Earl of Hertford. What more inevitable than a love affair
-between him and Catherine? There were sorrows enough in the background
-of her history, slavery enough—despite pageant and hunting and the
-comings and goings of great persons from foreign courts—to endure at the
-hands of the energetic, alert, excitable, witty, jealous royal mistress.
-Little by little the love story wove itself in the manner of every love
-tale. A community of interest, a series of assemblies which passed in
-array her Majesty’s ladies before the eyes of her gentlemen, little
-incidents which brought out the personalities of the two, mere
-propinquity, a look here and a word there, did their work. The two were
-soon secretly plighted, with the Lady Jane to share and shield their
-dear secret. Many anxious moments must have gone to their councils. To
-declare their troth would only be a signal for their instant separation.
-The same result would arise if they humbly asked the royal permission to
-be betrothed. To marry and fly would only savour of deep State
-conspiracy. To marry and bide quietly and then face the astonished and
-scandalous world with an air of “Indeed, and it is true. So part us you
-shall not. And, moreover, ’tis our affair. Wherefore, fling your mud
-elsewhere!” seemed the wisest way in the end, and also followed the line
-of least resistance.
-
-One morning—surely as crisp and heartening a day as could be desired for
-such a purpose—the Queen’s Majesty went to Eltham in Kent to hunt. My
-Lady Jane and my Lady Catherine stayed behind. When all was quiet they
-left the Palace (Westminster) “by the stairs at the orchard” and
-strolled quietly “along the sands.” Those sands led to the Earl of
-Hertford’s house in “Chanon Row.” He was waiting for his lady; he did
-not even leave her to call the priest. That was the Lady Jane’s errand.
-There is something very delightful about this incident, and the steady
-chaperon’s part undertaken by the Earl’s sister. The priest came, the
-wedding took place. After the brief ceremony there could not be much
-dalliance or entertainment. It was not yet the time to give the secret
-to the world. The ladies must reach the Palace again before hue and cry
-could be raised. They did not go back by “the sands,” probably because
-the tide had risen. They went back by boat. The Earl did not accompany
-them. But he led his bride and his sister to the boat which waited for
-them at the foot of the water-stairs of his house. He assisted them
-in—it must have been very hard to let go the hand of the woman so newly
-pledged to him—and the shallop went quietly on its way and delivered its
-fair passengers at the Palace stairs without exciting comment. A little
-later the two ladies were demurely seated at dinner “in Master
-Comptroller’s chamber.” Probably neither of them played that evening
-much of a table part.
-
-The bride was left to bear the onus of the affair. After a few stolen
-meetings the Earl went to France. And presently the world began to point
-and stare. The report grew, but no one seemed able to credit it. At the
-close of August, 1561, the Earl’s mother wrote to Cecil mentioning the
-rumour, denying all knowledge of it, and hoped that the wilfulness of
-her unruly child, Hertford, would not diminish the Queen’s favour. On
-the same date Sir Edward Warner, Lieutenant of the Tower, wrote to the
-Queen stating that he had questioned Lady Catherine as to her “love
-practices,” but she would confess nothing. It is said that Lady St. Loe
-burst into tears when Lady Catherine made confession to her. Probably
-the older woman knew what was in store for them both. The royal warrant
-to Sir Edward Warner not only required him to “examine the Lady
-Catherine very straightly how many hath been privy to love between her
-and the Lord of Hertford from the beginning,” but continues: “Ye shall
-also send to Alderman Lodge, secretly, for St. Low and shall put her in
-awe of divers matters confessed by the Lady Catherine; and so also deal
-with her that she may confess to you all her knowledge in the same
-matters. It is certain that there hath been great practices and
-purposes; and since the death of the Lady Jane[6] she hath been most
-privy. And as ye shall see occasion, so ye may keep St. Low two or three
-nights, more or less, and let her be returned to Lodge’s or kept still
-with you, as ye shall think meet.”
-
-After poor Lady Catherine took Lady Loe into her confidence, she made
-frantic application for help to Lord Robert Dudley—not yet Earl of
-Leicester—so high in the Queen’s good graces. In this there is sheer
-drama as well as pathos—this confession and piteous appeal from the
-young and comely lady of quality, whose only fault was that she had
-married for love, to the handsome, pampered, arrogant cavalier, the
-Queen’s darling. Lady Hertford went to his very chamber in Court to
-implore him to stand between her parlous state as prospective mother and
-the Queen’s anger. Yet nothing in such contingencies could divert
-Elizabeth’s fury, or make her act in a humane fashion. Lord Hertford was
-summoned to England to undergo trial with his wife, and very soon both
-were committed separately to the Tower. But before this could be done
-the farce of a public enquiry had to be played. A commission was
-ordained, pompously headed by no less a person than Archbishop Parker.
-The accused were requested to produce, within a given time, witnesses of
-their marriage. That they failed to do this is extraordinary. The priest
-seems to have disappeared, and Lady Jane Seymour appeared unable to find
-him or to assist in furnishing the required evidence. But as this couple
-could not satisfy the Commission in time they were sentenced to be
-imprisoned during the Queen’s pleasure. “Displeasure” would be the
-correct word. For Elizabeth knew little but vanity and vexation of
-spirit at this period. The very word marriage must have been a red rag
-to her. With the strong vitality and virility of her father warring
-within her against the heritage of the feminine instincts of her mother,
-Anne Boleyn, with countless suitors and innumerable flatterers to
-encourage and keep at bay alternately, with one eye fixed on Mary of
-Scotland and another on the “devildoms of Spain,” her life just now was
-a constant turmoil. Her whole entourage was forced to share in it. She
-would not decide upon a consort to help her; she belittled the estate of
-marriage one day and dallied with it the next. No wonder that poor Mr.
-Treasurer Cecil wrote as he did on the eve of the New Year of 1564.
-Schemes matrimonial whirled round him like the winter snow. Elizabeth
-was being wooed by a French monarch and an Austrian Emperor at the same
-moment; the Lennox family and Mary of Scotland were working to achieve
-the marriage of the latter with Darnley, and the Lady Mary Grey, fired
-no doubt by her sister’s intrigue and sick of loneliness, had actually
-surreptitiously married John Keys, the Serjeant Porter to the Queen.
-Meanwhile the Earl and Countess of Hertford were in the Tower. In
-addition, the Queen was putting up her beloved Dudley, now Earl of
-Leicester, to oppose Darnley as a possible consort for Scottish Mary.
-Shrewd old Cecil shows, however, that she is only half-hearted about it:
-“I see the qn M^{ty} very desyroos to have my L. of Lecester placed in
-this high degree to be the Scottish Queen’s husband, but whan it commeth
-to the conditions which are demanded I see her then remiss of her
-earnestness.”[7]
-
-He concludes wearily enough:—
-
-
-“This also I see in the Qn Ma^{ty}, a sufficient contentation to be
-moved to marry abrood, and if it is so may [it] plese Almighty God, to
-leade by the hand some mete person to come and lay hand on her to her
-contentation, I cold than wish my self more helth to endure my yeres
-somewhat longar to enjoye such a world here as I trust wold follow:
-otherwise I assure yow, as now thyngs hang in desperation, I have no
-comfort to lyve.”
-
-
-My Lady St. Loe, as confidante, was forced to weather the storm and
-endure reprimand. The married lovers, meanwhile, dragged out their days
-in durance. Their son was born in the Tower. In vain they languished,
-pined, and implored the intercession of friends. In 1562 the Earl was
-allowed a little more ease. Husband and wife managed to meet again.
-Another child was born to them, and my Lord was duly fined fifteen
-thousand pounds by the Star Chamber, for this event was construed into a
-new State offence. In 1563 the dreaded plague caused Elizabeth to remove
-her poor love-birds from the Tower. Lady Catherine went to the house of
-her uncle, Sir John Grey, in Essex, and he was roused to uttermost
-compassion and distress by her wretched mental and physical condition.
-It was in mid-Lent that he wrote to Cecil emphatically and ironically:—
-
-
-“It is a great while me thinkethe, Cousin Cecile, since I sent unto you,
-in my neices behalf, albeit I knowe, (opportunitie so servinge) you are
-not unmindful of her miserable and compfortlesse estate. For who
-wantinge the Princes favor, maye compt himselfe to live in any Realme?
-And because this time of all others hathe ben compted a time of mercie
-and forgevenes I cannot but recommende her woefull liffe unto you. In
-faithe I wolde I were the Queen’s confessor this Lent, that I might
-joine her in penaunce to forgive and forget; or otherwise able to steppe
-into the pulpett to tell her Highness, that God will not forgive her,
-unleast she frelye forgeve all the worlde.”
-
-
-This letter is worth quoting because it shows the prevailing attitude of
-the Elizabethan courtier. No one who lacked the favour of the sovereign
-could be accounted as one living. Lady Catherine, once under that heavy
-cloud of disfavour, never emerged, but died broken and miserable within
-six years of her unhappy marriage. Wherefore Lady St. Loe had chance
-enough to learn her lesson, and was fortunate in that her share of the
-affair was visited only by a cross-examination and warning. She was not
-at all the sort of woman to brook being left out in the cold. She was
-too wise, of course, ever to have engulfed herself in a marriage of this
-sort, but in such a case, had she not managed to divert Elizabeth’s
-anger by some master stroke of wit and diplomacy, she would certainly
-not have languished of “woofull griefe” nor starved herself to death,
-like Lady Catherine, for sorrow.
-
-At such a time and in face of the fresh hubbub caused at Court by the
-marriage of Lady Mary Grey (“an unhappy chance and monstruoos,” comments
-Cecil, in a letter to the English Ambassador in France), the peace and
-security of Chatsworth offered themselves as a happy refuge against all
-complications. There is a grotesque humour in Cecil’s use of that word
-monstrous, for Lady Mary was almost a dwarf, and Keys, whom Cecil calls
-“the biggest gentleman in this Court,” had secured his post of Serjeant
-Porter owing to his magnificent size and height. He was twice Lady
-Mary’s age, and was a widower with several children. The Queen clapped
-him in the Fleet, and condemned Lady Mary to confinement in the houses
-of successive friends. The pair never met after their hasty wedding.
-
-Thus, on all sides, Court was a place of “dispeace,” while in Derbyshire
-Lady St. Loe had good neighbours, people of quality and substance, and
-was safe within her parks and palings. She did not share her royal
-mistress’s distrust of matrimony, for she was free to choose her next
-lord, and there was no reason why she should remain a widow longer than
-she could help.
-
-It is not to be suggested for a moment that she had no suitors and that
-she was not the subject of all kinds of matrimonial gossip. One Fowler
-(subsequently committed to the Tower in connection with the discovery of
-suspicious papers) opines in his “notes” that “either Lord Darcy or Sir
-John Thynne are to marry my Lady St. Loe, and not Harry Cobham.”
-Doubtless the Cobham match would have pleased her well, and she would
-have been quite in her element in the place which afforded a seat and a
-surname to that noble and splendid family upon whom the evil days of
-Jacobean confiscation and the betrayal of Sir Walter Raleigh had not yet
-fallen. A sister of Lord Cobham was married to Mr. Secretary Cecil, “and
-the match would have been advantageous, but possibly my Lady, with her
-deep insight into character, divined that the gentleman was not of the
-steady stuff which makes for worldly security.” Moreover the best
-matches are by no means to be found near the Court, and close at hand,
-in the same county, lived one greater than the Cobhams, a man whom many
-a maid and every widow would be proud to espouse. He was a widower, an
-earl, the owner of seven seats, bearer of a high government post, and he
-came of a long line of distinguished soldiers. Lady St. Loe went to work
-wisely. She had the assistance of her dear gossip and contemporary, Lady
-Cobham. No one could have acted the go-between more discreetly. Before
-long the fashionable world had something to talk about in the
-announcement of the fourth marriage of Bess Hardwick.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
- “A GREAT GENTLEMAN”
-
-
-The fourth husband of “Building Bess” was no less a person than George
-Talbot, sixth Earl of Shrewsbury. Though the name does not appear in the
-great roll of the prominent soldiers at the battle of Hastings, the
-first Talbot—then Talebot—of whom anything noteworthy is recorded, won
-the first title, a barony, for his family at the close of the career of
-William the First. Thenceforward the Talbots march magnificently through
-the history of England—great gentlemen, castellans, commanders,
-governors, judges, lords-lieutenant. They wielded authority in Wales,
-fought in France, Scotland, Ireland, Castile, occasionally fell under
-suspicion of conspiracy, and emerged without hurt. Once and once only
-was their pride humbled in the dust, when the hitherto invincible
-tactics of John Talbot, the greatest general of his day, the chief glory
-of all the Talbots before and since, were overcome by the generalship of
-the Maid of Orleans. It must have hit the great general very hard to
-find himself in prison on French soil for three long years at the hands
-of a woman. Neither force nor strategy freed him, but mere money. He had
-married a rich wife—heiress to all “Hallamshire,”[8] including the
-castle of Sheffield. In 1432 he agreed to pay a large ransom, and
-hurried back to England, bursting with purpose and revenge. Instantly he
-raised a fresh force, rejoined the English army in France, and fought
-with such terrible and triumphant results that his name, like that of
-Bonaparte, figured for generations as a bogy with which to scare
-fractious children. It was this tremendous campaign which won for his
-race the great earldom of Shrewsbury.
-
-George, the sixth earl, the great gentleman now dealt with, inherited
-all the administrative qualities of his ancestors, though he was less
-intimately associated with war than his father Francis. It was well also
-that his duties should have been to a greater extent civil and defensive
-than military and aggressive. For he had stepped into a great
-inheritance, and his burdens, as householder and county magnate, were
-stupendous. The manors and castles of Worksop, Welbeck, Bolsover,
-Sheffield, Tutbury, Wingfield, and Rufford were all his. He came into
-his own in 1560. The greatest gift he received in that year was the
-Garter which the Queen bestowed on him. Five years later he was
-appointed Lord-Lieutenant of the counties of York, Nottingham, and
-Derby. Subsequently the post of High Steward in the place of the unhappy
-fifth Duke of Norfolk was added to his honours. In the third year of his
-lieutenancy the affair with Bess Hardwick was in full swing.
-
-From both sides it was a reasonable and profitable alliance. He was a
-widower with sons and daughters who needed mothering. Her children
-needed a father. There was wealth enough to provide for all. Yet
-possibly family dissensions might arise amongst the young folk. But
-against this risk my lady had devised a splendid scheme of
-protection—the intermarriage of some of the children. They were but
-children, the two couples—Gilbert Talbot, the fifteen-year-old second
-son of the Lord-Lieutenant and Mary Cavendish, and the bride’s son Henry
-Cavendish, to whom Grace Talbot, the Earl’s daughter, was given as wife.
-
-The aforesaid childish marriages were settled and carried through
-forthwith. Shortly afterwards the wedding of their elders took place
-with due magnificence, while the bride, besides her Cavendish and Barlow
-properties, brought to her fourth husband the Gloucestershire estate of
-St. Loe.
-
-If the Cavendish epoch had been one of security and happiness, the
-Shrewsbury epoch promised to be one of sheer brilliance and delight. It
-is true there were one or two dissentient voices. Said a certain John
-Hall, under subsequent examination upon his arrest for Scottish
-conspiracy, that, though he served as a gentleman of the Earl’s
-household for some years, he so misliked my Lord’s marriage with this
-wife, as divers others of his friends did, that he resigned his post.
-Yet the Queen and her circle approved. That was the main thing. The
-following letter from a kinsman at Court emphasises the fact:—[9]
-
-
-“May it please you to understand that Mr. Wingfield hath delivered your
-venison to the Queen’s Majesty with my lord’s most humble commission,
-and your Ladyship with humble thanks from both your honours for her
-great goodness.
-
-“[I] assure your Ladyship of my faith, her Majesty did talk one long
-hour with Mr. Wingfield of my Lord and you so carefully, that, as God is
-my judge, I think your honours have no friend living that could have
-more consideration, nor more show love and great affection. In the end
-she asked when my Lady meant to come to the Court: he answered he knew
-not: then said she, ‘I am assured if she might have her own will she
-would not be long before she would see me.’ Then said, ‘I have been glad
-to see my Lady Saint-Loe, but now more desirous to see my Lady
-Shrewsbury.’ ‘I hope,’ said she, ‘my Lady hath known my good opinion of
-her; and thus much I assure you, there is no Lady in this land that I
-better love and like.’ Mr. Batleman can more at large declare unto your
-honour. And so with most humble commendations to my very good Lord, I
-wish to you both as the Queen’s Majesty doth desire; and so take my
-leave in humble wise. From St. John’s the 21st of October.
-
- “Your honours to command,
- “E. WINGFIELD.”
-
-
-There was certainly nothing whatever in this marriage to upset
-Elizabeth’s plans. Indeed, it really paved the way for her schemes and
-made it easier for her to utilise not only the Earl’s wealth, his
-authority and position, but all his country seats in turn for the
-greater security of her life and throne.
-
-My Lady Shrewsbury was forty-eight, my Lord had been but eight years an
-Earl. Time had not yet marked on his face the lines of anxiety and care
-which the next twenty-three years were to bring him. He was at the
-zenith of his career, and the Queen hinted mysteriously that ere long
-she would show him still more emphatic proofs of her trust and affection
-in so splendid a servitor. It is in a very happy and devoted vein that
-he writes love letters from Court just after marriage to his second
-bride, in which he addresses her as “sweet none.”[10]
-
-It is regrettable that these letters to his “none” are not more
-numerous. Otherwise the Earl’s correspondence all his life was enormous,
-and the masses of letters which mirror contemporary history and his
-duties in connection with them are nearly all comprised in that rich
-heritage of manuscript known as the Talbot Papers. Cecil is his constant
-correspondent. As Lord-Lieutenant of three such great counties he would
-naturally be kept _au courant_ of great happenings. Is there fear of
-French invasion? Immediately the Lords of the Privy Council send him
-instructions. He is to organise companies of demi-lances, to find horses
-for them—“a good strong and well-set gelding and a man on his back meet
-to wear a corselet and shoot a dagge” runs the specification. Did her
-Majesty receive “letters out of Spain”? Copies of the same were sent to
-the Earl “to the intent that you may thereby see what the humour and
-disposition of those parties [i.e. the King of Spain and his emissary]
-tend unto.” Did France goad Mary of Scotland into that unforgettable
-offence—the adoption of the English royal arms? Then also must his
-lordship be acquainted with the fact and its immense possibilities.
-Presently active Scottish hostility seemed imminent, and the letter
-which travelled to my Lord from Berwick to bid him have all his men in
-readiness to move to the Border is cumbrously and theatrically endorsed
-“Haste, haste, haste, haste, post haste with all possible haste.”
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _After a portrait at Rufford Abbey_
-
- GEORGE TALBOT, EARL OF SHREWSBURY
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _After a portrait in the possession of the Duke of Portland_
-
- ELIZABETH COUNTESS OF SHREWSBURY
-
- Page 38
-]
-
-The marriage of Mary and Darnley, the exciting news of the force raised
-by the rebellious Earls of Moray and Arran against their Queen
-immediately after the ceremony, the perilous position of Mary betwixt
-her enemies—between Moray’s force on one side, secretly encouraged by
-Elizabeth, and Elizabeth’s forces, supplemented by two thousand Irish
-and the Earl of Argyle’s company, on the other—the details of
-field-pieces and “harquebusses,” all these events and matters passed in
-review under the eyes of the splendid and cautious Earl of Shrewsbury.
-Scarcely a day went by but some important paper or letter, official or
-private, was put into his hands. At every turn he was helping to “make
-history,” while he was a keen spectator of the Scottish drama up to the
-point when Mary fled out of her own country to implore the aid and
-protection of her sister sovereign.
-
-It is now that the plot—Elizabeth’s plot which she had kept up her
-sleeve—begins to peep out. The first authentic news of it apparently
-went to the other Elizabeth, the newly made Countess of Shrewsbury, in
-the following letter from the English Court. The signature is torn off,
-but the correspondent has weighty news to tell, in spite of his
-deprecatory attitude towards mere rumours:—
-
-
-“My most humble duty remembered unto your honourable good Ladyship. If
-it were not for my bounden duty’s sake I would be loth to write, because
-there is so small certainty in occurrences, but (seeing I am bound to
-write) it is but small that I see with my own eyes that is worth
-writing, and therefore I am forced to supply by that I do hear; which I
-write as I hear by credible report, otherwise I should not write at all,
-and therefore if I do err it is pardonable. The news is here that my
-Lord your husband is sworn of the Privy Council; and that the Scottish
-Queen is on her journey to Tutbury, something against her will, and will
-be under my Lord’s custody there.”
-
-
-The rest of the letter is perhaps worth quoting, because it gives a
-picture of public events and suggests such a spacious background for the
-present life of Bess Hardwick. It deals with the war now beginning
-between Spain and the Netherlands, owing to the barbarous treatment of
-the latter by the Duke of Alva, and the commotion occasioned by it in
-France.
-
-
-“The report is that the Duke of Alva hath for the lack of money disarmed
-the most part of his army; and they are not paid for that is past; but
-rob and steal, and much molest the country. And being divers garrisons
-at Maestricht of the Walloons the Duke sent to discharge them and sent
-Spaniards in their place, who have shut the gates of the Spaniards and
-refuse to deliver the town before they are paid their due.... In France
-there is a great stir to let the Prince of Condé to join with the Prince
-of Orange, so that the King divides his force, the Duke of Anjou to stop
-the passage of the Prince of Condé, etc., etc.”
-
-
-The letter ends with intimate details:—
-
-
-“And so eftsoons Jesus preserve you and send my cousin Frances a good
-hour and your honour a glad grandmother.
-
-“Scribbled at London ... January, 1568.”
-
-
-Evidently this “Frances” is the eldest daughter of the Countess, who
-married Sir Henry Pierrepoint, and whose child is awaited.
-
-Matters as regards the Earl of Shrewsbury did not move so fast as one
-would expect. It was not till June of 1568 that the final orders reached
-the Earl to make ready his “castle” of Tutbury for the reception of his
-romantic royal prisoner. Mary was now at Carlisle, and the part which
-the Earl was to play in her entourage as suggested in contemporary
-letters has more the character of that of a prominent cavalier in a
-princely retinue than that of a military gaoler. The description in the
-French ambassador’s letter reads well:—
-
-
-“A castle named Tutbury, which is only one hundred miles from
-here”—London—“and is a very beautiful place as they say, especially for
-hunting, in which, whenever it takes place, the Earl of Shrewsbury, who
-has a portion of his estate in that neighbourhood, is ordered to give
-her his company, along with other Lords and gentlemen thereabout.”
-
-
-The Queen was feeling her way, slowly sounding the Shrewsburys’
-relatives, careful always to assert her appreciation not only of lord,
-but of lady. My Lord came to Court, and still her Majesty beat about the
-bush.
-
-The following letters[11] from the Earl belong to this epoch of the
-lives of the newly wedded pair:—
-
-
-“My dear none, being here arrived at Wingfield late yesternight from
-Rofford, though very weary in toiling about, yet thinking you would be
-desirous to hear from me, scribbled these few lines to let you
-understand that I was in health and wished you anights with me. I picked
-out a very good time, for since my coming from home I never had letters
-but these this morning from Gilbert, which I send you. I mind to-morrow,
-God willing, to be with you at Chatsworth: and in the meantime as
-occurrences [befall] to me you shall be partaker of them. I thank you,
-sweet none, for your baked capon, and chiefest of all for remembering of
-me. It will be late to-morrow before my coming to Chatsworth, seven or
-eight of the clock at the soonest: and so farewell, my true one.
-
-“This 28th June.
-
- “Your faithful husband,
- “G. SHREWSBURY.”
-
-
-“My dear none, having received your letter of the first of December
-which came in very good time, else had I sent one of these few remaining
-with me to have brought me word of your health, which I doubted of for
-that I heard not from you of all this time till now, which drove me in
-dumps, but now relieved again by your writing unto me. I thank you,
-sweet none, for your puddings and venison. The puddings have I bestowed
-in this wise: [a] dozen to my Lady Cobham, and as many to my L. Steward
-and unto my L. of Leicester: and the rest I have reserved to myself to
-eat in my chamber. The venison is yet at London, but I have sent for it
-hither.
-
-“I perceive Ned Talbot hath been sick, and [is] now past danger. I thank
-God I have such a none that is so careful over me and mine. God send me
-soon home to possess my greatest joy: if you think it is you, you are
-not deceived.
-
-“I will not forget to deal with the Master of the Rolls for young
-Knifton. He seems to be much my friend, and is now in dealing between
-Denenge and me, for the lease of Abbot Stake, agreed upon by me and
-Tamworth he should so do. He holds it at a thousand marks: and the
-Master of the Rolls hath driven it to five hundred pounds, which
-methinks too much for such a lease, yet because it lies so, as I am
-informed, amongst Gilbert’s lands, I have made my steward to offer four
-hundred pounds, and to get [delay] till the next term, because I would
-have your advice therein. And for that I live in hope to be with you
-before you can return answer again, you shall understand that this
-present Monday in the morning finding the Queen in the garden at good
-leisure, I gave her Majesty thanks that she had so little regard to the
-clamorous people of Bolsover[12] in my absence. She declared unto me
-what evil speech was against me, my nearness and state in housekeeping,
-and as much as was told her, which she now believes with as good words
-as I could wish, declaring that ere it were long I should well perceive
-she did so trust me as she did few. She would not tell me therein, but
-[I] doubt [not] it was about the custody of the Scottish Queen. Here is
-private speech that Gates and Vaughan should make suit to have her, but
-this day I perceive it is altered. I think before Sunday these matters
-will come to some pass, that we shall know how long our abode shall be,
-but howsoever it falls out, I will not fail but be with you before
-Christmas, or else you shall come to me.
-
-“The plague is dispersed far abroad in London, so that the Queen keeps
-her Christmas here, and goeth not to Greenwich as it was meant. My Lady
-Cobham, your dear friend, wishes your presence here: she loves you well.
-I tell her I have the cause to love her best, for that she wished me so
-well to speed as I did: and as the pen writes so the heart thinks, that
-of all earthly joys that hath happened unto me, I thank God chiefest for
-you: for with you I have all joy and contentation of mind, and without
-you death is more pleasant to me than life if I thought I should long be
-from you: and therefore, good wife, do as I will do, hope shortly of our
-meeting, and farewell, dear sweet none. From Hampton Court this Monday
-at midnight, for it is every night so late before I go to my bed, being
-at play in the privy chamber at Premiro, where I have lost almost a
-hundred pounds, and lacked my sleep.
-
- “Your faithful husband till death,
- “G. SHREWSBURY.
-
-“Wife, tell my daughter Maule that I am not pleased with her that she
-hath not written to me with her sister: yet will I not forget her and
-the rest, and pray God to bless them all.
-
-“To my wife the Countess of Shrewsbury at Tutbury give this.”
-
-
-The daughter “Maule” here named is evidently Mary. Besides Gilbert and
-Grace Talbot, married as stated to the Cavendish daughter and son of
-Lady Shrewsbury, the Earl’s children were Francis, the eldest (who
-married Anne Herbert, daughter of William Earl of Pembroke, and did not
-inherit, since he died in 1582); Mary, who married Sir George Saville,
-Kt.; Catherine, who married Henry Earl of Pembroke; Edward, who married
-Jane (elder daughter of Cuthbert Lord Ogle, co-heiress with the wife of
-Charles Cavendish), and succeeded to his father’s title, after Gilbert,
-as eighth earl; and Henry Talbot, who married Elizabeth, daughter of Sir
-William Rayner, and left two daughters.
-
-The next letter from the Earl gives the Queen’s important decision:—
-
-
-“My dear none, I have received your letter of the 8th of December,
-wherein appeareth your desire for my soon coming. What my desire is
-thereunto, I refer the same to your construsion.[13] If I so judge of
-time, methinks time longer since my coming hither without you, my only
-joy, than I did since I married you: such is faithful affection, which I
-never tasted so deeply of before. This day or to-morrow we shall know
-great likelihood of our despatch. I think it will be Christmas Even
-before I shall arrive at Tutbury. Things fall out very evil against the
-Scots’ Queen. What she shall do yet is not resolved of.
-
-“As it chances, I am glad that I am here: for if I were not I were like
-to have most part of my leases granted over my head: there is such suit
-for leases in reversion of the Duchy. My park that I have in keeping
-called Morley Park is granted in reversion for thirty years, wherein I
-have made some stir. My good neighbour hath a promise of it, and if I
-can get it put in I am about to get a friend of mine to put the forest
-of the Peak in his book. I have offered a thousand pounds for a lease in
-reversion for thirty years. I must pay Denege five hundred and forty-one
-for his lease of Stoke. How money will be had for these matters assure
-you I know not. I will make such means to Mr. Mildmay for the stay of
-Tutbury tithe, as I will not be prevented: for it is high time, for
-there was never such striving and prancing for leases in reversion as be
-now at this present.
-
-“My L. Steward hath been sick and in danger, but now well. My L.
-Sheffield is departed this life; and my L. Paget just after. Your black
-man is in health.
-
- “Your faithful husband till my end,
- “G. SHREWSBURY.
-
-“From the Court this Monday the 13th of December. Now it is certain the
-Scots’ Queen comes to Tutbury to my charge. In what order I cannot
-ascertain you.
-
- “To my wife the Countess of Shrewsbury
- at Tutbury give this.”
-
-
-It was not till just the close of 1568 that Shrewsbury was certain of
-his new duty and in a position to write that triumphant postscript.
-Within a month, in the beginning of the New Year, he had taken over from
-Sir Francis Knollys the task which was to prove so engrossing,
-stupendous, so provocative of every imaginable complication, official
-and domestic.
-
-Imagine the excitement of my Lady at such a juncture! She knew the
-Scottish Queen only by hearsay, and her curiosity must have been kept at
-boiling pitch while her heart swelled with importance in the
-anticipation of the additional chatelaine’s duties thrust upon her by
-the august guest. She had known what it was to deal with a princess in
-captivity, for she had been acquainted with Elizabeth before her
-accession. The present matter was far more vital, more portentous. The
-Queen who rode wearily from Bolton Castle to Sheffield and thence to
-Tutbury must be humoured as Queen, served as queens are served, but a
-network of rules were being prepared, not only for her own retinue and
-the household, but for earl and lady.
-
-The Earl, foreseeing all such domestic complications, had asked the
-Council for directions as to the treatment of his prisoner.
-“Remembrances for my L. of Shrewsbury” stands at the head of notes, in
-his handwriting, all duly numbered. Of these No. 5 reads, “For my wife’s
-access unto her, if she send for her.”
-
-To this the reply in Cecil’s handwriting is, “The Queen of Scots may see
-the Countess, if she is sick, or for any other necessary cause, but
-rarely. No other gentlewoman must be allowed access to her.” The
-remainder of the rules are strict enough, and the pleasant country-house
-picture drawn by the French Ambassador, De la Forest, in the letter
-quoted, is rudely effaced by these details. Shrewsbury is to be well
-fortified by an array of facts against the Scottish Queen, lest her
-pleading should win his sympathies and her captive condition arouse his
-indignation too deeply. How the regulations at every turn reveal
-Elizabeth of England—at once autocratic and apprehensive of her own
-importance, at once trustful and suspicious! The document is so vital a
-part of the household appanage of the Shrewsburys from this moment until
-the close of their wardership that it is worth quoting in the concise
-form in which, partly in the original and partly as abstract, it is
-given in Leader’s admirable _Mary Queen of Scots in Captivity_.
-
-
-“A memorial of certain thinges imparted by the Q. Matie to the erle of
-Shrewsbery, for the causes following. Gyven at Hampton Courte, the
-xxvjth day of January 1568, the xjth year of her Mates reign. The Q. has
-chosen him in consequence of his approved loyalty and faithfulness, and
-the ancient state and blood from which he is descended, to have the
-custody of the Queen of Scots.
-
-“The Earl is to treat her, being a Queen, of the Queen Elizabeth’s
-blood, with the reverence and honour meet for a person of his state and
-calling and for her degree. He must ask Lord Scrope and the Vice
-Chamberlain [Knollys] about the ceremonies used by them towards her,
-that ‘she may not find herself to be in the usage of herself abused, nor
-by this removing to have her State amended.’
-
-“Whatever honour he gives her he must take care that by no pretence she
-finds any means to gain any rule over him to practise for her escape.
-She must have no opportunity either to escape nor yet to practise with
-anyone to help her to escape. He doubtless knows how important it is to
-the Queen’s honour and reputation and quietness that Mary does not
-depart without the Queen’s assent. No persons must be in conference with
-her except those already placed about her as her ordinary servants, and
-those who have special licence from the Queen. The latter for no longer
-time than is mentioned in the licence.
-
-“If any persons coming to visit the Earl or anyone in his household,
-proffer to come to her presence, or to have conference with any
-belonging to her, or if she invites them to come to her presence in the
-house or abroad, under colour of hunting, or other pastime, he shall
-warn them to forbear, and if needful use his authority to make them
-desist, and send their names to the Queen.
-
-“Persons coming out of Scotland to see her, if of degrees above that of
-servants, or if noted to be busy men and practicers, must be remitted to
-the Queen for licence. If they are mean servants or persons coming only
-to have relief of her, he shall not be so straight towards them as to
-give her occasion to say she is kept a prisoner, and yet he must
-understand their errands and not suffer them to abide where she shall
-be, or to hover about the country.
-
-“He must make a view of all her ordinary servants when he first takes
-the charge, and cause a household roll to be made of those necessary and
-of those who were with her at Bolton. With the advice of the Vice
-Chamberlain, he must reduce the number, omitting those who are
-superfluous and who are fit rather for practices than service.... Her
-diet must be kept at the former rate, and payments made by the clerk who
-was sent for that purpose from the Queen’s household. He (my Lord
-Shrewsbury) must consult the Vice Chamberlain as to the watching of the
-house, as he knows her condition and the disposition of those about her.
-The Queen intended her first to be placed at Tutbury Castle but as the
-house is not fit, if she is nearer the Earl’s house of Sheffield than
-Tutbury, she shall remain there till further orders. If she is at
-Tutbury, it is left to the Earl’s discretion to allow her to remain, or
-to remove her to Sheffield or any other of the Earl’s houses.
-
-“Because it is thought that she will try to make the Earl think her
-cause worthy of favour, and that she is not well used in being
-restrained from liberty, the Queen has ordered, that beside the
-knowledge which the Earl has of the presumptions produced against her
-for the murder of her husband, and her unlawful marriage with the
-principal murderer Bothwell, he shall also be informed of other
-particulars too long to write here, that he may answer her and her
-favourers. He may say, as of himself, that if she is known to utter any
-speeches touching the Queen’s honour or doings, it may be an occasion to
-publish all her actions, which once being done cannot be revoked, but
-many things must follow to her prejudice.
-
-“The Earl will be allowed wages for 40 persons at 6d. a day, to be used
-at his discretion.”
-
-
-As a matter of fact the house at Tutbury was certainly “not fit” for the
-reception of any guest. The Shrewsburys made application to the Queen
-for hangings and necessaries in the way of furniture; and these were
-promised. But they did not arrive. Mary was growing obstreperous and
-visited all her misery and annoyance on her present gaoler, Sir Francis
-Knollys. He, poor man, was in despair, with his wife dying, and his
-piteous requests for discharge from duty unheeded by Elizabeth. No
-wonder he wrote at last to say that he would take the matter into his
-own hands, “and as sure as God is in heaven, repair to Court, and suffer
-any punishment that may be laid upon him, rather than continue in such
-employment.”
-
-And still the much-needed furniture was not in its place. At last my
-Lady Shrewsbury, no doubt in desperation, took down such hangings as
-there were at Sheffield, and with the help of the borrowed details set
-to work to prepare Tutbury. A supplementary instalment of household
-articles from Court helped to complete the necessaries. The journey from
-Bolton began on January 25th, in morose, biting weather. It brought Mary
-of Scotland to the single gate in the wall surrounding Tutbury on the
-afternoon of February 4th, a Friday. The position of this place was fair
-enough in the beautiful valley of the Dove, but it was not all the
-French Ambassador imagined it, and my lady and her household were sore
-put to it to make it habitable. The scene of commotion and bustle must
-have palpitated with drama. With messengers bringing letters and the
-rumours and counter-rumours which filtered through from the country folk
-the ten days of Queen Mary’s journey southward must have been a period
-of extraordinary tension for all immediately concerned. The condition of
-that busy, expectant household at Tutbury under my Lady’s command is
-best suggested in the imaginary dialogue overleaf.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
- HUBBUB
-
-
- _Scene_: The presence chamber of Tutbury Castle on a raw day of
- February, 1569. A casement flapping in the wind. Crimson velvet
- drapery lies on the floor, and two women squat there, stitching at
- it. Beyond, through an open door, a suite of smaller rooms full of
- furniture.
-
-_First Sewing Woman._ You tug too much of the velvet over to you, Mary.
-Let be, and be content with your share.
-
-_Second Sewing Woman._ I only desire to help you, Richardyne. I scarcely
-can hold my needle for the cold.
-
-_1st S.W._ Then shut the window, you fool.
-
-_2nd S.W._ Nay, fool I am not, though I be younger than you. For I did
-not set the window open. It was the cook. Call him to fasten it.
-
-_1st S.W._ The cook indeed! His part is to bake and stew, not hang out
-of the casements.
-
-_2nd S.W._ Will there be a great feast, do you think, when this Queen
-comes?
-
-_1st S.W._ There will be feasts every night.
-
-_2nd S.W._ Lord! how happy it will be! They say she loves dancing.
-
-_1st S.W._ Who told you this?
-
-_2nd S.W._ The post that brought my Lord’s letter from Bolton. He knew,
-for he spoke like a Scottish man.
-
-_1st S.W._ Now I see why the fiddler has come from Chatsworth.
-
-_2nd S.W._ Yes, to make music he has come. He begged my Lady so sore to
-keep him here that she promised the poor wretch at last——
-
-_1st S.W._ There he is, playing down by the kitchen.
-
-_2nd S.W._ He is coming here. [_Gets up hastily and trips over the
-velvet. Enter a youth with branches of laurel and ivy. He puts them on a
-table, and is about to retire when the fiddler enters playing and
-bowing._]
-
-_The Youth._ What do you here, old scraping John?
-
-_Fiddler._ More than you, fellow of discord, with idle arms.
-
-_The Youth_ [_angrily_]. They are only waiting to pound thee.
-
-_Fiddler._ I am my Lord’s servant more than you. He has many boys like
-you who can stand and stare, but only one who can fiddle.
-
-_The Youth_ [_advancing_]. Look to thyself. Thy catgut will not shield
-thee much.
-
-_Fiddler_ [_from behind the table_]. Help, help, Master Crompe!
-
-_The Women_ [_rising and flinging the velvet over the chair_]. Help,
-help—porter, cook, men, all of you!
-
-_1st S.W._ [_to the youth_]. Boy, do not brawl in the presence chamber.
-
-_2nd S.W._ No, no, it is foolish. We each must work to-day that we may
-dance another day. And how can we dance if you break the fiddler’s head?
-
-_The Youth_ [_furious_]. He is a lewd fellow, smooth and gentle to you
-wenches, but a liar——
-
-_Fiddler._ Master Crompe. He calls me a liar. [_Enter the Steward,
-Crompe._]
-
-_Crompe._ Stop your bellowing, all. You, Fiddler—drown the chatter with
-your music, if music you must make. Her Ladyship comes. You—boy, go to
-the bed-chambers above and help to carry down the napery which she will
-give you. Oh! there is more to accomplish than any hands can do. The
-stables are not yet ready, two of the scullions are drunk and must go,
-the carpenters are short of wood for the mending of the walls of my
-Lord’s guardroom, the roof of the dining-hall leaks, and the roll of
-canvas for the wall behind the dais, which is mossy and wet, has not
-come from France. [_Goes out shaking his head._]
-
-_2nd S.W._ [_mimicking him_]. Lord, oh, Lord! the sky will tumble on our
-heads.
-
-_1st S.W._ Get back to work, girl. These velvets are for the Scots
-Queen’s bedroom.
-
-_2nd S.W._ Is that true? I will stitch hard if—Master Fiddler will play.
-
-_Fiddler._ All work, not forgetting the business of eating, goes better
-to music. [_Begins to play, walking up and down the room._]
-
-_2nd S.W._ [_laughing_]. I cannot sew. There is an itch in my ankles.
-
-_1st S.W._ Fudge!
-
-_2nd S.W._ Do you think it is the plague that I have?
-
-_Fiddler._ It means that you must dance and not sew.
-
- [_2nd S.W., jumping up, gathers up her petticoats, and prances in
- time. The Fiddler plays on, and the youth, entering with napery,
- thrusts it on to the large table and joins the dance._]
-
-_2nd S.W._ Faster, Master Fiddler, till feet are as hot as toasts.
-
- [_In the middle of it, with a jingle of keys and a rustle of skirts,
- enter my Lady of Shrewsbury with a long roll of paper in her
- hands._]
-
-_Bess_ [_in the doorway_]. Is this how my command is obeyed?
-
- [_The music dies away with a trickle, the dancers fall back against
- the wall._]
-
-_1st S.W._ [_rises and curtsies_]. Richardyne’s feet were cold, my Lady,
-and she danced to save them from blains.
-
-_Bess_ [_drily_]. A mess of mustard were the quicker way, I think, to
-cure _that_. [_To the youth._] And you—have you also frozen toes?
-
-_Youth._ Y—yes, my Lady.
-
-_Bess._ Then go and keep watch outside the castle gate in the wind. That
-will warm you quick enow. You can play Jumping Joan all the while and
-nobody to stop you. But so soon as you see a light upon the hill it is
-the signal that the Queen has passed the woods and is close. [_Exit
-Youth._] [_To the Fiddler._] Remember—you—you must not intrude if you
-are to be suffered here. You must stay in the kitchens till you are
-wanted.
-
-_Fiddler._ My Lady, I went looking for you and thought to find you here
-to know my duties.
-
-_Bess._ Like enough! Make no noise till you are ordered. [_He turns to
-go._] Stop! What tunes can you play?
-
-_Fiddler._ A hundred and more—“The Derby Ram,” “The Nun’s Green
-Rangers,” “The Unconscionable Bachelors,” “The Derby Hero,” “The
-Bakewell”——
-
-_Bess._ Silence! I do not desire to listen to your dictionary. How do
-you call the air you played but now?
-
-_Fiddler._ The title I know not, my Lady, but the song of it begins—
-
- You have a lodging in my heart
- For which you pay no rent.
-
-_Bess._ Marry, and you chose that to greet the Queen?
-
-_Fiddler._ It is for you to choose, my Lady.
-
-_Bess._ Go to, go to. Back to the kitchens with your fiddle. I will
-choose later. [_Enter Master Crompe._] Crompe, Crompe, did you hear what
-he said—the name of his tune?
-
-_Crompe._ Yes, my Lady.
-
-_Bess._ He is an impudent fellow, Crompe.
-
-_Crompe._ Innocent I trust, my Lady.
-
-_Bess._ There was a wink in his eye, Crompe. [_Stamps her foot._] “You
-have a lodging in my heart”—forsooth!—“For which you pay no rent!” Mark
-that, Crompe. It mislikes me much. He should play that to my Lord
-Treasurer at Court. An’ the next letter gives no surety of that I will
-no more tear down my tapestries to furnish a prison-house.
-
-_Crompe_ [_soothingly_]. My Lord has her Majesty’s promise in writing
-that the furnishments shall be sent. And for the present we can make
-shift.
-
-_Bess._ Well, well, time passes and nothing is finished. [_Seats herself
-at the table._] Bring me the ink, good Crompe, that I may check the
-appointments in the Scots Queen’s chambers. [_Crompe goes out._] Crompe,
-Crompe, who has littered this room with this green stuff?
-
-_1st S.W._ I heard Mistress Elizabeth Cavendish command the branches to
-be gathered for garlands.
-
-_Bess._ Garlands?
-
-_2nd S.W._ For the Queen’s welcome.
-
-_Bess._ Idleness and foolery. Garlands! [_Catches sight of her daughter
-Elizabeth in the doorway._] Bet, why do you bring confusion into my
-plans?
-
-_Elizabeth._ Lady mother, there were no flowers. I have sought in the
-lanes, and there is no joy in them. And so I would twine the laurels and
-ivy into chains and see the leaves shine in the firelight.
-
-_Bess_ [_sharply_]. No time for garlands. There will be chains enough
-truly. Go, fetch me this green stuff away. Throw it out of the window,
-Crompe. Bet, fetch your needle and mend me yonder cushion. [_Goes to
-door and calls._] Mrs. Glasse! Wenches! [_Women come running. Mrs.
-Glasse, the housekeeper, follows with a bundle of linen._]
-
-_Bess._ Listen to me, all of you. Here is my Lord’s tale of the things
-which must be ready. As I read so do you answer, Mrs. Glasse. Thirty
-pallets must be ready.
-
-_Mrs. Glasse._ Only twenty have mattresses, my Lady.
-
-_Bess._ Have you not five feather-beds, woman?
-
-_Mrs. G._ Only three, my Lady. The two others have been taken for the
-captain of the soldiers that is coming.
-
-_Bess._ By whose order?
-
-_Mrs. G._ I know not.
-
-_Bess._ Take them away instantly and put instead the old mattress from
-the old state-couch. The other five must make shift without mattresses.
-
-_Mrs. G._ My Lady, there are not pillows for more than fifteen beds.
-
-_Bess._ But yesterday I gave you out ten new ones.
-
-_Mrs. G._ We still lack fifteen, save your Ladyship will allow those of
-chaff to be used.
-
-_Bess._ Use anything, all you can lay hands upon. Lord, Lord! all my
-substance is swallowed, and still you cry “More pillows!” Beshrew me if
-you do not eat pillows. Alice, are the ewers and basins in place?
-
-_Alice._ Yes, m’lady, though one is cracked and two were broken early
-this morning by my Lord’s hound, which sprang through the window, so
-that I dropped them in my fright.
-
-_Bess._ Lord! these people eat ewers as fast as pillows! Take away the
-cracked one and put brass ewers for the other two. No, stay. Leave the
-cracked one. They say this Queen’s folk have a crazy fancy for little
-dogs and darlings. If we place them new pitchers, they will only break
-those also.
-
-_Alice._ Little French dogs...? Oh, they will be sport!
-
-_Bess._ Hold thy idiot’s tongue. Pray Heaven they do not bring monkeys
-also, like Lady Catherine Grey[14] when she went to the Tower. Kate,
-where is the Queen’s coverlet? [_Girls bring it forward._] There is an
-ugly darn in it. It shall be hidden with some gold lace. Fetch my Lord’s
-old riding-cloak and rip the galloon quickly from it. Do not use the
-broad, but the narrow. It will seem well enough. To work, to work!
-
- [_Re-enter Crompe._]
-
-_Crompe._ The cook and his fellows be ready, my Lady.
-
-_Bess._ Let him come. [_Enter a procession of kitchen men with dishes._]
-
-_Bess_ [_reading from the roll before her_]. A pair of capons stuffed
-with chestnuts.
-
-_Cook._ The garnishing has yet to be done, my Lady.
-
-_Bess._ A brisket of pork.
-
-_Cook._ Boy—bring it round.
-
- [_A cook’s boy parades with the dish._]
-
-_Bess._ Six carp—these should be served hot.
-
-_Cook._ My Lady, they simmer slowly.
-
-_Bess_ [_reading_]. A roast of beef.
-
- [_Two boys parade it and pass on._]
-
-_Bess_ [_going on with the list, while the dishes are presented in
-turn_.]
-
-Hare with little jellies.
-
-Plover trussed and stuffed.
-
-Wheaten cakes.
-
-A mess of furmity.
-
-A heron stewed. You dolts, this should be heated!
-
-_Cook._ My Lady, my Lady—the ovens will heat it again quickly. I brought
-it hither that your Ladyship should taste the sauce. [_Presents a spoon.
-Bess tastes._]
-
-_Bess._ I mislike the onion. And for a Queen, there is too much aniseed.
-Mark that if the dish goes untouched.
-
-_Cook._ My Lady, they say this Queen will bring her own
-tasting-gentleman.
-
-_Bess._ Surely, yes, surely. Who will she not bring? Her
-tasting-gentleman to see she is not poisoned by you, Master Cook.
-Swallow the insult and say your prayers and be sparing of your herbs in
-future. You were always too set upon aniseed, and ’tis fit only for the
-colic, to my thinking. Get on, get on with your dishes.... H’m! the
-pasties ... here is only one of liver. I told Crompe to command two ...
-two of liver and two of apples. [_The pasties are presented._]
-
-_Bess._ Fifty loaves.
-
-_Cook._ Thirty-eight are here.
-
-_Bess_ [_angrily_]. Always something lacking, it seems. A plague, you
-fellows! Understand me, Cook, if the castle goes hungry you shall go
-more hungry, and your purse still more. Briskets, sallets, eggs,
-cheeses—where are they? Crompe, here—take you the bill, and if anything
-lacks you know who shall first go supperless. Not the Queen, and not
-your master and lady. Nor the Queen’s folk either. But you, Crompe—do
-you hear me? You!
-
-_Crompe_ [_agitated_]. Yes, my Lady. Indeed, my Lady.... I have made
-provision to your order ... for twenty persons.
-
-_Bess._ Twenty? And I have told you forty....
-
-_Crompe._ Thirty beds said Mrs. Glasse.
-
-_Bess._ Mrs. Glasse knows nothing. Dare you scream ever to me of Mrs.
-Glasse, Crompe? [_More quietly._] Listen, listen. The Queen brings five
-gentlemen—hungry riding gentlemen; six gentlewomen—weary riding women.
-God help us for their airs and graces, their wants and their want-nots!
-And the gentlemen must have their men. God help us again! Three in
-number these men. And the gentlewomen will bring two wives to wait on
-them, and there will be fourteen servitors, three cooks. Crompe, cease
-that arithmetic of your fingers, for it incenses me!—Four boys, ten
-wenches and children——
-
-_Crompe_ [_aghast, counting on his fingers behind his back_]. ’Tis
-forty-eight without the children, my Lady.
-
-_Bess._ Well, well, can I not add two and two as well as you, Crompe?
-Does it help me if you stand there with a mouth like a porringer?
-
-_Crompe._ But the children, my Lady!
-
-_Bess._ And the horses, Crompe!
-
-_Crompe._ Then there will be grooms also.
-
-_Bess._ Oil your wits, Crompe, and think of the grooms. Man alive! if
-you stand in that spot the world will take you for a root of mandragora,
-to be torn out, howling, by dogs! Stir, stir! Do somewhat, or, if you
-cannot of yourself, remember you have a mistress, my good fool!
-[_Rustles out into the corridor._]
-
-_Crompe_ [_aside_]. Who should ever forget it?
-
-_2nd S.W._ [_jumping up, points through the casement_]. See, there is
-something. A boy runs ... ’tis a post. My Lady, my Lady.
-
- [_Re-enter Lady Shrewsbury._]
-
-_2nd S.W._ My Lady ... there is a fire lighted on that hill, and a boy
-comes running.
-
-_Bess._ Then the Frenchwoman is upon us. For God’s sake leave your
-stitching, and mend the rest with pins and nails as you best can! The
-carpenter shall aid you. To the Queen’s bedchamber—quick, quick!
-[_Drives them in front of her._] Crompe, you follow.... No—go to the
-stables, the kitchens. Tell the men to bring more coals and bigger
-logs.... [_Exeunt.... Her voice pursues the servants down the
-corridors._] Pile high the fires! Higher! More logs! Have the torches
-ready! Pile high the fires!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
- MAKE-BELIEVE
-
-
-All the mighty fuss and preparation aforesaid sufficed only to make
-Tutbury barely habitable. The airy, pleasant impressions of the French
-Ambassador were literally castles in the air compared with the fastness
-itself to which Mary of Scotland travelled. To begin with, her retinue
-numbered sixty persons, and Heaven knows where they all slept that first
-night. Mary’s own rooms were small enough, and she complained bitterly
-of them and of the condition of the whole building. Here is her
-description in a subsequent letter:—
-
-
-“I am in a walled enclosure, on the top of a hill, exposed to all the
-winds and inclemencies of heaven. Within the said enclosure, resembling
-that of the wood of Vincennes, there is a very old hunting lodge, built
-of timber and plaster, cracked in all parts, the plaster adhering
-nowhere to the woodwork and broken in numberless places; the said lodge
-distant three fathoms or thereabouts from the walls, and situated so low
-that the rampart of earth which is behind the wall is on a level with
-the highest point of the building, so that the sun can never shine upon
-it on that side, nor any fresh air come to it; for which reason it is so
-damp, that you cannot put any piece of furniture in that part without
-its being in four days completely covered with mould. I leave you to
-think how this must act upon the human body; and, in short, the greater
-part of it is rather a dungeon for base and abject criminals than the
-habitation fit for a person of my quality, or even of a much lower....
-The only apartments that I have for my own person consist—and for the
-truth of this I can appeal to all those that have been here—of two
-little rooms, so excessively cold, especially at night, that, but for
-the ramparts and entrenchments of curtains and tapestry which I have had
-made, it would not be possible for me to stay in them in the daytime;
-and out of those who have sat up with me at night during my illnesses,
-scarcely one has escaped without fluxion, cold, or some disorder.”
-
-
-As for the gay hunting parties which had been anticipated, the only
-exercise allowed her was in a palisaded vegetable patch called by
-courtesy a garden.
-
-The first fortnight of that time must have placed a severe strain on the
-temper and endurance of the autocratic chatelaine. She was not to have
-access to the royal prisoner, she must obey the orders of her
-gaoler-husband, himself constantly on tenter-hooks lest his cranky abode
-should suffer sudden attack from Mary’s friends, lest sickness should
-attack her, or quarrels be brewed between her motley household and his
-own. My Lady Bess—for once—must keep herself well in the background and
-still contrive provision for that big household. Doubtless it was she
-who backed the Earl in his determination to secure at once an
-understanding with the English Queen as to the household expenditure of
-the prisoner. He put in a claim for £500 as a preliminary, and a weekly
-allowance of £52 was arranged. Whether he received it remains to be
-seen. Mary was not yet entirely a prisoner. That is to say she did not
-realise herself as one. Her sister-queen was too crafty to permit that.
-Shrewsbury, who found Mary calm and, at the outset, bearing household
-inconveniences cheerfully—hopeful that they were but temporary—gave her
-a little leash here and there. She evidently insisted on seeing Bess
-Shrewsbury. “The Queen continueth daily resort unto my wife’s chamber,
-where, with the Lady Leviston and Mrs. Seaton, she useth to sit working
-with the needle, in which she much delighteth, and in devising of works;
-and her talk is altogether of indifferent and trifling matters without
-ministering any sign of secret dealing and practice.” So wrote my Lord
-gaoler to reassure all at Court who might suspect him of insufficient
-strictness. The fact is, a long and detailed letter to Sir William Cecil
-from Nicholas White, the first visitor of importance who had spoken at
-length with Mary at Tutbury, had sounded the alarm. “If I,” says this
-gentleman, “might give advice there should be very few subjects in this
-land have access to or conference with this lady. For, beside that she
-is a goodly personage ... she hath withal an alluring grace, a pretty
-Scottish accent, and a searching wit crowned with mildness. Fame might
-move some to relieve her, and glory joined to gain might stir others to
-adventure much for her sake. Then joy is a lively infective sense, and
-carrieth many persuasions to the heart which ruleth all the rest. Mine
-own affection by seeing the Queen’s majesty, our sovereign, is doubled,
-and thereby I guess what sight might work in others.” This was the
-impression she made on a young and gallant courtier loyal enough to
-Elizabeth. Here, again, she is in the form of a veritable problem as
-viewed by her first warder, Knollys, who delivered her into Shrewsbury’s
-charge. Knollys also pours out his impressions to Cecil:—
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, from the picture at Hardwick
- Hall
- By permission of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire_
-
- MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS
-]
-
-
-“This lady and princess is a notable woman; she seemeth to regard no
-ceremonious honour beside the acknowledging of her estate regal; she
-sheweth a disposition to speak much, to be bold, to be pleasant, and to
-be very familiar. She sheweth a great desire to be avenged of her
-enemies, she sheweth a readiness to expose herself to all perils in hope
-of victory, she delighteth much to hear of hardiness and valiancy,
-commending by name all approved hardy men of her country, although they
-be her enemies, and she concealeth no cowardice even in her friends. The
-thing that most she thirsteth after is victory, and it seemeth to be
-indifferent to her to have her enemies diminished either by the sword of
-her friends, or by the liberal promises and rewards of her purse, or by
-division and quarrels raised among themselves: so that for victory’s
-sake pain and peril seemeth pleasant unto her: and in respect of
-victory, wealth and all things seemeth to her contemptible and vile. Now
-what is to be done with such a lady and a princess, or whether such a
-princess and lady to be nourished in one’s bosom? or whether it be good
-to halt and dissemble with such a lady I refer to your judgment.”
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby_
-
- MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS’ APARTMENTS AND DUNGEONS AT TUTBURY
-
- Page 66
-]
-
-It did not take Shrewsbury and his lady long to realise what they had
-undertaken to nourish in their bosom. The great thing was to distract
-her with light and little things. Of these she had sufficient at first
-to prevent her from much brooding in the intervals of writing her vivid
-and endless letters to France, to Scotland, to Burghley, and to the
-English Queen. Gentleman visitors being practically taboo, there
-remained only the Countess of Shrewsbury as a set-off from Mary’s own
-ladies. These were few—Mrs. Bruce and Lady Livingston, who was ailing,
-while of the “four Maries,” whose beauty and grace helped to weave the
-romantic legend of the vanished Court at Holyrood, there remained in the
-royal service but one, Mary Seton. Her Queen took a special interest in
-her, and was very dependent on her. Mary Seton surely knew her mistress
-through and through. Her post must at times have been one of great risk
-and mental torture. She was constantly in personal attendance, dealing
-with the Queen’s wardrobe and dressing her hair—for in this, history
-says, she was as clever as any skilled perruquier. Mary at first
-scarcely had a rag to cover her. Two bits of black velvet and some
-darned underclothing had been doled out to her, by Elizabeth, on her
-arrival in England. Much scorn and merriment they surely caused in the
-Scotch Queen’s closet! Clothing to wrap her, hangings—that veritable
-“rampart” of tapestries of which Mary spoke in the letter quoted—were
-necessary for her existence, and she would have her environment gracious
-and artistic even if the tapestries were of sacking. With the aid, no
-doubt, of Bess the chatelaine, some appearance of regality was contrived
-and maintained—so the letters of the day show—as best might be. The
-Shrewsburys had no objection to that. Everyone entered apparently on the
-surface into the little game of make-believe which “this Queen here” (as
-she is constantly described in letters from the houses in which she was
-immured) played throughout the fifteen years of her life under the
-Earl’s roof. For Mary was ever an arch-romanticist. This sense of
-romance constituted two-thirds of her attraction. Both Queens were
-playing waiting games, but Mary was determined to play hers effectively
-in spite of all conditions. And thus we have that vivid picture of her
-pretence court carried on under the eye of Bess Shrewsbury. The Scots
-Queen, seated on her dais under her canopy bearing the elusive legend
-“En ma fin est mon commencement,” issued her orders touching her
-household, received eagerly all scraps of news which filtered through to
-her and any visitors that were permitted. But the more interesting part
-was that of the Earl’s lady, who stood as the social barrier between the
-outer world, so full of stirring incident, and the mock court indoors.
-How much to tell her Scottish majesty and how little, what gossip to
-retail and what to suppress, was no light task for a talkative,
-energetic lady, who knew the ins and outs not only of the English Court
-but the character of its mistress. Mary was always good company.
-Elizabeth gave her subjects plenty to talk about. One wonders, in the
-light of a certain letter which Mary afterwards wrote to the Queen, how
-far[15] Bess Shrewsbury allowed her tongue at this juncture to trip out
-of sheer vivacity and desire to please her prisoner-guest. Just now,
-however, it is too early to imagine intrigue in this direction. The
-women could safely discuss clothes and the new fashion of doing the
-hair. Mary Seton was acknowledged to be the best “busker of hair in any
-country,” “and every other day she had a new device of head-dressing,
-without any cost, and yet setteth forth a woman gaily well.” Mary loved
-her wigs, her headdresses, embroidery, her little pets, and the
-contriving of presents of needlework. With these Bess could sympathise.
-On occasion she wanted French silks, and when Mary wrote to France a
-list of goods which she desired, she would send for a length of silk for
-my Lady, and a friendly transaction took place between the two. Truly a
-charming relationship! And all the time Mary was not too bored, for she
-was writing love letters to her new suitor—the Duke of Norfolk.
-
-Let us take in the political situation for a moment. It was the spring
-of 1569—just two years since the murder of Darnley, since when Mary had
-the impression of a procession of violent events to wipe out of her
-mind. Events since that horrible night had travelled at a wild speed.
-Her abasement before Bothwell, her desperate game of bluff—that is to
-say, her mad marriage with him, in spite of the opposition of all her
-friends, while she yet wore her discreet mourning for the wretched
-Darnley—her sudden awakening to bare realities, and the shock of the
-knowledge that she had given herself wholly to a mere adventurer, and a
-brutal one at that—these were some of the sinister facts over which, in
-this solitude and stillness of her English life, she had time enough to
-brood. Then came the final revelation of the almost wholesale perfidy of
-her Scottish noblemen, and the three weeks of her ghastly third
-honeymoon, which amounted to nothing but a preliminary imprisonment,
-ending in the gross insults of the populace, which drove her distracted
-on her way to the fortress of Lochleven. The detection and flight of
-Bothwell, her Scottish imprisonment, her escape and her flight to
-England—all these were part of the crimson pageant from which she had
-emerged, shattered in body, soul-worn, to face the problem of her life.
-Her baby boy was far from her in the hands of her brother and worst
-enemy, Earl Moray, the traitor to whom the power of Elizabeth gave
-approval as regent. But Moray himself had executed a _volte-face_. For
-his own purposes he now assumed a highly moral and affectionate tone
-towards his kinswoman. He advised this, her fourth marriage, on the
-score that it was the best chance of wiping out the stigma which clung
-to her in connection with her passion for Bothwell and her illegal union
-with him. “Take a suitable and godly person to be your spouse and you
-will at once assume a very high place in my excellent esteem” was
-practically his attitude. Mary knew his power. Was not the villain in
-constant intercourse with Cecil, Elizabeth’s right hand? She knew also
-that marriage was the only way out of prison and back to her throne.
-Three husbands had failed her. Even Moray conceded that she “had been
-troubled in times past with children, young, proud fools, and furious
-men”—the anæmic Francis II, Darnley, and Bothwell. As a woman she could
-attract any man she chose. And the Duke of Norfolk was one of the
-premier gentlemen of England, inclined to espouse her faith, and had
-powerful friends among the nobles near the Border. The plan was
-exciting. France and Spain must back her up in it. It was very difficult
-to send and receive letters. No wonder that the strain of this secret,
-with the bad weather and the difficulties under which the Tutbury
-household laboured of securing sufficient provisions and sufficient fuel
-to warm the cranky building, resulted in the illness of the prisoner.
-
-After much letter-writing there came from Court the permission for
-removal for which the Earl and Mary longed. The household was to take up
-its abode now at Wingfield Manor. Away went my Lady ahead to put up the
-curtains and see to the carpets and pallets and other upholstery, and a
-week or two later away went the cavalcade after her. Her chatelaine’s
-art and dexterity had freer play here. Wingfield Manor, in its ruins,
-suggests a house of grace, comfort, and importance, well proportioned,
-and soundly built in a stately manner. Even Mary, aware of its tolerably
-fortified nature, its guardroom and dungeons, its massive keep and
-earthworks, conscious of the nightly sentinels under her windows, could
-call it “a fair palace.” And my Lady was surely in her element. It was
-not exactly the rich domestic peace, the family life for which she or
-her husband had bargained. They were forced to isolate themselves from
-their children to a great extent, lest the comings and goings connected
-with their own family should entice strangers or messengers of doubtful
-character. But the eyes of England were upon the Earl and his lady.
-Where Mary was there abounded romance, intrigue, and mystery. Spain,
-France, Scotland, all were watchful, waiting for the least news. And
-possibly the Queen’s command and the distinction conferred on the
-Shrewsburys carried them far along the painful task on which they had
-embarked. There is no doubt that Bess had a better time of it in the
-bargain than her lord. The ultimate responsibility was his. Moreover,
-his was a nature conscientious almost to a morbid degree. He was forced
-to receive attacks without and within and to keep his head cool. He must
-report himself in long letters to Mr. Treasurer, he must bear with the
-complaints and entreaties of his captive. Mary was not so much of a
-prisoner that she could not rush to his suite of rooms and upbraid the
-authority by which her Scottish messengers were detained and her letters
-examined. Her abuse and lamentation, defiance and tears were shared
-alike by husband and wife. In reporting all this in detail to the Court,
-he insists upon the necessity of his wife’s co-operation. In the same
-breath he makes it piteously clear that the matter is not one for
-diversion or satisfaction to either of them. In this picture he draws of
-their joint life in such letters, Tutbury or Wingfield shelters not one
-prisoner, but three. The royal lady is scarcely a moment out of their
-sight or hearing. The only advantage of her constant invasion of my
-Lady’s chamber is that the latter may watch her the more closely and
-report more minutely upon her looks and words.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo by Valentine and Sons, Dundee_
-
- THE RUINS OF WINGFIELD MANOR
-
- Page 70
-]
-
-Already by this time the Shrewsburys could enter into the feelings of
-Sir Francis Knollys when he longed to shake off his irksome duties. Had
-the Earl foreseen the extent of the burden thrust upon him he would have
-followed the example of his comrade-in-arms and begged for instant
-release. All he could and did do, however, was to endure, while
-protesting his loyalty.
-
-There was excitement enough in store for everyone when Mary’s adviser,
-the Bishop of Ross, was actually permitted to join the Wingfield
-household. This was the signal for the crowding of Scottish folk to the
-vicinity. These came constantly to pay their court to Mary, thereby
-increasing all the domestic complications of Earl and lady, to say
-nothing of the added cost in catering and stabling entailed by such
-“traffic.” Nor did it help them that Mary should fall ill. After delays
-two physicians were sent from Court, and besides insisting upon a
-thorough ventilation and cleaning of her apartments they advised her
-removal to yet another of the family mansions.
-
-This time it was to Chatsworth that the cavalcade travelled. The busy
-Countess had not yet completed her great scheme of building. Yet a part
-of the then “new house” was sufficiently completed for use, and though
-there was as yet no stately presence chamber here, nor ballroom, nor
-great dining-hall, as at Wingfield, the surroundings were sylvan and
-reassuring, and the little raised and moated garden where Mary would
-take the air was far more agreeable than the tangled garden patch at
-Tutbury. In May the change to the meadows by the Derwent must have been
-delicious. By June 1st the visit was ended and away went the cortège
-again, my Lady Bess included, back to Wingfield. The Earl, for the first
-time since Mary’s arrival, took a few days’ leave of absence and again
-went to Chatsworth. This brief absence immediately gave rise to trouble
-and suspicious reports. While struggling with indisposition he hurried
-back, and had just time to report that all was well at Wingfield when
-ague and fever laid him low. His wife took command of the situation. His
-condition was so critical that she wrote to Cecil asking that some
-arrangement “for this charge” should be made in case he should grow
-worse. Cecil took action at once, but before any change in the command
-at Wingfield could be made the Earl was recovering, and his wife wrote
-to reassure the Queen, through Cecil, and put in a word for her own
-loyalty:—
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby_
-
- MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS BOWER, CHATSWORTH
-
- Page 72
-]
-
-
-“Of my duty in all respects, God, that is my witness of my doings and
-meanings, will defend me, I trust, against the evil that malice would
-unto me. No enemy would I willingly refuse to be my judge in this case,
-that hath power to think and speak truly, but most heartily do I thank
-you for your right friendly admonition, knowing that I cannot too much
-remember my duty, like as I would be no less sorry if I were not
-persuaded that you did write only of good will, without all cause of
-suspicion. I have hitherto found you to be my singular good friend, and
-so I trust you will continue, which God grant I may requite to my
-desire.”
-
-
-Poor Shrewsbury did not recover quickly. He suffered mentally as much as
-bodily all through this summer of 1569, and begged a few days’ grace to
-visit the baths at Buxton. This was withheld and delayed, and, in
-despair, he went without permission. Immediately the Queen was told of
-it and instructed Burghley to pounce on him in a letter. Naturally he
-hurried home full of abject apology, and, though he found the household
-at Wingfield tranquil, was much annoyed at the insanitary state of the
-manor in consequence of the number of people in and about it. A little
-crowd of no less than two hundred and fifty persons now constituted the
-entourage of prisoner, Earl, and Countess. In order to wipe off all
-undesirables, he recommended another change of domicile—this time to his
-estate of Sheffield.
-
-The Earl possessed two manors here—the Lodge or Manor on the hill, and
-the Castle in the valley above the meadows—now built over—where the Dun
-and Sheaf joined their waters. This move was regarded as a most
-excellent method for change and expansion. Both houses were habitable,
-there was good fishing, and plenty of ground for exercise without going
-out of bounds. Nothing was lacking now to hasten the departure save the
-royal permission.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
- PLOT AND COUNTERPLOT
-
-
-The move to Sheffield was now abandoned because of the desperate
-excitement aroused in Elizabeth’s mind by the disclosure of the love
-affair which was brewing between Mary and the Duke of Norfolk. This
-matter for some time was not entirely a secret. A certain number of
-influential English nobles agreed with those of Scotland that such a
-marriage would be an excellent solution of the entire Scottish question.
-Even Leicester himself, adored of Elizabeth, joined his opinion to
-theirs. And these gentlemen had drawn up a proposal to Mary of which one
-clause runs, “Whether, touching her marriage with the Duke of Norfolk
-which had been moved to her by the Earl of Moray and Lidington, she
-would wholly refer herself to the Queen’s Majesty and therein do as she
-would have her and as her Majesty did like thereof—willing that all
-things should be done for her Majesty’s surety, which might be best
-advised by the whole Council.”
-
-Her reply to this document, especially to the clause quoted, was clear,
-dignified, and highly emphatic. She did not doubt the English Queen’s
-good faith, nor the friendship of her nobles, nor the goodwill and
-liking of the Duke. She adroitly declared that she never regarded
-marriage as a mere means to recover power and position, saying, “I
-assure you that if either men or money to have reduced my rebels to
-their due obedience could have ticed me I could have been provided of a
-husband ere now. But I ... did never give ear to any such offer.” She
-fully calculated what she would lose by this marriage in regard to all
-her “friends beyond the seas.” The Duke of Alva was trying to secure her
-co-operation in the invasion of England. She was coquetting with the
-Duke of Anjou. She was writing to Rome. By the document she had signed
-she laid aside all future schemes, while she could still nourish the
-secret hope that, once restored to the Scottish throne in place of her
-baby son, she would, in default of Elizabeth’s marriage, inherit the
-throne of England. The whole matter was now on such a broad and amicable
-footing that apparently nothing was wanting but the longed-for “Bless
-you, my children” from the lips of Elizabeth.
-
-By September this dream was rudely dispelled. Norfolk was summoned to
-Court, roundly abused—Elizabeth, as one of her courtiers writes of her,
-could “storme passinglie”—and poor Shrewsbury received a severe snub.
-The Queen practically declared him a useless gaoler: “I have found no
-reliance on my Lord Shrewsbury in the hour of my need, for all the fine
-speeches he made me formerly, yet I can in no wise depend on his
-promise.” Therefore she added two guards—the Earl of Huntingdon and
-Viscount Hereford.
-
-More household complications, more goings and comings, more trouble for
-Earl and Countess! Afflicted with chronic gout and irritated in every
-direction, Shrewsbury decided to make for Tutbury again. A tactless
-royal order addressed to Huntingdon (whom Mary also hated) over the head
-of Shrewsbury bred fresh discomfort and annoyance in the Castle. Things
-were, however, gradually smoothed over. The jealousy between Mary’s
-gaolers was allayed on the one hand by the news that the Queen’s
-apprehensions were justified by the disappearance of the Duke of Norfolk
-from Court, while the alarm of Mary was increased fourfold by the
-cross-questioning to which she was subjected and the news of the sudden
-arrest of her ducal lover.
-
-These were dramatic days which Bess of Shrewsbury witnessed. Letters
-were intercepted, coffers suddenly searched in the Scots Queen’s
-apartments, there were incursions of men with “pistolets,” constant
-dismissals of the Queen’s people, sudden dismissal, even, of the
-Countess’s own servants. But the gaps at the board were immediately
-filled by Huntingdon and his retinue, for whom the Shrewsburys were
-expected to provide without any increase of allowance, on the score that
-the present numbers of the household did not exceed those at Wingfield
-and elsewhere. The irony of this, added to the suggestions that the Earl
-had been too kind to his prisoner, and that his request to be allowed to
-deal as before with Mary without the assistance of any other officer,
-sprang from some person or persons “too much affectionated to her,”
-created havoc in Shrewsbury’s mind. Of course he visited his anger on
-his colleague Huntingdon in the form of morose hints. In that atmosphere
-of wholesale suspicion he could not speak out except in a letter to
-head-quarters. He knew that Elizabeth’s sinister expressions implied
-suspicions of his Countess. It is difficult to understand exactly what
-this lady was “after,” in the vulgar phrase, at this moment. For Mary,
-with whom she had hitherto been on excellent terms, now distrusted her
-also. She expressed this distrust _tout au plat_, as she would say, to
-Walsingham in October, and told him not to attach any credit “to the
-schemes and accusations of the Countess who is now with you.” Apparently
-my Lady had left for the Court, and was there making good her case and
-her husband’s. As likely as not she was furiously jealous of the
-authority wrested from her husband in favour of Huntingdon, and
-overwrought, like everyone else, by the acute tension of the situation.
-Henceforward in the correspondence with Cecil sturdy disclaimers of
-treason on the part of Earl and lady are always cropping up. The
-following is from Shrewsbury to Cecil, October, 1569:—
-
-
-“Sir,—I have received your letter, thinking myself beholden unto you for
-your friendly care over me. I hear to my grief that suspicion is had of
-over much goodwill borne by my wife to this Queen and of untrue dealing
-by my men. For my wife thus must I say, she hath not otherwise dealt
-with that Queen than I have been privy unto and that I have had liking
-of, and by my appointment hath so dealt that I have been the more able
-to discharge the trust committed unto me. And if she for her dutiful
-dealing to her Majesty and true meaning to me should be suspected that I
-am sure hath so well deserved, she and I might think ourselves
-fortunate. And where I perceive her Majesty is let to understand that by
-my wife’s persuasion I am the more desirous to continue this charge, I
-speak it afore God she hath been in hand with me as far as she durst and
-more than I thought well of since my sickness to procure my discharge. I
-am not to ...[16] by her otherwise than I think well of.”
-
-
-From the close of this year till the execution of the Duke of Norfolk in
-1572 the history of George Talbot and Bess Hardwick is bound up with the
-story of the tissue of conspiracies which wound itself about Mary. The
-Norfolk plot, with which Mary was to be drawn out of prison, was a stout
-rope woven of many strands; the net which Cecil constructed for his prey
-was close-meshed and wide-spreading. There were constant alarums and
-excursions for the Earl and his people. He succeeded in getting rid of
-Huntingdon, but he was incessantly in fear of a rising of the northern
-nobles to whom Norfolk had appealed for their armed support; and when
-this fear was realised and the armed Earls arrived within fifty odd
-miles of Tutbury a hasty removal was necessary. Coventry was the only
-place which suggested itself until the hostile demonstration fizzled out
-and Tutbury could be regained.
-
-The new year found the household re-established there. While Mary, in
-poor health, acted as though she had no inkling of conspiracy, while the
-Duke of Norfolk and the Bishop of Ross, her adviser, were in the Tower,
-miniature plots again disturbed the tenor of existence, and for once the
-Earl was permitted to choose his own road, and to remove his captive
-with bag and baggage to Chatsworth.
-
-This was a pleasanter place than Tutbury for the inditing of love
-letters, as Mary found. But her Duke was a broken reed. He wanted to
-leave the Tower, and to Elizabeth he vowed he would not marry her rival.
-The summer passed on and the conditions of imprisonment at Chatsworth
-fluctuated from “straitness” to indulgence according to the suspicions
-of Elizabeth and the reports of those who were jealous spies of the
-Earl’s slightest actions. Things assumed a more hopeful aspect in spite
-of the discovery of another minor plot to free Mary by letting her down
-from one of the windows of the Countess’s spacious and elegant
-house—still unfinished. Elizabeth about this time actually contemplated
-Mary’s freedom and her re-establishment as a sovereign; whereupon a
-treaty to this end was carefully discussed!
-
-Negotiations came to such a pass that Mr. Treasurer himself was
-empowered to travel to Chatsworth and confer with the prisoner. He took
-his wife with him, and between business and pleasure the visit passed
-off well. Cecil wrote a long and complimentary “leaving letter” on
-behalf of himself and his wife, chiefly interesting in this connection
-because it indicates how Lady Shrewsbury played her part as hostess.
-
-
-“We have fully satisfied her Majesty with the painful and trusty
-behaviour of my Lady your wife in giving good regard to the surety of
-the said Queen; wherein her Majesty surely seemed to us to be very glad,
-and used many good words, both of your Lordship’s fidelity towards
-herself, and of the love that she thought my Lady did bear to her....
-And thus I humbly take my leave of your Lordship and my Lady, to whom my
-wife hath written to give her thanks for certain tokens whereof I
-understood nothing afore she told me of them; and sorry I am my Lady
-should have bestowed such things as my wife cannot recompense as she
-would, but with her hearty goodwill and service, which shall always be
-ready to her favour and mine also: assuring yourself that to my
-uttermost I will be to your Lordship and to my Lady as sure in good will
-as any poor friend you have.”
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _From an engraving by W. T. Ryall, after the painting by Mark Gerard_
-
- WILLIAM CECIL, LORD BURGHLEY
-
- Page 80
-]
-
-Like all the schemes of Elizabeth the aforesaid treaty hung fire.
-Suspense and disappointment had their usual result upon Mary. Once more
-she fell ill. Had she died on their hands Earl and Countess would have
-been open to the worst suspicions. They found themselves always out of
-pocket in regard to her maintenance; they were themselves, obviously,
-more or less prisoners in their own house; they had begged to be
-released from “this charge.” In an age when poisonings were rife and
-assassinations common they would have been suspected by all parties of
-all sorts of foul play. Mary’s loyal gentleman, John Beton, the
-prægustator, must have had enough to do at this time in tasting the
-dishes for the daily menus. Shrewsbury meanwhile kept a sharp look-out
-and at once suggested change of air. Mary, in spite of the pain in her
-side, symptom of a chronic malady, and one which always attacked her
-when she was the least out of health, was only too ready to move. This
-time the destination was Sheffield—the castle.
-
-Matters grew worse and worse in regard to the captive in spite of all
-these precautions. Down came the Bishop of Ross—now set at liberty—and
-the Court physician, while all the world knew that for this illness
-there was but one cure—liberty. Only intrigue kept Mary alive at the
-close of 1570. The rest of the spring and summer of 1571 witnessed her
-return to the proposals to the Duke of Norfolk, the co-operation of
-Ridolfi, the preparations by her Scottish partisans, the crystallisation
-of the plan of invasion by Philip of Spain. The whole toil of this great
-enterprise was nullified by the curiosity of a mere merchant, an
-innocent messenger chosen to carry a bag of money destined to further
-the plot. He mistrusted the contents, carried the bag to head-quarters,
-and inside were the incriminating letters which led to the second
-imprisonment of Norfolk and the gradual unravelling of the conspiracy.
-During the lengthy process of examining the many people involved there
-were uneasy moments for all sorts and conditions of men. It was a most
-uncomfortable time for the Shrewsburys. It was open to any of their
-dismissed servants who were arrested to inculpate their former
-employers, and the latter were probably prepared for such contingencies.
-Yet a letter like the following would descend upon the Countess somewhat
-like a bombshell. The man Lascelles mentioned in it was an ex-servant
-under arrest, and when threatened with torture pleaded guilty to the
-charge, giving as excuse that what he did was known to the Countess.
-
-
- “It may please your Ladyship,
-
-“Where of late Bryan and Hersey Lascelles having been before my Lords of
-her Majesty’s Council, it appeareth directly by the letters both of the
-Queen of Scots and of the Duke of Norfolk also, that Hersey, as he
-confessess also himself has been a dealer sometimes with the Queen there
-by the means of his brother’s being in service there; and yet that his
-dealing was not without knowledge of your Ladyship, to the end, as he
-says, that the same might always be known. I have thought good to
-advertise your Ladyship thereof, and withal to pray you to let me
-understand the truth of such matter as your Ladyship doth know of the
-said Hersey Lascelles’ dealings from time to time as particularly as
-your Ladyship can remember. And so I take my leave of your Ladyship.
-
-“From London, the 13th of October, 1571.
-
- “Your Ladyship’s at commandment,
- “W. BURGHLEY.
-
-“To the right honourable and my very good Lady, the Countess of
-Shrewsbury. Haste, haste, haste.”
-
-
-A nice letter to receive on a serene autumn day! Carefully worded and
-dignified though it is, it opens up vistas of suspicion and treachery.
-The Countess was away, and her lord had to bear the first brunt of it
-alone. Perhaps this was just as well, as it gave him a chance of
-clearing their honour independently. For, of course, he recognised in it
-an urgent official document. The reading must have cost him a bad
-quarter of an hour. There was no time to be lost in again asserting his
-wife’s integrity. A few seconds of miserable suspense would possibly
-ensue ere his trust and loyalty conquered all fears, and he sat down to
-write first to his wife, enclosing the letter from Court, and then to
-tell Burleigh that some serious misconstruction must have been placed on
-the fact that he always empowered his lady to interest herself in such
-persons as Lascelles and his doings, the better to keep her spouse
-apprised of Mary’s plots: “I willed my wife to deal with him and others
-to whom the Queen bears familiar countenance, so as the better to learn
-her intentions.” To this he adds a diplomatic postscript, assuring
-Burleigh that this letter is penned independently of any collusion with
-his wife.
-
-The Countess, fenced in by consciousness of innocence, backed by the
-sense of possession, and seated in the heart of her own pleasant estate,
-rich now in the burnished glory of autumn, writes _en grande dame_ from
-Chatsworth on October 22nd:—
-
-
-“Your letters touching Henry Lassells came to my hands after my husband
-had answered them. I doubt not you are persuaded of my dutiful service,
-but lest you should think any lack of goodwill to answer, I thought it
-meet to advertise you of my whole doings in the matters.
-
-“As soon as I had intelligence that this Lassells had some familiar talk
-with the Queen of Scotland, and that my Lord thereupon had laid watch to
-his doings, this Lassells belike suspecting of my knowledge thereof,
-desired that he might offer unto me some special matter touching that
-Queen, with great desire that I should in no wise utter it, for, saith
-he, she hath most earnestly warned me not to tell you of all creatures.
-I then hoping to hear of some practice, answered him that he might
-assure himself not only to be harmless, but to be well rewarded also at
-the Queen Majesty’s hands, and of my Lord, if he would plainly and truly
-show of her doings and devices, meet to be known. Then he told me with
-many words that she pretended great goodwill unto him, and of good
-liking of him, and that she would make him a lord, but, saith he, I will
-never be false to the Queen’s Majesty, nor to my Lord, my master.
-Further than this I could not learn of him. Then I warned him to
-remember his duty and to beware of her, and that she sought to abuse
-him, and that I knew for certain that she did hate him. He said then
-that he would take heed, and advertise me of all that he could learn.
-After this he came to me again, and told me of her familiar talk as
-before, and of no further matter, saving that he said that he told her
-how he marvelled that she could love the Duke,[17] having so foul a
-face, and that she answered that she could like him well enough, because
-he was wise. Then I warned him again more earnestly than I did before,
-and told him of her hatred towards him. Then he seemed to credit me.
-Albeit a while after he desired me by his letters to certify him how I
-knew she hated him, for, saith he, if she so do she is the falsest woman
-living. Then my Lord and I perceiving his mind so fondly occupied on her
-and knowing him to be both vain and glorious, and that he was more like
-to be made an instrument to work harm than to do good, my Lord
-despatched him out of service, as he hath divers others upon suspicion
-at sundry times. This came to my knowledge about Candlemas, next after
-the Northern rebellion, and he was put away about Easter following. I
-never knew of any dealing between the Queen and the Duke of Norfolk,
-either by Lassells or anyone else. If I had I trust you think I would
-have discovered it.”
-
-
-It is not surprising that the Earl’s wife kept aloof for a while and
-preferred Chatsworth just now. Sheffield was a regular dungeon: the
-Scottish Queen was only allowed to take an airing on the leads. No
-domestic cheerfulness was possible, no social intercourse, and every
-letter sent or received was a source of anxiety.
-
-Both for the sake of social decency and because of the necessity to
-impress the always scandalous world with her conjugal devotion, the
-Countess however returned presently to the fortress and took up her
-share of the daily burden of wardenship.
-
-Her presence was more than ever necessary now. The Duke of Norfolk’s
-trial was fixed for a date early in the New Year, and the Earl’s
-assistance thereat was indispensable, for he was made Lord High Steward
-of England in the place of the arraigned nobleman. The command at
-Sheffield was therefore temporarily assigned, not to Huntingdon this
-time, but to Sir Ralph Sadler. He arrived, the Earl left for London, and
-Bess Shrewsbury remained to keep a hand upon the situation and play her
-own cards. She did this incessantly till her husband’s return.
-Circumstances gave her most excellent opportunities for making a good
-impression on Sadler. It was her business to walk on those leads of the
-now vanished castle with the prisoner and to carry her daily such news
-as it was considered well to communicate. There was very little variety
-in the days. When the weather was bad Mary kept to her rooms. When it
-improved she took her airing, but had not much refreshment for her eyes.
-There was little to do on the leads but stroll to and fro, gazing at
-Sheffield Lodge on the hill, or at the water and meadows below. And for
-the ear there was nothing beyond music on the virginals to charm it, no
-sounds to distract the country silence, except the opening and closing
-of the castle gates, and the roll of the drum at six o’clock morning and
-evening, when the watches were set and the password given.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _From the picture in the possession of the Duke of Norfolk_
-
- THOMAS HOWARD, DUKE OF NORFOLK
-
- Page 86
-]
-
-To all who are students of the latter years of Mary’s life the letters
-of Sir Ralph Sadler, written during this time, must be familiar. His
-whole attention is naturally concentrated on the interesting captive,
-but here and there we get side glimpses of Lady Shrewsbury and her power
-as a kind of self-ordained lady of the bedchamber to Mary.
-
-The news of Norfolk’s death sentence was not long in coming. The Earl of
-Shrewsbury himself had to pronounce it with true and bitter tears, and
-Cecil, now Lord Burghley, at once wrote to Sheffield. A fact so
-important must be communicated to Mary at once. It was due to her both
-as Norfolk’s accomplice and as a prisoner of quality. It was highly
-important that the effect of it on her should be gauged and duly
-reported. For this sweet errand the Countess was chosen. A previous
-announcement had, however, reached her, and took the wind out of the
-Countess’s sails. What a situation! She found the Queen “all bewept and
-mourning,” and had the doubtful taste to ask “what ailed her.” Mary,
-with great dignity and pathos, replied that she was sure that the
-Countess must already know the cause and would sympathise, and she
-expressed further her intense grief lest anything she had written to
-Elizabeth on behalf of Norfolk had brought him and her other friends to
-such a pass. The Countess had common sense, and her rejoinder was
-logical and undoubtedly correct, but she need not have hit quite so hard
-as in her reply, quoted by Sadler. For a woman of imagination—and
-imagination of a practical kind Bess Shrewsbury certainly possessed—it
-was a cruel answer, and not the least part of the cruelty was the
-scathing condemnation of one who she knew might have been Mary’s
-husband. It seems to have crushed Mary. She could bear no further
-discussion of the matter, and withdrew into herself to nurse her sorrow.
-“And so like a true lover she remaineth, still mourning for her love,”
-wrote Sadler, much touched by her attitude. This letter of his is
-graphic enough to be quoted in full:—
-
-
- “Please it, your Lordship,
-
-“The posts whether they work or play have their hire, and therefore I
-spare not their labour though I have none other occasion than to
-advertise your L. that all is well here concerning this charge, and that
-yesterday I received your letters of the 17th of this present (for which
-I most heartily thank your L.), together with a brief discourse of the
-Duke’s arraignment and condemnation, which I forthwith imparted unto my
-Lady of Shrewsbury to the end she might take occasion to make this Queen
-understand of the same; and also I gave it out to the gentlemen in this
-House both what number of the Nobility did pass upon his trial, and also
-that his offences and treasons were such, and so manifestly and plainly
-proved, that all the noble men did not only detest the same, but also
-without any manner of scruple objected by common consent everyone of
-them did pronounce him guilty. Which, being put abroad here in the house
-after this sort, was brought unto the knowledge of this Queen by some of
-her folk which heard it, before my Lady came unto her, for the which
-this Queen wept very bitterly, so that my Lady found her all to be wept
-and mourning, and asking her what she ailed, she answered that she was
-sure my Lady could not be ignorant of the cause, and that she could not
-but be much grieved, to understand of the trouble of her friends, which
-she knew did fare the worse for her sake, for sure she was that the Duke
-fared the worse for that which she of late had written to the Q.
-Majesty; and said further that he was unjustly condemned, protesting
-that as far as ever she could perceive by him or for anything she knew
-he was a true man to the Queen her sister: but being answered by my Lady
-that as she might be sure that whatsoever she had written to the Q.
-Majesty could do the Duke neither good nor harm touching his
-condemnation, so if his offences and treasons had not been great and
-plainly proved against him those noble men which passed upon his trial
-would not for all the good on earth have condemned him. She thereupon
-with mourning there became silent, and had no will to talk any more of
-the matter, and so like a true lover she remaineth still mourning for
-her love. God, I trust, will put it into the Queen Majesty’s heart so to
-provide for herself that such true lovers may receive such rewards and
-fruits of their love as they have justly deserved at her Majesty’s
-hands.
-
-“All the last week this Queen did not once look out of her chamber,
-hearing that the Duke stood upon his arraignment and trial, and being
-troubled by all likelihood by a guilty conscience and fear to hear of
-such news as she hath now received. And my presence is such a trouble
-unto her that unless she come out of her chamber I come little at her,
-but my Lady is seldom from her, and for my part I have not since my
-coming hither so behaved myself towards her as might justly give her
-occasion to have any such misliking of me: though indeed I would not
-rejoice at all of it, if she had any better liking. But though she like
-not of me yet I am sure this good lady and all the gentlemen and others
-of this house do like well enough of me: which doth well appear by their
-courteous and gentle entertainment of me and mine. My Lord hath a costly
-guest of me, for I and my men and 36 horses of mine do all lie and feed
-here at his charge, and therefore the sooner he come home the better for
-him. Trusting his L. be now on the way and therefore I forbear to write
-to him. But if he be there, it may please you to tell him that all is
-well here, and that my Lady and I do long to see his L. here. And as I
-doubt not she would most gladly have him here, so I am sure she cannot
-long for him more than I do, looking hourly to hear some good news from
-your L. of my return. And so I beseech Almighty God to preserve and keep
-you in long life and health, and to increase you in honour and virtue.
-From Sheffield Castle the 21st of January at night 1571. With the rude
-hands of
-
- “Your L. to command as your own
- “R. SADLER.
-
- “To the right honourable and my very good lord, my Lord of Burghley,
- of the Queen Majesty’s Privy Council.”
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _From a print in the British Museum_
-
- SHEFFIELD MANOR HOUSE
-
- Page 90
-]
-
-Never was the contrast between the two principal ladies in Sheffield
-Castle so marked as at this moment. Mary mourns for Norfolk, for the
-ruin of her hopes, for the treaty of freedom which now can never be
-carried through. Bess sails about the castle aware of everything at
-Court and at home; the posts bring her affectionate letters from the
-Earl, while her children and his flourish under their respective tutors.
-Chatsworth is still a-building, and she signs orders for stone and wood
-and coal and fodder. She was a good hostess to Sadler, and when he
-relinquished his duties gladly enough in February, upon the Earl’s
-return, he was positive that Lady Shrewsbury was deserving of great
-commendation and “condign thanks” for the manner in which she filled her
-important position. She was very much of a personage, and her
-correspondence exhibits very few of the traits usually described as
-“feminine,” while her friends fully estimated her influence and her
-interest in the larger events. The following lengthy letter gives the
-complexity of the political situation, and though of course it belongs
-to a date previous to the execution of Norfolk, is placed here as an
-illustration of the stirring times in which the great lady lived and the
-events which had happened during the first year or two of her fourth
-marriage. It is unsigned, and is evidently from some connection or
-possibly a gentleman of the Shrewsbury household, who is keeping his
-ears and eyes wide open at Court:—
-
-
- “To the Countess of Shrewsbury,
-
-“My most humble duty remembered unto your honourable good lord. May it
-please the same to understand that I have sent you herein enclosed the
-articles of peace concluded and proclaimed through all France, in
-French, because they are not at this hour to be had in English (which
-are translated and in printing), and if the peace be kept, the
-Protestants be indifferently well. The great sitting is done at Norwich;
-and, as I do hear credibly, that Appleyard, Throgmorton, Redman, and
-another are condemned to be hung, drawn, and quartered; and Hobart and
-two more are condemned to perpetual imprisonment, with the loss of all
-their goods and lands during their lives. The four condemned for high
-treason, and the other for reconcilement. They were charged of these
-four points: the destruction of the Queen’s person; the imprisonment of
-my Lord Keeper, my Lord of Leicester, Secretary Cecil; the setting at
-liberty out of the Tower the Duke of Norfolk; and the banishment of all
-strangers; and it fell out in their examination that they would have
-imprisoned Sir Christopher Haydon and Sir William Butts, the Queen’s
-Lieutenants. None of them could excuse themselves of any of the four
-points, saving Appleyard said he meant nothing towards the Queen’s
-person; for that he meant to have had them to a banquet, and to have
-betrayed them all, and to have won credit thereby with the Queen.
-Throgmorton was mute, and would say nothing till he was condemned, who
-then said, ‘They are full merry now that will be as sorry within these
-few days.’ Mr. Bell was attorney for Mr. Gerrard, he being one of the
-Judges, and Mr. Bell alleged against Appleyard that he was consenting to
-the treason before; alleging one Parker’s words, that was brought
-prisoner with Dr. Storey out of Flanders, that Parker heard of the
-treason before Nallard came over to the Duke of Alva. And there stood
-one Bacon by that heard Parker say so: my Lord offered a book to Bacon
-for to swear: ‘O, my Lord,’ said Appleyard, ‘will you condemn me of his
-oath that is registered for a knave in the Book of Martyrs?’
-
-“They had set out a proclamation, and had four prophecies; one was
-touching the wantonness of the Court, and the other touching this land
-to be conquered by the Scots; and two more that I cannot remember. There
-were many in trouble for speaking of seditious words. Thomas Cecil said
-that the Duke of Norfolk was not of that religion as he was accounted to
-be: and that his cousin Cecil was the Queen’s darling, who was the cause
-of the Duke of Norfolk’s imprisonment, with such like; who is put off to
-the next assize. Anthony Middleton said, ‘My Lord Morley is gone to set
-the Duke of Alva into Yarmouth, and if William Keat had not accused me,
-Throgmorton, and the rest we had had a hot harvest; but if the Duke of
-Norfolk be alive, they all dare not put them to death.’ Metcalf said
-that he would help the Duke of Alva into Yarmouth, and to wash his hands
-in the Protestants’ blood. Marsham said that my Lord of Leicester had
-two children by the Queen: and for that he is condemned to lose both his
-ears, or else pay £100 presently. Chiplain said he hoped to see the Duke
-of Norfolk to be King before Michaelmas next, who doth interpret that he
-meant, not to be King of England, but to be King of Scotland.
-
-“Mr. Bell and Mr. Solicitor said both to this effect to the
-prisoners—‘What mad fellows were ye, being all rank Papists, to make the
-Duke of Norfolk your patron that is as good a Protestant as any is in
-England: and, being wicked traitors, to hope of his help to your wicked
-intents and purposes, that is as true and as faithful a subject as any
-that is in this land, saving only that the Queen is minded to imprison
-him for his contempt.’ Doctor Storey is at Mr. Archdeacon Watts’ house,
-in custody, besides Powels. Thurlby, late Bishop of Ely, died this last
-week at Lambeth.
-
-“The Spanish Queen is arrived in the Low Countries, and will embark as
-soon as may be. The Emperor is setting forward his other daughter
-towards Metz to be married to the French King. It is written, by letters
-of the 28th of the last, from Venice, that the Turk has landed in Cyprus
-100,000 men, or more, and has besieged two great cities within that
-kingdom, Nicocia and Famagosta. At one assault at Famagosta they lost
-12,000 men; upon the which repulse the Begler Bey of Natolia, the
-General of the Turk’s army, wrote to the great Turk, his master, that he
-thought it was invincible. He answered that, if they did not win it
-before they came, they should be put to the sword at their return home.
-The Turk has sent another army by land against the Venetians, into
-Dalmatia, and are besieging Zara with 20,000 footmen and 20,000
-horsemen, and divers towns they have taken, as Spalator, Elisa, Eleba,
-and Nona, with great spoil and bloodshed: and it is written that the
-Turk’s several armies are above 200,000 men against the Venetians. The
-men first sent by the Venetians fell so into diseases by the way as they
-were fain to prepare new men, which is thought will hardly come to do
-any good in Cyprus. A man may see what account is to be made of these
-worldly things, as to see in a small time the third state of
-Christendom, in security, power, and wealth, to be in danger of utter
-overthrow in one year.
-
-“They say my Lord of Leicester hath many workmen at Kenilworth to make
-his house strong, and doth furnish it with armour, ammunition, and all
-necessaries for defence. And thus Jesus have my Lord, and your Ladyship,
-and my friends in his tuition, to God’s pleasure.—Scribbled at London,
-the last of August, 1570.
-
-“Your good Ladyship’s ever to command during life.
-
- “To the right honourable Countess of Shrewsbury
- at Chatsworth, or where.”
-
-
-Life fell once more into its old groove. No large conspiracy could be
-feared yet, in spite of Elizabeth’s postponement of Norfolk’s execution.
-But there remained always the undercurrent of lesser “practices.” Earl
-and Lady had their hands always full with detective work of this kind.
-Priests and conjurers, pedlars, porters, and even schoolmasters formed
-the roll of suspects. Scouts were always at work following their
-movements, hanging about taverns to hear gossip which might betray their
-doings, and searchers were employed to pounce upon any scrap of written
-stuff which might prove valuable “copy.” Some of the most emphatic
-witnesses against Mary—her own letters of conspiracy—were actually found
-hidden under a stone on a bit of waste ground. The messenger charged
-with them durst not carry them further at that moment and before he
-could remove them they were discovered. It was about this time that she
-was given permission to take her airing further than the leads and to
-walk out in the open. The snow lay on the ground and soaked her to the
-ankles, but she bore it cheerfully, and one wonders if she had knowledge
-of those hidden letters and whether she nourished a wild hope of finding
-them in their niche and setting them safely on their way. Secret and
-sinister were the warnings which Earl and Lady shared in that long cold
-spring at Sheffield. All travellers from across the Border were duly
-catalogued by the northern authorities and word passed from mouth to
-mouth of their appearance and activities. This was the sort of despatch
-which reached the castle: “A certain boy should come lately out of
-England with letters to the castle of Edinburgh and is to return back
-again within three or four days.... It were not amiss that my Lord of
-Shrewsbury had warning of him. His letters be secured in the buttons and
-seams of his coat. His coat is of black English frieze, he hath a cut on
-his left cheek, from his eye down, by the which he may be well known.”
-
-All the dodges of such envoys—from the stitching of letters into linings
-and the hiding of a written message under the setting of a jewel to the
-use of bags with double bottoms where despatches could be kept “safe
-from wet and fretting” and sight—were known to the Shrewsburys. An
-evening spent in the kitchens and guardroom, an hour or so of conference
-with my Lady would open to reader and writer alike a world of
-sensational gossip “palpitating with actuality.” The captive Queen’s
-precarious health was a constant subject of discussion. Shrewsbury’s
-letters were bound to be full of it. Mary, who once more began to
-bombard Elizabeth with letters, suggested a trial of Buxton waters. She
-also busied herself anew with embroidery, contrived gifts for the Queen,
-and sent her a large consignment of French stuffs and silks. When
-packages of this kind arrived from France the Earl was always on the
-look-out. So careful was he in regard to his wife’s share in such
-parcels that he would not let her receive and pay for such goods until
-he had first communicated the exact details of the transaction to his
-royal mistress.
-
-Neither French taffetas nor little embroidered caps could alter the
-decision of the Privy Council and reverse the position of the axe in
-regard to the Duke of Norfolk. His death took place in the glory of the
-early summer of 1572. Mary mourned and her health grew worse and worse.
-Yet, just when change was planned for her, and the castle had reached a
-condition almost too insanitary to endure, the news came of the massacre
-of St. Bartholomew. “These French tragedies and ending of unlucky
-marriage with blood and vile murders cannot be expressed with tongue to
-declare the cruelties.... These fires may be doubted that their flames
-may come both hither and into Scotland, for such cruelties have large
-scopes.... All men now cry out of your prisoner,” wrote Burghley to the
-Earl under supreme agitation. To which the latter replies later, “These
-are to advertise you that the Queen remains still within these four
-walls, in safe keeping.” The woods and wolds, he explains, are being
-scoured by his spies, and the number of the guard is increased by
-thirty. Clang of gate, clash of steel, roll of drum—the household music
-of the Shrewsburys knew nothing more harmonious than these noises. At
-stated intervals we hear the old burthen of sturdy self-vindication in
-such letters as the following to Burghley:—
-
-
- “My very good Lord,
-
-“I heartily thank your good Lordship for seeking to satisfy her Majesty
-in some doubts she might conceive of me and my wife, upon information
-given to her Majesty; your Lordship therein doeth the part of a faithful
-friend; so I have always trusted, and you shall receive no dishonour
-thereby. My services and fidelity to her Majesty are such as I am
-persuaded with assured hope that her Majesty, having proofs enough
-thereof, condemneth those who so untruly surmise, against my wife first,
-and now myself, either of us undutiful dealing with this Queen or myself
-of any carelessness in regard my charge. As before I crave trial of
-whosoever is here noted of any indirect dealing with this Queen, so do I
-again require at your Lordship’s hands to be amenable to her Majesty for
-due proof and punishment, as they merit, that her Majesty might be fully
-satisfied and quiet. And for my riding abroad sometimes (not far from my
-charge) in respect of my health only; it has been well known to your
-Lordship from the first beginning of my charge, and it is true I always
-gave order first for safe keeping of her with a sure and stronger guard,
-both within my house and further off, than when myself was with her. I
-trusted none in my absence but those I had tried; true and faithful
-servants unto me, and like subjects to her Majesty. I thank God my
-account of this weighty charge is ready, to her Majesty’s contentation.
-No information nor surmise can make me shrink. Nevertheless, henceforth
-her Majesty’s commandment for my continual attendance upon this lady
-shall be obeyed, as her Majesty shall not mislike thereof; and even so,
-my Lord, I say to that part of your letters wherein a motion is made to
-me; that (as in all my services hitherto) I had, nor seek, written
-contentment nor will, than shall stand her Majesty’s pleasure or her
-best service. And so, wishing to your Lordship as well as to myself, I
-take my leave.
-
-“At Sheffield this 9th of December, 1572.
-
- “Your Lordship’s ever-assured friend,
- “G. SHREWSBURY.
-
-“I have presumed to write to the Queen’s Majesty to the same effect as
-to your Lordship.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
- FAMILY LETTERS
-
-
-The following letters carry on the story of the Shrewsburys in domestic
-and official detail for the next year. The second stepson of Bess was by
-this time not only a married man, but a member of Parliament and a
-courtier. He and his eldest stepbrother and brother-in-law, Henry
-Cavendish, represented their own county. His brother, Francis Talbot,
-the Earl’s heir, who was also at Court, had been entrusted with
-diplomatic duties, and had already managed to get into mischief. Neither
-he nor Gilbert, who survived him, ever took such an important social or
-official position as that achieved by their father and stepmother. But
-in youth they were about the Court, and they held their parents in
-proper awe. Their occasional letters imply a strong sense of family duty
-and kinship in little things as in great. The first letter touches on a
-purely domestic matter. It is curious that, seeing his wife was his
-stepmother’s eldest daughter, Gilbert should not have referred to the
-Countess for advice and approval.
-
-
-“My Lord,—My brother told me of the letter your Lordship sent him for
-the putting away of Morgan and Marven; and said he rejoiced that your
-Lordship would so plainly direct and command him what to do, and he
-trusteth hereafter to please your Lordship in all his doings; whereunto,
-according to my duty, I prayed him to have care above all manner of
-things, and advised him to keep secret your Lordship’s directions.
-
-“I have found out a sober maiden to wait on my wife, if it shall please
-your Lordship. She was servant unto Mrs. Southwell, now Lord Paget’s
-wife, who is an evil husband, and will not suffer any that waited on his
-wife before he married her to continue with her. As it behoves me, I
-have been very inquisitive of the woman, and have heard very well of her
-behaviour; and truly I do repose in her to be very modest and well
-given, and such a one as I trust your Lordship shall not mislike; but if
-it be so that she shall not be thought meet for my wife, she will
-willingly repair hither again. Her name is Marget Butler; she is almost
-twenty-seven years old. Mr. Bateman[18] hath known her long, and
-thinketh very well of her: she is not very beautiful, but very cleanly
-in doing of anything chiefly about a sick body, to dress anything fit
-for them. I humbly pray your Lordship to send me word whether I shall
-make shift to send her down presently, for she is very desirous not to
-spend her time idly. Thus, most humbly desiring your Lordship’s daily
-blessing, with my wonted and continual prayer for your Lordship’s
-preservation in all honour and health, long to continue, I end.
-
-“At the Court this Monday, the 25th of May, 1573.
-
- “Your Lordship’s most humble and obedient son,
- “GILBERT TALBOT.”
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, from the picture at Hardwick
- Hall_
- _By permission of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire_
-
- GILBERT TALBOT, SEVENTH EARL OF SHREWSBURY
-
- Page 100
-]
-
-The next letter is largely given up to gossip, and places the Earl of
-Leicester, who constantly writes wise and appreciative letters to the
-Shrewsburys, in the gay, vivid light in which he is best known to
-posterity. It is exhaustive, and touches on all the reports the writer
-can gather as to public criticism of Shrewsbury as gaoler, besides
-making allusion to the Earl’s financial difficulties.
-
-
-“My most humble duty remembered, right honourable, my singular good Lord
-and father; because of the convenience of the bearer hereof, I have
-thought good to advertise your Lordship of the estate of some here at
-the Court, as near as I have learned by my daily experience. My Lord
-Treasurer, even after the old manner, dealeth with matters of the State
-only, and beareth himself very uprightly. My Lord Leicester is very much
-with her Majesty, and she shows the same great, good affection that she
-was wont; of late he has endeavoured to please her more than heretofore.
-There are two sisters now in the Court that are very far in love with
-him, as they have been long—my Lady Sheffield and Frances Howard;[19]
-they (of like striving who shall love him better) are at great wars
-together, and the Queen thinketh not well of them and not the better of
-him; by this means there are spies over him. My Lord of Sussex goes with
-the tide, and helps to back others; but his own credit is sober,
-considering his estate; he is very diligent in his office, and takes
-great pains. My Lord of Oxford is lately grown into great credit; for
-the Queen’s Majesty delighteth more in his personage and his dancing and
-valiantness than any other. I think Sussex doth back him all that he
-can; if it were not for his fickle head he would pass any of them
-shortly. My Lady Burghley unwisely has declared herself, as it were,
-jealous, which is come to the Queen’s ear; whereat she has been not a
-little offended with her, but now she is reconciled again. At all these
-love matters my Lord Treasurer winketh, and will not meddle anyway.
-Hatton is sick still; it is thought he will very hardly recover his
-disease, for it is doubted it is in his kidneys; the Queen goeth almost
-every day to see how he doth. Now are there devices (chiefly by
-Leicester, as I suppose, and not without Burleigh’s knowledge) to make
-Mr. Edward Dyer as great as ever was Hatton; for now, in this time of
-Hatton’s sickness, the time is convenient. It is brought thus to pass:
-Dyer lately was sick of a consumption, in great danger; and, as your
-Lordship knows, he has been in displeasure these two years, it was made
-the Queen believe that his sickness came because of the continuance of
-her displeasure towards him, so that unless she would forgive him he was
-like not to recover, and hereupon her Majesty has forgiven him and sent
-unto him a very comfortable message; now he is recovered again, and this
-is the beginning of the device. These things I learn of such young
-fellows as myself. Two days since Dr. Wilson told me he heard say that
-your Lordship, with your charge, was removed to Sheffield Lodge, and
-asked me whether it was so or not: I answered I heard so also; that you
-were gone thither of force till the castle could be cleansed. And,
-further, he wished to know whether your Lordship did so by the consent
-of the Council, or not: I said I knew not that, but I was certain your
-Lordship did it on good ground. I earnestly desired him, of all
-friendship, to tell me whether he had heard anything to the contrary;
-which he sware he never did, but asked because, he said, once that Lady
-should have been conveyed from that house. Then I told him what great
-heed and care you had to her safe-keeping; especially being there that
-good numbers of men, continually armed, watched her day and night, and
-both under her windows, over her chamber, and of every side her; so
-that, unless she could transform herself to a flea or a mouse, it was
-impossible that she should escape. At that time Mr. Wilson showed me
-some part of the confession of one (but who he was, or when he did
-confess it, he would in no wise tell me), that that fellow should say he
-knew the Queen of Scots hated your Lordship deadly because of your
-religion, being an earnest Protestant; and all the Talbots else in
-England, being all Papists, she esteemeth of them very well; and this
-fellow did believe verily all we Talbots did love her better in our
-hearts than the Queen’s Majesty: this Mr. Wilson said he showed me
-because I should see what knavery there is in some men to accuse. He
-charged me of all love that I should keep this secret, which I promised;
-and, notwithstanding, considering he would not tell me who this fellow
-was, I willed a friend of mine, one Mr. Francis Southwell, who is very
-great with him, to know, amongst other talk, who he had last in
-examination; and I understood that this was the examination of one at
-the last session of Parliament, and not since, but I cannot learn yet
-what he was. Mr. Walsingham is this day come hither to the Court; it is
-thought he shall be made Secretary. Sir Thomas Smith and he both
-together shall exercise that office. He hath not yet told any news; he
-hath had no time yet for being returned home; as soon as I hear any your
-Lordship shall have them sent. Roulsden hath written to your Lordship as
-he saith, by this bearer; he trusteth to your Lordship’s satisfaction. I
-have been very importunate of him for the present payment of his debt to
-your Lordship. He cannot anyways make shift for money unless he sell
-land, which he vows to do rather than to purchase your Lordship’s
-displeasure. I have moved my Lord Treasurer two sundry times as your
-Lordship commanded me for the mustering within your Lordship’s offices.
-The first time he willed me to come to him some other time, and he would
-give me an answer, because then he had to write to Berwick in haste;
-this he told me before I half told him what I meant. The second time,
-which was on Saturday last, my Lord Leicester came unto him as I was
-talking; but to-morrow, God willing, I will not fail to move him
-thoroughly. For other matters I leave your Lordship to the bearer
-himself. And so, most humbly desiring your Lordship’s daily blessing,
-with my wonted prayer for the continuance of your Lordship’s honour, and
-health long to continue, I end, this 11th of May, 1573.
-
- “Your Lordship’s most humble and obedient son,
- “GILBERT TALBOT.”
-
-
-This letter is packed with suggestions of Court intrigue.
-Hatton—afterwards Sir Christopher Hatton—it will be remembered, was one
-of the many young courtiers whose polish, culture, and elegant dancing
-excited Elizabeth’s romantic interest. He rose from the post of
-Gentleman of the Privy Chamber to the captaincy of the Guard, and, by
-way of the successive posts of Vice-Chamberlain and Privy Councillor,
-reached the Chancellorship and received a Garter.
-
-Edward Dyer, Hatton’s rival, matched him to some extent in honours, for
-he too was subsequently knighted and invested with the Garter. As for
-the Dr. Wilson named, he afterwards became a Secretary of State, while
-the Earl of Oxford, who is shown as trying to outdo all other courtiers
-in favour, was a son-in-law of Lord Burghley. He was an adherent of the
-fifth Duke of Norfolk, and when Burghley refused to intercede for the
-Duke’s life, the Earl vowed that he would revenge himself on his
-father-in-law by destroying the happiness of his daughter. This he
-achieved satisfactorily, and when she died of a broken heart he finished
-his work of destruction by dissipating the whole of his fortune. The
-jealousy of “my Lady Burghley,” named in the above letter, evidently
-refers to the torture which his wife suffered while he was paying
-addresses to the Queen.
-
-In the midst of this motley Court group one discerns the figure of
-Burghley himself, a pillar of discretion, while unable to shield his own
-daughter from distress and scandal.
-
-We see that the Earl of Leicester was a person to be cultivated so long
-as his love affairs did not incur the Queen’s anger, and so long, in
-fact, as the love-making was not on his side. It must have been with a
-chuckle of satisfaction that the Earl received a letter from the
-favourite about this time, in which he specially commends the behaviour
-of the young Talbots and records the Queen’s high approval of them. All
-this was very soothing to their parents. The political situation was
-less acute. Many traitors were dead, and the banner of Mary of Scotland
-lay in the dust. Her chief stronghold had fallen. France was in very bad
-odour, though the memory of the horror of the Bartholomew Massacre was
-beginning to fade from English minds. Spain had enough to do with her
-affairs in the Netherlands. Elizabeth could afford to dance, practise on
-the virginals, play off one of her Court lovers against another, and
-invent nicknames for them. Domestic happiness and a merrier aspect of
-things came also nearer to the Talbots. My Lady absented herself for a
-while, and the Earl writes to her as of old like a lover, and tells her
-of his dangers and longings:—
-
-
-“My dear none,—Of all joys I have under God the greatest is yourself: to
-think that I possess so faithful, and one that I know loves me so
-dearly, is all and the greatest comfort that this earth can give.
-Therefore God give me grace to be thankful to Him for His goodness
-showed unto me, a vile sinner.
-
-“And where you advise in your letter you willed me to ...[20] which I
-did that I should not be ...[20] to this lady nothing of the matter: my
-stomach was so full, I asked her in quick manner, where she writ any
-letters to any her friends that I would stand in her title. She affirms
-in her honour she hath not. But howsoever it is she hath written
-therein, I may safely answer I make small account thereof.
-
-“I thank you, my sweetheart, that you are so willing to come when I
-will. Therefore, dear heart, send me word how I might send for you; and
-till I have your company I shall think long, my only joy: and therefore
-appoint a day, and in the meantime I shall content me with your will,
-and long daily for your coming. I your letters study very well; and I
-like them so well they could not be amended: and I have sent them up to
-Gilbert. I have written to him how happy he is to have such a mother as
-you are. Farewell, only joy. This Tuesday evening.
-
- “Your faithful one,
- “G. SHREWSBURY.
-
-“To my wife.”[21]
-
-
-The next letter, from one of her own boys, is one which Bess evidently
-sent on to her “juwell” of a husband:—
-
-
- _Henry Cavendish to the Countess of Shrewsbury._
-
-“May it please your honour, I thought it good to let your La. understand
-of a misfortune that happened in my house. On Thursday night last at
-supper two of my men fell out about some trifling words, and to all
-their fellows’ judgment that heard their jangling we made good friends
-again, and went and lay together that night, for they had been
-bedfellows of long before, and loved one another very well, as everybody
-took it in the house. On Friday morning, very early, by break of day,
-they went forth, by name Swenerto and Langeford, with two swords apiece,
-as the sequel after showed; and in the fields fought together, and in
-fight Swenerto slew Langeford, to my great grief both for the sudden
-death of the one and for the utter destruction of the other, whom I
-loved very well. Good Madam, let it not trouble you anything; we are
-mortal, and born to many and strange adventures; and therefore must
-temper our minds to bear such burdens as shall be by God laid on our
-shoulders. My greatest grief, and so I judge it will be some trouble to
-your La. that it should happen in my house. Alas! mada, what could I do
-with it: altogether right sorrowful for it, and it hath troubled and
-vexed me, more than in reason it should have done a wise man. I would to
-God I could forget that there never had been any such matter. Upon the
-fight done I sent for Mr. Adderley, and used his counsel in all things.
-Swenerto fled presently and is pursued, but not yet heard of. Thus
-humbly craving your La. daily blessing I end, more than sad to trouble
-your La. thus long with this sorrowful matter. Tut: this present
-Saturday.
-
-“Your La. most bounden, humble, and obedient son,
-
- “HENRY CAVENDISH.
-
- “To my lady.
- “Return this.”
-
-
-“My ‘juwell,’ this Saturday at night I received this letter, much to my
-grief for the mishap. Yet was ever like that Swenerto should commit some
-great fault; he was a vain, lewd fellow. Farewell, my dear heart.
-
- “Your faithful wife,
- “E. SHREWSBURY.”
-
-
-The Earl writes again, impatient for his wife’s return:—
-
-
-“My dear none,—I see how careful you are of my health, which if I were
-sick would relieve me again. I received a letter from Gilbert sent by
-Nykle Clark. You may see the time approaching near that a new alarm will
-be given me. When you have read his letter I pray you to write to me
-again, for I mind of Monday to write by Antony Barlow; he will be glad
-of the pursuivantship if he can get it: he shall have my good will
-therein. If you will write up ... he may safely deliver it, therefore I
-pray you fail not, but send me your advice concerning this matter.
-Farewell, my only joy. This Saturday I pray you keep promise; you said
-you would be with me within a fortnight at the furthest; therefore let
-me hear from you when I shall send for your horses, my sweetheart.
-
- “Your faithful husband and assured,
- “G. SHREWSBURY.”
-
-
-At the beginning of the year following, 1574, the Earl indites a very
-touching and dignified little New Year letter to the son in whom he
-always seems to take the most interest—Gilbert:—
-
-
-“I have received your letter of New Year’s Eve, and this New Year’s day
-I begin to use my pen first to yourself wishing you to use yourself this
-New Year and many years after to God’s glory and fear of Him, and to
-live in that credit your ancestors have hitherto done, and so doing, as
-I hope you will, be faithful, loyal, and serviceable to the Queen’s
-Majesty, my Sovereign, who to me, under God, is King of Kings and Lord
-of Lords. Your New Year’s gift shall be I will supply all your needful
-wants; and so long as I see that carefulness, duty, and love you bear me
-which hitherto I see in you, my purse and all that I have shall be as
-free to you as to myself.[22] Time is so short and I have so many come
-to me with New Year’s gifts I can write no more, but thank you for your
-perfumed doublet you sent me: and so praying God to bless you.
-
-“Sheffield Castle this New Year’s Day 1574.
-
- “Your loving father,
- “G. SHREWSBURY.”
-
-
-The whole tone of the letter is one of domestic security, and one has a
-vivid glimpse of the New Year celebrations and the flow of gifts. These
-_étrennes_ were important affairs. A good courtier always paid this dole
-to his queen under the guise of a handsome gift, while the nobles and
-country gentry in their turn were the recipients from their tenants and
-friends of heterogeneous articles varying from capons, wine, and
-foodstuffs to gloves, clothes, or furniture.
-
-No one in that great and rich family group, so full of promise, had any
-notion of the events which would call down upon the Countess the wrath
-of the Queen, or the fresh accusations which would be hurled against the
-Earl.
-
-Life just now was as easy as Shrewsbury could ever hope to find it. He
-had managed to satisfy his prisoner and give her plenty of change. She
-was in the autumn of 1573 transferred to Chatsworth, _en route_ for
-Buxton. Ultimately, by dint of scouring the place of strangers and
-preventing access to the springs of any save specified persons—a thing
-the more easy of accomplishment since the waters were the property of
-Shrewsbury’s family—it was made possible to give her five weeks here.
-After this came a stay at Chatsworth and then the return to Sheffield.
-
-Freedom from outside attacks did not last very long. Before the spring
-had fairly set in Elizabeth and Burghley were once more on the warpath
-against the Shrewsburys. Never was George Talbot sure of his Queen’s
-trust. It must be remembered here that at the close of 1572 she had
-deliberately written thus by Burghley: “The Queen’s Majesty has in very
-good part accepted your last letter to herself, and has willed me to
-ascertain your Lordship that she doth no wise alter her former good
-opinion of your approved fidelity and of the care you have of such
-service as is committed to you, the same being such as none can in her
-land compare with the trust committed to your Lordship, and yet she
-would have your Lordship, as she says, not to mislike that when she hath
-occasion to doubt or fear foreign practices reaching hither into her
-realm, even to the charge which your Lordship hath, she do warn you
-thereof; and, in so doing, not to imagine that she findeth such
-informations to proceed from any mistrust that she hath of your
-Lordship, no more than she would have if you were her son or brother.
-This she wills me to write effectually to your Lordship ... with my most
-hearty commendations to your Lordship and my good Lady.”
-
-In spite of this the least thing afforded Elizabeth an excuse for a
-nagging letter to Sheffield Castle. On this occasion the matter was
-innocent enough. Gilbert’s young wife expected her first child, and it
-was not surprising that my Lord and Lady should prefer that the event
-should take place under their roof. Yet the Queen thought it necessary
-to worry them with mistrust, forcibly expressed. Shrewsbury replies to
-Burghley: “The mislike her Majesty ... of my son Gilbert’s wife brought
-to bed in my house, as cause of women and strangers repair hither, makes
-me heartily sorry; nevertheless, the midwife excepted, none such have,
-or do at any time, come within her sight; and at the first, to avoid
-such resort, I myself with two of my children christened the child. What
-intelligence passeth for this Queen to and from my house I do not know;
-but trust her Majesty shall find my service while I live both true and
-faithful. Yet be you assured, my Lord, this lady will not stay to put in
-practice, or make enquiry by all means she can devise, and ask me no
-leave, so long as such access of her people is permitted unto her.... My
-Lord, where there hath been often bruits of this Lady’s escape from me,
-the 26th of February last there came an earthquake, which so sunk
-chiefly her chamber as I doubted more her falling than her going, she
-was so afraid. But God be thanked she is forthcoming, and grant it may
-be a forewarning unto her. It hath been at the same time in sundry
-places. No hurt was done and the same continued a very small time. God
-grant us all grace to fear Him.”
-
-That the very Derbyshire ground which bore him should fail his feet
-while his Queen’s faith in him fell away seems adding insult to injury.
-For some time past he appears to have been torn between the longing to
-rid himself of a now intolerable responsibility and the fear of
-misconstruction to which his retirement from his post would expose him.
-“The truth is, my good Lord,” as he is driven at last to say to
-Burghley, “if it so stand with the Queen Majesty’s pleasure I could be
-right well contented to be discharged ... and think myself therewith
-most happy, if I could see how the same might be without any blemish to
-my honour and estimation.” He begs that Burghley “will have respect that
-such consideration may be had of my service as shall make it manifest to
-the world how well her Majesty accepteth the same. My Lord Scroop, and
-others, were not unconsidered of for their short time of service.” And
-so in this condition of mind he waits for Burghley’s advice. He would
-have done better to risk the Queen’s displeasure and to lay down his
-gaoler’s warrant on the plea of illness, even if in those days medical
-certificates were not so easy to procure and might not have been so
-potent. As for disfavour at Court, he could, as a strong and powerful
-private gentleman, take up his stand and keep up his vast property,
-though Elizabeth might wreak her annoyance on the young Cavendishes and
-Talbots. Had he summed up the courage to decide the matter after his own
-heart he would have lost nothing in the world’s esteem, been far better
-off in pocket, and possibly the barque of the Shrewsburys would have
-escaped the shoals and rocks of domestic bickerings, which in later
-middle-life led to such woeful wreckage of the vessel and the
-magnificent family crew.
-
-George Talbot did not foresee all this. He was not an imaginative man.
-He was a typical Government official, precise, sententious, cautious,
-faithful, anxious, hypersensitive. One imagines that his countess—who
-was not in the least _au fond_ the typical discreet wife of a high
-official—spent a good deal of time goading him to revolt. He has
-admitted in a previous letter that she was not at all anxious for him to
-continue with his present duties. Of course, it was the business of
-Burghley to keep him at them. Shrewsbury was the most useful of all
-English nobles in this respect. All the conditions about him suited the
-Queen’s purposes in every way. The way in which she and Burghley put him
-off with fair promises and bamboozled him with vague promises of reward
-makes one gasp. As to current outlay—the £52 per week allowed him for
-this by the Council was far too little—one of the most ingenious
-suggestions Elizabeth ever made was that Mary should “defray her own
-charges with her dowry of France.” Shrewsbury adds: “She seemed not to
-dislike thereof at all, but rather desirous ... so she asked me in what
-sort and with what manner of liberty she should be permitted to same.”
-He urges that these details should be settled at once. “Assure yourself
-if the liberty and manner thereof content her as well as the motion, she
-will easily assent to it; and so I wish it, as may be without peril
-otherwise; and for the charges in safe-keeping her, I have found them
-greater many ways than some have accounted for, and than I have made
-show of, or grieved at; for in service of her Majesty I can think my
-whole patrimony well bestowed.”
-
-How the wary official, loyal and somewhat crushed, speaks in that last
-sentence! How irritating to his Bess with her superabundant business
-instinct and her ambitions for her family! He was ever on the watch, his
-conscience agog. She was continually “on the make,” seeking the quickest
-road to family aggrandisement which was compatible with decency.
-
-The following letter belongs to this period, and shows Gilbert Talbot
-back in London. He had been previously there in communication with Court
-officials apropos of the accusations brought originally against his
-father and subsequently against himself by an ex-chaplain of the Earl,
-named Corker, in combination with another priest called Haworth. The
-letter roused the whole family. The Earl literally lashes out. It
-remains as the chief evidence of the first published imputations against
-the Earl’s honour. It evidently embodies the attitude of wife as well as
-husband. This is a very important point because of the dissension which
-arose later on this very question.
-
-
-“_To the right honourable my very good Lord, my Lord Burghley, Lord
-Treasurer of England._
-
-“Your Lordship’s friendly letters I accept in as friendly ways as I know
-to be meant to me. For Corker’s proceedings against my son Gilbert, I
-partly understand of his false accusation; which, in my conscience, is
-utterly untrue and thereupon I dare gage my life. The reprobate’s
-beginning was against me and now turned to Gilbert. His wicked speeches
-of me cannot be hid; I have them of his own hand, cast abroad in London,
-and bruited throughout this realm, and known to her Majesty’s Council.
-Her Majesty hath not heard of him ill of me, so it pleaseth her Majesty
-to signify unto me by her own gracious letters, which I must believe,
-notwithstanding his dealing against me is otherwise so notoriously known
-that if he escape sharp and open punishment dishonour will redound to
-me. This practice hath a further meaning than the varlets know of....
-For mine own part I have never thought to allow any title, nor will,
-otherwise than as shall please her Majesty to appoint.... How can it be
-supposed that I should be disposed to favour this Queen for her claim to
-succeed the Queen’s Majesty? My dealing towards her hath shown the
-contrary. I know her to be a Stranger, a Papist, and my enemy; what hope
-can I have of good of her, either for me or my country? I see I am by my
-own friends brought in jealousy, wherefore I wish with all my heart that
-I were honourably read, without note or blemish, to the world of any
-want in me.”
-
-
-Though the Earl’s enemy was satisfactorily condemned to the pillory and
-the Fleet, the scandal proved many-headed, and again the poor official
-(accused, among other things, of being as much of a credulous fool as a
-knave in regard to Mary of Scotland) thunders protest.
-
-
-“Wherefore as touching that lewd fellow, who hath not only sought by
-unlawful libels extant, so much as in him lay, to deface my dutiful
-heart and loyalty, but also the rooting up of my house, utter overthrow
-and destruction of my lineal posterity, I neither hold him a subject nor
-yet account him worthy the name of a man, which with a watery submission
-can appease so rigorous a storm;[23] no, if loss of my life, which he
-hath pretended would have fully contented him, I could better have been
-satisfied than with these, his unspeakable vilenesses.... I might be
-thought hard-hearted if, for Christianity’s sake, I should not freely
-forgive as cause shall require, and desire God to make him a better
-member, being so perilous a caterpillar in the Commonwealth. For I have
-not the man anywise in contempt, it is his iniquity and Judas dealing
-that I only hate.”
-
-
-In other words, “Reptile! But I forgive thee.” It is almost a parallel
-to the anecdote of a certain little girl with an over-stern nurse of
-gloomy religious tendencies, to whom the child, waking alone in the
-dark, called, “Nurse, nurse, come, come! I dreamed that the devil was
-here tempting me to call you a duffer—_but I resisted the temptation_!”
-
-The Corker affair, of course, provided fresh food for the imaginings and
-reports of Mary’s adversaries. People thought that it would necessarily
-mean the removal of Mary into fresh custody. Mary herself dreaded this.
-She did not love Shrewsbury, but she believed her life to be safe with
-him, though she may not have entirely trusted his wife. She heard that
-poison was to be used against her, and that there was a suggestion at
-Court “to make overtures to the Countess of Shrewsbury.” She was assured
-that if anyone poisoned her without Elizabeth’s knowledge, the latter
-“would be very much obliged to them for relieving her of so great a
-trouble.”
-
-There is nothing on the Countess’s side to corroborate this wild
-statement. This horrible fear, however, was so implanted in Mary’s mind
-that she sent to France for “some genuine terra sigillata, as antidote.”
-But she did not apply to her sinister mother-in-law Catherine De Medici.
-“Ask M. the Cardinal my uncle,” she writes, “or if he has none, rather
-than have recourse to the Queen my mother-in-law, or to the King, send a
-bit of fine unicorn’s horn, as I am in great want of it.”
-
-The year 1574 travelled onward without realisation of her fears. The
-“caterpillar,” Corker, had not prevailed in the overthrow of the Earl’s
-house or of his “lineal posterity,” and Gilbert Talbot in this little
-note writes affectionately enough to his stepmother:—[24]
-
-
-“My most humble duty remembered unto your good Ladyship, to fulfil your
-La. commandment, and in discharge of my duty by writing, rather than for
-any matter of importance that I can learn, I herewith trouble your La.
-Her Majesty stirreth little abroad, and since the stay of the navy to
-sea here hath been all things very quiet.... I have written to my Lord
-of the bruit which is here of his being sick again, which I nothing
-doubt but it is utterly untrue: howbeit, because I never heard from my
-L. nor your La. since I came up, I cannot choose but be somewhat
-troubled, and yet I consider the like hath been often reported most
-falsely and without cause, as I beseech God this be. My Lady Cobbam
-asketh daily how your La. doth, and yesterday prayed me, the next time I
-wrote, to do her very hearty commendation unto your La., saying openly
-she remaineth unto your La. as she was wont, as unto her dearest friend.
-My La. Lenox hath not been at the Court since I came. On Wednesday next
-I trust (God willing) to go hence towards Goodrich; and shortly after to
-be at Sheffield. And so most humbly craving your La. blessing with my
-wonted prayer, for your honour and most perfect health long to continue.
-From the Court at Greenwich this 27th June, 1573.
-
- “Your La. most humble and obedient son,
- “GILBERT TALBOT.
-
- “To my Lady.
-
-“I received a letter from my Lord since this letter was sealed, and then
-I had no time by this messenger to write again unto your La. which came
-in a comfortable season unto me.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
- A CERTAIN JOURNEY
-
-
-It was now the autumn of the year 1574. The Shrewsburys had for the time
-being come triumphantly out of official complications, and despite their
-grave responsibilities lived as comfortably as might be, though they
-were often separated, because the wife, at any rate, had other duties
-besides that of gaolership. What social life was permitted to them by
-the restraint entailed by this charge could obviously be enjoyed only by
-the Countess, and even she must have found it difficult to meet her
-cronies, get her children married and provided for, and keep a firm hand
-on domestic expenditure at the various houses she owned. The guarding of
-Mary of Scotland certainly had its interesting, romantic side, and this
-to some extent was a set-off against the greyer side of the business and
-its financial disadvantages. Just now the chances of Mary were at their
-lowest. Bothwell was dying in exile,[25] the Duke of Norfolk had shed
-his blood vainly for her, Charles Darnley, “The Young Fool,” as Mr. Lang
-most justly calls him, though dead, with all his vanity, treachery, and
-vice, could still harm her cause, more latterly perhaps through the
-popular stigma which attached to her than by the hatred of his
-relatives, the family of Lennox. His family, sorely chastened by
-Elizabeth for his marriage with Mary, was, since his death, held in less
-odium at the English Court, though it did not suit the Queen’s gracious
-meanness to raise it out of poverty. Elizabeth and Darnley’s mother,
-poor soul—Countess of Lennox, _née_ the Lady Margaret Douglas—had buried
-the hatchet after the boy’s death. For the benefit of those who forget
-her story—or ignore it—a word as to this lady:—
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _From a contemporary picture_
-
- LADY MARGARET DOUGLAS, COUNTESS OF LENNOX
-
- MOTHER OF LORD DARNLEY
-
- Page 120
-]
-
-The daughter of Queen Margaret of Scotland (a Tudor, and sister of Henry
-VIII) and of the Earl of Angus, a mere boy, she was born in a wild
-moment of flight over the border into England. The very castle into
-which her mother crept after the long journey on horseback was
-immediately besieged. Thereafter the child Margaret became a bone of
-contention between her divorced parents—as history tells. After three
-years of babyhood in the shelter of her royal uncle’s English Court she
-spent her youth in France and Scotland, often latterly a wanderer from
-castle to castle, abhorred by her mother the Scots Queen because of her
-devotion to her outlawed father. For years she had neither house nor
-pin-money, but was dependent always upon such hospitality and shelter as
-her father’s friends would yield her in their Northern fortresses.
-Though her mother never forgave her for her defection, the fortunes of
-the girl—beautiful and of imposing personality—mended and brought her at
-last into the sunshine of Tudor favours. Henry VIII had compassion on
-his niece and made her playmate of Princess Mary, at which time she so
-won his affections that he settled an annuity upon her and her father.
-Subsequently she was first lady-in-waiting to Anne Boleyn, and was
-installed as one of the household of the baby Princess Elizabeth. While
-Katherine of Aragon was being divorced and the star of Anne Boleyn waxed
-and waned she witnessed strange moments, and watched the violent changes
-by which her uncle declared now this one and now that one of his
-daughters illegitimate. Her own fortunes, even as a princess of the
-blood royal, were—in spite of her uncle’s genial expressions—nothing too
-secure, and marriage and a dowry were still dreams of the future.
-Possibly the King’s erotic irregularities allowed him no time for the
-love affairs of others, but at any rate he manifestly did not, like some
-of his successors, intend to doom his lady wards to perpetual virginity.
-When Lady Margaret showed favour to Lord Thomas Howard, kinsman of the
-Queen (Boleyn), Henry seemed to have winked at the courtship. So soon,
-however, as he killed his second consort and degraded her baby girl to
-the ranks of the illegitimate, matters assumed a very different colour.
-For the Lady Margaret Douglas was now the nearest heir to the throne. He
-married immediately, but no heir was speedily born. Meanwhile the Lady
-Margaret’s love affair grew and culminated in a formal if secret
-contract—that is to say a solemn betrothal, in every respect binding.
-Henry regarded this as a double offence. His blood niece, his heir
-apparent, had contracted herself without his permission; moreover she
-had pledged herself to a near relative of the abhorred Boleyn. He
-behaved in his proper, kingly, melodramatic way, sent man and maid to
-the Tower, speedily convicted them of high treason, and sentence of
-death followed. The execution of this, as usual, was delayed. The State
-document condemning both is, as all the world knows, one of the most
-disgracefully illegal concoctions ever produced by the blundering rage
-of a ruler and the hypocrisy of his ministers. In addition it furnished
-the precedent for the gross interference of that ruler’s daughter,
-Elizabeth, in like cases. In addition to proving the Lady Margaret
-guilty of treason, it professed to prove her illegitimacy also, and so
-cleared the way for Henry’s future whims. The unhappy Lord Thomas, after
-a year or two, succumbed to close confinement and sorrow and died in the
-Tower. His lady was removed to Sion House Court, near London, one of the
-few religious houses upon which her uncle found it convenient to smile
-because it could play a most useful part in his affairs as a polite
-place of detention for ladies of quality who drooped under his
-displeasure. The birth of his prince—Edward VI—made him relent towards
-his niece, and she came about the Court once more, though her old
-penchant for the house of Howard, of which a second member—nephew of her
-betrothed—now wooed her, thrust her into shadow again. This was probably
-a harder blow than the first, though she was not this time shivering
-under the fear of the axe. For she had been fully restored to her old
-place; she had once more taken part in that melodramatic domestic
-merry-go-round of Henry’s consorts. She was first lady to the new royal
-Anne of Cleves, she had apartments assigned to her at Hampton Court, and
-she was “first lady” again to Anne’s successor, Katherine Howard. A
-weary period of detention at Sion House followed—sharply ended because
-the King now wished to shut up Katherine Howard there. So Lady Margaret
-was moved on to the care of the Duke of Norfolk on the East coast. The
-third Katherine whom Henry wooed—the widowed Parr—put an end to this
-banishment, and by her tact and kindness reconciliations took place all
-round in the royal house. Lady Margaret played bridesmaid and
-lady-in-waiting once more, and her uncle began to bestir himself about
-her marriage. The man she wedded at the age of thirty-two after so much
-tossing and chasing, imprisonment and poverty, was the very Matthew,
-Earl of Lennox, whose claim to the Scots Crown had by James V of
-Scotland, on the death of his two sons, been preferred against those of
-the Earl of Arran. Both earls were kinsmen of James, and because of
-their high ambitions were engaged in undying feud. The birth of a royal
-Scots heir, in Mary, reduced both lords to the same level, but did not
-diminish the pertinacity of Lennox, who returned from France to England
-with the design of wedding Mary’s mother, Mary of Lorraine, as soon as
-her widowhood pointed her out as eligible. He was a handsome fellow and
-perfected in the graces of courts after his long apprenticeship in
-France, but he did not have his way, and emissaries from England schemed
-to throw Lady Margaret Douglas in his path. England was eager that he
-should serve her purposes. As consort of Mary of Lorraine and financed
-by France he would be the worst enemy of England. With Lady Margaret
-England dangled before him a good dowry. The marriage, adorned by the
-blessing of Henry VIII, took place with great éclat in 1544, and the
-King flourished his sanction in a speech including the important
-declaration, “in case his own issue failed he should be right glad if
-heirs of her body succeeded to the crown.” Nevertheless, though her
-husband was promised the regency of Scotland, and she was awarded
-residence in a royal palace (Stepney), she did not retain the King’s
-favour. Quarrels ensued; whether brewed by the spies in her own
-household in London or in Yorkshire (where she established herself in
-order to be nearer her husband, engaged in Border invasions), or by her
-act does not appear. Just before Henry died the breach was complete, and
-in spite of her having given birth to three legitimate Tudor heirs, of
-whom Henry Darnley was the second, her rights and those of her offspring
-from the regal succession in England were wiped out.
-
-With a strength, as of Antæus, the much-buffeted lady overrode trouble
-and travelled to London with her child Henry, now the eldest (her
-first-born died in infancy), to pay her respects to her cousin, the new
-King, Edward VI. How she faced the situation is a marvel. Her husband’s
-Border cruelties had made him unpopular, and she was coldly looked upon.
-Her position for some years was most equivocal, since, in spite of her
-close relationship to the queen dowager of Scotland, she could not
-present to this lady, her sister-in-law, her husband Earl Lennox,
-traitor to Scotland, or her sons, in whom the Tudor blood was tainted by
-that of Lennox. She lived, however, in stately fashion in Yorkshire,
-followed eagerly the ritual of the Romish Church, and educated her
-children in it. Quarrels with her father Angus, discussions as to the
-disposal of his property, the birth of her eighth child, and the
-impaired health of her lord engrossed her now sufficiently. Then came
-another subtle and sudden change of fortunes with the death of Edward
-VI, the abortive scheme on behalf of Lady Jane Grey, and the sudden
-triumph of the claims of Princess Mary over those of her younger sister
-Elizabeth.
-
-During the reign of Mary of England Lady Lennox passed into calmer
-waters. She did not abuse her opportunities, but the Queen’s favour did
-not make Margaret or her children heirs designate to Mary’s crown.
-
-Exit Mary, enter Elizabeth, and with Elizabeth a short time of
-prosperity! Matthew Lennox secured eventually his regency in Scotland,
-and his wife was in waiting upon Elizabeth at Windsor. She must have
-felt like a bat emerging from a cellar after the constant misfortunes
-and rebuffs of the past. Disfavour, dispeace were, however, always her
-portion, and very soon closed in upon her. This time the occasion of
-disturbance was France. Its king died. Mary of Scotland became queen
-consort. Lady Lennox saw a rich chance of using influence so puissant
-for reinstating her husband and herself in Scotland. She sent one
-messenger of congratulation and again another. This seems to have been
-Henry Darnley, now her eldest son, who was just fifteen. Thus did she
-begin to lay the train of circumstances which exploded in the horrors of
-the night of Kirk-o’-Field. From this till the actual Darnley marriage
-it was the Lady Lennox even more than her husband who invited intrigue.
-She, like other keen aristocratic plotters of the day, employed not only
-codes, emissaries, and spies, but conjurors. Little she guessed at the
-eavesdroppers who lurked in the corners of her great house at
-Settrington, and of the spies whom the Earl of Leicester and Lord
-Burghley employed to catch every suspicious word and record every
-private interview within her walls. One fine day the Queen’s officers
-invaded and seized her household, conjurors included, and she and her
-family were summoned sharply to Court. A sorry journey that, though not
-the first piece of pitiful travelling she had done. Servants, children,
-lord and lady reached the capital, and were disposed of in various
-quarters. The Lennoxes were ordered to their own apartments in
-Westminster Palace, while some of their retinue were put into the old
-Gate House prison close by. How young Lord Darnley managed to evade
-watching and quietly lose himself in London is a mystery. This did not
-make things easier for his parents, who were instantly punished by
-separation and imprisonment, he in the Tower, and she to strait keeping
-under the roof of Sir Richard and Lady Sackville, the Queen’s cousins,
-at Sheen. Lady Lennox’s religion and the unjust suggestion that she had
-been responsible for the harsh treatment, by the late Queen, of her
-sister Elizabeth, seemed to aggravate the case of both prisoners. After
-sickness, pleadings, and indignation, husband and wife were permitted to
-share confinement at Sheen. It would have been best for them if they had
-been kept there indefinitely. How Elizabeth ever came to free them in
-the midst of her suspicions and fears in regard to the marriage of Mary
-of Scotland is extraordinary. That she should actually have been
-prevailed upon to give the Earl and his eldest son a passport into
-Scotland is still more so. With the Darnley marriage began Lady Lennox’s
-long incarceration in the Tower itself—a more pitiful imprisonment than
-any she had experienced. Her children were far from her; her husband and
-eldest son were too wise to risk their fate by obeying Elizabeth’s
-absurd order to return to Court. Freedom came hand in hand with the
-terrible news of Darnley’s murder. What could the woman do but break
-forth into loud complaints and passionate accusation in the royal
-presence? Was it strange that, worn with imprisonment, the beauty of her
-prime gone, her face disfigured with many sorrows, her dignity and royal
-blood degraded, she should address a petition begging the Queen to
-commit Mary to trial and secure the speedy execution of justice?
-Elizabeth would not have her hand forced. “It was not becoming,” said
-she, “to fix a charge so heinous upon the princess and her kinswoman
-without producing the clearest evidence.” She would not actually accuse,
-but she would not clear her enemy.
-
-Thus there was reason enough for Elizabeth’s later clemency towards the
-Lennoxes. It suited the purpose of queen and prisoner that they should
-now join issue against the murderess, “the hure,” against “Bothwell’s
-wench.” It suited Lennox well that he should be installed guardian of
-the future James I, and Lady Lennox, as his grandmother, was now
-accorded a far more important position than she could have taken had her
-daughter-in-law been above suspicion. It is true that financially she
-was never unembarrassed. A mansion at Hackney, formerly the property of
-the ruined family of Percy, was awarded to her as a residence, but it
-does not seem to have been much of a home, or at least, her manner of
-living there seems to have been anything but luxurious. She does not
-appear to have been much at Court. Gilbert Talbot alludes to her in a
-letter already quoted, and written in this summer of 1574: “My Lady of
-Lennox hath not been at the Court since I came.” Up to the present her
-attitude towards Mary was unchanged. When Lord and Lady Burghley visited
-Chatsworth in 1570, Margaret Lennox thought it necessary to flog a dead
-horse and add by letter her exhortations to the warnings of Elizabeth
-that Mr. Secretary should be on his guard against the wiles of Mary.
-Even Margaret—a woman—knew the force of the personal equation in this
-case. She is careful to add: “Not for any fear you should be won, which
-as her Majesty tells me she did speak to you at your departing, but to
-let you understand how her Majesty hath had some talks with me touching
-my Lord.... Her Majesty says that Queen works many ways—I answered her
-Majesty was a good lady to her and better I thought than any other
-prince would have been if they were in her case, for she staid
-publishing abroad her wickedness which was manifestly known.” In the
-self-same summer from Chatsworth Mary, the daughter-in-law, writes to
-her. The content and tone of the letters is pitiful enough.
-
-
-“Madame,—If the wrong and false reports of enemies well known as
-traitors to you, alas! too much trusted by me, by your advice, had not
-so far stirred you against my innocence (and I must say against all
-kindness) that you have not only as it were condemned me wrongfully, but
-cherished, as your words and deeds have testified to all the world, a
-manifest misliking against your own blood, I would not have omitted this
-long ago duty in writing to you, excusing me for those untrue reports
-made of me, but hoping with God’s grace and time to have my innocence
-confirmed, as I trust it is already, even to the most indifferent
-persons. I thought best not to trouble you for a time till now another
-matter is moved that toucheth us both, which is the transporting of your
-little son, and my only child, to the which I were never so willing, yet
-I would be glad to have your advice therein, as in all other things
-touching him. I have borne him, and God knoweth with what danger to him
-and to me, and of you he is descended. So I mean not to forget my duty
-to you in showing therein any unkindness to you notwithstanding how
-unkindly you have dealt with me, but will love you as my aunt and
-respect you as my mother-in-law. And if it please you to know further of
-my mind, in that and all things betwixt us, my ambassador, the Bishop of
-Ross, shall be ready to confer with you.
-
-“And so after my hearty commendations, remitting you to the said
-ambassador and your better consideration, I commit you to the protection
-of Almighty God, whom I pray to preserve you, and my brother Charles,
-and cause you to know my part better than you do—By your loving
-daughter-in-law.
-
-“(To my Lady Lennox, my mother-in-law.)”[26]
-
-
-This letter was delivered to Lady Lennox in the Queen’s presence some
-months after it was written, and Elizabeth was still at work defaming
-the writer to her mother-in-law. That was during the close of 1570. In
-1574 their relations were in no wise altered. Lady Lennox evidently
-still believed her son’s wife guilty, while she pathetically insisted
-upon her rights as the grandmother of a king. In this capacity she
-applied to the Queen for a safe-conduct to her northern house of
-Settrington—now restored to her—whither she wished to repair with her
-son Charles because she had been informed of a plot to carry off her
-royal grandson and bring him to England. This seems to have been a
-rather well-worn excuse and was mistrusted by Elizabeth, who about this
-time began to entertain doubts of her lady’s real attitude towards the
-imprisoned “dowager of Scotland.” She and Lady Shrewsbury were old
-acquaintances at Court. The latter heard of the projected long journey,
-and invited the party to break it at one of the Shrewsbury “places.”
-Chatsworth offered itself as most suitable, but she was right in her
-surmise that this choice would only appear in a suspicious light to
-Elizabeth, who anticipated it in the admonition she bestowed on Lady
-Lennox before her departure. Her Ladyship showed a fine indignation at
-such a suggestion, but one wonders whether this was not merely a piece
-of “bluff,” for the complicity of Mary had been repeatedly denied by
-Bothwell and by other Scottish lords implicated in the dark business at
-Kirk-o’-Field. At any rate this northern journey gave colour to all
-kinds of imputations. It was suggested that Lady Lennox’s ultimate aim
-was simply a visit of tender enquiry and that she was bound actually for
-Scotland to assure herself of the welfare of the boy James. It was
-thought, again, that she herself would kidnap the child and bring him
-into England for her own purposes or for those of her daughter-in-law.
-At all events she had her way and started. Lady Shrewsbury also knew
-that Chatsworth was much too near Sheffield Castle to allow of the
-reception of this guest without literally disobeying orders from Court.
-She decided, therefore, upon Rufford Abbey as the most suitable place.
-Unhappily the scheme which lay behind this hospitality has not descended
-to posterity in the form of letters. But gradually the motives
-underlying the invitation show themselves clearly enough. Lady
-Shrewsbury had still one unmarried daughter for whom she was exerting
-herself to find a good match. She had her eye upon a certain young
-Bertie, a son of the Duchess of Suffolk by a second marriage. This
-affair could not be accomplished, and she therefore worked upon the
-Duchess’s sympathy so as to secure her co-operation in a new direction.
-Lady Lennox and her son Charles on their journey halted first at the
-gates of the Duchess’s house. Six miles away was Rufford, where Lady
-Shrewsbury had taken her daughter and made all ready for goodly
-entertainment. To the Duchess’s house she sent a messenger, and backed
-up the invitation by a personal visit. Lady Lennox accepted the
-invitation, and with her son, coach, baggage-carts, mules, and
-attendants arrived at the Abbey. Previous to this there must surely have
-taken place an interesting three-cornered interview between the three
-great ladies. Though the Duchess of Suffolk may have been genuinely
-interested in helping to find a husband for wistful young Elizabeth
-Cavendish, one cannot acquit her of a certain malice. Her part in the
-transaction wears a very innocent air. Nothing happened under her roof
-for which she could be called to book by the Queen. At the same time she
-was a hot Protestant and could not have felt any very great sympathy for
-the Lady Lennox, nor for Lady Shrewsbury, who, as regards mere creed,
-must always have been a religious opportunist.
-
-At Rufford Lady Lennox fell ill. There was excuse enough after the
-exposure to cold and flood in the uncertain autumn weather during which
-she undertook her journey. She was forced to keep her room. Nothing
-could have fallen out more happily to assist the plot of the hostess.
-Her hands were occupied with her friend’s ailments. Their children must
-amuse one another. In five days the close companionship between Charles
-and Elizabeth could not but grow, fostered by the cleverness of the
-girl’s mother. Free to go and come in gardens and woodland, young and
-lithe, eager to escape from rules and duties and tutors, to forget sad
-things—Elizabeth Cavendish, the grim details of Sheffield Castle, its
-alarums and excursions, Charles Stuart, the tragedies of his family—they
-wooed each other readily. Glimpses of their courtship are visualised for
-the reader in imaginary dialogue following.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
- LOVE AND THE WOODMAN
-
-
- _Scene_: A parlour in Rufford Abbey, October, 1574. Elizabeth
- Cavendish bending over her embroidery frame. The Countess of
- Shrewsbury seated writing.
-
-A man’s voice [_calling outside the window_]. Mistress! Mistress
-Elizabeth! Come out!
-
- [_Elizabeth Cavendish starts, rises, looks at her mother._
-
-_Countess_ [_apparently stern_]. Say that I have set you a task. Now do
-not go to the window!
-
-_Elizabeth_ [_checking herself half-way to the window_]. Nay, my Lord, I
-cannot come indeed. [_Drops her voice._] Oh! mother, if it were one of
-the grooms or only my brother!
-
-_Countess._ Little fool! It is the voice of Lennox. Mark you—play him
-wisely.
-
-_Lennox_ [_calling again_]. Mistress, there is no “cannot” when the sun
-calls!
-
-_Elizabeth._ My Lord, lady mother says she ... needs me.
-
-_Lennox._ It is not true. She is brewing a hot posset for my mother. I
-saw her shoulders in the buttery.
-
-_Countess_ [_her shoulders shaking_]. Oho! it was Mrs. Glasse he saw. I
-gave her once an old gown of mine to wear.
-
-_Elizabeth_ [_moving to the window_]. No, no, my Lord, she says it was
-Mrs. Gl.... [_The Countess springs up, catches her sharply by the wrist,
-and gives her a little rap with her fan._]
-
-_Countess._ S-s-t! Let him think I am not here. Play him, play him!
-
-_Lennox._ What is that you say, mistress?
-
-_Elizabeth_ [_embarrassed and miserable_]. Nothing....
-
- [_Lennox throws his cap in at the window. It falls at her feet._]
-
-_Countess._ Girl, do not touch it.
-
-_Lennox._ Oh, mistress, how the sun calls! It has called my cap. Some
-magic has given wings to it and it is gone.
-
-_Elizabeth._ It is here!
-
-_Countess._ Hush! Not yet—not yet.
-
- [_Enter at back a maid with a bowl of posset._]
-
-_Lennox._ Mistress, is my cap flown in at your window perchance?
-
-_Countess_ [_mimicking Elizabeth’s voice_]. Indeed, no.
-
-_Elizabeth._ Oh—lady mother!
-
- [_The maid with the posset giggles, and receives a frown and a box on
- the ear for her pains._]
-
-_Maid._ Will your la’ship’s grace be pleased to taste?
-
-_Countess._ Nay, nay, I cannot abide tansy, but it is good for the
-joints and for rheumy distillations, and will serve the Lady Margaret
-finely. Go you and wait for me at her door with the bowl.
-
-_Lennox._ Elizabeth, I know you have my cap. Without it I cannot walk
-abroad. The wind is cool.
-
-_Elizabeth_ [_softly_]. Oh, mother, he will have the rheum too!
-
-_Countess._ Then shall he stay longer and be well nursed and physicked
-also.
-
-_Lennox._ Bring me my cap, fair mistress.
-
-_Bess_ [_in Elizabeth’s voice_]. Come and fetch it, my Lord.
-
-_Lennox._ That I will, if you will come out with me. But not till you
-promise.
-
-_Bess_ [_to Elizabeth_]. Say no—say no.
-
-_Elizabeth._ I cannot, because ... because ... I have much work to do,
-enough for ... many days.
-
-_Lennox._ It can tarry, lady. In two days I shall be over the Border.
-
-_Elizabeth_ [_agonised_]. Oh, mother!
-
-_Bess_ [_in the feigned voice_]. Not without your cap, I trust, my Lord.
-
-_Lennox._ What if you give it me back?
-
-_Elizabeth_ [_in tears_]. Mother, why does he not come to fetch it?
-
-_Bess._ Sh-sh. I scolded him well but half an hour ago, and bid him
-leave you alone and keep out of my parlour.
-
-_Elizabeth_ [_with dignity_]. Nay, lady mother, he shall have his cap.
-[_Picks it up._]
-
-_Bess_ [_taking it from her_]. He shall, young impudence, but he shall
-fetch it. Play him, Bet, play him well, and if he should ask you go into
-the meadows ... say “Yes.” But not in haste, mark you!
-
-_Elizabeth_ [_on her knees, clinging to her mother’s gown_]. Lady
-mother ... I mislike it....
-
-_Bess_ [_disengaging herself_]. “It,” “it”? What is “it”? He is a pretty
-young man, and his blood runs high like Darnley’s. But God be thanked
-’tis a wiser fool than his brother. Now remember to carry yourself as a
-Cavendish should. Be cautious! Make no false step. I go to cosset and
-posset the mother. S’death, I would I were in your shoes, Bet, to run
-into the woods instead of tiptoe round a sick-chamber.
-
-_Elizabeth_ [_springing up_]. May I indeed go into the woods?
-
-_Bess_ [_at the door_]. Sh-sh.... Cavendo tutus![27]
-
-_Elizabeth_ [_half runs to the window with the cap, stops, smiles_]. My
-Lord!
-
-_Lennox._ Are you alone, mistress?
-
-_Elizabeth._ Yes.... No....
-
-_Lennox._ Who is there?
-
-_Elizabeth._ Your cap! [_Looks laughing out of the window._]
-
-_Lennox._ Coming, coming! [_A minute later he bursts open the door and
-greets her, walks to the embroidery frame, pushes it into a corner, and
-holds out his hand._] Into the sun, Elizabeth.
-
-_Elizabeth_ [_shyly_]. I have not my hood, my Lord.
-
-_Lennox._ Charles, Elizabeth!
-
-_Elizabeth._ Charles ... my Lord.
-
-_Lennox._ Into the woods, my Lady. What matters your hood? The sun
-cannot fire your hair if you wear a hood! [_Draws her down the stairway.
-At the foot of it she slips her hand from his, and they pass demurely
-across the courtyard and out into the meadows, talking of light and
-little things. From time to time Lennox sings snatches of song. The
-larks trill overhead. They plunge into the woods._]
-
-_Elizabeth._ Oh, Charles, I feel as though I had grown lark’s wings ...
-like your cap.
-
-_Lennox._ No, no. If you would grow into a bird, then I shall needs
-become a fowler.
-
-_Elizabeth._ Nay, you shall have wings too.
-
-_Lennox._ Why have we not wings, Elizabeth?
-
-_Elizabeth_ [_looking up into the sky between the branches_]. God is
-wise, Charles. And we have the beautiful warm earth and all the flowers
-to joy us. Meseems it is more comfortable to talk upon the earth than in
-the branches.... And to build our mansions on the earth, too.
-Charles....
-
-_Lennox._ Mansions? I hate them. Great chambers in which one must shiver
-in cold state because one is poor, great chairs in which one must sit
-very straight and look wise, great windows where the snow and rain beat
-and trickle in, or little ones which bar the sun. In Scotland they are
-like that, little and narrow in the great castles. I hate them.
-
-_Elizabeth_ [_proudly_]. In England we have great windows secure against
-storms. You should see my mother’s house at Hardwick, Charles. It has
-high windows. And so fair the house. And she says she will build one
-there still greater and fairer.
-
-_Lennox._ But I desire no great house. You are little, I am not
-great.... I want a little house, a bower....
-
-_Elizabeth._ My Lord....
-
-_Lennox_ [_with his arm about her_]. A bower with you, which I would
-build out of the trees, my own self, like the knight who loved the lady.
-
-_Elizabeth._ Ah? Who was she?
-
-_Lennox._ A lady, like you, Elizabeth, and not much taller, so I take
-it. I read of her in a little book. See ... here it is. [_Pulls a volume
-out of the bosom of his jerkin._] My brother Darnley gave it me once. It
-is a love tale, all in French, and very curious.
-
-_Elizabeth._ Read it to me, Charles.
-
-_Lennox._ Sweetheart, I cannot read it all because the words are so
-strange, but my brother writ portions of the rightful meanings on the
-margins.... Come ... let us sit.... [_He draws her to a place under the
-trees._]
-
-_Elizabeth._ Charles ... I am afraid....
-
-_Lennox._ Not with me....
-
-_Elizabeth._ There are woodmen.... They go to and fro.
-
-_Lennox._ What of that? There are woodmen in the story—many. [_Opens the
-book._]
-
-_Elizabeth._ Listen, I hear their axes—chip, chop. They are cutting into
-pieces the lovely trees they felled in the spring. It is very sad.
-
-_Lennox._ Dear, you are sweetly foolish. They cannot hurt you.
-
-_Elizabeth_ [_sadly_]. So do they cut down the happy trees.
-
-_Lennox._ Happy to be cut down to build bowers for you and me....
-Listen.... [_Turns over the leaves._] She was a fairy maiden.
-
-_Elizabeth_ [_shocked_]. Oh! Then she said no prayers.
-
-_Lennox._ Her foster-father took her from the fairies, and what prayers
-she missed she learnt at the feet of love.
-
-_Elizabeth._ Where did she first see her lover...?
-
-_Lennox._ How can I tell? He loved her from the beginning ... as I love
-you.
-
-_Elizabeth._... The beginning?
-
-_Lennox._ Two days ago.
-
-_Elizabeth_ [_starting up_]. A woodman comes. [_He pulls her down
-again._]
-
-_Lennox._ How can I tell the story if you run away?
-
-_Elizabeth._ Indeed ... I love to listen.
-
-_Lennox_ [_goes on rapidly_]. Well ... thus was it. These two loved ...
-oh, terribly! And the father of the knight, a great count, parted them,
-since the boy would not go fight against his country’s enemies except he
-wedded the lady ... and the Count bid her foster-father shut her in a
-prison so that she should weave no spells about him more.
-
-_Elizabeth._ This is too sad a story. [_Wipes her eyes._]
-
-_Lennox._ It was a very fair prison in a great castle, dearest.... And
-she quickly escaped from it by her art.
-
-_Elizabeth._ Good, good!
-
-_Lennox._ But her love knew not where she went.... And he said to his
-father, “If I trounce your foes in battle, let me but kiss my lady.” To
-which the lord said “Yes.” But he kept not his word, and put the knight
-in prison when he came home bruised and weary after battle.
-
-_Elizabeth._ Alack!
-
-_Lennox._ But she—she found the prison and sang through the window, and
-cut her hair to throw into the chamber that he might remember her.
-
-_Elizabeth_ [_slyly_]. Like your cap, but just now, Charles.
-
-_Lennox._ Yes, yes.... And they called courage to one another till the
-soldiers came and she hid for fear they should kill her.... And then she
-walked far till she came to a great wood.... [_A woodman passes with his
-axe._]
-
-_Elizabeth._ There is the axe, again. It minds me of—of death, Charles!
-
-_Lennox._ Dearest, it is only a foolish axe to chop your lady mother’s
-fuel.
-
-_Elizabeth._ And how did the knight find his lady?
-
-_Lennox._ When the Count deemed the fairy lady gone for ever he let his
-son the knight come out of the tower where he was, and feasted him. But
-the lady dwelt in the woods and he knew it not.
-
-_Elizabeth_ [_indignant_]. He stayed to feast while she wandered in a
-strange wood?
-
-_Lennox._ He stayed but little. And when he could he took his horse and
-rode out and came to five roads which met.... Stay ... my brother writ
-of these cross-roads. It is a pretty conceit he made. The one was called
-“The World,” and another “The Wars,” a third was “Power,” and the
-fourth ... see, can you read this?
-
-_Elizabeth._ “Riches.” And the next word is “Poverty.”
-
-_Lennox._ There he waited—perplexed.
-
-_Elizabeth._ Quick, quick! Which did he choose?
-
-_Lennox._ Faith, he tried them all save “Poverty.”... Yet when he would
-travel down one or the other her voice called him back, and his horse
-stood like stone till the knight trembled in the twilight and feared she
-was all a fairy and no woman, but mocked him. And then from his bosom
-there fell a sheaf of her hair. When he stooped to gather it, it grew
-into a fine chain, the end whereof he could not see, and it closed about
-his wrist like a bracelet and drew him to the road called “Poverty.”
-
-_Elizabeth._ Then, surely, he rode fast?
-
-_Lennox._ Horse and man were exceeding glad—so says the book ... because
-of the noble road which opened before them.... And the moon and the sun
-shone together upon them till at last they were come to a little house
-of boughs twined with lilies.... Over the door was written, “Her Heart
-and My Desire” ... and there he found his lady, singing fairy songs
-because she knew that he was faithful.... [_Closes the book and bends
-over her._]
-
-_Elizabeth_ [_softly_]. And there they stayed surely a little while.
-
-_Lennox._... To the end of the world....
-
-_Elizabeth._... But the woodman came by with his axe to cut down the
-bower.
-
-_Lennox._ Not in this tale.
-
-_Elizabeth._ The lilies faded.
-
-_Lennox._ They were fadeless.
-
-_Elizabeth._ They grew old ... and ... could not feel the sun....
-
-_Lennox._ Never, never.
-
-_Elizabeth._ I would it were true, Charles. [_The sound of the axe again
-interrupts them. There is laughter from men, who pass and repass and
-point out the lovers to each other._] There! They have seen us—the rude
-woodmen. We have no bower any more. [_Hurries away from the tree._]
-
-_Lennox_ [_in pursuit_]. What mean you by this “woodman”...?
-
-_Elizabeth_ [_holding out her hands for protection_]. I mean there ...
-is no for ever.... They died, and the lilies and the branches died. Let
-us go home ... Charles, hide me ... from the woodman!
-
-_Lennox._ Always, always! Elizabeth, stay with me. Do not ever go from
-me. You ... you shall never die!
-
- [_He puts his cloak about her and they walk, closely knit, through the
- meadows till they reach the Abbey. At the gates they slip apart and
- go in demurely as before. The Countess looks through a window on to
- the court over which they pass._]
-
-_Countess._ Bet, come instantly to your chamber!
-
-_Lennox_ [_saluting_]. My Lady, she cannot leave me. For so has she
-promised.
-
-_Countess._ Lord, Lord! What have you done?
-
-_Elizabeth._ Lady mother, I ...
-
-_Countess._ Come in, come in, you sad fools. Every scullion will hear
-you. [_The three meet on the staircase and the Countess motions them
-austerely into the parlour._]
-
-_Countess_ [_to Lennox_]. I bid you stay far from Elizabeth.
-
-_Elizabeth._ Oh, mother, make no more feints. He loves me. If he goes
-from me ... [_Her voice breaks._]
-
-_Lennox._ My Lady, she will go to the Border with me and into the world.
-
-_Countess_ [_with a cry of dismay_]. So, so.... “He loves me.”... “I
-will go over the Border.”... And how shall a poor woman permit such
-naughty contrivings!
-
-_Elizabeth._ Mother.... We are not naughty. I did not know he loved me
-till ... till we spoke of a story.... And then ... it was very sweet,
-mother ... till the woodmen came.... And I was frightened and ran,
-and ... Charles bid me come home.... He says the woodman ... [_Turns to
-Lennox for protection._]
-
-_Countess_ [_with a cry of anger_]. The woodmen. What is this of the
-woodmen?
-
-_Elizabeth._ They mocked, and....
-
-_Countess._ Lord, Lord!... What is to be done now...? You should both be
-whipped. The woodmen to see you kissing and cozening under the trees?
-The woodmen? And you a Cavendish! Stay you here till I have told the
-Lady Lennox. Oh, oh, oh! that I should have such a tale for her....
-
- [_At the sound of her voice Lady Lennox, roused, comes down the
- corridor in her bedgown._]
-
-_Countess._ My Lady!
-
-_Lennox._ Mother....
-
-_Lady Lennox._... I was affrighted. I thought you wept, my Lady.
-
-_Countess._ Matter for weeping, in truth. [_Points to Elizabeth and
-Lennox, who stand together._]
-
-_Lady Lennox._ But ... how? [_Sinks into a chair._]
-
-_Countess_ [_vehemently_].... My Lady, ... these naughty children have
-carried themselves no better than a pair of turtle-doves; and all in the
-woods.... And the whole world knows it. My very woodmen ... low
-fellows ... laughed!... Your son plots to carry my Elizabeth over the
-Border an if she were a truss of hay! And she, the wretch, too, content
-to be bundled that way ... any way ... so long as it be on his road! Oh!
-my Lady, help us all, lest shame fall on my house.
-
-_Lennox_ [_defiant_]. No shame to love well, my Lady. Are there no
-priests? And this an Abbey!
-
-_Lady Lennox._ Boy, go you to your room and leave me talk with my Lady
-here.
-
-_Lennox._ I go with Elizabeth to the gallery. When you call, mother, we
-will come.... [_Kisses her hand and goes out with Elizabeth._]
-
-_Lady Lennox._ A priest! There is time enough....
-
-_Countess._ How do I know if they will not fly like birds together if we
-say them “Nay”?
-
-_Lady Lennox._... The saints forbid!...
-
-_Countess_ [_quickly_]. The boy is wild ... for love makes wildlings of
-men.... It is the only word of wisdom he has said ... that of the
-priest.
-
-_Lady Lennox._ Great Heaven!...
-
-_Countess._ Young fools.... Yet, if we part them ... shall not our
-consciences give us everlasting punishment?
-
-_Lady Lennox._ True, true.... The girl is very gentle, my Lady.... There
-is a look in her eye that.... And he is very ripe for love. [_The
-Countess punctuates her speeches with sympathetic gestures._] And I have
-seen much sorrow, and the House of Lennox dies ... with Charles.
-
-_Countess._ Come ... let us not talk of death ... but look properly upon
-this matter and devise, instead of funerals, weddings. Come, my sweet
-friend, dear Lady ... to your chamber.... Rest, and let us comfort one
-another.... Come! [_She supports Lady Lennox out of the room._]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
- AFTERMATH
-
-
-There was, as the two mothers agreed, but one way out of it all—a speedy
-marriage. No time to invite the blessing of the bride’s stepfather, no
-time for signing of deeds, or for collecting bride-gear, or for endowing
-boy and girl with house and lands. These things would as well be done
-afterwards as now, and a pompous family wedding in the Shrewsbury
-household would just now have been attended with all sorts of
-difficulties. Without more ado the matter was settled, and the actual
-wedding seems to have taken place at Rufford in the presence of only a
-very few persons. Indeed, in the words of one historian, the pair
-“married almost as soon as Lady Lennox was able to leave her bedroom.”
-It has been suggested by the same writer that the two dowagers, in
-aiding and abetting the marriage, were at cross purposes. It is certain
-that Lady Shrewsbury had met her match in character, purpose, and
-ability in intrigue. She could not have been able to persuade Margaret
-Lennox in the affair against her will and conscience. Henderson
-elaborates the suggestion thus: “The motive of Lady Lennox was probably
-reconciliation with the Queen of Scots, through the new connection
-formed with the Shrewsburys. If Elizabeth died—and there was a general
-impression that she would not live long—Mary might very possibly succeed
-her; and though Lady Lennox thought it prudent to assert to Elizabeth
-that she never could have dealings with the Queen of Scots, since, being
-flesh and blood, she could not forget the murder of her child, yet she
-did not wish to debar herself from all further favour from the possible
-Queen of England, who was also the mother of her grandchild (i.e. James
-of Scotland). As for Mary, nothing could suit her better than a
-reconciliation with Lady Lennox, since it would mean the renewal of
-support from many Catholics who had been estranged from her by the
-circumstances attending the death of Darnley. In any case, whatever
-Mary’s part in the accomplishment of the marriage, and whether any
-understanding was then arrived at by her with Lady Lennox or not, Mary,
-after the death of Lady Lennox in 1578, affirmed that she had been
-reconciled to her for five or six years, and that Lady Lennox sent her
-letters expressing regret at the wrong she had done her in the
-accusations she had been induced to make against her, at the instance of
-Elizabeth and her Council.”[28]
-
-This is, however, a part of future history. The facts show that Mary
-seems to have had no hand in the marriage, and we cannot imagine that
-after carefully balancing all possibilities Lady Shrewsbury would have
-invited her interest. The whole thing would have been revealed and
-exaggerated by spies, and thus assume the form of a very serious plot.
-Lady Lennox certainly trusted to Elizabeth’s credence in her old enmity
-against her daughter-in-law to clear her from blame. Lady Shrewsbury
-doubtless pretended to herself that she could not be justly accused of a
-grab at royal rights, on behalf of her family, since Scotland had
-already its King and it was open to England to name a successor. La
-Mothe Fénélon, the French Ambassador, feared that the Lennox intimacy
-would estrange the Shrewsburys from Mary, and so make her case harder.
-The very contrary happened, as the correspondence reveals.
-
-For the moment we are concerned with the days immediately following that
-sudden ceremony at Rufford. Details of the itinerary of the bridal pair
-are not forthcoming, neither does it appear where the older Lady Lennox
-went after her momentous visit, nor whether young Elizabeth and her
-husband took shelter with her mother or his. News of the event did not
-reach the Queen till fully a month later. Instantly she scented treason.
-Here was a chance for her to behave once more after the pattern of her
-autocratic father. She belaboured the Earl of Shrewsbury, and despatched
-to both dowagers and the bride and bridegroom a summons to Court.
-
-Lord Shrewsbury, who in these days scarcely ever put pen to paper except
-to expostulate, explain, and apologise, wrote three separate letters on
-the subject—to the Queen, to Burghley, and to Lord Leicester. It will
-suffice to quote the two first:—
-
-
- “May it please your excellent Majesty,
-
-“The commandment your Majesty once gave me, that I should sometimes
-write to you, although I had little to write of, boldeneth me thus to
-presume, rather to avoid blame of negligence than dare tarry long for
-any matter worthy your Majesty’s hearing; only this I may write; it is
-greatly to my comfort to hear your Majesty passed your progress in
-perfect health and so do continue. I pray to Almighty God to hold it
-many years, and long after my days ended; so shall your people find
-themselves most happy.
-
-“This Lady, my charge, is safe at your Majesty’s commandment.
-
-“And, may it further please your Majesty, I understood of late your
-Majesty’s displeasure is sought against my wife, for marriage of her
-daughter to my Lady Lennox’s son. I must confess to your Majesty, as
-true it is, it was dealt in suddenly, and without my knowledge; but as I
-dare undertake and ensure to your Majesty, for my wife, she, finding her
-daughter disappointed of young Barté, where she hoped that the other
-young gentleman was inclined to love with a few days’ acquaintance, did
-her best to further her daughter in this match; without having therein
-any other intent or respect than with reverend duty towards your Majesty
-she ought. I wrote of this matter to my Lord Leicester a good while ago
-at great length. I hid nothing from him that I knew was done about the
-same, and thought not meet to trouble your Majesty therewith, because I
-took it to be of no such importance as to write of, until now that I am
-urged by such as I see will not forbear to devise and speak what may
-procure any suspicion, or doubtfulness of my service here. But as I have
-always found your Majesty my good and gracious Sovereign, so do I
-comfort myself that your wisdom can find out right well what causes move
-them thereunto, and therefore am not afraid of any doubtful opinion, or
-displeasure to remain with your Majesty of me, or of my wife, whom your
-highness and your council have many ways tried in times of most danger.
-We never had any thought or respect but as your Majesty’s most true and
-faithful servants; and so do truly serve and faithfully love and honour
-your Majesty, ever praying to Almighty God for your Majesty, as we are
-in duty bounden.
-
- “SHEFFIELD, _2nd of December, 1574_.”
-
-
-The other letter is headed:—
-
-
- “To My Lord Tre....,
-
-“My very good Lord, for that I am advertised the late marriage of my
-wife’s daughter is not well taken in the Court, and thereupon are some
-conjectures more than well, brought to her Majesty’s ears, in ill part
-against my wife; I have a little touched the same in my letters now to
-her Majesty, referring further knowledge thereof to letters I sent my
-Lord of Leicester a good while since, wherein I made a long discourse of
-that matter; and if your Lordship meet with anything thereof that
-concerns my wife or me, and sounds in ill part against us, let me crave
-of your Lordship so much favour as to speak your knowledge and opinion
-of us both. No man is able to say so much as your Lordship of our
-service because you have so carefully searched it, with great respect to
-the safe keeping of my charge. So I take leave of your Lordship.
-
- “SHEFFIELD, _2nd December, 1574_.”
-
-
-These letters did not help matters in the slightest. The two Countesses
-were obliged to go to Court for chastisement, and apparently Bess
-Shrewsbury repaired thither before any interview could be secured with
-her husband. Nor have any letters from her been found to show whether
-she was awestruck or defiant, though correspondence must have passed
-between wife and husband upon a matter so urgent.
-
-The fateful northern journey took place about October 9th. Queen
-Elizabeth’s summons was dated November 17th, and reached the delinquents
-within a few days. Lady Lennox, who, in her royal capacity and as mother
-of the bridegroom, may legally be regarded as the prime offender,
-followed Lord Shrewsbury’s example of explanation and expostulation.
-She, too, wrote promptly to Lords Burghley and Leicester:—[29]
-
-
- “My very good Lord,
-
-“Assuring myself of your friendship I will use but few words at this
-present, other than to let you understand of my wearisome journey and
-the heavy burden of the Queen’s Majesty’s displeasure, which I know well
-I have not deserved, together with a letter of small comfort that I
-received from my Lord of Leicester, which being of your Lordship read, I
-shall desire to be returned to me again. I also send unto your Lordship,
-here enclosed, the copy of my letter now sent to my Lord of Leicester;
-and I beseech you to use your friendship towards me as you see time.
-Thus with my hearty commendations, I commit you to Almighty God, whom I
-beseech to send you long life to your heart’s desire. Huntingdon this 3
-of December.
-
- “Your Lordship’s assured loving friend,
- “MARGARET LENNOX.
-
-“To the Right Honourable my very good Lord and friend, the
-Lord-Treasurer of England.”
-
-
-It is unfortunate that one of the enclosures, the letter from Leicester,
-is not to be found, for it would have been interesting to read that
-gentleman for once in a mood that was not suave and reassuring.
-
-The letter to Leicester gives a graphic description of her uncomfortable
-journey across flooded country:—[30]
-
-
- “HUNTINGDON, _December 3, 1574_.
-
-“My very good Lord,—The great unquietness and trouble that I have had
-with passing these dangerous waters, which hath many times enforced me
-to leave my way, which hath been some hindrance to me that hitherto I
-have not answered your Lordship’s letters chiefly on that point wherein
-your Lordship, with other my friends (as your Lordship says) seems
-ignorant how to answer for me. And being forced to stay this present
-Friday in Huntingdon, somewhat to refresh myself, and my overlaboured
-mules, that are both crooked and lame with their extreme labour by the
-way, I thought good to lay open to your Lordship, in these few lines,
-what I have to say for me, touching my going to Rufford to my Lady of
-Shrewsbury, both being thereunto very earnestly requested, and the place
-not one mile distant out of my way. Yea, and a much fairer way, as is
-well to be proved; and my Lady meeting me herself upon the way, I could
-not refuse, it being near XXX miles from Sheffield. And as it was well
-known to all the country thereabouts that great provision was there made
-both for my Lady of Suffolk and me—who friendly brought me on the way to
-Grantham, and so departed home again, neither she nor I knowing any such
-thing till the morning after I came to Newark. And so I meant simply and
-well, so did I least mistrust that my doings should be taken in evil
-part, for, at my coming from her Majesty, I perceived she misliked of my
-Lady of Suffolk being at Chatsworth, I asked her Majesty if I were
-bidden thither, for that had been my wonted way before if I might go.
-She prayed me not, lest it should be thought I should agree with the
-Queen of Scots. And I asked her Majesty, if she could think so, for I
-was made of flesh and blood, and could never forget the murder of my
-child. And she said, ‘Marry, by her faith she could not think so that
-ever I could forget it, for if I would I were a devil.’ Now, my Lord,
-for that hasty marriage of my son, Charles, after that he had entangled
-himself so that he could have none other, I refer the same to your
-Lordship’s good consideration, whether it was not most fitly for me to
-marry them, he being mine only son and comfort that is left me. And your
-Lordship can bear me witness how desirous I have been to have had a
-match for him other than this. And the Queen’s Majesty, much to my
-comfort, to that end gave me good words at my departure.”
-
-
-There were other letters from her repeating the statements about her
-careful avoidance of Chatsworth and Sheffield, the helpless position in
-which she was placed by “the sudden affection” of her son, and begging
-for the Queen’s compassion “on my widowed estate, being aged and of many
-cares.”
-
-She reached Court on December 12th, and was accorded such a reception
-that La Mothe Fénélon thought it worth while to include, in his
-despatches to France, her fears and apprehensions. He records her dread
-of her old prison, the Tower, and her hope that she may escape at least
-that indignity through the influence of good friends. She went meekly to
-her house at Hackney, with Charles and Elizabeth Lennox, who had
-scarcely learnt the meaning of the word honeymoon. There the three,
-forbidden to leave the precincts of the house, spent a joyless
-Christmas, while, in lieu of a royal festival greeting, Christmas Eve
-brought them Elizabeth’s orders that they were to have intercourse only
-with such persons as were named by the Privy Council. Immediately after
-Christmas the door of the Tower gaped and swallowed the Lennox dowager.
-To the Tower also, it seems, was sent her confederate. The comments of
-Bess of Shrewsbury have not been chronicled. But she probably remembered
-keenly enough the days when as “Sentlow” she had the sense to keep out
-of any active participation in the marriage of Lady Catherine Grey. Her
-thoughts in retrospect could not have been very pleasant, and genuine
-fears for the fate of her young and easily-led daughter must have
-jostled fears for her own skin.
-
-As for Lady Lennox, her sensations were still more poignant. “Thrice
-have I been cast into prison,” said she, “not for matters of treason,
-but for love matters. First, when Thomas Howard, son to Thomas first
-Duke of Norfolk, was in love with myself; then for the love of Henry
-Darnley, my son, to Queen Mary of Scotland; and lastly for the love of
-Charles, my younger son, to Elizabeth Cavendish.”
-
-It was just after Christmas that Lord Shrewsbury again bestirred himself
-and applied to Burghley, though he ostensibly does it less on behalf of
-his wife than of Lady Lennox.
-
-
- “My very good Lord,
-
-“Upon my Lady Lennox’s earnest request, as to your Lordship I am sure
-shall appear, I have written to my Lords of the Council all I can find
-out of her behaviour towards this Queen and dealing when she was in
-these north parts; and if some disallowed of my writing (as I look they
-will, because they would have it thought that I should have enough to do
-to answer for myself) let such ...[31] reprove, or find any ...[31]
-respect to her Majesty in me or my wife is sought for, and then there is
-some cause to reprehend me, and for them to call out against me as they
-do. I take that Lady Lennox be a subject in all respects worthy the
-Queen’s Majesty’s favour, and for the duty I bear to her Majesty I am
-bound, methinks, to commend her so as I find her; yea, and to intreat
-you, and all of my Lords of the Council for her, to save her from
-blemish, if no offence can be found in her towards her Majesty. I do not
-nor can find the marriage of that Lady’s son to my wife’s daughter can
-any way be taken with indifferent judgment, be any offence or
-contemptuous to her Majesty; and then, methinks, that benefit any
-subject may by law claim might be permitted to any of mine as well. But
-I must be plain with your Lordship. It is not the marriage matter nor
-the hatred some bear to my Lady Lennox, my wife, or to me, that makes
-this great ado and occupies heads with so many devices. It is a greater
-matter; which I leave to conjecture, not doubting but your Lordship’s
-wisdom hath foreseen it, and thereof had due consideration, as always
-you have been most careful for it.
-
-“I have no more to trouble your Lordship withal, but that I would not
-have her Majesty think, if I could see any cause to imagine any intent
-of liking or insinuation with this Queen the rather to grow by this
-marriage, or any other inconvenience might come thereby to her Majesty,
-that I could or would bear with it, or hide it from her Majesty, for
-that Lady’s sake, or for my wife, or any other cause else; for besides
-the faith I bear her Majesty, with a singular love I look not by any
-means but by her Majesty only to be made better than I am; nor by any
-change to hold that I have—so take my leave of your Lordship.
-
-“Sheffield Castle (where my charge is safe), the 27th of December, 1574.
-
-“Your Lordship’s assured friend to my power,
-
- “G. SHREWSBURY.”
-
-
-This letter is dignified, slightly defiant—claiming common justice for
-his people, as “any subject” may do—and doggedly loyal. He is no
-opportunist, and for any improvement in his fortunes he looks to
-Elizabeth only. He has acted whole-heartedly and with a single mind. He
-has tendered to the Lords of the Council all possible details which
-would assist in clearing Lady Lennox from imputations in regard to
-co-operation with Mary of Scotland. He fully recognises that this is the
-“greater matter” which “occupies heads with so many devices” and wherein
-lies the crux of the affair. He knew that a long official enquiry was
-inevitable. This took the form of a special Court under the Earl of
-Huntingdon, whom Mary of Scots and the Earl alike detested. The choice
-of him as grand inquisitor must have been the more galling just now,
-because reports were rife that this rash marriage had finally decided
-the Queen to supersede Lord Shrewsbury as incapable and unworthy of her
-reliance. Such rumours were always a part of her policy. She knew
-perfectly well who was most useful to her, and she was not going to
-relax her grip upon Shrewsbury, his endurance, his loyalty, his houses,
-and his income.
-
-Lord Huntingdon’s enquiry went forward, and both ladies were ultimately
-acquitted of “large treasons.” If the gaoler-soldier Earl did not give
-his wife a sound verbal drubbing for endangering the peace of his whole
-house in so gratuitous a fashion it would be strange. From the very
-first, in spite of his assurances to the Queen, he must have scented his
-lady’s ambition with regard to any possible semi-royal offspring of the
-Rufford marriage. The matter weighed on him greatly in after life. One
-can only assume that his Bess at this period lost her sense of
-perspective, and that in one sense her noted long-headedness deserted
-her. The enquiry over, the principal offenders, crushed and humble (Lady
-Lennox at all events seemed so), retired to their homes. It is mentioned
-that the royal order giving Lady Shrewsbury her freedom included
-permission for her to repair to the baths at Buxton, a change of air
-which must have been extremely salutary after the poor ventilation of
-the Tower of London, even under the less rigorous conditions accorded to
-prisoners of quality.
-
-By the middle of May, Lady Lennox was once more at her Hackney house. A
-visit to Buxton waters for her was out of the question, both as regards
-policy and expense. At Hackney she rested, very much out of the world
-and very poor, with her gentle little daughter-in-law and son, who spent
-the first year of their married life in a tolerably morose atmosphere of
-suspicion and unpopularity. They had, of course, a few visitors. Gilbert
-Talbot, who seems always to have been the spokesman of the family, and
-to have kept in touch with its various members, records the impression
-made by the Lennoxes on a certain “Mr. Tyndall,” who subsequently
-carried letters down to Derbyshire to the mother of Elizabeth Lennox:—
-
-
-“This bearer, Mr. Tyndall, was at Hackney, where he found them there
-well. And I trust very shortly that the dregs of all misconstruction
-will be wiped away, that their abode there after this sort will be
-altered.”
-
-
-This means that the inmates were socially taboo and were still kept
-“within bounds.”
-
-In July of the same year there is a most pathetic little letter from the
-girl-wife Elizabeth, by this time in a fair way to produce an heir for
-the perishing house of Lennox. She makes no allusion to the fact in this
-piteous and formal little note to the mother who used her for family
-purposes much in the same way as she used a stone for the building of
-her other “workes.” The cause of the displeasure which the writer seeks
-to disarm is inexplainable. Elizabeth Cavendish was exactly the opposite
-in character to her mother, or her mother’s eldest daughter Mary, wife
-of Gilbert Talbot. The latter—of whom more presently—was a hot-tempered,
-vindictive, energetic creature, with plenty of intelligence. Elizabeth
-Cavendish was gentle, unassuming, tender-hearted. She would certainly
-take the line of least resistance. This is the letter:—[32]
-
-
-“My humble duty remembered: beseeching your L. of your daily blessings:
-presuming of your motherlike affection towards me your child that trust
-I have not so evilly deserved as your La. hath made show, by your
-letters to others, which maketh me doubtful that your La. hath been
-informed some great untruth of me or else I had well hoped that for some
-small trifle I should not have continued in your displeasure so long a
-time. And I might be so bold as to crave at your La. hands that it would
-please you to extreme[33] such false bruits as your La. hath heard
-reported of me as lightly as you have done when othere were in the like
-case, I should think myself much the more bound to your La. I beseech
-you make my hearty commendations to my aunt. I take my leave in humble
-wise.
-
-“Hackney, 25th of July.
-
- “Your La. humble and Obedient daughter,
- “E. LENOX.
-
- “To the right honourable the Countess
- of Shrewsbury my very good mother.”
-
-
-At all events, the mother’s displeasure must have melted upon the birth
-of her Lennox grandchild. Unhappily for the ambitious Bess, this was not
-a son but a girl, christened Arabella, who was afterwards to play her
-part in just such a tragi-comedy of ambition, Court pageant, and
-luckless marriage as befell her grandmother Margaret Lennox, and the
-Ladies Catherine and Mary Grey. Had the child been a boy Queen Elizabeth
-might have been less inclined to clemency. Her sex, her helplessness,
-the poverty of her father’s house, and the dangerous and delicate
-condition of his health were all inducements to the Queen’s compassion,
-and also rendered the babe a useful item in the plans of the “Mistress
-Builder.” Her birth, of course, brought the Shrewsburys into an oddly
-contradictory relationship towards Mary of Scotland, who always showed
-the tenderest interest in the child. It must also have assisted to
-complete the better understanding between Darnley’s mother and widow.
-Already they had drawn closer in a mutual dread lest, since the
-assassination of the old Earl of Lennox, the evil practices of the
-present Regent, Lord Morton, should injure the young James of Scotland.
-Lady Lennox’s letter to Mary from Hackney, dated November 10th, 1575,
-makes their reconciliation very clear:—
-
-
-“It may please your Majesty, I have received your letters and mind both
-by your letters and otherwise, much to my comfort specially perceiving
-what jealous natural care your Majesty hath of our sweet and peerless
-jewel in Scotland. I have been as fearful and as careful as your Majesty
-of him, so that the wicked governor should not have power to do harm to
-his person, whom God preserve from his enemies. I beseech your Majesty
-fear not, but trust in God all shall be well. The treachery of your
-traitors is evidently no better than before. I shall always play my part
-to your Majesty’s content so as may tend to both our comforts. And now I
-must yield your Majesty my most humble thanks for your good remembrance
-and bounty to our little daughter, her who some day may serve your
-highness. Almighty God grant unto your Majesty a long and happy life.
-
- “Your Majesty’s most humble and
- loving mother and aunt,
- “MARGARET LENNOX.”
-
-
-The “little daughter” is surely the young Elizabeth Lennox (_née_
-Cavendish), who adds this postscript to the letter:—
-
-
-“I most humbly thank your Majesty that it pleased you to remember me,
-your poor servant, both with a token and in my La. Gr.’s letter,[34]
-which is not little to my comfort. I can but wish and pray God for your
-Majesty’s long and happy estate.... I may do your Majesty better
-service, which I think long to do, and shall always be as ready thereto
-as any servant your Majesty hath, according as by duty I am bound. I
-beseech your highness to pardon these rude lines, and accept the good
-heart of the writer, who loves and honours your Majesty unfeignedly.
-
-“Your Majesty’s most humble and lowly servant through life,
-
- “E. LENNOX.”
-
-
-Now the above convincing and pathetic letter of the dowager Lady Lennox,
-it seems, never reached Mary; but fortunately for Mary’s reputation and
-as proof of the accord between her and her mother-in-law with regard to
-the marriage and other matters, has been preserved.
-
-Two years later, 1577, Queen and mother-in-law were toiling to get the
-Scottish prince away from the “wicked governor,” and Mary says of Lady
-Lennox, “I praise God that she becomes daily more sensible of the
-faithlessness and evil intentions of those whom she previously assisted
-with her name against me.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
- VARIOUS OCCURRENCES
-
-
-The Shrewsbury pair started the year 1575 in different fashion. She was
-in the Tower and not at all in a happy mood. He also in a
-fortress—Sheffield—but as warder and not prisoner, and more unhappy,
-because in the larger things he was always the more conscientious, yet
-bestirred himself to send a diplomatic present of rich gold plate to
-Lord Burghley, and was himself in the usual manner the recipient of
-bounties from his friends and tenants. Burghley acknowledges the present
-and his indebtedness in highly satisfactory terms to the master of
-Sheffield Castle:—
-
-
-“And now, my Lord, I find such continuance or rather increase, of your
-good will to me, by your costly gift of plate this new year, as you may
-account me greatly in your debt and yet ready with my heart and service
-to acquit you. I humbly therefore pray your Lordship to make proof of my
-good will where my power may answer the same, and I trust you shall find
-the best disposed debtor that your Lordship hath to acquit my debt.”
-
-
-Lodge prints immediately before this letter from the Lord Treasurer a
-fragment (also from the Talbot manuscripts) in which Lord Shrewsbury
-lays his financial case emphatically before the Queen, and there is no
-doubt that his appeal and the present of gold plate to her Lord
-Treasurer were incidents closely related:—
-
-
-“Your Majesty was minded to allow me for the keeping of this Lady but
-£30 a week. When I received her into my charge at your Majesty’s hands,
-I understood very well it was a most dangerous service, and thought
-overhard to perform, without some great mischief to himself at least,
-and as it seemed most hard and fearful to others and every man shrunk
-from it, so much the gladder was I to take it upon me, thereby to make
-appear to your Majesty my zealous mind to serve you in place of greatest
-peril; and I thought it was the best proof your Majesty could make of
-me. I demanded not great allowance, nor did stick for anything as all
-men used to do. My Lords of your Council, upon good deliberation,
-assigned by your Majesty’s commandment, a portion of £52 every week
-(less by the half than your Majesty paid before she came to me) which I
-took, and would not in that doubtful time have refused your Majesty’s
-service of trust so committed to me, if my lands and life had lain
-thereon; and how I have passed my service, and accomplished your trust
-committed to me, with quiet, surety——”
-
-
-That sudden break in the appeal, whatever its cause, has its own
-dramatic force.
-
-As regards Court matters, a long letter from Francis Talbot, the eldest
-son, who apparently wrote so rarely, belongs to the beginning of this
-year. It gives a picture of Queen Elizabeth in a mood of anxiety,
-depression, and perplexity in regard to foreign politics, especially
-touching the all-important decision as to whether or not she should
-accept the offer of the suzerainty of the Netherland States:—
-
-
-“Her Majesty is troubled with these causes which maketh her very
-melancholy; and seemeth greatly to be out of quiet. What shall be done
-in these matters as yet is unknown, but here are ambassadors of all
-sides who labour greatly one against another.”
-
-
-To this year also belongs a kindly letter—this time on purely family
-matters—from the wife of Francis Talbot, Lady Ann, _née_ Herbert,
-daughter of William, Earl Pembroke, to the Countess of Shrewsbury. In
-this the forthcoming “prograce” is mentioned, and the visit of Queen
-Elizabeth to the then Countess of Pembroke, her sister-in-law, _née_
-Catherine Talbot, and married to Henry, Earl Pembroke:—
-
-
-“Good Madame, I am to crave pardon for not writing to my Lord’s man
-Harry Grace. The cause I willed him to declare to your La. which was the
-extremity that my sister of Pembroke was in at that time; which hath
-continued till Thursday last. Since that day she hath been out of her
-swooning, but not able to stand or go. Her greatest grief is now want of
-sleep, and not able to away with the sight of meat; but considering her
-estate before we think ourselves happy of this change, hoping that
-better will follow shortly. The Queen Majesty hath been here with her
-twice; very late both times. The last time it was ten of the clock at
-night ere her Majesty went hence, being so great a mist as there were
-divers of the barges and boats that waited for her lost their ways, and
-landed in wrong places, but thanks be to God her Majesty came well home
-without cold or fear. For the holding of the progress I am sure your La.
-heareth; for my part I can write no certainty, but as I am in all other
-matters, as I have always professed and as duty doth bind me, ready at
-your La. command; and in anything I may show it either at this time or
-when occasion serveth, if I be not as willing thereto as any child of
-your own, then let me be condemned according to my deserts; otherwise I
-humbly crave your La. good opinion of me not to decrease, remembering
-your La. commandment heretofore, to write to you as often as I could,
-which now in this place I shall have better means than I have had in the
-country, and thereupon presuming to lengthen my letter upon any
-occasion, although I count this of my sister very evil news, yet
-considering her recovery, I hope my long scribbling will the less
-trouble your La. And so with my most humble duty of my Lord and your La.
-I humbly take my leave. From Baynards Castle the 8th of May.
-
-“Your La. assured loving daughter to command,
-
- “ANNE TALBOT.
-
-“My sister of Pembroke hath willed to remember her humble duty to my
-Lord and you, with desire of his daily blessing. As soon as she is able
-she will do it herself.
-
- “To the right honourable and my assured good Lady
- and mother, the Countess of Shrewsbury.”
-
-
-That “my sister Pembroke” recovered from her swoonings and her
-convalescence is stated at the close of a long letter from Gilbert
-Talbot, in February, to both his parents.
-
-During the whole of the spring the Earl’s correspondence was large. Sir
-Francis Walsingham and others kept him informed of all State events and
-possibilities which could affect politics. In a paper which the Earl
-endorses “Occurrences, from Mr. Secretary Walsingham” is contained the
-news of the disappearance from the French Court of Henry of Navarre, the
-overtures made to him by the French King, the gradual increase of his
-adherents among the Protestants, the multifarious schemes of the Duke of
-Guise, and all the details which made for civil war. The belief in magic
-seems to have had sufficient hold upon a statesman like Walsingham to
-induce him to include a note such as this:—
-
-
-“There is secret report, and that very constantly affirmed by men of
-credit, that a day or two before the King of Navarre departed, it
-happened the Duke of Guise and him to play at dice, upon a very smooth
-board, in the King’s cabinet; and that, after they had done, there
-appeared suddenly upon the board certain great and round drops of blood
-that astonished them marvellously, finding no cause in the blood of the
-world, but, as it were, a very prodigy.”
-
-
-Another letter of this year is very interesting, as it shows the
-indefatigable Lady Shrewsbury once more at her match-making, and once
-again seeking to ally her family with one which could most assist it at
-Court—the family of Lord Burghley. Lord Shrewsbury’s letter making the
-proposal as suggested by his wife is not forthcoming, but Lord
-Burghley’s reply is full and detailed, and breathes caution in every
-word. His excuses for declining the offer are quite reasonable. At the
-same time he must have had sufficient insight into her Ladyship’s
-masterful character to strengthen his refusal. He accentuates his fear
-of the Queen’s distrust by instancing the absurd reports circulated
-about him when he merely went to Buxton to drink the waters, and he
-concludes with a quaintly sententious condemnation of “human learning”
-in wishing well to the boy whom he did not desire for his son-in-law.
-
-
-“My very good Lord,—My most hearty and due commendations done, I cannot
-sufficiently express in words the inward hearty affection that I
-conceive by your Lordship’s friendly offer of the marriage of your
-younger son; and that in such a friendly sort, by your own letter, and
-as your Lordship writes, the same proceeding of yourself. Now, my Lord,
-as I think myself much beholden to you for this your Lordship’s
-kindness, and manifest argument of a faithful goodwill, so must I pray
-your Lordship to accept mine answer, with assured opinion of my
-continuance in the same towards your Lordship. There are specially two
-causes why I do not in plain terms consent by way of conclusion hereto;
-the one, for that my daughter is but young in years; and upon some
-reasonable respects, I have determined (notwithstanding I have been very
-honourably offered matches) not to treat of marrying her, if I may live
-so long, until she be above fifteen or sixteen, and if I were of more
-likelihood myself to live longer than I look to do, she should not, with
-my liking, be married before she were near eighteen or twenty. The
-second cause why I differ to yield to conclusion with your Lordship is
-grounded upon such a consideration as, if it were not truly to satisfy
-your Lordship, and to avoid a just offence which your Lordship might
-conceive of my forbearing, I would not by writing or message utter, but
-only by speech to your Lordship’s self. My Lord, it is over true and
-over much against reason that upon my being at Buxton last, advantage
-was sought by some that loved me not to confirm in her Majesty a former
-conceit which had been laboured to put into her head, that I was of late
-become friendly to the Queen of Scots, and that I had no disposition to
-encounter her practices; and now at my being at Buxton, her Majesty did
-directly conceive that my being there was, by means of your Lordship and
-my Lady, to enter into intelligence with the Queen of Scots; and hereof
-at my return to her Majesty’s presence I had very sharp reproofs for my
-going to Buxton with plain charging of me for favouring the Queen of
-Scots; and that in so earnest a sort I never looked for, knowing my
-integrity to her Majesty; but especially knowing how contrariously the
-Queen of Scots conceived of me for many things past to the offence of
-the Queen of Scots. And yet, true it is, I never indeed gave just cause
-by any private affection of my own, or for myself, to offend the Queen
-of Scots; but whatsoever I did was for the services of mine own
-sovereign Lady and Queen, which if it were yet again to be done I would
-do. And though I know myself subject to contrary workings of displeasure
-yet will I not, for remedy of any of them both, decline from the duty I
-owe to God and my sovereign Queen; for I know and do understand, that I
-am in this contrary sort maliciously depraved, and yet in secret sort;
-on the one part, and that of long time, that I am the most dangerous
-enemy and evil willer to the Queen of Scots; on the other side that I am
-also a secret well willer to her and her title, and that I have made my
-party good with her. Now, my Lord, no man can make both these true
-together; but it sufficeth such as like not me in doing my duty to
-deprave me, and yet in such sort is done in darkness, as I cannot get
-opportunity to convince them in the light. In all these crossings, my
-good Lord, I appeal to God who knoweth, yea (I thank him infinitely),
-who directeth my thoughts to intend principally the service and honour
-of God, and jointly with it the surety and greatness of my sovereign
-Lady the Queen’s Majesty; and for any other respect but it may tend to
-those two, I appeal to God to punish me if I have any. As for the Queen
-of Scots, truly I have no spot of evil meaning to her. Neither do I mean
-to deal with any titles to the Crown. If she shall intend any evil to
-the Queen’s Majesty, my sovereign, for her sake I must and will mean to
-impeach her; and therein I may be her unfriend, or worse.
-
-“Well now, my good Lord, your Lordship seeth I have made a long
-digression from my answer, but I trust your Lordship can consider what
-moveth me thus to digress. Surely it behoveth me not only to live
-uprightly, but to avoid all probable arguments that may be gathered to
-render me suspected to her Majesty whom I serve with all dutifulness and
-sincerity; and therefore I gather this, that if it were understood that
-there were a communication or a purpose of marriage between your
-Lordship’s son and my daughter I am sure there would be an advantage
-sought to increase these former suspicions. Considering the young years
-of our two children ... if the matter were fully agreed betwixt us, the
-parents, the marriage could not take effect, I think it best to refer
-the motion in silence, and yet so to order it with ourselves that, when
-time shall hereafter be more convenient, we may (and then also with less
-cause of vain suspicion) renew it. And in the meantime I must confess
-myself much bounden to your Lordship ... wishing your Lordship’s son all
-the good education may be meet to teach him to fear God, love your
-Lordship, his natural father, and to know his friends; without any
-curiosity of human learning, which, without the fear of God, I see doeth
-great hurt to all youth in this time and age. My Lord, I pray you bear
-with me scribbling, which I think your Lordship shall hardly read, and
-yet I would not use my man’s hand in such a matter as this.
-
-“From Hampton Court, 24th December, 1575.
-
-“Your Lordship’s most assured commandment,
-
- “W. BURGHLEY.”
-
-
-The boy in question was Edward Talbot, the Earl’s fourth son. His
-matrimonial chances did not suffer by this just refusal, for in after
-years he married one of the twin heiresses of Lord Ogle of
-Northumberland, and eventually, after the death of his two elder
-brothers, succeeded to his father’s earldom.
-
-A single bill of items of the Earl’s expenditure in the year 1575
-amounting to £300 is of a nature which shows how many and extensive were
-the purchases justifying his constant appeals to the Treasury. All these
-items he had to import from France by special messenger. Hogshead after
-hogshead of French wine was required for Mary’s use. Her household drank
-it in preference to the heavier English brew of ale. Moreover, she was
-accustomed to use it for her bath, especially when indisposed. Buckram
-and canvas, damask and sheeting, vinegar and live quails (“with cages
-for the said quails”), paper and hempseed, “comfitures and other
-sugar-works,” and even “fourteen pounds of sleyed silk for my Lady,
-being of all colours,” go to this long bill of goods from Rouen.
-
-My Lady meanwhile was properly reinstated in the English Queen’s
-confidence. It would please Bess Shrewsbury well to know that this
-letter from the Earl of Leicester, written early in 1576 to her husband,
-has come down to posterity:—
-
-
-“My Lord,—For that this bearer is so well known and trusted of you I
-will leave to trouble you with any long letters, and do commit the more
-to his report, for that he is well able to satisfy your Lordship fully
-of all things here. And, touching one part of your letter sent lately to
-me, about the access of my Lady, your wife, to the Queen there, I find
-the Queen’s Majesty well pleased that she may repair at all times, and
-not forbear the company of that Queen, having not only very good opinion
-of my Lady’s wisdom and discretion, but thinks how convenient it is for
-that Queen to be accompanied and pass the time rather with my Lady than
-meaner persons. I doubt not but your Lordship shall hear in like sort
-also from her Majesty touching the same, and yet I may well signify thus
-much, as from herself, to your Lordship. The rest I commend to this
-bearer, and your Lordship, with my good Lady, to the Almighty. In haste,
-this first of May.
-
- “Your Lordship’s assured kinsman,
- “R. LEICESTER.”
-
-
-Soon after, in June, Lord Shrewsbury, at Buxton with his “charge,” asks
-that he may remove her, not to Tutbury as suggested, but back to
-Sheffield Lodge. There was a “bruit” that Lord Leicester was going to
-Buxton for the waters, and it was necessary, seeing that his going would
-probably attract others in the world of fashion, not to allow Mary to
-linger at the baths. A letter from Gilbert Talbot, in July, 1576, full
-of the usual delightful chit-chat about Queen and Court, mentions the
-Buxton expedition in connection with the magnificent Leicester:—
-
-
-“My duty most humbly remembered, right honourable my singular good Lord
-and father. Since my coming hither to the Court there hath been sundry
-determinations of her Majesty’s progress this summer. Yesterday it was
-set down that she would go to Grafton[35] and Northampton, Leicester,
-and to Ashby, my Lord Huntingdon’s house, and there to have remained
-twenty-one days, to the end the water of Buxton might have been daily
-brought thither for my Lord of Leicester, or any other, to have used;
-but late yesternight this purpose altered, and now at this present her
-Majesty thinketh to go no further than Grafton; howbeit there is no
-certainty, for these two or three days it hath changed every five hours.
-The physicians have fully resolved that wheresoever my Lord Leicester be
-he must drink and use Buxton water twenty days together. My Lady Essex
-and my Lady Sussex will be shortly at Buxton, and my Lady Norris shortly
-after; I cannot learn of any others that come from hence.
-
-“This day Mr. Secretary Walsingham has gotten the Bill signed for the S.
-Q.’s diet, and to-morrow early it shall be sent to the Exchequer, that
-as soon as possible we may receive the money, which shall be disposed
-according to your Lordship’s commandment in payment of all your debts
-here.
-
-“I have bespoken two pair of little flagons, for there are none ready
-made, and I fear they will not be finished before my departure hence. I
-have seen many fair hangings, and your Lordship may have all prices,
-either two shillings a stick or seven groats, three, four, five, or six
-shillings the stick, even as your Lordship will bestow; but there is of
-five shillings the stick that is very fair. But unless your Lordship
-send up a measure of what depth and breadth you would have them, surely
-they will not be to your Lordship’s liking; for the most of them are
-very shallow, and I have seen none that I think deep enough for a guest
-chamber, but for lodgings.
-
-“I have had some talk with my Lord of Leicester since my coming, whom I
-find most assuredly well affected towards your Lordship and yours. I
-never knew man in my life more joyful for their friend than he at my
-Lady’s noble and wise government of herself at her late being here;
-saying that he heartily thanked God of so good a friend and kinsman of
-your Lordship, and that you are matched with so noble and good a wife. I
-saw the Queen’s Majesty yesternight in the garden; but for that she was
-talking with my Lord Hunsden, she spake nothing to me, but looked very
-earnestly on me. I hear her Majesty conceiveth somewhat better of me
-than heretofore;[36] and my Lord of Leicester doubteth not in time to
-bring all well again.
-
-“I can learn no certain news worthy to write to your Lordship’s
-Secretary. William Winter hath not yet sent my resolute answer from the
-Flushingers and Prince of Orange touching our merchants’ ships and
-goods; for other matters of France. I know Mr. Secretary Walsingham’s
-wonted manner is to send your Lordship’s occurrents that come thence.
-Mr. Secretary Smith lieth still in hard case at his house in Essex, and,
-as I hear, this day or to-morrow setteth towards the baths in
-Somersetshire; the use of his tongue is clean taken from him that he
-cannot be understood, such is the continuance of the rheum that
-distilleth from his head downwards.
-
-“Thus, not knowing wherewith else to trouble your Lordship, I most
-humbly beseech your blessing, with my wonted prayer for your Lordship’s
-long continuance in all honour, and most perfect health.
-
-“From the Court this Friday at night, the 6th of July, 1576.
-
- “Your Lordship’s most humble and
- obedient loving son,
- “GILBERT TALBOT.”
-
-
-Otherwise the family affairs of the Shrewsburys were engrossing enough.
-The Lennox baby, born at Chatsworth, had, as stated, altered their
-domestic and social world considerably. My Lady was now the grandmother
-of a possible queen, a creature having equal right on her father’s side
-to the crowns of Scotland and England. It was very important that while
-Lady Shrewsbury still kept up towards the child’s aunt, Mary, a show of
-friendliness, she should curry favour on every occasion with the English
-Queen, who supported the rule of young James of Scotland. It was a nice
-and delicate game to play, and must have pleased her well. It was not
-likely now that Mary would ever come into power. Still, strange things
-happened. If Elizabeth died suddenly Mary might have her day at last,
-and every act of the Shrewsburys towards her in her captivity would be
-weighed in her judgment and awards as soon as she was in the seat of
-government. The two women had hitherto grown very friendly. All manner
-of confidences must have passed between them, and my Lady’s alert ears
-had supplied her quick tongue with many a bit of scandal which she could
-retail for the amusement of the royal “guest.”
-
-From this period, however, she would practise greater caution. She had
-recently steered clear of great danger, and was toiling hard for the
-Queen’s smiles. It was well known that those who favoured and fêted Lord
-Leicester fêted the Queen in proxy. The visit of Leicester to Buxton in
-1576 presented itself therefore as a great social chance.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
- MY LORD LEICESTER’S CURE
-
-
-My Lord of Leicester was to have his cure. The physicians insisted upon
-it. It is chronicled in Gilbert Talbot’s letter with all the importance
-which would attend the bulletins of the health of a king. The Queen
-never resented a fuss of this kind made over her pampered darling. In
-his stuffed and padded Court costume, his feathered head-dress, and his
-jewels one cannot detect in him one of the virile qualities which so
-dominated her imagination. His treacheries were winked at, his vices
-condoned, even the people who accused him most violently of the murder
-of his first wife, Amy Robsart, when in perplexity crawled to his feet,
-either literally like poor Lady Catherine Grey, or in abject letters
-like Lady Lennox, who was one of his bitterest accusers and who had
-suffered under the spies he sent into her very house. Let us for a few
-moments recall the growth of this personage, this veritable bay-tree. He
-was just Robert Dudley, a younger son, the fifth of a ruined family
-lying under attainder—the Dukes of Northumberland. Mary of England
-restored him to his title, and drew him out of nonentity and poverty by
-appointing him Master of the Ordnance at the siege of S. Quentin. As
-soldier and courtier he certainly came into contact with the Princess
-Elizabeth, whose visits to Court were finally forced upon her unwilling
-sister. Elizabeth had scarcely been on the throne a few months before
-she indulged with much too evident relief in flirtations with him, as a
-counterblast to the incessant negotiations with the ambassadors of her
-successive foreign suitors. She coquetted with him in her boat, she kept
-his portrait in a secret cabinet, she showed off her learning, her airs
-and graces before him, she danced with him, and when she formally
-created him Earl of Leicester she “could not refrain from putting her
-hand in his neck, smilingly tickling him.” This honour, by the way, it
-will be remembered, she pretended to confer on him in order that his
-rank should fit him for marriage with Mary Queen of Scots, and so avoid
-the dangers and difficulties to England which would arise from her
-marriage with Darnley. There never was a pretence so thin. Elizabeth
-made a great show of her willingness to bestow on another her “brother
-and best friend, whom she would have married herself had she minded to
-take a husband.” Since she had decided to die a virgin she held that
-such a procedure in regard to Leicester would “free her mind of all
-fears and suspicions to be offended by any usurpation before her death,
-being assured that he was so loving and trusty that he would never
-suffer any such thing to be attempted in her time.” While she openly
-advertised Leicester as her favourite, she dangled him as a prize over
-the head of her chief enemy. She always loved playing with fire, and it
-is well that this time she did not burn her fingers, for Leicester was
-the complete courtier and could not decide between the two queens. In
-his eyes Mary had as much chance of ruling England as his present
-mistress. Mary did not at the beginning of her career in Scotland appear
-very anxious for his wooing. All this helped Elizabeth. Creighton
-clearly takes the view that the latter promoted the Darnley marriage by
-the very pushing of Leicester’s claims. Whether or not he was personally
-commendable to Mary, it was greatly to his disadvantage, that, as
-creature of Elizabeth, he should be thrust upon her enemy.
-
-Just at that period Leicester’s familiarity towards the Queen touched
-gross impudence. We see him in the royal tennis-court pausing in a match
-against the premier peer of England, the Duke of Norfolk, to wipe his
-face with the handkerchief quickly filched from the Queen’s hand as she
-sat amongst the onlookers. The Duke raged, offered violence, and,
-unfortunately for royal dignity, Elizabeth’s manner showed that she took
-the part of Leicester. She had already bestowed on him while a commoner
-the Garter. The Order of St. Michael was his next honour, and he was
-soon created Master of the Horse, Steward of the Household, Chancellor
-of Oxford, Ranger of the Forests south of Trent, and, later on,
-Captain-General of the English forces in the Netherlands. When age and
-his last illness brooded over him his queen planned for him a last
-dazzling post—a new creation—in the Lieutenancy of England and Ireland.
-Despite the scandals attached to his three marriages,[37] he maintained
-his place in the eyes of Elizabeth, and only in after years seriously
-earned her displeasure. He had the rare art of “keeping on the right
-side” of Lord Burghley, between whom and himself a sort of armed
-neutrality existed, except when mutual advantage found them acting
-heartily in concert. Leicester, as all his history shows, was, like
-Buckingham, a gay dog, a ladies’ man. Pretty women hovered about him at
-Court—_vide_ the letter from Gilbert Talbot under date May 11, 1573,
-quoted in full in a previous chapter—he had to keep them at peace not to
-give offence. He could play with their love, enjoy it, go to utmost
-lengths, so long as the Queen believed that in his heart no other woman
-could take her place. He entertained largely, he lived and dressed as
-befitted his position. It was above all highly important that he should
-keep his health in order, preserve the elegant lines of his soldier’s
-figure, and defer as long as possible the days when he would, in his own
-phrase, “grow high-coloured and red-faced.”
-
-When he was ordered to Buxton it was imperative that he should be
-properly received and housed, and not lodged in the low wooden sheds
-which were used by the ordinary public during their “cure,” and where
-their fare seems to have consisted of “oat cakes, with a viand which the
-hosts called mutton, but which the guests strongly suspected to be dog.”
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo by Emery Walker, after the picture in the National Portrait
- Gallery_
-
- ROBERT DUDLEY, EARL OF LEICESTER
-
- Page 178
-]
-
-Buxton waters, under the patronage of St. Anne “of Buckstone” and St.
-Andrew of Burton, were beset for many years before this with poor
-crippled pilgrims, who left symbols of their gratitude in the various
-shrines of the place in the way of crutches and candles. When the
-Cromwell of Henry VIII wiped England of popery these testimonials were
-all demolished, and he “locked up and sealed the baths and wells ...”
-pending the royal permission “to wash” therein. This, however, did not
-prevent the Earl of Shrewsbury from building a suitable house for
-patients, and it is thus described by a physician of the day:—
-
-
-“Joyninge to the chiefe sprynge betweene the river and the bathe is a
-very goodly house, four square, four stories hye, so well compacte with
-houses and offices underneath, and above and round about, with a great
-chamber, and other goodly lodgings to the number of thirty, that it is
-and will be a bewty to beholde; and very notable for the honourable and
-worshipful that shall need to repair thither, as also for others.
-
-“Yea, and the porest shall have lodgings and beds hard by for their uses
-only. The bathes also so beautified with seats round; defended from the
-ambyent air; and chimneys for fyre to ayre your garments in the bathes
-side, and other necessaries most decent.”
-
-
-Prices for baths varied according to the social position of the patient!
-An archbishop seems to head the scale with a compulsory payment of £5,
-while a yeoman only paid twelvepence, and was entitled to as long a cure
-as the Primate. Lord Leicester, coming in the category of Earls, was
-charged twenty shillings. One half of the fee went to the doctor in
-command, the rest towards a fund for the cure of the poorest cripples.
-
-The aforesaid house, which four times sheltered both Mary of Scotland
-and once at least Lord Leicester, is now gone; in place of it is a
-hotel, and there is no trace of the “pleasant warm bowling-green planted
-about with large sycamore trees.” This, according to another authority,
-was part of its garden, and it was Gilbert Talbot’s duty to entertain
-his father’s dazzling guest and the Queen’s favourite in this pleasant
-spot. During the week of this memorable visit the young man never lost
-an opportunity of furthering his family’s cause and of sounding
-influential persons at all seasons. He, like others, had constant
-recourse to Leicester, both by word of mouth and pen. The letter which
-follows[38] is a typical epistle of the kind which is scattered through
-the society correspondence of the day.
-
-We see by this that Gilbert was actually at “Buckstones” doing the
-honours of his father’s house there to any distinguished guests, while
-the Earl, his father, was nailed to his post at Sheffield, and the
-Countess presumably busying herself with the killing of the fatted calf
-at Chatsworth in readiness to honour Leicester on his going southward.
-
-She must have hailed this epistle with huge satisfaction, since it
-definitely announces the Earl’s presence at Buxton with his intention of
-accepting her invitation to Chatsworth, and at the same time assures her
-of his good offices on behalf of young Lady Lennox. Poor Elizabeth
-Cavendish was by this time a widow,[39] almost penniless, and appealing
-to the Queen for financial support on behalf of the baby Lady Arabella.
-The letter is addressed to both of Gilbert’s parents:—
-
-
-“My duty, etc,—This morning early I delivered your L.’s packet to my L.
-of Leicester, who, upon reading thereof, said he would write to your L.
-by a post that is here, and willed me to send away your lackey. I asked
-him how long he thought to tarry here, and prayed him to tarry as long
-as might be. And he said he knew not whether to go to Chatsworth on
-Tuesday or Wednesday or Thursday come seven nights, but one of those
-three days without fail. There came some score of fowl here on Saturday,
-which served here very well yesterday, and will do this three or four
-days. Sir Hugh Chamley sent hither to my L. of Leicester a very fat
-beef, which my L. of Leicester bade me go down to see, and to take him
-to use as I listed; but I told him I was sure your L. would be angry if
-I took him; yet for all this, he would force me to take him; and so I
-kept him here in the town till I know your L.’s pleasure what shall be
-done with him; he would serve very well for Chatsworth. Bayley thinketh
-that they will tarry two or three days at Chatsworth. There is no word
-yet come from my L. of Huntington and my La. whether they will meet my
-L. of Leicester at Chatsworth or not; if they do (as he hath written
-very earnestly to them) I think he will not come to Ashby, but go the
-next way to Killingworth and there tarry but two or three days only. My
-L. of Rutland, by reason of the foul afternoon yesterday, lay here all
-the last night in the chamber where Sir Henry Lea lodged. I showed the
-letter of my La. Lennox, your daughter, to my L. of Leicester, who said
-that he thought it were far better for him to defer her suit to her
-Majesty till his own coming to the Court than otherwise to write to her
-before; for that he thinketh her Majesty will suppose his letter, if he
-should write, were but at your La.’s request, and so by another letter
-would straight answer it again, and so it do no great good; but at his
-meeting your La. he will (he saith) advise in what sort your La. shall
-write to the Queen Majesty, which he will carry unto her, and then be as
-earnest a solicitor therein as ever he was for anything in his life, and
-he doubteth not to prevail to your La. contention. To-morrow my L. of
-Leicester meaneth to go to Sir Peres a Leyes to meet with my L. of
-Derby, if the weather be any whit fair. And thus most humbly craving
-your Lo.’s blessing with my wonted prayer for your long continuance in
-all honour and most perfect health and long life I cease. At Buxton in
-haste this present Monday before noon.
-
-“Your Lo.’s most humble and obedient son,
-
- “G. TALBOT.
-
-“The Lords do pray your L. to remember their case (of) knives.”[40]
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _From a photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, after the picture at
- Hardwick Hall
- By permission of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire_
-
- QUEEN ELIZABETH
-
- Page 182
-]
-
-There is no further comment from him on the subject of this visit, but
-later letters will show that it went off smoothly and resulted in
-benefit to the patient. As for his visit to Chatsworth it appears to
-have been a triumphant success. Many things were talked out between
-host, hostess, and guest in the few days of his sojourn. They had many
-experiences in common—to wit, the insane jealousy and suspicions of
-their Sovereign. But on this occasion their meeting hatched no
-unpleasant results in this respect. The Queen herself wrote to thank
-them for their good entertainment of her valued friend. And hereby hangs
-a little comedy, a mystery. Two letters, evidently of the same date,
-were dictated by the Queen. The skittish original in the handwriting of
-Sir Francis Walsingham was not sent. A sedate version of it was the one
-which the Shrewsburys opened. This is among the Talbot manuscripts. The
-lively edition remains in the Record Office among the Mary Queen of
-Scots MSS. for the amusement of posterity. Opinions differ as to the
-mood in which Elizabeth wrote it.[41] It has been suggested that it was
-done in a flippant ironical spirit; it has also been taken as a symptom
-of wild elation born of Elizabeth’s belief that her marriage with Lord
-Leicester would really be achieved. It seems most likely that she
-certainly dashed it off in a flippant mood, with the intention of
-chaffing the serious apprehensive High Steward of England and his wife,
-and that Lord Burghley, or Walsingham, advised her to desist and to
-allow a copy to be made, excluding the “larky” passages.
-
-This is what she sent:—
-
-
- “The Queen to the Earl and Countess of Shrewsbury.
- “By the Queen.
- “Your most assured loving cousin and sovereign,
- Elizabeth R.
- “Our very good Cousins,
-
-“Being given to understand from our cousin of Leicester how honourably
-he was received by you our cousin the Countess at Chatsworth, and his
-diet by you both discharged at Buxtons, but also presented with a very
-rare present, we should do him great wrong (holding him in that place of
-favour we do) in case we should not let you understand in what thankful
-sort we accept the same at your hands, not as done unto him, but to our
-own self, reputing him as another ourself; and, therefore, ye may assure
-yourselves, that we taking upon us the debt not as his but as our own,
-will take care accordingly to discharge the same in such honourable sort
-as so well-deserving creditors as ye are shall never have cause to think
-ye have met with an ungrateful debtor. In this acknowledgment of new
-debts we may not forget our old debt, the same being as great as a
-sovereign can owe to a subject; when through your loyal and most careful
-looking to this charge committed to you, both we and our realm enjoy a
-peaceable government, the best good hope that to any prince on earth can
-befall: This good hap, then, growing from you, ye might think yourselves
-most unhappy if you served such a prince as should not be as ready
-graciously to consider of it as thankfully to acknowledge the same,
-whereof ye may make full account, to your comfort when time shall serve.
-Given under our signet in our manor of Greenwich, the 25th day of June,
-1577, and in the 19th year of our reign.”
-
-
-This is what Elizabeth, a sovereign of nineteen years’ standing, a woman
-over forty years of age, wanted to send:—
-
-
-“Being given to understand from our cousin of Leicester how honourably
-he was lately received and used by you, our Cousin the Countess of
-Chatsworth, and how his diet is by you both discharged at Buxtons, we
-should do him great wrong (holding him in that place of favour we do) in
-case we should not let you understand in how thankful sort we accept the
-same at both your hands—which we do not acknowledge to be done unto him
-but unto ourselves; and therefore do mean to take upon us the debt and
-to acknowledge you both as creditors, so you can be content to accept us
-for debtor, wherein is the danger unless you cut off some part of the
-large allowance of diet you give him, lest otherwise the debt thereby
-may grow to be so great as we shall not be able to discharge the same,
-and so become bankrupt, and therefore we think it meet for the saving of
-our credit to prescribe unto you a proportion of diet which we mean in
-no case you shall exceed, and that is to allow him by the day of his
-meat two ounces of flesh referring the quality to yourselves, so as you
-exceed not the quantity; and for his drink one-twentieth of a pint of
-wine to comfort his stomach and as much of St. Anne’s sacred water as he
-lusteth to drink. On festival days, as is fit for a man of his quality,
-we can be content you shall enlarge his diet by allowing unto him for
-his dinner the shoulder of a wren, and for his supper a leg of the same,
-besides his ordinary ounces. The like proportion we mean you shall allow
-unto our brother of Warwick,[42] saying that we think it meet, in
-respect that his body is more replete than his brother’s, that the
-wren’s leg allowed at supper on festival days be abated; for that light
-suppers agreeth but with the rules of physic. This order our meaning is
-you shall inviolably observe, and so you may right well assure
-yourselves of a most thankful debtor to so well-deserving creditors.”
-
-
-This letter is endorsed “M. of her Mates Ires to the Earl and Countess
-of Shrewsbury, of thanks for the good usage of my L. of Lec.”
-
-Indeed, it was well that it was not sent. From one point of view it
-reads suspiciously like a skit devised by Elizabeth on the statements
-periodically sent her by Lord Shrewsbury with regard to the “diet” of
-the Queen of Scots, and the number of courses and dishes allowed her on
-festival days.
-
-The Earl writes presently to the Queen in his wife’s name, on this, his
-own, and other matters. His tone is artful, astute, and conventional:—
-
-
- “May it please your most excellent Majesty,
-
-“The comfortable letters I lately received, of your own blessed
-handwriting, made me by oft looking on them, think my happiness more
-than any service (were it never so perfect) could merit; and myself more
-bounden to your Highness for the same than by writing I can express. And
-as it pleased your Majesty to write with assured confidence you have in
-my fidelity, and safe keeping of this lady, doubting nothing but lest
-her fair speech deceive me, so I am sure, although it please your
-Majesty to warn[43] me of her, yet doth your wisdom see well enough by
-my many years’ service past any inclination to her was never further,
-nor otherwise than of her Majesty’s service....
-
-“Nor have I cause to trust her. Were her speech fair or crabbed my only
-respect hath been, is still, and so shall continue, to the duty I owe
-unto your Majesty.... I have her forthcoming at your Majesty’s
-commandment....
-
-“And may it now further please your Majesty to license my wife and me
-humbly to acknowledge ourselves the more bound to your Majesty, as well
-as for the comfortable message Mr. Julio brought us lately from your
-Majesty, as that it pleased your Majesty to vouchsafe our rude and gross
-entertainment of our devout friend, my kinsman, my Lord of Leicester;
-which although in respect of our duties to your Majesty and the great
-goodwill we bear to him, is not so well as it ought to be, yet are we
-sure it contenteth him, and displeaseth not your Majesty, that he is the
-welcomed friend to us of all others. My wife also bids me yield her
-humble thanks to your Majesty ... and now (since we can do no more, nor
-your Highness have no more of us than our true and faithful hearts and
-service, wherein we will spend our lives and all we have, if your
-Majesty command it) we pray to God for your most excellent Majesty, as
-we are bounden. Sheffield, 4th of July, 1577.
-
-“Your Majesty’s most humble, faithful servant,
-
- “GEORGE SHREWSBURY.”
-
-
-In this year, whether or no the weather specially tended to develop
-rheumatism or aggravate it, there seems to have been a positive rush of
-great persons to Buxton. A fortnight later Lord Burghley wrote to inform
-the Shrewsburys of his expedition to the baths and, like others, to beg
-for hospitality.
-
-“I am now thoroughly licensed by her Majesty to come thither with as
-much speed as my old crazed body will suffer me. And, because I doubt
-your Lordship is and shall be pressed with many other like suits for
-your favour, to have the use of some lodgings there, I am bold at the
-present to send this my letter by post”—that is to say, by special
-messenger. He goes on: “I am to have in my company but Mr. Roger Manners
-and my son, Thomas Cecil, for whom I am also to interest your Lordship
-to procure them, by your commandment, some lodging as your Lordship
-shall please.”
-
-The Earl of Sussex who preferred a doughty cure, drinking as much as
-three pints a day, made tender enquiries as to the result of the water
-on the Lord Treasurer. As to its effects on Lord Leicester, one can
-judge best by this letter from a friend to the Shrewsburys—Richard
-Topclyffe, a tremendous Protestant, by the way, and hunter of
-“mass-mongers and recusants,” to the Countess. He reassures her fully as
-to the health of the guest who had just quitted Chatsworth, quotes
-Leicester’s promise to further her welfare and that of her young
-stepsons, Henry and Edward Talbot, his kinsmen:—
-
-
-“We did yesternight come to Ricote, my Lo. Norris’s, where late did
-arrive the Countesses of Bedford and Cumberland and the Earl of
-Cumberland, the Lord Wharton and his wife. The fat Earl[44] cometh this
-day, my L. of Leicester being departed towards the Court, to Sir Thomas
-Gresham’s, thirty-three miles hence (whereby you may perceive of his
-health), only a little troubled with a boil drawing to a head in the
-calf of the leg, which maketh him use his litter. The Countess kept him
-long waiting, asking if Buxton sent sound men halting home. But I never
-did hear him commend the place, nor the entertainment half so much: and
-did sware that he wished he had tarried three weeks longer with his
-charge ... but, saith he, it hath, and would have cost my friends
-deeply. His L. wished her Majesty would progress to Grafton and
-Killingworth, which condition he would see Buxton this summer again. But
-the next year is threatened that journey. I can send your La. no more
-unpleasant news but that his Lo. hath said with me in vows that he will
-be as tender over your Lord and yourself, and both yours, as over his
-own health: and my Lo. is very careful over his two young cousins, Mr.
-Ed. and Mr. Hen., to have them placed at Oxford, wishing that he may
-find of his kindred to work his goodwill upon, as he hath done hitherto
-on many unthankful persons. Good madam, further you my good Lo., your
-husband’s disposition that way for your son Charles.... And therewith I
-end; in very humble sort. The 9th of July, 1577.
-
- “Your La. ever at command,
- “RIC. TOPCLIFFE.”[45]
-
-
-Everything as regards the Talbot and Cavendish family was going
-well—merrily as a marriage-bell, so far as “Bess” was concerned. The
-widowhood of her youngest daughter, Lady Lennox, did not affect her. It
-was only one more tool to her hand in scheming for the Queen’s favour,
-the Queen’s largesse, and in balancing any foolish and unwise notions
-which the Countess might have previously entertained in regard to Queen
-Mary’s cause.
-
-Mary, it may be recalled here, had had more than one chance of marriage
-with Lord Leicester. He had, so to speak, meandered in and out of her
-affairs, now as suitor, now as go-between. As recently as 1574, three
-years previous to his Buxton visit, he seems for the second time to have
-entertained thoughts of making her an offer of marriage, whereas
-previously he had used his influence on behalf of the Duke of Norfolk’s
-wooing, and again with a view to averting his condemnation. In 1574 Mary
-was so firmly impressed with his attitude towards her that she advised
-her relations in France to pave the way for friendly overtures with a
-gift to Leicester. She was also about this time very anxious to
-refurbish her wardrobe, and took a great interest in securing brilliant
-and becoming materials and millinery of the kind most in vogue: “Send by
-and by Jean de Compiègne,” she writes, “and let him bring me patterns of
-dresses and samples of cloth of gold and silver and silk, the most
-beautiful and rare that are worn at Court, to learn my pleasure about
-them. Order Poissy to make me a couple of headdresses, with a crown of
-gold and silver, such as they have formerly made for me; and tell Breton
-to remember his promise, and obtain for me from Italy the newest
-fashions in headdresses, and veils and ribbons, with gold and
-silver....” There was no blindness about the way she regarded the
-possibility of such a marriage. She held that Leicester’s motives were
-anything but romantic or altruistic. But if so powerful a suitor could
-be secured, and above all seduced from allegiance to Elizabeth, Mary had
-no objection to the match. Her letters to France are full of allusions
-to him:—[46]
-
-
-“Leicester talks over M. de La Mothe to persuade him that he is wholly
-for me, and endeavours to gain over Walsingham my mortal enemy to this
-effect.”
-
-And again: “M. de La Mothe advises me to entreat that my cousin of
-Guise, my grandmother and yours, will write some civil letters to
-Leicester, thanking him for his courtesy to me, as if he had done much
-for me, and by the same medium send him some handsome present, which
-will do me much good. He takes great delight in furniture; if you send
-him some crystal cup in your name, and allow me to pay for it, or some
-fine Turkey carpet, or such like as you may think most fitting, it will
-perhaps save me this winter, and will make him much ashamed, or
-suspected by his mistress, and all will assist me. For he intends to
-make me speak of marriage or die, as it is said, so that either he or
-his brother may have to do with this crown. I beseech you try if such
-small device can save me and I shall entertain him with the other, at a
-distance.”
-
-
-How this letter reveals her impulse for romance, her pathetic, dogged
-attempts to believe herself all-powerful!
-
-Leicester, naturally, was far too cautious to take the tremendous risk
-involved, and contented himself with keeping at a distance and in
-exchanging polite and friendly letters with the Shrewsburys, such as the
-one quoted on page 170. He was an adept at this kind of sugary
-testimonial. Certainly no finer instance could be given in support of
-the dignity, virtue, and innocence of an intriguing and busy lady from
-the pen of an arch-courtier—a man accused of wife-murder, seduction,
-poisoning, and political treachery.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
- THE DIVIDED WAY
-
-
-Seeing that my Lady of Shrewsbury had triumphantly surmounted one of the
-greatest dangers she had ever drawn upon herself and hers, one can
-safely assume that after the foregoing letter she was in a tolerably
-prancing and jovial temper. Socially she really was for the moment a
-much more important item to be reckoned with than Mary Queen of Scots
-herself. All the difficulties of the past two years had only served to
-bring her into closer touch with both queens. Meantime she was a rich
-and honoured lady with a great many irons in the fire, and her wants and
-requirements were legion. She still wanted ale and wood and stone, she
-could not spend all her valuable time dancing attendance upon Mary, or
-sharing the dull semi-military routine of Sheffield Castle and Sheffield
-Lodge. She went to her beloved Chatsworth, and husband and wife
-exchanged letters. Here is a wistful appreciation from him:—
-
-
-“My Sweetheart,—Your true and faithful zeal you bear me is more
-comfortable to me than anything I can think upon, and I give God thanks
-daily for his benefits he hath bestowed on me, and greatest cause I have
-to give him thanks that he hath sent me you in my old years to comfort
-me withal. Your coming I shall think long for, and shall send on Friday
-your litter horses and on Saturday morning I will send my folks, because
-Friday they will be desirous to be at Rotherham Fair.
-
-“It appears by my sister Wingfield’s letter there is bruit of this
-Queen’s going from me. I thank you for sending it me, which I return
-again, and will not show it till you may speak it yourself what you
-hear; and I have sent you John Knifton’s letter, that Lord brought me,
-that you may perceive what is [? bruited] of the young King. I thank you
-for your fat capon and it shall be baked, and kept cold and untouched
-until my sweetheart come; guess you who it is. I have sent you a cock
-that was given to me, which is all the dainties I have here.
-
-“I have written to Sellars to send every week a quarter of rye for this
-ten weeks, which will be as much as I know will be had there, and ten
-quarters of barley, which will be all that I can spare you. Farewell, my
-sweet true none and faithful wife.
-
- “All yours,
- “SHREWSBURY.”[47]
-
-
-Here is a letter from her to him, brisk, tart, affectionate all at
-once:—
-
-
- “My dear heart,
-
-“I have sent your letters again and thank you for them; they require no
-answer; but when you write remember to thank him for them. If you cannot
-get my timber carried I must be without it though I greatly want it; but
-if it would please you to command Hebert or any other, to move your
-tenants to bring it, I ken they will not deny to do it. I pray you let
-me know if I shall have the ton of iron. If you cannot spare it I must
-make shift to get it elsewhere, for I may not now want it. You promised
-to send me money afore this time to buy oxen, but I see, out of sight
-out of mind with you.
-
-“My son Gilbert has been very ill in his bed ever since he came from
-Sheffield: I think it is his old disease; he is now, I thank God,
-somewhat better and she very well. I will send you the bill of my wood
-stuff: I pray you let it be sent to Joseph, that he may be sure to
-receive all. I thank you for taking order for the carriage of it in
-Hardwick; if you would command, your waggoner might bring it thither: I
-think it would be safest carried. Here is neither malt nor hops. The
-malt come last is so very ill and stinking, as Hawkes thinks none of my
-workmen will drink it. Show this letter to my friend and then return it.
-I think you will take no discharge at Zouch’s hands nor the rest. You
-may work still in despite of them; the law is on your side.[48] It
-cannot be but that you shall have the Queen’s consent to remove hither;
-therefore if you would have things in readiness for your provision, you
-might the sooner come. Come either before Midsummer or not this year;
-for any provision you have yet you might have come as well as at Easter
-as at this day. Here is yet no manner of provision more than a little
-drink, which makes me to think you mind not to come. God send my jewel
-health.
-
- “Your faithful wife
- “E. SHREWSBURY.”
-
-
- “Saturday morn.
-
-“I have sent you lettuce for that you love them; and every second day
-some is sent to your charge and you. I have nothing else to send. Let me
-hear how you, your charge and love do, and commend me I pray you. It
-were well you sent four or five pieces of the great hangings that they
-might be put up; and some carpets. I wish you would have things in that
-readiness that you might come either three or four days after you hear
-from Court. Write to Baldwin to call on my Lord Treasurer for answer of
-your letters.”
-
-
-The expression in the postscript “your charge and love” has been
-variously interpreted by historians. It is utterly inconceivable that,
-as suggested, Lady Shrewsbury should have indicated Mary Queen of Scots
-by the last word. Had she wished to bring an accusation of this kind
-against her husband she would not immediately add her desire that he
-should join her as soon as possible. It is not unlikely that this
-perplexing sentence should run, “Let me hear how you, your charge, and
-(our) love do,” the “love” probably signifying a child or grandchild
-then with the Earl. Similarly the words “God send my jewel health” may
-apply to the same child, for in after years she uses this term of
-endearment almost exclusively in speaking of her precious grandchild,
-Arabella Stuart. Her peremptory request for “great hangings and carpets”
-is rather interesting, because a previous family letter, not yet
-included, gives a picture of the Earl’s parsimony in these details. This
-occurs as early as two years before the date of the above letters; and
-two long epistles from Gilbert to his stepmother show, first, how the
-long strain of his duties was telling upon the Earl, and, secondly, the
-unfavourable contrast produced on the minds of their children by the
-manner in which they were treated respectively by father and mother.
-
-Gilbert, at Sheffield in 1575, describes the atmosphere of the house as
-utterly uncongenial. He is longing to be away and to have his own home.
-Lady Shrewsbury was away, probably at Chatsworth.[49]
-
-
-“My L. is continually pestered with his wonted business, and is very
-often in exceeding choler of slight occasion; a great grief to them that
-loves him to see him hurt himself so much. He now speaketh nothing of my
-going to house, and I fear would be contented with silence to pass it
-over; but I have great hope in your La. at your coming, and in all my
-life I never longed for anything so much as to be from hence; truly,
-Madame, I rather wish myself a ploughman than here to continue.”
-
-
-Her Ladyship came and went, but does not seem to have had much effect in
-softening her lord. Soon afterwards Gilbert writes again, oppressed by
-his father’s lack of lavishness in regard to the fitting out of his
-son’s home—an attitude which he compares unfavourably with the generous
-methods of the stepmother.[50]
-
-
-“Madame, where it hath pleased your La. to bestow on us a great deal of
-furniture towards house we can but by our prayers for your La. show
-ourselves dutiful as well for this as all other your La. continual
-benefits towards us, whereof we can never fail so long as it shall
-please God to continue His grace towards us. Presently after your La.,
-departure from hence my Lord appointed him of the wardrobe to deliver us
-the tester and curtains of the old green and red bed of velvet and satin
-that your La. did see; and the cloth bed tester and curtains we now lie
-in, and two very old counterpanes of tapestry; and forbad him to deliver
-the bed of cloth of gold and tawny velvet that your La. saw. That which
-your La. hath given us is more worth than all that is at Goodrich,[51]
-or here of my Lord’s bestowing. On Wednesday my Lord went hence. Cooks
-brought in a piece of housewife’s cloth nothing dearer than twelve pence
-the yard, and so was holden; which Cooks told my Lord would very well
-serve my wife to make sheets, bore cloths and such like: which my L. at
-the very first yielded unto, and bade him carry it to Stele to measure,
-into the outer chamber, and he said he thought it very dear of that
-price, and thereupon my L. refused to buy it.... Thus I beseech your La.
-most humbly of your blessing to your little fellow[52] and myself who is
-very well, thanks be to God....
-
-“Sheffield, this Friday, 13th of October, 1575.”
-
-
-Here for the first time is the beginning of real dissension in the
-family. The Earl’s own son murmurs against him, and the wife, being the
-daughter of her husband’s stepmother, would naturally share his
-resentment towards the soldierly official towards whom she stood in such
-a very delicate double relationship. The young couple are placed in a
-very difficult position henceforth between Earl and Countess, and their
-letters show the growing jealousy of her absence and her independence in
-the Earl’s mind. The postscript strikes a tenderer note in the allusion
-to the childish days of the “lyttell fellow”—George, son and heir of
-Gilbert and Mary Talbot—and his awe of his “Lady Danmode” (Grandmother).
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, after the painting at Hardwick
- Hall_
- _By permission of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire_
-
- ELIZABETH COUNTESS OF SHREWSBURY
-
- Page 198
-]
-
-
-“My duty, most humble rem. R. Ho., my most singular good La. This day my
-Lo. intendeth to go to Worsopp; to-morrow to Rufford; and on Saturday
-hither again. He was not so inquisitive of me touching your La. since my
-last being at Chatsworth, as he was the time before; only he hath asked
-me many times when I thought your La. would be here: whereto I have
-answered sometimes that your La. was so ill at ease with the rheumatism
-as you knew not when God would make you able; other times, that I
-thought when your La. were well, you would desire to stay for some
-months if he would give you leave; for you assuredly thought my Lo. was
-better pleased with your absence than presence. Whereunto he replied
-very earnestly the contrary in such manner as he hath done heretofore
-when I have told him the like. I found occasion to tell him that your
-La. meant not to hold Owen as your groom any longer, since it was his
-pleasure to be so offended with him: howbeit (I said) your La. told me
-that you knew not what offence he had committed, nor other by him at all
-than that he was a simple, true man, and that you would be glad to
-understand something to lay to his charge when you should turn him out
-of your service. But he answered no other than that it was his will for
-divers causes which he would not utter. Further, I said your La. told me
-you meant to take some wise fellow as your groom that should not be so
-simple as Owen was, but one who had been in service heretofore and knew
-what were fit and belonged to him to do in that service. Quoth he: ‘I
-believe she will take none of my putting to her.’ Since that time he
-gave no occasion of speech of your La., and indeed I have not been very
-much with him these four or five days, for he had much business with
-others. He is nothing so merry in my judgment as he was the last week;
-but I assure your La. I know not any cause at all. No other thing I know
-worthy of your La. knowledge at this present. Therefore, with most
-humble desire of your La. blessings to me and mine, and our prayer for
-your La. continuance in all honour, most perfect health and felicity, I
-cease.
-
-“Sheffield, this present Thursday, 1st August, 1577.
-
- “Your La. most humble and obedient
- loving children,
- “GILBERT TALBOT, M. TALBOT.
-
-“George is very well, I thank God: he drinketh every day to La.
-Grandmother, rideth to her often, but yet within the Court; and if he
-have any spice, I tell him La. Grandmother is come and will see him;
-which he then will either quickly hide or quickly eat, and then asks
-where La. Danmode is.”
-
-
-Here it is very distinctly set forth, the growing distrust, the little
-suspicions nursed by husband and wife: “He was not so inquisitive of me
-touching your Ladyship.” “He asked me divers times when I thought your
-Ladyship would be here.” “You assuredly thought that my Lord was better
-pleased with your absence than presence.” And in expressing his mother’s
-willingness to send away one of her grooms, since her lord was so
-offended with him, though she would gladly know of some offence to
-allege in giving the man his dismissal, he shows that my Lord still is
-mistrustful. “She’ll take no groom that I recommend to her” is his
-morose comment.
-
-Another long letter from Gilbert the go-between gives the quarrel a
-more serious colour. Apparently it is the absurd old matter of
-household tapestries which is the immediate bone of contention. In
-vulgar phrase, there seems to have been a regular “row” over some
-embroiderers—upholsterer’s men as they would now be called—at
-Sheffield Lodge, who had been turned adrift instead of being carefully
-housed while at their work. The Earl’s steward, one Dickenson,
-evidently acted against express orders in his zeal to keep at a
-distance all persons who were not actually of the household and who
-might convey letters or messages to the captive. The Earl had
-expressed himself forcibly and the Countess could not forget his
-words. But she had not restrained her tongue either, and he had
-retorted that she scolded “like one that came from the Bank.” He does
-not like the groom, Owen (alluded to in the letter just quoted), and
-couples him with the embroiderer’s men. But the thing which most hurts
-him is that his wife should have left Sheffield, whither he is bound
-from Bolsover, the very day he arrives. He cannot forgive it, in spite
-of her suggestion that he should combine some business he has to
-transact in the Peak district with a visit to her at Chatsworth. He
-is, moreover, morbidly sensitive about the whole position, and thinks
-that his wife’s departure will make a very bad impression upon his
-household. Gilbert pleads her love and devotion, and draws a vivid
-picture of her distress. The Earl melts; he concedes her love; he
-reiterates all he has done for her, all he has “bestowed.” And lastly
-he curses her building projects which take her so constantly away from
-him.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _From a photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, after the picture at
- Hardwick Hall
- By permission of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire_
-
- GEORGE TALBOT, SIXTH EARL OF SHREWSBURY
-
- Page 202
-]
-
-
-“My duty most humbly remembered. I trust your La. will pardon me in
-writing plainly and truly, although it be both bluntly and tediously. I
-met my L. at Bolsover yesterday about one of the clock, who at the very
-first was rather desirous to hear from hence than to enquire of
-Killingworth. Quoth he, ‘Gilbert, what talk had my wife with you?’
-‘Marry, my L.,’ quoth I, ‘it hath pleased her to talk with me once or
-twice since my coming, but the matter she most spoke of is no small
-discomfort for me to understand.’ Then he was very desirous and bade me
-tell him what. I began: ‘Truly, Sir, with as grieved a mind as ever I
-saw woman in my life, she told me your L. was vehemently offended with
-her, in such sort, and with so many words and shows in your anger of
-evil will towards her, as thereby your L. said you could not but seem
-doubtful that all his wonted love and affection is clean turned to the
-contrary; for your L. further said, you had given him no cause at all to
-be offended.’ You hearing that your embroiderers were kept out of the
-Lodge from their beds by John Dickenson’s command said to my L. these
-words in the morning, ‘Now did you give command that the embroiderers
-should be kept out of the Lodge?’ and my L. answered ‘No.’ ‘Then,’ quoth
-your La., ‘they were kept from their beds there yesternight; and he that
-did so said John Dickenson had given that express command.’ Which my L.
-said was a lie. And he said it was utterly untrue. And so I would have
-gone on to have told the rest; how your La. willed him to enquire
-whether they were not in this manner kept out or no: but his proceeding
-into vehement choler and hard speeches he cut me off, saying it was to
-no purposs to hear any recital of this matter, for if he listed he said
-he could remember cruel speeches your La. used to him, ‘which were such
-as,’ quoth he, ‘I was forced to tell her, she scolded like one that came
-from the Bank.[53] Then, Gilbert,’ said he, ‘judge whether I had cause
-or not. Well,’ quoth he, ‘I will speak no more of this matter: but she
-hath such a sort of varlets about her as never ceaseth carrying tales’;
-and then uttered cruel words against Owen chiefly and the embroiderers,
-over long to trouble your La. with. So being alighted from his horse all
-this while, said, ‘Let us get up and be gone; and I shall have enough to
-do when I come home.’ Then quoth I, ‘I think my La. be at Chatsworth by
-this time.’ ‘What!’ quoth he, ‘is she gone from Sheffield?’ I answered,
-‘By nine of the clock.’ Whereupon he seemed to marvel greatly, and said,
-‘Is her malice such that she would not tarry one night for my coming?’ I
-answered that your La. told me that he was contented at your first
-coming you should go as yesterday: which he swore he never heard of.
-‘Then,’ quoth I, ‘my La. further told me that when your L. was contented
-for her departure that day, he said that he had business in the Peake
-and would shortly come thither, and lie at Chatsworth.’ Quoth he, ‘Her
-going away thus giveth me small cause to come to Chatsworth,’ but
-answered not whether he said so or not. But I assure your La. before
-God, he was and is greatly offended with your going hence yesterday.
-
-“After he had seen all his grounds about Bolsover, and was coming into
-the way homewards, he began with me again saying that all the house
-might discern your Ladyship’s stomach against him by your departure
-before his coming. I answered beside what I said before, that your La.
-said you had very great and earnest business as well at Chatsworth for
-your things there, as to deal with certain freeholders for Sir Thomas
-Stanhope, but he allowed not any reason or cause, but was exceeding
-angry for the same. Whereupon I spake at large which I beseech your La.
-to pardon my tediousness in repeating thereof, or at least the most
-thereof. Quoth I, ‘I pray your L. give leave to tell you plainly what I
-gathered by my Lady. I see she is so grieved and vexed in mind as I
-protest to God I never saw any woman more in my life; and after she told
-me how without any cause at all your L. uttered most cruel and bitter
-speeches against her, when she all the while never uttered any undutiful
-word, and had particularly imparted the whole matter, she plainly
-declared unto me that she thought your L. heart was withdrawn from her,
-and all your affection and love to hate and evil will’: saying that you
-took it as your cross that so contrary to your deservings he adjudged of
-you, applinge[54] the manifold shows which you so indefinitely have made
-proof; and so forgot no earnest protestations that your La. pleased to
-utter to me of your dear affection and love to him both in health and
-sickness, taking it upon your soul that you wished his griefs were on
-yourself to disburden and quit him of [them].
-
-“And quoth I, ‘My L., when she told me of this her dear love towards
-you, and now how your L. hath requited her, she was in such perplexity
-as I never saw woman’: and concluded, that your La. speech was that now
-you know he thought himself most happy when you were absent from, and
-most unhappy when you were with him. And this, I assure your La., he
-heeded; and although I cannot say his very word was that he had injured
-and wronged you, yet both by his countenance and words it plainly showed
-the same, and [he] answered, ‘I know,’ quoth he, ‘her love hath been
-great to me: and mine hath been and is as great to her: for what can a
-man do more for his wife than I have done and daily do for her?’ And so
-reckoned at large, your La. may think with the most, what he hath given
-and bestowed. Whereunto I could not otherwise reply than thus. Quoth I,
-‘My L., she were to blame if she considered not these things: but I
-gather plainly by her speech to me that she thinketh notwithstanding
-that your heart is hardened against her, as I have once or twice already
-told your Lordship, and that you love them that love not her, and
-believe those about you which hateth her.’ And at your departure I said
-that your La. told me that you verily thought my L. was gladder of your
-absence than presence. Wherein, I assure your La., he deeply protested
-the contrary: and said, ‘Gilbert, you know the contrary; and how often I
-have cursed the buildings at Chatsworth for want of her company: but
-[quoth he] you see she careth not for my company by going away. I would
-not have done so to her....’ But after this he talked not much; but I
-know it pinched him, and on my conscience I think so; but what effects
-will follow God knoweth.
-
-“I will write again to your La. what I find by him this day; for
-yesternight having not talked with any but myself, I know that his heart
-desireth reconciliation if he wist which way to bring it to pass. Living
-God grant it, and make his heart turn to your comfort in all things.
-
-“To-morrow he will send me to Derby about Sir Thomas Stanhope’s matter.
-I most humbly beseech your La. blessing to me and mine. George rejoiced
-so greatly yesternight at my L. coming home, as I could not have
-believed if I had not seen it. Sunday at nine of the clock. For God’s
-sake, Madame, pardon my very tedious and evil favoured scribbling.
-
-“Your La. most humble and obedient loving son,
-
- “GILBERT TALBOT.”
-
-“The hasty letter from Sir John Constable was to advertise that there
-are two Scots that travel with linen cloths to sell, that gave letters
-of importance to this Queen: one of them is brother to Curle. My L.
-Huntington’s letter was refusal of land that my L. offered him to sell.”
-
-
-“What effects will follow God knoweth!” Certainly 1577 was an unhappy
-year for the house of Shrewsbury. “This world,” as Lord Leicester says
-in one of his letters to the great Earl, “is wholly given to reports and
-bruits of all sorts.” And these conjugal bickerings, as the Earl
-foresaw, would beget reports which, added to the “bruits” he had to face
-almost daily anent his prisoner, would certainly crush him and his wife.
-For the present the latter rumours were reviving in such force that he
-could not stop to think of his private affairs. In his letter to his
-wife—the first letter quoted in this chapter—he had alluded to one of
-these “bruits,” and his apprehensions naturally made him greatly desire
-the companionship of his Bess.
-
-These rumours were no laughing matter. Affairs in the Netherlands were
-now complicating England’s foreign policy, and the rumour of the wooing
-of Mary of Scotland by the gallant Don John of Austria caused all sorts
-of suspicions of her release. For this audacious and foolhardy soldier
-had projected a programme of exploits which included the subjugation of
-the Low Countries, the conquest of England, and, through Mary, the
-sovereignty over it and the restoration of the Romish faith. My Lord
-Treasurer promptly indited the following to Mary’s gaoler:—
-
-
-“My very good Lord,
-
-“I cannot but continue my thanks for all your liberal courtesies,
-praying your Lordship to assure yourself of my poor but yet assured
-friendship while I live. At my coming to the Court I found such alarm by
-news directly written from France, and from the Low Countries, of the
-Queen of Scots’ escape, either already made or very shortly to be
-attempted, as (surely knowing, as I did, your circumspection in keeping
-of her, and hearing all things in that country about you very quiet, and
-free from such dangers) I was bold to make small account of the news,
-although her Majesty, and the Council here, were therewith perplexed.
-And though time doth try these news for anything already done false, yet
-the noise thereof, and the doubt that her Majesty halts for secret
-hidden practices, to be wrought rather by corruption of some of yours
-whom you shall trust than by open force, moveth her Majesty to warn your
-Lordship, as she said she would write to your Lordship that you
-continue, or rather increase, your vigilancy ...; and as I think your
-Lordship hath carried your charge to Chatsworth, so I think that house a
-very meet bourn for good preservation thereof; having no town of resort
-where any ambushes ... may lie.”
-
-
-Shrewsbury had removed Mary to Chatsworth during the late summer of
-1577, and his motive in applying for leave to do so was apparently not
-unmixed with an earnest desire for that “reconciliation” at which
-Gilbert hinted. There was, besides, a very potent reason for the
-_rapprochement_ of husband and wife. On Gilbert and Mary Talbot great
-sorrow had fallen. The adored baby son George, the “lytell fellow,” died
-suddenly. The Earl tells it to Burghley. He writes from Sheffield
-briefly, incoherently. The loss hits him very hard, and he acknowledges
-that this child is his best beloved, the Queen’s Majesty only excepted.
-In fear of the effect of the blow upon his excitable wife he suggests
-that Burghley’s reply and condolences should be addressed to her, and so
-help to “rule” and control her.
-
-
-“My very good Lord,—When it pleased God of His goodness yesternight a
-little before supper to visit suddenly my dearest jewel under God next
-to my Sovereign, with mortality of sickness, and that it hath pleased
-God of his goodness to take that sweet babe from me, he surely was a
-toward child. I thought it rather by myself than by common report you
-should understand it from me, that though it nips me near, yet the fear
-I have of God and the dutiful care to discharge my duty and trust my
-mistress puts me in, makes me now that he is gone to put away needless
-care and to look about me that I am put in trust withal—and, my Lord,
-because I doubt my wife will show more folly than need requires, I pray
-your Lordship write your letter to her, which I hope will greatly rule
-her. So wishing to your Lordship perfect health, I take my leave.
-Sheffield, 12th of August, 1577.
-
- “Your Lordship’s assured friend,
- “G. SHREWSBURY.”[55]
-
-
-To Walsingham the Earl also announces this news, adding, “Howbeit, I do
-not willingly obey unto His will who took him, who only lent him me,
-without grudging thereat; but my wife (although she acknowledge no less)
-is not so well able to rule her passions, and hath driven herself into
-such case by her continual weeping, as it likes to breed in her further
-inconvenience.” Wherefore he is particularly anxious to join her at
-Chatsworth, and begs that the Queen shall be “moved” for the requisite
-permission.
-
-This visit was ended by the beginning of November, when Queen Mary was
-once more bundled back to Sheffield. At this time she seems to have been
-on the best of terms with Earl and Countess, and ready to do them every
-kindness in her power. For instance, she sent to France for a bed for
-them. But as this was not at the moment acceptable she mentions in a
-letter her intention to “fulfil my promise by another bed of finer
-stuff.” It came to her knowledge that they required half a dozen great
-hall candlesticks such as those “made at Crotelles,” whereupon she sent
-for “the largest, richest, and best made.” These were to be sent among
-articles ordered by her servants, “so that they may create no
-suspicion.”
-
-It is sometimes hard to distinguish from her bribes the presents Mary
-made out of sheer generosity.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
- “BRUITS”
-
-
-In a letter quoted in the previous chapter Lord Burghley had told Lord
-Shrewsbury that the Queen herself would write to him on the subject of
-the new-old rumours about Mary’s escape. Elizabeth, of course, did
-write, and very seriously, about these reports “from sundry places
-beyond the sea,” and in that letter (of September, 1577) she gave her
-servant full powers to use his own discretion in making things secure.
-But by the spring of 1578 she was not quite so sure of him. The
-mischief-making at Court had done its usual work. The Queen was very
-cruelly placed always between two parties—Mary’s friends and Mary’s
-enemies. To all, as her courtiers, she must preserve a certain show of
-grace and unswerving discretion, holding always the balance between the
-Argus-eyed alertness of the first and the many-winged suspicions of the
-last. These suspicions were often grossly exaggerated. There were some
-at least who desired the prisoner’s freedom, but not her usurpation of
-the English throne and a third religious revolution. On the other hand,
-there were men, who, though powerful under Elizabeth, could quickly have
-transferred their allegiance to the other sovereign. Again, at all hours
-“posts” from various ports could bring in secret information under the
-excellently inclusive system organised by Elizabeth’s chief adviser.
-
-Tugged this way and that in her fears for the stability of the kingdom,
-and at times driven to a pitch of intense alarm, the Queen’s confidence
-in the capacity of the Earl at Sheffield varied according to the tales
-poured into her ear.
-
-A crisis of this kind had been slowly brewing since the autumn, till in
-the opening of this year it was actually decided to remove Mary to
-Leicestershire, and place her under the roof and guard of Lord
-Huntingdon. Everything was arranged, even down to the despatch of the
-usual warnings to the surrounding officials of the counties through
-which the Scots Queen must pass. And then—the usual hitch. Shrewsbury,
-of course, scented trouble and disgrace, and before definite orders
-could reach him as to the change, he wrote to the Queen: “To answer
-somewhat,” he rightly says, “in this letter is part of my duty, lest my
-silence should breed suspicion.” And no wonder! For “I am informed that
-there are reports ... that I am too much at the devotion of this lady,
-and so the less to be trusted, and that it was considered better to
-dispose her elsewhere out of my custody, to my dishonour and disgrace.”
-He pleads stoutly, as always, for the recognition of his
-single-heartedness and loyalty. He desires only “to be acquitted of
-blame by the Queen’s own goodness.” He challenges her equity and good
-faith: “I presume with your favour not to excuse myself, but to be
-cleared thereof by your own just judgment.”
-
-He points out that had he desired to espouse Mary’s cause he might have
-done so far earlier in the day:—
-
-
-“When her liberty was sought, and her case pleaded with sword in hand,
-herself in force enough as she supposed to achieve her highest
-enterprise, if any hope had been to her of my inclination that way I
-might have had an office at her hand with little reward as the greatest
-traitor they had, and been offered golden mountains.” But even Mary, as
-he points out, knows her ground, and would not attempt to approach him:
-“She was without hope of me and durst reveal nothing to me.” He hates
-the notion of any upheaval in the realm: “A change bringeth nothing but
-destruction of him that desireth it.”
-
-
-The Queen, after her usual custom after writing a letter of admonition,
-softened it down by a kind and rather contradictory little message, to
-which he alludes in a postscript: “Thanks for your gracious messages by
-my son Gylbard, among others, that I should not credit bruits, but you
-would be careful of me.” Elizabeth also included gracious messages to
-his “daughter Lynox and her child,” the which, he assured the Queen,
-were a great comfort to Lady Shrewsbury.
-
-For the rest, how could the poor fellow help believing “bruits”? This
-kind of gracious royal message was very well in its way, but he must
-have known that it amounted to nothing. There arose, as he was well
-aware, other kinds of rumours concerning him and his which were much
-less mendacious, though they were probably grossly increased by
-scandalmongers.
-
-Family correspondence has proved how strained were the conjugal
-relations of Earl and Countess, and how a barrier beginning, seemingly,
-with a foundation no less tangible than an armful of tapestries (but
-subsequently solidified by the sheer masonry of Chatsworth) had grown up
-between them. All matters of private dispute were complicated by their
-own difficulties in regard to the tenants of their various estates and
-any neighbours with whom they were on bad terms. Little by little the
-fact that the house of Shrewsbury was not at peace with itself must
-penetrate to the greater world. Servants carried the news into the
-county. If my Lord blazed and my Lady retorted fiercely and shrilly,
-matters could not be kept within four walls. And so, though it belongs
-to a year later than the crisis which now brooded, a very long letter is
-here inserted because it is so pertinent to the affairs of the Talbots
-and Cavendishes. Without going needlessly into business details here, it
-must be explained that all the disputes with tenants, etc., to which the
-letter alludes, were calculated from the Queen’s point of view to
-disaffect the people in the immediate neighbourhood of the Earl, and
-give them ground for opposing him and furthering the cause of Mary
-merely out of spiteful motives. Certain tenants complained, it seems,
-that they had been turned out of properties leased to them by the Earl,
-and actually carried the matter up to the Lords of the Council for their
-arbitration. The Lords took no violent action in the matter, while the
-Earl denied the charges, and brought countercharge of ill-treatment.
-Eventually, after correspondence and discussion, the Council discharged
-the complainants without punishment beyond a little admonition; and
-after due examination of the man Higgenbotham mentioned in this letter,
-decided that his offence was exaggerated, and recommended him to the
-Earl’s clemency. Eventually the unfortunate Earl had to give in and
-reinstate his restive men of Glossopdale in their farms, so that his own
-popularity might be assured in order to serve the purposes of his Queen.
-
-The letter from Gilbert is addressed to “My Lord, my Father”:—
-
-
-“My duty most humbly remembered, right honourable my singular good Lord
-and father. Your letters, sent by my lacquey of the 10th of this May, I
-received the 13th, at which time my Lord of Leicester was at Wanstead
-where he yet remains, and therefore I presently delivered your
-Lordship’s to the Queen’s Majesty to Mr. Secretary Walsingham, to be
-delivered by him, the weather being wet and rainy and therefore no hope
-that her Majesty would walk or come abroad, so as I might deliver it
-myself. But whilst I stood by he read your Lordship’s letter to himself,
-the which he liked very well; and said that he perceived thereby that
-your Lordship meant to deal well with your tenants, whereof he was very
-glad, for that he knew also that it would very well content her Majesty;
-but very little more speech he had with me at that time, and, since, I
-hear that he has delivered your Lordship’s letter to her Majesty, the
-which she also has taken in very good part. The other letter, to my Lord
-Leicester, I sent forthwith to him to Wanstead, but he returns not till
-to-morrow, having been there all this week; and I hear nothing from him
-thereof. I likewise delivered your Lordship’s letter to my Lord
-Treasurer, who liked it very well; and said that he was very glad that
-your Lordship took his plain dealing with you in his letter in so good
-part. And thus this tragedy I hope is at an end, until the coming up of
-Higgenbotham, with such proofs as your Lordship shall send against him.
-
-“We have had no little ado with these unreasonable people of Ashford,
-whereof this bearer can inform your Lordship at length; but now they are
-all returned back again, and none of those letters that were sent up to
-the Council, or any other concerning that matter, were delivered, but
-sent down to my Lady again; yet it was thought good that I should make
-my Lord of Leicester privy to the coming of these persons; the which I
-did the same day that they came to town; and, when I had told him at
-length how the case stood, he agreed with me that it was a plain
-practice;[56] yet, nevertheless wished that (if by any means possible)
-we should stay them from complaining; saying, in general words, that if
-they were not stayed, there would fall out greater inconvenience both to
-your Lordship and my Lady than you were aware of, how false and untrue
-soever their complaints were. But, before that, he enquired of the town
-where they dwelt, which when I had described to him, he well remembered,
-and that he had angled and fished at the end of that town; and said that
-he thought it belonged wholly to my Lady; and asked whether your
-Lordship did meddle therewith or not. I answered him that your Lordship
-had wholly left it to my Lady, to use at her pleasure, and was not privy
-that her Ladyship dealt therewith. ‘Well,’ quoth he, ‘but for all that
-assure yourself that whosoever set these varlets and the others on, had
-no less evil meaning towards my Lord than my Lady; for there is no
-difference made, neither in the Queen’s opinion nor any others but
-whatsoever concerns one of them, touches them both alike; and yet,’
-quoth he, ‘I never heard of any practice for the removing of my
-Lordship’s charge, but, amongst other things, this was ever one: that
-there was no good agreement betwixt my Lord and my Lady: and that it was
-informed, both to the Queen and others, that there was a secret division
-between your doings, and,’ quoth he, ‘if it were known I verily believe
-the same has now been informed, and it is not long since I heard it,
-when I am assured that there never was any such thing; but,’ quoth he,
-‘by the Eternal God, if they could ever bring the Queen to believe it
-that there were jars betwixt them, she would be in such a fear as it
-would sooner be the cause of the removing of my Lordship’s charge than
-any other thing; for I think verily,’ quoth he, ‘she could never sleep
-quietly after, as long as that Queen remained with them’; and, next to
-this it troubles the Queen most when she hears that you are not so well
-beloved of your tenants as she would wish, which was the cause of her
-late earnest letter, ‘the which,’ quoth he, ‘I could not stay if my life
-had lain thereon. Well,’ quoth he, ‘I am glad all these former matters
-are so well satisfied; and, to conclude,’ quoth he, ‘I pray God that my
-Lord and Lady have none but faithful and true servants about them, and
-that none of them do, by indirect means, cause it to be informed
-sometimes hither that there are mislikes or disagreements betwixt them
-when there are none at all.’ I leave to write unto your Lordship my
-answers to many of these his Lordship’s speeches, for they would be too
-long; and your Lordship may think that either I answered according to my
-duty, and to the truth, or else I forgot myself overmuch. All this
-speech I had with him before he went to Wanstead, which is five days
-since. The secret opinion is now that the matter of Monseigneur’s[57]
-coming and especially the marriage, is grown very cold, and Simier like
-shortly to go over; and yet I know a man may take a thousand pounds in
-this town, to be bound to pay double so much when Monseigneur comes into
-England and treble so much when he marries the Queen’s Majesty, and if
-he neither do the one nor the other, to gain the thousand pound clear.
-This is all the news that I hear. And thus, my wife and I, most humbly
-beseeching your Lordship’s daily blessings, with our wonted prayer, upon
-our knees, for your long continuance in all honour, most perfect health,
-and long long life, I cease.
-
-“At your Lordship’s little house near Charing Cross, this present
-Friday, late at night, 15th of May, 1579.
-
- “Your Lordship’s most humble and
- obedient loving son,
- “GILBERT TALBOT.
-
-“I wish it would please your Lordship to remember my Lord Chancellor
-with some gift. It would be very well bestowed.”
-
-
-Thus, because of the possibility of larger treasons, the warder of Mary
-of Scotland and his family must needs swallow their private grievances,
-forgive their truculent tenants, and appear wreathed with smiles. They
-must maintain their estate, in spite of their increasing liabilities and
-the churlishness of the Royal Exchequer, and above all they must keep my
-Lord Treasurer well supplied with _douceurs_.
-
-Why they did not sell a portion of their vast inheritance at this
-juncture in order to make matters comfortable one cannot understand. In
-London the Earl’s creditors were pressing him, and he was too
-conscientious to let the matter stand longer than avoidable.
-
-A new responsibility was about to be thrust on the Talbots in securing
-the hereditary rights of their grandchild Arabella. For the Dowager Lady
-Lennox died in this year quite suddenly at her house at Hackney. It was
-odd that the guest who last saw her was the man whom she had accused of
-slaying his wife, and whose treachery she had once denounced. Lord
-Leicester went down to talk business with her at Hackney, relating, no
-doubt, to the sorry state of her financial affairs, and stayed to dine
-with her. Just after he left she was taken violently ill, and died two
-days later. What she had to bequeath—and Heaven knows it was little
-enough—in the way of jewels she left to Arabella Stuart. With the death
-of her son, Lennox, the ties which bound her to life practically
-disappeared, and she succumbed at the age of sixty-seven to a disease
-which must have been aggravated by the terrible misfortunes of her
-extraordinary life. Her own dowry of Scottish lands made her no return
-because of the war-bound condition of her native country; the sons who
-owned the estates conferred on her husband by Henry VIII were all dead.
-Her land in Yorkshire passed from her with the death, one presumes, of
-her last son, and her fatherless granddaughter was, as Strickland says,
-“heiress to nought but sorrow and a royal pedigree.”
-
-It was evident that a push must be made to protect the rights of the
-child. Queen Mary herself sent for the old lady’s jewels on behalf of
-her little niece, but on the other hand she urged her son’s guardians to
-put forward his claims. This was not with a view to destroying the
-chances of Arabella, but merely to assert his family rights, lest he
-should be regarded as a foreigner. A counterblast to this was the action
-of Elizabeth, who took the child under her protection. This fulfilled
-the heart’s desire of Elizabeth Shrewsbury. Yet it did not avail her
-much. The right to do as he chose with the earldom was by young James,
-under the influence of his nobles, claimed for Scotland, and he was made
-to grant the earldom to the Bishop of Caithness, a man advanced in years
-and without heir, chosen purposely for present convenience until another
-Stuart—Esmé Stuart, Lord d’Aubigny, should claim it. Lord and Lady
-Shrewsbury wrote in deprecation to Lord Leicester on the subject,
-entreating Elizabeth’s intervention:[58] “Unless the Queen will write in
-most earnest sort to the King of Scotland on her little ward’s
-behalf ... we cannot but be in some despair.... The Bishop of
-Caithness ... is an old sickly man without a child; and I think it is
-done that D’Aubigny, being in France and the next heir male, should
-succeed him. My wife says that the old Lord Lennox told her long ago of
-D’Aubigny’s seeking to prevent the infant.”
-
-Subsequently Mary declined to open any negotiations with Esmé Stuart in
-her own affairs, both because she did not trust him and because she was
-desirous not to give offence to “our right well-beloved cousin,
-Elizabeth, Countess of Shrewsbury.” This is proof enough that her first
-move in regard to the matter had been one of pure policy and was to be
-regarded as quite apart from her private sentiments. It were well if she
-had never sent the recommendation.
-
-Other rumours of the moment gathered special force, and were perhaps of
-more importance to the nation at large than was the possible escape of
-Mary. They were rumours of the Queen’s marriage. Anjou’s wooing was a
-long business. It lasted over nine years. Elizabeth was just now
-revelling in rather a skittish mood in spite of the wild “bruits” about
-her health. It was said that she was threatened with epilepsy; at all
-events she could enjoy herself, and receive fantastic love letters,
-while she shortened the leash by which she held Mary, and docked her of
-any semblance of liberty. It did not seem to depress the Virgin Queen
-that her royal suitor was only twenty. She always pretended great
-coyness towards all gentlemen, and there is an odd touch in the way she
-scolded Gilbert Talbot for inadvertently gazing upon her in her early
-morning deshabille as she stood at a casement.
-
-
-“On May Day I saw her Majesty, and it pleased her to speak to me very
-graciously. In the morning about eight o’clock I happened to walk in the
-Tiltyard, under the gallery where her Majesty used to stand to see the
-running at tilt; where by chance she was, and looking out of the window,
-my eye was full towards her, she showed to be greatly ashamed thereof,
-for that she was unready, and in her night stuff; so when she saw me
-after dinner, as she went to walk, she gave me a great fillip on the
-forehead, and told my Lord Chamberlain, who was the next to her, how I
-had seen her that morning, and how much ashamed she was. And, after, I
-presented unto her the remembrance of your Lordship’s and my Ladyship’s
-bounden duty and service; and said that you both thought yourselves most
-bounden to her for her most gracious dealing towards your daughter my
-Lady of Lennox; and that you assuredly trusted in the continuance of her
-favourable goodness to her and her daughter. And she answered that she
-always found you more thankful than she gave cause....”
-
-
-That last sentence rings with ironical truth. As they read it Earl and
-Countess might well merge their differences and smile unanimously—a
-somewhat bitter smile!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
- RUTH AND JOYUSITIE
-
-
-The dashing suitor of Mary of Scotland, Don John of Austria, was dead.
-Her rival was on the edge of a marriage with a son of Mary’s stoutest
-champion—France. It was a bad moment for the prisoner. It was not a
-pleasant time for the Talbots. Life at Sheffield could be varied only by
-letters from Gilbert, though his parents must to some extent have been
-cheered by the prospect of his speedily having another heir. His wife
-was attended by no less a person than the famous physician of my Lord of
-Leicester, a certain Mr. Julio, who seems, on all accounts, to have
-known a great deal too much about the unholy drugs which the Medici
-found so useful, though his skill as a physician could not be gainsaid.
-Gilbert Talbot at least seems flourishing. He is free to come and go; he
-is quite a “citizen of the world.” He executes commissions for his
-family, his purchases are practical, and he is thoughtful for his
-stepmother’s needs. “There are two Friesland horses,” he writes, “of a
-reasonable price for their goodness; I have promised the fellow for them
-£33; I think them especial good for my Ladyship’s coach; I will send
-them down.” He despatches constant reports of his wife’s health, and of
-the repairs and decorations which he is superintending in “Shrewsbury
-House,” otherwise the Earl’s house in “Broad Street” from which Gilbert
-writes. A special ceiling was being designed for this, the building was
-to be newly glazed, and the family coat-of-arms inserted in the windows
-in stained glass. In a postscript he heralds a private letter from the
-Queen to Lady Shrewsbury, which is not forthcoming. “My Lord, my
-brother[59] tarrieth only for her Majesty’s letter to my Lady, which,
-she saith, she will write in her own hand, so as nobody shall be
-acquainted with a word therein till my Lady receive it. I have not seen
-her look better a great while, neither better disposed; the living God
-continue it.”
-
-The composition of this young gentleman is always rather vague and his
-punctuation hazy. He means, of course, that it is the Queen who is in
-such good health and humour. She was very busy puzzling everyone over
-her projected marriage, and sketching Court entertainments in connection
-with it. Even while she felt the gravity of such a step she would dally
-with it, thrust away apparently all but the lighter side of things. She
-kept her Privy Council sitting “from eight o’clock in the morning until
-dinner-time; and presently after dinner, and an hour’s conference with
-her Majesty’s Council again, and so till supper-time.” All this strain
-was induced, Gilbert assures the household at Sheffield, by “the matter
-of Monsigneur coming here, his entertainment here, and what demands are
-to be made unto him in the treaty of marriage ...; and I can assure your
-Lordship it is verily thought this marriage will come to pass of a great
-sort of wise men; yet nevertheless there are divers others like Sr.
-Thomas of Jude who would not believe till he had both seen and felt. It
-is said that Monseigneur will certainly be here in May next.... It is
-said that he will be accompanied with three dukes, ten earls, and a
-hundred other gentlemen.”
-
-The suitor came—but more or less secretly—and departed. It was not till
-nearly a year later that the cat-and-mouse game which Elizabeth played
-with him approached a crisis in the shape of a splendid pageant at
-Whitehall, which she organised to dazzle the French Ambassador, and to
-give the impression that this affair was really to be accomplished. Gay
-times those—with Sir Philip Sidney’s art and grace to lead the pomps and
-ceremonies! Everyone of importance was invited. “Her talk,”[60] says a
-contemporary of Elizabeth, “was of tournaments and balls; her one desire
-was that the fairest ladies in England should grace her Court. The Lords
-were bidden to bring their families to London that there might be the
-bustle of constant gaiety. The merchants were ordered to sell their
-silks, velvets, and cloth of gold at a reduction of a quarter of the
-ordinary price that more should be induced to buy, and so enhance the
-general splendour.”
-
-Alack for the Shrewsburys! No gay invitation appears to have summoned
-them from the wilds of their county to witness the famous pageant and
-the battle of flowers and perfumes waged this year in the tiltyard at
-Whitehall, or applaud the splendid chariot of “my Lady Desire” and her
-four gallant sons, of whom Sir Philip Sidney personated one.
-
-Such happiness and all that which Mary of Scotland, in a letter, termed
-“joyusitie” was a thing apart from existence at Sheffield, and she, who
-loved all such fantastical gaieties, who knew as much as any of them of
-love practices and flowery games, who could play even with peasant folk
-like a child, looked wistfully forth upon the world from the leads of
-her castle-prison or from the meadows close to the Lodge, its neighbour.
-From 1579 to 1581 her affairs and those of the Talbots are full of small
-events, things which kept them alert, yet brought but little result. The
-Earl was watched closely by Elizabeth. He could not even leave home for
-two days without sharp reprimand, although he never absented himself for
-an hour without knowing that his prisoner was absolutely secure, while
-his servants kept him carefully informed of her condition. One of them,
-for example, by name George Skargelle, a constant eye-witness of the
-Shrewsbury tragi-comedy, not only reports upon the prisoner, but scours
-the immediate neighbourhood to see what is going on: “May yt plese your
-honner to understand that your L’ house is quyet and well, God be
-pressed; and the Quene is sarvet wth. her vetteles and wille plesed for
-thes II dayes.” He goes to the Castle gardens “to see what stir there
-was of your Lordship’s follkes” and found certain fellows playing at
-dice, while in the town of Sheffield he discovered other gamblers at
-cards. After this he breaks a lance in speech with his master’s
-truculent “bad tenants of Glossopdale,” whom he so mistrusted that he
-gave information of their presence to the men at the bridges and the
-watches, and to the owners of the houses where the travellers lodged.
-The Queen heard of the Earl’s absence (for there were always people
-ready to report the least movement of so notable a county resident), and
-belaboured him in a letter. He begged her to allow him to come to Court
-and justify himself. For many reasons he longed to do this. He was weary
-of writing endless letters to her and to the Treasury. His personal
-debts weighed on his conscience, and his enemies were always trying to
-make out that he could not be in any need of supplies because of his
-large estates. Big houses are big thieves, and what with his large
-double family and the costs entailed by his position, even his trade
-projects—he was among other things an owner of lead and exporter of
-it—did not keep him in sufficient ready money to maintain all his houses
-and fulfil his landlord’s liabilities as he would have wished. He was
-not personally an extravagant man, and displays none of the magnificent
-tastes of his wife in regard to his house and person. He declared that
-his creditors should be satisfied rather than he should use expensive
-household articles. “I would have you buy me glasses to drink in,” he
-wrote in 1580 to his servant Baldwin. “Send me word what old plate
-yields the ounce, for I will not leave me a cup to drink in, but I will
-see the next term my creditors paid.” He may have made a special point
-of this in order that Baldwin should use the statement as a pathetic
-plea when making application to the Treasury for payments due to his
-master, the main reason the Earl had for keeping his representative in
-London. He had felt deeply the false reports of his income spread about
-by local detractors, who were probably also responsible for the
-statement that he was now keeping his prisoner on short commons. His
-sensations and those of the Countess on hearing of this from Lord
-Leicester can well be imagined. The statement had been handed on to him
-by the French Ambassador in London, and Leicester told him it would
-“much mislike her Majesty.”
-
-The accusation runs: “That your Lordship doth of late keep the Scotch
-Queen very barely of her diet, insomuch as on Easter day last she had
-both so few dishes and so bad meat in them as it was too bad to see it;
-and that she finding fault thereat your Lordship should answer that you
-were cut off your allowance, and therefore could yield her no better.”
-
-And yet Shrewsbury could forgive the Queen’s suspicions and, tolerably
-happy in the birth of a granddaughter, despite the fact that a male heir
-to Gilbert would have rejoiced him far more, instructed his son Francis
-to present for him a New Year’s present to Elizabeth.
-
-Simultaneously no time was lost, no trouble grudged in worrying
-Burghley, “her Majesty’s housewife” as the Earl rather ironically terms
-him in one letter, with regard to a settlement of the everlasting claim
-for “this Queen’s diet.” Indeed, one can only imagine that this word
-“diet,” by which the cost of the board of the Scottish Mary is always
-signified in succeeding correspondence, must have held in the Earl’s
-mind and heart the same place as the name of Calais in the mind of Mary
-of England. Robert Beale, a clerk of the Privy Council and personal
-friend of the Shrewsburys, did his best for them, but despite his kindly
-despatches—one of which has a pretty allusion to “my little Lady
-Favour,” evidently Lady Arabella Stuart—payment was tardy. Even the
-scanty allowance originally decided upon had been deliberately reduced
-by royal order. For the hundredth time he tackled anew the official
-“housewife” with the words: “I have made suit to her Highness for some
-recompense, in which I do find so cold comfort that I am near driven to
-despair to obtain anything.” Elsewhere he speaks pathetically of “the
-cark and care” which is his portion. “My riches they talk of are in
-other men’s purses,” he complains bitterly; “God knows I make many
-shifts to keep me out of debt and to help my children, which are heavy
-burdens though comfortable, so long as they do well. I can say no more,
-but I have spies near about me and know them well.”
-
-At last, in the August of 1582, in sheer despair of obtaining
-satisfaction, and sick of employing intermediaries, he wrote to the
-Queen:—
-
-
- “May it please your most excellent Majesty,
-
-“Having then ten years been secluded from your most gracious sight and
-happy presence, which more grieveth me than any travel or discommodity
-that I have suffered in this charge that it hath pleased your Majesty to
-put me in trust withal, I have taken the boldness most humbly to beseech
-your Majesty that it may please the same to license me for a fortnight’s
-journey towards your Majesty’s royal person; to the end you may by
-myself receive a true account of my said charge, and thereby know what
-my deservings are. Wherein, if I may (as I desire most earnestly)
-satisfy your Majesty, it shall be unto me a great encouragement to
-continue the most faithful duty and careful service that I owe unto your
-Majesty, and shall yield to my life’s end.”
-
-
-This permission was in a fair way to be granted as far as letters could
-show, and the good, timid, dogged Earl made all arrangements, settled
-the stages of his journey, ordered bedding and lodging, and planned his
-retinue: “I think my company will be twenty gentlemen and twenty yeomen,
-besides their men and my horsekeepers.” He only waited for his journey
-till Chesterfield Fair was over and the crowds of suspicious loafers
-dispersed. But he waited far too long. The plague had seized London and
-had increased apace; he dreaded the cold journey south in the autumn
-storms; he dreaded an aggravated attack from “the enemy”—gout.
-
-Simultaneously with this disappointment came sharper sorrow—the death of
-Francis Talbot. The event presented itself to Lord Leicester as worthy
-of one of those flowery, humbugging, sententious, idiotic letters of
-which he wrote so many in his crowded life. This unscrupulous idler,
-living on the fat of the land and overheaped with gifts and favours,
-presents a very odd picture as he conjures an afflicted, upright, and
-overburdened contemporary to count up his blessings: “The Lord hath
-blessed you many ways in this world, and not least with the blessing of
-children for your posterity.” This from a fellow who could disown his
-legitimate son by denying a lawful marriage with the mother! And again:
-“He that hath sent you many might have given you fewer, and He that took
-away this might also take away the rest. Be thankful to Him for all His
-doings, my good Lord, and take all in that good part which you ought; be
-you wholly His, and seek His kingdom, for it far surpasses all worldly
-kingdoms.” This from the shrewd sycophant who was waiting day after day
-to be announced as consort of the Queen of England!
-
-To return on our paces a little. The health of Queen Mary was extremely
-unsatisfactory. From 1579 right on through the eighties she addressed
-letter after letter of piteous entreaties for freedom to Elizabeth, and
-to the ambassador Mauvissière. Sometimes, for weeks at a time, she could
-not leave her bed owing to the pain in her side. Sometimes the hardly
-won permission to go to Buxton would revive her spirits. On one occasion
-she fell backwards from her horse just as she was mounting, and injured
-herself severely. Sometimes she was kept closely guarded at Buxton, and
-on others she would be allowed to see something of the country close to
-it. In 1577 she was so ailing that she made her will. But she would
-revive to write endless spirited letters, to plead incessantly and
-indignantly against the way in which her French dowry, the only income
-she now had, was being dissipated and misappropriated in France, and to
-make eager preparations for hunting expeditions, to few of which, as she
-confessed, she expected Lord Shrewsbury would give his consent. At the
-end of 1581 she was so worn out by secret suspense in regard to her
-fate, by constraint, and by lack of air and exercise—the simple remedies
-which in years past had helped her to conquer all bodily ills—that for
-once her courage left her. She begged for special doctors other than
-those who ordinarily attended her. She worked herself into an agony over
-the position of her son, and finally begged that the Queen would send
-assistance to her “as that she might not be cast away for want of such
-help of physicians and things as she needed.”
-
-Robert Beale, already mentioned in his connection with the Privy
-Council, who was really sent down at this juncture to Sheffield to
-investigate the political relationship between Mary and her son, found
-the household in a depressing condition. Lord Shrewsbury had a bad
-attack of gout, and though the Countess was not described as ill, her
-frame of mind cannot have been very cheerful. Everyone seems to have
-poured out his woes in Beale’s ears, while he stuck to his purpose, and
-tried to secure a definite answer as to whether or no Mary would
-formally yield the Scottish crown to her son. A clear answer from her he
-never had. She was ill, hysterical, and, to his thinking and that of the
-Earl, full of trickery. They believed that she asked for a special
-physician from London because it might give her a chance of carrying out
-some scheme to her advantage in connection with the Duke of Alençon, who
-was expected in England. One night when she sent specially for Beale he
-arrived to find the room in sudden darkness, and Mary in bed, with the
-dim shadowy figures of her chamberwomen hovering about her. Among those
-shadowy ladies in the bedchamber was still the devoted Mary Seton, to
-whom had come some years previously ruth which her mistress also shared.
-Not only had the loyal prægustator, John Beton, died in the earlier days
-of the long imprisonment, but his brother and successor in the post,
-Andrew, had passed away. With Andrew, who courted her passionately, the
-Seton had at last fallen in love. The only barrier to their union was a
-most inexplicable vow of celibacy which the girl had taken. With the
-approval of his brother, Archbishop Beton, and the encouragement of his
-royal mistress, the gallant Andrew overcame his lady’s dread of the
-married estate, and undertook to secure papal dispensation from her vow.
-It was on his journey back from Rome to Sheffield that he died.
-
-Beale, as aforesaid, found himself nonplussed by the gloom of the
-Queen’s apartments; and as for talking business it was impossible, for
-she received him with sobs.
-
-Because of “her weeping and her women in the dark I brake off,” he wrote
-to Walsingham. He went away and reported this uncanny interview to the
-Earl, who sent his lady to her. Mary was asleep or shamming, and all
-Lady Shrewsbury could do was to chat vaguely with Mary Seton about “the
-suddenness of her sickness.” Later on the same careful enquiries were
-made by the Countess, whose shrewd deduction was, “I have known her
-worse and recover again.” Her Ladyship was, if not head nurse on these
-occasions, certainly official inspectress, and Beale reported that
-whether Mary was dangerously ill or not she was obliged to use medicine
-and poultices, at which he had himself sniffed inquisitively, and which
-Lady Shrewsbury had seen applied.
-
-Presently there was a decided improvement in the condition of the
-invalid, and Elizabeth allowed Mary’s carriage to be sent to her so that
-she might drive within the limits of the Sheffield manor estate, whose
-circumference in those days, as Leader assures us, was eight miles, and
-covered an expanse of 2461 acres. Mary could not yet avail herself of
-this distraction, so sore and feeble was her weakened body. Yet at all
-times and seasons she was extraordinarily sensitive to the joys and
-sorrows of persons in her environment. The birth of Gilbert’s daughter
-already mentioned was just such an occasion for her goodness and
-generosity. She stood godmother to the child and sent to France for
-presents. These family occurrences complicated the Earl’s business
-considerably, and he took great precautions on this occasion that the
-event should not come to pass under the same roof as that which held his
-captive. At the end of the letter, in which he instructs Baldwin to make
-certain payments to his daughter-in-law’s nurse, he says: “I am removed
-to the castle, and most quiet when I have the fewest women here, and am
-best able to discharge the trust reposed in me.”
-
-He had still further occasion for this attitude, for another blow fell
-upon his family. Young Lady Lennox died. As usual it was the Earl who
-made the formal announcement of the loss at Court, for his wife was, as
-on a previous occasion, too distraught to collect her wits.
-
-
- “My very good Lords,
-
-“It hath pleased God to call to His mercy out of this transitory world
-my daughter Lennox, this present Sunday, being the 21st of January,
-about three of the clock in the morning. Both towards God and the world
-she made a most godly and good end, and was in most perfect memory all
-the time of her sickness even to the last hour. Sundry times did she
-make her most earnest and humble prayer to the Almighty for her
-Majesty’s most happy estate and the long and prosperous continuance
-thereof, and as one most infinitely bound to her Highness, humbly and
-lowly beseeched Her Majesty to have pity upon her poor orphan Arabella
-Stewart, and as at all times heretofore both the mother and poor
-daughter were most infinitely bound to her Highness, so her assured
-trust was that Her Majesty would continue the same accustomed goodness
-and bounty to the poor child she left, and of this her suit and humble
-petition my said daughter Lennox, by her last will and testament,
-requireth both your Lordships, to whom she found and acknowledged
-herself always most bound in her name, most lowly to make this humble
-petition to Her Majesty and to present with all humility unto Her
-Majesty a poor remembrance (delivered by my daughter’s own hands) which
-very shortly will be sent, with my daughter’s most humble prayer for her
-Highness’ most happy estate, and most lowly beseeching her Highness in
-such sort to accept thereof as it pleased the Almighty to receive the
-poor widow’s mite.
-
-“My wife taketh my daughter Lennox’s death so grievously that she
-neither doth nor can think of anything but of lamenting and weeping. I
-thought it my part to signify to both your Lordships in what sort God
-hath called her to his mercy, which I beseech you make known to Her
-Majesty and thus with my very hearty commendations to both your good
-Lordships I cease.
-
- “Sheffield Manor this 21st January, 1581–2.
- “Your Lordships’ assured
- “G. SHREWSBURY.
-
-“To Lord Burghley and Lord Leicester.”[61]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
- VOLTE FACE
-
-
-The death of her daughter Elizabeth Lennox proved a heavy blow to Bess
-Shrewsbury. At first she did not realise the full force of it.
-Everything possible had been done to secure puissant support and
-interest for Elizabeth and her child Arabella immediately on the death
-of her husband and mother-in-law.
-
-The will executed by Queen Mary in 1577 specially named Arabella Stuart
-as heiress to her father’s earldom, in the clause: “Je faitz don à
-Arbelle, ma niepce, du compté de Lennox, tenu par feu son père, et
-commande a mon filz comme mon heritier et successeur, d’obeyr en cest
-endroict à ma volonté.”
-
-Further, the young widow herself had found courage to address Lord
-Burghley:—
-
-
-“I can but yield unto your Lordship most hearty thanks for your
-continual goodness towards me and my little one, and specially for your
-Lordship’s late good dealing with the Scots Ambassador for my poor
-child’s right, for which, as also sundry otherwise we are for ever bound
-to your Lordship whom I beseech still to further that cause as to your
-Lordship may seem best.
-
-“I can assure your Lordship that the Earldom of Lennox was granted by
-Act of Parliament to my Lord my late husband and the heirs of his body,
-so that they should offer great wrong in seeking to take it from
-Arbella, which I trust by your Lordships’ good means will be prevented,
-being of your mere goodness for justice sake so well disposed thereto.
-For all which your Lordship’s goodness as I am bound I rest in heart
-more thankful than I can anyway express.
-
-“I take my leave of your Lordship, whom I pray God long to preserve.
-
-“At Newgate Street the 15th Aug. 1578.
-
- “Your Lordship’s,
- “As I am bound,
- “E. LENNOX.”[62]
-
-
-Again, immediately on the death of the old Lady Lennox Mary had executed
-this warrant dated Sept. 19, 1579, appointing any heirloom jewels to
-Arabella:—
-
-
-“To all people be it knowne that we Marie be the grace of God Quene of
-Scotland, dowagier of Fraunce doo will and require Thomas Fowller soole
-executor to our dearest mother in lawe and aunt, the lady Margret
-countess of Lennox deceased, to deliver into the hands and cowstody of
-our right well belowed cousines Elizabeth contess of Shrewsbury all and
-every such juells, as the sayd Lady Margaret before her death delivered
-and committed in charge to the said Thomas Fowller for the use of the
-lady Arbella Stewart her graund chyld if God send her lyf till fowrten
-yeres of age; if not then, for the use of our deare and only sonne the
-prince of Scotland. In witness that this is owre will and desire to the
-sayd Fowller we have gewen the present under our owne hand at Shefild
-Manor, the XIX off September the year of our lord M.D. threscore and
-nyntenth, and of our regne the thretty sixth.”[63]
-
-
-In addition Mary wrote at this time to “Monsieur de Glasgo” one of her
-Archbishops, in such a manner as shows her sincere attitude towards the
-Lennox succession. This letter embodies the important fact of the
-interposition of Queen Elizabeth, while the warrant just quoted awards
-the care of the jewels not to the mother but the maternal grandmother of
-the Stuart heiress.
-
-
-“The Countess of Lennox, my mother-in-law died about a month ago, and
-the Q. of E^d. has taken into her care her ladyship’s grand daughter
-(Arabella S.). I desire those who are about my son to make instances in
-his name for this succession, not for any desire I have that he should
-actually succeed to it, but rather to testify that neither he nor I
-ought to be reputed or treated as foreigners in England who are both
-born within the same isle.
-
-“This good lady was, thank God, in very good correspondence with me
-these 5 or 6 years bygone, and has confessed to me by sundry letters
-under her hand, which I carefully preserve, the injury she did me by the
-unjust pursuits wh. she allowed to go against me in her name, thro’ bad
-information, but principally, she said thro’ the express orders of the
-Q. of Ed. and the persuasions of her council, who took much solicitude
-that we might never come to good understanding together. But as soon as
-she came to know of my innocence, she desisted from any further suit
-against me.”[64]
-
-
-Lady Shrewsbury may or may not have felt the support of Mary
-ineffectual, but she must have hoped everything from Elizabeth, and to
-Lord Burghley’s condolences wrote thus:—
-
-
-“My honourable good Lord, your Lordship hath heard by my Lo. how it hath
-pleased God to visit me; but in what sort soever his pleasure is to lay
-his heavy hand on us we must take it thankfully. It is good reason his
-holy will should be obeyed. My honourable good Lord I shall not need
-here to make long recital to your Lo. how that in all my greatest
-matters I have been singularly bound to your Lo. for your Lo. good and
-especial favour to me, and how much your Lo. did bind me, the poor woman
-that is gone, and my Arbella, at our last meeting at Court, neither the
-mother during her life, nor can I ever forget, but most thankfully
-acknowledge it; and so I am well assured will the young babe when her
-riper years will suffer her to know her best friends. And now my good
-Lo. I hope her Majesty upon my most humble suit will let that portion
-which her Majesty bestowed on my daughter and jewel Arbella, remain
-wholly to the child for her better education. Her servants that are to
-look to her, her masters that are to train her up in all good learning
-and virtue, will require no small charges; wherefore my earnest request
-to your Lo. is so to recommend this my humble suit to her Majesty as it
-may soonest and easiest take effect; and I beseech your Lo. to give my
-son William Cavendish leave to attend on your Lo. about this matter. And
-so referring myself, my sweet jewel Arbella, and the whole matter to
-your honourable and friendly consideration, I take my leave of your Lo.
-to pardon me for that I am not able to write to your Lo. with my own
-hand. Sheffield this 28th January.
-
- “Your L. most assured
- loving friend
- “E. SHREWSBURY.”[65]
-
-
-Meanwhile the young King of Scotland took his own way, and Esmé Stuart
-stepped eventually into the shoes of the newly appointed Lord Lennox—the
-old Bishop of Caithness aforesaid—as intended by the nobles who
-surrounded the Scottish throne.
-
-There was from the standpoint of King James sufficient excuse for this
-device. Esmé was the nephew of the late Lord Lennox, Arabella’s
-grandfather, and a close kinsman of the young King. He had courtly
-training, culture, and diplomacy in his favour. He was nine years older
-than the little sovereign, and he came to Scotland from France as the
-accredited though secret representative of Rome and the Guises, to win
-Scotland at one stroke back to its alliance with France and its
-obedience to the Pope. He made his presence felt quickly enough and the
-first-fruits of his coming was the seizure and execution of Lord
-Morton—erstwhile Regent, and creature of Elizabeth—as a prominent agent
-in the murder of Lord Darnley. Here for the moment we leave Esmé Stuart,
-in Creighton’s concentrated phrase, as “master of Scotland ... the
-English party practically destroyed.”
-
-Meanwhile, all the Countess of Shrewsbury could do was to write abject
-letters to Elizabeth asking her to execute an order by which a settled
-allowance should be conferred on Arabella.
-
-The Countess could obviously now have nourished no hopes of utilising
-Mary’s influence. The Earl was in receipt of all outside information in
-regard to Scotland and the English Court. It was patent that no help for
-Mary could come from James, well primed since his cradle by the lords
-who hated his mother. Bess Shrewsbury’s glorious dream of a throne for
-Arabella stared at her now as a somewhat sickly vision. The only hopes
-for the child were from an influential marriage. That Arabella’s
-grandmother did confide her dream to Mary is evident from the very
-curious revelations which the latter makes in subsequent letters, when
-the Countess, once so friendly and communicative, if at times brusque
-and inquisitorial, had turned against her to the extent of grave
-“scandilation,” in the language of those days.
-
-This business of Arabella Stuart’s future marks a crisis in the
-Shrewsbury household. It was like the tap given to a very vivid and
-complex kaleidoscope, for it suddenly brought the relationship of the
-three important personages—Earl, Countess, and Scottish Queen—into new
-juxtaposition, and the true colour of the desires of the Countess shone
-out more vividly for the changed order of things. To the mere onlooker
-the matter is not made clear till much later. Only those immediately
-concerned were aware of her gradual change of front, especially towards
-her husband, and it was not yet that the full result of this apparent
-volte face could be perceived. In order to understand how marked was
-this change events must be anticipated by a year or two, and attention
-given to an extraordinary letter from Queen Mary which betrays all sorts
-of unauthorised intercourse between herself and Lady Shrewsbury. This
-letter, penned by an always fanciful and extremely excitable woman, is
-of course, an exaggeration of the Countess’s opportunism. Yet, there has
-evidently been a gradual cessation of the friendly intimacy between the
-two women, and a sufficient revelation of the Countess’s mind to give
-Mary occasion to flare out to such a correspondent as the ambassador
-Mauvissière. In this letter, of the year 1584, she speaks fiercely of
-the treachery of Lady Shrewsbury—“La fausseté de mon honorable
-hostesse”—which she wishes made clear to Elizabeth: “Rien n’a jamais
-aliené la susdite de moy que la vaine espérance par elle conçue de faire
-tomber cette couronne sur la teste d’Arbella sa petite-fille, mesmement
-par son mariage avec le fils du comte de Leicester, divers tokens estant
-passez entre les enfants nourris en cette persuasion, et leurs peintures
-envoyées d’une part et l’aultre.” She goes on to say that but for this
-imaginary hope—“une telle imagination”—of making one of her race royal
-the countess would never have so turned away from Mary—“ne se fult
-jamais divertye de moy”—for, the writer continues:[66] “she was so bound
-to me, and regardless of any other duty or regard, so affectionate
-towards me that, had I been her own queen, she could not have done more
-for me; and as a proof of this say to the Queen, pretending that you
-heard it from Mrs. Seton last summer when she went to France, that I had
-the sure promise of the said countess that if at any time my life were
-in danger, or if I were to be removed from here, she would give me the
-means of escape, and that she herself would easily elude danger and
-punishment in respect to this; that she made her son Charles Cavendish
-swear to me in her presence that he would reside in London on purpose to
-serve me and warn me of all which passed at the Court, and that he would
-actually keep two good strong geldings specially to let me have speedy
-intelligence of the death of the Queen, who was ill at the time; and
-that he thought to be able to do this.... Thereupon the said countess
-and her sons used every possible persuasion to prove to me the danger to
-which I was exposed in the hands of the Earl of Shrewsbury, who would
-deliver me into the hands of my enemies or allow me to be surprised by
-them, in such a manner that, without the friendship of the said
-countess, I was in very bad case. To begin with you need only put
-forward these two little examples, by which the Queen can judge what has
-gone to make up the warp and woof[67] of the intercourse during the past
-years between myself and the said countess, whom, if I wished, I could
-place in a terrible position by giving the names of those persons who,
-by her express order, have brought me letters in cypher, which she has
-delivered to me with her own hand. It will be sufficient for you to tell
-the Queen that you heard these particulars from the said Mrs. Seton, and
-that you are positive that if it pleased her to make skilful enquiry
-into the misconduct of the said countess, I could disclose other
-features of greater importance which would cause considerable discomfort
-to others about her. Contrive, if possible, that she[68] shall keep the
-matter secret without ever naming who had been induced to reveal these
-things by devotion to her welfare, that in short she may recognise what
-faith she can place in the said countess, who in your opinion could be
-won over to my cause, if I thought well, by a present of two thousand
-crowns.
-
-
-“You have afforded me peculiar satisfaction by sending copies of my
-letters ... into France and Scotland, by which the truth of these
-rumours may be known, rumours which I am certain only proceed from the
-said countess and her son Charles; but since the witnesses by whom I can
-prove my case are afraid to incur the displeasure of the Queen, I am
-constrained to bide until I can find others to assist at a public
-explanation and reparation.
-
-“Sheffield, 1584, March 21.”
-
-
-This letter flies like a thunderbolt across the Shrewsbury heaven. The
-lady’s ambition, according to her enemy, acknowledges no bounds, is no
-respecter of persons. Mary she not only casts aside like an old glove,
-but she assumes a triumphant, hostile attitude towards her. Through Lord
-Leicester’s heir, Arabella will ensure the favour of the English throne,
-while other means will be used to secure the Scottish throne itself for
-the child. Portraits and “divers tokens” have passed between the
-children. Bess is as sure of her power now as she was in the days when
-she boasted that she could both assist Mary to escape and herself elude
-retribution. Robust, rich, prosperous, swelled with her dreams, she
-counts herself unassailable. Her mood of excitement tempts her, however,
-further than her caution. Mary has spoken to Mauvissière of “rumours,”
-reports so serious that they have reached even to Scotland and France.
-She is sure that the Countess and her son Charles, once her sworn
-servants, are the source of these. A letter, which must be quoted in
-full here, written six months later to Mauvissière, makes the substance
-of these rumours perfectly clear.
-
-If the correspondence already quoted come like a thunderbolt, this next
-letter conveys a shock even greater. There is one really extraordinary
-passage in the first letter which, though it concerns the Earl, does not
-prepare the onlooker for the scandalous matter of the second epistle.
-This passage is the one in which his wife has the audacity, according to
-Mary, to warn the latter against the Earl. What is the psychological
-process which forces such a statement from the shrewd, worldly-wise
-woman whose fortunes, socially, are entirely bound to those of her
-husband? What can it be but blind jealousy arising from consciousness of
-their opposite natures and from the hostility of sex? The intrigues with
-Mary, the opportunism, the blatant ambition—these are comprehensible.
-Was it all true? In the light of later letters from Mary all such
-statements must be regarded very sceptically. Division there certainly
-was in the great household: scolding and bitterness, a great weariness
-of heart, a series of sordid misunderstandings. If in a wild reckless
-mood the emotional, powerful spirit of Bess Shrewsbury had escaped
-control, and she had uttered the ghost of such a warning as that quoted,
-it must have sprung from nothing but the blind hatred of Mary and
-jealousy of her husband, the last having its source in her fierce
-consciousness of an utter clash of temperaments. Her opportunism, her
-immense ambitions are conceivable; even, to a certain degree, the
-longing to intrigue with Mary. They are comprehensible if one estimates
-the Countess’s nature as one in which the love of domination, the quick
-sense of advantage, and the keen perception of the melodrama of life
-were combined. The Earl’s nature was the very opposite. To him she must
-have acted latterly like a goad, while his obstinacy maddened her. His
-dogged patience under unwilling service, his bitter and almost stupid
-resignation under the meanness and suspicion of his Queen, his caution
-and method, his intense sensitiveness to any unjust criticism, his
-horror of plots, his dread of any unauthorised move, be it ever so
-trifling, formed a granite barrier to his wife’s independent,
-self-concentrated, restless spirit. Her pugnacity tussled with his
-resolution, and discord ensued.
-
-She whom Elizabeth darkly called “The Daughter of Debate,” the captive
-Queen—was suddenly become as much of a thorn in the side of husband and
-wife as in that of their sovereign. Wheresoever Mary was there stalked
-complexity. This of itself, given the intricacies of her Stuart nature
-and her extraordinary life and circumstances, was sufficient. But that
-the Countess should have piled complexity upon complexity in such a way
-as to wreck her own household reduces the observer to stupefaction. By
-the second letter to Mauvissière it is seen that she was at Court. The
-mere fact of her presence there seems to rouse Mary to a sort of fury at
-her own helplessness. This letter is even more detailed, more excited
-than the one just quoted:—
-
-
- “Wingfield, October 18, 1584.
-
-“No reply having come from the Queen of England concerning the treaty
-proposed between her, me, and my son, and not having received any news
-from you for six weeks I cannot but doubt that this delay has been
-purposed to give time and advantage to the Countess of Shrewsbury, in
-order that she may play her game and trouble those on every side
-possible, to escape the just punishment of her fault and treason, and to
-give the lie to the Queen her sovereign, to the malicious reports, so
-harmful to me. I would make, with all affection possible, the request
-from myself, and in the name of Monsieur, my good brother, and the
-noblemen, my relations in France, that you will give a satisfactory and
-clear explanation to the Queen of England and those of her Council of
-the false and scandalous rumours that everybody knows have been invented
-and spread abroad by the Countess of my intercourse with the Count of
-Shrewsbury. I beg you to proceed with all haste in a public examination
-or at least before the Council, and in your presence particularly, of
-her and her two sons, Charles and William Cavendish, whether they will
-confirm or refute the rumours and language they have previously
-maintained, that in the cause of reason and justice they may be punished
-as an example, there being no subject so poor, vile, and abject in this
-kingdom to whom common justice can be denied. Such satisfaction would be
-granted to the meanest subject, how much more to one of my blood and
-rank, and so closely related to the Queen. But here I am, bound hand and
-foot, and, I might say, almost tongue-tied. I can do nothing for myself
-to avenge this atrocious and wicked calumny. May it please you to
-remember the definite promise made to me by the Queen, which I have
-mentioned before in four or five letters to you, that she had always
-hated the liberty and insolence, so largely encouraged in this corrupt
-age in the slander of Kings and primates, and that she would do all in
-her power to repress this evil. I will give her the names of the guilty
-originators of this scandal, and in proof of her words she will be
-obliged to execute a rigorous and exemplary punishment upon them. I name
-to her now the Countess of Shrewsbury and her son Charles especially, to
-convict them of this unhappy slander. If not, I ask but their own
-servants and those of the Count usually in the house should be put on
-their oath to God, and their allegiance to the Queen, and examined, for
-I know too well that some of them otherwise would never have the chance
-of giving witness, and the Countess would maintain her rumours were
-truth. One of her servants has told me that she has caused this scandal
-to be spread in divers parts of the kingdom, and that they have heard
-her in the room of the Count reproaching him similarly. And to come to
-particulars, for some months at Chatsworth there was staying one of the
-grooms of Lord Talbot specially to enquire concerning this. He has
-nothing to say of me under the name of the Lady of Bath. I cannot but
-think the Countess has power to silence her friends, who would otherwise
-be too convincing witnesses of the falsehood of their rumours against
-the Queen, her sovereign, so that she will do wisely not to force me to
-rouse the witnesses, for if I demand justice on them, and am refused, I
-will produce, before all the princes of Christendom, by articles signed
-by my own hand, an account of the honourable proceedings of this lady,
-as much against the Queen as against me, against whom she had formerly
-spread this rumour. I will give a declaration of the time, persons, and
-all friends, so necessary that it will not be pleasing to those who are
-constant in condemning. And in the wrongs that she has done them, if
-there are any of them to support her and to countenance those injuries
-which I have received from her, or if in such a case there is a question
-of my honour, it will always be to me more than earthly life. It may be
-after so long and painful captivity I am constrained and obliged to put
-before the public anything which may offend them or do harm. In that it
-is for them to remedy and obviate by giving me reparation and
-satisfaction for scandals and impostures. God grant that at the end I
-may find true what the Countess has formerly told me, that the more she
-could show herself my enemy, and work against me, she would be so much
-the more welcome and more favoured at Court.
-
- “MARIE R.”[69]
-
-
-The scandalous rumours suggesting a liaison between Mary of Scotland and
-Shrewsbury seem to have been on foot some two years previous to this
-letter, and were naturally combined with the suggestion of his
-connivance in her plans for escape and his vilification of his Queen.
-There is a long, tedious, pitiful letter from the Earl on the subject
-under the date of October 18th, 1582, addressed, of course, to Lord
-Burghley. The “scandilation” is not mentioned as such, but the other
-allegations are strictly denied. Shrewsbury reminds his friend that on
-the last occasion on which he saw Elizabeth and “enjoyed the comfort of
-her private speech” she did “most graciously promise that she would
-never condemn” him without calling for his self-justification. He begs
-for a hearing now. He adds: “Among the rest of my false accusations,
-your Honour knoweth that I have been touched with some undutiful
-respects touching the Queen of Scots; but I am very well able to prove
-that she hath shewed herself an enemy unto me, and to my fortune; and
-that I trust will sufficiently clear me.” The letter is dated from
-Handsworth, the little manor which appears to have been the only place
-in this and after years in which the harassed man could possess his soul
-in quiet and dignity.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
- THE COIL THICKENS
-
-
-That last plaint of George Talbot was in 1582. Previous to this the
-curious letters quoted from Gilbert Talbot give a pretty graphic notion
-of the acute irritation between his parents. They still sometimes acted
-in concert. In 1583 (February 7th) both of them wrote simultaneously to
-Burghley to desire his good offices in appeasing the Queen anent the
-marriage of the Countess’s nephew, John Wingfield, to the Countess of
-Kent. By 1584 the affair seems to have developed into a very unequal
-family feud of five to two. As in a game of “oranges and lemons” Bess
-Shrewsbury, already backed by her sons Charles and William Cavendish,
-seems to have tugged not only her daughter Mary over to her side, but
-also Mary’s husband. He is no longer Gilbert the go-between, but the
-declared champion of his stepmother against his own father and his
-stepmother’s eldest son Henry Cavendish. Family affairs are certainly in
-a shockingly ungodly condition. William Cavendish is trying to screw his
-stepfather over a matter of £1800, and the quarrel between the Countess
-and Earl is so serious that the matter has passed into the hands of the
-Master of the Rolls and the Lord Chief Justice, who take opposite sides.
-The Countess has named her husband as “traytor” at Court, and he is
-resolved to go and exonerate himself. His secret malady is betrayed to
-Gilbert by a family servant named Steele, whose confidences can only
-help to complicate matters. He has long conversations with Queen Mary’s
-secretary, Curle, and seems to have access to all her retinue and to
-know the attitude of every member of the Earl’s household towards
-Gilbert. The only redeeming feature is the steadfast loyalty of Henry
-Cavendish—heir to a portion of the Rufford and Langeford estates—to his
-stepfather. Gilbert adroitly urges his own poverty and his wife’s
-“necessite,” but is sharply silenced. Shrewsbury is very jealous of his
-heir’s long absence at the hated Chatsworth, but at the same time
-promises to defray the fees of the physician attending Mary—the
-redoubtable Mary Talbot.
-
-This lady is the true outcome of her mother. Bess Shrewsbury was
-accustomed to speak of her many building enterprises as her “workes.”
-One of her most pathetically characteristic “workes” was Mary Talbot.
-Later on in regard to Arabella Stuart’s career history shows how the
-mother’s intriguing match-making tactics repeated themselves in the
-daughter. For the moment it is her pertinacity, her love of possessions,
-her hot uncontrolled temper, and her vindictiveness which concern us.
-
-Again we must anticipate by some years and include here as explanatory
-and pertinent an episode which displays the violence and bitterness of
-Mary Talbot’s nature.
-
-Between the Stanhopes of Nottingham and the Cavendishes there was a
-deadly feud in the course of which blood was shed on both sides. In the
-height of this strife Mary Talbot (by that time Countess of Shrewsbury)
-sent the following deadly message to Sir Thomas Stanhope of Shelford. It
-was not written, but delivered by two messengers, and the message has
-come down to posterity in this form, as quoted in Johnson’s _Extracts
-from Norfolk Papers_:—
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, from the picture at Hardwick
- Hall
- By permission of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire_
-
- MARY CAVENDISH, COUNTESS OF SHREWSBURY
-
- Page 252
-]
-
-
-“My Lady hath commanded me to say this much to you. That though you be
-more wretched, vile, and miserable than any creature living; and, for
-your wickedness, become more ugly in shape than the vilest toad in the
-world; and one to whom none of reputation would vouchsafe to send any
-message; yet she hath thought good to send thus much to you—that she be
-contented you should live (and doth noways wish your death) but to this
-end—that all the plagues and miseries that may befall any man may light
-upon such a caitiff as you are; and that you should live to have all
-your friends forsake you; and without your great repentance, which she
-looketh not for, because your life hath been so bad, you will be damned
-perpetually in hell fire.” The chronicler goes on to say that the
-heralds added many other opprobrious and hateful words, which could not
-be remembered, because the bearer would deliver it but once, as he said
-he was commanded, but said if he had failed in anything, it was in
-speaking it more mildly and not in terms of such disdain as he was
-commanded.
-
-
-It was this free-tongued, easily infuriated nature with which the Earl
-had to cope in addition to his wife’s excitability and financial
-ambitions, his son’s cry of “Give, give!” the suspicions of his Queen,
-the lies and slanders of his enemies, and the intrigues of his
-captivating captive. The wonder is that he could be even so generous,
-affectionate, and level-headed as the following letter shows; that he
-could forgive Gilbert, and laugh with my Lord of Rutland, who seems to
-have visited Shrewsbury solely to pour balm on his friend’s wounds and
-put him in a happier frame of mind, so that at Gilbert’s coming the
-difficulties of a business discussion about the disposal of Welbeck—at
-which place the Countess eventually established her son Charles
-Cavendish, and concerning which she appears to have had important
-financial transactions with her husband—was made easy. Owing to the
-guest’s _bonhomie_, father and son are placed on a footing which enables
-them to discuss things composedly, and Gilbert is informed of the false
-reports of his father’s attitude towards Mary Talbot.
-
-
- _Gilbert and Mary Talbott to the Countess of Shrewsbury_
- (1583).
-
-
-“My bounden duty, duty, etc.—On Friday at night my L. sent to me to be
-with him the next morning early. I came to Worsop about 9 o’clock, and
-found the two earls together, but saw them not till dinner was on the
-table. After ordinary greeting at the board, my L. speaking of Welbeck,
-my L. of Rutland said he was sure my L. would pay for it, and ‘so,’
-quoth he, ‘you promised me yesternight,’ which my L. denied; ‘but,’ said
-my L., ‘your L. was exceeding earnest with me so to do’; whereat they
-were both very merry; and he still was earnest with my L. therein, but
-he laughed it off. After dinner my L. called me to him in his chamber,
-and told me a long tale of the cause of his meeting with that Lord; the
-effect in substance was to continue friendship with him; and recited
-many reasons that he had to trust him better than any nobleman; and said
-that I had like cause to do so, both in respect of kindred, and that he
-loveth me exceeding well; and sware by God he was never more earnestly
-dealt with than he had been by him since his coming, for me; both to be
-good to me in present and hereafter; and bade me take knowledge thereof
-and give him thanks, and that in any case I should go to Newark to him.
-And before had ended all that it seemed he would have said, he was
-called away by the other being ready to go down to horse. So when I came
-out I briefly gave him thanks for what my L. had told me; and he wished
-he were able to do me any pleasure, desired me to come to Newark, and he
-would tell me more, and none living be better welcome; and so we parted.
-Then I rode some part of my L. way with him. He told me that the cause
-he would not have me carry my wife to London was, for that he thought
-your La. would go up to London, and then would my wife join with you in
-exclaiming against him, and so make him to judge the worse of me, with
-much to that effect. I alleged the necessity of my wife’s estate; how
-ill I could live here without any provisions; but he cut me off, saying
-he looked hourly for leave to go up, and after he had been there
-himself, I might carry her if I would, and if I did before, he could not
-think I loved him; and for her health, he said physicians might be sent
-for, though he bare the charges; and would not suffer me to speak a word
-more thereof, but bade me now do it if I would. Then he told me that
-Lewis being at Newark, Hercules Foliambe told him that he heard my L.
-had commanded me to put away my wife; and called Lewis, and he affirmed
-it, and so my L. willed me to charge Foliambe therewith and make him
-bring out his author. Then he told me that the matters were hard between
-your La. and him; that Sir W. M. and the Master of the Rolls were wholly
-on your side, and would have set down an order clean against him; but
-that the Lord Chief Justice would not thereto consent, but stuck to him
-as friendly as ever man did. He would honour and love him for it whilst
-he lived; and that the order was deferred till Thursday last; and that
-this last week he had found out and sent up all the pay books written by
-Ryc. Cooke, of all manner of conveyances whatsoever, whereby it appeared
-that Knifton and Cooke dealt the most treacherously with him that ever
-any men had done; but recited not wherein, saying that he hath not
-Hardwick and the West country lands without impeachment of waste, as he
-would be sworn his meaning was. Further that W. Cavendish he said was
-not ashamed to demand £1800 for [it] and made such a matter of it, as
-was never heard; whereof he spake so out of purpose, as it were in vain
-to write it. Then commended H. Cavendish exceedingly for maintaining his
-honour, which he said he should fare the better for; and told that
-divers noble men had of late answered for him very stoutly, especially
-the Earl of Cumberland. Then told that Bentall, hearing how evil he was
-spoken of at London, and for that your La. had called him traitor, he
-desired leave to go up, either to be cleared or condemned, and that he
-hath written by him to my L. Treasurer and my L. of Leicester that he
-might be thoroughly tried, and have as he had deserved. As for his
-knowledge of him, he wrote he had found him the truest and most faithful
-servant that he ever had. He said Bentall rather chose to go up of
-himself than to be sent for; and that he had been twice examined before
-my L. Treasurer and my L. of Leicester, and had sped well, and so would
-do he hoped. These are all the special points that I can remember he
-spoke of. I began many times to tell him my griefs, and to open my
-estate, but he would not suffer me to speak, but said he loved me best
-of all his children, and that I had never given him cause of offence but
-in tarrying so long at Chatsworth; which thing he also would not suffer
-me to answer, but said it was past, and he would not hear more thereof.
-When I was parted with my L. I met Style[70] with the stuff. The secret
-he told me of the estate of my L. body was that swelling which he said
-he thought none but himself did know, but when I told him where it was,
-he marvelled that I knew it. He told me that Bentall persuaded my L.
-that he was able to do him such service above as he never had done him,
-and to discover the secrets of all things, especially by his brother
-that serves my L. of Leicester; but Steele said he verily thought he
-should be laid up in prison. He said he talked with Curle all the day
-before he went, and all that morning, but I could get out no particular
-thing of him besides his continual familiarity with all the Scots. He
-said there is not any about my L. but Stringer but seeketh my undoing.
-
-“I am in hope to meet Mr. Serjante Roods at Winkfield. Herein is
-enclosed a note for your La. to read. The remainder of Rufford and
-Langford is assuredly [rested] in my brother H. Cavendish, as the other
-lands that are unrevocable are.
-
-“I desire to know whether your La. thinketh that her Majesty will be
-offended with my going to Newark to that Earl or not, considering what
-speeches she used to me of him. If it be not in that respect, I think it
-is very necessary I go thither, seeing that he hath used so good offices
-for me to my L. My L. said to one that my L. of Leicester was Bentall’s
-great friend. God prosper your La. in all things. We most humbly beseech
-your La. blessing to us all.
-
- “G. TALBOTT. MARY TALBOTT.”
-
-
-It is patent which way the wind blows, and how the Earl is regarded by
-his principal antagonists. There is open war; his words are repeated,
-his moves watched, and he is simply become a fine grape to be squeezed
-for their advantage.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby_
-
- HARDWICK HALL, SHOWING ENTRANCE GATEWAY
-
- Page 258
-]
-
-Things were brewing to a head, and in 1584 Chatsworth, the beautiful,
-the detested of the Earl, was literally besieged by him. It must be
-recalled here that his wife had already divided her own two houses
-amongst her two elder sons. On Henry, as eldest Cavendish she had
-bestowed Chatsworth; on William, her best beloved, her own Hardwick. For
-Charles, her youngest, as instanced, she had other plans, namely,
-Welbeck. Now Henry had married the Earl’s daughter, Lady Grace. The
-quarrel naturally concentrated itself on Chatsworth, which, through
-Grace, was shared by the Talbot side of the family. The Earl refused to
-be done out of certain rights in this property. His lady, irritated by
-the fact that Henry was on the Earl’s side, bore down upon the house,
-dismantled it, and sent the greater part of the contents to Hardwick,
-while Charles and William Cavendish practically manned the empty
-building. Up rode the Earl with his gentlemen and servants to demand
-admittance, and was, according to his own statements,[71] resisted by
-William “with halberd in hand and pistol under his girdle.” The whole
-position was naturally rendered more and more painful by this
-undignified occurrence, and all parties concerned were foolishly guilty
-of wanton waste of a good summer’s day. Meanwhile the Countess was
-practically without a suitable house, since she could now share none of
-her husband’s lordly residences. Here follows a tragic and unforgettable
-letter from the Earl, almost alone, as it were with his back against a
-wall. He writes not to Burghley this time, but to Lord Leicester.
-Ostensibly the letter is one of condolence. Leicester’s son by Lettice
-Knollys died in babyhood in July of this year, at the time when the Earl
-and his retinue hammered at the doors of Chatsworth. It was open to
-Shrewsbury to requite his friend’s sanctimonious epistle, previously
-quoted, on the death of Francis Talbot by just such another. The soldier
-Earl, however, is of different stuff from the courtier. His heart cannot
-dissemble, and the occasion becomes an excuse for bitter confidences,
-elicited evidently by a letter from Leicester which informs him of the
-blow and makes kindly allusion, possibly admonitory, to Gilbert Talbot,
-who himself had lost an only son and heir.
-
-
- “My good Lord,
-
-“For that I perceive your Lordship takes God’s handiwork thankfully, and
-for the best, doubt not but God will increase you with many good
-children, which I wish with all my heart. And where it pleases you to
-put me in mind of Gilbert Talbot, as though I should remember his case
-by my own, truly, my Lord, they greatly vary. For my son, I never
-dissuaded him from loving his wife, though he hath said he must either
-forsake me, or hate his wife, this he gives out, which is false and
-untrue. This I think is his duty; that, seeing I have forbad him for
-coming to my wicked and malicious wife, who hath set me at naught in his
-own hearing, that contrary to my commandment, hath both gone and sent
-unto her daily by his wife’s persuasion, yea and hath both written and
-carried letters to no mean personages in my wife’s behalf. These ill
-dealings would he have salved by indirect reports, for in my life did I
-never seek their separation; for the best ways I have to content myself
-is to think it is his wife’s wicked persuasion and her mother’s
-together, for I think neither barrel better herring of them both. This
-my misliking to them both argues not that I would have my son make so
-hard a construction of me that I would have him hate his wife, though I
-do detest her mother. But to be plain, he shall either leave his
-indirect dealings with my wife, seeing I take her as my professed enemy,
-or else indeed will I do that to him I would be loth, seeing I have
-heretofore loved him so well; for he is the principal means and
-countenance she has, as he uses the matter, which is unfit; yet will I
-not be so unnatural in deeds as he reports in words, which is that I
-should put from him the principal things belonging to the Earldom. He
-hath been a costly child to me, which I think well bestowed if he come
-here again in time. He takes the way to spoil himself with having his
-wife at London; therefore if you love him, persuade him to come down
-with his wife and settle himself in the country; for otherwise, during
-his abode with his wife at London, I will take the £200 I give him
-yearly besides alienating my good will from him, ... If he allege it be
-her Majesty’s pleasure to command him to wait, let his wife come home,
-as more fit it is for her.
-
-“The assurance of your Lordship’s faithful friendship towards me hath,
-by so many years’ growth, taken so deep root as it cannot now fade nor
-decay, neither any new friendship take my faithful goodwill away, as
-time and occasion shall try; and so hoping your Lordship will be
-satisfied without further doubt or scruple therein, I commend your
-Lordship to the discretion of the Almighty.”
-
-
-This letter is not signed by Shrewsbury, but simply endorsed: “The copy
-of my letter of 8th Aug., 1584,” which fixes the date.
-
-That the dignified George Talbot should stoop to such a slang expression
-as “neither barrel better herring” in regard to his once adored and
-brilliant Countess shows the complete wreckage of all their joy, their
-high comradeship, their mutual reverence.
-
-Into the same confessional, the ear of the astute Treasurer, Bess
-Shrewsbury poured out her side, writing from Hardwick on August 2nd: her
-husband was using her very hardly, he sought to take Chatsworth from
-her, he had induced her son Henry to deal most unnaturally with her,
-wherefore she hoped that Burghley would remonstrate, as his letters
-would do more with the Earl than those of any other living person, etc.
-etc. A little over a fortnight after, the Earl, who had already given
-his version of the Chatsworth affair, placed details of the “insolent
-behaviour” of William Cavendish before the Privy Council. The State
-Papers show that the Council took prompt action here, but to their reply
-informing the Earl of the committal of William to prison, and expressing
-their opinion that it was not meet that a man of his mean quality should
-use himself in a contemptuous sort against one of his Lordship’s station
-and quality, they add a clause stating that the Queen desired that “he
-should suffer the Cavendishes to enjoy their own lands unmolested.”
-
-To all this quarrel over possessions, which reads for all the world like
-a prolonged act out of a new version of the ancient drama
-_All-for-Money_, was added the distasteful business of the now
-flourishing scandal about Queen Mary and the Earl. Doubtless his wife
-and stepsons were ready to bite out their tongues by the time the
-scandal they apparently fostered of his intimacy with Mary of Scots was
-generally known. Though their nerves were less sensitive they could not
-but see that the affair was passing beyond their control and that only
-harm could ensue. The time was approaching when they must be publicly
-called to account. Meanwhile lesser persons were already being
-interrogated. The actual details of the slander are located in the
-extract from a letter in diary[72] form written by the Recorder of
-London, William Fletewood, to Lord Burghley:—
-
-
-“Thursdaie,[73] the next daie after, we kept the generall sessions at
-Westminster Hall for Middlesex. Surelie it was very great! We satt the
-whole daie and the next after also at Fynsburie. At this sessions one
-Cople and one Baldwen my Lord of Shrewsburie’s gent. required me that
-they might be suffered to indict one Walmesley of Islyngton an
-Inn-holder for scandilation of my Lord their master. They shewed me two
-papers. The first was under the clerk of the council’s hand of my Lord’s
-purgation, in the which your good Lordship’s speeches are specially set
-downn. The second paper was the examinations of divers witnesses taken
-by Mr. Harris; the effect of all which was that Walmesley should tell
-his guests openlie at the table that the Erle of Shrowsbury had gotten
-the Scottish Quene with child, and that he knew where the child was
-christened, and it was alleged that he should further adde that my Lord
-should never go home agayne, with lyke wordes, etc. An indictement was
-then drawne by the clerk of the peace the which I thought not good to
-have published, or[74] that the evidence should be given openlie, and
-therefore I caused the jurie to go to a chamber, where I was, and heard
-the evidence given, amongst whom one Merideth Hammer, a doctor of
-divinitie and Vicar of Islyngton was a witnes, who had dealt as lewdlie
-towards my Lord in speeches as did the other, viz. Walmeslye. This
-doctor regardeth not an oathe. Surelie he is a very bad man: but in the
-end the indictement was indorsed Billa Vera.”
-
-
-Of course this true bill was satisfactory in one sense. At the same time
-mud sticks, and the publicity of such a case always helps to arouse
-wider interest in the possible rumours. Both Queen Mary and the Earl
-were rampant and eager for a proper official enquiry. She even sent a
-message to Elizabeth on the subject when in committee with an emissary
-of the Queen in regard to other matters. This talk was duly noted down
-and is included among the Marian MSS.:—
-
-
-“She thanked her Majesty for the promise to punish the authors of the
-slanders against her; Toplif [Topcliff] was one, and Charles Candish
-another; the Countess of Shrewsbury did not bear her that goodwill which
-the Queen supposed, ‘who with her divers times laughed at such reports,
-and now did accuse her. It touched his Lordship as well as her,
-wherefore she trusted as a nobleman he would regard his house.’ She
-wished this to be signified to the Lord Treasurer, Leicester, and
-Walsingham, desiring their favour in this suit.”
-
-
-It is interesting and piquant to find that Mary’s suspicions should
-alight upon that egregious Papist-baiter Topcliffe, but this pompous
-gentleman does not appear to have been successfully impugned in this
-case. Otherwise Mary eventually had her will. The Earl at last succeeded
-in obtaining permission to go to Court to clear himself, and to
-relinquish finally his heavy duty. Indeed, he was soon formally
-delivered from his charge, but the change of officers did not take place
-immediately. Some time elapsed before formalities and details were
-carried through, and he and his prisoner paid in July, 1584, their last
-visit in company to Buxton. There Mary wrote her famous Latin couplet
-with a diamond on a window-pane:—
-
- Buxtona quae calidae celebraris nomine Lymphae,
- Forte mihi post hac non adennda, Vale.
-
-The permission for which the Earl longed came in August, and his
-successor was Sir Ralph Sadler, who has previously figured in this
-record. It was not an easy transfer. The poor Earl’s departure was
-complicated by the business of transferring his prisoner to Wingfield
-Manor from Sheffield. There were delay and trouble, so that the
-cavalcade did not leave till early in September, and it was not till the
-7th of that month, after fifteen years of hard service, that he was a
-free man.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
- “FACE TO FACE”
-
-
-A free man, a free agent! But at what a price was Shrewsbury free!
-
-His honour was undermined by his own family, his fortunes impaired by
-his Queen’s penuriousness, his prime was past, his best given in return
-for apparently naught. Even the gratitude of his captive—and she never
-seems to have been regardless of such leniency as he was permitted to
-show her—had it been emphatically expressed, would have been no real
-reward to him, for it would only have placed him under suspicion. He had
-but one testimonial to his credit—the fact that in the midst of Mary’s
-dangers and terrors she felt that she was safer in his keeping “than in
-that of any other.” His farewell to her cannot have been anything but a
-strained and painful matter, with the hateful barrier of “scandilation”
-to mar the dignity and courtesy of it on both sides. She wished him to
-convey her letters to Elizabeth. He declined, and her new gaoler sent
-them with his official correspondence. Thus parted, after the strange
-intimacy of fifteen years, Mary of Scotland and George Talbot. When they
-met again it was as principal actors in the “tragedy of Fotheringay” in
-the autumn of 1586.
-
-The Earl travelled to London with his retinue of gentlemen and grooms—a
-business of four to five days. Face to face he and his sovereign stood
-at last and the second formal step in the scandal affair was taken.
-
-He was “very graciously used by her Majesty,” who showed herself “very
-desirous to comprehend the controversies between him and the lady, his
-wife.” Walsingham, commenting on this, writes that he feared this
-reconciliation would “not be performed over easily.” Elizabeth kept her
-promise and set to work at once. The Lords of the Council were summoned
-to testify to his loyalty, uprightness, and honour, and he was called to
-face them and receive their magnificent and pompous declaration, “a
-memorable testimonial by Queen Elizabeth and the Lords of the Council as
-to the discharge of his duty faithfully, and trust in the custody of the
-Queen of Scots.” It is not necessary to quote the whole document here.
-The actual domestic scandal is only touched very vaguely in it thus:—
-
-
-“And if in some trifles, and private matters of small moment, not
-appertaining to the Queen’s Majesty, his Lordship thought that his
-honour and reputation had been touched by the evil reports of any, he
-was required to think that the same was common to them and others as
-well as to himself in this world, howbeit, if any person could be
-particularly charged by his Lordship, it was reason that he should be
-called to answer the same; and, therefore, his Lordship was desired to
-assure himself of this their Lordships’ good and honourable opinion
-concerning his Lordship, and so to sit down as a person that was very
-meet for the company, then to serve her Majesty and the realm; and so,
-therewith, he took his place in Council according to his degree and
-office.”
-
-
-Thus did their Lordships pour oil on the bruises of their battered
-colleague. But he needed more than words. The pain was too deep to be
-healed by that bland reminder of the general prevalence of false
-witnesses in the world. The phrase “if any person could be particularly
-charged ... it was reason that he should be called to answer the same”
-is far more curative. Two such persons had been dealt with. But his lady
-was not to escape. Beale, his good friend, took a serious view of the
-situation. “I have dealt with the Earl,” he wrote to Walsingham,
-“touching his son, and find him well affected towards him save that he
-says he is ruled by his wife, who is directed by her mother. I think his
-hatred for her will hardly be appeased, as he thinks the slanders and
-other information made to her Majesty have proceeded from her.”
-
-Both Mary and Shrewsbury were to have their full satisfaction. Mary was
-from the first most explicit, and, not content with her excited
-outpourings to the French Ambassador, herself wrote to Elizabeth at this
-date from Wingfield Manor after Shrewsbury and she had parted. She
-alludes in this letter to Elizabeth’s “honourable promise.” She declares
-that she will never desist from her demands for satisfaction until her
-reputation is formally cleared in regard to the Countess’s slanders. It
-is a final challenge which Elizabeth could not in decency resist.
-
-In December of this year Bess Shrewsbury with William and Charles were
-called to their account before the Lords of the Council. Full
-satisfaction was received—of a kind. There could be nothing very
-triumphant about it from Mary’s point of view. There was really none of
-that magnificent abasement of her trio of enemies which she painted
-subsequently to a correspondent in one of her letters after her removal
-to Chartly. This is her version:—
-
-
-“The Countess of Shrewsbury (I thank God) hath been tried and found to
-her shame, in her attempt against me, the same woman indeed that many
-have had opinion that she was, and at the request of my secretary Nau,
-he being at the Queen of England’s Court in the month of December, ’84,
-the said lady upon her knees, in presence of the Queen of England and
-some principals of her Council, denied to her the shameful bruits by
-herself spread abroad against me.”[75]
-
-
-As a matter of fact, the accused three unanimously asserted total
-ignorance of the entire scandal and its possible sources alike, and
-their declaration made before the Privy Council was solemnly recorded,
-and is included in the mass of State documents, while an exact copy of
-it is among the Talbot papers. It is not a very interesting or savoury
-little document, but highly important to George Talbot and his heirs as
-a second certificate of merit. It covers exactly the same ground as the
-extract quoted from Fletewood’s “dyarium.” At its conclusion, after
-testifying boldly to the dignity and honour of Mary, the mother and sons
-offer to uphold the truth of their wholesale disclaimer against any
-person whomsoever, whenever the occasion should arise. Thus, though
-posterity is afforded that vision of their abject position “on their
-knees in the royal presence” as stated by Mary, the attitude, contrasted
-with their denial, is rather that of reverent dignity than of sheer
-abasement.
-
-Thus was the honour of the Talbots saved, but at such cost and after
-such a pitiful process of the public washing of family linen that it
-does very little real credit to the parties concerned. The poor Earl
-could only point to his Queen’s testimonial and console himself by
-thinking on his family doggerel:—
-
- The Talbot true that is,
- And still hath so remaynde,
- Lost never noblenesse
- By princke of spot distaynde:
- On such a fixed fayth
- This trustie Talbot stayth.
-
-For there is no real honour left to a house divided against itself. The
-quarrel of man and wife had become the property of the world. Matters
-must be patched up somehow with the aid of friends and Court officials.
-Everything, to the eye, was now put on a highly respectable basis. The
-bland disclaimer by the Cavendishes paved the way at any rate for a more
-decent family relationship.
-
-For the fourth time in her life Bess Hardwick had faced and surmounted a
-great danger. As Lady St. Loe she had laid herself in some way open to
-back-biters, had triumphantly quashed them, and had escaped being deeply
-involved in the affair of Lady Catherine Grey; as Lady Shrewsbury she
-had braved the wrath of Elizabeth over the Lennox marriage, and now
-triumphed over Mary and the Earl. Upon this last occasion she emerged
-with a slate at least superficially clean.
-
-Superficially. The thing extorts your admiration after the reading of
-Mary’s detailed accusations. But there is yet one more letter which Mary
-planned to send hurtling towards the Court. It is a bomb more deadly
-than any of the rest, and had it found its mark even the indomitable
-Lady Shrewsbury might have been annihilated—would certainly have been
-hopelessly discountenanced. It is the production known to all students
-of this historical period as “The Scandal Letter,” here translated with
-the exception of passages which are best in the original French. Again,
-full allowance must be made here for the overwrought condition of the
-writer. This letter tallies with the spirit of the letters on the same
-subject already seen. Moreover, it is on all sides adjudged by experts
-to be a genuine document in Mary’s own hand. This epistle, which in
-itself formed a safety-valve for the tumult of the writer’s brain,
-either was not despatched and was afterwards found among her papers, or
-may have been intercepted in full flight—possibly by Burghley, for it
-rests to this day among the Hatfield MSS. Events show that it can never
-have reached Elizabeth. The publication of such pernicious matter could
-not have done any good or have diverted in any way Elizabeth’s
-disapproval from her prisoner. Nor could it have altered Mary’s fate. If
-there be, as one cannot but think, a certain basis of truth in it—the
-Countess had a lively tongue, as the world knows—the road by which this
-lady travelled between 1578 and 1584 must have literally overhung a
-ghastly social precipice.
-
-
- “Madame,[76]
-
-“In accordance with what I promised you and have ever since desired, I
-must—though with regret that such matters should be called in question,
-still without passion and from motives of true sincerity, as I call God
-to witness—declare to you that what the Countess of Shrewsbury has said
-of you to me is as nearly as possible as follows. I assure you I treated
-the greater part of her statements, while rebuking the said lady for
-thinking and speaking so licentiously of you, as matters in which I had
-no belief, either then or now, knowing the nature of the Countess and
-the spirit which animated her against you.
-
-“Premièrement, qu-un, auquel elle disoit que vous aviez faict promesse
-de mariage devant une dame de votre chambre, avait couché infinies foys
-avvesques vous, avecque toute la licence et privaulté qui se peut user
-entre mari et femme; mais qu’indubitablement vous n’estiez pas comme les
-aultres femmes, et pour ce respect c’estoit follie a tous ceulz
-qu-affectoient vostre mariage avec M. le duc d’Anjou, d’aultant qu’il ne
-se pourrait accomplir, et que vous ne vouldriez jamais perdre la liberté
-de vous fayre fayre l’amour et avoir vostre plésir tousjours avecques
-nouveaulx amoureulx, regrettant, ce disoit elle, que vous ne vous
-contentiez de maister Haton et un aultre de ce royaulme: mays que, pour
-l’honneur du pays, il lui fashoit le plus que vous aviez non seulement
-engagé vostre honneur avecques un étranger nommé Simier, l’alant trouver
-la nuit dans la chambre d’une dame, que la dicte comtesse blamoit fort a
-ceste occasion là, où vous le baisiez et usiez avec lui de diverses
-privautez deshonestes; mays aussi lui revelliez les segrets du royaulme,
-trahisant vos propres conseillers avex luy. Que vous vous esties
-desportée de la mesme dissolution avvec le Duc son maystre, qui vous
-avoit esté trouver une nuit à la porte de vostre chambre, où vous
-l’aviez rencontré avvec vostre seulle chemise et manteau de nuit, et que
-par après vous l’aviez laissé entrer, et qu’il demeura avecques vous
-près de troys heures.
-
-“As for the aforenamed Hatton [it was said] that you literally pursued
-him, displaying your love for him so publicly that he was obliged to
-withdraw, that you gave Killigrew[77] a box on the ear because he did
-not bring back Hatton when sent in pursuit, the latter having left your
-presence in anger because of insulting remarks you had made about some
-gold buttons on his coat. [The Countess said] that she had worked to
-achieve the marriage of the said Hatton with the late Countess of
-Lennox, her daughter, but that he would not listen to the proposal for
-fear of you. Again, that even the Earl of Oxford durst not live with his
-wife lest he should lose the advantages which he hoped to receive for
-making love to you, that you were lavish towards all such persons and to
-all who were engaged in similar intrigues; for example, that you gave a
-person of the Bedchamber, named George, a pension of £300 for bringing
-you the news of the return of Hatton; that towards all other persons you
-were very thankless and stingy, and that there were but three or four in
-your kingdom whom you had ever benefited. The Countess, in fits of
-laughter, advised me to place my son among the ranks of your lovers as a
-thing which would do me good service and would entirely disable the
-Duke, whose affair, if allowed to continue, would be very prejudicial to
-me. And when I replied that such an act would be interpreted as sheer
-mockery, she answered that you were so vain, and had such a good opinion
-of your beauty—as if you were a sort of goddess from heaven—that she
-wagered she could easily make you take the matter seriously and would
-put my son in the way of carrying it through.
-
-“[She said] that you were so fond of exaggerated adulation, such as the
-assurance that no one dared to look full into your face, since it shone
-like the sun, that she and other ladies at Court were obliged to employ
-similar forms of flattery; that on her last appearance before you she
-and the late Countess of Lennox scarcely ventured to interchange glances
-for fear of bursting into laughter over the way in which they were
-openly mocking you. She begged me on her return to scold her daughter
-because she could not persuade her to do likewise; and as for your
-daughter Talbot she was assured that she would never fail to sneer at
-you. The said Lady Talbot, immediately upon her return, after she had
-made her obeisance to you and taken the oath as one of your servants,
-related it to me as a mere empty pretence, and begged me to receive a
-similar act of homage, one which she felt, however, more deeply and
-rendered absolutely to me. This for a long time I refused, but in the
-end, disarmed by her tears, I let her yield it to me, she declaring that
-she would not for worlds be in personal attendance upon you, for fear
-lest if you were angry you would treat her as you did her Cousin Skedmur
-(whose finger you broke, pretending to those at Court that it was caused
-by the fall of a chandelier), or as you did another, who while waiting
-on you at table received a great cut on the hand from a knife from you.
-In a word, from these latter details and the rumours of common gossip
-you can see that you are made game of and mimicked by your ladies as if
-they were at a play, and even by my women also, though, when I perceived
-it, I swear to you that I forbade my women to have anything to do with
-the matter.
-
-“In addition the said Countess once informed me that you wanted to
-induce Rolson[78] to make love to me and attempt to dishonour me, either
-literally or by scandalous rumours, and that he had instructions to this
-effect from your own lips; that Ruxby came here about eight years ago to
-make an attempt on my life after being received by you personally, and
-that you told him to do all that Walsingham should command and direct.
-
-“That when the Countess was promoting the marriage of her son Charles
-with one of Lord Paget’s nieces, while you on the other hand wanted to
-secure her by the exercise of your unlimited and absolute prerogative
-for a member of the Knollys family, she had raised an outcry against you
-and declared it was pure tyranny that you should want to carry off all
-the heiresses of the country according to your own fancy, and that you
-had disgracefully abused the said Paget, but that in the end the
-nobility of the kingdom would not stand it, even if you appealed to
-other than those whom she knew well.
-
-“Il y a environ quatre ou sinq ans que, vous estant malade et moy aussy
-au mesme temps, elle me dit que vostre mal provenoit de la closture une
-fistulle que vous aviez dans une jambe: et que son doubte, venant à
-perdre vos moys, vous mourriez bientost.
-
-“In this she rejoiced on the strength of a vain notion she has long
-cherished, based on the predictions of one named John Lenton, and upon
-an old book which foretold your death by violence and the accession of
-another queen, whom she interpreted to be me. She merely regretted that
-according to this book it was predicted that the queen who was to
-succeed you would only reign three years and would die, like you, a
-violent death. All this was actually represented in a picture in the
-book, the contents of the last page of which she would never disclose to
-me.
-
-“She knows that I always looked upon all this as pure nonsense, but she
-did her utmost to ingratiate herself with me and even to ensure the
-marriage of my son with my niece Arbella.
-
-“In conclusion I once more swear to you on my faith and honour that all
-this is perfectly true, and that where your honour is concerned it was
-never my intention to wrong you by revealing it, and that it should
-never be known through me, who hold it all to be very false. If I may
-have an hour’s speech with you I will give more particulars of the
-names, times, places, and other circumstances to prove to you the truth
-of this and other things, which I reserve until fully assured of your
-friendship. This I desire more than ever. Further, if I can this time
-secure it you will find no relative, friend, nor even subject more loyal
-and affectionate than myself. For God’s sake, believe the assurance of
-one who will and can serve you.
-
-“From my bed, forcing my arm and my sufferings to satisfy and obey you.
-
- “MARIE R.”
-
-
-This letter, of course, is concentrated venom. Mary could embroider with
-her pen as well as with her clever needle. She could entwine and order
-her imaginings with magnificent effect. She had heaps of fantasy and
-romance and could employ them more than puckishly. The document is a
-_tour de force_ of craft and power. Its double aim is unerring. With
-this one poisoned shaft the writer seeks to destroy the security of the
-two Elizabeths—so similar in their autocratic natures, their vitality
-and joy in intrigue. A fiendish delight lurks behind every suggestion
-aimed at the person and amours of Elizabeth. Even these, taking into
-account the ghastly suspense of her imprisonment and the wreckage of her
-mental balance, might be forgiven to Mary. But the statement suggesting
-Elizabeth’s betrayal of her State secrets to a mere envoy like the
-Frenchman Simier, while admitting him to the grossest intimacy, is too
-wickedly sane in its vindictiveness to be forgivable. In her most
-impulsive, most overwrought moments Lady Shrewsbury would never have
-dared to suggest a thing so base or so impossible. The letter condemns
-itself throughout, and undermines the truth of many of the previous wild
-complaints by Mary of the Countess’s words and deeds. Naturally, every
-breath of scandal attaching to the Queen’s intercourse with the
-innumerable persons of the opposite sex with whom her position brought
-her into contact was treasured and retailed in all directions, and
-exaggerated versions of every incident would, of course, be transmitted
-to Mary. To achieve such a letter she had only to collect the titbits,
-put them into the mouth of one she hated, profess to expose all the
-rottenness of Elizabeth’s so-called friends, and serve up the whole
-gallimaufry with a crowning _bonne bouche_ in the assertion of her own
-innocence, truth, and loyalty. The Arch-Tempter guided her pen in this
-hour, and that last plea of weakness and despair, “de mon lit, forçant
-mon bras et mes douleurs pour vous satis fayre et obéir,” is scarcely
-convincing. The devil was assuredly in it, and she must have saved up
-all her energy for such a production. Don Bernardino de Mendoza, when
-alluding in a letter of 1585 to the release of Shrewsbury from his task
-and his retirement to his estates, declared that he thanked the Queen
-for delivering him from two devils, the Scottish Queen and his wife:—
-
-
-“El conde de Shreubury ha partido para ir en Darbissier siendo
-lugartheniente de dos condados de Darbi y Stafford. Besso los manos a la
-Regna de Inglaterra, diziendole, hazello por havelle librado de dos
-diablos, que heran la Regna de Scozia y su muger.”
-
-
-This is probably a partial exaggeration. Of course Elizabeth could not
-free him from his wife. It was her pleasurable business to bring them
-together again. A lengthy matter and badly begun!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
- HAMMER AND TONGS
-
-
-There is no other title possible for the condition of things with which
-this chapter deals. That public vindication of the Earl, it will be
-remembered, was in 1584, coupled with his wife’s formal disclaimer of
-the scandal circulated about him. Still there is nothing to heal the
-estrangement, and the Earl, hearing disturbing reports, writes to Lord
-Burghley from his country seclusion in the autumn of the following year,
-1585:—
-
-
- “My noble good Lord,
-
-“Since my coming into the country, my wife and her children have not
-ceased to inform her Majesty, most slanderously of me, that I have
-broken her Highness’s order; and at length they have obtained her
-gracious letters, and Mr. Secretary’s to me, the which I have answered,
-and sent up my servant Christopher Copley with them; praying your
-Lordship that he may, with your favour, attend on you, and acquaint you
-thoroughly from time to time with my causes, and that it would please
-you to further him with your advice and continuance of your good favour.
-My Lord, she makes all means she can to be with me, and her children
-have her living, whereunto I will never agree, for if I have the one, I
-will have the other, which was thought reasonable by the Lord
-Chancellor, and the Lord of Leicester; but by her letters she desires to
-come to me herself, but speaks no word of her living.[79] I have been
-much troubled with her, and almost never quiet to satisfy her greedy
-appetite for money, to pay for her purchases to set up her children;
-besides the danger I have lived in, to be compassed daily with those
-that most maliciously hated me, that if I were out of the way, presently
-they might be in my place. It were better we lived as we do, for in
-truth, I cannot away with her children, but have them in jealousy; for
-till Francis Talbot’s death, she and her children sought my favour, but
-since those times they have sought for themselves and never for me.
-Thus, with my hearty commendations, I commit your good Lordship to the
-tuition of the Almighty.
-
-“Sheffield, this twenty-third of October, 1585.
-
- “Your Lordship’s most faithful friend,
- “G. SHREWSBURY.”
-
-
- “My noble good Lord,
-
-“Finding you so honest and constant a friend to me, I have been willing,
-and yet doubtful to trouble you with my gouty fist, unless I had matters
-of some importance, knowing your Lordship so troubled with her Majesty’s
-affairs; but now, perceiving what untrue surmises have and are daily
-invented by my wife and her children of me, and I think will be during
-their lives, I am therefore to request your Lordship thus much; if they
-shall exclaim of me from time to time without cause as they do,
-considering how manifestly they have disproved in all their accounts,
-that they may make trial of their complaints against me before they are
-heard; and so shall her Majesty and her Council be less troubled with
-these untrue surmises, and by the Grace of God, my doings and dealings
-have and shall be such as I wish, my wife and her imps, who I know to be
-mortal enemies, might daily see into my doings which I took for no less
-but they will do their best. So, wishing your Lordship health as my own,
-I take my leave.
-
-“Sheffield, this ninth of November, 1585.
-
-“Your Lordship’s most faithful ever assured friend,
-
- “G. SHREWSBURY.”
-
-
-The word “imp” in Elizabethan times really only implied “offshoot” and
-“offspring” and was used also in an agricultural sense. But the
-application of it here is maliciously grotesque to the modern sense. The
-word strikes one oddly also in the epitaph of the son of Leicester, the
-baby Lord Denbigh, described on his tomb as “this noble imp.”
-
-On November 9th from Sheffield Castle Shrewsbury reopens his formal
-campaign, and the real tussle in London begins. Lord Leicester, his good
-friend, is no longer on the spot, owing to his absence in the
-Netherlands. In the long letter to this Lord, quoted hereafter, though
-belonging to a date slightly previous, it will be seen that mention is
-made of the Queen’s preliminary arbitration in the quarrel. The main
-points showing the fluctuations of this strife are set forth in the
-State documents, and the whole of Vol. CCVII is devoted to them, showing
-that the years 1586–7 are given up to a regular formal ballyragging on
-both sides. On the 31st of January, 1586, the Earl is found appealing to
-Walsingham, requiring that his wife should be ordered to make public
-retractation of her slanderous speeches about him. (This evidently
-refers to fresh backbiting, for as regards the great scandal already
-named matters had been thrashed out long since.) He adds that he must
-bend his mind to trouble though his years do otherwise move him;
-meanwhile he has brought a suit against Charles Cavendish and Henry
-Beresford, accusing them of the same slander. The Queen intervenes and
-requests him to stay the suits. Shrewsbury, however, persists on the
-score of the statute “De scandalis magnatum.”[80] The Cavendishes on
-their side pleaded for the abandonment of the two suits just named and
-for the impartial examination of witnesses. Evidence is next included by
-Shrewsbury’s servants of the prejudicial statements of Beresford, while
-the Cavendishes employed a servant of the Countess to attest the great
-partiality with which the examination of Beresford was conducted, to the
-disadvantage of the Countess’ case. Upon this the Queen sent to Sir
-Charles Cavendish for details of the exact state of affairs between his
-mother and stepfather. These he submitted to Walsingham in March. On May
-the 12th the Queen wrote to the Earl expressing her earnest desire that
-all controversies between him and his lady and her younger sons should
-cease, and by her mediation be brought to some good end and accord. She
-reminded him that his years required repose, especially of the mind, and
-stated that she enclosed an order for the settlement of the dispute, the
-result of her conference with the Lord Chancellor, the Earl of
-Leicester, and the Treasurer and Chief Secretary of State.
-
-Lady Shrewsbury meanwhile objected strongly to all the Earl’s
-proceedings, accused him of displacing certain of her tenants, and
-assured the Queen that he refused to restrain the slander suits. This is
-a fragment of her many complaints, and is endorsed:—
-
-
- “Objections used by the Countess to the Earl of Shrewsbury’s answers,
- who has not obeyed the Queen’s last letter.
-
-“To all these answers drawn by my Lord’s learned counsel, as may appear,
-who never want words to answer whatsoever:—
-
-“I allege that for her Majesty’s order I must appeal to her own gracious
-remembrance, which particularly was expressed by her last letter to my
-Lord, though not obeyed. And (I) do avow on my whole credit with her
-Majesty for ever that the things he hath entered to is worth nine
-hundred pounds a year, and that he hath repaid but eight and fifty pound
-of near two thousand pounds, which in that (case?) would have been to my
-sons and me. That he displaceth sundry tenants, and as myself allegeth
-meaneth to continue the suits.
-
-“In all these things I most humbly beseech speedy redress if they be
-true, and discredit and her Majesty’s disfavour if they be found untrue.
-
-“May, 1586.”
-
-
-On June 15th Shrewsbury, writing to Walsingham, begged him to favour his
-suit against the Countess, and asked that the Queen should banish her
-from Court, adding that he was ashamed to think of his choice of such a
-creature, and piteously entreated Walsingham to persuade his son Gilbert
-Talbot to leave “that wicked woman’s company.”
-
-The action went through against Beresford, for the next item in the
-State record is a note upon the York Assizes in June. At the same time
-the Countess petitioned the Council denying the charges of the Earl that
-she had ever maintained her servant Beresford against him. Next follows
-an important note by Charles Cavendish on the force and effect of the
-Queen’s order which was intended to produce a united reconciliation and
-cohabitation.
-
-The Earl was by this time slowly coming to terms, but he required that
-Henry Cavendish should be reinstated in Chatsworth and assured of
-certain lands, while his debts, it was stipulated, were to be paid by
-the Countess. The Countess and her two sons, on the other hand, stated
-that they had been much out of pocket for three years by the Earl’s
-aggressive proceedings, and begged for redress.
-
-Into this hotchpotch are flung notes of the yearly allowances which the
-Earl gave his Countess when they were together, of the amount of rent
-paid by certain tenants, and all other disputes about the jointures of
-the Countess, leases, houses, lands, and other property settled upon
-various members of the family by father and mother. Not a single scrap
-of personal or real estate seems to have been forgotten. The unhappy
-couple tussled especially hard over their plate. In the Hatfield MSS.
-catalogue the inquisitive will find a full list of the articles. They
-include “a podinger” (of which the dish seems to be in my Lady’s hands,
-while her Lord retains the lid), a “great silver salt having many little
-ones within it to be drawn out,” one “George,” enamelled white and set
-with diamonds, costing £38, “a cup of assay,” gilt “talbots,” ewers,
-plates, standing-pots, bowls, candlesticks, trenchers, “parcel gilt and
-double gilt.” Then there was the same pull-devil pull-baker business
-over household linen, mattresses, and hangings—those hangings which were
-always such a cause of bother to the couple all through their fifteen
-years of menage in connection with their troublesome prisoner-guest. The
-demands of the Earl on his part infuriate his wife, and there is a
-scornful and sarcastic entry in the Hatfield MSS., endorsed by Burghley,
-to the effect that “the parcels above demanded by the Earl are things of
-small value and mere trifles for so great and rich a nobleman to bestow
-on his wife in nineteen years.” The Countess then reminds him of her
-share in the way of gifts: “the Earl hath received of her at several
-times, pots, flagons, dishes, porringers, warming-pans, boiling-pot, a
-charger or voider of silver, with many other things she now remembereth
-not. Besides, better than £1000 of linen consumed by him, being carried
-to sundry of his houses to serve his Lordship’s turn. And with his often
-being at Chatsworth with his charge and most of his stuff there
-spoiled.”
-
-In addition, she quotes an annual contribution of 30 to 40 mattresses,
-20 quilts, etc. etc.
-
-All these absurd and pitiful obstacles made the Queen’s order for
-cohabitation very distasteful, and in July the Earl lashed out in an
-important and emphatic letter to Court. His wife had of her own will
-left him, and he did not see why he should receive her under his roof
-now simply because she offered to come. “It appeareth,” goes on the
-statement, “by her words and deeds she doth deadly hate him, and hath
-called him knave, fool, and beast to his face, and hath mocked and mowed
-at him.” Here follow two letters from the contending parties. Her
-Ladyship had written to my Lord on August 4th, 1586, to which he sends
-the long reply quoted. She again writes on August 11th.
-
-_Earl of Shrewsbury to his Countess._
-
-
-“Wife, in the three first lines of your last letter dated Thursday, 4
-August, 1586, you hold yourself importunate for demanding my plate and
-other things, part whereof, in the same letter you confess, which at
-your being with me you desired to have, and the residue of the plate and
-hangings you pass over in silence, for which I take light occasion to be
-displeased with you by writing (as you say) and demand this question of
-me—What new offence is committed since her Majesty reconciled us? To the
-first part of your letter I answer that there is no creature more happy
-and more fortunate than you have been for when you were defamed and to
-the world a byword, when you were St. Loo’s widow, I covered those
-imperfections (by my intermarriage) with you and brought you to all the
-honour you have, and to the most of that wealth you now enjoy.
-Therefore, you have cause to think yourself happier than others, for I
-know not what she is within this realm that may compare with you either
-in living or goods; and yet you cannot be contented. The reconciliation
-that her Majesty moved betwixt us was—that I should take a probation of
-your good behaviour toward me for a year, and send you to Wingfield upon
-my charges, to which I yielded (being much pressed by her Highness) with
-these conditions: that I should not bed nor board with you; those
-servants that were now about you, I would put from you and put others to
-you; your children, nor Gilbert Talbot, nor his wife should come at you
-whilst you were with me; your living I would have, and my goods (which
-you and William Cavendish had taken) I would have restored. Yet you
-still pressed her Majesty further, that you might come to me at my house
-to Chelsea, which I granted, and at your coming I told you that you were
-welcome upon the Queen’s commandment, but though you were cleared in her
-Majesty’s sight for all offences, yet I had not cleared you, nor could
-trust you till you did confess that you had offended me. Nor can I be
-contented to accept of you, if you do not this in writing and upon your
-knees and before such as her Majesty shall appoint. It was promised that
-I should find you obedient unto me in all points. I thought it unfit
-that there should be suits betwixt your children and me, if I should
-accept of you, which made me to try you, and demand my plate of you,
-etc. What greater disobedience could you shew unto me than deny me that
-which is my own? You will hardly suffer me to be master of any of yours,
-when you cannot be pleased to restore me mine own. Is it fit that you
-should gage my plate and mine arms upon it? Can you do me greater
-dishonour? You say that, if your estate were able, you would not stand
-with me upon such toys. You never esteemed how largely you cut quarters
-out of my cloth; but you have carried always this mind towards me, that,
-if you once got anything of me, you cannot be contented to restore it
-again. As (if you remember) you borrowed £1000 of me, etc., and gave me
-your bill for it; I was not ignorant that I could not recover any money
-by it, but it is a witness that you had the money and yet you never paid
-it me again. As touching her Majesty’s order for your living, she
-pronounced the same at Greenwich, and ordered me £500 a year and divers
-other things which they thought fit, and we assented to be set down in
-the draft of the books, as may appear. And as touching this, that if I
-did at any time receive you and cohabit with you, the Lords thought it
-reasonable—and you assented to it—that I should have your living during
-the time of our cohabitation, and hereupon I refer myself to their
-opinions. Marry, this difference there was, that if you disliked to
-cohabit and dwell with me, then your sons to have your living, upon a
-signification to be made, the form whereof could not be agreed upon, as
-may appear. Your children’s names were used only for this cause, because
-you were not capable yourself, but they were thought meetest to deal for
-you, till I liked to take you to me. And I think their commission
-extended to it, or else you would not have laboured their great pains
-which they took in it, and they would have been glad then that I should
-have taken you and your living also, which your children desired not, if
-I could have agreed to it. I am sorry to spend all these words with you,
-but assure yourself this shall be the last time that I will write much
-to you in the matter or trouble myself; and likewise, if you intend to
-come to me, advise yourself in these points before remembered, that I
-will have you to confess that you have offended me, and are heartily
-sorry for it, in writing, and upon your knees (without either if or
-and). Your living you shall bring with you to maintain you with, and to
-pay such debts as is expressed in the consideration of the deed. For
-neither by the said deed, nor yet by her Majesty’s order, it was meant
-that your sons should have your living, which appertaineth to me, being
-my enemies, and have sought my defamation and destruction of my house,
-and I to have you without that which the laws giveth me. My goods you
-shall restore me before we come together. And, if you cannot be content
-to do this I protest before God, I will never have you come upon me,
-whatever shall [happen]. I could allege many causes why you have thus
-disobediently behaved yourself against me. One chief cause was when I
-had made you my sole executrix you persuaded me to make a lease in trust
-to two of your friends for threescore years, minding thereby to have the
-benefit thereof by the executorship. You caused me in my extremity of
-sickness to pass my lands by deed enrolled—to your friends—in bargain
-and sale, and the indenture which did lease the houses was not enrolled,
-so that if I had then died, the same might have been embezzled, and so
-my posterity for that land in the case of St. Loo. But, when I perceived
-in what danger I stood, I put you out of my will, and have since started
-to remedy those my great imperfections that I was not able to benefit my
-children nor recompense my servants. At length it came to your ear,
-though there were not many that knew it, and then you began to play your
-part, and hath used me ever since in such despiteful sort as I was not
-able to bear or abide it: and this is one of the causes that you deal
-with me in this wise as you do, and not such causes as you allege to her
-Majesty of my dislike of you. All offences done by you are esteemed
-nothing as was the offence of Henry Beresford, that was found guilty of
-such slanderous speeches that he had spoken of me, that, if they had
-been true, as they be most false, had overthrown me and my house. Also,
-in regard to your confederacy with him and his son, I cannot but
-remember that the young fellow should swear he never spoke any such
-speeches by me as was laid in my action which, till it was discovered,
-moved great favour towards Beresford, and had like both to have abused
-both her Majesty and Mr. Secretary, and clearly to have dishonoured me
-(as Mr. Secretary informed me). This I take to be a grievous offence
-done unto me. I thought good not to omit this, but to put you in
-remembrance thereof, what great favour you have showed him, and was very
-unfit to have been supported by you, when the case did touch me so near,
-which I look for at your hands that you will confess.
-
-“And thus I end.
-
- “From Chelsea the 5th of August, 1586.”
-
-_Endorsed_: “The copy of my Lord’s letter to the Countess his wife, V.
-August, 1586.”
-
-
-_The Countess of Shrewsbury to the Earl._
-
-
-“My Lord, I hold myself most unfortunate that upon so slight occasion it
-pleaseth you to write in this form to me: for what new offence is
-committed since her Majesty reconciled us? If the denial of the plate be
-the only cause, why then, my Lord, the true affirmation thereof in my
-letter is more than my words, neither such a trifle I hoped could have
-wrought so unkind effects; and were my state able I would not stand upon
-such toys as those you speak of. Touching my son’s living, that is no
-new cause, for it was long ago moved by you, and could never be
-consented to by us, in respect of the reasons in my last letter
-alleged.... My Lord, I know not how justly you can term me insatiable in
-my desire of gaining, for my losses have been so great, with my charges,
-that makes me desire honestly to discharge my debt with my children’s
-lands, which you have no need of, and will not in my time discharge them
-though we should live on nothing; and I am greedy of nobody’s lands, but
-would keep the rest, which by all law, order, and conscience they ought
-to possess. Neither my case and fortune hath been to maintain my
-miseries with untruths, for receiving daily manifest discourtesies I
-need not blush to speak truly.
-
-“I assure you, my Lord, my meaning is not to molest or grieve you with
-demanding, neither I trust it can be thought greediness to demand
-nothing, for I desire no more than her Majesty’s order giveth, and wish
-your happy days to be many and good....
-
-“Touching the postscript, my desire hath been so great to be with you
-and save your long delays, that made me be an humble suitor to her
-Majesty to be earnest with you, but not as you write.
-
-“For the other that I labour your stay, I assure you, my Lord, I did
-not, but yet would be very glad that all were perfected here and then to
-go down with you, and hoped also ere this we should have been on our way
-into the country.
-
-“So, beseeching Almighty God to make you better conceive of me, I end,
-wishing myself, without offence, with you,
-
- “Your obedient faithful wife,
- “ELIZABETH SHREWSBURY.
-
-“Richmond, this Thursday.”
-
-
-Like a pedal note through the long jangle runs the Queen’s order, upon
-which Sir Charles Cavendish comments more than once. The main part of
-it, of course, deals with the disposal of property, the outcome of the
-affair being that the couple should travel down to the country together,
-and the lands belonging to the Cavendishes revert to them. A footnote to
-one copy of the order says that the meaning of this is not to take away
-anything in the way of concessions already arranged, but only “to better
-the Countess’s part.”
-
-Elizabeth was accused of partiality by the Earl. Her own attitude
-towards him had been rather like that of some of his children, for she
-had always made use of his possessions to suit her own purpose without
-any intention of repayment. It is possible that from the innate
-stinginess of her disposition she may have resented the fashion in which
-he coupled accusations against his wife’s rapacity with his sore,
-justifiable complaint that Mary’s imprisonment had impoverished him. In
-a letter to Lord Leicester he can no longer control his feelings against
-the Queen. Though written in 1585, it is quoted here as being pertinent.
-
-Bitter and rambling, it is in reply to one from Leicester, which shows
-plainly that the Queen, as arbitrator, has thrown her weight into the
-balance with the Countess. The document is quoted by Lodge from a rough
-copy endorsed “The Earl of Shrewsbury’s answer to the Earl of
-Leicester’s letter ... ultimo Aprilis, 1585,” and is therefore unsigned.
-
-
- “My good Lord,
-
-“Since her Majesty hath declared her mind in the matter betwixt me and
-my wife, and doubts not but in every respect I will observe it as her
-Highness hath set it down and that the Lord Chancellor should take order
-with me for the accomplishment thereof, well weighing her Majesty’s hard
-censure of me and my causes; since my coming to Chelsea, I have not been
-well, nor able to return my answer by your Lordship’s servant so
-speedily as I would, but have now thought good to send this bearer, my
-servant, Christopher Copley, unto your Lordship with this answer; that
-as her Majesty doth demand and look for at my hands faith and due
-obedience, as is the duty of every good subject to spend lands and life
-in the defence of her Majesty’s person and realm, which I and my
-ancestors have done and am ready at her Majesty’s commandment, so, for
-the maintenance of my honour and credit, do I claim and demand of her
-Majesty justice and benefit of her Majesty’s laws, never denied by her
-Majesty nor by any of her noble progenitors, to any of the meanest of
-her subjects before this; yet not doubting but that her Majesty will
-have better consideration of me and my cause when she hath thoroughly
-weighed of it; and that if she (for all my careful and faithful service,
-to my great charges above my allowance in the keeping of that Lady for
-sixteen years last past: with the extraordinary charges and expense of
-her Majesty’s commissioners sent down, as of Sir Walter Mildmay, Mr.
-Beale, and Sir Ralph Sadler, and others, their horse and men, for so
-long time as they continued with me), will bestow nothing on me yet I
-even thought she would have left me with what her Majesty’s laws had
-given me. Since that her Majesty hath set down this hard sentence
-against me, to my perpetual infamy and dishonour, to be ruled and
-overrun by my wife, so bad and wicked a woman, yet her Majesty shall see
-that I will obey her commandment, though no curse or plague in the earth
-could be more grievous to me. These offers of my wife’s enclosed in your
-letters I think them very unfit to be offered to me. It is too much to
-make me my wife’s prisoner, and set me down the demesnes of Chatsworth,
-without the house and other lands leased, which is but a pension in
-money. I think it stands with reason that I should choose the £500 by
-year ordered by her Majesty where I like best, according to the rate
-William Cavendish delivered to my Lord Chancellor; or else I shall think
-myself doubly wronged, which I am sure her Majesty will not offer unto
-me. And thus I commit your Lordship to the tuition of the Almighty.”
-
-
-The last sentence is entirely ironical after the preceding outburst.
-Leicester was not the man to take spiritual counsel or to bestir himself
-to his own disadvantage. He was essentially a “trimmer,” and the
-guardianship of the Almighty was only a matter of speech for him. He
-seems to have remained fairly neutral after this, to judge from what
-Henry Talbot writes from London on the 6th of August to his father:—
-
-
-“All your Lordship’s affairs here are well; and your wife doth exclaim
-against my Lord Leicester, because, as she saith, he hath not been so
-good as his promise. Her Majesty, praise to God, is well, and marvelleth
-she can hear nothing from your Lordship, and she useth the best speeches
-that may be of your Lordship.”
-
-
-To this letter there is a delightful postscript giving a suggestive and
-greedy message from one of Shrewsbury’s friends:—
-
-
-“My Lord Mayor hath his humble duty remembered unto your Lordship, and
-says he hopes your Lordship’s bucks are fat this summer.”
-
-
-So did all the world sponge upon the once wealthy George Talbot.
-
-Another letter from Henry Talbot is a sort of amplification of the
-attitudes of his Queen and wife, and though he could not but be
-flattered by that of the first there was everything to torture him
-acutely in her professions after the treatment he had received:—
-
-
-“May it please your Honour to be advertised that I came from Court upon
-the 20th of this present where I left all things very well, and her
-Majesty saith she doth marvel greatly that she hath received but one
-letter from your Lordship since your going down. Moreover she herself
-told me that she marvelled she heard no oftener from you, whom it
-pleased to term her love, declaring further what care she had of your
-health, and what a trouble your sickness was unto her; whereunto I
-answered that your Lordship’s chiefest comfort, and speedy recovery of
-your health, proceeded from her Majesty’s so gracious favour and
-countenance bestowed upon you; whereat her Majesty smiled, saying,
-“Talbot, I have not yet shewed unto him that favour which hereafter we
-mean to do.””
-
-
-Words, words! This was the coin in which Elizabeth paid the faithful
-among her subjects, her kinsmen included. But to resume the letter: “As
-touching your wife’s causes, she lieth still in Chancery Lane, and doth
-give out that she meaneth to continue there and not to go into the
-country. My Lord, my brother’s wife, and her brother, the
-Knight”—meaning Sir Charles Cavendish—“do attend very diligently at
-Court, and little respect there is had of them; nevertheless they cease
-not to follow, to the end the world may say they are in credit.”
-
-The nearest approach to a final and reasonable settlement was suggested
-by the Earl’s proposal to settle £1500 a year on his wife, with
-Chatsworth House and other lands, under certain conditions, a document
-which raised a good deal of discussion on both sides. Out of this
-cauldron of anger, misery, and sordidness emerged at last once more the
-royal order, final and distinct: The Earl was to receive his wife, and
-take probation of her obedience for one year, and if she proved
-forgetful of her duty was to place her in her house at Chatsworth. Rents
-and assurance of lands were also clearly set forth, and it was ordained
-that all actions for plate, jewels, and hangings were to be stayed.
-
-The Countess had the last word on this, for her practical instinct
-prompted her instantly to request that her Majesty should appoint
-someone to be an eye-witness “in house” with the Earl and herself.
-Further, she begged that she might not, failing their final agreement,
-be confined to Chatsworth House only, and besought her Majesty “to
-conclude her honourable and godly work” as speedily as possible.
-
-Early in August, 1586, the Queen passed this final order of
-reconciliation. Assured of the willingness of the couple to cease their
-strife, she summoned them to her presence, and “in many good words
-showed herself very glad thereof, and the Earl and Countess in good sort
-departed together very comfortably.” Wingfield was their destination,
-and was named in the original order drawn up already in March.
-
-
- THE QUEEN’S ORDER.
-
-“An order pronounced by her Majesty between the Earl of Shrewsbury and
-the Countess his wife in the presence of the Secretary (Walsingham).
-
-“That the said Earl shall give present order for the conveying of the
-said Countess to some one of his principal manor houses in Derbyshire,
-furnished for her to remain in, with liberty to go either to Chatsworth
-or Hardwick, and to return to the Earl’s house at her pleasure.
-
-“That the said Earl shall allow to the said Countess towards the
-defraying of the charges of household £300 and fuel until he shall yield
-to cohabitation, and doth also promise in respect of her Majesty’s
-mediation further gratuity of yearly provision for the maintenance of
-her said house.
-
-“That the said Earl shall appoint four or five of his own men to attend
-upon the said Countess and shall pay them their wages.
-
-“The said Earl promiseth her Majesty to resort sometimes to the house
-where the said Countess shall lie, as also to send for the said Countess
-upon notice given of her desire to some other house where he himself
-shall remain, and in case she shall so behave herself toward him as one
-that by good and dutiful ways [?] will do her best endeavour to recover
-his former good opinion and love, then it is to be hoped that continual
-cohabitation will follow, which her Majesty greatly desires.”
-
-All this looks highly promising. It arouses glowing hopes in the minds
-of the onlookers that after many toils and dangers, social and
-political, such a man and such a woman, born to eminence and possessed
-of great qualities, will enjoy many happy years together, quit of their
-old intolerable burden, the care of “the Daughter of Debate.” Such a
-letter as this from the faithful Gilbert Dickenson, which welcomes my
-Lord home to his manor and his acres, telling of the folk who gather to
-greet him, and of the fatted calf in preparation, completes the
-picture:—
-
-
-“May it please your Lo. to understand that divers honest men have heard
-of your Lo. coming home and would have come to meet your Lo. but that I
-have stayed them till I hear further of your Lo. pleasure; and there is
-such running from house to house to tell that your Lo. did lie at
-Wingfield all night and everyone preparing to meet your L.
-
-“Your Lo. should come into the country with such love as never did man
-in England, which is a greater comfort to us than any worldly riches,
-and for sheep, oxen, and lambs shall not be wanting nor anything which
-can be got, God willing.”
-
-
-Alack for love and hope! Only two months after this stately cavalcade of
-Earl and Lady travelled home, the Countess addressed the Treasurer
-again. She had sore complaints to make of her husband.
-
-“My singular good Lord,” she wrote, “I most humbly and heartily thank
-your Lo. for your letter sent by my son William Cavendish. It is my
-greatest comfort that it pleaseth your Lo. to have care of me, else
-grief and displeasure would have ended my days. Since my coming into the
-country my Lo. my husband hath come to his home Wingfield, where I most
-remain, not past three times; more I have not seen him; he stayed not
-over a day at a time at his being here.... Since my coming down, he hath
-allowed me gross provisions as beef, mutton, and corn to serve my house,
-but now not long since he hath sent me word that he will not allow me
-any further and doth withdraw all his provision, not suffering me to
-have sufficient fire.”[81] She goes on to say that if all were as her
-Majesty desired and assured her, namely, that she might be always with
-her husband, she would not need such allowances of provision, etc. etc.
-
-This attitude of the Earl strikes one as a little petty at this
-juncture. He had, after all, large estates and many houses, and there
-was no need to starve his lady out of Wingfield, even if their
-characters and moods were finally and utterly incompatible.
-
-All through these years 1586–7 he was still worried by Gilbert’s
-affairs. The letters which follow explain themselves.
-
-The first is a denunciation of Gilbert’s extravagant wife:—
-
-
- “Son Gilbert,
-
-“I thank you for your pains taken in certifying me of those your sundry
-news, being the very same in effect that I heard of the day before I
-received your letter. For answer thereto, you shall understand my
-meaning towards you is as good as it was at that our departure you put
-me in mind of; but for any help about the payment of your debts I do
-advise you altogether to rely on yourself, and the best discharge you
-shall be able to make thereof, than any ways upon me; who, least my
-silence in that behalf, and at this time, might breathe some hope
-agreeable to your conceived opinion, do in sadness, as you did in jest,
-return you a short answer for your long warning; willing you either to
-provide for yourself, as you may, or else be disappointed; for during my
-life, I would not have you to expect any more at my hands than I have
-already allowed you, whereof I know you might live well, and clear from
-danger of any, as I did, if you had that governance over your wife, as
-her pomp and court-like manner of life were some deal assuaged. And, for
-mine own part, and your good, I do wish you had but half so much to
-relieve your necessities as she and her mother have spent in seeking,
-through malice, mine overthrow and dishonour, and I in defending my just
-cause against them: by means of whose evil dealings, together with other
-bargains wherein I have entangled myself of late, I am not able either
-to help you, or store myself for any other purpose I shall take in hand
-these twelve months. Thus praying God to bless you, I bid you farewell.
-
- “Sheffield Lodge, the 17th of June, 1587.
- “Your loving father,
- “G. SHREWSBURY.”
-
-
-The next is from the newest mediator between Talbot and Cavendish, Sir
-Henry Lee, a long-winded but delightful personage of romantic and
-fantastic temperament. Lodge assures us that he was “bred from infancy
-in Courts and camps,” and that this induced him not only to take a
-leading part in tilts and tournaments, but led to his assumption of the
-“self-created title of Champion of the Queen,” and that he made a vow to
-present himself in the tiltyard in that character on the 27th of
-November in every year, till disabled by age. This vow he kept, and upon
-his retirement at the age of sixty installed as his successor the Earl
-of Cumberland in the presence of Queen and Court, “offering his armour
-at her Majesty’s feet, and clothing himself in a black velvet coat and
-cap.”
-
-
- _Sir Henry Lee to Lord Talbot._
-
-
- “Sir,
-
-“On Monday last I received your letter; on Thursday I went to Sheffield,
-my Lord, your father’s, where I found him much amended, after his
-physic, of the gout, which took him at Brierly, and troubled him until
-then. My being there made him much better disposed, of whom I received
-many sundry kindnesses and more favours than I have or ever may deserve.
-Acknowledgment is small requital, but that I do and will, to him,
-yourself, and yours, in as sundry ways as by my wit, will, and fortune I
-may. Dinner done, and all rising saving his Lordship and my poor self, I
-told him I had written to you, according to his liberty given me upon
-such talk as his Lordship had last with me at Worksop; that I received
-an answer which then I presented unto him. I left him alone; Mr. Henry
-Talbot, Roger Portington, your very good friend, with myself, standing
-at the window, where I, that knew the sundry contents of the letter,
-might see any alteration in himself, as they that stood by imagined by
-his sighs, guessed according to their humours. Your letter perused (and
-well marked, as it did well appear unto me by his speeches immediately
-after), rising from the board, with more colour in his cheeks than
-ordinary, he led me by the hand into his withdrawing chamber, where he
-told me he did well perceive the contents of your letter; that you had
-been long a disobedient child to him; that you joined and practiced
-against him, and with such as sought his overthrow, and consequently
-your own undoing, and the espials and parties you had in his house did
-show your care to be more for that he had himself; but, withal, he knew
-you had many good parts, but those overruled by others that should be
-better governed by yourself. More regard, he says, to your old father,
-would do well; who has been ever loving unto you and must be requited
-with more love and obedience, or else (by his divination) your credit
-will slowly increase. He is glad, as he says, that you live in those
-parts (but he speaks ironia) where some good may be learned, but more to
-be shunned; yet all well where grace is, so you are able to go through
-withal; but for the feeding of such vain time and superfluous excess as
-should do best for yourself to diminish, he is not able, he says, and I
-fear will never be willing, to maintain. He reckoned how many had been
-in hand with him for the payment of your debts; my Lord Treasurer and
-others. His answer was that, through the wilfulness of him, who shunned
-his advice, and the imperfections of others, his undoing should not
-grow, that they themselves might have cause to pity him in his age,
-through his folly and their persuasions. There, my Lord, he told that
-three thousand pounds nearly went out of his living to his children, and
-many other sums to small purpose to remember. He confessed he sent you
-such a letter as you write of, and written by a man of his, but
-altogether by his direction. But he was old, lame of the gout, and now
-no more able to write himself. He spake much of your inconstancy in your
-friendships, and especially to my Lord of Leicester; sometimes, as you
-favoured, there was not such; and laboured himself to rely more upon
-him, altogether misliking such humours as favoured and disfavoured in
-such sort, and in so short a time; but, for himself, he would fly such
-variety, and perform his friendship and faith. Truly, my Lord, he used
-many of these speeches before I interrupted him, and good reason I had
-to forbear, for he spoke not without grief, as I guess, and passion, I
-am sure; therefore [I] thought best to stay until the storm was somewhat
-overblown. At the last I besought him to tell me whether these old
-grievances were not remitted upon conference between yourselves; and
-whether your abode there was not with his good allowance, that you
-should procure yourself to be joined with him in his offices; further,
-that you should, by good means, procure some honourable office for your
-better understanding. All this he did not deny, but, touching his
-discourse, I think not fit to set it down, my messenger is so uncertain,
-and my meaning to do good, if I may, but no hurt. He is old and unwieldy
-and deceived by such he trusteth, and you shun to assist him, and
-therefore will let out all; but that I believe not. I found one thing in
-your letter: I said that I feared, and made me sorry; that your
-favouring so much your own credit, and finding so small means to answer
-your creditors, you might fall into some hard course; and, before these
-words were all out of my mouth, he said, ‘Yea, marry, some desperation.’
-Therefore I took hold: ‘Good my Lord, license me to speak with your
-favour, that speak nothing by practice again, but through a dutiful mind
-to you, now in years, and for yours, by course of nature likely to
-succeed you. If he should, as you have termed it, take any desperate
-way, pass into those parts which this doubtful time brings, to many
-dangers, and especially to our nation, were not this peril great, and,
-by presumption, not to be recovered? You cannot be ignorant, for all
-your mislike, what a son you have; esteemed of the highest, favoured of
-the best, and the best judgments, and how much he differs from other
-men’s sons of your own conditions; so much your love, care, and regard
-should be the more by how much your loss were more (to be balanced by
-reason) than all the rest put together. Your country may and will
-challenge a part and party in him, as a wise man, fit and able to serve
-it. You yet find not what a Lord Talbot you have; but if he should by
-any extraordinary accident be taken from you, and not to be recovered,
-yourself, with your grief, would accompany your white hair to your end
-with a grave full of cares; and who doth sooner enter into desperation
-than great wits accompanied with mighty and honourable hearts, which
-hardly can away with want, but never with discredit?’ This, my Lord,
-sunk somewhat into him. He confessed much of this. He mused long, and
-spake little: he stayed, standing long, without complaining of his legs
-(by reason he was earnest) one hour and a half at the least before we
-parted. So, in many doubts, I left him, minding to send such letters as
-you required, to Welbeck and thence to be sent to you: wherewith I took
-my leave.
-
-“I will never take upon me to advise you. You see now what passed, and
-upon what grounds; therefore resolve, upon temperate blood and good
-judgment, and free advice, for the time present: remembering both love
-and duty, and that you deal with a kind man. I wish a sudden journey, at
-the least to see him; he must needs take it well, and I know your age
-may endure it; your friends desire it, and I among the rest (to see you
-ere I go from these parts) that loveth you, whose being here with my
-Lady, would have made this country to me far otherwise than it is, and
-my abode much longer than it is like to be. I have troubled you long.
-The news is that my Lady Talbot, the widow, and your sister my Lady
-Mary, with my Lady Manners, as I take it came to Sheffield this night
-past. I think my Lord will to Hatfield the next week that cometh, or the
-week following, with such company as he hath, but the certainty I know
-not: but whether he go there, or no, I wish you would haste to meet him.
-My brother, Mr. Portington, Mr. Lascelles, with myself, and Mr. Fawley,
-recommendeth our love and service to your good Lordship. I beseech you
-let me be remembered humbly unto my Lady, and to good Sir Charles
-Candishe and his family, wishing them both the best happiness.
-
-“From Lettwell, the 13th of August, 1587.
-
- “Your Lordship’s poor and faithful friend ever,
- “HENRY LEE.”
-
-
- _The Earl of Shrewsbury to Sir Henry Lee._
-
-
- “Good Sir Henry Lee,
-
-“I have perused that enclosed letter you sent me within yours, and do
-account you most faithful and forward to do good where you profess
-friendship. Neither can the eloquence of the one, nor the earnest desire
-of the other, persuade me to do otherwise in that matter than I have
-already, upon good consideration, determined. My son compares my words
-with his own conceits, and means to save his credit as shall content me,
-but when he sealeth I will assure. I proposed to leave him in better
-case than my father left me, and if I give him so much as I cannot
-withhold, I am not in his debt. I forgave him all his faults, but I
-promised him not that I would trust him. He can bring the honour of his
-house now to make for his purpose, but he remembereth not how he went
-about to dishonour it. He laboured not to make sure my Lord of Leicester
-of their side that went about to accuse his father of treason. He did
-not countenance his wife and her mother against me in all their bad
-actions. His deceits never moved me to be displeased. Well, if they did,
-I pronounce forgiveness thereof to his friend, as I have done before
-unto him. He knoweth whereof his grief grew; let him henceforth avoid
-the occasions. He says he is not overruled by his wife, but attributes
-that to my speeches: but I say, if he be not he will quickly recover,
-and live better of his annuity than I could do when I bare his name,
-with less allowance. Yet (notwithstanding his doubtful words of your
-welcome hither, in respect you have moved me for his good) I beseech you
-come ten times for every one past; assuring you that the most eloquent
-orator in England can do no more with me than you have, till I perceive
-a new course. Thus, with my hearty commendations, I bid you farewell.
-
-“Sheffield, September 6th, 1587.
-
- “Your loving friend,
- “G. SHREWSBURY.”
-
-
-The long letter from Sir Henry Lee gives a pathetic and vivid portrait
-of the old Government official who feels himself at last like a worn-out
-tool, unloved, unnecessary to the world—save when his position as a
-premier peer required him to raise levies for the defence and contest of
-Ireland, or county matters called him from retirement in his military
-and judicial capacity. To the very end he was a prompt official, and his
-family motto, “Prest d’Accomplir,” his watchword. In 1586 he was still
-among those who receive urgent orders to arm and prepare bodies of
-Derbyshire fighting men, and must give his attention to the most absurd
-details of uniform, such as the “convenient hose and doublet, and a
-cassock of motley ... either sea-green colour or russet,” noted among
-the regulations issued by his fellows of the Privy Council.
-
-These things are, however, only flashes in the pan. He is getting old.
-All the world was growing old, and all his contemporaries, in the phrase
-of the day, were “a little thing sickish.” The intrepid and laborious
-Walsingham is described as being “troubled with his old diseases: the
-tympany and carnosity,” and so is absent from Court. Letters still
-flowed in to the Earl, news of the Netherlands campaign, from the now
-depressed Lord Leicester, the Governor, news of the Queen’s movements,
-of Spain, of the legal strife of his contemporaries and friends. They
-are only sticks and straws flung into the deep and turgid current of his
-lonely, embittered life.
-
-It was in the midst of such disputes as these that the summons had come
-to him from Fotheringay.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
- FADING GLORIES
-
-
-His own household and many of his tenants were faithful to the Earl
-Marshal. Fortunately he had not at the moment much leisure for private
-broodings. The Babington conspiracy had churned up the old alarms about
-Mary, the Royal Commission for her trial was being appointed, and,
-though he was fortunately able to plead illness as an excuse for once
-more repairing to London to take his seat in this important meeting of
-the Council, he was obliged by letter to Burghley to assert his
-willingness to add his name to the decree of the Privy Council in regard
-to Mary’s sentence, at the same time enclosing his seal and giving the
-Lord Treasurer full authority to sign for him. Did he at the moment of
-writing recall that broidered motto which must have flashed at him many
-times from the dais which his prisoner contrived for herself in her
-imprisonment: “En ma fin est mon commencement”? If so, the pride and
-pathos of it must have struck home terribly. For he too was nearing his
-end. He too had naught but sorrow in his heir, and though Gilbert,
-Edward, and Henry Talbot still lived to carry on his name, it could not
-be in a very hopeful spirit that he thought upon the continuance of his
-line so long as he apprehended the renewal of family strife and could
-not forgive or love again his high-handed lady.
-
-Many things had happened to Mary since they parted, notably the failure
-of the last great conspiracy for her freedom. Of all these he was fully
-informed, and sums up her affairs in a single phrase in the ensuing
-letter:—
-
-
- “_To the Right Honourable my verie good Lord the Lord Burghley, Lord
- Thresorer of England._
-
- “My noble good Lord,
-
-“I have received your Lordship’s letters both of the 12th November and
-the 14th of the same, whereby I find myself greatly beholden unto your
-Lordship for your good remembrance of me, with the proceeding of the
-foul matters of the Scots Queen; sentence whereof, I understand by your
-Lordship, is given and confirmed, and for execution to be had
-accordingly. I perceive it now resteth in her Majesty’s hands; for my
-own part I pray that God may so inspire her heart to take that course as
-may be for her Majesty’s own safety; the which I trust her Majesty’s
-grave wisdom will wisely foresee; which in my consent cannot be without
-speedy execution.
-
-“And thus wishing to your good Lordship as to myself, do bid you right
-heartily farewell. Your Lordship’s assuredly,
-
- “SHREWSBURY.
-
-“Orton Longville, this 17th November, 1586.”
-
-
-In spite of illness, Shrewsbury could not escape the wretched
-responsibility of assisting at the tragedy of Fotheringay. There he was
-forced, on February 8th, 1587, to stand upon the high stage, seven feet
-square and five feet high, to receive Mary as she mounted it to her
-death. “At the two upper corners were two stools set,” runs the
-record,[82] “one for the Earl of Shrewsbury, another for the Earl of
-Kent; directly between the said stools was placed a block one foot high,
-covered with black, and before that stood a little cushioned stool for
-the Queen to sit on while her apparel was taken off.... Being come into
-the hall, she stayed and with a smiling countenance asked Shrewsbury why
-none of her own servants were suffered to be present. He answered that
-the Queen, his mistress, had so commanded. ‘Alas,’ quoth she, ‘far
-meaner persons than myself have not been denied so small a favour, and I
-hope the Queen’s Majesty will not deal so hardly with me.’ ‘Madam,’
-quoth Shrewsbury, ‘it is so appointed to avoid two inconveniences: the
-one that it is likely your people will shriek and make some fearful
-noise in the time of your execution, and so both trouble you and us, or
-else press with some disorder to get of your blood and keep it for a
-relic, and minister offence that way.’ ‘My Lord,’ she answered, ‘I pray
-you for my better quietness of mind let me have some of my servants
-about me, and I will give you my word that they shall not offend in any
-sort.’ Upon which promise two of her women and five of her men were sent
-for, who coming into the hall and seeing the place of execution prepared
-and their sovereign mistress expecting death, they began to cry out in
-most woeful and pitiful sort; wherewith she held up her hand, willing
-them for her sake to forbear and be silent, ‘for,’ quoth she, ‘I have
-passed my word to these lords that you shall be quiet and not offend
-them.’ And presently there appeared in them a wonderful show of
-subjection and loyal obedience as to their natural prince, whom even at
-the instant of death they honoured with all reverence and duty. For
-though their breasts were seen to rise and swell as if their wounded
-hearts would have burst in sunder, yet did they, to their double grief,
-forbear their outward plaints to accomplish her pleasure.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby_
-
- STATUE OF MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS AT HARDWICK HALL
-
- Page 310
-]
-
-“As soon as she was upon the stage there came to her a heretic called
-Doctor Fletcher, Dean of Peterborough, and told her how the Queen his
-sovereign, moved with an unspeakable care of her soul, had sent him to
-instruct and comfort her in the true words of God. At which she somewhat
-turned her face towards him, saying, ‘Mr. Doctor, I will have nothing to
-do with you nor your doctrine’; and forthwith kneeled down before the
-block and began her meditations in most godly manner. Then the doctor
-entered also into a form of new-fashioned prayers; but the better to
-prevent the hearing of him, she raised her voice, and prayed so loud, as
-he could not be understood. The Earl of Shrewsbury then spoke to her and
-told her that he would pray with her and for her. ‘My Lord,’ quoth she,
-‘if you will pray for me I thank you; but, in so doing, pray secretly by
-yourself, for we will not pray together.’ Her meditations ended, she
-arose up and kissed her two gentlewomen, and bowed her body towards her
-men, and charged them to remember her to her sweet son, to whom she sent
-her blessing, with promise to pray for him in heaven; and lastly to
-salute her friends, and so took her last farewell of her poor servants.
-
-“The executioners then began, after their rough and rude manner, to
-disrobe her, and while they were so doing, she looked upon the noblemen,
-and smilingly said, ‘Now truly, my Lords, I never had two such grooms
-waiting on me before!’ Then, being ready for the block, one of her women
-took forth a handkerchief of cambric—all wrought over with gold
-needlework—and tied it about her face; which done, Fletcher willed her
-to die in the true faith of Christ. Quoth she: ‘I believe firmly to be
-saved by the passion and blood of Jesus Christ, and therein also I
-believe according to the faith of the Ancient Catholic Church of Rome,
-and therefore I shed my blood.’”
-
-After this the Earl went home, evidently to Sheffield, with time enough
-to brood once more upon his sickness and his troubles. In 1587 he was
-certainly at Wingfield with his wife—at least for a brief space—for he
-wrote to inform Burghley of the fact in obedience to her Majesty’s
-request. But he was still thoroughly suspicious and distrustful of her
-attitude. On one occasion, as it seems by the following letter from
-Nicholas Kynnersley, my Lady had just left Wingfield when my Lord sent
-his man Gilbert Dickenson to enquire her movements. The letter which
-puts the magnificent pair in such a pitiful light is relieved by a
-gracious allusion to little Arabella, left behind at Wingfield,
-apparently in Kynnersley’s charge:—
-
-
-“The night after John was come with my letter Elizabeth told me that
-Gilbert Dickenson came to her in the [bakehouse] and asked if your Ho.
-were here; and she answered ‘No.’ And he asked when you went away, and
-she said ‘Yesterday.’ He asked when you would come again; she answered
-‘Shortly as she thought.’ And late at night there came a boy from
-Sheffield in a green coat, and talked with them in the stable, and said
-he must go very early in the morning to Sheffield again. What the
-meaning of these questions and the lackey coming so late and going so
-early in the morning, I know not, except it be to bring me Lo. words of
-your absence here, and so that he might come upon you sudden and find
-you away. So I leave it to your Ho. wisdom to consider of it as you
-think best; but I think good you were there. Mr. Knifton rode by to-day
-to Sheffield as I was told, and called not as I ... told which I marvel
-of. My La. Arbella at eight of the clock this night was merry, and eats
-her meat well; but she went not to the school these six days; therefore
-I would be glad of your La. coming, if there were no other matter but
-that. So I beseech the Almighty preserve your La. in health, and send
-you soon a good and comfortable end of all your great troubles and
-griefs.
-
-“Wingfield, this Tuesday, the 5th of November, at 8 of the clock at
-night, 1588.
-
- “Your Ho. most dutyful bound obedient servant,
- “NICHOLAS KINNSLAY.
-
-“To the right Ho. my singular good La. and Mistress the Countess of
-Salop give this with speed.”[83]
-
-
-While this “singular good lady” was still busy trying to induce the Earl
-to live with her “in house,” he had sundry official business to
-transact. In 1588 he was hard at work “routing recusants,” egging on the
-Sheffield Commissioners appointed to that duty, and certifying himself
-and the Queen of the military efficiency of the counties under his
-lieutenancy—for the Spanish fleet hovered ever round the English coast.
-More “seminary priests” did he rout, and used his energy in inducing
-folk to go to the Established Church, offering his old “lame body” for
-the Queen’s service, since “her quarrel should make him young again.”
-Within a few months of his death he is mentioned in State records as
-having successfully pounced upon a certain papistical Lady Foljambe and
-committed her to polite imprisonment in the house of her relative.
-
-This next letter from Gilbert and Mary Talbot to their mother shows
-entire devotion to her at this difficult period, and is happily free
-from the old tale-bearing and espionage of previous years:—
-
-
-“Our bounden duty most humbly remembered. In like humbleness we render
-your La. thanks for your letter; the last though not the least of your
-infinite goodnesses towards us and ours. We are safely come hither to
-Dunstable (we thank God) this Shrove Monday at night; and for that the
-foul way is past, we think best to return your La. letter again from
-hence.
-
-“Such news as on the Queen’s highways we have met with, your La. shall
-now understand. First that her Majesty (royally in person) was at the
-parliament house the first day of this parliament; where Serjeant Snagge
-was admitted for the Speaker of the lower house. My Lord of Derby is
-Lord Steward during this session. That yesterday one told a man of mine
-that as yet nothing of any moment hath been touched in the lower house,
-neither any expectation that any great matters will be handled, but it
-will shortly end. That a day or two before the parliament began, the
-Lord Chancellor and the Lord Treasurer, with one or two more of the
-privy council, and Mr. Attorney and Mr. Solicitor were with the Earl of
-Arundel in the Tower; since which time there hath been no such speech of
-his arraignment, as there was before. This is all the Queen’s highways
-hath afforded us of news. Yet further we hear that all your
-Ladyship’s ...[84] are very well. And thus in haste, most humbly
-beseeching your La. blessing to us and all ours who pray evermore to the
-most highest to grant unto your La. all contentment with long life, we
-humbly cease, till our next letter, which shall not be long.
-
-“Your La. most humble and obedient loving children,
-
- “GILB. TALBOTT. MARY TALBOTT.
-
-“We have desired your La. letter men to bring a letter to your La. from
-Beskewood, where Mrs. Markham’s earnest entreaty made us to leave her
-till the return thereof. I beseech the Almighty to send your La. my La.
-Arball and the rest of your La.’s a most happy long life.
-
-“To my Lady.”
-
-
-The date of this is 1589. Shrewsbury by this time has lapsed into
-retirement. He falls finally into old age. Elizabeth’s boasting promise
-that she would give him still greater proof of her trust he would be
-justified in receiving with a sardonic grunt. Of what use were her
-favours to him now? She, well into her fifties, could dance, sing, ride,
-pester her ladies, and flirt with her gentlemen. “The Queen,” writes a
-friend of the Talbots in 1589, “is so well as I assure you: six or seven
-gallyards in a morning, besides music and singing, is her ordinary
-exercise.” This is just a year after the death of her adored Leicester,
-immediately upon his return from his governorship of the Netherlands,
-which he had so hated. The days of his departure for that task were the
-days of Elizabeth’s disfavour. “My Lord,” he wrote pathetically to
-Shrewsbury in 1585, “no man feeleth comfort but they that have cause of
-griefe, and no men have so much neede of reliefe and comfort as those
-that go in these doubtful services. I pray you, my Lord, help us to be
-kept in comfort, for that we wyll hazard our lyfe for it.” Shrewsbury
-and his Countess could echo that cry from the depths of their hearts,
-for they too were of the company of those “that go in ... doubtful
-services.”
-
-Thus Leicester, the splendid lover, was dead—of a fever caught on his
-way home to Kenilworth. Elizabeth still danced, still had zest and
-appetite for masque and ceremonial. But Shrewsbury and Burghley, after
-they had written their stately condolences to the Queen, corresponded
-with one another about health matters. In 1589 the former sends a
-pathetic old man’s gift to his friend of ointment for his joints and “a
-small rug” to wrap about his legs “at times convenient,” while a flask
-of fine “oyle of roses” was in these days more necessary than ale to the
-once stalwart Earl Marshal of England.
-
-From time to time Burghley sends to his friend the State news, with
-suppressed allusions here and there to his illnesses and sorrows. Lady
-Burghley was dead, and though her husband was able to write in his old
-dignified fashion of affairs at Court, he avoids all its recreations.
-“The Queen is at Barn Elms, but this night I will attend her at
-Westminster, for I am no man meet for feastings,” runs a pathetic
-postscript from him.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, from the painting by Zucchero at
- Hardwick Hall_
- _By permission of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire_
-
- QUEEN ELIZABETH
-
- Page 316
-]
-
-To Elizabeth, Shrewsbury had played the part which she assigned to one
-of her lovers, the Duke of Anjou, to whom she wrote apropos of his
-persistency that she should never cease to love and esteem him as the
-dog which, being often chastised, returns to its master: “comme le chien
-qui estant souvent batu retourne a son maitre.” To her lovers she could
-say such things with impunity, to her servants she only implied them.
-Her beaten yet steadfast hound, Shrewsbury, true to his family’s emblem
-of the faithful “Talbot dog,” lay chiefly in these days at his small
-manor of Handsworth pouring out his soul in letters. There seem to be
-none available from his wife during his last years, though she was to
-the end truly anxious to be on happier terms with him, and made every
-possible effort to achieve this. Once more Elizabeth used her good
-offices with the honest intent to restore him to happiness. In what was
-practically the last private letter she ever wrote him, despatched in
-December, 1589, she addressed him as “her very good old man,” was
-anxious for news of his health, particularly at this inclement season,
-sympathised with his gout, and begged him to permit his wife sometimes
-to have access to him according to her long-cherished wish. He seems to
-have brooded heavily, as of yore—to a conscience so tender the brooding
-nature is often a sorry twin brother—and to have discussed the matter
-without any happy result. About this time he wrote to his intimate
-friend the Bishop of Lichfield on the subject. The Bishop’s views are
-set forth in his reply. His view of the married estate is a highly
-morose one. Yet he begs the Earl, for decency’s sake, to patch up the
-quarrel finally.
-
-
- _The Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry to the Earl of Shrewsbury._
-
-
- “Right honourable, my singular good Lord,
-
-“I am bold according to my promise, to put you in remembrance of some
-matters already passed between us in talk. It is an old saying, and as
-true as old, a thing well begun is half ended. It pleased your good
-Lordship, at my late being with you, to confer with me about divers
-points touching the good estate of this our shire, whereof yourself,
-next under her Majesty, is the chief governor; and I hope, as you then
-begun them in good time, so very shortly they will be brought to very
-good perfection.... Thus much for those common affairs we had in
-conference; now the chief and last matter that we talked of, and a
-matter indeed both in conscience chiefly to be regarded of you, and in
-duty still to be urged and called upon by me, was the good and godly
-reconciliation of you together, I mean my Lordship and my Lady your
-wife. I humbly thank your good Lordship you were content then to take my
-motion in good part, and to account it for a good piece of mine office
-and charge to travel in such cases, as indeed it is, and therefore, I
-trust you will be as willing now to see me write as you were then to
-hear me speak in that matter; and the more, because I speak and write as
-well of mere love and goodwill to yourself, as for any respect also of
-discharging my duty unto God; and yet, also, you must think chiefly and
-principally that I speak and write to discharge my duty to God, and must
-take all that I do to proceed, not as from a common friend and
-hanger-on, but as from a special ghostly father, stirred up of God
-purposely, as I hope, to do good unto you both by my ghostly advice. My
-honourable good Lord, I cannot see but that it must needs rest as a
-great clog to your conscience, if you consider the matter as it is, and
-will weigh the case according to the rule of God’s word: I say I cannot
-see but that it must needs rest and remain a great clog and burthen to
-your conscience to live asunder from the Countess your wife, without her
-own good liking and consent thereto; for, as I have told you heretofore,
-it is the plain doctrine of Saint Paul that the one should not defraud
-the other of due benevolence nor of mutual comfort and company, but with
-the agreement of both parties, and that also but for a time, and only to
-give yourselves to fasting and prayer. This is the doctrine of Saint
-Paul, and this doctrine Christ Himself confirmed in the Gospel when He
-forbiddeth all men to put away their wives unless for adultery, a thing
-never suspected in my Lady your wife. I could bring forth many
-authorities and examples both of the Holy Scriptures and other, profane
-writers, to prove that such kind of separations have always been holden
-unlawful and ungodly, not only among the people of God, but also among
-the heathen themselves that never knew God; and I could likewise show
-what fearful judgments of God have followed such unlawful separations,
-and what great plagues have fallen upon not only the offenders
-themselves, but also upon their houses and children, and all their
-posterity after them; but I shall not need to use any such discourse to
-your Lordship, because so wise, so grave, so well disposed as indeed you
-are of yourself if other evil counsellors did not draw you to the
-contrary; who also shall not want their part in the play, for, as the
-proverb saith, so experience proveth the same to be true, _consilium
-malum consultori pessimum_, evil counsel falleth out worst to the
-counsel giver.
-
-“But some will say in your Lordship’s behalf that the Countess is a
-sharp and bitter shrew, and therefore like enough to shorten your life
-if she should keep you company. Indeed, my good Lord, I have heard some
-say so, but if shrewdness or sharpness may be a just cause of separation
-between a man and wife, I think few men in England would keep their
-wives long; for it is a common jest, yet true in some sense, that there
-is but one shrew in all the world and every man hath her; and so every
-man might be rid of his wife that would be rid of a shrew. My honourable
-good Lord, I doubt not but your great wisdom and experience hath taught
-you to bear some time with the woman as with the weaker vessel; and yet,
-for the speeches I have had with her Ladyship in that behalf, I durst
-pawn all my credit unto your Lordship (and, if need be, also bind myself
-in any great bond), she will so bridle herself that way, beyond the
-course of other women, that she will rather bear with your Lordship,
-than look to be borne withal; and yet to be borne withal sometimes is
-not amiss for the best and wisest and patientest of us all. But
-peradventure some of your friends will object greater matter against
-her; as that she hath sought to overthrow your whole house; but those
-that say so I think are not your Lordship’s friends, but rather her
-Ladyship’s enemies, and their speech carrieth no resemblance of truth;
-for how can it be likely that she should seek or wish the overthrow of
-you or your house, when not only, being your wife, your prosperity must
-needs profit her very much, but also, having joined her house with your
-house in marriage, your long life and honourable state must needs glad
-her heart to the uttermost; if not for your own sake, yet for the issue
-of both your bodies, whom she loveth, I dare say, as her own life, and
-would not see by her goodwill to fall into any decay, either of honour
-or any other good state of life or livings; although, also, I dare say
-she wisheth all good unto you for your own sake, as well as theirs, or
-else she would not be so desirous of your life and company as she is.
-And therefore, I beseech your Lordship remove all such conceits far from
-you as are beaten into your head by evil counsellors, and rather think
-this unlawful separation to be a stain to your house, and a danger to
-your life; for that God, indeed, is not well pleased with it, Who will
-visit with death or sickness all that live not after His laws, as of
-late yourself had some little touch or taste given you of it by those or
-the nearest friends of those whom you most trusted about you. For my own
-part, I wish your Lordship all good, even from my heart; both long life
-and honourable state, with all increase of honour, and joy and comfort
-in the Lord to your own heart’s desire; but yet both I and you, and all
-of us that are God’s children, must think that such visitations are sent
-us of God to call us home, and if we despise them when they are sent, He
-will lay greater upon us. Thus I am bold, my good Lord, both in the fear
-of God and in goodwill towards yourself, to discharge the duty of your
-well-willing ghostly father, and if your Lordship accept it well, as I
-hope you will, I beseech you let me understand it by a line or two, that
-I may give God thanks for it; if not, I have done my part; the success I
-leave to God; and rest yours, notwithstanding, in what I may, and so I
-humbly take my leave of your good Lordship.
-
-“From Eccleshall, the 12th of October, 1590.
-
- “Your Lordship’s in all duty to command,
- “W. COVEN. AND LICH.”
-
-
-It is not necessary to lay stress on the sheer fatuity and unwisdom of
-three-fourths of such a letter. But the gross injustice of it has never
-been fully appreciated by historians. In the first place, Bess of
-Hardwick was not a mere shrew—as has been amply set forth. She was a
-woman of great capabilities, and superabundant driving power which,
-insufficiently controlled, ended in a blindness to any point of view but
-her own, and so caused her to utter under provocation, stress, and
-disappointment hard and foolish things which the Earl could not forget.
-The estrangement had certainly gone too far for peace. The time for such
-things as a renewal of trust and love between the two was past. Within a
-month or two—in the January of 1591—the Earl died. Gossip—wise after the
-event—declared that with his last breath he groaned over the
-possibilities of disaster which would descend upon his family through
-his wife’s schemes for Arabella.
-
-In the previous year the great Walsingham, worn out by stress of affairs
-and labour, succumbed also—to his “tympany and carnosity.”
-
-And, since the world and his wife must be amused, and the Queen needed
-distraction from heavy cares of State, she went forth to be entertained
-at a public fête a day after the death of her much-enduring “good old
-man.”
-
-To the last he could not forget the great slander. Even his tomb
-witnesses, in his own words, to his virtue. He must have brooded
-carefully over this epitaph and the memorial which bears it in Sheffield
-Church. All allusion to his second wife is omitted, and in regard to the
-scandal he urges the fact of his official presence at the execution of
-Mary as the surest proof of the innocence of his relations with her. All
-he asked of his posterity was that upon his death the date should be
-added to the tomb. This they omitted to do.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI
- HEIR AND DOWAGER
-
-
-A family circle made up of ingredients so pugnacious could scarcely be
-expected to act unanimously when it came to a question of the division
-of property after the Earl’s death. Instantly the fragments in the
-Talbot kaleidoscope rearranged themselves. It was my Lady who now fought
-practically single-handed, and the new Earl, Gilbert, and her own child
-Mary were against her. They fought, as usual, in letters, and confided
-largely in their friends. Gilbert and Mary in one of their previous
-letters had called upon the Almighty “speedily to grant your Ladyship
-all contentment with long life.” When this new family feud began they
-must have regretted that wish. Had they foreseen that they had to
-encounter her strong will and keen business instinct for the space of
-another seventeen years they might possibly have compromised matters
-more quickly. The fact is Gilbert and Mary were innately pugnacious. It
-is written in their faces as they look down from the walls of the great
-picture-gallery of Hardwick. Neither face is unrefined, both are shrewd,
-and Mary’s, at any rate, has, added to a touch of scorn, a certain
-humorous sparkle. Neither, however, possesses the dignity of the
-parents. Mary has not her mother’s good features and innately
-aristocratic air. Gilbert lacks the breadth and steadiness expressed by
-the Earl.
-
-Gilbert had taken his place now as seventh Earl, received the usual
-pompous letters of condolence from Lord Burghley and others, and was
-duly admitted to the order of the Garter. His notions of earldom
-expressed themselves chiefly in a gorgeous style of living which (in
-Hunter’s opinion) “alone earned for him the title of the great and
-glorious Earl of Shrewsbury,” irrespective of either intellectual or
-official distinction. Naturally his wife with her “pomp and court-like
-ways” was in full accord with him, and the renewal of the
-“All-for-Money” family fray was inevitable. In addition to his strife
-with the old Countess, he fought with Henry Talbot his younger brother,
-with Lady Talbot the widow of his elder brother Francis, with his own
-mother’s people the Manners family, with a prominent neighbour Sir
-Richard Wortley of Wortley, and, as aforesaid, with the Stanhopes of
-Nottinghamshire, to whom his wife despatched the violent message of
-hatred quoted in a previous chapter. It stands to reason also that he
-could not live at peace with his tenantry. As an ordinary man he does
-not seem to have been mentally vigorous enough, as a man of the world
-not sufficiently master of his hates and prejudices to come to an
-understanding with them. It was, after all, the most difficult task of
-his Lordship, and one for which his Court and town experiences had not
-fitted him in the least. Most pitiful of all was his deadly feud with
-his brother Edward. As Gilbert’s letters show, this arose entirely out
-of the dissensions over property, though Edward and Henry, appointed as
-executors of their father’s will, were wise enough to decline the task
-and allow it to devolve on to the experienced shoulders of their
-splendid stepmother.
-
-This feud between Edward and Gilbert flourished wickedly. There is no
-need to bore the reader with the insertion of the pages of truculent
-correspondence which ensued. Gilbert eventually challenged the other to
-a duel, and Edward firmly declined to fight his own flesh and blood.
-From the ancient chivalric standpoint this may look like a lack of
-virility. But to fight would have been the height of unwisdom for two
-young, well-born men, fathers of families, and in circumstances that
-would have been wholly preposterous except for their absurd expenditure.
-It is this very refusal of Edward Talbot which causes one to discount
-the current story—set forth with the support of arguments,
-probabilities, and reasons in the Harleian MSS.—to the intent that
-Edward conspired, in Medici fashion, with Gilbert’s own physician, Dr.
-Wood, against Gilbert’s life, the medium chosen for the murder being a
-subtly poisoned pair of perfumed gloves.
-
-Thus it was as well for the whole family that my Lady came to the fore
-again and wrestled with Gilbert, for he had flattery enough from some of
-his friends to feed his vanity in his new position. The garrulous
-Richard Topcliffe covered several pages in a letter expressing gladness
-that it had pleased God to set the heir in the seat of his noble
-ancestors. “At such an alteration of a house as now hath chanced by your
-father’s death, there is ever great expecting towards the rising of the
-sun.” It is an absurd, toadying letter, of which the only sincere part
-is the writer’s definition of it at the close as “my tedious dream.” Of
-such letters Gilbert received his share, like his father, and was
-flooded with all sorts of other correspondence—official, semi-official,
-and private. He assumes his father’s office in the lieutenancy of three
-counties, issues his orders for armament. He meant excellently well no
-doubt, but was not in the worldly sense a success. He could never, like
-his father, have borne the Queen’s heavy burdens from sheer devotion to
-a patriotic ideal and from horror of incurring her disfavour. His
-disputes with his tenantry so overpowered him that he was forced to
-refer the matter to the Queen. Her opinion was against him and on the
-side of the tenants. Meanwhile the Stanhope quarrel became a regular
-county affair, and, as Hunter puts it, “was pursued by both parties with
-such precipitation and violence that it was rendered impossible for the
-neighbouring gentry to preserve neutrality.” It is not surprising that
-five years after his father’s death he was thoroughly out of favour. Yet
-Elizabeth could be very kind to his children. One of her gentleman
-ushers, his friend, Richard Brakenbury, writing from Court, sent him in
-a letter to Rufford a pretty picture of the way she fondled his little
-girl:—
-
-
-“If I should write how much her Majesty this day did make of the little
-lady your daughter, with often kissing (which her Majesty seldom useth
-to any) and then amending her dressing with pins, and still carrying her
-with her Majesty in her own barge, and so into the Privy Council
-lodgings, and so homeward from the running, you would scarce believe me.
-Her Majesty said (as true it is) that she is very like my Lady her
-grandmother. She behaved herself with such modesty as I pray God she may
-possess at twenty years old.”
-
-
-Indirectly the magnificent Dowager could only be gratified by such
-favours. Her main energies now were given to “pushing” Arabella in the
-great world. Incidentally also it was her affair to go on building,
-building, that she might live and flourish. Constructive imagination of
-a certain kind she undoubtedly had. She loved grandeur, comfort, and
-domestic beauty, and could conceive and plan their achievement. She was
-led to her building by her sense of importance, coupled with the
-praiseworthy desire to establish her offspring in a fine house, and so
-increase their social advantages. That was the beginning, and her
-practical imagination aided her. But rumour says that it is not by the
-golden light of imagination that she was helped to expand and continue
-her enterprises, but by the glare of morbid superstition. Some
-soothsayer she met—history does not say at what period of her life—told
-her that so long as she went on building she would never die. All
-hard-headed as she was she has not escaped the imputation of credence in
-fortune-telling, for she went on building to the end. Moreover, there is
-the more excuse for her superstition, since, as we know, crystal-gazers
-and conjurers with their charmed plates of gold, their phials and
-symbols, came and went in the country and about the English and foreign
-courts. It is more than possible that such persons, though included in
-Shrewsbury’s roll of “practicers” and suspects, occasionally found their
-way into my Lady’s parlour in Chatsworth or Hardwick. There is behind
-this old soothsayer’s story a deeper meaning. She built that she might
-exist, but in her building she truly lived, for in her strongly
-constructive instinct all her higher faculties, in their finest, their
-Aristotelian sense, found their outlet, while her heart realised a
-certain happiness.
-
-By this time she was just seventy, and still in full vigour, though
-tolerably scarred and embittered in heart and soul. Through Arabella and
-her second son William, both of whom she really seems to have adored,
-she had still a great hold upon life. It was her main business now to
-fight old age, face her fourth widowhood resolutely, live in comfort,
-and provide for those she loved or who were in any sense dependent on
-her.
-
-Arabella cannot, of course, have had a particularly joyous or smooth
-childhood under the sway of that keen, tempestuous temperament, but at
-any rate she imbibed and inherited an enormous amount of vitality. She
-was too young to be overcast by the pitiful, short-lived love story of
-her parents, and her grandmother brought her up jealously and in an
-atmosphere of state which helped to single her out from the other
-grandchildren of the family and from the family circle. A letter from
-the Countess, written when Arabella was but a baby, may be included
-here:—
-
-
- “_The Countess of Shrewsbury to Lord Burghley, respecting the
- assignment of an Income to the Lady Arabella._ A.D. 1582.[85]
-
-“After my very hearty commendations to your good Lo. where it pleased
-the Queen’s Majesty my most gracious Sovereign, upon my humble suit to
-grant unto my late daughter Lennox four hundred pounds, and to that her
-dear and only daughter Arbella two hundred pounds yearly for their
-better maintenance, assigned out of part of the land of her inheritance:
-whereof the four hundred pounds is now at her Majesty’s disposition by
-the death of my daughter Lennox, whom it pleased God (I doubt not in
-mercy for her good, but to my no small grief, in her best time) to take
-out of this world, whom I cannot yet remember but with a sorrowful
-troubled mind. I am now, my good L., to be an humble suitor to the
-Queen’s Majesty that it may please her to confirm that grant of the
-whole six hundred pounds yearly for the education of my dearest jewel
-Arbella, wherein I assuredly trust to her Majesty’s most gracious
-goodness, who never denied me any suit, but by her most bountiful and
-gracious favours every way hath so much bound me as I can never think
-myself able to discharge my duty in all faithful service to her Majesty.
-I wish not to leave after I shall willingly fail in any part thereof to
-the best of my power. And as I know your L. hath special care for the
-ordering of her Majesty’s revenues and of her estate every way, so trust
-I you will consider of the poor infant’s case, who under her Majesty is
-to appeal only unto your Lo. for succour in all her distresses; who, I
-trust, cannot dislike of this my suit on her behalf, considering the
-charges incident to her bringing up. For although she were ever where
-her mother was during her life, yet can I not now like she should be
-here nor in any place else where I may not sometimes see her and daily
-hear of her, and therefore charged with keeping house where she must be
-with such as is fit for her standing, of whom I have special care, not
-only such as a natural mother hath of her best beloved child, but much
-more greater in respect how she is in blood to her Majesty: albeit one
-of the poorest as depending wholly on her Majesty’s gracious bounty and
-goodness, and being now upon seven years, and very apt to learn, and
-able to conceive what shall be taught her. The charge will so increase
-as I doubt not her Majesty will well conceive the six hundred pounds
-yearly to be little enough, which as your Lo. knoweth is but so much in
-money, for that the lands be in lease, and no further commodity to be
-looked for during these few years of the child’s minority. All which I
-trust your L. will consider and say to her Majesty what you think
-thereof; and so most heartily wish your L. well to do.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _From a photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, after the painting at
- Hardwick Hall
- By permission of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire_
-
- ARABELLA STUART
-
- Page 330
-]
-
-“Sheffield this 6th day of May.
-
- “Your L. most assured loving friend,
- “E. SHREWSBURY.
-
-“To the right honourable and my very good Lord the Lord Burghley, L.
-Treasurer of England.”
-
-
-To this Arabella, aged seven, adds her pretty French postscript:—
-
-
-“Je prieray Dieu Monsr. vous donner en parfaicte en entiere santé, tout
-heureux et bon succes, et seray tousjours preste a vous faire tout
-honneur et service.
-
- “ARBELLA STEWARD.”
-
-
-The new Hardwick, the present hall, was not actually finished till seven
-years after the Earl’s death, and there and at the older house the
-Dowager and the semi-royal grandchild spent many years together. The
-former was, as has been instanced, busy betimes with making matches for
-the child. After the disappointment about Lord Leicester’s little son,
-the old ambitious spirit flares up gloriously in the proposal that
-Arabella, who was just ten years old, should marry James of Scotland.
-She was suggested by Walsingham, presumably at the Queen’s desire, as an
-alternative bride to a Danish princess. James was not inclined to make
-up his mind at the moment, and in the following year another bridegroom
-was suggested—Rainutio, son of the Duke of Parma. Since the Duke was
-suspected of laying claim to the English throne, these negotiations were
-carried on secretly, not so secretly, however, that they escaped the
-knowledge of Burghley. State papers show that he was well aware that a
-servant of Sir Edward Stafford was employed “from beyond the sea, to
-practise with” Arabella about this marriage. “He was sent once before
-for her picture, and has been thrice to England this year,” is the
-conclusion of the secret information sent to Court. It is likely that
-the picture named might be a copy of one of the two hanging now in the
-great gallery at Hardwick Hall. Both are deeply interesting, and one, in
-which she is shown as a little, dignified, grandly dressed child of two
-holding a gay stiff doll, is very moving. The other, of which the
-original seems to be at Welbeck, shows her “in her hair,” in the old
-phrase. Part of her hair is drawn over a puff above her forehead and
-adorned with a drop jewel, and the rest hangs down fine and straight
-like a soft veil behind her shoulders. Her dress is white, with sleeves
-either of ermine or white velvet with black spots; her gold fan has a
-dull red cord, and a girdle of jewels is about her waist. On either side
-of her hangs a portrait of James VI as a little boy. In one he carries a
-hawk—symbol of the passion for sport which seems to have been, save for
-his obstinacy, his only strong point; in the other he is in correct
-fashionable dress and plumed cap, and wears a tiny sword—symbol of the
-courage he never possessed, and forerunner of the full-grown weapon
-which he could carry with swagger, but dared not use on his mother’s
-behalf. Even as his little presence hedges Arabella in this gallery on
-both sides, so in life his position dominated hers most cruelly in years
-to come.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, from the picture at Hardwick
- Hall
- By permission of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire_
-
- ARABELLA STUART
-
- Page 332
-]
-
-The proposed marriage alluded to, which set abroad all manner of fears
-of conspiracy in connection with Arabella in 1592, caused Lord Burghley
-to write warnings to the Countess. All the old caution and authority
-show in her reply:—
-
-
- _The Countess of Shrewsbury to Lord Burghley: representing her care of
- the Lady Arabella._[86]
-
-
-“My honourable good Lord,—I received your Lordship’s letter on Wednesday
-towards night, being the 20th of this September, by a servant of Mr.
-John Talbott, of Ireland. My good Lord, I was at the first much troubled
-to think that so wicked and mischievous practices should be devised to
-entrap my poor Arbell and me, but I put my trust in the Almighty, and
-will use such diligent care as I doubt not but to prevent whatsoever
-shall be attempted by any wicked persons against the poor child. I am
-most bound to her Majesty that it pleased her to appoint your Lordship
-to give me knowledge of this wicked practice, and I humbly thank your
-Lordship for advertising it: if any such like hereinafter be discovered
-I pray your Lordship I may be forewarned. I will not have any unknown or
-suspected person to come to my house. Upon the least suspicion that may
-happen here, anyway, I shall give advertisement to your Lordship. I have
-little resort to me: my house is furnished with sufficient company:
-Arbell walks not late, at such time as she shall take the air, it shall
-be near the house, and well attended on: she goeth not to anybody’s
-house at all: I see her almost every hour in the day: she lieth in my
-bedchamber. If I can be more precise than I have been I will be. I am
-bound in nature to be careful for Arbell: I find her loving and dutiful
-to me, yet her own good and safety is not dearer to me, nor more by me
-regarded than to accomplish her Majesty’s pleasure, and that which I
-think may be for her service. I would rather wish many deaths than to
-see this or any such like wicked attempt to prevail.
-
-“About a year since, there was one Harrison, a seminary, that lay at his
-brother’s house about a mile from Hardwick, whom I thought then to have
-caused to be apprehended, and to have sent him up; but found he had
-licence for a time. Notwithstanding, the seminary, soon after, went from
-his brother’s, finding how much I was discontented with his lying so
-near me. Since my coming now into the country, I had some intelligence
-that the same seminary was come again to his brother’s house: my son
-William Cavendish went thither of a sudden to make search for him, but
-could not find him. I write this much to your Lordship that if any such
-traitorous and naughty persons (through her Majesty’s clemency) be
-suffered to go abroad, that they may not harbour near my houses
-Wingfield, Hardwick, or Chatsworth in Derbyshire: they are the most
-likely instruments to put a bad matter in execution.
-
-“One Morley, who hath attended on Arbell, and read to her for the space
-of three years and a half, showed to be much discontented since my
-return into the country, in saying he had lived in hope to have some
-annuity granted him by Arbell out of her lands during his life, or some
-lease of grounds to the value of forty pounds a year, alleging that he
-was so much damaged by leaving the University, and now saw that if she
-were willing, yet not of ability, to make him any such assurance. I
-understanding by divers that Morley was so much discontented, and withal
-of late having some cause to be doubtful of his forwardness in religion
-(though I cannot charge him with papistry), took occasion to part with
-him. After he was gone from my house, and all his stuff carried from
-hence, the next day he returned again, very importunate to serve without
-standing upon any recompense, which made me more suspicious, and the
-more willing to part with him. I have no other in my house who will
-supply Morley’s place very well for the time. I will have those that
-shall be sufficient in learning, honest, and well disposed so near as I
-can.
-
-“I am forced to use the hand of my son William Cavendish, not being able
-to write so much myself for fear of bringing great pain to my head. He
-only is privy to your Lordship’s letter, and neither Arbell nor any
-other living, nor shall be.
-
-“I beseech your Lordship I may be directed from you as occasion shall
-fall out. To the uttermost of my understanding, I have and will be
-careful. I beseech the Almighty to send your Lordship a long and happy
-life, and so I will commit your Lordship to His protection. From my
-house at Hardwick the 21st of September, 1592.
-
- “Your Lordship’s as I am bound,
- “E. SHREWSBURY.”
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby_
-
- THE PICTURE GALLERY FROM THE NORTH, HARDWICK HALL
-
- Page 336
-]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII
- ARABELLA DANCES INTO COURT
-
-
-The death of Mary Queen of Scots was the signal for the Countess to
-insure that Arabella should be as near the Court as possible. She was
-kept hard at her lessons, but, though the various members of the family
-were at variance over property, the Dowager was far too wise to spoil
-the girl’s prospects by forbidding her intercourse with her “Court-like”
-aunt, Gilbert’s Mary. As regards the young Shrewsbury pair she was, of
-course, at once a possible stumbling-block and a possible stepping-stone
-to their advantage. Her parentage gave her social precedence, and though
-her present worldly status was not very great, she might at any time, by
-an important marriage, assume a position far above them and be regarded
-as a source of Court favours. In fact, both sides of the complicated
-family co-operated to help her on in the world.
-
-Already at the age of thirteen she was introduced to the Court. Her
-young uncle, Sir Charles Cavendish, writes of it with great
-appreciation: “My Lady Arbell, has been once to Court. Her Majesty spoke
-twice to her ... she dined in the presence, but my Lord Treasurer had
-her to supper; and at dinner, I dining with her, and sitting over
-against him, he asked me whether I came with my niece. I said I came
-with her: then he spake openly, and directed his speech to Sir Walter
-Rawley, greatly in her recommendation, as that she had the French, the
-Italian, played of instruments, dances, and writ very fair; wished she
-were fifteen years old, and with that rounded Mr. Rawley in the ear, who
-answered it would be a happy thing.... My Lady Arbelle and the rest are
-very well, and it is wonderful how she profiteth in her book, and
-believe she will dance with exceeding good grace, and can behave herself
-with great proportion to everyone in their degree.”[87]
-
-Old Lady Shrewsbury worked hard for Arabella and played for Elizabeth’s
-favour now more than ever, with a keen hope of seeing the girl named as
-her Majesty’s successor. James of Scotland was, of course, playing a
-similar game, and while he pressed the Queen in regard to the
-succession, up to the point of making her angry, he kept on good terms
-with Arabella, to whom he wrote now and then an affectionate, cousinly
-letter. His tactics were practical, for he now proposed as her
-bridegroom Esmé Stuart, a piece of diplomacy on which, under the
-magnificent guise of her restoration to her own title of Lennox, he must
-have prided himself enormously. This offer was declined; a shortsighted
-refusal, as it proved both in the future and in the present, for matters
-in regard to Elizabeth’s favour did not prosper. Old age and bitterness
-made her resentful and increased her hydra-headed suspicion. It was
-always so easy for any ill-minded person to raise a papistical scare and
-accuse Arabella—whose aunt, the young Countess, was notoriously in
-favour of the proscribed priesthood—as being the heart and soul of every
-such plot.
-
-Yet the Dowager Countess still laboured on. We find Arabella sending the
-Queen a “rare New Year gift,” to which her Majesty’s return was
-acknowledged by a confidential correspondent as a very poor one. The
-Queen, however, in discussion with the writer announced her intention to
-be kind and promised to be “very careful of Arabella.” Again this was a
-case of “Words, words!”
-
-It was in 1592 that Arabella refused Esmé Stuart. In 1596 no less a
-person than the French King discussed her as a possible bride for the
-Dauphin. Meanwhile she, who was in no sense an _intrigante_, and seems
-to have inherited all the simplicity of her mother, with the energy and
-the _joie de vivre_ of her grandmother, was in no way concerned in the
-wretched schemes attributed to her by wild gossip. She was more desirous
-of love and companionship than of place and glory, and of a decent
-competence than the splendour of courts. In her twenty-eighth year
-(1603) she attempted to make her own choice. It was a curious one as
-regards discrepancy in age. She sought to betroth herself to a boy
-fifteen years old, young William Seymour. This was no less than the
-grandson of that same unhappy Earl Hertford who had wedded poor Lady
-Catherine Grey. The whole affair would be puzzling if it were not for
-the fact that Arabella’s thoughts were turned in this direction by the
-fact that he, like herself, was partly of royal blood. At the same time,
-he was not hampered by the possession of a crown, and with all the
-attendant difficulties and dangers of a royal marriage. The matter did
-not go very far, for the bare suggestion of such a thing aroused the
-most absurd excitement in the Queen’s mind. Arabella was at once
-arrested.
-
-Elizabeth, it will be remembered, was already dying by inches in the
-cold spring of 1603. The accusation that Arabella’s action killed her
-has no ground whatsoever; but it was an unfortunate moment to incur
-royal displeasure. Naturally when the question of succession came up
-finally and Elizabeth was asked if she could contemplate young William
-Seymour’s father, Lord Beauchamp, as her heir, the old irritation
-against the Hertford marriage flared up in that memorable dying retort
-of hers: “I will have no rascal’s son in my place.”
-
-Bitterly indeed must Bess Shrewsbury have raved at Hardwick against the
-unjust fate which caused the fortunes of her “juwell” to decline so
-miserably at this critical moment. The succession of James was thereby
-assured, and when it became fact was a bitter pill for Talbot and
-Cavendish to swallow. By this time the good Burghley was dead, and his
-son, Sir Robert Cecil, undertook to mediate for Arabella with James. She
-was for the moment removed to polite imprisonment in the country, whence
-she wrote breezy and innocent letters to her family, notably to her
-step-uncle, Edward Talbot, in which she disclaims her guilt in a
-somewhat veiled and fantastic manner. “Noble gentleman,” runs one
-sentence, “I am as unjustly accused of contriving a comedy as you in my
-conscience a tragedy.”
-
-While she awaited the King’s pleasure James was making his first royal
-progress, and Gilbert Shrewsbury had the honour of entertaining him
-magnificently at Worksop Manor, which must have made the Dowager
-fearfully jealous. Cecil set to work as soon as possible on his
-protégée’s behalf, and, seeing that she presented no problem of
-political danger, eventually procured her liberty—that is, with certain
-reservations. He undertook that she should reside with the Marchioness
-of Northampton at Sheen.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _From an engraving by Walker, after a drawing by Malton_
-
- WELBECK ABBEY
-
- Page 340
-]
-
-All this while the Countess Dowager kept well in the background.
-Arabella, she knew, was of an age to manage her own affairs, and could
-deal shrewdly and promptly with Cecil in regard to her maintenance by
-the King in her right as one of royal blood. She managed this difficult
-situation so well that she was presently taken into the bosom of the
-Court. This happy event was gracefully achieved thus. The arrival in
-England of the Queen-Consort some months after her husband was the cause
-for further display on the part of both Cavendishes and Talbots. Bess
-Shrewsbury planned a great reception for Anne of Denmark at Chatsworth,
-and tendered the invitation through Arabella. It was declined, and it
-has been suggested that the royal motive for this was the unhappy
-association of the great hostess with the mother of James. Though the
-mere fact of the Countess’s former position of assistant-gaoler may not
-have sufficed, memories of strife and “scandilation” would certainly
-stick in the memory of those who surrounded James, and their advice
-could scarcely favour the invitation. Arabella was, however, authorised
-to go to Welbeck to assist her uncle, Sir Charles Cavendish, to receive
-Anne. At the same time she was to be introduced to the young Princess,
-to whom she was appointed State governess. Earl Gilbert’s house was once
-more honoured, and his wife and he incited to impoverish themselves anew
-for their second magnificent royal entertainment in the year of the
-accession.
-
-At Welbeck Sir Charles Cavendish vied with his half-brother and
-contrived an elaborate sylvan pageant in which Arabella figured as
-Diana. Poor Diana! At twenty-seven she could personate with zest the
-chaste, invincible, tireless goddess. Could she have foreseen that rôle
-assigned to her for life by the criminal selfishness of James, she would
-have forsworn all courts in that hour, and preferred the groves in which
-she and William Seymour would willingly have walked in years to come,
-hand in hand, poor and happy.
-
-So—as in Elizabeth’s day—the girl, spirited, cultured, good, and
-warm-hearted, danced herself into the heart of Queen Anne, and above all
-into that of the young Elizabeth, whom she charmed instantly. Away went
-Arabella now to Court in the new Queen’s train, and thenceforward
-appeared constantly in the company of her clever, tart, intriguing
-Shrewsbury aunt. Her uncle Gilbert kept a steady eye on her. For she was
-lively, brilliant; not beautiful, but of great magnetic attraction.
-Withal, she was quick of tongue, and he feared lest she should slip into
-indiscretion of speech and give advantage to back-biters at Court.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby_
-
- THE DINING-ROOM, HARDWICK HALL
-
- Page 342
-]
-
-She escaped at least one danger this autumn—infection from the plague.
-In spite of all her duties and dangers she was in close touch with her
-relatives. Naturally there were difficult moments. Now she displeases
-her tremendous grandmother, and now her pugnacious aunt. Again and again
-she tries to act as go-between, and at odd times secures favours for one
-or the other—a barony for William Cavendish, a bride for his son. At
-intervals she visited her grandmother, but generally with a view to
-making peace between Gilbert and the hostess of Hardwick. To him she
-wrote in a very touching manner after a visit to the old lady: “I found
-so good hope of my grandmother’s good inclination to a good and
-reasonable reconciliation betwixt herself and her divided family that I
-could not forbear to impart to your Lordship with all speed. Therefore I
-beseech you, put on such a Christian and honourable mind as becometh you
-to bear to a lady so near to you and yours as my grandmother is. And
-think you cannot devise to do me greater honour and contentment than to
-let me be the only mediator, moderator, and peacemaker betwixt you and
-her. You know I have cause only to be partial on your side, so many
-kindnesses and favours I have received from you, and so many
-unkindnesses and disgraces have I received from the other party. Yet
-will I not be restrained from chiding you (as great a lord as you are)
-if I find you either not willing to be asken to this good notion or to
-proceed in it as I shall think reasonably.... If I be not sufficient for
-this treaty never think me such as can add strength and honour to your
-family.”
-
-Such matters were hard for both sides, and one’s sympathy inclines to
-the ageing, fighting, building Dowager. “Your unkindness sticks sore in
-her teeth,” wrote one of Gilbert’s informants. To Gilbert, however, she
-managed to maintain a proud front, and busied herself about a fresh
-building enterprise.
-
-This project was partly the outcome of her extraordinary pugnacity. Her
-neighbour, Sir Francis Leake, had designed and was building in the
-county a fine house, Sutton, which rivalled Hardwick in magnificence.
-Invidious comparisons were evidently drawn, and she declared scornfully
-that she would build as good a house “for owls” as he for men. The
-mansion she built was therefore called Owlcotes, and was not far from
-Hardwick.
-
-The first year of Arabella’s royal post was certainly one fraught with
-peril, for it closed with the trial of Sir Walter Raleigh, accused, as
-all will remember, of plotting to dethrone James in favour of Arabella.
-Even Henry Cavendish was suspected of complicity. It is not necessary
-here to go into the details which proved Arabella’s innocence. It was
-quickly proved and her Court life went on as before, gaily, with
-masques, drawing-rooms, ballets, and even the nursery games in which it
-pleased the ladies of the Danish Anne to indulge.
-
-At the close of her second year at Court (1605) another proposal, this
-time from the King of Poland, reached Arabella and was refused. She does
-not yet seem to have tired of the frivolous and exhausting life, though
-her letters—whimsical, affectionate, quaintly sententious, often highly
-graphic—are shortened at times, and, though loyal, she complains roundly
-of “this everlasting hunting.” For in their passion for sport King and
-Queen dragged their courtiers hither and thither, and the latter were
-often miserably housed and served during these expeditions.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _From a photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, after the painting at
- Hardwick Hall
- By permission of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire_
-
- JAMES THE FIFTH OF SCOTLAND
-
- Page 344
-]
-
-The Dowager at Hardwick was well informed of Court affairs, for she paid
-a handsome retaining fee to no less a person than the Dean of the Chapel
-Royal in order that he should keep her well posted. In this year (1605)
-she was taken seriously ill and summoned Arabella. The girl was
-evidently afraid of her, for she took precautions to insure welcome in
-the shape of a letter from the King himself, desiring the Countess to
-receive her granddaughter with kindness and bounty. This incensed the
-old lady a good deal. Though she was now more or less like a sleeping
-dragon guarding her hoard, as in the Norse legend, she could still rouse
-herself to snarl in a letter. She did not write to the King direct, but
-devised an epistle to the Dean, in which she emphatically declared her
-astonishment at the royal message. This he was ordered to show to the
-King. “It was very strange to her,” she said, “that my Lady Arabella
-should come to her with a recommendation as either doubting of her
-entertainment or desiring to come to her from whom she had desired so
-earnestly to come away. That for her part she thought she had
-sufficiently expressed her good meaning and kindness to her that had
-purchased her seven hundred pounds by year land of inheritance, and
-given her as much money as would buy a hundred pound by year more. And
-though for her part she had done very well for her according to her poor
-ability, yet she should always be welcome to her, though she had divers
-grandchildren that stood more in need than she, and much the more
-welcome in respect of the King’s recommendation; she had bestowed on
-Arabella a cup of gold worth a hundred pound, and three hundred pound in
-money which deserved thankfulness very well, considering her poor
-ability.”
-
-James could afford to laugh at such a communication, which fortunately
-did not prejudice Arabella in his eyes. Her return to Court was not long
-delayed, for her grandmother recovered, and the Court lady was once more
-free to stand godmother to royal babies, play, hunt, and dance, and
-suffer perpetual financial embarrassment owing to the ridiculous
-expenditure to which courtiers of both sexes were put in making royal
-gifts and providing the costly, fantastic costumes which the successive
-masques entailed.
-
-It was during the production of the famous “Masque of Beauty,” written
-for _Twelfth Night_, and produced in honour of the visit of the King of
-Denmark, that Bess Shrewsbury sank into her last illness. For this
-masque Arabella, it is recorded, appeared in jewels and robes worth more
-than £100,000. From such scenes of colour and luxuriance she was called
-to that stately, lonely deathbed at Hardwick.
-
-Of the Countess’s danger her relatives were fully aware, and the various
-family partisans took good care to be on the look-out for any hostile
-movements with regard to property from their opponents. The following
-extract from one of Gilbert’s letters to Henry Cavendish gives an ugly
-little picture of the situation. The date is January 4th, 1607:—
-
-
-“When I was at Hardwick she did eat very little, and not able to walk
-the length of the chamber betwixt two, but grew so ill at it as you
-might plainly discern it. On New Year’s Eve, when my wife sent her New
-Year’s gift, the messenger told us she looked pretty well and spoke
-heartily; but my Lady wrote that she was worse than when we last saw
-her, and Mrs. Digby sent a secret message that her Ladyship was so ill
-that she could not be from her day nor night. I heard that direction is
-given to some at Wortley to be in readiness to drive away all the sheep
-and cattle at Ewden instantly upon her Ladyship’s death.
-
-“These being the reasons that move me thus to advise you, consider how
-like it is that when she is thought to be in danger your good brother
-will think it time to work with you to that effect, and—God forgive me
-if I judge amiss—I verily think that, till of late, he hath been in some
-hope to have seen your end before hers, by reason of your sickliness and
-discontentment of mind. To conclude, I wish and advise you to take no
-hold of any offer that shall be made unto you, etc.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby_
-
- TOMB OF ELIZABETH COUNTESS OF SHREWSBURY
-
- Page 346
-]
-
-“You have not been forgot to my Lady, neither for yourself nor for
-Chatsworth, but we have forborne to write you thereof, knowing that one
-of your brother’s principallest means to keep us all so divided one from
-another, etc.”
-
-
-“Your good brother” is certainly William Cavendish, of whom the whole
-family were wildly jealous, and who planned to seize certain cattle
-belonging to the Countess, in advance of his brothers, so soon as she
-had drawn her last breath.
-
-Very few details are extant of the death of the great Bess. Grateful
-pensioners she had, and certainly some devoted servants. Her intimate
-friends were few, and nearly all her contemporaries predeceased her. We
-come across nothing more interesting as a bare record of her death than
-the following entry in Simpson’s _National Records of Derby_ for 1607:—
-
-
-“The old Countess of Shrewsbury died about Candlemas this year, whose
-funeral was about Holy Thursday. A great frost this year. The witches of
-Bakewell hanged.”
-
-
-So into limbo this contemptuous entry dismisses a great lady. Pouf! Out
-with the candles! The frost is over; some women have been hung at
-Bakewell; an old lady is dead.
-
-To the end she never ceased her doughty and defiant game with stone,
-wood, and mortar. While her “home for owls” was in erection there came
-that same “great frost” named in the old Derby chronicle. Naturally the
-mortar at “Owlcotes” froze. The masons could do nothing. Instantly she
-issued orders that it was to be thawed with boiling water. This was
-unavailing, and the order came to use ale also, in the hope that the
-thicker fluid might prevent crystallisation. About this there is the
-true Elizabethan touch. But even ale, poured out like water, failed, and
-my Lady went out—with the holy candles.
-
-How Arabella—faithful, loyal, vital, intense—danced, toiled, and
-loved—to her doom; how energetic, ambitious Mary Shrewsbury, like her
-mother before her, enjoyed imprisonment in the Tower because of her
-match-making intrigues; how William Cavendish became not only an earl,
-but one of the first colonists in Virginia and Bermuda; how Henry
-Cavendish died of his “sickliness and discontentment of mind”; how Henry
-Talbot, also, passed away before he could share the splendour or the
-thriftlessness of his race; how Charles Cavendish made Bolsover Castle a
-fit guesthouse for the King, for whom his son prepared a famous masque
-and banquet; how Gilbert Shrewsbury, his presence-chamber crowded with
-spongers and creditors, pawned his plate and jewels, and how his younger
-brother and chief enemy, Edward Talbot, became eighth Earl in his stead,
-belong to an epoch which escapes the limit of this survey.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby_
-
- ENTRANCE HALL, HARDWICK HALL
-
- Page 348
-]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
- MY LADY’S MANSIONS
-
-
-It is universally conceded by our nation that the French have a sense of
-the theatre which we shall never possess. The only set-off we can
-produce is a pre-eminent “sense of the house.” In France this has to a
-great extent died out. In French and in most continental cities the
-greater number of people live like pigeons in large cotes. It is the
-tendency of all towns, though in England the notion takes hold slowly.
-In the country the sense of the house is as strong as ever, with this
-change—that it is the day of the little house. Of the great house in its
-perfect sense as a home there are but few happy instances. It is the day
-of little things—little books, little songs, little pictures, little
-buildings, little frequent journeys, little incomes, and little sports.
-Above all, the little incomes! Little incomes laugh defiance at great
-houses. For great houses, as aforesaid, are great thieves. Bess and her
-Lord knew it, in the end, to their sorrow. Slowly English men and women
-have come to realise this, and not to aspire enviously to great houses.
-That notion was long a-dying, that obsession of the great house. Its
-long decline meant assuredly much that was tragic, wounding,
-self-torturing. Oh! those mistaken, ostentatious shams and pomposities
-of the early Victorian days when many a kindly, highly cultured,
-hypersensitive group of persons dwelt the lives of immured cabbages! And
-all this because of false pride, because of a penury they deliberately
-huddled round them, like a coward, who flings his cloak over his head so
-that he may not see even the opportunity for the courage which must go
-to the changed order of things.
-
-And so the little incomes of to-day—the day of the triumph of the
-exploitation of limited resources—laugh at the great houses because the
-first have been forced to learn that trick of defiance side by side with
-the bitter lesson of monetary limitations which they share with the
-last. Yet behind their defiance is a great admiration of the big
-mansions. And behind the admiration, if they but guessed it, a great
-sense of indebtedness. For it is the little incomes, and not the little
-houses, which laugh at great mansions. Is it not by virtue of the past
-life and compassion of the great houses that the little ones achieve
-their beauty in miniature, and, lastly, their sweet appropriateness to
-the usages of modern life? The great house begat these little ones of
-to-day—no hovels, but decent homes—which spring up all over England and
-Scotland and Ireland—in the hollows or heights of downs, in richly
-watered places, on ridges, by the fringes of woods, upon the sea
-flank—creeping up almost impudently to the very skirts of the great
-“places” which have passed into the traditions of history. Some of these
-remain to us as dazzling show places, some few are also emphatically
-homes. Whether applied in the present to this most beautiful and
-intimate purpose or not, all the great mansions of Elizabeth Lady
-Shrewsbury were most truly intended for sweet daily uses. Two principal
-houses had she of her own—Hardwick and Chatsworth. Eight more George
-Talbot brought her—Wingfield, Sheffield, Rufford, Welbeck, Worksop,
-Tutbury, Bolsover. One smaller place he cherished for his old age, a
-little country house at Handsworth in the same county, and one more, as
-already explained, she in her old age founded—Owlcotes or
-Oldcotes—besides beginning the rebuilding of Bolsover Castle. Great
-houses indeed! Four of them, in especial, were widely sung and praised.
-How runs the curious old rhyme?
-
- “Hardwicke for hugeness, Worsope for height,
- Welbecke for use, and Bolser for sighte.
- Worsope for walks, Hardwicke for hall,
- Welbecke for brewhouse, Bolser for all.
- Welbecke a parish, Hardwicke a Court,
- Worsope a pallas, Bolser a fort.
- Bolser to feast in, Welbecke to ride in,
- Hardwicke to thrive in, and Worsope to bide in.
- Hardwicke good house, Welbecke good keepinge,
- Worsope good walkes, Bolser good sleepinge.
- Bolser new built, Welbecke well mended,
- Hardwicke concealed, and Worsope extended.
- Bolser is morn, and Welbecke day bright,
- Hardwicke high noone, Worsope good night;
- Hardwicke is now, and Welbecke will last,
- Bolser will be and Worsope is past.
- Welbecke a wife, Bolser a maide,
- Hardwicke a matron, Worsope decaide.
- Worsope is wise, Welbecke is wittie,
- Hardwicke is hard, Bolser is prettie.
- Hardwicke is riche, Welbecke is fine,
- Worsope is stately, Bolser divine.
- Hardwicke a chest, Welbecke a saddle,
- Worsope a throne, Bolser a cradle.
- Hardwicke resembles Hampton Court much,
- And Worsope, Welbecke, Bolser none such.[88]
- Worsope a duke, Hardwicke an earl,
- Welbecke a viscount, Bolser a pearl.
- The rest are jewels of the sheere
- Bolser pendant of the eare.
- Yet an old abbey hard by the way—
- Rufford—gives more alms than all they.”
-
-It is curious that Chatsworth, so famous in history, has no part in the
-rhyme. Save for an old engraving of it in the new, the present
-Chatsworth, no trace of the fabric of the second mansion, the house
-planned by William Cavendish the first, exists; and in the grounds no
-relic is to be found belonging to the date of Queen Mary’s imprisonment
-except a scrap of ivied ruin known as her “bower.”
-
-What is the fate of the rest of the long list? Wingfield is an exquisite
-ruined fragment. The relic of that which was once Sheffield Castle is
-only to be found thickly embedded among the workshops and factories of a
-great smoke-belching town; and the whole property has passed to the
-dukedom of Norfolk.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby_
-
- BOLSOVER CASTLE
-
- Page 352
-]
-
-Oldcotes, as we know, Bess Hardwick never finished, nor Bolsover, for
-that last duty fell upon her son, Sir Charles Cavendish, who “cleared
-away the loose cement and tottering stones and began to lay the
-foundation of the newe house at Bolsover,” only finished by his son,
-Marquis of Newcastle. Strangely enough, it is not this—the beautiful
-Elizabethan mansion, which witnessed now glorious pageants and now civil
-war—that remains for habitation, but a portion of the original
-stronghold. Says one descriptive writer: “The figure of Hercules,
-supporting the balcony over the principal doorway, is an appropriate
-symbol of the Castle’s strength. The fortress is habitable, and makes a
-very unconventional and picturesque residence, with its pillar parlour
-ornamented with old-fashioned devices; its noble Star Chamber lined with
-sombre portraits of the twelve Cæsars and ceilinged with blue and gold
-to represent the firmament at night; and its quaint bed-chambers, two of
-which are covered with pictures indicative of Heaven and Hades ...
-pictures ... of angels reclining on clouds, or wandering in delightful
-glades; and of angels of darkness, hideous ... and writhing in torment.”
-The which, says this chronicler, so affected the conscience of one
-inhabitant that he effaced them—“took a lime brush and ruthlessly wiped
-out both sinners and saints.” The ruin near this building must have
-stood finely “on the grand terrace to the south” in its heyday when the
-elasticity of good Bolsover steel spears and buckles was a household
-word in England.
-
-Tutbury Castle lies a ruin by the Dove, unregretted, well detested by
-all who were ever immured there.
-
-Welbeck—how true to the rhyme!—lasts and “will last”—“day bright,” a
-“saddle,” a place to “ride in,” a great “parish,” a home for use, for
-“good keepinge,”—in a word, an institution for posterity to wonder at.
-Such also is Rufford, one of the few great buildings which have escaped
-fire. Among the list of the disestablished monasteries it passed into
-the hands of the Talbots, who made good use of its Elizabethan gallery
-and its state chambers. On the other hand, the original manor house of
-Worksop—“the wise,” the “pallas,” the “throne,” was burnt down in 1761,
-was “decaide” very soon. Bolser the “maid” as aforesaid is now grown
-very grey, but is still lovely, the more wonderful in its isolation
-because of the ugly little new town below it. Welbeck “the wife”
-flourishes, has grown, is much increased.
-
-Hardwick the “matron” endures. In her “hugeness,” in her character of
-spacious court and hall, in her seclusion and peace, her well-being, her
-riches and comfort, well warmed with the sun of prosperity, as at “high
-noone”—in her rôle as “chest,” as storehouse of unassailable fortunes,
-as a place “to thrive in,” Hardwick is the chiefest of all these houses,
-because, saving the church of All Saints at Derby, with the monument
-Bess Shrewsbury erected in it to herself, and the almshouses in the same
-town, it is the only thing of all her “workes” upon which her sole
-impress remains. Into this grey stone house, which bears her maiden
-name, has passed her extraordinary and very fine “sense of the home,”
-and the doggerel just quoted adds to that almost a portrait of herself.
-Time was when she wore stiff outstanding dresses, encrusted with network
-of jewels or bordered and lined with fur, like others who visited Court
-or the weddings and pageants of her circle. In the principal portrait of
-her, the one which hangs in the centre of the Cavendish group in the
-glorious Hardwick gallery—a stretch of 170 feet, of which the walls
-carry nearly two hundred portraits—she is, however, presented just in
-the character of matron and widow. Her child-bearing days were over, her
-schemes were many. One cannot read the rhymes quoted without feeling
-that when Hardwick is named in the jingle she herself passes in and out
-of the string of words, which in itself is like a ladies’ chain in a
-country dance. She is in black velvet with a rich quadruple necklace of
-pearls. Her chest, with gold and documents and household “stuff,” goes
-with her; we hear the jingle of her household keys, her ringing,
-authoritative voice, meet the glance of those clear, keen eyes, and
-follow the line of the thin, sensitive mouth, which could help that
-far-seeing brain of hers so much. That mouth could flatter, but it could
-also speak with terrible sharpness; it could repeat a good joke, a spicy
-scandal, or quiver with grief; it could say tender things—“my juwell and
-love, my dearest harte”—and it could bargain finely. “Hardwick is hard,”
-says the rhyme, and her lips seem to tighten to that phrase. She could
-certainly be both terribly hard and tender.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby_
-
- PICTURE GALLERY, HARDWICK HALL
-
- (Showing the fireplace and a portrait of Mary Queen of Scots)
-
- Page 354
-]
-
-There is another smaller portrait of her, in her Countess’s coronet and
-an ermine tippet, which is rather more gracious in expression than the
-stiff, beruffed, matronly picture above mentioned. Close about her are
-her husbands—all save Barlow. Most comfortable of these is Sir William
-Cavendish, sturdy, bearded, and well-liking, in his furred robe and flat
-cap. Close by, and matching the figure of Arabella Stuart in sheer
-pathos, is that of the quiet, childless Grace Talbot, whom Fate so soon
-made the widow of the much-travelled Henry Cavendish. It is that of a
-dumpy little woman in black, holding in one hand a single pale
-eglantine—the flower of the Cavendishes. Her reddish-brown hair, her
-pale lips, a spinet of which the under portion of the open lid is
-faintly decorated with red-winged cherubs, and a dark green table-cloth,
-are the only scraps of colour in the sombre scheme. Her psalter, with
-diamond notation, lies open at the words “Sois moy seigneur ma garde et
-mon appuy, Car en toy gist toute mon esperance.”
-
-In the same group one finds Burghley, rosy, astute, richly clad, a
-prince of dignitaries, than whom no statesman ever had richer experience
-of men and things, of power and place, of sovereigns and the royal
-caprice, who on the eve of death could still write to his first-born,
-over the trembling signature of “Your anguished father,” the words
-“Serve God by serving of the Queen, for all other service is indeed
-bondage to the devil.”
-
-Very warm and full of life is the portrait of William Cavendish the
-younger, the Countess’s favourite son. To him in his right as first Earl
-and ancestor of the Dukes of Devonshire belongs, after his mother, the
-whole of this glorious gallery, typical of this magnificent house.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _From a photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, after the picture by P.
- Oudry
- at Hardwick Hall, by permission of his Grace the Duke of
- Devonshire_
-
- MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS
-
- Page 356
-]
-
-The end wall is given up to the portraits of the three English Queens.
-In the centre is Elizabeth, magnificent and monstrous, the clothes
-hiding the woman, the whole art of portraiture merged in the painter’s
-dogged intent to reproduce every detail of her jewels, her lace, and the
-birds, beasts, and reptiles with which her enormous, billowing dress is
-embroidered. On her right stands Queen Anne, very dull, complacent, and
-richly attired; on her left Queen Mary, solemn, handsomely robed,
-dignified. An opposite wall bears the other often-painted Mary, the
-Arch-Enigma, she whose personality, to my thinking, is so much more
-subtle and dominant than that of her magnificent English sisters. This
-is the famous Mary of Oudry’s brush, graceful, simple, subtle, the face
-diaphanous and elusive. There is an odd likeness between the motto she
-chose for her dais and that which the baby Arabella bears on the jewel
-pendent from her necklace: “Pour parvenir j’endure” is the legend. And
-both women bear witness to that determination in their faces, in their
-tragic fates. That and the old “En ma fin est mon commencement” ring in
-your ears as you turn from the gallery and from the beautiful
-presence-chamber with its wonderful coloured plaster frieze to the
-little bedroom dedicated to the relics of the Scots Mary. The curtains
-she embroidered, the coverings for the chairs, the tapestry, the very
-bed in which she slept and tossed and wept, are all proudly cherished.
-Mary never stayed at Hardwick, _pace_ Horace Walpole, nor possibly ever
-saw it. Nor was she ever housed at the old Hardwick, which stands now
-like a ghostly, ruined parent of the newer building, at right angles to
-it. The old house served “Building Bess” not only as model for her new
-hall, but furnished her, it is said, with actual material. It was, for
-those days, a good model that she took, and its high and countless
-windows made it hygienically a great improvement upon the gloom of
-Tutbury and Sheffield. No trace of superstition or pettiness has gone to
-the building, begun soon after she acquired the house—either by purchase
-or by legacy from her brother James Hardwick—some years before the death
-of her fourth husband, and completed seven years or so after it—that is
-in 1597. At first, says tradition, she seems to have intended to make
-her home at the older house and reserve the new one for ceremonial and
-entertainment, “as if she had a mind to preserve her Cradle and set it
-by her Bed of State.” The stones of that “Cradle” she eventually took
-for the “Bed,” and into that bed she literally wove all that was best of
-herself. Of mere personal feminine vanity she expresses little, of
-personal importance much. She was fond of her crest, and the modelled
-stags of her own family are devised to flatter her duly in an
-inscription (in the great drawing-room) to the intent that noble as is
-the stag, in all its animal perfection, its nobility is enhanced by
-bearing the arms of the Countess. She doted also on her initials. They
-are worked into the stone scrolling which adorns her four towers, into
-the main gateway, and into the low wall which flanks the square garden
-where you enter. They are repeated in the flower-beds. She must have
-loved signing her name also, for scarcely a scrap, it seems, of the
-household accounts concerning her buildings exists but bears evidence of
-her minute scrutiny. Here is her signature as it appears often repeated
-under such items as “thre ponde hyght pence,” or at the close of a
-letter thus:—
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The Hardwick wages-book between New Year, 1576, and the close of
-December, 1580, with the list of her men—stone-breakers, gardeners,
-moss-gatherers, thatchers, wall-builders, ditchers—was made up by her
-once a fortnight and signed. Inside the house too are her initials, with
-the arms of her father, the stags and the roses of the Hardwicks, and
-into a famous inlaid table (brought, it is said, by her son Henry from
-the East) is woven the cryptic poetical motto of her father’s family:—
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby_
-
- MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS BED, NOW AT HARDWICK HALL
-
- Page 358
-]
-
- “The redolent smell of aeglantyne
- We stagges exault to the deveyne.”
-
-This legend is to be faintly traced in the interior of the ruined old
-hall. With the exception of the Shrewsbury coronet and the initials, you
-find very little suggestion of the Talbots. Everywhere the arms of
-Hardwick predominate in panel, fireplace, and lock. They strike the eye
-the instant you enter the house by the great entrance-hall. Large and
-magnificent, they are set forth on the right wall: in heraldic language,
-“a saltire engrailed _azure_; on a chief of the second three cinquefoils
-of the field,” set in a lozenge-shaped shield and bearing the aforesaid
-coronet. The supporters are two “stags _proper_, each gorged with a
-chaplet of roses, _argent_, between two bars _azure_.” To these
-supporters the lady had no right because her family had none. But she
-assumed them, turning to account the stag of her family crest. Her son
-William adopted a variation of this, and in the Devonshire arms of
-to-day we again find the wreathed stags _proper_, while the shield bears
-three harts’ heads. In the Mary Queen of Scots bedroom you will find in
-plaster work again the Hardwick arms, but also those of Cavendish and of
-the Countess’s mother, Elizabeth Leake. Needless to say, the house is
-built in the grand manner. The great entrance-hall runs to the height of
-two stories, and besides its panelling and old furniture has screens of
-tapestry. Just off the stairway on the left is the curious little chapel
-shut off from the landing by an open-work oak screen. Close by is a
-state bedroom, and adjoining it is a fine dining-room, whence a
-minstrels’ gallery leads to the wainscoted and tapestried drawing-room.
-The splendid presence-chamber, sixty-five feet long, thirty-three wide,
-and twenty-six high, is another remarkable feature, and besides its
-pictures and tapestry has the famous ancient frieze, already mentioned,
-in coloured plaster relief representing the Court of Diana. The choice
-of theme was, no doubt, out of compliment to the Queen, for her initials
-and arms are in this room substituted for those of the Countess, who, in
-spite of her dreams, never had the delight of receiving Elizabeth here.
-
-In regard to the sheer details of furniture and tapestries the
-guide-books have sufficiently noted such items, and this is not the
-place for an inventory. But in the household lists, carefully catalogued
-and cherished, are noted “silver cloath of tissue and cloath of gold,
-velvet of sundry colours, needlework twelve feet deep, one piece of the
-picture of Faith and her contrary Mahomet, another piece with Temperance
-and her contrary Sardynapales.” And there are others “wrought with
-Flowers and slipps of Needlework,” while a “white Spanish rugg,” great
-chairs and little chairs, French stools, “a little desk of mother o’
-pearl, a purple sarcanet quilt,” are duly noted, in addition to carpets
-and hangings galore storied with myth and legend. Good rich things over
-which to fight when it was a case of family quarrels! Many of these and
-the other famous tapestries with which the lovely house is crammed are
-being wisely guarded, and, where possible, delicately repaired, while
-taste and gracious sympathy with every object are turning the Hall into
-a place which is a perfect museum with the added grace of a house. The
-very ring—attached to the foot of the Countess’s writing-table—through
-which she slipped the leash of her dog, is still preserved.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby_
-
- THE PRESENCE-CHAMBER, HARDWICK HALL
-
- Page 360
-]
-
-Set high upon a fine hill in the centre of a park, encircled with
-rolling country, and facing east and west, the great, old windows of
-Hardwick look out above colonnades upon a new world. At no great
-distance are mines like those which have spoiled Bolsover and Worksop.
-The masons still labour at the stonework of Hardwick, for storms have
-worn the elaborate scrolling of those four proud towers, and the flagged
-pathway from gate to house-door is pitted and hollowed by frost and rain
-and the feet of generations. And still it stands, a monument and a
-living record of one who knew in her strange, active life much grief and
-much joy, who loved flattery and self-assertion and the struggle for
-individual development, and yet could write in letters of stone over the
-door of her presence-chamber: “The conclusion of all thinges is to feare
-God and keepe His commaundements.”
-
-She had the great secret of living almost to the last in the “high
-noone” of her desires. When the western sun bathes her façade she lives
-again, walks again upon her terrace and under her colonnades. And with
-her goes that great procession, pathetic and vital, of her “workes”—her
-children, her friends, her buildings, her household gods, her intrigues,
-her dazzling dreams, her bargains—and all of them seem to have a part in
-the music of that duet of notions ever running in her head—“of bricks
-and mortar to yield grandeur, of human beings to yield wealth.”
-
-She has been turned into ridicule by Horace Walpole, whose flippant
-vulgarity nevertheless acknowledged her magnificence. She was called
-shrew by a pompous bishop, but she had too much brain for a shrew. She
-could certainly scold—“like one from the banke”—but so could her royal
-mistress. In these two Elizabeths there is, after one allows for the
-difference in their actual circumstances, a strange likeness. Both were
-violent natures; both, in spite of their extraordinary sense of dignity,
-had a strong dash of the hoyden. Both had immense vitality, relished
-life intensely, loved to play with schemes. Both were obstinate,
-affectionate, vindictive, pugnacious, essentially women of their era, a
-type to which Elizabeth herself set the measure and called the tune.
-While the sum of all sorrow is the same, their sorrows differed in
-detail. Elizabeth of England, called to the immense sacrifice of her
-womanhood for England, fell back in private on petty vanities, and had
-her reward in the love of the larger public of her day and in the
-enlightened homage of posterity to her sacrifice and her statesmanship.
-Elizabeth Shrewsbury justly refused to sacrifice herself to the official
-burdens put upon her earl, unjustly refused to go shares with him in
-their common responsibilities, and so in her the “combat for the
-individual” ran to exaggeration, with its harvest of sheer bitterness
-and errors. In body and soul she represented that spirit of
-individualism set in an epoch of intrigue, sensation, change,
-uncertainty, wide and violent contrast, in days of large treasons and
-international piracy, of high feeding and large ideas, of scented
-gloves, masks, doublets, and ill-managed kitchen heaps, of plot and
-counter-plot, of Court splendour and national drama.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby_
-
- HARDWICK HALL FROM THE WEST GARDEN
-
- Page 362
-]
-
-Tobie Matthew, Archbishop of York, preached a fine funeral sermon upon
-this “costly Countess,” in which she was likened to the ideal virtuous
-woman of Solomon, while Hunter, on the other hand, ironically suggests
-that Massinger based his character of Sir Giles Overreach upon her.
-Lodge has termed her violent, treacherous, tyrannical. Such in many ways
-was the nature of England’s Elizabeth. Yet both women were makers and
-builders, often blind, always resourceful, achieving immense results in
-their several capacities. And since the royal symbol of the one is the
-stately Tudor rose, so also shall the lovely “redolent aeglantyne” of
-the motto of the other entwine and weave through the ages the memory of
-all that was finest in the amazing Lady of Hardwick. With that sweet
-savour—regarding it as the final evaporation of her complex, rampant,
-thorny, vital nature—let all harsher thoughts of her now be chased away.
-
-
-
-
- INDEX
-
-
- A
-
- Adderley, Mr., 108
-
- Alsope, Hugh, 17
-
- Alva, Duke of, 40, 76, 92–3
-
- Anjou, Duke of, 40, 76, 218, 221, 272, 317
-
- Anne Boleyn, 28, 121
-
- Anne of Cleves, 122
-
- Anne of Denmark, 341–2, 344, 356
-
- Appleyard, 92
-
- Argyle, Earl of, 39
-
- Arran, Earl of, 39, 123
-
- Arundel, Earl of, 314
-
-
- B
-
- Barlow, Antony, 108
-
- Barlow, Robert, 3, 355
-
- Beale, Robert, 228, 231 _et sqq._, 268, 293
-
- Bedford, Countess of, 188
-
- Bedford, Earl of, 188
-
- Bell, William, 92–3
-
- Bentall, 256 _et sqq._
-
- Beresford, Henry, 282 _et sqq._, 289, 290
-
- Beton, Andrew, 232
-
- Beton, Archbishop, 232
-
- Beton, John, 81, 232
-
- Beauchamp, Lord, 340
-
- Bolsover, 35, 43, 204, 347, 351 _et sqq._
-
- Bolton, Castle, Mary Queen of Scots at, 47, 49
-
- Bonaparte, Napoleon, 35
-
- Bothwell, Earl of, 68–9, 119, 127
-
- Boughton, Elizabeth. _See_ Cavendish
-
- Brackenbury, Richard, 327
-
- Bruce, Mrs., 66
-
- Burghley, Lady, 32, 101, 105, 128, 316
-
- Burghley, Robert Cecil, Lord, 340–1
-
- Burghley, Thomas Cecil, Lord, 188
-
- Burghley, William Cecil, Lord, 23, 32, 38, 69, 79, 101, 104–5, 178,
- 183, 211, 257, 259, 302, 314, 316, 325;
- and Lady Catherine Grey’s marriage, 27, 30;
- and Mary Queen of Scots’ marriage, 29;
- letters written to, 30, 64–5, 80, 149, 150, 153, 208, 236, 239, 278,
- 329, 333;
- and Lady Mary Grey’s marriage, 31;
- and imprisonment of Mary Queen of Scots, 47, 64–5, 70, 72, 97;
- visits Mary Queen of Scots, 80, 128, 228;
- letters from, 82, 161, 165, 188;
- and Lascelles, 82–3;
- and Norfolk’s death, 87;
- and the Norwich high treason trial, 92–3;
- his and Elizabeth’s distrust of the Shrewsburys, 110 _et sqq._;
- and Lady Lennox, 125, 153;
- and the Lennox marriage, 149, 150, 236, 239;
- Shrewsbury’s present of plate to, 161;
- and Lady Shrewsbury’s match-making, 165 _et sqq._;
- goes to Buxton, 187;
- and the accusation against Lord Shrewsbury, 249, 250;
- and the Shrewsbury quarrel, 26, 279 _et sqq._, 285, 290, 298;
- and Shrewsbury’s slanderers, 264;
- and the “Scandal Letter,” 271;
- and Mary Queen of Scots’ trial, 308–9;
- and Lady Arabella’s income, 329 _et sqq._;
- and Lady Arabella’s proposed marriage, 333 _et sqq._;
- his death, 340;
- his portrait at Hardwick, 356
-
- Butts, Sir William, 92
-
- Buxton, Mary Queen of Scots at, 110, 167, 171, 179
-
-
- C
-
- Caithness, Bishop of, 220
-
- Catherine de Medici, 117
-
- Cavendish, Anne, 6
-
- Cavendish, Sir Charles, 6, 45, 242, 247–8, 254, 258, 264, 268, 275,
- 282, 284, 292, 296, 305, 337, 340–1, 348
-
- Cavendish, Elizabeth. _See_ Lennox
-
- Cavendish, Elizabeth, 6
-
- Cavendish, Lady Grace, 6, 36, 44, 258, 355
-
- Cavendish, Henry, 6, 36, 99, 107, 256 _et sqq._, 261, 284, 344, 346,
- 348, 355
-
- Cavendish, Thomas, 4
-
- Cavendish, Sir William, “Bess of Hardwick’s” second husband, 4 _et
- sqq._, 11, 355
-
- Cavendish, William. _See_ Earl of Devonshire
-
- Cecil. _See_ Lord Burghley
-
- Chamley, Sir Hugh, 181
-
- Chatsworth, 6 _et sqq._, 16, 72, 79, 80, 84, 91, 110, 120, 130, 152,
- 180 _et sqq._, 184, 205, 208, 214, 258, 284–5, 294, 296–7, 334, 341,
- 347
-
- Cobham, Lord, 32
-
- Cobham, Lady, 33, 42, 44, 118
-
- Cooke, R., 256
-
- Copley, Christopher, 293
-
- Corker, Chaplain, 114 _et sqq._
-
- Crompe, James, 10, 19, 22
-
- Cumberland, Countess of, 188
-
- Cumberland, Earl of, 188, 256, 301
-
- Curle, 252, 257
-
-
- D
-
- Darcy, Lord, 32
-
- Darnley, Henry, Earl of, 29, 39, 68–9, 119, 124 _et sqq._, 146, 153,
- 159, 176, 240
-
- Derby, Earl of, 275, 314
-
- Devonshire, first Earl of, 6, 10, 22, 294, 298, 334–5;
- and Lady Arabella Stuart, 239;
- and Mary Queen of Scots, 247, 268–9;
- and Hardwick Hall, 256, 258–9, 262, 287;
- Lady Shrewsbury’s love for, 329, 356;
- barony conferred on, 342;
- family’s jealousy of, 347;
- earldom conferred on, 348;
- and Chatsworth, 352;
- his portrait at Hardwick, 356
-
- Dickenson, Gilbert, 298, 312
-
- Dudley, Lady Amy, 175
-
- Dudley, Lord Robert. _See_ Earl of Leicester
-
- Dyer, Edward, 102, 104
-
-
- E
-
- Edward VI, 6 _et sqq._, 24, 122, 124
-
- Elizabeth, Queen, 16–17, 20, 35, 121–2, 189, 233, 257, 260, 301, 307,
- 360;
- and Lady Catherine Grey’s elopement, 26 _et sqq._, 30;
- her suitors, 29, 221, 317;
- and Lady Mary Grey’s marriage, 31;
- and “Bess of Hardwick’s” fourth marriage, 36 _et sqq._;
- and the custody of Mary Queen of Scots, 39 _et sqq._;
- and Queen Mary’s expenditure, 63;
- courtiers’ opinion of, 64–5;
- and Mary’s release, 80–1;
- and Queen Mary’s attachment to the Duke of Norfolk, 75 _et sqq._, 85,
- 87;
- her suspicions of the Shrewsburys, 77 _et sqq._, 97–8, 110 _et sqq._,
- 212, 214 _et sqq._, 226 _et sqq._;
- and Norfolk’s trial and execution, 95–6;
- her affection for the Earl of Leicester, 73, 101, 105, 175 _et sqq._,
- 315;
- her favourites, 101–2, 277;
- and Lady Lennox, 125 _et sqq._, 145;
- and Elizabeth Cavendish’s marriage to the Earl of Lennox, 147 _et
- sqq._, 270;
- consigns Lady Lennox and Lady Shrewsbury to the Tower, 153;
- her allowance to Shrewsbury, 162;
- her depression, 162–3;
- visits the Countess of Pembroke, 163;
- Burghley’s loyalty to, 167–8;
- her possible successor, 174, 338;
- and Leicester’s visit to the Shrewsburys, 182 _et sqq._;
- her letter to the Shrewsburys, 183 _et sqq._;
- letter written to, 186;
- her fear of Queen Mary, 186–7, 211 _et sqq._;
- and the pageant at Whitehall, 225;
- Queen Mary’s appeals to, 230–1;
- and Lady Arabella Stuart, 239, _et sqq._;
- and Mary’s attack on the Shrewsburys, 242 _et sqq._;
- and the Shrewsbury slander, 263–4, 268;
- and the Shrewsbury quarrel, 267, 279 _et sqq._, 292 _et sqq._;
- the “Scandal Letter” to, 271 _et sqq._;
- her pursuits, 315–16, 362;
- her fondness for children, 327;
- and the provision for Lady Arabella, 329 _et sqq._;
- and Lady Arabella’s proposed marriage, 340;
- her portrait at Hardwick, 356
-
- Essex, Countess of, 171
-
-
- F
-
- Fawley, Mr., 305
-
- Fénélon, La Mothe, 147, 152, 191
-
- Fletcher, Dr., Dean of Peterborough, 311–12
-
- Fletewood, William, Recorder of London, 262, 269
-
- Foljambe, Hercules, 255
-
- Fowller, Thomas, 237
-
-
- G
-
- Gerrard, Judge, 92–3
-
- Glasgow, Archbishop of, 238
-
- Gresham, Sir Thomas, 188
-
- Grey, Lady Catherine. _See_ Countess of Hertford
-
- Grey, Lady Jane, 24, 125
-
- Grey, Sir John, 30
-
- Grey, Lady Mary. _See_ Keys
-
- Grey, Lord Leonard, 14
-
-
- H
-
- Hall, John, 36
-
- Hammer, Rev. Merideth, 263
-
- Hardwick, Elizabeth (“Bess of Hardwick”). _See_ Countess of Shrewsbury
-
- Hardwick, Elizabeth (mother of “Bess of Hardwick”), 13, 23
-
- Hardwick Hall, 7, 8, 17, 258, 261, 325, 331–2, 334, 342 _et sqq._,
- 351–2
-
- Hardwick, John (father of “Bess of Hardwick”), 1 _et sqq._, 7
-
- Hatton, Sir Christopher, 102, 104, 272–3
-
- Haydon, Sir Christopher, 92
-
- Henry VIII, 5, 7, 14, 24, 120, 123–4, 179, 219
-
- Henry of Navarre, 165
-
- Herbert, Lady Anne. _See_ Talbot
-
- Herbert. _See_ Pembroke
-
- Hereford, Viscount, 76
-
- Hertford, Countess of, 24 _et sqq._, 158, 175, 270, 339
-
- Hertford, Dowager Countess of, 27–8
-
- Hertford, Earl of, 25 _et sqq._, 153, 339
-
- Howard, Hon. Francis, 101
-
- Howard, Lord Thomas, 121–2, 153
-
- Hunsden, Lord, 173
-
- Huntingdon, Earl of, 76 _et sqq._, 86, 155–6, 181, 212
-
-
- J
-
- Jackson, Henry, 23
-
- James I, 69, 76, 123, 127, 129, 130, 159, 160, 220, 240, 311, 332, 338,
- 340 _et sqq._
-
- John of Austria, Don, 207, 223
-
- Julio, Mr., 223
-
-
- K
-
- Katherine of Aragon, 121
-
- Katherine Howard, 122
-
- Katherine Parr, 123
-
- Kennet, Bishop, 4
-
- Kent, Earl of, 310
-
- Keys, John, Serjeant Porter, 29, 31
-
- Keys, Lady Mary, 29, 31, 158
-
- Kighley, Anne. _See_ Cavendish
-
- Killigrew, Sir William, 273
-
- Knifton, Mr., 256, 313
-
- Knollys, Sir Francis, 46, 48, 50, 71
-
- Knollys, Lettice. _See_ Countess of Leicester
-
- Kynnersley, Nicholas, 312
-
-
- L
-
- Lascelles, Hersey, 82 _et sqq._, 305
-
- Leake, Elizabeth, 359
-
- Leake, Sir Francis, 343
-
- Lee, Sir Henry, 300 _et sqq._
-
- Leicester, Douglas, Countess of, 101, 177
-
- Leicester, Lettice, Countess of, 177, 259
-
- Leicester, Robert Dudley, Earl of, 42, 94, 104, 125, 223, 227, 264,
- 303, 306–7;
- and Lady Catherine Grey’s marriage, 27;
- Queen Elizabeth’s love for, 29, 75, 101, 176, 183, 315;
- and the Norwich conspiracy trial, 92;
- his gaiety, 100–1, 178;
- and the Lennox marriage, 147 _et sqq._;
- letter written by, 170;
- chit-chat concerning, 171–2;
- his visit to Buxton, 174 _et sqq._;
- his insolence to the Queen, 177;
- Elizabeth’s letter concerning, 184 _et sqq._;
- and the Shrewsbury tenantry, 215–16;
- and Francis Talbot’s death, 230;
- and Bentall, 256 _et sqq._;
- death of his son, 259;
- and the Shrewsbury quarrel, 280, 292, 294;
- letter written to, 292;
- his death, 315–16
-
- Lennox, Charles Stuart, Earl of, 6, 12 _et sqq._, 153, 157, 219, 270
-
- Lennox, Matthew, Earl of, 123 _et sqq._, 159, 240
-
- Lennox, Elizabeth, Countess of, 6, 213, 222, 273–4;
- her courtship, 131 _et sqq._;
- her marriage, 145–6;
- the Queen’s anger against, 147 _et sqq._, 153, 270;
- pathetic letter to her mother, 157–8;
- birth of her daughter, Lady Arabella Stuart, 158;
- letter to Queen Elizabeth, 160;
- her widowhood, 189;
- her death, 234 _et sqq._;
- the Queen’s allowance to, 329
-
- Lennox, Margaret, Countess of, 118, 120 _et sqq._, 145 _et sqq._;
- letters written by, 150, 159, 175, 219, 237–8, 270
-
- Lenton, John, 276
-
- Leviston, Lady, 64
-
- Lichfield, Bishop of, 317 _et sqq._
-
- Livingstone, Lady, 66
-
-
- M
-
- Manners, Roger, 188
-
- Manners, Lady, 305
-
- Margaret Queen of Scotland, 24, 120
-
- Mary, Queen, 12, 20, 120, 125, 356
-
- Mary of Lorraine, 123
-
- Mary Queen of Scots, 28, 110, 155, 162, 169, 193, 196, 208, 223, 292,
- 308;
- her marriage to Darnley, 29, 39;
- Elizabeth’s plotting against, 39 _et sqq._;
- her life as a prisoner, 47 _et sqq._, 63 _et sqq._, 85–6;
- her description of Tutbury Castle, 62–3;
- and the Duke of Norfolk, 68–9, 75 _et sqq._, 85;
- goes to Wingfield, 70–1;
- her ill-health, 72, 79, 81, 97, 230 _et sqq._;
- and Norfolk’s execution, 87 _et sqq._, 97;
- strict surveillance of, 95–6, 98;
- her misfortunes, 105, 119;
- her claims, 115;
- her fear of assassination, 117;
- and the Countess of Lennox, 125 _et sqq._;
- letter written by, 128;
- her reconciliation with the Countess of Lennox, 145–6, 159, 160;
- and the birth of Lady Arabella Stuart, 159;
- Lord Burghley and, 166 _et sqq._;
- at Buxton, 171;
- her friendship with Lady Shrewsbury, 174, 209;
- and Leicester, 176–7, 190–1;
- her reported escape, 207, 211 _et sqq._, 221;
- and Lady Arabella Stuart’s heritage, 220, 236 _et sqq._;
- her love of gaiety, 225–6;
- her diet, 228;
- her accusations against Lady Shrewsbury, 241 _et sqq._, 246 _et
- sqq._;
- the slander against, 245, 249, 250, 263 _et sqq._, 268 _et sqq._;
- her execution at Fotheringay, 266, 309 _et sqq._, 323, 337;
- her “Scandal Letter” to Elizabeth, 271 _et sqq._;
- her bower at Chatsworth, 352;
- her portrait at Hardwick Hall, 356–7
-
- Matthew, Tobie, Archbishop of York, 363
-
- Mauvissière, 242, 244 _et sqq._
-
- Mendoza, Don Bernardino de, 278
-
- Middleton, Antony, 93
-
- Mildmay, Sir Walter, 293
-
- Moray, Earl of, 39, 69, 75
-
- Morton, James Douglas, Earl of, 159, 240
-
-
- N
-
- Norfolk, fifth Duke of, 177
-
- Norfolk, Thomas, fourth Duke of, 68–9, 75 _et sqq._, 79, 82, 85 _et
- sqq._, 97, 105, 119, 190
-
- Norris, Lord, 188
-
- Norris, Lady, 171
-
-
- O
-
- Ogle, Cuthbert Lord, 45
-
- Ogle, Jane. _See_ Shrewsbury
-
- Osborne, Peter, 24
-
- Oseley, Solicitor-General, 34
-
- Owlcotes, 343, 351
-
- Oxford, Earl of, 101, 105, 273
-
-
- P
-
- Paget, Lord, 46, 100, 275
-
- Parker, Archbishop, 28
-
- Parma, Duke of, 332
-
- Pembroke, Catherine Countess of, 45, 163
-
- Pembroke, Henry Herbert, second Earl of, 24, 45, 163
-
- Pembroke, William Earl of, 45
-
- Philip of Spain, 82
-
- Pierrepoint, Sir George, 20–1
-
- Pierrepoint, Sir Henry, 6, 20, 41
-
- Pierrepoint, Lady, 6, 41
-
- Poland, King of, 344
-
- Portington, Roger, 301, 305
-
-
- R
-
- Raleigh, Sir Walter, 32, 344
-
- Rawley, Sir Walter, 338
-
- Robsart, Amy. _See_ Dudley
-
- Rolson, 275
-
- Roods, Mr. Serjeant, 257
-
- Ross, Bishop of, 71, 79, 81, 129
-
- Rufford, 35, 151, 199, 252, 327, 351
-
- Rutland, Edward Manners, third Earl of, 254 _et sqq._
-
- Ruxby, 275
-
-
- S
-
- Sackville, Lady, 126
-
- Sackville, Sir Richard, 17, 126
-
- Sadler, Sir Ralph, 86 _et sqq._, 265, 293
-
- St. Loe, Sir William, 13 (“Bess of Hardwick’s” third husband), 13 _et
- sqq._, 23, 286
-
- Scrope, Lord, 48, 112
-
- Seaton, Mrs., 64
-
- Seton, Mary, 66–7, 232–3, 242–3
-
- Seymour, Lady Jane, 28
-
- Seymour, William, 339, 340, 342
-
- Sheffield, Lady. _See_ Countess of Leicester.
-
- Sheffield Castle, 35, 281;
- Mary Queen of Scots at, 73 _et sqq._, 85 _et sqq._, 95 _et sqq._, 110
- _et sqq._, 171, 193, 231 _et sqq._
-
- Shrewsbury, Edward Talbot, eighth Earl of, 43, 45, 169, 189, 308,
- 325–6, 340, 348
-
- Shrewsbury, Elizabeth Countess of: her birth, 1;
- her early life, 2;
- her early marriage and widowhood, 3;
- her second marriage to Sir William Cavendish, 4;
- her family, 5 _et sqq._, 12–13, 36;
- rebuilds Chatsworth, 7, 12, 23, 72, 91, 202 _et sqq._;
- instructions to her steward, 9, 10;
- death of her husband, 10;
- her third marriage to Sir William St. Loe, 13 _et sqq._;
- letters written to, 8, 17, 18, 19, 21, 40, 42, 45, 106 _et sqq._,
- 158, 181, 188, 193, 197–8, 202, 254, 286;
- letters written by, 9, 22, 183, 194, 239, 290, 298, 329, 333;
- death of her husband, 23, 32;
- and Lady Catherine Grey’s marriage, 27, 30;
- her suitors, 32–3;
- her fourth marriage to Earl of Shrewsbury, 34 _et sqq._;
- and Mary Queen of Scots’ imprisonment, 46–7, 50–1, 63 _et sqq._, 86
- _et sqq._, 95–6;
- and Author’s interlude at Tutbury Castle, 52 _et sqq._;
- at Wingfield Manor, 70 _et sqq._;
- and Queen Elizabeth’s suspicion of, 72–3, 77 _et sqq._, 97, 111;
- and Henry Lascelles, 83 _et sqq._;
- and Mary and Norfolk, 87 _et sqq._;
- her business instincts, 114, 119;
- Mary’s attitude to, 117;
- and her daughter Elizabeth’s marriage, 132, 145 _et sqq._;
- her imprisonment in the Tower, 153 _et sqq._, 161;
- released from the Tower, 156;
- the birth of her grandchild, 158–9, 173–4;
- her love of match-making, 165 _et sqq._;
- restored to Elizabeth’s favour, 170;
- entertains Leicester at Chatsworth, 182 _et sqq._;
- her social importance, 193;
- her household needs, 196;
- and Gilbert Talbot, 197;
- family quarrels, 200 _et sqq._;
- the dissension between the Earl and, 200 _et sqq._, 213–14, 251, 260
- _et sqq._, 279 _et sqq._, 312–13, 318 _et sqq._;
- and her love of building, 203, 214;
- her grief at her grandchild’s death, 208–9, 213;
- presents to, from Mary, 209;
- the tenantry and, 215 _et sqq._;
- and the rights of Lady Arabella Stuart, 220, 236, 239 _et sqq._, 328
- _et sqq._, 333 _et sqq._, 343, 345;
- and Elizabeth’s flattery, 222;
- and Mary Queen of Scots’ illness, 233;
- and the death of her daughter, Lady Lennox, 234 _et sqq._;
- and Mary Queen of Scots’ complaints of, 241 _et sqq._;
- and the Shrewsbury scandal, 245 _et sqq._, 268 _et sqq._;
- and Gilbert Talbot’s monetary affairs, 254 _et sqq._;
- division of her property, 258, 284–5;
- and Queen Elizabeth as peacemaker, 267–8, 283, 290, 292 _et sqq._,
- 312;
- appears before the Lords of the Council, 268 _et sqq._;
- and the “Scandal Letter,” 271 _et sqq._;
- and the Earl’s financial proposal, 296 _et sqq._;
- appeals to Burghley, 298;
- Bishop of Lichfield and, 318 _et sqq._;
- her characteristics, 322, 354–5, 361 _et sqq._;
- quarrels with Gilbert and Mary, 324, 326;
- builds Owlcotes, 343, 348;
- her serious illness, 344, 346;
- her death, 347;
- her mansions, 349 _et sqq._;
- her portrait at Hardwick, 354
-
- Shrewsbury, George Talbot, sixth Earl of (“Bess of Hardwick’s” fourth
- husband), 241;
- his ancestry, 34–5;
- honours bestowed on, 35;
- his marriage to “Bess of Hardwick,” 36 _et sqq._;
- his enormous correspondence, 38;
- letters written by, 42, 45, 78, 97, 106, 108–9, 111, 115, 165, 186–7,
- 193, 208, 234, 259, 279, 281, 286, 299, 305;
- his charge of Mary Queen of Scots, 40–1, 43, 45 _et sqq._, 95, 180,
- 231;
- his allowance for Mary, 63, 113–14, 162;
- and Mary’s life at Tutbury, 64 _et sqq._;
- at Wingfield, 70 _et sqq._;
- his illness, 72–3;
- Queen Elizabeth’s complaints of, 76–7, 97–8, 111 _et sqq._, 156, 226;
- and Queen Mary’s health, 81, 96;
- and the attack on his wife, 82 _et sqq._, 97–8;
- and Duke of Norfolk’s trial, 86–7;
- letters written to, 99 _et sqq._, 109, 290, 301, 318;
- his characteristics, 113, 246, 254;
- and the priests’ accusation, 114 _et sqq._;
- and Elizabeth Cavendish’s marriage, 147 _et sqq._;
- and his wife’s imprisonment, 153 _et sqq._;
- his present to Burghley, 161–2;
- and his son’s proposed marriage, 166 _et sqq._;
- his expenditure, 169, 227–8;
- and Leicester at Buxton, 171;
- entertains Leicester at Chatsworth, 182 _et sqq._;
- his parsimony, 196, 201, 299;
- disagreements with his children, 198, 251 _et sqq._;
- disagreements with his wife, 200 _et sqq._, 213, 251 _et sqq._, 258
- _et sqq._, 312 _et sqq._;
- and Mary’s reported escape, 207, 211;
- and his grandchild’s death, 208–9;
- Mary’s friendliness towards, 209;
- pleads to Queen Elizabeth, 212;
- difficulties with his tenants, 214 _et sqq._;
- and his grandchild Arabella, 220;
- wishes to visit the Queen, 230;
- death of his son Francis, 230, 259;
- and Mary’s ill-health, 231 _et sqq._;
- and the death of Lady Lennox, 234–5;
- the slander against, 245, 249, 250, 262 _et sqq._, 267 _et sqq._;
- and Mary Talbot, 254 _et sqq._;
- his dislike of Chatsworth, 258–9;
- released from his charge of Mary, 266;
- visits Elizabeth, 266–7;
- and Elizabeth as peacemaker, 267, 278, 296 _et sqq._;
- his monetary disputes with the Countess, 284 _et sqq._;
- and Elizabeth’s partiality for the Countess, 292 _et sqq._;
- and Elizabeth’s profession, 295, 315;
- Elizabeth’s decision, 296 _et sqq._;
- reproves Mary Talbot’s extravagance, 299, 300;
- Sir Henry Lee and, 299 _et sqq._;
- his lonely old age, 307–8, 315–16;
- summoned to Fotheringay, 307;
- and execution of Mary Queen of Scots, 309 _et sqq._;
- Bishop of Lichfield’s advice to, 318 _et sqq._;
- his death, 322 _et sqq._
-
- Shrewsbury, Gilbert Talbot, seventh Earl of, 6, 43, 106, 127, 157, 164,
- 228, 283, 286, 308;
- his marriage, 36, 44–5;
- letters written by, 99, 117, 171, 197, 199, 202, 215, 254, 314, 346;
- his varied duties, 99, 223;
- letters written to, 109, 299;
- and his first child, 111;
- and the priests’ accusations against his father, 114–15, 117–18;
- Court chit-chat by, 171 _et sqq._;
- entertains Leicester at Buxton, 180;
- his illness, 195;
- and his uncongenial home, 197 _et sqq._;
- dissension with his father, 198 _et sqq._;
- and his parents’ quarrels, 201 _et sqq._, 254 _et sqq._;
- and the Shrewsbury tenantry, 215 _et sqq._;
- and Elizabeth’s “deshabille,” 221–2;
- champions his stepmother, Lady Shrewsbury, 251–2;
- death of his son, 259;
- his monetary difficulties, 299, 348;
- his love for his stepmother, 314–15;
- succeeds his father, 324–5, 327;
- his portrait at Hardwick Hall, 324;
- quarrels with his brother Edward, 326;
- entertains the King, 340–1;
- and Lady Arabella Stuart, 342;
- quarrels with his stepmother, 343
-
- Shrewsbury, Jane, Countess of, 45
-
- Shrewsbury, John Talbot, first Earl of, 34–5
-
- Shrewsbury, Mary, Countess of, 6, 11, 157, 252, 299, 314, 324, 337,
- 346, 348
-
- Sidney, Sir Philip, 225
-
- Simier, 272, 277
-
- Skargelle, George, 226
-
- Skipwith, Henry, 17
-
- Smith, Sir Thomas, 103, 173
-
- Snagge, Serjeant, 314
-
- Somerset, Duke of, 25
-
- Southwell, Francis, 103
-
- Stafford, Sir Edward, 332
-
- Stanhope, Sir Thomas, 204, 206, 252–3, 327
-
- Steele, 257
-
- Story, Dr., 92–3
-
- Stuart, Esmé, Lord d’Aubigny, 220, 240, 339
-
- Stuart, Lady Arabella, 213, 312–13, 315, 348, 355;
- her birth, 158–9, 173;
- her rights, 219, 220;
- the allowance for, 228, 240, 329 _et sqq._;
- death of her mother, 234;
- and her succession to her father’s earldom, 236–7;
- Mary’s bequest of jewels to, 237–8;
- appeals to Elizabeth on behalf of, 238–9;
- Lady Shrewsbury’s ambitions for, 241, 244, 322, 328, 338;
- proposed alliances for, 276, 332 _et sqq._, 339, 344;
- her postscript to Lord Burghley, 331;
- goes to Court, 337 _et sqq._;
- her betrothal to William Seymour, 339;
- her arrest, 339, 340;
- appointed State Governess, 341;
- summoned to Lady’s Shrewsbury’s bedside 344–5
-
- Suffolk, Duchess of, 131, 151
-
- Sussex, Earl of, 101
-
- Sussex, Countess of, 171
-
-
- T
-
- Talbot, Lady Anne, 45, 163
-
- Talbot, Lady Catherine. _See_ Pembroke
-
- Talbot, Lord Edward. _See_ Shrewsbury
-
- Talbot, Lady Francis, 305, 325
-
- Talbot, Lord Francis, 45, 99, 162, 224, 228, 230, 259, 280, 325
-
- Talbot, Lady Grace. _See_ Cavendish
-
- Talbot, George. _See_ Sixth Earl of Shrewsbury
-
- Talbot, George, 200, 208
-
- Talbot, Gilbert. _See_ Seventh Earl of Shrewsbury
-
- Talbot, Henry, Lord, 45, 189, 294–5, 301, 308, 325, 348
-
- Talbot, Lady Jane, 45
-
- Talbot, John. _See_ First Earl of Shrewsbury
-
- Talbot, Mary. _See_ Countess of Shrewsbury
-
- Talbott, John, 333
-
- Throgmorton, Sir Nicholas, 92–3
-
- Thurlby, Bishop, 94
-
- Thynne, Sir John, 32
-
- Topcliffe, Richard, 264;
- his letter to Lady Shrewsbury, 188
-
- Tutbury Castle, 35, 351, 353;
- Mary Queen of Scots at, 40, 47 _et sqq._, 62 _et sqq._, 76 _et sqq._,
- 171;
- Author’s Dramatic Interlude at, 52 _et sqq._
-
-
- W
-
- Walpole, Horace, 357, 361
-
- Walsingham, Sir Francis, 23, 78, 103, 165, 171, 173, 183, 209, 223,
- 264, 267–8, 275, 281 _et sqq._, 297
-
- Warner, Sir Edward, 27
-
- Warwick, Ambrose Earl of, 185, 188
-
- Watts, Archdeacon, 93
-
- Welbeck Abbey, 35, 254, 258, 341, 351 _et sqq._
-
- Wharton, Lord, 188
-
- White, Nicholas, 64
-
- Wilson, Dr., 102–3, 105
-
- Wingfield, Mr., 37
-
- Wingfield Manor, 35, 286, 297 _et sqq._, 312, 334, 351;
- Mary Queen of Scots at, 70 _et sqq._, 265, 268
-
- Winter, Sir William, 173
-
- Wood, Dr., 326
-
- Worksop Manor, 35, 197, 340, 351 _et sqq._
-
- Wortley, Sir Richard, 325
-
-
- Z
-
- Zouche, Sir John, 195
-
- Zouche, Lady, 2, 3
-
------
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- Collins’ _Noble Families_.
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- The Marquis of Dorset.
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- State MS.
-
-Footnote 4:
-
- ? Almoner.
-
-Footnote 5:
-
- Avoid = clear out.
-
-Footnote 6:
-
- Lady Jane Grey.
-
-Footnote 7:
-
- State MS.
-
-Footnote 8:
-
- According to Leland, “Halamshire beginneth a ii. mile from Rotheram.
- Sheffield iii miles from Rotheram, wher the lord of Shreusbyre’s
- castle, the chefe market towne of Halamshire. And Halamshire goeth one
- way vi or vii miles above Sheffield by west, yet as I here say,
- another way the next village to Sheffield is in Derbyshire. Al
- Halamshire go to the seesions of York and is counted as a membre of
- Yorkshire. Aeglesfield and Bradfeld ii townelettes or villages long to
- one paroche chirche. So by this meanes (as I was enstructed) ther be
- but iii paroches in Halamshire that is of name, and a great Chapelle.”
-
- Hunter sums up these three parishes as Sheffield, Ecclesfield, and
- Hansworth, with the chapelry of Bradfield.
-
-Footnote 9:
-
- Hunter’s _Hallamshire_.
-
-Footnote 10:
-
- None = own. Probably an abbreviation of “mine own.”
-
-Footnote 11:
-
- Hunter’s _Hallamshire_.
-
-Footnote 12:
-
- His disaffected tenants at Bolsover.
-
-Footnote 13:
-
- Construction.
-
-Footnote 14:
-
- When Lady Catherine Grey was imprisoned in the Tower for her secret
- marriage with the Earl of Hertford she took amongst her belongings
- some pet monkeys. These played havoc with the hangings, not in
- first-rate condition, with which, by Elizabeth’s order, the
- cheerlessness of her prison apartments was mitigated.
-
-Footnote 15:
-
- The famous scandal-letter about the Countess of Shrewsbury from Mary
- to Elizabeth, to which reference follows later.
-
-Footnote 16:
-
- Blank in the MS.
-
-Footnote 17:
-
- Of Norfolk.
-
-Footnote 18:
-
- A servant of the Shrewsburys.
-
-Footnote 19:
-
- Daughters of William, Lord Howard of Effingham.
-
-Footnote 20:
-
- Blank In the MS.
-
-Footnote 21:
-
- Hunter’s _Hallamshire_.
-
-Footnote 22:
-
- In the light of after events this is a somewhat rash offer!
-
-Footnote 23:
-
- Corker had apparently eaten his words in a whining counter statement.
-
-Footnote 24:
-
- Hunter’s _Hallamshire_.
-
-Footnote 25:
-
- His death took place in 1575, but Mary did not hear of it till a year
- later.
-
-Footnote 26:
-
- Leader, _Mary Queen of Scots in Captivity_.
-
-Footnote 27:
-
- The Cavendish motto, meaning “Secure by taking care.”
-
-Footnote 28:
-
- _Mary Queen of Scots: Her Environment and Tragedy_, by T. F.
- Henderson.
-
-Footnote 29:
-
- State Papers—Domestic, quoted by Miss Strickland.
-
-Footnote 30:
-
- State Papers—Domestic.
-
-Footnote 31:
-
- Blank in the original, as given in Lodge’s _Illustrations of British
- History_.
-
-Footnote 32:
-
- Hunter’s _Hallamshire_.
-
-Footnote 33:
-
- Explain or set aside.
-
-Footnote 34:
-
- Lady Grace’s letter.
-
-Footnote 35:
-
- The Queen had a small palace here, in Northamptonshire.
-
-Footnote 36:
-
- Gilbert Talbot had apparently fallen out of favour. The matter is,
- however, so unimportant that no explanation remains of it.
-
-Footnote 37:
-
- His three wives were: Amy or Anne, daughter and heir to Sir John
- Robsart; Douglas, daughter of William Lord Howard of Effingham and
- widow of John Lord Sheffield, by whom he had one son, Sir Robert
- Dudley; and Lettice Knollys, daughter of Sir Francis Knollys and widow
- of Walter Earl of Essex. Amy Robsart died suddenly at Kenilworth, and
- he did not even attend her funeral; Lady Sheffield he repudiated
- because of his passion for Lettice Knollys, whose death took place
- under suspicious circumstances. He declared his son by Lady Sheffield
- to be illegitimate, and she, though married to him, was so frightened
- by his attempt to remove her by poison, in order that he might wed the
- widowed Countess of Essex, that, though legally bound to him, she
- became the wife of Sir Edward Stafford, of Grafton.
-
-Footnote 38:
-
- Hunter’s _Hallamshire_.
-
-Footnote 39:
-
- Her husband died of consumption within two years of the hasty and
- romantic wedding at Rufford Abbey.
-
-Footnote 40:
-
- Hallamshire knives, or “whittles,” were famous, and the Earl often
- sent gifts of sets to his friends in these early days of the
- development of Sheffield cutlery.
-
-Footnote 41:
-
- Creighton takes the view that this was Elizabeth’s elaborate method of
- flogging the couple at Chatsworth for luring Leicester to Chatsworth,
- and that she highly disapproved of the visit.
-
-Footnote 42:
-
- Ambrose Earl of Warwick, to whom Lord Leicester bequeathed his
- estates, only making his own son, Robert Dudley, heir in the second
- place.
-
-Footnote 43:
-
- In sending her thanks for Leicester’s entertainment Elizabeth
- apparently despatched also to Shrewsbury a separate letter embodying
- her old suspicious fears.
-
-Footnote 44:
-
- Could this be the Earl of Warwick, who, as suggested in Elizabeth’s
- skittish letter just quoted, had been invited to Chatsworth with Lord
- Leicester?
-
-Footnote 45:
-
- Hunter’s _Hallamshire_.
-
-Footnote 46:
-
- Letters of Mary Queen of Scots, quoted by Leader.
-
-Footnote 47:
-
- Hunter’s _Hallamshire_.
-
-Footnote 48:
-
- The Earl and Sir John Zouch, a kinsman of the Countess, were
- contesting the right to sell some Derbyshire lead mines.
-
-Footnote 49:
-
- Hunter’s _Hallamshire_.
-
-Footnote 50:
-
- _Ibid._
-
-Footnote 51:
-
- Goodrich Castle, in Herefordshire; also one of the Shrewsbury
- properties at this date.
-
-Footnote 52:
-
- His little son.
-
-Footnote 53:
-
- The mouth of a coal-pit.
-
-Footnote 54:
-
- Probably “detailing” or “appealing to.”
-
-Footnote 55:
-
- Hunter’s _Hallamshire_.
-
-Footnote 56:
-
- That is, clearly a plot against Shrewsbury.
-
-Footnote 57:
-
- The Duke of Anjou, Elizabeth’s new suitor, whom she called her
- “Frogg,” while his ambassador, Simier, who so nearly, in his own
- opinion, secured for his master the bride of his ambitions, was known
- at Court as the “Monkey.”
-
-Footnote 58:
-
- Leader.
-
-Footnote 59:
-
- Evidently his elder brother Francis Talbot, who was probably about to
- visit his parents.
-
-Footnote 60:
-
- Quoted in Creighton’s _Elizabeth_.
-
-Footnote 61:
-
- Ellis’s _Letters_ (Lansdowne MSS.).
-
-Footnote 62:
-
- Ellis’s _Letters_.
-
-Footnote 63:
-
- Labanoff.
-
-Footnote 64:
-
- _Ibid._
-
-Footnote 65:
-
- Ellis’s _Letters_.
-
-Footnote 66:
-
- Labanoff. _State Papers_, Mary Queen of Scots.
-
-Footnote 67:
-
- I have translated this freely. Mary means the tissue of treachery, the
- fabrications of the Countess during their acquaintance.
-
-Footnote 68:
-
- The Queen.
-
-Footnote 69:
-
- Labanoff. This translation is the one given by Leader.
-
-Footnote 70:
-
- Steele.
-
-Footnote 71:
-
- Vol. CCVII State Papers.
-
-Footnote 72:
-
- This “dyarium” is reprinted by Wright, Vol. II, _Queen Elizabeth and
- her Times_.
-
-Footnote 73:
-
- The day after Michaelmas.
-
-Footnote 74:
-
- Ere.
-
-Footnote 75:
-
- Letter to Liggons, May 18, 1586. State MSS. Mary Queen of Scots.
-
-Footnote 76:
-
- Labanoff.
-
-Footnote 77:
-
- Killigrew was a deadly enemy of Mary, for he had been sent in 1572 to
- Scotland by Elizabeth to propose the demand by the Scots of the
- surrender of Mary on condition that she should be executed.
-
-Footnote 78:
-
- Rolson was a gentleman pensioner of Elizabeth who betrayed his father,
- one of the conspirators who engaged in 1570 with the sons of the Earl
- of Derby in a plot to convey Mary out of Chatsworth through a window.
- She mentioned him four years later in a letter to “Monsieur de Glasgo”
- with the greatest abhorrence, both as filial traitor and as author of
- a design to poison her.
-
-Footnote 79:
-
- I.e. Of her keep and its cost.
-
-Footnote 80:
-
- The Act referred to is one passed in the reign of Richard II to punish
- the slander of high personages or officials.
-
-Footnote 81:
-
- State MSS.
-
-Footnote 82:
-
- By “A Catholic,” State MSS.
-
-Footnote 83:
-
- Hunter’s _Hallamshire_.
-
-Footnote 84:
-
- Blank in the MS.
-
-Footnote 85:
-
- Ellis’s _Letters_.
-
-Footnote 86:
-
- Ellis’s _Letters_.
-
-Footnote 87:
-
- Costello.
-
-Footnote 88:
-
- “None-Such”—one of the royal palaces at this time.
-
-
-
-
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-
-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Bess of Hardwick and her Circle, by Maud Stepney Rawson</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Bess of Hardwick and her Circle</p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Maud Stepney Rawson</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: July 7, 2021 [eBook #65787]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Richard Tonsing, MWS, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BESS OF HARDWICK AND HER CIRCLE ***</div>
-
-<div class='tnotes covernote'>
-
-<p class='c000'><strong>Transcriber’s Note:</strong></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter ph1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div>BESS OF HARDWICK</div>
- <div>AND HER CIRCLE</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter ph2'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div>BY THE SAME AUTHOR</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A LADY OF THE REGENCY</div>
- <div class='line'>JOURNEYMAN LOVE</div>
- <div class='line'>THE APPRENTICE</div>
- <div class='line'>TALES OF RYE TOWN</div>
- <div class='line'>THE LABOURER’S COMEDY</div>
- <div class='line'>THE ENCHANTED GARDEN</div>
- <div class='line'>THE EASY-GO-LUCKIES</div>
- <div class='line'>THE STAIRWAY OF HONOUR</div>
- <div class='line'>HAPPINESS</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div id='Frontispiece' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_frontis.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>Photo by Richard Keene Ltd. Derby, after the painting at Hardwick Hall.</em></span><br /><br /><em>Elizabeth, Countess of Shrewsbury.</em></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='titlepage'>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c003'>BESS OF HARDWICK<br /> <span class='xlarge'>AND HER CIRCLE</span></h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='small'>BY</span></div>
- <div><span class='large'>MAUD STEPNEY RAWSON</span></div>
- <div class='c002'><span class='small'>WITH THIRTY-EIGHT ILLUSTRATIONS</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>INCLUDING A PHOTOGRAVURE FRONTISPIECE</span></div>
- <div class='c002'>London: HUTCHINSON &amp; CO.</div>
- <div>Paternoster Row ❧ 1910</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_v'>v</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>TO MY HUSBAND</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c005'>To you belongs, for many a reason, this, my first
-essay in history, which I have carried to its end
-with many misgivings, but with much delight in the
-matter itself.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The orthodox may be affronted at two brief incursions
-into fiction which they will find in it. Let them skip
-these judiciously, magisterially. For my own part, I
-needed consolation at times for certain hard and bitter
-facts of the history. Therefore, since the way was
-sometimes long, and the wind, in my imagination, very
-cold—as it whistled in and out of the ruins of those
-manors and castles where the Scots Queen and her married
-gaolers dwelt, or as it drove the snow across the
-splendid grey façade of Hardwick (to say nothing of
-the draughts of the sombre, public research libraries)—I
-first drew my Countess down from her picture-frame
-to marshal her household, and then lured her child and
-her child’s lover after her to gladden your road and
-mine.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>And so I give you—besides all the thoughts which
-have gone to every scrap of writing I have ever done—these
-last, which curl and stiffen and again uncoil
-themselves about this hungry woman of Elizabethan
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_vi'>vi</span>days. Into her life and much-abused toil, we, who
-have neither gold nor heirs for whom to store it, can
-look together in love and pity.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Thus even while we rejoice over our diminutive
-home, may we never forget to give thanks to the spirit
-of those who built the great houses which nourish the
-little ones, and who, in place of the “scarlet blossom of
-pain” that grows at great door and little, shall give to
-us in the end the perfect English rose.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>M. S. R.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Little Orchard,</span></div>
- <div class='line in2'><span class='sc'>Streatley,</span></div>
- <div class='line in8'><span class='sc'>Berks.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_vii'>vii</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>AUTHOR’S NOTE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>All complete letters herein quoted have been put into modern
-spelling. These, with the exception of one or two fragments
-and when the source is not otherwise indicated, have been
-selected from the transcripts in Lodge’s <cite>Illustrations of British
-History</cite>, from the originals amongst the Talbot, Howard, and
-Cecil MSS.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The Author gratefully acknowledges the special permission
-of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire to include in this work
-reproductions of many of the fine pictures at Hardwick Hall,
-as well as a number of views of that noble building.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_ix'>ix</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary='CONTENTS'>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='18%' />
-<col width='68%' />
-<col width='13%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <th class='c008'><span class='small'>CHAPTER</span></th>
- <th class='c009'>&nbsp;</th>
- <th class='c010'><span class='small'>PAGE</span></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>I.</td>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>The Red-haired Girl</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_1'>1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>II.</td>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>The Mistress Builder</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_11'>11</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>III.</td>
- <td class='c009'>“<span class='sc'>A Great Gentleman</span>”</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_34'>34</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>IV.</td>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Hubbub</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_52'>52</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>V.</td>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Make-believe</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_62'>62</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>VI.</td>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Plot and Counterplot</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_75'>75</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>VII.</td>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Family Letters</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_99'>99</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>VIII.</td>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>A Certain Journey</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_119'>119</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>IX.</td>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Love and the Woodman</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_133'>133</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>X.</td>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Aftermath</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_145'>145</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>XI.</td>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Various Occurrences</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_161'>161</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>XII.</td>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>My Lord Leicester’s Cure</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_175'>175</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>XIII.</td>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>The Divided Way</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_193'>193</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>XIV.</td>
- <td class='c009'>“<span class='sc'>Bruits</span>”</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_211'>211</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>XV.</td>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Ruth and Joyusitie</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_223'>223</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>XVI.</td>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Volte Face</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_236'>236</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>XVII.</td>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>The Coil Thickens</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_251'>251</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>XVIII.</td>
- <td class='c009'>“<span class='sc'>Face to Face</span>”</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_266'>266</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>XIX.</td>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Hammer and Tongs</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_279'>279</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>XX.</td>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Fading Glories</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_308'>308</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>XXI.</td>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Heir and Dowager</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_324'>324</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>XXII.</td>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Arabella Dances into Court</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_337'>337</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>XXIII.</td>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>My Lady’s Mansions</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_349'>349</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Index</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_365'>365</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_xi'>xi</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table1' summary='LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS'>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='80%' />
-<col width='20%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Elizabeth Countess of Shrewsbury</span> (<em>Photogravure</em>)</td>
- <td class='c011'><em><a href='#Frontispiece'>Frontispiece</a></em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='c009'></th>
- <th class='c011'><em>To face page</em></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Hardwick Old Hall</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_2'>2</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Sir William Cavendish</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_4'>4</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Hardwick Old Hall: the Giants’ Chamber</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_6'>6</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Sir William St. Loe</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_16'>16</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>George Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_38'>38</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Elizabeth Countess of Shrewsbury</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_38'>38</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Mary Queen of Scots</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_64'>64</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Mary Queen of Scots’ Apartments and Dungeons at Tutbury, from the North-west</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i_066fp'>66</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Wingfield</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_70'>70</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Mary Queen of Scots’ Bower, Chatsworth</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_72'>72</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>William Cecil, Lord Burghley</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_80'>80</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Thomas Howard, Duke of Norfolk</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_86'>86</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>The Manor House, Sheffield</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_90'>90</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Gilbert Talbot, Seventh Earl of Shrewsbury</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_100'>100</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Lady Margaret Douglas, Countess of Lennox</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_120'>120</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_178'>178</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Queen Elizabeth</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_182'>182</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Elizabeth Countess of Shrewsbury</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_198'>198</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>George Talbot, Sixth Earl of Shrewsbury</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_202'>202</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Mary Cavendish, Countess of Shrewsbury</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_252'>252</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Hardwick Hall, showing Entrance Gateway</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_258'>258</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_xii'>xii</span><span class='sc'>Statue of Mary Queen of Scots</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_310'>310</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Queen Elizabeth</span> (<em>by Zucchero</em>)</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_316'>316</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Arabella Stuart as a Child</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_330'>330</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Arabella Stuart</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_332'>332</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Hardwick Hall: the Picture Gallery from the North</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_336'>336</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Welbeck Abbey</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_340'>340</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Hardwick Hall: the Dining-room</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_342'>342</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>James the Fifth</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_344'>344</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Tomb of Elizabeth Countess of Shrewsbury</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_346'>346</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>The Entrance Hall, Hardwick Hall</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_348'>348</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Bolsover Castle</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_352'>352</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Hardwick Hall: the Picture Gallery</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_354'>354</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Mary Queen of Scots</span> (<em>by P. Oudry</em>)</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_356'>356</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Mary Queen of Scots’ Bed, Hardwick Hall</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i_358fp'>358</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Hardwick Hall: the Presence-chamber</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_360'>360</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Hardwick Hall from the West Garden</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_362'>362</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='chapter ph1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div>BESS OF HARDWICK</div>
- <div class='c012'><span class='xlarge'>AND HER CIRCLE</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>CHAPTER I<br /> <span class='small'>THE RED-HAIRED GIRL</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c005'>Among the hills and dales of Derbyshire, that great
-county of august estates, there came into the world
-in the year 1520 a certain baby girl. Her father, John
-Hardwick of Hardwick House, and her mother Elizabeth,
-daughter of Thomas Leake of Hasland, in the
-same county, christened the child Elizabeth, naturally
-enough after her mother. Like the great Queen of
-England to whom she was senior, and with whom in
-after years she had so much traffic of a highly dramatic
-kind, this Elizabeth has come down to posterity under
-the shorter name of Bess.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Derbyshire, always a great county, was specially important
-in her day. Far from London and Court it
-seemed like a little England within England. Its great
-families wove its life step by step, its varied landscape,
-its heights and dales rendered it an important strategical
-centre in the event of rebellion, and the roughness and
-slough of pack-road and cart-road made even local expeditions
-affairs of moment. The little red-haired baby
-girl inherited from her native soil, from her race, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>from the neighbours about her all that sense of county
-importance, that desire to found, establish and endow a
-great family with great estates which her life developed
-to so remarkable a degree. That consciousness of county
-importance was inevitable in those days when families
-gave their names not only to their mansions, but to the
-hamlets or village which clustered round them. Bess of
-Hardwick was brought up amongst them all—the Hardwicks
-of Hardwick, the Barleys of Barley (or Barlow), the
-Pinchbecks of Pinchbeck, the Blackwalls of Blackwall, the
-Leakes, and the Leches. Not all of them were so very
-opulent. The Hardwicks, though not rich, were of
-honourable standing as county gentry, and the Barleys
-and Leakes were of the same social rank. John Hardwick
-could not afford to give his daughters large dowries,
-and consequently when my Lady Zouche, her aunt, took
-Bess into her household in London the parents were
-probably glad enough to embrace such a social chance
-for her. Up to this time she led naturally the life of
-the ordinary young gentlewoman of tender years, said
-her prayers, learnt to sew and embroider, and had seen
-something of the ordering of a household and the disposal
-of country produce, while she heard and treasured
-up such scraps of news as filtered through to her family
-and neighbours by letters and travellers who came to
-the houses about her, or such rumours as were bruited
-in the county town. She was but twelve years old
-when she made her entry at once into my Lady Zouche’s
-house and into history. We are told that she had
-reddish hair and small eyes, but no picture of her remains
-to give any idea of her appearance at this moment
-when she left her childhood behind her. Physique she
-must always have had, and with it tenacity and tact in
-furthering her own prospects. She was of the type in
-which the art of “getting on” is innate. London and
-my Lady Zouche’s excellent social position gave her
-her first chance.</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_002fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby</em></span><br /><br />HARDWICK OLD HALL<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_2'>2</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>There is almost a touch of Becky Sharp in the way
-that this young girl, dowerless save for the forty marks of
-<em>dot</em> allotted by John Hardwick to each of his daughters,
-settled down in that household. There came to London
-one of her Derbyshire neighbours—a youth of the
-Barley or Barlow family, named Robert. Under Lady
-Zouche’s roof he fell sick and the little niece helped to
-tend him. Whether he also fell in love, whether
-Mistress Hardwick the mother was minded to “settle”
-one at least of her girls early, or whether Lady Zouche
-was of a strong match-making tendency does not appear.
-But a marriage between the niece and the guest was
-arranged and quickly carried through. A strange
-pitiful affair it must have been—that London wedding
-between the red-haired child and the sickly young man—a
-ceremony trailing after it a sorry hope of happiness
-in the midst of physicking and nostrums, weakness and
-watching, until the death of the bridegroom before the
-bride had reached her fourteenth year. His death left
-no apparent gap in my Lady Zouche’s household and
-no mark upon history. But it bestowed on the child-wife
-the dignity of widowhood, and such importance,
-plus her forty marks, as attached to any property that
-Robert Barlow left her. The Barlows were not wealthy.
-Some of them in after years were in sore straits for
-a living. The State Papers show the existence of
-piteous letters from a certain Jane Barlow who writes in
-January, 1583, to her father, Alexander Barlow, “from
-a foreign land.” She is in extreme want, forced to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>borrow money to carry on her “business,” and assures
-him that the meanest servant he has “liveth in far
-better condition than she.” There is nothing to show
-that the Barlows applied to their relation “Bess” in
-after years for help. Such property as there was passed
-to her, and she travelled out of their ken into richer
-circles.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>In 1547, at the age of twenty-seven, a woman in the
-height of her powers and the perfection of her womanhood,
-with considerable knowledge of the world and a
-tremendous store of physical and mental vitality, she
-secured a second husband and a man of considerable
-means—Sir William Cavendish. He was the second
-son of Thomas Cavendish, and his family, like that of
-Bess, took its name from its hamlet or manor. Says
-the pompous Bishop Kennet of those days: “The
-Cavendishes, like other great Families of greatest
-Antiquity derived a Name from their Place of Habitation.
-A younger branch of the Germons, famous in
-Norfolk and Essex, settled at Cavendish in Suffolk, and
-from that Seat and Estate were soon distinguished by
-that Sirname.” Thomas Cavendish, like the father of
-Bess, was “a well-to-do but undistinguished Squire,”
-but his sons made names for themselves.</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_004fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>From a photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, after the painting at Hardwick Hall</em><br />&#8196; &#8196; <em>By permission of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire</em></span><br /><br />SIR WILLIAM CAVENDISH<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_4'>4</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>In 1539 his son William was appointed one of the
-auditors of the Court of Augmentation. This Court,
-of which one at least of the members had been employed
-as a commissioner for the surrender of religious
-houses, was ostensibly founded to ensure the increase
-of the royal exchequer to such a point as would enable
-the sovereign duly to establish and strengthen the
-defences of the realm. Within a year Mr. Cavendish
-had so well played his cards and acquitted himself that
-he received from Henry VIII a grant of Church property—the
-lordships and manors of Northawe, Cuffley,
-and Childewicke in Hertfordshire. In 1548, the year
-after his marriage, he was further rewarded not only
-by the post of “Treasurer of the Chamber to the
-King” which, we are assured, was “a place of great
-trust and honour,” but the knighthood which brought his
-third wife the title that raised her above the majority
-of her fellow-gentlewomen. He did not bring her a
-virgin heart, for he had been twice married and twice
-a widower without male heir. But he conferred on her
-important social position, a great deal of land—additional
-prizes fell to his share in the way of lesser glebe
-properties, abbeys, and rectories, because his appointment
-in the royal exchequer kept him <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">au courant</span></i> of the
-places which were being given or going cheap in the
-market—and she in her turn brought him the sons he
-doubtless so greatly desired.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Never surely did a couple settle down so whole-heartedly
-or so harmoniously to the founding of a
-family, to the increase and consolidation of their patrimony.
-As to the first—their offspring—Sir William
-made a proud and careful list in writing, being, as
-Collins<a id='r1' /><a href='#f1' class='c013'><sup>[1]</sup></a> says, “A learned and exact Person.” He had
-in all sixteen children, eight of whom were borne to
-him by “this beautiful and discreet Lady,” as Collins
-describes Bess Cavendish.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The fact that his second wife’s name was also Elizabeth
-has at times given rise to misstatements with
-regard to the place and date of his third marriage, but
-he was careful to record this: “I was married to
-Elizabeth Hardwick, my third wife, in Leicestershire,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>at Brodgate, my Lord Marquess’s<a id='r2' /><a href='#f2' class='c013'><sup>[2]</sup></a> House, the 20th of
-August, in the first yeare of King Ed. the 6, at 2 of
-the Clock after midnight.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Of the eight children of this marriage six survived.
-The others were Temperance, “my 10 childe and the
-second by the same woman,” and Lucrece the youngest.
-The surviving daughters were Frances Cavendish, the
-eldest, married to Sir Henry Pierrepoint, of Holme
-Pierrepoint, Notts; Elizabeth Cavendish, who espoused
-Charles Stuart, Earl of Lennox; and Mary,
-the youngest girl, who became the wife of Gilbert
-Talbot. Of the three sons, the eldest, Henry Cavendish,
-who settled later at Tutbury Castle, married Lady
-Grace Talbot; William Cavendish, who wedded successively
-Anne, daughter of Henry Kighley, of Kighley,
-and Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Edward Boughton,
-and to whom his adoring mother left Chatsworth; and
-Charles. Frances Cavendish by her marriage became
-the ancestress of the Earls and Dukes of Kingston, and
-(through a female heiress) of the Earls Manvers, inheritors
-of the Pierrepoint property. Her brother
-Henry, though he died young, was the ancestor of the
-Barons Waterpark; while William, duly knighted in
-time, was the first Earl of Devonshire and progenitor
-of that great ducal house. Mary, though her
-husband was but a younger son of the Talbot race,
-became eventually Countess of Shrewsbury on his
-unexpected accession to the title; while Charles,
-besides a knighthood, secured as bride one of the twin
-heiresses of the Barony of Ogle, by which means the
-possessions of Welbeck Abbey and other great estates
-were insured to the Cavendishes. All these matters,
-however, belong to the future. The present was all-important
-to the welfare of Sir William and his lady.
-A fast growing family must be provided for, and
-scattered estates meant waste of cost and labour. The
-clear, keen eyes of the newly-wedded Bess looked far
-into the future. She did not care for the notion of
-separation from her own lands and the unwieldy business
-of dealing with her husband’s estates in different
-parts of the South of England. At the time of their
-marriage he had sold the aforesaid manors in Hertfordshire,
-Lincolnshire, Cardigan, and Cornwall, in favour
-of others in Derbyshire, Nottingham, and Stafford.
-The county instinct of his wife asserted itself. Her
-heart was in Derbyshire where her own dowry was concentrated.
-She desired the transfer of her bridegroom’s
-interests and property thither. Her resolution and her
-vitality naturally carried the day, and Sir William sold
-all the rest of his southern estates and settled with her
-in a manor which had originally been built by her old
-county friends the Leeches (or Leches) of Leech—Chatsworth.</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_006fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby</em></span><br /><br />HARDWICK OLD HALL: THE GIANTS CHAMBER<br /><br />(So called from the two colossal figures, dubbed Gog and Magog, in raised plaster-work over the fireplace)<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_6'>6</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>Gradually her great hobby asserted itself—the desire
-to build—and this constructive energy, as her story
-will show, went hand in hand with her master passion,
-the love of power and possession, to the end of her
-days. The mansion of the Leeches did not please her.
-It must be rebuilt for the glory of the Cavendishes.
-Her knight yielded to the wish. They set about the
-work quickly, living meanwhile, one supposes, in the
-original mansion. Hardwick Hall, it will be remembered,
-was not yet hers. John Hardwick, her father,
-had passed away in the nineteenth year of Henry VIII.
-That reign was at an end, and the reign of Edward VI
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>drawing to its close. Hardwick House eventually
-became the portion of the red-haired daughter, some
-say through the will of her brother, who apparently
-died without heir. But for the moment the Cavendishes
-needed a fine house for domesticity on a large scale and
-old Chatsworth did not suffice them. Elizabeth Cavendish
-had plenty to do in founding her family. These
-were great and busy times for the great lady. Shoulder
-to shoulder husband and wife worked at their building,
-at their estate, at the management of their tenants,
-their parks and palings, their farms and holdings. The
-red-haired girl was in her element as matron and comptroller
-and lady bountiful. Fortune smiled on her
-enterprise, and when the crown of Edward VI descended
-to Mary of England, Sir William Cavendish still held
-securely his valuable post in the Exchequer.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>It is a fine English picture as one looks upon it, this
-married life of the Cavendishes—knight and lady
-amongst their babies, enlarging their county circle,
-increasing their county honours, holding intercourse
-with Court and capital, with market and county town.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Here is a letter on domestic matters from Sir William
-to his lady showing his trust in her management of
-their joint affairs:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“To Bess Cavendish,</div>
- <div class='line in16'>“My Wife.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Good Bess, having forgotten to write in my letters
-that you should pay Otewelle Alayne eight pounds
-for certain oats that we have bought of him over and
-above twelve that I have paid to him in hand, I heartily
-pray you for that he is desirous to receive the rest at
-London to pay him upon the sight hereof. You know
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>my store and therefore I have appointed him to have
-it at your hands. And thus fare you well. From
-Chatsworth the XIIIth of April.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>W. C.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>And here is a characteristic letter from his good lady
-during her absence from home in 1552 to her man of
-affairs, in which she soundly takes him to task for
-discourtesy to her “sister Jane,” orders beer to be
-brewed against her own return, and issues commands
-for building and repairs:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Francis, I have spoken with your master for the
-deals or boards that you wrote to me of; and he
-is content that you shall take some for your necessity
-by the appointment of Neusante, so that you take such
-as will do him no service about his building at Chatsworth.
-I pray you look well to all things at Chatsworth
-till my aunt’s coming home, which I hope shall be
-shortly, and in the meantime cause Broushawe to look
-to the smithy and all other things at Penteridge. Let
-the weaver make beer for me forthwith, for my own
-drinking and your master’s; and see that I have good
-store of it, for if I lack either good beer or good charcoal
-or wood I will blame nobody so much as I will do
-you. Cause the floor in my bedchamber to be made
-even, either with plaster, clay, or lime: and all the
-windows where the glass is broken to be mended: and
-all the chambers to be made as close and warm as you
-can. I hear that my sister Jane cannot have things that
-is needful for her to have amongst you: If it be true,
-you lack a great of honesty as well as discretion to deny
-her anything that she hath a mind to, being in my
-house; and then assure yourself I cannot like it to
-have my sister so used. Like as I would not have any
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>superfluity or waste of anything, so likewise would
-I have her to have that which is needful and necessary.
-At my coming home I shall know more, and then I
-will think as I shall have cause. I would have you
-give to my midwife from me, and from my boy Willie
-and to my nurse from me and my boy, as hereafter
-followeth: first to the midwife from me ten shillings,
-and from Willie five shillings: to the nurse from me
-five shillings, and from my boy three shillings and four
-pence: so that in the whole you must give to them
-twenty-three shillings and four pence. Make my
-sister privy to it, and then pay it to them forthwith. If
-you have no other money, take so much of the rent at
-Penteridge. Tell my sister Jane that I will give my
-daughter something at my coming home: and praying
-you not to fail to see all things done accordingly, I bid
-you farewell. From London the 14th of November.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your Mistress,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>“<span class='sc'>Elizabeth Cavendish</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Tell James Crompe that I have received the five
-pounds and nine shillings that he sent me by Hugh
-Alsope.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“to my servant Francis Whitfield,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>give this at Chatsworth.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>CHAPTER II<br /> <span class='small'>THE MISTRESS BUILDER</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c005'>Upon this scene of household importance and
-intimate family life, making, if not for happiness
-in the fullest sense of the word, at any rate for prosperity
-and success, fell for a second time upon the
-married life of Bess Hardwick the great shadow. Sir
-William Cavendish, so accomplished in business, so
-doughty a husband, so excellent a host, died in 1557.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>His wife made a note of the event in her own hand:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Memorandum, that Sir William Cavendish, Knight,
-my most dear and well beloved husband, departed this
-present life on Monday, being the 25th day of October,
-betwixt the hours of 8 and 9 of the same day at
-Night, in the year of our Lord God 1557, the dominical
-Letter then C. On whose soul I most humbly beseech
-the Lord to have mercy, and to rid me and
-his poor children out of our great misery.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>Elizabeth Cavendish.</span>”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>This was probably the greatest grief of her life, and
-all her after energies were spent in furthering the
-welfare of her Cavendish children.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Now followed a period of widowhood, during which
-no substantial or interesting episodes bring the lady’s
-name to the front. But she did not lose her hold over
-society and the Court. Nor did she lay aside her wise,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>worldly habits. She was still the grand dame—dispenser
-of charities, recipient of Court letters, mistress
-of masons and woodmen and grooms, resting securely
-upon her hoard like the dragon in German legend,
-assuring herself and the world, “I lie and possess, and
-would slumber.” But hers was not the nature to be
-quiescent very long. And she had incentive enough
-to action. She had six children to further in the
-world. Daughters must be married, sons must be
-brought into the charmed circle of the Queen, to run
-the gauntlet of suspicions, favours, and coldnesses from
-her and bear the jealousy and competition of others
-till the right opportunity came for advancement. Moreover,
-there was Chatsworth to complete—alone. At
-thirty-seven, gifted with excellent good looks, an indomitable
-will, and a constitution robust and healthy,
-it was not the moment for such a woman to permit
-either her schemes or her zest in life to collapse. So
-she keeps to her road, moving no doubt daily between
-the old Chatsworth and the new, the beloved fabric
-which for her was at once the mausoleum of her greatest
-happiness, the eloquent witness of her aspirations
-for her children, and a lasting memorial of her Cavendish
-ambitions. So one beholds her working onward,
-building for the future, impatient no doubt of the
-present. Fully accustomed now to take command of
-her life and affairs, she controls every item of the
-building of her new house. One can picture her easily
-enough walking or driving to and fro, while she issues
-commands for the felling of wood, signs orders for the
-selling of coals and stone, for the transplantation of
-trees, the manufacture of hangings, the transport of
-Derbyshire marbles, the employment of artificers in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>mosaic, and plaster and wood. She had built six
-Cavendishes, bone of her bone, flesh of her flesh, and
-now she was building a great and perfect house for
-them and theirs. In it she would reign, so long as
-she lived, supreme. One pictures her again and again—a
-vigorous, vital woman, in proper and dignified
-weeds, with shrewd and genial face in which the lines
-of intrigue and sorrow had not yet deepened, moving
-amongst her army of workmen, fully conscious of the
-country life about her, though possibly not playing for
-a while a very active part in it. But the old zest of
-living, the old desire of the world, the joys of which
-she had tasted only at brief intervals during the babyhood
-of her six children, were ineradicable. She had
-acres and gold, she needed a helpmeet more than many
-women. No country gentleman of sufficient importance
-presented himself for whom she would think it
-worth while to give up the pretty delight of being
-addressed as “my lady.” In this dilemma Fate brought
-her face to face with Sir William St. Lo.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>He was of excellent birth, and, like her second
-husband, a widower. His family was, of course, originally
-Norman. State papers show that a Margaret de
-St. Low or Laudo parted with certain rights in Cornish
-property in the reign of Henry III. By the seventeenth
-century the family seems to have concentrated in
-Gloucestershire, where it held the manor of Tormarton,
-twenty-two miles south of the county town.
-“Livery” of this manor, we read, was granted to
-William St. Loe by Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>William and his brother John had fought bravely in
-Ireland against Desmond. In 1536 the former—the
-family name is spelt variously as Seyntlow, Seyntloe,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>and Santclo—is mentioned in despatches. There is a
-vivid glimpse in various letters of an attack on the
-castle of “Carreke Ogunell.”<a id='r3' /><a href='#f3' class='c013'><sup>[3]</sup></a> Says Lord Leonard
-Grey, writing to Henry VIII in England, “It was taken
-by assault by William Seyntloe and his men before
-scaling ladders could arrive.” But the writer is not
-quite sure if the success was due to “hope of fame or
-lack of victuals, for a halfpenny loaf was worth 12d., but
-there was none to be sold.” The castle has marble walls
-thirteen feet thick. It is the strongest Lord Leonard
-has ever seen. An Englishman could take it at a rush,
-in spite of the fact that besides being set in a fine moat,
-“in an island of fresh water,” the place was guarded
-with watch towers of hewn marble. But Lord Leonard
-does not think that any Irishman could have built it!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Later there is mutiny and rumour of sore disruption
-in the English-Irish army. Young Captain St. Loe’s
-men forgather with discontented spirits, and the whole
-of his stalwart retinue of three hundred, “men of high
-courage and activity,” revolts so badly that, though he
-and his captains are cleared of all blame, it is necessary
-to “bend the ordnance” on the mutineers and proceed
-against them in “battle array.” Little wonder that the
-men, henchmen and yeomen, doubtless, of Gloucestershire,
-hated the campaign. Even Lord Leonard himself
-shared the destitution of the privates and was pinched
-for the lack of a loaf. “And so,” he goes on after his
-comment on the price of bread, “I among others lay in
-my harness, without any bed, almost famished with
-hunger, wet, and cold.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Fortune and personality carried William St. Loe onward.
-In the forties of the sixteenth century he appears
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>as seneschal of Waterford, and complains bitterly of the
-way in which he is hampered in office by the Lord
-Chancellor in Ireland. The contention of his official
-companions, however, as given in a letter to the Court,
-describes him as “a good warrior, but unfit to administer
-justice.” Military disorder is stated to be the result,
-and if the complainants only “had the disposal of the
-farms Seyntlow now has” things would be very different.
-It is suggested that he is turning into a regular freebooter....
-And so on.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>However this may be, we find the gentleman in 1557
-not only safely established in England, but holding important
-Court posts with high-sounding titles. He is
-at once Grand Butler of England and captain of the
-Queen’s Guard. In these capacities Bess Hardwick, as
-Lady Cavendish, must have already met him. Had she
-not married him and had he lived long enough, she
-might have been committed to his tender mercies and
-guardianship in a very different sense. But at present
-her genius for intrigue only threw her into the apparently
-pleasant fetters of marriage. This “Grand
-Botelier,” this dashing swashbuckler who now rode at
-the head of the royal guards, and was in constant touch
-with the governor of the Tower, with the interior of
-which building she made acquaintance later, took her as
-his second wife. The whole thing seems to have been
-most amicable, affectionate, and excellent—amicable and
-affectionate on his part, excellent from her point of view.
-It did not interfere with his important duties; it did
-not necessarily nail her to the Court. Above all, it did
-not interfere with her building. Indeed, it gave her the
-more heart to it because the good captain would now
-assume by her side the duties of Derbyshire host.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>Moreover, he could help her materially in her building.
-She did not need his advice about architecture of course.
-But she saw that she could draw under her hand the
-dues of his manor in Gloucestershire for the glory of
-the Cavendishes and the surer foundation of her own
-comfort. The fine dashing soldier had children. Yet
-this was no serious block in her way. She might
-arrange it all, while leaving them not destitute but
-dependent on her wise financial dispositions. The marriage
-was duly solemnised and gave satisfaction. The
-Queen approved of my Lady St. Loe, and the more so
-because the latter did not wish to monopolise her bridegroom.
-There was enough at the Derbyshire estate to
-amuse her, and Sir William’s letters to her kept her
-advised of things “about” the Queen’s Majesty. Scottish
-affairs were brewing hotly. Elizabeth was but
-newly a queen. There were processions and enactments,
-enquiries, and excursions at Court. Bess Hardwick
-held the post of Lady of the Bedchamber, and
-naturally took the keenest interest in all that went on.
-Except through letters, reliable news did not filter at
-all to the wilds of the Peak and its lovely dales. But
-Sir William loved her and appreciated her deeply. In
-his affectionate letters he identifies her quaintly and
-sweetly with her house. “My honest, sweet Chatsworth”
-is one of the expressions. Elsewhere she is
-“My own, more dearer to me than I am to myself,”
-and in another letter he has seized her enthusiasm for
-management and construction, for he calls her “My own
-good servant and chief overseer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Occasionally Bess wanted her “grand botelier” to
-herself, and it must have been hard for Sir William to
-tear himself away from the rich security and ease of
-the house. One of his letters from Court shows that he
-is in trouble with his Queen for delayed return.</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_016fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, from the picture at Hardwick Hall</em><br />&#8196; &#8196; <em>By permission of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire</em></span><br /><br />SIR WILLIAM ST. LOE</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>“She hath found great fault with my long absence,
-saying she would talk with me farther and that she would
-well chide me. Whereunto I answered, that when her
-highness understood the truth and the cause she would
-not be offended. Whereunto she says, ‘Very well, very
-well’; howbeit, hand of hers I did not kisse.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A portrait which hangs in the great gallery at Hardwick
-shows the writer of the following letters (quoted in
-Hunter’s <em>Hallamshire</em>) in his habit as he lived—a kindly
-fellow, but at this period not a man of power.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Sir William Saint-Loe to Lady Saint-Loe.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My own, more dearer to me than I am to myself,
-thou shalt understand that it is no small fear nor grief
-unto me of thy well doing that I should presently see
-what I do, not only for that my continual nightly dreams
-beside my absence hath troubled me, but also chiefly for
-that Hugh Alsope cannot satisfy me in what estate thou
-nor thine is, whom I regard more than I do William
-Seyntlo. Therefore I pray thee, as thou dost love me,
-let me shortly hear from thee, for the quieting of my
-unquieted mind, how thine own sweet self with all thine
-doeth; trusting shortly to be amongst you. All thy
-friends here saluteth thee. Harry Skipwith desired me
-to make thee and no other privy that he is sure of mistress
-Nell, with whom he is by this time. He hath sent
-ten thousand thanks unto thyself for the same: she hath
-opened all things unto him. To-morrow Sir Richard
-Sackville and I ride to London together; on Saturday
-next we return hither again. The queen yesterday, her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>own self riding upon the way, craved my horse; unto
-whom I gave him, receiving openly for the same many
-goodly words. Thus wishing myself with thyself, I bid
-thee, my own good servant and chief overseer of my
-works, most heartily farewell: by thine who is wholly
-and only thine, yea and for all thine while life lasteth.
-From Windsor the fourth of September by thy right
-worshipful master and most honest husband master Sir</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>William Seyntlo</span>, esquire.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Commend me to my mother and to all my brothers
-and sisters, not forgetting Frank with the rest of my
-children and thine. The Amnar<a id='r4' /><a href='#f4' class='c013'><sup>[4]</sup></a> saluteth thee and
-sayeth no gentleman’s children in England shall be
-better welcome nor better looked unto than our boys.
-Once again, farewell good honest sweet.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Myself or Greyves shall be the next messenger.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“To my own dear wife at</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Chatsworth deliver this.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Sir William Saint-Loe to Lady Saint-Loe.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My hap is evil, my time worse spent; for that
-my reward as yet is nothing more than fair words with
-the like promises. Take all in good part; and if I
-should understand the contrary, it would trouble me
-more than my pen shall express. I have leave to come
-and wait upon thee, I and my brother Clement, with two
-or three good fellows more: [we] had been with thee by
-this day if it had not been for our —— matter, the which
-I will not leave over rawly. I will forbear the answering
-of all particularities in thy last letter written unto me,
-for that God willing I will this next week be the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>messenger myself. Master Man came home the night
-before the date hereof. He putteth me in great hope of
-the matter you know of. Thus trusting that God provideth
-for us all things for the best, I end; committing
-thee and all thine which are mine unto his blessed will
-and ordinance. Farewell, my own sweet Bess. From
-Master Man’s house in Redcross Street, the 12th of
-October, by him who dareth not so near his coming
-home to term thee as thou art: yet thine</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>William Seyntlo</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“My cousin Clarke saluteth thee, who was by me at
-the writing hereof.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“To my own good wife at</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Chatsworth deliver this.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>In this letter he complains of the heavy charge for his
-hired Court apparel.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Sir William Saint-Loe to Lady Saint-Loe.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My honest sweet Chatsworth: I like the weekly
-price of my hired court stuff so evil that upon Thursday
-next I will send it home again, at which day the week
-endeth. I pray you cause such stuff as Mowsall left
-packed in a sheet to be brought hither by the next carrier:
-there be hand towels and other things therein that
-I must occupy when I shall lie at Whitehall. My men
-hath neither shirt nor any other thing to shift them
-until that come. Trust none of your men to ride any
-[of] your housed horses, but only James Cromp or
-William Marchington; but neither of them without
-good cause serve speedily to be done. For nags there
-be enough about the house to serve other purposes.
-One handful of oats to every one of the geldings at a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>watering will be sufficient so they be not laboured. You
-must cause some[one] to oversee the horsekeeper for
-that he is very well learned in loitering.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“The Queen hath found great fault with my long
-absence saying that she would talk with me farther, and
-that she would well chide me. Whereunto I answered
-that when her highness understood the truth and the
-cause she would not be offended. Whereunto she said
-‘Very well, very well.’ Howbeit hand of hers I did
-not kisse.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“The Lord Keeper hath promised me faithfully to be
-at both days’ hearing; and that if either law or conscience
-be on my side I shall have it to my contentment.
-Vaughan is come unto town, but not yet Bagott. Stevens
-and we shall go through on Friday night next, at which
-time his brother will be here, who hath disbursed seven
-hundred of the twelve hundred pounds. I have an
-extreme pain in my teeth since Sunday dinner. Thus
-with aching teeth I end, praying the living [God] to
-preserve thee and all thine. Written at London, against
-my will where I am if other ways our matters might
-well be ended, this 24th of October:</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Your loving husband with aching heart until we meet,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>William Seyntlo</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“If you think good, lease your fishing in Dove unto
-Agard. We are the losers of suffering it as we have done.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“To my loving wife at Chatsworth</div>
- <div class='line in12'>give this with speed.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>This next letter is from Sir George Pierrepoint in
-gratitude of her kindly offices. His family was afterwards
-closely connected with that of Bess of Hardwick,
-for her eldest daughter married Sir Henry Pierrepoint.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span><em>Sir George Pierrepoint to Lady Saint-Loe.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Right worshipful and very good Lady: after my
-heartiest manner I commend me to your Ladyship:
-even so pray you I may be to good Mr. Seyntloe:
-most heartily thanking you both for your great pains
-taken with me at Holme, accepting everything (though it
-were never so rudely handled) in such gentle way as you
-did; which doth and will cause me to love you the
-better while I live if I were able to do you other
-pleasure or service; and the rather because I understand
-your Ladyship hath not forgotten my suit to you at your
-going away as specially to make Mr. Sackville and Mr.
-Attorney my friends in the matter between Mr. Whalley
-and me, wherein he doeth me plain wrong (as I take it
-is my conscience) only to reap trouble and unquiet me.
-But I trust so much in God’s help, and partly by your
-Ladyship’s good means, and continuance of your goodness
-towards me, that he shall not overthrow me in my
-righteous cause. And touching such communication as
-was between us as at Holme, if your Ladyship and the
-gentlewoman your daughter like or be upon sight as
-well as I and my wife like the young gentlewoman, I
-will not shrink from it I said or promised; by the grace
-of God who preserve your Ladyship and my Master
-your husband long together in wealth, health and prosperity
-to his pleasure, and your gentle heart’s desire.
-From my poor house at Woodhouse the 4th of November
-1561, by the rude lusty hands of your good Ladyship’s
-assuredly always to command.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in28'>“<span class='sc'>George Pierrepoint.</span></div>
- <div class='line'>“To the right worshipful and my</div>
- <div class='line in4'>singular good Lady, my Lady</div>
- <div class='line in12'>Sentloo at London this be delivered.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>This other letter is highly typical for the good lady’s
-literary style and her attitude towards her employees.
-It is to James Crompe, her man of affairs.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Crompe, I do understand by your letters that
-Wortly saith he will depart at our Ladyday next. I
-will that you shall have him bound in an obligation to
-avoid<a id='r5' /><a href='#f5' class='c013'><sup>[5]</sup></a> at the same day, for sure I will trust no more to
-his promise. And when he doth tell you that he is any
-penny behind for work done to Mr. Cavendish or me,
-he doth lie like a false knave: for I am most sure he did
-never make anything for me but two vanes to stand
-upon the house. I do very well like your sending
-sawyers to Pentrege and Medoplecke, for that will
-further my works: and so I pray you in any other thing
-that will be a help to my building, let it be done. And
-for Thomas Mason, if you can hear where he is, I would
-very gladly he were at Chatsworth. I will let you know
-by my next letter what work Thomas Mason shall begin
-at first, when he doth come. And as for the other
-mason which Sir James told you of, if he will not apply
-his work, you know that he is not the man for me; and
-the mason’s work which I have to do is not much, and
-Thomas Mason will very well oversee that work. I
-perceive Sir James is much misliked for his religion;
-but I think his wisdom is such that he will make small
-account of that matter. I would have you tell my aunt
-Lenecker that I would have the little garden which is by
-the new house made a garden this year. I care not
-whether she bestow any great cost thereof; but to sow
-it with all kinds of herbs and flowers and some pieces of
-it with mallows. I have sent you by this carrier three
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>bundles of garden seeds all written with William Marchington’s
-hand; and by the next you shall know how to
-use them in every point.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“From the Court the 8th of March,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your mistress,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>“<span class='sc'>E. Seyntlo</span>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>The “Aunt Lenecker” (more correctly known as
-Lynacre) was a Leake and sister of Lady St. Loe’s
-mother. She seems to have lived for some years with her
-niece, possibly since her first widowhood.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Nothing very exciting happened to the St. Loe couple
-in their short married life. When not at Court they paid
-visits, were entertained, or entertained their own visitors,
-as scraps of correspondence show. They must have had
-traffic already with the great family of Talbot—which,
-besides Sheffield Castle, owned so many large seats in
-Derby and Nottingham—and both of them naturally
-held intercourse with “Mr. Secretary Walsingham”
-and “Mr. Treasurer Cecil.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>When Sir William St. Loe died—tolerably soon, alas!—Bess
-Hardwick had gone far with her building, social
-and actual. Her third widowhood found her richer,
-bolder, better known at Court, and able to play her
-part in an ever-widening circle of the powerful and
-prosperous.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Such a lady would naturally make enemies. In 1567
-she was slandered by Henry Jackson, an ex-scholar of
-Merton College, Oxford, the tutor of her children.
-Instantly the matter went to the Council, and the
-Council wrote in September to the Archbishop of
-Canterbury. “Lady St. Loo, widow, having retained
-as schoolmaster Henry Jackson&nbsp;... is disturbed by
-scandalous reports raised against her family by him;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>you are to examine the matter thoroughly and speedily
-with the assistance of the Solicitor-General Mr. Oseley
-and Mr. Peter Osborne or other Ecclesiastical Commissioners,
-that the lady’s good name may be preserved;
-if he has unjustly defamed her he is to be severely
-punished,” runs the digest of the draft in the State MS.
-And immediately upon the conclusion of the examination
-the Queen herself intervenes on behalf of
-the lady “who has long served with credit in our
-Court,” and forthwith she commands the punishment
-of the wicked clerk: “extreme punishment, corporal or
-otherwise, openly or private, and that speedily.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Besides the danger of slander there was the trap of
-intrigue. Up to the present Bess Hardwick had kept
-clear of mischief, but, native curiosity apart, she could
-not, as Lady of the Bedchamber, help being often the
-recipient of the secrets of her friends. The romantic
-love story of Lady Catherine Grey, who held a similar
-Court post to herself, brought her into a tight place.
-For the benefit of those who do not recall the tale it
-shall be set forth again here.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The Lady Catherine was the sister of Lady Jane
-Grey. By a curious combination of circumstances—the
-exclusion given by the will of Henry VIII to the posterity
-of Margaret of Scotland, the publication of the
-will of Edward VI, and the non-repeal of certain Acts
-of Parliament—it was judged that the right to the
-crown rested with the House of Suffolk. To this great
-house Lady Catherine was the heir. She was formally
-contracted in extreme youth to Lord Herbert, the son
-of the Earl of Pembroke. But the wise Earl, in dread
-of the acute complications which such a marriage might
-entail, arranged for a divorce. This probably affected
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>the lady but little. She was young, she was attractive
-and romantic, she could meet cavaliers enough and to
-spare in the immediate circle of the Queen. But, as
-all the world knows, her Majesty, while she kept
-a dozen men languishing about her, was very loth to
-have any of her ladies wed. Love affairs must be
-very secret, lest the parties incurred her disfavour and
-the loss of benefits. As for Lady Catherine, her birth,
-as has been shown, rendered her a mark for all manner
-of suspicion. At Court she was the close companion
-of Lady Jane Seymour, daughter of the Duke of Somerset.
-This Lady Jane had a brother, no less than the
-Earl of Hertford. What more inevitable than a love affair
-between him and Catherine? There were sorrows enough
-in the background of her history, slavery enough—despite
-pageant and hunting and the comings and goings
-of great persons from foreign courts—to endure at the
-hands of the energetic, alert, excitable, witty, jealous
-royal mistress. Little by little the love story wove itself
-in the manner of every love tale. A community of interest,
-a series of assemblies which passed in array
-her Majesty’s ladies before the eyes of her gentlemen,
-little incidents which brought out the personalities of
-the two, mere propinquity, a look here and a word there,
-did their work. The two were soon secretly plighted,
-with the Lady Jane to share and shield their dear secret.
-Many anxious moments must have gone to their
-councils. To declare their troth would only be a signal
-for their instant separation. The same result would
-arise if they humbly asked the royal permission to be
-betrothed. To marry and fly would only savour of
-deep State conspiracy. To marry and bide quietly and
-then face the astonished and scandalous world with an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>air of “Indeed, and it is true. So part us you shall
-not. And, moreover, ’tis our affair. Wherefore, fling
-your mud elsewhere!” seemed the wisest way in the
-end, and also followed the line of least resistance.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>One morning—surely as crisp and heartening a day
-as could be desired for such a purpose—the Queen’s
-Majesty went to Eltham in Kent to hunt. My Lady
-Jane and my Lady Catherine stayed behind. When all
-was quiet they left the Palace (Westminster) “by the
-stairs at the orchard” and strolled quietly “along the
-sands.” Those sands led to the Earl of Hertford’s
-house in “Chanon Row.” He was waiting for his
-lady; he did not even leave her to call the priest.
-That was the Lady Jane’s errand. There is something
-very delightful about this incident, and the steady
-chaperon’s part undertaken by the Earl’s sister. The
-priest came, the wedding took place. After the brief
-ceremony there could not be much dalliance or entertainment.
-It was not yet the time to give the
-secret to the world. The ladies must reach the Palace
-again before hue and cry could be raised. They did
-not go back by “the sands,” probably because the tide
-had risen. They went back by boat. The Earl did not
-accompany them. But he led his bride and his sister to
-the boat which waited for them at the foot of the water-stairs
-of his house. He assisted them in—it must have
-been very hard to let go the hand of the woman so
-newly pledged to him—and the shallop went quietly on
-its way and delivered its fair passengers at the Palace
-stairs without exciting comment. A little later the two
-ladies were demurely seated at dinner “in Master
-Comptroller’s chamber.” Probably neither of them
-played that evening much of a table part.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>The bride was left to bear the onus of the affair.
-After a few stolen meetings the Earl went to France.
-And presently the world began to point and stare. The
-report grew, but no one seemed able to credit it. At
-the close of August, 1561, the Earl’s mother wrote to
-Cecil mentioning the rumour, denying all knowledge of
-it, and hoped that the wilfulness of her unruly child,
-Hertford, would not diminish the Queen’s favour. On
-the same date Sir Edward Warner, Lieutenant of the
-Tower, wrote to the Queen stating that he had questioned
-Lady Catherine as to her “love practices,” but
-she would confess nothing. It is said that Lady St. Loe
-burst into tears when Lady Catherine made confession
-to her. Probably the older woman knew what was in
-store for them both. The royal warrant to Sir Edward
-Warner not only required him to “examine the
-Lady Catherine very straightly how many hath been
-privy to love between her and the Lord of Hertford
-from the beginning,” but continues: “Ye shall also
-send to Alderman Lodge, secretly, for St. Low and shall
-put her in awe of divers matters confessed by the Lady
-Catherine; and so also deal with her that she may confess
-to you all her knowledge in the same matters. It
-is certain that there hath been great practices and purposes;
-and since the death of the Lady Jane<a id='r6' /><a href='#f6' class='c013'><sup>[6]</sup></a> she hath
-been most privy. And as ye shall see occasion, so ye
-may keep St. Low two or three nights, more or less,
-and let her be returned to Lodge’s or kept still with
-you, as ye shall think meet.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>After poor Lady Catherine took Lady Loe into her
-confidence, she made frantic application for help to
-Lord Robert Dudley—not yet Earl of Leicester—so
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>high in the Queen’s good graces. In this there is sheer
-drama as well as pathos—this confession and piteous
-appeal from the young and comely lady of quality,
-whose only fault was that she had married for love,
-to the handsome, pampered, arrogant cavalier, the
-Queen’s darling. Lady Hertford went to his very
-chamber in Court to implore him to stand between her
-parlous state as prospective mother and the Queen’s
-anger. Yet nothing in such contingencies could divert
-Elizabeth’s fury, or make her act in a humane
-fashion. Lord Hertford was summoned to England to
-undergo trial with his wife, and very soon both were
-committed separately to the Tower. But before this
-could be done the farce of a public enquiry had to
-be played. A commission was ordained, pompously
-headed by no less a person than Archbishop Parker.
-The accused were requested to produce, within a given
-time, witnesses of their marriage. That they failed to
-do this is extraordinary. The priest seems to have
-disappeared, and Lady Jane Seymour appeared unable
-to find him or to assist in furnishing the required evidence.
-But as this couple could not satisfy the Commission
-in time they were sentenced to be imprisoned
-during the Queen’s pleasure. “Displeasure” would be
-the correct word. For Elizabeth knew little but vanity
-and vexation of spirit at this period. The very word
-marriage must have been a red rag to her. With the
-strong vitality and virility of her father warring within
-her against the heritage of the feminine instincts of her
-mother, Anne Boleyn, with countless suitors and innumerable
-flatterers to encourage and keep at bay
-alternately, with one eye fixed on Mary of Scotland and
-another on the “devildoms of Spain,” her life just now
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>was a constant turmoil. Her whole entourage was
-forced to share in it. She would not decide upon a
-consort to help her; she belittled the estate of marriage
-one day and dallied with it the next. No wonder that
-poor Mr. Treasurer Cecil wrote as he did on the eve of
-the New Year of 1564. Schemes matrimonial whirled
-round him like the winter snow. Elizabeth was being
-wooed by a French monarch and an Austrian Emperor
-at the same moment; the Lennox family and Mary of
-Scotland were working to achieve the marriage of the
-latter with Darnley, and the Lady Mary Grey, fired no
-doubt by her sister’s intrigue and sick of loneliness,
-had actually surreptitiously married John Keys, the
-Serjeant Porter to the Queen. Meanwhile the Earl
-and Countess of Hertford were in the Tower. In
-addition, the Queen was putting up her beloved
-Dudley, now Earl of Leicester, to oppose Darnley as a
-possible consort for Scottish Mary. Shrewd old Cecil
-shows, however, that she is only half-hearted about it:
-“I see the qn M<sup>ty</sup> very desyroos to have my L. of
-Lecester placed in this high degree to be the Scottish
-Queen’s husband, but whan it commeth to the conditions
-which are demanded I see her then remiss of her
-earnestness.”<a id='r7' /><a href='#f7' class='c013'><sup>[7]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c006'>He concludes wearily enough:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“This also I see in the Qn Ma<sup>ty</sup>, a sufficient contentation
-to be moved to marry abrood, and if it is so may [it]
-plese Almighty God, to leade by the hand some mete
-person to come and lay hand on her to her contentation,
-I cold than wish my self more helth to endure my yeres
-somewhat longar to enjoye such a world here as I trust
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>wold follow: otherwise I assure yow, as now thyngs
-hang in desperation, I have no comfort to lyve.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>My Lady St. Loe, as confidante, was forced to weather
-the storm and endure reprimand. The married lovers,
-meanwhile, dragged out their days in durance. Their
-son was born in the Tower. In vain they languished,
-pined, and implored the intercession of friends. In
-1562 the Earl was allowed a little more ease. Husband
-and wife managed to meet again. Another child
-was born to them, and my Lord was duly fined fifteen
-thousand pounds by the Star Chamber, for this event
-was construed into a new State offence. In 1563 the
-dreaded plague caused Elizabeth to remove her poor
-love-birds from the Tower. Lady Catherine went to
-the house of her uncle, Sir John Grey, in Essex, and
-he was roused to uttermost compassion and distress
-by her wretched mental and physical condition. It
-was in mid-Lent that he wrote to Cecil emphatically
-and ironically:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is a great while me thinkethe, Cousin Cecile,
-since I sent unto you, in my neices behalf, albeit I
-knowe, (opportunitie so servinge) you are not unmindful
-of her miserable and compfortlesse estate. For who
-wantinge the Princes favor, maye compt himselfe to
-live in any Realme? And because this time of all others
-hathe ben compted a time of mercie and forgevenes I
-cannot but recommende her woefull liffe unto you. In
-faithe I wolde I were the Queen’s confessor this Lent,
-that I might joine her in penaunce to forgive and forget;
-or otherwise able to steppe into the pulpett to tell her
-Highness, that God will not forgive her, unleast she
-frelye forgeve all the worlde.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>This letter is worth quoting because it shows the
-prevailing attitude of the Elizabethan courtier. No one
-who lacked the favour of the sovereign could be accounted
-as one living. Lady Catherine, once under
-that heavy cloud of disfavour, never emerged, but died
-broken and miserable within six years of her unhappy
-marriage. Wherefore Lady St. Loe had chance enough
-to learn her lesson, and was fortunate in that her share
-of the affair was visited only by a cross-examination
-and warning. She was not at all the sort of woman to
-brook being left out in the cold. She was too wise, of
-course, ever to have engulfed herself in a marriage
-of this sort, but in such a case, had she not managed to
-divert Elizabeth’s anger by some master stroke of wit
-and diplomacy, she would certainly not have languished
-of “woofull griefe” nor starved herself to death, like
-Lady Catherine, for sorrow.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>At such a time and in face of the fresh hubbub
-caused at Court by the marriage of Lady Mary Grey
-(“an unhappy chance and monstruoos,” comments Cecil,
-in a letter to the English Ambassador in France), the
-peace and security of Chatsworth offered themselves as
-a happy refuge against all complications. There is
-a grotesque humour in Cecil’s use of that word monstrous,
-for Lady Mary was almost a dwarf, and Keys,
-whom Cecil calls “the biggest gentleman in this Court,”
-had secured his post of Serjeant Porter owing to his
-magnificent size and height. He was twice Lady
-Mary’s age, and was a widower with several children.
-The Queen clapped him in the Fleet, and condemned
-Lady Mary to confinement in the houses of successive
-friends. The pair never met after their hasty
-wedding.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>Thus, on all sides, Court was a place of “dispeace,”
-while in Derbyshire Lady St. Loe had good neighbours,
-people of quality and substance, and was safe
-within her parks and palings. She did not share
-her royal mistress’s distrust of matrimony, for she
-was free to choose her next lord, and there was no
-reason why she should remain a widow longer than
-she could help.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>It is not to be suggested for a moment that she had
-no suitors and that she was not the subject of all kinds
-of matrimonial gossip. One Fowler (subsequently
-committed to the Tower in connection with the discovery
-of suspicious papers) opines in his “notes” that
-“either Lord Darcy or Sir John Thynne are to marry
-my Lady St. Loe, and not Harry Cobham.” Doubtless
-the Cobham match would have pleased her well, and
-she would have been quite in her element in the place
-which afforded a seat and a surname to that noble and
-splendid family upon whom the evil days of Jacobean
-confiscation and the betrayal of Sir Walter Raleigh had
-not yet fallen. A sister of Lord Cobham was married
-to Mr. Secretary Cecil, “and the match would have
-been advantageous, but possibly my Lady, with her
-deep insight into character, divined that the gentleman
-was not of the steady stuff which makes for worldly
-security.” Moreover the best matches are by no means
-to be found near the Court, and close at hand, in the
-same county, lived one greater than the Cobhams, a
-man whom many a maid and every widow would be
-proud to espouse. He was a widower, an earl, the
-owner of seven seats, bearer of a high government
-post, and he came of a long line of distinguished
-soldiers. Lady St. Loe went to work wisely. She had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>the assistance of her dear gossip and contemporary,
-Lady Cobham. No one could have acted the go-between
-more discreetly. Before long the fashionable world
-had something to talk about in the announcement of the
-fourth marriage of Bess Hardwick.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>CHAPTER III<br /> <span class='small'>“A GREAT GENTLEMAN”</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c005'>The fourth husband of “Building Bess” was no
-less a person than George Talbot, sixth Earl of
-Shrewsbury. Though the name does not appear in the
-great roll of the prominent soldiers at the battle of
-Hastings, the first Talbot—then Talebot—of whom
-anything noteworthy is recorded, won the first title, a
-barony, for his family at the close of the career of
-William the First. Thenceforward the Talbots march
-magnificently through the history of England—great
-gentlemen, castellans, commanders, governors, judges,
-lords-lieutenant. They wielded authority in Wales,
-fought in France, Scotland, Ireland, Castile, occasionally
-fell under suspicion of conspiracy, and emerged
-without hurt. Once and once only was their pride
-humbled in the dust, when the hitherto invincible tactics
-of John Talbot, the greatest general of his day, the
-chief glory of all the Talbots before and since, were
-overcome by the generalship of the Maid of Orleans.
-It must have hit the great general very hard to find
-himself in prison on French soil for three long years at
-the hands of a woman. Neither force nor strategy
-freed him, but mere money. He had married a rich
-wife—heiress to all “Hallamshire,”<a id='r8' /><a href='#f8' class='c013'><sup>[8]</sup></a> including the castle
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>of Sheffield. In 1432 he agreed to pay a large ransom,
-and hurried back to England, bursting with purpose
-and revenge. Instantly he raised a fresh force, rejoined
-the English army in France, and fought with such
-terrible and triumphant results that his name, like that
-of Bonaparte, figured for generations as a bogy with
-which to scare fractious children. It was this tremendous
-campaign which won for his race the great
-earldom of Shrewsbury.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>George, the sixth earl, the great gentleman now dealt
-with, inherited all the administrative qualities of his
-ancestors, though he was less intimately associated with
-war than his father Francis. It was well also that his
-duties should have been to a greater extent civil and
-defensive than military and aggressive. For he had
-stepped into a great inheritance, and his burdens, as
-householder and county magnate, were stupendous.
-The manors and castles of Worksop, Welbeck, Bolsover,
-Sheffield, Tutbury, Wingfield, and Rufford were all his.
-He came into his own in 1560. The greatest gift he
-received in that year was the Garter which the Queen
-bestowed on him. Five years later he was appointed
-Lord-Lieutenant of the counties of York, Nottingham,
-and Derby. Subsequently the post of High Steward
-in the place of the unhappy fifth Duke of Norfolk was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>added to his honours. In the third year of his lieutenancy
-the affair with Bess Hardwick was in full swing.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>From both sides it was a reasonable and profitable
-alliance. He was a widower with sons and daughters
-who needed mothering. Her children needed a father.
-There was wealth enough to provide for all. Yet
-possibly family dissensions might arise amongst the
-young folk. But against this risk my lady had devised
-a splendid scheme of protection—the intermarriage of
-some of the children. They were but children, the
-two couples—Gilbert Talbot, the fifteen-year-old second
-son of the Lord-Lieutenant and Mary Cavendish, and
-the bride’s son Henry Cavendish, to whom Grace Talbot,
-the Earl’s daughter, was given as wife.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The aforesaid childish marriages were settled and
-carried through forthwith. Shortly afterwards the
-wedding of their elders took place with due magnificence,
-while the bride, besides her Cavendish and
-Barlow properties, brought to her fourth husband the
-Gloucestershire estate of St. Loe.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>If the Cavendish epoch had been one of security and
-happiness, the Shrewsbury epoch promised to be one of
-sheer brilliance and delight. It is true there were one
-or two dissentient voices. Said a certain John Hall,
-under subsequent examination upon his arrest for
-Scottish conspiracy, that, though he served as a gentleman
-of the Earl’s household for some years, he so misliked
-my Lord’s marriage with this wife, as divers
-others of his friends did, that he resigned his post.
-Yet the Queen and her circle approved. That was the
-main thing. The following letter from a kinsman at
-Court emphasises the fact:—<a id='r9' /><a href='#f9' class='c013'><sup>[9]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>“May it please you to understand that Mr. Wingfield
-hath delivered your venison to the Queen’s Majesty
-with my lord’s most humble commission, and your
-Ladyship with humble thanks from both your honours
-for her great goodness.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“[I] assure your Ladyship of my faith, her Majesty
-did talk one long hour with Mr. Wingfield of my Lord
-and you so carefully, that, as God is my judge, I think
-your honours have no friend living that could have
-more consideration, nor more show love and great
-affection. In the end she asked when my Lady meant
-to come to the Court: he answered he knew not: then
-said she, ‘I am assured if she might have her own will
-she would not be long before she would see me.’ Then
-said, ‘I have been glad to see my Lady Saint-Loe, but
-now more desirous to see my Lady Shrewsbury.’ ‘I
-hope,’ said she, ‘my Lady hath known my good opinion
-of her; and thus much I assure you, there is no Lady
-in this land that I better love and like.’ Mr. Batleman
-can more at large declare unto your honour. And so
-with most humble commendations to my very good
-Lord, I wish to you both as the Queen’s Majesty doth
-desire; and so take my leave in humble wise. From
-St. John’s the 21st of October.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your honours to command,</div>
- <div class='line in20'>“<span class='sc'>E. Wingfield</span>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was certainly nothing whatever in this marriage
-to upset Elizabeth’s plans. Indeed, it really paved the
-way for her schemes and made it easier for her to
-utilise not only the Earl’s wealth, his authority and
-position, but all his country seats in turn for the greater
-security of her life and throne.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>My Lady Shrewsbury was forty-eight, my Lord had
-been but eight years an Earl. Time had not yet
-marked on his face the lines of anxiety and care which
-the next twenty-three years were to bring him. He
-was at the zenith of his career, and the Queen hinted
-mysteriously that ere long she would show him still
-more emphatic proofs of her trust and affection in so
-splendid a servitor. It is in a very happy and devoted
-vein that he writes love letters from Court just after
-marriage to his second bride, in which he addresses her
-as “sweet none.”<a id='r10' /><a href='#f10' class='c013'><sup>[10]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c006'>It is regrettable that these letters to his “none” are
-not more numerous. Otherwise the Earl’s correspondence
-all his life was enormous, and the masses of
-letters which mirror contemporary history and his duties
-in connection with them are nearly all comprised in
-that rich heritage of manuscript known as the Talbot
-Papers. Cecil is his constant correspondent. As Lord-Lieutenant
-of three such great counties he would
-naturally be kept <em>au courant</em> of great happenings. Is
-there fear of French invasion? Immediately the Lords
-of the Privy Council send him instructions. He is
-to organise companies of demi-lances, to find horses
-for them—“a good strong and well-set gelding and
-a man on his back meet to wear a corselet and shoot
-a dagge” runs the specification. Did her Majesty
-receive “letters out of Spain”? Copies of the same
-were sent to the Earl “to the intent that you may
-thereby see what the humour and disposition of those
-parties [i.e. the King of Spain and his emissary]
-tend unto.” Did France goad Mary of Scotland into
-that unforgettable offence—the adoption of the English
-royal arms? Then also must his lordship be acquainted
-with the fact and its immense possibilities. Presently
-active Scottish hostility seemed imminent, and
-the letter which travelled to my Lord from Berwick
-to bid him have all his men in readiness to move
-to the Border is cumbrously and theatrically endorsed
-“Haste, haste, haste, haste, post haste with all possible
-haste.”</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figleft id003'>
-<img src='images/i_038fpa.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>After a portrait at Rufford Abbey</em></span><br /><br />GEORGE TALBOT, EARL OF SHREWSBURY</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figright id003'>
-<img src='images/i_038fpb.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>After a portrait in the possession of the Duke of Portland</em></span><br /><br />ELIZABETH COUNTESS OF SHREWSBURY<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_38'>38</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>The marriage of Mary and Darnley, the exciting
-news of the force raised by the rebellious Earls of
-Moray and Arran against their Queen immediately
-after the ceremony, the perilous position of Mary betwixt
-her enemies—between Moray’s force on one
-side, secretly encouraged by Elizabeth, and Elizabeth’s
-forces, supplemented by two thousand Irish and the
-Earl of Argyle’s company, on the other—the details
-of field-pieces and “harquebusses,” all these events
-and matters passed in review under the eyes of the
-splendid and cautious Earl of Shrewsbury. Scarcely
-a day went by but some important paper or letter, official
-or private, was put into his hands. At every turn
-he was helping to “make history,” while he was a keen
-spectator of the Scottish drama up to the point when
-Mary fled out of her own country to implore the aid
-and protection of her sister sovereign.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>It is now that the plot—Elizabeth’s plot which she
-had kept up her sleeve—begins to peep out. The first
-authentic news of it apparently went to the other
-Elizabeth, the newly made Countess of Shrewsbury,
-in the following letter from the English Court. The
-signature is torn off, but the correspondent has weighty
-news to tell, in spite of his deprecatory attitude towards
-mere rumours:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>“My most humble duty remembered unto your
-honourable good Ladyship. If it were not for my
-bounden duty’s sake I would be loth to write, because
-there is so small certainty in occurrences, but (seeing
-I am bound to write) it is but small that I see with
-my own eyes that is worth writing, and therefore I
-am forced to supply by that I do hear; which I write
-as I hear by credible report, otherwise I should not
-write at all, and therefore if I do err it is pardonable.
-The news is here that my Lord your husband is sworn
-of the Privy Council; and that the Scottish Queen is
-on her journey to Tutbury, something against her will,
-and will be under my Lord’s custody there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The rest of the letter is perhaps worth quoting,
-because it gives a picture of public events and suggests
-such a spacious background for the present life of Bess
-Hardwick. It deals with the war now beginning
-between Spain and the Netherlands, owing to the barbarous
-treatment of the latter by the Duke of Alva,
-and the commotion occasioned by it in France.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The report is that the Duke of Alva hath for the
-lack of money disarmed the most part of his army;
-and they are not paid for that is past; but rob and
-steal, and much molest the country. And being divers
-garrisons at Maestricht of the Walloons the Duke sent
-to discharge them and sent Spaniards in their place,
-who have shut the gates of the Spaniards and refuse
-to deliver the town before they are paid their due....
-In France there is a great stir to let the Prince of
-Condé to join with the Prince of Orange, so that the
-King divides his force, the Duke of Anjou to stop the
-passage of the Prince of Condé, etc., etc.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>The letter ends with intimate details:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And so eftsoons Jesus preserve you and send my
-cousin Frances a good hour and your honour a glad
-grandmother.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Scribbled at London&nbsp;... January, 1568.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Evidently this “Frances” is the eldest daughter of
-the Countess, who married Sir Henry Pierrepoint, and
-whose child is awaited.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Matters as regards the Earl of Shrewsbury did not
-move so fast as one would expect. It was not till June
-of 1568 that the final orders reached the Earl to make
-ready his “castle” of Tutbury for the reception of his
-romantic royal prisoner. Mary was now at Carlisle,
-and the part which the Earl was to play in her entourage
-as suggested in contemporary letters has more
-the character of that of a prominent cavalier in a
-princely retinue than that of a military gaoler. The
-description in the French ambassador’s letter reads
-well:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“A castle named Tutbury, which is only one
-hundred miles from here”—London—“and is a very
-beautiful place as they say, especially for hunting, in
-which, whenever it takes place, the Earl of Shrewsbury,
-who has a portion of his estate in that neighbourhood,
-is ordered to give her his company, along with
-other Lords and gentlemen thereabout.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Queen was feeling her way, slowly sounding
-the Shrewsburys’ relatives, careful always to assert her
-appreciation not only of lord, but of lady. My Lord
-came to Court, and still her Majesty beat about the
-bush.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>The following letters<a id='r11' /><a href='#f11' class='c013'><sup>[11]</sup></a> from the Earl belong to this
-epoch of the lives of the newly wedded pair:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My dear none, being here arrived at Wingfield late
-yesternight from Rofford, though very weary in toiling
-about, yet thinking you would be desirous to hear
-from me, scribbled these few lines to let you understand
-that I was in health and wished you anights with
-me. I picked out a very good time, for since my
-coming from home I never had letters but these this
-morning from Gilbert, which I send you. I mind
-to-morrow, God willing, to be with you at Chatsworth:
-and in the meantime as occurrences [befall] to me you
-shall be partaker of them. I thank you, sweet none,
-for your baked capon, and chiefest of all for remembering
-of me. It will be late to-morrow before my coming
-to Chatsworth, seven or eight of the clock at the
-soonest: and so farewell, my true one.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“This 28th June.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your faithful husband,</div>
- <div class='line in12'>“<span class='sc'>G. Shrewsbury</span>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My dear none, having received your letter of the
-first of December which came in very good time, else
-had I sent one of these few remaining with me to have
-brought me word of your health, which I doubted of
-for that I heard not from you of all this time till now,
-which drove me in dumps, but now relieved again
-by your writing unto me. I thank you, sweet none, for
-your puddings and venison. The puddings have I
-bestowed in this wise: [a] dozen to my Lady Cobham,
-and as many to my L. Steward and unto my L. of
-Leicester: and the rest I have reserved to myself to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>eat in my chamber. The venison is yet at London,
-but I have sent for it hither.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I perceive Ned Talbot hath been sick, and [is] now
-past danger. I thank God I have such a none that is
-so careful over me and mine. God send me soon home
-to possess my greatest joy: if you think it is you, you
-are not deceived.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I will not forget to deal with the Master of the
-Rolls for young Knifton. He seems to be much my
-friend, and is now in dealing between Denenge and me,
-for the lease of Abbot Stake, agreed upon by me and
-Tamworth he should so do. He holds it at a thousand
-marks: and the Master of the Rolls hath driven it
-to five hundred pounds, which methinks too much for
-such a lease, yet because it lies so, as I am informed,
-amongst Gilbert’s lands, I have made my steward to
-offer four hundred pounds, and to get [delay] till the
-next term, because I would have your advice therein.
-And for that I live in hope to be with you before you
-can return answer again, you shall understand that this
-present Monday in the morning finding the Queen in
-the garden at good leisure, I gave her Majesty thanks
-that she had so little regard to the clamorous people
-of Bolsover<a id='r12' /><a href='#f12' class='c013'><sup>[12]</sup></a> in my absence. She declared unto me
-what evil speech was against me, my nearness and state
-in housekeeping, and as much as was told her, which
-she now believes with as good words as I could wish,
-declaring that ere it were long I should well perceive
-she did so trust me as she did few. She would not tell
-me therein, but [I] doubt [not] it was about the custody
-of the Scottish Queen. Here is private speech that Gates
-and Vaughan should make suit to have her, but this day
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>I perceive it is altered. I think before Sunday these
-matters will come to some pass, that we shall know
-how long our abode shall be, but howsoever it falls out,
-I will not fail but be with you before Christmas, or
-else you shall come to me.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“The plague is dispersed far abroad in London, so
-that the Queen keeps her Christmas here, and goeth not
-to Greenwich as it was meant. My Lady Cobham, your
-dear friend, wishes your presence here: she loves you
-well. I tell her I have the cause to love her best, for
-that she wished me so well to speed as I did: and as the
-pen writes so the heart thinks, that of all earthly joys
-that hath happened unto me, I thank God chiefest for
-you: for with you I have all joy and contentation of
-mind, and without you death is more pleasant to me
-than life if I thought I should long be from you: and
-therefore, good wife, do as I will do, hope shortly of
-our meeting, and farewell, dear sweet none. From
-Hampton Court this Monday at midnight, for it is
-every night so late before I go to my bed, being at play
-in the privy chamber at Premiro, where I have lost
-almost a hundred pounds, and lacked my sleep.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your faithful husband till death,</div>
- <div class='line in24'>“<span class='sc'>G. Shrewsbury</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Wife, tell my daughter Maule that I am not pleased
-with her that she hath not written to me with her sister:
-yet will I not forget her and the rest, and pray God to
-bless them all.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“To my wife the Countess of Shrewsbury at Tutbury
-give this.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The daughter “Maule” here named is evidently
-Mary. Besides Gilbert and Grace Talbot, married as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>stated to the Cavendish daughter and son of Lady
-Shrewsbury, the Earl’s children were Francis, the eldest
-(who married Anne Herbert, daughter of William Earl
-of Pembroke, and did not inherit, since he died in
-1582); Mary, who married Sir George Saville, Kt.;
-Catherine, who married Henry Earl of Pembroke;
-Edward, who married Jane (elder daughter of Cuthbert
-Lord Ogle, co-heiress with the wife of Charles Cavendish),
-and succeeded to his father’s title, after Gilbert,
-as eighth earl; and Henry Talbot, who married Elizabeth,
-daughter of Sir William Rayner, and left two
-daughters.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The next letter from the Earl gives the Queen’s
-important decision:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My dear none, I have received your letter of the
-8th of December, wherein appeareth your desire for my
-soon coming. What my desire is thereunto, I refer the
-same to your construsion.<a id='r13' /><a href='#f13' class='c013'><sup>[13]</sup></a> If I so judge of time,
-methinks time longer since my coming hither without
-you, my only joy, than I did since I married you: such
-is faithful affection, which I never tasted so deeply of
-before. This day or to-morrow we shall know great
-likelihood of our despatch. I think it will be Christmas
-Even before I shall arrive at Tutbury. Things fall out
-very evil against the Scots’ Queen. What she shall do
-yet is not resolved of.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“As it chances, I am glad that I am here: for if I
-were not I were like to have most part of my leases
-granted over my head: there is such suit for leases in
-reversion of the Duchy. My park that I have in keeping
-called Morley Park is granted in reversion for thirty
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>years, wherein I have made some stir. My good neighbour
-hath a promise of it, and if I can get it put in I am
-about to get a friend of mine to put the forest of the
-Peak in his book. I have offered a thousand pounds for
-a lease in reversion for thirty years. I must pay Denege
-five hundred and forty-one for his lease of Stoke. How
-money will be had for these matters assure you I know
-not. I will make such means to Mr. Mildmay for the
-stay of Tutbury tithe, as I will not be prevented: for it
-is high time, for there was never such striving and
-prancing for leases in reversion as be now at this
-present.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“My L. Steward hath been sick and in danger, but
-now well. My L. Sheffield is departed this life; and
-my L. Paget just after. Your black man is in health.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your faithful husband till my end,</div>
- <div class='line in24'>“<span class='sc'>G. Shrewsbury</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“From the Court this Monday the 13th of December.
-Now it is certain the Scots’ Queen comes to Tutbury to
-my charge. In what order I cannot ascertain you.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“To my wife the Countess of Shrewsbury</div>
- <div class='line in4'>at Tutbury give this.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was not till just the close of 1568 that Shrewsbury
-was certain of his new duty and in a position to write
-that triumphant postscript. Within a month, in the
-beginning of the New Year, he had taken over from
-Sir Francis Knollys the task which was to prove so
-engrossing, stupendous, so provocative of every imaginable
-complication, official and domestic.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Imagine the excitement of my Lady at such a juncture!
-She knew the Scottish Queen only by hearsay, and her
-curiosity must have been kept at boiling pitch while her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>heart swelled with importance in the anticipation of the
-additional chatelaine’s duties thrust upon her by the
-august guest. She had known what it was to deal with
-a princess in captivity, for she had been acquainted
-with Elizabeth before her accession. The present
-matter was far more vital, more portentous. The
-Queen who rode wearily from Bolton Castle to Sheffield
-and thence to Tutbury must be humoured as Queen,
-served as queens are served, but a network of rules
-were being prepared, not only for her own retinue and
-the household, but for earl and lady.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The Earl, foreseeing all such domestic complications,
-had asked the Council for directions as to the treatment
-of his prisoner. “Remembrances for my L. of Shrewsbury”
-stands at the head of notes, in his handwriting,
-all duly numbered. Of these No. 5 reads, “For my
-wife’s access unto her, if she send for her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>To this the reply in Cecil’s handwriting is, “The
-Queen of Scots may see the Countess, if she is sick, or
-for any other necessary cause, but rarely. No other
-gentlewoman must be allowed access to her.” The
-remainder of the rules are strict enough, and the
-pleasant country-house picture drawn by the French
-Ambassador, De la Forest, in the letter quoted, is rudely
-effaced by these details. Shrewsbury is to be well fortified
-by an array of facts against the Scottish Queen,
-lest her pleading should win his sympathies and her
-captive condition arouse his indignation too deeply.
-How the regulations at every turn reveal Elizabeth of
-England—at once autocratic and apprehensive of her
-own importance, at once trustful and suspicious! The
-document is so vital a part of the household appanage
-of the Shrewsburys from this moment until the close of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>their wardership that it is worth quoting in the concise
-form in which, partly in the original and partly as
-abstract, it is given in Leader’s admirable <cite>Mary Queen
-of Scots in Captivity</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“A memorial of certain thinges imparted by the
-Q. Matie to the erle of Shrewsbery, for the causes
-following. Gyven at Hampton Courte, the xxvjth
-day of January 1568, the xjth year of her Mates
-reign. The Q. has chosen him in consequence of his
-approved loyalty and faithfulness, and the ancient state
-and blood from which he is descended, to have the
-custody of the Queen of Scots.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“The Earl is to treat her, being a Queen, of the
-Queen Elizabeth’s blood, with the reverence and honour
-meet for a person of his state and calling and for her
-degree. He must ask Lord Scrope and the Vice
-Chamberlain [Knollys] about the ceremonies used by
-them towards her, that ‘she may not find herself to be
-in the usage of herself abused, nor by this removing to
-have her State amended.’</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Whatever honour he gives her he must take care that
-by no pretence she finds any means to gain any rule
-over him to practise for her escape. She must have no
-opportunity either to escape nor yet to practise with
-anyone to help her to escape. He doubtless knows how
-important it is to the Queen’s honour and reputation
-and quietness that Mary does not depart without the
-Queen’s assent. No persons must be in conference with
-her except those already placed about her as her ordinary
-servants, and those who have special licence from
-the Queen. The latter for no longer time than is mentioned
-in the licence.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“If any persons coming to visit the Earl or anyone
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>in his household, proffer to come to her presence, or to
-have conference with any belonging to her, or if she
-invites them to come to her presence in the house or
-abroad, under colour of hunting, or other pastime, he
-shall warn them to forbear, and if needful use his
-authority to make them desist, and send their names to
-the Queen.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Persons coming out of Scotland to see her, if of
-degrees above that of servants, or if noted to be busy
-men and practicers, must be remitted to the Queen for
-licence. If they are mean servants or persons coming
-only to have relief of her, he shall not be so straight
-towards them as to give her occasion to say she is kept
-a prisoner, and yet he must understand their errands
-and not suffer them to abide where she shall be, or
-to hover about the country.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“He must make a view of all her ordinary servants
-when he first takes the charge, and cause a household
-roll to be made of those necessary and of those who
-were with her at Bolton. With the advice of the Vice
-Chamberlain, he must reduce the number, omitting
-those who are superfluous and who are fit rather for
-practices than service.... Her diet must be kept at
-the former rate, and payments made by the clerk who was
-sent for that purpose from the Queen’s household. He
-(my Lord Shrewsbury) must consult the Vice Chamberlain
-as to the watching of the house, as he knows her
-condition and the disposition of those about her.
-The Queen intended her first to be placed at Tutbury
-Castle but as the house is not fit, if she is nearer the
-Earl’s house of Sheffield than Tutbury, she shall remain
-there till further orders. If she is at Tutbury, it is left
-to the Earl’s discretion to allow her to remain, or to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>remove her to Sheffield or any other of the Earl’s
-houses.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Because it is thought that she will try to make the
-Earl think her cause worthy of favour, and that she is not
-well used in being restrained from liberty, the Queen
-has ordered, that beside the knowledge which the Earl
-has of the presumptions produced against her for the
-murder of her husband, and her unlawful marriage with
-the principal murderer Bothwell, he shall also be
-informed of other particulars too long to write here,
-that he may answer her and her favourers. He may
-say, as of himself, that if she is known to utter any
-speeches touching the Queen’s honour or doings, it may
-be an occasion to publish all her actions, which once
-being done cannot be revoked, but many things must
-follow to her prejudice.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“The Earl will be allowed wages for 40 persons at
-6d. a day, to be used at his discretion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As a matter of fact the house at Tutbury was
-certainly “not fit” for the reception of any guest. The
-Shrewsburys made application to the Queen for hangings
-and necessaries in the way of furniture; and these
-were promised. But they did not arrive. Mary was
-growing obstreperous and visited all her misery and
-annoyance on her present gaoler, Sir Francis Knollys.
-He, poor man, was in despair, with his wife dying, and
-his piteous requests for discharge from duty unheeded
-by Elizabeth. No wonder he wrote at last to say that
-he would take the matter into his own hands, “and
-as sure as God is in heaven, repair to Court, and suffer
-any punishment that may be laid upon him, rather than
-continue in such employment.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>And still the much-needed furniture was not in its
-place. At last my Lady Shrewsbury, no doubt in
-desperation, took down such hangings as there were
-at Sheffield, and with the help of the borrowed details
-set to work to prepare Tutbury. A supplementary
-instalment of household articles from Court helped to
-complete the necessaries. The journey from Bolton
-began on January 25th, in morose, biting weather. It
-brought Mary of Scotland to the single gate in the wall
-surrounding Tutbury on the afternoon of February 4th,
-a Friday. The position of this place was fair enough in
-the beautiful valley of the Dove, but it was not all the
-French Ambassador imagined it, and my lady and her
-household were sore put to it to make it habitable.
-The scene of commotion and bustle must have palpitated
-with drama. With messengers bringing letters
-and the rumours and counter-rumours which filtered
-through from the country folk the ten days of Queen
-Mary’s journey southward must have been a period
-of extraordinary tension for all immediately concerned.
-The condition of that busy, expectant household at
-Tutbury under my Lady’s command is best suggested
-in the imaginary dialogue overleaf.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>CHAPTER IV<br /> <span class='small'>HUBBUB</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c014'><em>Scene</em>: The presence chamber of Tutbury Castle on a raw day
-of February, 1569. A casement flapping in the wind.
-Crimson velvet drapery lies on the floor, and two women
-squat there, stitching at it. Beyond, through an open door,
-a suite of smaller rooms full of furniture.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>First Sewing Woman.</em> You tug too much of the velvet
-over to you, Mary. Let be, and be content with your
-share.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Second Sewing Woman.</em> I only desire to help you,
-Richardyne. I scarcely can hold my needle for the cold.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>1st S.W.</em> Then shut the window, you fool.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>2nd S.W.</em> Nay, fool I am not, though I be younger
-than you. For I did not set the window open. It was
-the cook. Call him to fasten it.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>1st S.W.</em> The cook indeed! His part is to bake and
-stew, not hang out of the casements.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>2nd S.W.</em> Will there be a great feast, do you think,
-when this Queen comes?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>1st S.W.</em> There will be feasts every night.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>2nd S.W.</em> Lord! how happy it will be! They say
-she loves dancing.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>1st S.W.</em> Who told you this?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>2nd S.W.</em> The post that brought my Lord’s letter
-from Bolton. He knew, for he spoke like a Scottish
-man.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span><em>1st S.W.</em> Now I see why the fiddler has come from
-Chatsworth.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>2nd S.W.</em> Yes, to make music he has come. He
-begged my Lady so sore to keep him here that she
-promised the poor wretch at last——</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>1st S.W.</em> There he is, playing down by the kitchen.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>2nd S.W.</em> He is coming here. [<em>Gets up hastily and
-trips over the velvet. Enter a youth with branches of laurel
-and ivy. He puts them on a table, and is about to retire
-when the fiddler enters playing and bowing.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>The Youth.</em> What do you here, old scraping John?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Fiddler.</em> More than you, fellow of discord, with idle
-arms.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>The Youth</em> [<em>angrily</em>]. They are only waiting to pound
-thee.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Fiddler.</em> I am my Lord’s servant more than you. He
-has many boys like you who can stand and stare, but
-only one who can fiddle.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>The Youth</em> [<em>advancing</em>]. Look to thyself. Thy catgut
-will not shield thee much.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Fiddler</em> [<em>from behind the table</em>]. Help, help, Master
-Crompe!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>The Women</em> [<em>rising and flinging the velvet over the chair</em>].
-Help, help—porter, cook, men, all of you!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>1st S.W.</em> [<em>to the youth</em>]. Boy, do not brawl in the
-presence chamber.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>2nd S.W.</em> No, no, it is foolish. We each must work
-to-day that we may dance another day. And how can
-we dance if you break the fiddler’s head?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>The Youth</em> [<em>furious</em>]. He is a lewd fellow, smooth and
-gentle to you wenches, but a liar——</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Fiddler.</em> Master Crompe. He calls me a liar. [<em>Enter
-the Steward, Crompe.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span><em>Crompe.</em> Stop your bellowing, all. You, Fiddler—drown
-the chatter with your music, if music you must
-make. Her Ladyship comes. You—boy, go to the
-bed-chambers above and help to carry down the napery
-which she will give you. Oh! there is more to accomplish
-than any hands can do. The stables are not yet
-ready, two of the scullions are drunk and must go, the
-carpenters are short of wood for the mending of the
-walls of my Lord’s guardroom, the roof of the dining-hall
-leaks, and the roll of canvas for the wall behind the
-dais, which is mossy and wet, has not come from France.
-[<em>Goes out shaking his head.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>2nd S.W.</em> [<em>mimicking him</em>]. Lord, oh, Lord! the sky
-will tumble on our heads.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>1st S.W.</em> Get back to work, girl. These velvets are
-for the Scots Queen’s bedroom.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>2nd S.W.</em> Is that true? I will stitch hard if—Master
-Fiddler will play.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Fiddler.</em> All work, not forgetting the business of eating,
-goes better to music. [<em>Begins to play, walking up
-and down the room.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>2nd S.W.</em> [<em>laughing</em>]. I cannot sew. There is an itch
-in my ankles.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>1st S.W.</em> Fudge!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>2nd S.W.</em> Do you think it is the plague that I have?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Fiddler.</em> It means that you must dance and not sew.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>[<em>2nd S.W., jumping up, gathers up her petticoats, and
-prances in time. The Fiddler plays on, and the youth,
-entering with napery, thrusts it on to the large table and
-joins the dance.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>2nd S.W.</em> Faster, Master Fiddler, till feet are as hot
-as toasts.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>[<em>In the middle of it, with a jingle of keys and a rustle of
-skirts, enter my Lady of Shrewsbury with a long roll
-of paper in her hands.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess</em> [<em>in the doorway</em>]. Is this how my command is
-obeyed?</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>[<em>The music dies away with a trickle, the dancers fall back
-against the wall.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>1st S.W.</em> [<em>rises and curtsies</em>]. Richardyne’s feet were
-cold, my Lady, and she danced to save them from blains.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess</em> [<em>drily</em>]. A mess of mustard were the quicker way,
-I think, to cure <em>that</em>. [<em>To the youth.</em>] And you—have
-you also frozen toes?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Youth.</em> Y—yes, my Lady.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> Then go and keep watch outside the castle gate
-in the wind. That will warm you quick enow. You
-can play Jumping Joan all the while and nobody to stop
-you. But so soon as you see a light upon the hill it is
-the signal that the Queen has passed the woods and is
-close. [<em>Exit Youth.</em>] [<em>To the Fiddler.</em>] Remember—you—you
-must not intrude if you are to be suffered here.
-You must stay in the kitchens till you are wanted.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Fiddler.</em> My Lady, I went looking for you and thought
-to find you here to know my duties.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> Like enough! Make no noise till you are
-ordered. [<em>He turns to go.</em>] Stop! What tunes can
-you play?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Fiddler.</em> A hundred and more—“The Derby Ram,”
-“The Nun’s Green Rangers,” “The Unconscionable
-Bachelors,” “The Derby Hero,” “The Bakewell”——</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> Silence! I do not desire to listen to your
-dictionary. How do you call the air you played but
-now?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span><em>Fiddler.</em> The title I know not, my Lady, but the song
-of it begins—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>You have a lodging in my heart</div>
- <div class='line'>For which you pay no rent.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> Marry, and you chose that to greet the Queen?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Fiddler.</em> It is for you to choose, my Lady.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> Go to, go to. Back to the kitchens with your
-fiddle. I will choose later. [<em>Enter Master Crompe.</em>]
-Crompe, Crompe, did you hear what he said—the name
-of his tune?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Crompe.</em> Yes, my Lady.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> He is an impudent fellow, Crompe.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Crompe.</em> Innocent I trust, my Lady.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> There was a wink in his eye, Crompe. [<em>Stamps
-her foot.</em>] “You have a lodging in my heart”—forsooth!—“For
-which you pay no rent!” Mark that, Crompe.
-It mislikes me much. He should play that to my
-Lord Treasurer at Court. An’ the next letter gives no
-surety of that I will no more tear down my tapestries
-to furnish a prison-house.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Crompe</em> [<em>soothingly</em>]. My Lord has her Majesty’s promise
-in writing that the furnishments shall be sent.
-And for the present we can make shift.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> Well, well, time passes and nothing is finished.
-[<em>Seats herself at the table.</em>] Bring me the ink, good
-Crompe, that I may check the appointments in the
-Scots Queen’s chambers. [<em>Crompe goes out.</em>] Crompe,
-Crompe, who has littered this room with this green
-stuff?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>1st S.W.</em> I heard Mistress Elizabeth Cavendish command
-the branches to be gathered for garlands.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> Garlands?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>2nd S.W.</em> For the Queen’s welcome.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span><em>Bess.</em> Idleness and foolery. Garlands! [<em>Catches sight
-of her daughter Elizabeth in the doorway.</em>] Bet, why do
-you bring confusion into my plans?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> Lady mother, there were no flowers. I
-have sought in the lanes, and there is no joy in them.
-And so I would twine the laurels and ivy into chains
-and see the leaves shine in the firelight.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess</em> [<em>sharply</em>]. No time for garlands. There will be
-chains enough truly. Go, fetch me this green stuff
-away. Throw it out of the window, Crompe. Bet,
-fetch your needle and mend me yonder cushion.
-[<em>Goes to door and calls.</em>] Mrs. Glasse! Wenches! [<em>Women
-come running. Mrs. Glasse, the housekeeper, follows with a
-bundle of linen.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> Listen to me, all of you. Here is my Lord’s
-tale of the things which must be ready. As I read
-so do you answer, Mrs. Glasse. Thirty pallets must be
-ready.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Mrs. Glasse.</em> Only twenty have mattresses, my Lady.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> Have you not five feather-beds, woman?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Mrs. G.</em> Only three, my Lady. The two others have
-been taken for the captain of the soldiers that is coming.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> By whose order?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Mrs. G.</em> I know not.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> Take them away instantly and put instead the
-old mattress from the old state-couch. The other five
-must make shift without mattresses.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Mrs. G.</em> My Lady, there are not pillows for more
-than fifteen beds.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> But yesterday I gave you out ten new ones.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Mrs. G.</em> We still lack fifteen, save your Ladyship will
-allow those of chaff to be used.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> Use anything, all you can lay hands upon.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>Lord, Lord! all my substance is swallowed, and still
-you cry “More pillows!” Beshrew me if you do not
-eat pillows. Alice, are the ewers and basins in place?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Alice.</em> Yes, m’lady, though one is cracked and two
-were broken early this morning by my Lord’s hound,
-which sprang through the window, so that I dropped
-them in my fright.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> Lord! these people eat ewers as fast as pillows!
-Take away the cracked one and put brass ewers for the
-other two. No, stay. Leave the cracked one. They
-say this Queen’s folk have a crazy fancy for little dogs
-and darlings. If we place them new pitchers, they will
-only break those also.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Alice.</em> Little French dogs...? Oh, they will be
-sport!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> Hold thy idiot’s tongue. Pray Heaven they do
-not bring monkeys also, like Lady Catherine Grey<a id='r14' /><a href='#f14' class='c013'><sup>[14]</sup></a> when
-she went to the Tower. Kate, where is the Queen’s
-coverlet? [<em>Girls bring it forward.</em>] There is an ugly
-darn in it. It shall be hidden with some gold lace.
-Fetch my Lord’s old riding-cloak and rip the galloon
-quickly from it. Do not use the broad, but the narrow.
-It will seem well enough. To work, to work!</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>[<em>Re-enter Crompe.</em>]</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Crompe.</em> The cook and his fellows be ready, my Lady.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> Let him come. [<em>Enter a procession of kitchen men
-with dishes.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span><em>Bess</em> [<em>reading from the roll before her</em>]. A pair of capons
-stuffed with chestnuts.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Cook.</em> The garnishing has yet to be done, my Lady.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> A brisket of pork.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Cook.</em> Boy—bring it round.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>[<em>A cook’s boy parades with the dish.</em>]</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> Six carp—these should be served hot.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Cook.</em> My Lady, they simmer slowly.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess</em> [<em>reading</em>]. A roast of beef.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>[<em>Two boys parade it and pass on.</em>]</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess</em> [<em>going on with the list, while the dishes are presented
-in turn</em>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Hare with little jellies.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Plover trussed and stuffed.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Wheaten cakes.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>A mess of furmity.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>A heron stewed. You dolts, this should be heated!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Cook.</em> My Lady, my Lady—the ovens will heat it again
-quickly. I brought it hither that your Ladyship should
-taste the sauce. [<em>Presents a spoon. Bess tastes.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> I mislike the onion. And for a Queen, there
-is too much aniseed. Mark that if the dish goes untouched.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Cook.</em> My Lady, they say this Queen will bring her
-own tasting-gentleman.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> Surely, yes, surely. Who will she not bring?
-Her tasting-gentleman to see she is not poisoned by
-you, Master Cook. Swallow the insult and say your
-prayers and be sparing of your herbs in future. You
-were always too set upon aniseed, and ’tis fit only for
-the colic, to my thinking. Get on, get on with your
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>dishes.... H’m! the pasties&nbsp;... here is only one of
-liver. I told Crompe to command two&nbsp;... two of
-liver and two of apples. [<em>The pasties are presented.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> Fifty loaves.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Cook.</em> Thirty-eight are here.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess</em> [<em>angrily</em>]. Always something lacking, it seems.
-A plague, you fellows! Understand me, Cook, if the
-castle goes hungry you shall go more hungry, and your
-purse still more. Briskets, sallets, eggs, cheeses—where
-are they? Crompe, here—take you the bill, and if
-anything lacks you know who shall first go supperless.
-Not the Queen, and not your master and lady. Nor
-the Queen’s folk either. But you, Crompe—do you
-hear me? You!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Crompe</em> [<em>agitated</em>]. Yes, my Lady. Indeed, my Lady....
-I have made provision to your order&nbsp;... for
-twenty persons.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> Twenty? And I have told you forty....</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Crompe.</em> Thirty beds said Mrs. Glasse.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> Mrs. Glasse knows nothing. Dare you scream
-ever to me of Mrs. Glasse, Crompe? [<em>More quietly.</em>]
-Listen, listen. The Queen brings five gentlemen—hungry
-riding gentlemen; six gentlewomen—weary
-riding women. God help us for their airs and graces,
-their wants and their want-nots! And the gentlemen
-must have their men. God help us again! Three in
-number these men. And the gentlewomen will bring
-two wives to wait on them, and there will be fourteen
-servitors, three cooks. Crompe, cease that arithmetic
-of your fingers, for it incenses me!—Four boys, ten
-wenches and children——</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Crompe</em> [<em>aghast, counting on his fingers behind his back</em>].
-’Tis forty-eight without the children, my Lady.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span><em>Bess.</em> Well, well, can I not add two and two as well
-as you, Crompe? Does it help me if you stand there
-with a mouth like a porringer?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Crompe.</em> But the children, my Lady!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> And the horses, Crompe!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Crompe.</em> Then there will be grooms also.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> Oil your wits, Crompe, and think of the grooms.
-Man alive! if you stand in that spot the world will take
-you for a root of mandragora, to be torn out, howling,
-by dogs! Stir, stir! Do somewhat, or, if you cannot
-of yourself, remember you have a mistress, my good
-fool! [<em>Rustles out into the corridor.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Crompe</em> [<em>aside</em>]. Who should ever forget it?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>2nd S.W.</em> [<em>jumping up, points through the casement</em>]. See,
-there is something. A boy runs&nbsp;... ’tis a post. My
-Lady, my Lady.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>[<em>Re-enter Lady Shrewsbury.</em>]</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>2nd S.W.</em> My Lady&nbsp;... there is a fire lighted on
-that hill, and a boy comes running.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> Then the Frenchwoman is upon us. For God’s
-sake leave your stitching, and mend the rest with
-pins and nails as you best can! The carpenter shall
-aid you. To the Queen’s bedchamber—quick, quick!
-[<em>Drives them in front of her.</em>] Crompe, you follow....
-No—go to the stables, the kitchens. Tell the men to
-bring more coals and bigger logs.... [<em>Exeunt.... Her
-voice pursues the servants down the corridors.</em>] Pile high
-the fires! Higher! More logs! Have the torches
-ready! Pile high the fires!</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>CHAPTER V<br /> <span class='small'>MAKE-BELIEVE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c005'>All the mighty fuss and preparation aforesaid sufficed
-only to make Tutbury barely habitable. The airy,
-pleasant impressions of the French Ambassador were
-literally castles in the air compared with the fastness
-itself to which Mary of Scotland travelled. To begin
-with, her retinue numbered sixty persons, and Heaven
-knows where they all slept that first night. Mary’s own
-rooms were small enough, and she complained bitterly of
-them and of the condition of the whole building. Here
-is her description in a subsequent letter:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am in a walled enclosure, on the top of a hill,
-exposed to all the winds and inclemencies of heaven.
-Within the said enclosure, resembling that of the wood
-of Vincennes, there is a very old hunting lodge, built of
-timber and plaster, cracked in all parts, the plaster adhering
-nowhere to the woodwork and broken in numberless
-places; the said lodge distant three fathoms or thereabouts
-from the walls, and situated so low that the rampart
-of earth which is behind the wall is on a level with
-the highest point of the building, so that the sun can
-never shine upon it on that side, nor any fresh air come
-to it; for which reason it is so damp, that you cannot
-put any piece of furniture in that part without its being
-in four days completely covered with mould. I leave
-you to think how this must act upon the human body;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>and, in short, the greater part of it is rather a dungeon
-for base and abject criminals than the habitation fit for a
-person of my quality, or even of a much lower....
-The only apartments that I have for my own person
-consist—and for the truth of this I can appeal to all those
-that have been here—of two little rooms, so excessively
-cold, especially at night, that, but for the ramparts and
-entrenchments of curtains and tapestry which I have
-had made, it would not be possible for me to stay in
-them in the daytime; and out of those who have sat up
-with me at night during my illnesses, scarcely one has
-escaped without fluxion, cold, or some disorder.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As for the gay hunting parties which had been anticipated,
-the only exercise allowed her was in a palisaded
-vegetable patch called by courtesy a garden.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The first fortnight of that time must have placed a
-severe strain on the temper and endurance of the
-autocratic chatelaine. She was not to have access to the
-royal prisoner, she must obey the orders of her gaoler-husband,
-himself constantly on tenter-hooks lest his
-cranky abode should suffer sudden attack from Mary’s
-friends, lest sickness should attack her, or quarrels be
-brewed between her motley household and his own.
-My Lady Bess—for once—must keep herself well in
-the background and still contrive provision for that
-big household. Doubtless it was she who backed the
-Earl in his determination to secure at once an understanding
-with the English Queen as to the household
-expenditure of the prisoner. He put in a claim for
-£500 as a preliminary, and a weekly allowance of £52
-was arranged. Whether he received it remains to be
-seen. Mary was not yet entirely a prisoner. That is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>to say she did not realise herself as one. Her sister-queen
-was too crafty to permit that. Shrewsbury, who
-found Mary calm and, at the outset, bearing household
-inconveniences cheerfully—hopeful that they were but
-temporary—gave her a little leash here and there. She
-evidently insisted on seeing Bess Shrewsbury. “The
-Queen continueth daily resort unto my wife’s chamber,
-where, with the Lady Leviston and Mrs. Seaton, she
-useth to sit working with the needle, in which she much
-delighteth, and in devising of works; and her talk is
-altogether of indifferent and trifling matters without
-ministering any sign of secret dealing and practice.” So
-wrote my Lord gaoler to reassure all at Court who might
-suspect him of insufficient strictness. The fact is, a
-long and detailed letter to Sir William Cecil from
-Nicholas White, the first visitor of importance who had
-spoken at length with Mary at Tutbury, had sounded
-the alarm. “If I,” says this gentleman, “might give
-advice there should be very few subjects in this land
-have access to or conference with this lady. For, beside
-that she is a goodly personage&nbsp;... she hath withal an
-alluring grace, a pretty Scottish accent, and a searching
-wit crowned with mildness. Fame might move some to
-relieve her, and glory joined to gain might stir others to
-adventure much for her sake. Then joy is a lively
-infective sense, and carrieth many persuasions to the
-heart which ruleth all the rest. Mine own affection by
-seeing the Queen’s majesty, our sovereign, is doubled,
-and thereby I guess what sight might work in others.”
-This was the impression she made on a young and
-gallant courtier loyal enough to Elizabeth. Here, again,
-she is in the form of a veritable problem as viewed by
-her first warder, Knollys, who delivered her into Shrewsbury’s charge. Knollys also pours out his impressions
-to Cecil:—</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_064fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, from the picture at Hardwick Hall<br />&#8196; &#8196; By permission of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire</em></span><br /><br />MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>“This lady and princess is a notable woman; she
-seemeth to regard no ceremonious honour beside the
-acknowledging of her estate regal; she sheweth a disposition
-to speak much, to be bold, to be pleasant, and
-to be very familiar. She sheweth a great desire to be
-avenged of her enemies, she sheweth a readiness to
-expose herself to all perils in hope of victory, she
-delighteth much to hear of hardiness and valiancy,
-commending by name all approved hardy men of her
-country, although they be her enemies, and she concealeth
-no cowardice even in her friends. The thing
-that most she thirsteth after is victory, and it seemeth
-to be indifferent to her to have her enemies diminished
-either by the sword of her friends, or by the liberal
-promises and rewards of her purse, or by division and
-quarrels raised among themselves: so that for victory’s
-sake pain and peril seemeth pleasant unto her: and in
-respect of victory, wealth and all things seemeth to her
-contemptible and vile. Now what is to be done with
-such a lady and a princess, or whether such a princess
-and lady to be nourished in one’s bosom? or whether
-it be good to halt and dissemble with such a lady I refer
-to your judgment.”</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div id='i_066fp' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_066fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby</em></span><br /><br />MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS’ APARTMENTS AND DUNGEONS AT TUTBURY<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_66'>66</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>It did not take Shrewsbury and his lady long to
-realise what they had undertaken to nourish in their
-bosom. The great thing was to distract her with light
-and little things. Of these she had sufficient at first to
-prevent her from much brooding in the intervals of
-writing her vivid and endless letters to France, to
-Scotland, to Burghley, and to the English Queen.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>Gentleman visitors being practically taboo, there remained
-only the Countess of Shrewsbury as a set-off
-from Mary’s own ladies. These were few—Mrs.
-Bruce and Lady Livingston, who was ailing, while
-of the “four Maries,” whose beauty and grace helped
-to weave the romantic legend of the vanished Court at
-Holyrood, there remained in the royal service but one,
-Mary Seton. Her Queen took a special interest in
-her, and was very dependent on her. Mary Seton
-surely knew her mistress through and through. Her
-post must at times have been one of great risk and
-mental torture. She was constantly in personal attendance,
-dealing with the Queen’s wardrobe and dressing
-her hair—for in this, history says, she was as clever as
-any skilled perruquier. Mary at first scarcely had a
-rag to cover her. Two bits of black velvet and some
-darned underclothing had been doled out to her, by
-Elizabeth, on her arrival in England. Much scorn and
-merriment they surely caused in the Scotch Queen’s
-closet! Clothing to wrap her, hangings—that veritable
-“rampart” of tapestries of which Mary spoke
-in the letter quoted—were necessary for her existence,
-and she would have her environment gracious and
-artistic even if the tapestries were of sacking. With
-the aid, no doubt, of Bess the chatelaine, some appearance
-of regality was contrived and maintained—so the
-letters of the day show—as best might be. The Shrewsburys
-had no objection to that. Everyone entered
-apparently on the surface into the little game of make-believe
-which “this Queen here” (as she is constantly
-described in letters from the houses in which she was
-immured) played throughout the fifteen years of her
-life under the Earl’s roof. For Mary was ever an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>arch-romanticist. This sense of romance constituted
-two-thirds of her attraction. Both Queens were playing
-waiting games, but Mary was determined to play
-hers effectively in spite of all conditions. And thus we
-have that vivid picture of her pretence court carried
-on under the eye of Bess Shrewsbury. The Scots
-Queen, seated on her dais under her canopy bearing
-the elusive legend “En ma fin est mon commencement,”
-issued her orders touching her household, received
-eagerly all scraps of news which filtered through
-to her and any visitors that were permitted. But the
-more interesting part was that of the Earl’s lady, who
-stood as the social barrier between the outer world, so
-full of stirring incident, and the mock court indoors.
-How much to tell her Scottish majesty and how little,
-what gossip to retail and what to suppress, was no light
-task for a talkative, energetic lady, who knew the ins
-and outs not only of the English Court but the character
-of its mistress. Mary was always good company.
-Elizabeth gave her subjects plenty to talk about. One
-wonders, in the light of a certain letter which Mary
-afterwards wrote to the Queen, how far<a id='r15' /><a href='#f15' class='c013'><sup>[15]</sup></a> Bess Shrewsbury
-allowed her tongue at this juncture to trip out of
-sheer vivacity and desire to please her prisoner-guest.
-Just now, however, it is too early to imagine intrigue
-in this direction. The women could safely discuss
-clothes and the new fashion of doing the hair. Mary
-Seton was acknowledged to be the best “busker of hair
-in any country,” “and every other day she had a new
-device of head-dressing, without any cost, and yet
-setteth forth a woman gaily well.” Mary loved her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>wigs, her headdresses, embroidery, her little pets,
-and the contriving of presents of needlework. With
-these Bess could sympathise. On occasion she wanted
-French silks, and when Mary wrote to France a list of
-goods which she desired, she would send for a length of
-silk for my Lady, and a friendly transaction took place
-between the two. Truly a charming relationship! And
-all the time Mary was not too bored, for she was
-writing love letters to her new suitor—the Duke of
-Norfolk.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Let us take in the political situation for a moment.
-It was the spring of 1569—just two years since the
-murder of Darnley, since when Mary had the impression
-of a procession of violent events to wipe out of
-her mind. Events since that horrible night had travelled
-at a wild speed. Her abasement before Bothwell, her
-desperate game of bluff—that is to say, her mad marriage
-with him, in spite of the opposition of all her friends,
-while she yet wore her discreet mourning for the
-wretched Darnley—her sudden awakening to bare realities,
-and the shock of the knowledge that she had given
-herself wholly to a mere adventurer, and a brutal one at
-that—these were some of the sinister facts over which,
-in this solitude and stillness of her English life, she had
-time enough to brood. Then came the final revelation
-of the almost wholesale perfidy of her Scottish noblemen,
-and the three weeks of her ghastly third honeymoon,
-which amounted to nothing but a preliminary
-imprisonment, ending in the gross insults of the populace,
-which drove her distracted on her way to the
-fortress of Lochleven. The detection and flight of
-Bothwell, her Scottish imprisonment, her escape and
-her flight to England—all these were part of the crimson
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>pageant from which she had emerged, shattered in body,
-soul-worn, to face the problem of her life. Her baby
-boy was far from her in the hands of her brother and
-worst enemy, Earl Moray, the traitor to whom the
-power of Elizabeth gave approval as regent. But Moray
-himself had executed a <em>volte-face</em>. For his own purposes
-he now assumed a highly moral and affectionate tone
-towards his kinswoman. He advised this, her fourth
-marriage, on the score that it was the best chance of
-wiping out the stigma which clung to her in connection
-with her passion for Bothwell and her illegal union with
-him. “Take a suitable and godly person to be your
-spouse and you will at once assume a very high place in
-my excellent esteem” was practically his attitude. Mary
-knew his power. Was not the villain in constant intercourse
-with Cecil, Elizabeth’s right hand? She knew
-also that marriage was the only way out of prison and
-back to her throne. Three husbands had failed her.
-Even Moray conceded that she “had been troubled
-in times past with children, young, proud fools, and
-furious men”—the anæmic Francis II, Darnley, and
-Bothwell. As a woman she could attract any man she
-chose. And the Duke of Norfolk was one of the
-premier gentlemen of England, inclined to espouse
-her faith, and had powerful friends among the nobles
-near the Border. The plan was exciting. France
-and Spain must back her up in it. It was very
-difficult to send and receive letters. No wonder that
-the strain of this secret, with the bad weather and the
-difficulties under which the Tutbury household laboured
-of securing sufficient provisions and sufficient fuel to
-warm the cranky building, resulted in the illness of the
-prisoner.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>After much letter-writing there came from Court the
-permission for removal for which the Earl and Mary
-longed. The household was to take up its abode now
-at Wingfield Manor. Away went my Lady ahead to put
-up the curtains and see to the carpets and pallets and
-other upholstery, and a week or two later away went the
-cavalcade after her. Her chatelaine’s art and dexterity
-had freer play here. Wingfield Manor, in its ruins,
-suggests a house of grace, comfort, and importance, well
-proportioned, and soundly built in a stately manner.
-Even Mary, aware of its tolerably fortified nature,
-its guardroom and dungeons, its massive keep and
-earthworks, conscious of the nightly sentinels under her
-windows, could call it “a fair palace.” And my Lady
-was surely in her element. It was not exactly the rich
-domestic peace, the family life for which she or her
-husband had bargained. They were forced to isolate
-themselves from their children to a great extent, lest the
-comings and goings connected with their own family
-should entice strangers or messengers of doubtful character.
-But the eyes of England were upon the Earl and
-his lady. Where Mary was there abounded romance,
-intrigue, and mystery. Spain, France, Scotland, all were
-watchful, waiting for the least news. And possibly the
-Queen’s command and the distinction conferred on the
-Shrewsburys carried them far along the painful task on
-which they had embarked. There is no doubt that Bess
-had a better time of it in the bargain than her lord.
-The ultimate responsibility was his. Moreover, his was
-a nature conscientious almost to a morbid degree. He
-was forced to receive attacks without and within and to
-keep his head cool. He must report himself in long
-letters to Mr. Treasurer, he must bear with the complaints and entreaties of his captive. Mary was not so
-much of a prisoner that she could not rush to his suite
-of rooms and upbraid the authority by which her Scottish
-messengers were detained and her letters examined.
-Her abuse and lamentation, defiance and tears were
-shared alike by husband and wife. In reporting all this
-in detail to the Court, he insists upon the necessity of
-his wife’s co-operation. In the same breath he makes it
-piteously clear that the matter is not one for diversion
-or satisfaction to either of them. In this picture he
-draws of their joint life in such letters, Tutbury or
-Wingfield shelters not one prisoner, but three. The
-royal lady is scarcely a moment out of their sight or
-hearing. The only advantage of her constant invasion
-of my Lady’s chamber is that the latter may watch her
-the more closely and report more minutely upon her
-looks and words.</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_070fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>Photo by Valentine and Sons, Dundee</em></span><br /><br />THE RUINS OF WINGFIELD MANOR<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_70'>70</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>Already by this time the Shrewsburys could enter
-into the feelings of Sir Francis Knollys when he longed
-to shake off his irksome duties. Had the Earl foreseen
-the extent of the burden thrust upon him he
-would have followed the example of his comrade-in-arms
-and begged for instant release. All he could and
-did do, however, was to endure, while protesting his
-loyalty.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>There was excitement enough in store for everyone
-when Mary’s adviser, the Bishop of Ross, was actually
-permitted to join the Wingfield household. This was
-the signal for the crowding of Scottish folk to the
-vicinity. These came constantly to pay their court
-to Mary, thereby increasing all the domestic complications
-of Earl and lady, to say nothing of the added
-cost in catering and stabling entailed by such “traffic.”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>Nor did it help them that Mary should fall ill. After
-delays two physicians were sent from Court, and besides
-insisting upon a thorough ventilation and cleaning of
-her apartments they advised her removal to yet another
-of the family mansions.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>This time it was to Chatsworth that the cavalcade
-travelled. The busy Countess had not yet completed
-her great scheme of building. Yet a part of the then
-“new house” was sufficiently completed for use, and
-though there was as yet no stately presence chamber
-here, nor ballroom, nor great dining-hall, as at Wingfield,
-the surroundings were sylvan and reassuring,
-and the little raised and moated garden where Mary
-would take the air was far more agreeable than the
-tangled garden patch at Tutbury. In May the change
-to the meadows by the Derwent must have been delicious.
-By June 1st the visit was ended and away
-went the cortège again, my Lady Bess included, back to
-Wingfield. The Earl, for the first time since Mary’s
-arrival, took a few days’ leave of absence and again
-went to Chatsworth. This brief absence immediately
-gave rise to trouble and suspicious reports. While
-struggling with indisposition he hurried back, and had
-just time to report that all was well at Wingfield when
-ague and fever laid him low. His wife took command
-of the situation. His condition was so critical that
-she wrote to Cecil asking that some arrangement “for
-this charge” should be made in case he should grow
-worse. Cecil took action at once, but before any
-change in the command at Wingfield could be made
-the Earl was recovering, and his wife wrote to reassure
-the Queen, through Cecil, and put in a word for her
-own loyalty:—</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_072fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby</em></span><br /><br />MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS BOWER, CHATSWORTH<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_72'>72</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>“Of my duty in all respects, God, that is my witness
-of my doings and meanings, will defend me, I trust,
-against the evil that malice would unto me. No enemy
-would I willingly refuse to be my judge in this case,
-that hath power to think and speak truly, but most
-heartily do I thank you for your right friendly admonition,
-knowing that I cannot too much remember
-my duty, like as I would be no less sorry if I were
-not persuaded that you did write only of good will,
-without all cause of suspicion. I have hitherto found
-you to be my singular good friend, and so I trust
-you will continue, which God grant I may requite to
-my desire.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Poor Shrewsbury did not recover quickly. He
-suffered mentally as much as bodily all through this
-summer of 1569, and begged a few days’ grace to visit
-the baths at Buxton. This was withheld and delayed,
-and, in despair, he went without permission. Immediately
-the Queen was told of it and instructed Burghley
-to pounce on him in a letter. Naturally he hurried
-home full of abject apology, and, though he found the
-household at Wingfield tranquil, was much annoyed at
-the insanitary state of the manor in consequence of the
-number of people in and about it. A little crowd of
-no less than two hundred and fifty persons now constituted
-the entourage of prisoner, Earl, and Countess.
-In order to wipe off all undesirables, he recommended
-another change of domicile—this time to his estate of
-Sheffield.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The Earl possessed two manors here—the Lodge or
-Manor on the hill, and the Castle in the valley above
-the meadows—now built over—where the Dun and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>Sheaf joined their waters. This move was regarded as
-a most excellent method for change and expansion.
-Both houses were habitable, there was good fishing, and
-plenty of ground for exercise without going out of
-bounds. Nothing was lacking now to hasten the departure
-save the royal permission.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>CHAPTER VI<br /> <span class='small'>PLOT AND COUNTERPLOT</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c005'>The move to Sheffield was now abandoned because
-of the desperate excitement aroused in Elizabeth’s
-mind by the disclosure of the love affair which was
-brewing between Mary and the Duke of Norfolk.
-This matter for some time was not entirely a secret.
-A certain number of influential English nobles agreed
-with those of Scotland that such a marriage would be an
-excellent solution of the entire Scottish question. Even
-Leicester himself, adored of Elizabeth, joined his opinion
-to theirs. And these gentlemen had drawn up a proposal
-to Mary of which one clause runs, “Whether,
-touching her marriage with the Duke of Norfolk which
-had been moved to her by the Earl of Moray and
-Lidington, she would wholly refer herself to the Queen’s
-Majesty and therein do as she would have her and as
-her Majesty did like thereof—willing that all things
-should be done for her Majesty’s surety, which might
-be best advised by the whole Council.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Her reply to this document, especially to the clause
-quoted, was clear, dignified, and highly emphatic. She
-did not doubt the English Queen’s good faith, nor the
-friendship of her nobles, nor the goodwill and liking
-of the Duke. She adroitly declared that she never
-regarded marriage as a mere means to recover power
-and position, saying, “I assure you that if either men
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>or money to have reduced my rebels to their due obedience
-could have ticed me I could have been provided
-of a husband ere now. But I&nbsp;... did never give
-ear to any such offer.” She fully calculated what she
-would lose by this marriage in regard to all her “friends
-beyond the seas.” The Duke of Alva was trying to
-secure her co-operation in the invasion of England.
-She was coquetting with the Duke of Anjou. She was
-writing to Rome. By the document she had signed she
-laid aside all future schemes, while she could still
-nourish the secret hope that, once restored to the
-Scottish throne in place of her baby son, she would,
-in default of Elizabeth’s marriage, inherit the throne
-of England. The whole matter was now on such a
-broad and amicable footing that apparently nothing was
-wanting but the longed-for “Bless you, my children”
-from the lips of Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>By September this dream was rudely dispelled.
-Norfolk was summoned to Court, roundly abused—Elizabeth,
-as one of her courtiers writes of her, could
-“storme passinglie”—and poor Shrewsbury received
-a severe snub. The Queen practically declared him
-a useless gaoler: “I have found no reliance on my
-Lord Shrewsbury in the hour of my need, for all the
-fine speeches he made me formerly, yet I can in no
-wise depend on his promise.” Therefore she added
-two guards—the Earl of Huntingdon and Viscount
-Hereford.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>More household complications, more goings and
-comings, more trouble for Earl and Countess! Afflicted
-with chronic gout and irritated in every direction,
-Shrewsbury decided to make for Tutbury again. A
-tactless royal order addressed to Huntingdon (whom
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>Mary also hated) over the head of Shrewsbury bred
-fresh discomfort and annoyance in the Castle. Things
-were, however, gradually smoothed over. The jealousy
-between Mary’s gaolers was allayed on the one hand
-by the news that the Queen’s apprehensions were
-justified by the disappearance of the Duke of Norfolk
-from Court, while the alarm of Mary was increased
-fourfold by the cross-questioning to which she was
-subjected and the news of the sudden arrest of her
-ducal lover.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>These were dramatic days which Bess of Shrewsbury
-witnessed. Letters were intercepted, coffers suddenly
-searched in the Scots Queen’s apartments, there were
-incursions of men with “pistolets,” constant dismissals
-of the Queen’s people, sudden dismissal, even, of the
-Countess’s own servants. But the gaps at the board
-were immediately filled by Huntingdon and his retinue,
-for whom the Shrewsburys were expected to provide
-without any increase of allowance, on the score that
-the present numbers of the household did not exceed
-those at Wingfield and elsewhere. The irony of this,
-added to the suggestions that the Earl had been too
-kind to his prisoner, and that his request to be allowed
-to deal as before with Mary without the assistance of
-any other officer, sprang from some person or persons
-“too much affectionated to her,” created havoc in
-Shrewsbury’s mind. Of course he visited his anger
-on his colleague Huntingdon in the form of morose
-hints. In that atmosphere of wholesale suspicion he
-could not speak out except in a letter to head-quarters.
-He knew that Elizabeth’s sinister expressions implied
-suspicions of his Countess. It is difficult to understand
-exactly what this lady was “after,” in the vulgar
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>phrase, at this moment. For Mary, with whom she
-had hitherto been on excellent terms, now distrusted
-her also. She expressed this distrust <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tout au plat</span></i>,
-as she would say, to Walsingham in October, and told
-him not to attach any credit “to the schemes and
-accusations of the Countess who is now with you.”
-Apparently my Lady had left for the Court, and was
-there making good her case and her husband’s. As
-likely as not she was furiously jealous of the authority
-wrested from her husband in favour of Huntingdon,
-and overwrought, like everyone else, by the acute
-tension of the situation. Henceforward in the correspondence
-with Cecil sturdy disclaimers of treason
-on the part of Earl and lady are always cropping up.
-The following is from Shrewsbury to Cecil, October,
-1569:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sir,—I have received your letter, thinking myself
-beholden unto you for your friendly care over me.
-I hear to my grief that suspicion is had of over much
-goodwill borne by my wife to this Queen and of untrue
-dealing by my men. For my wife thus must I say,
-she hath not otherwise dealt with that Queen than
-I have been privy unto and that I have had liking
-of, and by my appointment hath so dealt that I have
-been the more able to discharge the trust committed
-unto me. And if she for her dutiful dealing to her
-Majesty and true meaning to me should be suspected
-that I am sure hath so well deserved, she and I might
-think ourselves fortunate. And where I perceive her
-Majesty is let to understand that by my wife’s persuasion
-I am the more desirous to continue this charge,
-I speak it afore God she hath been in hand with me
-as far as she durst and more than I thought well of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>since my sickness to procure my discharge. I am
-not to&nbsp;...<a id='r16' /><a href='#f16' class='c013'><sup>[16]</sup></a> by her otherwise than I think well of.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>From the close of this year till the execution of the
-Duke of Norfolk in 1572 the history of George Talbot
-and Bess Hardwick is bound up with the story of the
-tissue of conspiracies which wound itself about Mary.
-The Norfolk plot, with which Mary was to be drawn
-out of prison, was a stout rope woven of many strands;
-the net which Cecil constructed for his prey was close-meshed
-and wide-spreading. There were constant
-alarums and excursions for the Earl and his people.
-He succeeded in getting rid of Huntingdon, but he
-was incessantly in fear of a rising of the northern
-nobles to whom Norfolk had appealed for their armed
-support; and when this fear was realised and the
-armed Earls arrived within fifty odd miles of Tutbury
-a hasty removal was necessary. Coventry was the
-only place which suggested itself until the hostile
-demonstration fizzled out and Tutbury could be regained.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The new year found the household re-established
-there. While Mary, in poor health, acted as though
-she had no inkling of conspiracy, while the Duke
-of Norfolk and the Bishop of Ross, her adviser,
-were in the Tower, miniature plots again disturbed
-the tenor of existence, and for once the Earl was
-permitted to choose his own road, and to remove his
-captive with bag and baggage to Chatsworth.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>This was a pleasanter place than Tutbury for the
-inditing of love letters, as Mary found. But her Duke
-was a broken reed. He wanted to leave the Tower, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>to Elizabeth he vowed he would not marry her rival.
-The summer passed on and the conditions of imprisonment
-at Chatsworth fluctuated from “straitness” to indulgence
-according to the suspicions of Elizabeth and
-the reports of those who were jealous spies of the Earl’s
-slightest actions. Things assumed a more hopeful aspect
-in spite of the discovery of another minor plot to free
-Mary by letting her down from one of the windows of
-the Countess’s spacious and elegant house—still unfinished.
-Elizabeth about this time actually contemplated
-Mary’s freedom and her re-establishment as
-a sovereign; whereupon a treaty to this end was carefully
-discussed!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Negotiations came to such a pass that Mr. Treasurer
-himself was empowered to travel to Chatsworth and
-confer with the prisoner. He took his wife with him,
-and between business and pleasure the visit passed off
-well. Cecil wrote a long and complimentary “leaving
-letter” on behalf of himself and his wife, chiefly interesting
-in this connection because it indicates how Lady
-Shrewsbury played her part as hostess.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We have fully satisfied her Majesty with the painful
-and trusty behaviour of my Lady your wife in
-giving good regard to the surety of the said Queen;
-wherein her Majesty surely seemed to us to be very
-glad, and used many good words, both of your Lordship’s
-fidelity towards herself, and of the love that she
-thought my Lady did bear to her.... And thus I
-humbly take my leave of your Lordship and my Lady,
-to whom my wife hath written to give her thanks for
-certain tokens whereof I understood nothing afore she
-told me of them; and sorry I am my Lady should have
-bestowed such things as my wife cannot recompense as
-she would, but with her hearty goodwill and service,
-which shall always be ready to her favour and mine also:
-assuring yourself that to my uttermost I will be to your
-Lordship and to my Lady as sure in good will as any
-poor friend you have.”</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_080fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>From an engraving by W. T. Ryall, after the painting by Mark Gerard</em></span><br /><br />WILLIAM CECIL, LORD BURGHLEY<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_80'>80</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>Like all the schemes of Elizabeth the aforesaid treaty
-hung fire. Suspense and disappointment had their
-usual result upon Mary. Once more she fell ill. Had
-she died on their hands Earl and Countess would have
-been open to the worst suspicions. They found themselves
-always out of pocket in regard to her maintenance;
-they were themselves, obviously, more or less prisoners
-in their own house; they had begged to be released from
-“this charge.” In an age when poisonings were rife
-and assassinations common they would have been suspected
-by all parties of all sorts of foul play. Mary’s
-loyal gentleman, John Beton, the prægustator, must
-have had enough to do at this time in tasting the dishes
-for the daily menus. Shrewsbury meanwhile kept a
-sharp look-out and at once suggested change of air.
-Mary, in spite of the pain in her side, symptom of a
-chronic malady, and one which always attacked her when
-she was the least out of health, was only too ready to
-move. This time the destination was Sheffield—the
-castle.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Matters grew worse and worse in regard to the
-captive in spite of all these precautions. Down came
-the Bishop of Ross—now set at liberty—and the Court
-physician, while all the world knew that for this illness
-there was but one cure—liberty. Only intrigue kept
-Mary alive at the close of 1570. The rest of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>spring and summer of 1571 witnessed her return to the
-proposals to the Duke of Norfolk, the co-operation of
-Ridolfi, the preparations by her Scottish partisans, the
-crystallisation of the plan of invasion by Philip of
-Spain. The whole toil of this great enterprise was
-nullified by the curiosity of a mere merchant, an innocent
-messenger chosen to carry a bag of money
-destined to further the plot. He mistrusted the contents,
-carried the bag to head-quarters, and inside were
-the incriminating letters which led to the second imprisonment
-of Norfolk and the gradual unravelling of
-the conspiracy. During the lengthy process of examining
-the many people involved there were uneasy
-moments for all sorts and conditions of men. It was
-a most uncomfortable time for the Shrewsburys. It
-was open to any of their dismissed servants who were
-arrested to inculpate their former employers, and the
-latter were probably prepared for such contingencies.
-Yet a letter like the following would descend upon
-the Countess somewhat like a bombshell. The man
-Lascelles mentioned in it was an ex-servant under
-arrest, and when threatened with torture pleaded guilty
-to the charge, giving as excuse that what he did was
-known to the Countess.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“It may please your Ladyship,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Where of late Bryan and Hersey Lascelles
-having been before my Lords of her Majesty’s Council,
-it appeareth directly by the letters both of the Queen
-of Scots and of the Duke of Norfolk also, that Hersey,
-as he confessess also himself has been a dealer sometimes
-with the Queen there by the means of his brother’s
-being in service there; and yet that his dealing was not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>without knowledge of your Ladyship, to the end, as he
-says, that the same might always be known. I have
-thought good to advertise your Ladyship thereof, and
-withal to pray you to let me understand the truth of
-such matter as your Ladyship doth know of the said
-Hersey Lascelles’ dealings from time to time as particularly
-as your Ladyship can remember. And so I take
-my leave of your Ladyship.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“From London, the 13th of October, 1571.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your Ladyship’s at commandment,</div>
- <div class='line in24'>“<span class='sc'>W. Burghley</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“To the right honourable and my very good Lady,
-the Countess of Shrewsbury. Haste, haste, haste.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A nice letter to receive on a serene autumn day!
-Carefully worded and dignified though it is, it opens
-up vistas of suspicion and treachery. The Countess
-was away, and her lord had to bear the first brunt of it
-alone. Perhaps this was just as well, as it gave him a
-chance of clearing their honour independently. For,
-of course, he recognised in it an urgent official document.
-The reading must have cost him a bad quarter
-of an hour. There was no time to be lost in again
-asserting his wife’s integrity. A few seconds of miserable
-suspense would possibly ensue ere his trust and
-loyalty conquered all fears, and he sat down to write
-first to his wife, enclosing the letter from Court, and
-then to tell Burleigh that some serious misconstruction
-must have been placed on the fact that he always empowered
-his lady to interest herself in such persons as
-Lascelles and his doings, the better to keep her spouse
-apprised of Mary’s plots: “I willed my wife to deal
-with him and others to whom the Queen bears familiar
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>countenance, so as the better to learn her intentions.”
-To this he adds a diplomatic postscript, assuring Burleigh
-that this letter is penned independently of any
-collusion with his wife.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The Countess, fenced in by consciousness of innocence,
-backed by the sense of possession, and seated in
-the heart of her own pleasant estate, rich now in the
-burnished glory of autumn, writes <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en grande dame</span></i> from
-Chatsworth on October 22nd:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Your letters touching Henry Lassells came to my
-hands after my husband had answered them. I doubt
-not you are persuaded of my dutiful service, but lest
-you should think any lack of goodwill to answer, I
-thought it meet to advertise you of my whole doings in
-the matters.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“As soon as I had intelligence that this Lassells had
-some familiar talk with the Queen of Scotland, and
-that my Lord thereupon had laid watch to his doings,
-this Lassells belike suspecting of my knowledge thereof,
-desired that he might offer unto me some special matter
-touching that Queen, with great desire that I should in
-no wise utter it, for, saith he, she hath most earnestly
-warned me not to tell you of all creatures. I then
-hoping to hear of some practice, answered him that he
-might assure himself not only to be harmless, but to be
-well rewarded also at the Queen Majesty’s hands, and
-of my Lord, if he would plainly and truly show of her
-doings and devices, meet to be known. Then he told
-me with many words that she pretended great goodwill
-unto him, and of good liking of him, and that she
-would make him a lord, but, saith he, I will never be
-false to the Queen’s Majesty, nor to my Lord, my master.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>Further than this I could not learn of him. Then I
-warned him to remember his duty and to beware of her,
-and that she sought to abuse him, and that I knew for
-certain that she did hate him. He said then that he
-would take heed, and advertise me of all that he could
-learn. After this he came to me again, and told me of
-her familiar talk as before, and of no further matter,
-saving that he said that he told her how he marvelled
-that she could love the Duke,<a id='r17' /><a href='#f17' class='c013'><sup>[17]</sup></a> having so foul a face, and
-that she answered that she could like him well enough,
-because he was wise. Then I warned him again more
-earnestly than I did before, and told him of her hatred
-towards him. Then he seemed to credit me. Albeit a
-while after he desired me by his letters to certify him
-how I knew she hated him, for, saith he, if she so do
-she is the falsest woman living. Then my Lord and I
-perceiving his mind so fondly occupied on her and
-knowing him to be both vain and glorious, and that he
-was more like to be made an instrument to work harm
-than to do good, my Lord despatched him out of service,
-as he hath divers others upon suspicion at sundry times.
-This came to my knowledge about Candlemas, next
-after the Northern rebellion, and he was put away about
-Easter following. I never knew of any dealing between
-the Queen and the Duke of Norfolk, either by Lassells
-or anyone else. If I had I trust you think I would
-have discovered it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is not surprising that the Earl’s wife kept aloof
-for a while and preferred Chatsworth just now.
-Sheffield was a regular dungeon: the Scottish Queen
-was only allowed to take an airing on the leads. No
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>domestic cheerfulness was possible, no social intercourse,
-and every letter sent or received was a source of
-anxiety.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Both for the sake of social decency and because of
-the necessity to impress the always scandalous world
-with her conjugal devotion, the Countess however
-returned presently to the fortress and took up her
-share of the daily burden of wardenship.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Her presence was more than ever necessary now.
-The Duke of Norfolk’s trial was fixed for a date early
-in the New Year, and the Earl’s assistance thereat was
-indispensable, for he was made Lord High Steward of
-England in the place of the arraigned nobleman. The
-command at Sheffield was therefore temporarily assigned,
-not to Huntingdon this time, but to Sir Ralph Sadler.
-He arrived, the Earl left for London, and Bess Shrewsbury
-remained to keep a hand upon the situation and
-play her own cards. She did this incessantly till her
-husband’s return. Circumstances gave her most excellent
-opportunities for making a good impression on
-Sadler. It was her business to walk on those leads
-of the now vanished castle with the prisoner and to
-carry her daily such news as it was considered well to
-communicate. There was very little variety in the
-days. When the weather was bad Mary kept to her
-rooms. When it improved she took her airing, but
-had not much refreshment for her eyes. There was
-little to do on the leads but stroll to and fro, gazing
-at Sheffield Lodge on the hill, or at the water and
-meadows below. And for the ear there was nothing
-beyond music on the virginals to charm it, no sounds
-to distract the country silence, except the opening and
-closing of the castle gates, and the roll of the drum
-at six o’clock morning and evening, when the watches
-were set and the password given.</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_086fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>From the picture in the possession of the Duke of Norfolk</em></span><br /><br />THOMAS HOWARD, DUKE OF NORFOLK<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_86'>86</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>To all who are students of the latter years of Mary’s
-life the letters of Sir Ralph Sadler, written during this
-time, must be familiar. His whole attention is naturally
-concentrated on the interesting captive, but here and
-there we get side glimpses of Lady Shrewsbury and her
-power as a kind of self-ordained lady of the bedchamber
-to Mary.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The news of Norfolk’s death sentence was not long
-in coming. The Earl of Shrewsbury himself had to
-pronounce it with true and bitter tears, and Cecil,
-now Lord Burghley, at once wrote to Sheffield.
-A fact so important must be communicated to Mary
-at once. It was due to her both as Norfolk’s accomplice
-and as a prisoner of quality. It was highly
-important that the effect of it on her should be gauged
-and duly reported. For this sweet errand the Countess
-was chosen. A previous announcement had, however,
-reached her, and took the wind out of the Countess’s
-sails. What a situation! She found the Queen “all
-bewept and mourning,” and had the doubtful taste to
-ask “what ailed her.” Mary, with great dignity and
-pathos, replied that she was sure that the Countess
-must already know the cause and would sympathise,
-and she expressed further her intense grief lest anything
-she had written to Elizabeth on behalf of Norfolk
-had brought him and her other friends to such a pass.
-The Countess had common sense, and her rejoinder was
-logical and undoubtedly correct, but she need not have
-hit quite so hard as in her reply, quoted by Sadler.
-For a woman of imagination—and imagination of a
-practical kind Bess Shrewsbury certainly possessed—it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>was a cruel answer, and not the least part of the
-cruelty was the scathing condemnation of one who
-she knew might have been Mary’s husband. It seems
-to have crushed Mary. She could bear no further
-discussion of the matter, and withdrew into herself to
-nurse her sorrow. “And so like a true lover she
-remaineth, still mourning for her love,” wrote Sadler,
-much touched by her attitude. This letter of his is
-graphic enough to be quoted in full:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Please it, your Lordship,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“The posts whether they work or play have
-their hire, and therefore I spare not their labour though
-I have none other occasion than to advertise your L.
-that all is well here concerning this charge, and that
-yesterday I received your letters of the 17th of this
-present (for which I most heartily thank your L.),
-together with a brief discourse of the Duke’s arraignment
-and condemnation, which I forthwith imparted
-unto my Lady of Shrewsbury to the end she might take
-occasion to make this Queen understand of the same;
-and also I gave it out to the gentlemen in this House
-both what number of the Nobility did pass upon his
-trial, and also that his offences and treasons were such,
-and so manifestly and plainly proved, that all the noble
-men did not only detest the same, but also without any
-manner of scruple objected by common consent everyone
-of them did pronounce him guilty. Which, being
-put abroad here in the house after this sort, was
-brought unto the knowledge of this Queen by some
-of her folk which heard it, before my Lady came unto
-her, for the which this Queen wept very bitterly, so
-that my Lady found her all to be wept and mourning,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>and asking her what she ailed, she answered that she
-was sure my Lady could not be ignorant of the
-cause, and that she could not but be much grieved,
-to understand of the trouble of her friends, which
-she knew did fare the worse for her sake, for sure
-she was that the Duke fared the worse for that which
-she of late had written to the Q. Majesty; and said
-further that he was unjustly condemned, protesting
-that as far as ever she could perceive by him or for
-anything she knew he was a true man to the Queen her
-sister: but being answered by my Lady that as she
-might be sure that whatsoever she had written to the
-Q. Majesty could do the Duke neither good nor harm
-touching his condemnation, so if his offences and
-treasons had not been great and plainly proved against
-him those noble men which passed upon his trial would
-not for all the good on earth have condemned him.
-She thereupon with mourning there became silent, and
-had no will to talk any more of the matter, and so like
-a true lover she remaineth still mourning for her love.
-God, I trust, will put it into the Queen Majesty’s heart
-so to provide for herself that such true lovers may
-receive such rewards and fruits of their love as they
-have justly deserved at her Majesty’s hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“All the last week this Queen did not once look out
-of her chamber, hearing that the Duke stood upon
-his arraignment and trial, and being troubled by all
-likelihood by a guilty conscience and fear to hear of such
-news as she hath now received. And my presence
-is such a trouble unto her that unless she come out
-of her chamber I come little at her, but my Lady is
-seldom from her, and for my part I have not since
-my coming hither so behaved myself towards her as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>might justly give her occasion to have any such misliking
-of me: though indeed I would not rejoice at all
-of it, if she had any better liking. But though she
-like not of me yet I am sure this good lady and all the
-gentlemen and others of this house do like well enough
-of me: which doth well appear by their courteous and
-gentle entertainment of me and mine. My Lord hath
-a costly guest of me, for I and my men and 36 horses
-of mine do all lie and feed here at his charge, and
-therefore the sooner he come home the better for him.
-Trusting his L. be now on the way and therefore
-I forbear to write to him. But if he be there, it may
-please you to tell him that all is well here, and that my
-Lady and I do long to see his L. here. And as
-I doubt not she would most gladly have him here, so
-I am sure she cannot long for him more than I do,
-looking hourly to hear some good news from your
-L. of my return. And so I beseech Almighty God
-to preserve and keep you in long life and health, and to
-increase you in honour and virtue. From Sheffield
-Castle the 21st of January at night 1571. With the
-rude hands of</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your L. to command as your own</div>
- <div class='line in28'>“<span class='sc'>R. Sadler</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>“To the right honourable and my very good lord,
-my Lord of Burghley, of the Queen Majesty’s
-Privy Council.”</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_090fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>From a print in the British Museum</em></span><br /><br />SHEFFIELD MANOR HOUSE<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_90'>90</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>Never was the contrast between the two principal
-ladies in Sheffield Castle so marked as at this moment.
-Mary mourns for Norfolk, for the ruin of her hopes,
-for the treaty of freedom which now can never be
-carried through. Bess sails about the castle aware
-of everything at Court and at home; the posts bring
-her affectionate letters from the Earl, while her children
-and his flourish under their respective tutors. Chatsworth
-is still a-building, and she signs orders for stone
-and wood and coal and fodder. She was a good hostess
-to Sadler, and when he relinquished his duties gladly
-enough in February, upon the Earl’s return, he was
-positive that Lady Shrewsbury was deserving of great
-commendation and “condign thanks” for the manner in
-which she filled her important position. She was very
-much of a personage, and her correspondence exhibits
-very few of the traits usually described as “feminine,”
-while her friends fully estimated her influence and her
-interest in the larger events. The following lengthy
-letter gives the complexity of the political situation, and
-though of course it belongs to a date previous to the
-execution of Norfolk, is placed here as an illustration
-of the stirring times in which the great lady lived and the
-events which had happened during the first year or two
-of her fourth marriage. It is unsigned, and is evidently
-from some connection or possibly a gentleman of the
-Shrewsbury household, who is keeping his ears and
-eyes wide open at Court:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“To the Countess of Shrewsbury,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“My most humble duty remembered unto your
-honourable good lord. May it please the same to
-understand that I have sent you herein enclosed the
-articles of peace concluded and proclaimed through all
-France, in French, because they are not at this hour to
-be had in English (which are translated and in printing),
-and if the peace be kept, the Protestants be indifferently
-well. The great sitting is done at Norwich; and, as I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>do hear credibly, that Appleyard, Throgmorton, Redman,
-and another are condemned to be hung, drawn,
-and quartered; and Hobart and two more are condemned
-to perpetual imprisonment, with the loss of
-all their goods and lands during their lives. The four
-condemned for high treason, and the other for reconcilement.
-They were charged of these four points: the
-destruction of the Queen’s person; the imprisonment
-of my Lord Keeper, my Lord of Leicester, Secretary
-Cecil; the setting at liberty out of the Tower the Duke
-of Norfolk; and the banishment of all strangers; and
-it fell out in their examination that they would have imprisoned
-Sir Christopher Haydon and Sir William Butts,
-the Queen’s Lieutenants. None of them could excuse
-themselves of any of the four points, saving Appleyard
-said he meant nothing towards the Queen’s person; for
-that he meant to have had them to a banquet, and to
-have betrayed them all, and to have won credit thereby
-with the Queen. Throgmorton was mute, and would
-say nothing till he was condemned, who then said,
-‘They are full merry now that will be as sorry within
-these few days.’ Mr. Bell was attorney for Mr.
-Gerrard, he being one of the Judges, and Mr. Bell
-alleged against Appleyard that he was consenting to the
-treason before; alleging one Parker’s words, that was
-brought prisoner with Dr. Storey out of Flanders, that
-Parker heard of the treason before Nallard came over
-to the Duke of Alva. And there stood one Bacon by
-that heard Parker say so: my Lord offered a book to
-Bacon for to swear: ‘O, my Lord,’ said Appleyard,
-‘will you condemn me of his oath that is registered for
-a knave in the Book of Martyrs?’</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“They had set out a proclamation, and had four
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>prophecies; one was touching the wantonness of the
-Court, and the other touching this land to be conquered
-by the Scots; and two more that I cannot remember.
-There were many in trouble for speaking of seditious
-words. Thomas Cecil said that the Duke of Norfolk
-was not of that religion as he was accounted to be:
-and that his cousin Cecil was the Queen’s darling, who
-was the cause of the Duke of Norfolk’s imprisonment,
-with such like; who is put off to the next assize.
-Anthony Middleton said, ‘My Lord Morley is gone to
-set the Duke of Alva into Yarmouth, and if William
-Keat had not accused me, Throgmorton, and the rest
-we had had a hot harvest; but if the Duke of Norfolk
-be alive, they all dare not put them to death.’ Metcalf
-said that he would help the Duke of Alva into Yarmouth,
-and to wash his hands in the Protestants’ blood.
-Marsham said that my Lord of Leicester had two
-children by the Queen: and for that he is condemned
-to lose both his ears, or else pay £100 presently.
-Chiplain said he hoped to see the Duke of Norfolk to
-be King before Michaelmas next, who doth interpret
-that he meant, not to be King of England, but to be
-King of Scotland.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Mr. Bell and Mr. Solicitor said both to this effect
-to the prisoners—‘What mad fellows were ye, being
-all rank Papists, to make the Duke of Norfolk your
-patron that is as good a Protestant as any is in England:
-and, being wicked traitors, to hope of his help
-to your wicked intents and purposes, that is as true
-and as faithful a subject as any that is in this land,
-saving only that the Queen is minded to imprison him
-for his contempt.’ Doctor Storey is at Mr. Archdeacon
-Watts’ house, in custody, besides Powels.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>Thurlby, late Bishop of Ely, died this last week at
-Lambeth.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“The Spanish Queen is arrived in the Low Countries,
-and will embark as soon as may be. The Emperor is
-setting forward his other daughter towards Metz to be
-married to the French King. It is written, by letters
-of the 28th of the last, from Venice, that the Turk has
-landed in Cyprus 100,000 men, or more, and has besieged
-two great cities within that kingdom, Nicocia
-and Famagosta. At one assault at Famagosta they lost
-12,000 men; upon the which repulse the Begler Bey of
-Natolia, the General of the Turk’s army, wrote to the
-great Turk, his master, that he thought it was invincible.
-He answered that, if they did not win it before they
-came, they should be put to the sword at their return
-home. The Turk has sent another army by land against
-the Venetians, into Dalmatia, and are besieging Zara
-with 20,000 footmen and 20,000 horsemen, and divers
-towns they have taken, as Spalator, Elisa, Eleba, and
-Nona, with great spoil and bloodshed: and it is written
-that the Turk’s several armies are above 200,000 men
-against the Venetians. The men first sent by the
-Venetians fell so into diseases by the way as they were
-fain to prepare new men, which is thought will hardly
-come to do any good in Cyprus. A man may see what
-account is to be made of these worldly things, as to see
-in a small time the third state of Christendom, in
-security, power, and wealth, to be in danger of utter
-overthrow in one year.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“They say my Lord of Leicester hath many workmen
-at Kenilworth to make his house strong, and doth furnish
-it with armour, ammunition, and all necessaries for
-defence. And thus Jesus have my Lord, and your Ladyship,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>and my friends in his tuition, to God’s pleasure.—Scribbled
-at London, the last of August, 1570.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Your good Ladyship’s ever to command during life.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“To the right honourable Countess of Shrewsbury</div>
- <div class='line in8'>at Chatsworth, or where.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>Life fell once more into its old groove. No large
-conspiracy could be feared yet, in spite of Elizabeth’s
-postponement of Norfolk’s execution. But there remained
-always the undercurrent of lesser “practices.”
-Earl and Lady had their hands always full with detective
-work of this kind. Priests and conjurers, pedlars,
-porters, and even schoolmasters formed the roll of suspects.
-Scouts were always at work following their
-movements, hanging about taverns to hear gossip which
-might betray their doings, and searchers were employed
-to pounce upon any scrap of written stuff which might
-prove valuable “copy.” Some of the most emphatic
-witnesses against Mary—her own letters of conspiracy—were
-actually found hidden under a stone on a bit of
-waste ground. The messenger charged with them durst
-not carry them further at that moment and before he
-could remove them they were discovered. It was about
-this time that she was given permission to take her airing
-further than the leads and to walk out in the open.
-The snow lay on the ground and soaked her to the
-ankles, but she bore it cheerfully, and one wonders if she
-had knowledge of those hidden letters and whether she
-nourished a wild hope of finding them in their niche and
-setting them safely on their way. Secret and sinister
-were the warnings which Earl and Lady shared in that
-long cold spring at Sheffield. All travellers from across
-the Border were duly catalogued by the northern
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>authorities and word passed from mouth to mouth of
-their appearance and activities. This was the sort of
-despatch which reached the castle: “A certain boy
-should come lately out of England with letters to the
-castle of Edinburgh and is to return back again within
-three or four days.... It were not amiss that my Lord
-of Shrewsbury had warning of him. His letters be
-secured in the buttons and seams of his coat. His coat
-is of black English frieze, he hath a cut on his left cheek,
-from his eye down, by the which he may be well known.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>All the dodges of such envoys—from the stitching of
-letters into linings and the hiding of a written message
-under the setting of a jewel to the use of bags with
-double bottoms where despatches could be kept “safe
-from wet and fretting” and sight—were known to the
-Shrewsburys. An evening spent in the kitchens and
-guardroom, an hour or so of conference with my Lady
-would open to reader and writer alike a world of sensational
-gossip “palpitating with actuality.” The captive
-Queen’s precarious health was a constant subject of discussion.
-Shrewsbury’s letters were bound to be full of
-it. Mary, who once more began to bombard Elizabeth
-with letters, suggested a trial of Buxton waters. She
-also busied herself anew with embroidery, contrived
-gifts for the Queen, and sent her a large consignment of
-French stuffs and silks. When packages of this kind
-arrived from France the Earl was always on the look-out.
-So careful was he in regard to his wife’s share in
-such parcels that he would not let her receive and pay
-for such goods until he had first communicated the
-exact details of the transaction to his royal mistress.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Neither French taffetas nor little embroidered caps
-could alter the decision of the Privy Council and reverse
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>the position of the axe in regard to the Duke of
-Norfolk. His death took place in the glory of the
-early summer of 1572. Mary mourned and her health
-grew worse and worse. Yet, just when change was
-planned for her, and the castle had reached a condition
-almost too insanitary to endure, the news came of the
-massacre of St. Bartholomew. “These French tragedies
-and ending of unlucky marriage with blood and vile
-murders cannot be expressed with tongue to declare the
-cruelties.... These fires may be doubted that their
-flames may come both hither and into Scotland, for such
-cruelties have large scopes.... All men now cry out
-of your prisoner,” wrote Burghley to the Earl under
-supreme agitation. To which the latter replies later,
-“These are to advertise you that the Queen remains
-still within these four walls, in safe keeping.” The
-woods and wolds, he explains, are being scoured by his
-spies, and the number of the guard is increased by
-thirty. Clang of gate, clash of steel, roll of drum—the
-household music of the Shrewsburys knew nothing
-more harmonious than these noises. At stated intervals
-we hear the old burthen of sturdy self-vindication
-in such letters as the following to Burghley:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“My very good Lord,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I heartily thank your good Lordship for seeking
-to satisfy her Majesty in some doubts she might
-conceive of me and my wife, upon information given
-to her Majesty; your Lordship therein doeth the part
-of a faithful friend; so I have always trusted, and you
-shall receive no dishonour thereby. My services and
-fidelity to her Majesty are such as I am persuaded with
-assured hope that her Majesty, having proofs enough
-thereof, condemneth those who so untruly surmise,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>against my wife first, and now myself, either of us
-undutiful dealing with this Queen or myself of any
-carelessness in regard my charge. As before I crave
-trial of whosoever is here noted of any indirect dealing
-with this Queen, so do I again require at your Lordship’s
-hands to be amenable to her Majesty for due
-proof and punishment, as they merit, that her Majesty
-might be fully satisfied and quiet. And for my riding
-abroad sometimes (not far from my charge) in respect of
-my health only; it has been well known to your Lordship
-from the first beginning of my charge, and it is
-true I always gave order first for safe keeping of her
-with a sure and stronger guard, both within my house
-and further off, than when myself was with her. I
-trusted none in my absence but those I had tried; true
-and faithful servants unto me, and like subjects to her
-Majesty. I thank God my account of this weighty
-charge is ready, to her Majesty’s contentation. No
-information nor surmise can make me shrink. Nevertheless,
-henceforth her Majesty’s commandment for
-my continual attendance upon this lady shall be obeyed,
-as her Majesty shall not mislike thereof; and even so,
-my Lord, I say to that part of your letters wherein
-a motion is made to me; that (as in all my services
-hitherto) I had, nor seek, written contentment nor will,
-than shall stand her Majesty’s pleasure or her best
-service. And so, wishing to your Lordship as well as
-to myself, I take my leave.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“At Sheffield this 9th of December, 1572.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your Lordship’s ever-assured friend,</div>
- <div class='line in20'>“<span class='sc'>G. Shrewsbury</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I have presumed to write to the Queen’s Majesty
-to the same effect as to your Lordship.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>CHAPTER VII<br /> <span class='small'>FAMILY LETTERS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c005'>The following letters carry on the story of the
-Shrewsburys in domestic and official detail for the
-next year. The second stepson of Bess was by this
-time not only a married man, but a member of Parliament
-and a courtier. He and his eldest stepbrother
-and brother-in-law, Henry Cavendish, represented their
-own county. His brother, Francis Talbot, the Earl’s heir,
-who was also at Court, had been entrusted with diplomatic
-duties, and had already managed to get into mischief.
-Neither he nor Gilbert, who survived him, ever
-took such an important social or official position as that
-achieved by their father and stepmother. But in youth
-they were about the Court, and they held their parents
-in proper awe. Their occasional letters imply a strong
-sense of family duty and kinship in little things as in
-great. The first letter touches on a purely domestic
-matter. It is curious that, seeing his wife was his stepmother’s
-eldest daughter, Gilbert should not have
-referred to the Countess for advice and approval.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My Lord,—My brother told me of the letter your
-Lordship sent him for the putting away of Morgan and
-Marven; and said he rejoiced that your Lordship would
-so plainly direct and command him what to do, and he
-trusteth hereafter to please your Lordship in all his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>doings; whereunto, according to my duty, I prayed him
-to have care above all manner of things, and advised him
-to keep secret your Lordship’s directions.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I have found out a sober maiden to wait on my
-wife, if it shall please your Lordship. She was servant
-unto Mrs. Southwell, now Lord Paget’s wife, who is
-an evil husband, and will not suffer any that waited on
-his wife before he married her to continue with her. As
-it behoves me, I have been very inquisitive of the woman,
-and have heard very well of her behaviour; and truly I
-do repose in her to be very modest and well given, and
-such a one as I trust your Lordship shall not mislike;
-but if it be so that she shall not be thought meet for
-my wife, she will willingly repair hither again. Her
-name is Marget Butler; she is almost twenty-seven
-years old. Mr. Bateman<a id='r18' /><a href='#f18' class='c013'><sup>[18]</sup></a> hath known her long, and
-thinketh very well of her: she is not very beautiful, but
-very cleanly in doing of anything chiefly about a sick
-body, to dress anything fit for them. I humbly pray
-your Lordship to send me word whether I shall make
-shift to send her down presently, for she is very desirous
-not to spend her time idly. Thus, most humbly desiring
-your Lordship’s daily blessing, with my wonted and
-continual prayer for your Lordship’s preservation in all
-honour and health, long to continue, I end.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“At the Court this Monday, the 25th of May, 1573.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your Lordship’s most humble and obedient son,</div>
- <div class='line in24'>“<span class='sc'>Gilbert Talbot</span>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_100fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, from the picture at Hardwick Hall</em><br />&#8196; &#8196; <em>By permission of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire</em></span><br /><br />GILBERT TALBOT, SEVENTH EARL OF SHREWSBURY<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_100'>100</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>The next letter is largely given up to gossip, and
-places the Earl of Leicester, who constantly writes wise
-and appreciative letters to the Shrewsburys, in the gay,
-vivid light in which he is best known to posterity. It is
-exhaustive, and touches on all the reports the writer can
-gather as to public criticism of Shrewsbury as gaoler,
-besides making allusion to the Earl’s financial difficulties.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My most humble duty remembered, right honourable,
-my singular good Lord and father; because of
-the convenience of the bearer hereof, I have thought
-good to advertise your Lordship of the estate of some
-here at the Court, as near as I have learned by my daily
-experience. My Lord Treasurer, even after the old
-manner, dealeth with matters of the State only, and
-beareth himself very uprightly. My Lord Leicester is
-very much with her Majesty, and she shows the same
-great, good affection that she was wont; of late he has
-endeavoured to please her more than heretofore. There
-are two sisters now in the Court that are very far in love
-with him, as they have been long—my Lady Sheffield
-and Frances Howard;<a id='r19' /><a href='#f19' class='c013'><sup>[19]</sup></a> they (of like striving who shall
-love him better) are at great wars together, and the
-Queen thinketh not well of them and not the better of
-him; by this means there are spies over him. My
-Lord of Sussex goes with the tide, and helps to back
-others; but his own credit is sober, considering his
-estate; he is very diligent in his office, and takes great
-pains. My Lord of Oxford is lately grown into great
-credit; for the Queen’s Majesty delighteth more in his
-personage and his dancing and valiantness than any
-other. I think Sussex doth back him all that he can;
-if it were not for his fickle head he would pass any of
-them shortly. My Lady Burghley unwisely has declared
-herself, as it were, jealous, which is come to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>Queen’s ear; whereat she has been not a little offended
-with her, but now she is reconciled again. At all these
-love matters my Lord Treasurer winketh, and will not
-meddle anyway. Hatton is sick still; it is thought he
-will very hardly recover his disease, for it is doubted it
-is in his kidneys; the Queen goeth almost every day to
-see how he doth. Now are there devices (chiefly by
-Leicester, as I suppose, and not without Burleigh’s
-knowledge) to make Mr. Edward Dyer as great as ever
-was Hatton; for now, in this time of Hatton’s sickness,
-the time is convenient. It is brought thus to pass:
-Dyer lately was sick of a consumption, in great danger;
-and, as your Lordship knows, he has been in displeasure
-these two years, it was made the Queen believe that his
-sickness came because of the continuance of her displeasure
-towards him, so that unless she would forgive him
-he was like not to recover, and hereupon her Majesty
-has forgiven him and sent unto him a very comfortable
-message; now he is recovered again, and this is the
-beginning of the device. These things I learn of such
-young fellows as myself. Two days since Dr. Wilson told
-me he heard say that your Lordship, with your charge,
-was removed to Sheffield Lodge, and asked me whether
-it was so or not: I answered I heard so also; that you
-were gone thither of force till the castle could be
-cleansed. And, further, he wished to know whether
-your Lordship did so by the consent of the Council, or
-not: I said I knew not that, but I was certain your
-Lordship did it on good ground. I earnestly desired
-him, of all friendship, to tell me whether he had heard
-anything to the contrary; which he sware he never
-did, but asked because, he said, once that Lady should
-have been conveyed from that house. Then I told him
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>what great heed and care you had to her safe-keeping;
-especially being there that good numbers of men, continually
-armed, watched her day and night, and both
-under her windows, over her chamber, and of every
-side her; so that, unless she could transform herself to
-a flea or a mouse, it was impossible that she should
-escape. At that time Mr. Wilson showed me some
-part of the confession of one (but who he was, or when
-he did confess it, he would in no wise tell me), that that
-fellow should say he knew the Queen of Scots hated
-your Lordship deadly because of your religion, being an
-earnest Protestant; and all the Talbots else in England,
-being all Papists, she esteemeth of them very well; and
-this fellow did believe verily all we Talbots did love her
-better in our hearts than the Queen’s Majesty: this
-Mr. Wilson said he showed me because I should see
-what knavery there is in some men to accuse. He
-charged me of all love that I should keep this secret,
-which I promised; and, notwithstanding, considering
-he would not tell me who this fellow was, I willed a
-friend of mine, one Mr. Francis Southwell, who is very
-great with him, to know, amongst other talk, who he
-had last in examination; and I understood that this was
-the examination of one at the last session of Parliament,
-and not since, but I cannot learn yet what he was. Mr.
-Walsingham is this day come hither to the Court; it is
-thought he shall be made Secretary. Sir Thomas Smith
-and he both together shall exercise that office. He hath
-not yet told any news; he hath had no time yet for
-being returned home; as soon as I hear any your Lordship
-shall have them sent. Roulsden hath written to
-your Lordship as he saith, by this bearer; he trusteth
-to your Lordship’s satisfaction. I have been very importunate
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>of him for the present payment of his debt to
-your Lordship. He cannot anyways make shift for
-money unless he sell land, which he vows to do rather
-than to purchase your Lordship’s displeasure. I
-have moved my Lord Treasurer two sundry times as
-your Lordship commanded me for the mustering within
-your Lordship’s offices. The first time he willed me to
-come to him some other time, and he would give me an
-answer, because then he had to write to Berwick in
-haste; this he told me before I half told him what I
-meant. The second time, which was on Saturday last,
-my Lord Leicester came unto him as I was talking; but
-to-morrow, God willing, I will not fail to move him
-thoroughly. For other matters I leave your Lordship
-to the bearer himself. And so, most humbly desiring
-your Lordship’s daily blessing, with my wonted
-prayer for the continuance of your Lordship’s honour,
-and health long to continue, I end, this 11th of May,
-1573.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your Lordship’s most humble and obedient son,</div>
- <div class='line in24'>“<span class='sc'>Gilbert Talbot</span>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>This letter is packed with suggestions of Court intrigue.
-Hatton—afterwards Sir Christopher Hatton—it
-will be remembered, was one of the many young
-courtiers whose polish, culture, and elegant dancing
-excited Elizabeth’s romantic interest. He rose from
-the post of Gentleman of the Privy Chamber to the
-captaincy of the Guard, and, by way of the successive
-posts of Vice-Chamberlain and Privy Councillor,
-reached the Chancellorship and received a Garter.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Edward Dyer, Hatton’s rival, matched him to some
-extent in honours, for he too was subsequently
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>knighted and invested with the Garter. As for the
-Dr. Wilson named, he afterwards became a Secretary
-of State, while the Earl of Oxford, who is shown as
-trying to outdo all other courtiers in favour, was a
-son-in-law of Lord Burghley. He was an adherent
-of the fifth Duke of Norfolk, and when Burghley refused
-to intercede for the Duke’s life, the Earl vowed
-that he would revenge himself on his father-in-law by
-destroying the happiness of his daughter. This he
-achieved satisfactorily, and when she died of a broken
-heart he finished his work of destruction by dissipating
-the whole of his fortune. The jealousy of “my Lady
-Burghley,” named in the above letter, evidently refers
-to the torture which his wife suffered while he was
-paying addresses to the Queen.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>In the midst of this motley Court group one discerns
-the figure of Burghley himself, a pillar of discretion,
-while unable to shield his own daughter from distress
-and scandal.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>We see that the Earl of Leicester was a person to be
-cultivated so long as his love affairs did not incur the
-Queen’s anger, and so long, in fact, as the love-making
-was not on his side. It must have been with a chuckle
-of satisfaction that the Earl received a letter from the
-favourite about this time, in which he specially commends
-the behaviour of the young Talbots and records
-the Queen’s high approval of them. All this was very
-soothing to their parents. The political situation was
-less acute. Many traitors were dead, and the banner of
-Mary of Scotland lay in the dust. Her chief stronghold
-had fallen. France was in very bad odour, though
-the memory of the horror of the Bartholomew Massacre
-was beginning to fade from English minds. Spain had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>enough to do with her affairs in the Netherlands.
-Elizabeth could afford to dance, practise on the virginals,
-play off one of her Court lovers against another,
-and invent nicknames for them. Domestic happiness
-and a merrier aspect of things came also nearer to the
-Talbots. My Lady absented herself for a while, and
-the Earl writes to her as of old like a lover, and tells
-her of his dangers and longings:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My dear none,—Of all joys I have under God
-the greatest is yourself: to think that I possess so
-faithful, and one that I know loves me so dearly, is
-all and the greatest comfort that this earth can give.
-Therefore God give me grace to be thankful to Him for
-His goodness showed unto me, a vile sinner.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“And where you advise in your letter you willed me
-to&nbsp;...<a id='r20' /><a href='#f20' class='c013'><sup>[20]</sup></a> which I did that I should not be&nbsp;...<a href='#f20' class='c013'><sup>[20]</sup></a> to this
-lady nothing of the matter: my stomach was so full, I
-asked her in quick manner, where she writ any letters
-to any her friends that I would stand in her title. She
-affirms in her honour she hath not. But howsoever it
-is she hath written therein, I may safely answer I make
-small account thereof.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I thank you, my sweetheart, that you are so willing
-to come when I will. Therefore, dear heart, send
-me word how I might send for you; and till I have
-your company I shall think long, my only joy: and
-therefore appoint a day, and in the meantime I shall
-content me with your will, and long daily for your
-coming. I your letters study very well; and I like
-them so well they could not be amended: and I have
-sent them up to Gilbert. I have written to him how
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>happy he is to have such a mother as you are. Farewell,
-only joy. This Tuesday evening.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your faithful one,</div>
- <div class='line in12'>“<span class='sc'>G. Shrewsbury</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“To my wife.”<a id='r21' /><a href='#f21' class='c013'><sup>[21]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The next letter, from one of her own boys, is one
-which Bess evidently sent on to her “juwell” of a
-husband:—</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><em>Henry Cavendish to the Countess of Shrewsbury.</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“May it please your honour, I thought it good to
-let your La. understand of a misfortune that happened
-in my house. On Thursday night last at supper two
-of my men fell out about some trifling words, and to
-all their fellows’ judgment that heard their jangling
-we made good friends again, and went and lay together
-that night, for they had been bedfellows of long before,
-and loved one another very well, as everybody took
-it in the house. On Friday morning, very early, by
-break of day, they went forth, by name Swenerto and
-Langeford, with two swords apiece, as the sequel after
-showed; and in the fields fought together, and in fight
-Swenerto slew Langeford, to my great grief both for
-the sudden death of the one and for the utter
-destruction of the other, whom I loved very well.
-Good Madam, let it not trouble you anything; we
-are mortal, and born to many and strange adventures;
-and therefore must temper our minds to bear such
-burdens as shall be by God laid on our shoulders.
-My greatest grief, and so I judge it will be some
-trouble to your La. that it should happen in my house.
-Alas! mada, what could I do with it: altogether right
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>sorrowful for it, and it hath troubled and vexed me,
-more than in reason it should have done a wise man.
-I would to God I could forget that there never had
-been any such matter. Upon the fight done I sent
-for Mr. Adderley, and used his counsel in all things.
-Swenerto fled presently and is pursued, but not yet
-heard of. Thus humbly craving your La. daily
-blessing I end, more than sad to trouble your La.
-thus long with this sorrowful matter. Tut: this
-present Saturday.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Your La. most bounden, humble, and obedient son,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>Henry Cavendish</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“To my lady.</div>
- <div class='line in2'>“Return this.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My ‘juwell,’ this Saturday at night I received this
-letter, much to my grief for the mishap. Yet was
-ever like that Swenerto should commit some great
-fault; he was a vain, lewd fellow. Farewell, my dear
-heart.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your faithful wife,</div>
- <div class='line in12'>“<span class='sc'>E. Shrewsbury</span>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Earl writes again, impatient for his wife’s
-return:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My dear none,—I see how careful you are of my
-health, which if I were sick would relieve me again.
-I received a letter from Gilbert sent by Nykle Clark.
-You may see the time approaching near that a new
-alarm will be given me. When you have read his
-letter I pray you to write to me again, for I mind of
-Monday to write by Antony Barlow; he will be glad of
-the pursuivantship if he can get it: he shall have my
-good will therein. If you will write up&nbsp;... he may
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>safely deliver it, therefore I pray you fail not, but send
-me your advice concerning this matter. Farewell, my
-only joy. This Saturday I pray you keep promise;
-you said you would be with me within a fortnight
-at the furthest; therefore let me hear from you when
-I shall send for your horses, my sweetheart.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your faithful husband and assured,</div>
- <div class='line in20'>“<span class='sc'>G. Shrewsbury</span>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>At the beginning of the year following, 1574, the
-Earl indites a very touching and dignified little New
-Year letter to the son in whom he always seems to take
-the most interest—Gilbert:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have received your letter of New Year’s Eve, and
-this New Year’s day I begin to use my pen first to yourself
-wishing you to use yourself this New Year and many
-years after to God’s glory and fear of Him, and to live
-in that credit your ancestors have hitherto done, and so
-doing, as I hope you will, be faithful, loyal, and serviceable
-to the Queen’s Majesty, my Sovereign, who to me,
-under God, is King of Kings and Lord of Lords. Your
-New Year’s gift shall be I will supply all your needful
-wants; and so long as I see that carefulness, duty, and
-love you bear me which hitherto I see in you, my purse
-and all that I have shall be as free to you as to myself.<a id='r22' /><a href='#f22' class='c013'><sup>[22]</sup></a>
-Time is so short and I have so many come to me with
-New Year’s gifts I can write no more, but thank you for
-your perfumed doublet you sent me: and so praying
-God to bless you.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Sheffield Castle this New Year’s Day 1574.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your loving father,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>“<span class='sc'>G. Shrewsbury</span>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>The whole tone of the letter is one of domestic
-security, and one has a vivid glimpse of the New Year
-celebrations and the flow of gifts. These <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">étrennes</span></i> were
-important affairs. A good courtier always paid this dole
-to his queen under the guise of a handsome gift, while
-the nobles and country gentry in their turn were the
-recipients from their tenants and friends of heterogeneous
-articles varying from capons, wine, and foodstuffs
-to gloves, clothes, or furniture.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>No one in that great and rich family group, so full
-of promise, had any notion of the events which would
-call down upon the Countess the wrath of the Queen,
-or the fresh accusations which would be hurled against
-the Earl.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Life just now was as easy as Shrewsbury could
-ever hope to find it. He had managed to satisfy his
-prisoner and give her plenty of change. She was in the
-autumn of 1573 transferred to Chatsworth, <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en route</span></i> for
-Buxton. Ultimately, by dint of scouring the place of
-strangers and preventing access to the springs of any
-save specified persons—a thing the more easy of accomplishment
-since the waters were the property of Shrewsbury’s
-family—it was made possible to give her five
-weeks here. After this came a stay at Chatsworth and
-then the return to Sheffield.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Freedom from outside attacks did not last very long.
-Before the spring had fairly set in Elizabeth and Burghley
-were once more on the warpath against the Shrewsburys.
-Never was George Talbot sure of his Queen’s
-trust. It must be remembered here that at the close of
-1572 she had deliberately written thus by Burghley:
-“The Queen’s Majesty has in very good part accepted
-your last letter to herself, and has willed me to ascertain
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>your Lordship that she doth no wise alter her
-former good opinion of your approved fidelity and of
-the care you have of such service as is committed to
-you, the same being such as none can in her land compare
-with the trust committed to your Lordship, and yet
-she would have your Lordship, as she says, not to mislike
-that when she hath occasion to doubt or fear foreign
-practices reaching hither into her realm, even to the
-charge which your Lordship hath, she do warn you
-thereof; and, in so doing, not to imagine that she
-findeth such informations to proceed from any mistrust
-that she hath of your Lordship, no more than she would
-have if you were her son or brother. This she wills
-me to write effectually to your Lordship&nbsp;... with my
-most hearty commendations to your Lordship and
-my good Lady.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>In spite of this the least thing afforded Elizabeth an
-excuse for a nagging letter to Sheffield Castle. On this
-occasion the matter was innocent enough. Gilbert’s
-young wife expected her first child, and it was not surprising
-that my Lord and Lady should prefer that the
-event should take place under their roof. Yet the
-Queen thought it necessary to worry them with mistrust,
-forcibly expressed. Shrewsbury replies to Burghley:
-“The mislike her Majesty&nbsp;... of my son Gilbert’s
-wife brought to bed in my house, as cause of women
-and strangers repair hither, makes me heartily sorry;
-nevertheless, the midwife excepted, none such have, or
-do at any time, come within her sight; and at the first,
-to avoid such resort, I myself with two of my children
-christened the child. What intelligence passeth for this
-Queen to and from my house I do not know; but trust
-her Majesty shall find my service while I live both true
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>and faithful. Yet be you assured, my Lord, this lady
-will not stay to put in practice, or make enquiry by all
-means she can devise, and ask me no leave, so long as
-such access of her people is permitted unto her....
-My Lord, where there hath been often bruits of this
-Lady’s escape from me, the 26th of February last there
-came an earthquake, which so sunk chiefly her chamber
-as I doubted more her falling than her going, she was so
-afraid. But God be thanked she is forthcoming, and
-grant it may be a forewarning unto her. It hath been
-at the same time in sundry places. No hurt was done
-and the same continued a very small time. God grant
-us all grace to fear Him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>That the very Derbyshire ground which bore him
-should fail his feet while his Queen’s faith in him fell
-away seems adding insult to injury. For some time
-past he appears to have been torn between the longing
-to rid himself of a now intolerable responsibility and the
-fear of misconstruction to which his retirement from his
-post would expose him. “The truth is, my good Lord,”
-as he is driven at last to say to Burghley, “if it so
-stand with the Queen Majesty’s pleasure I could be
-right well contented to be discharged&nbsp;... and think
-myself therewith most happy, if I could see how the
-same might be without any blemish to my honour and
-estimation.” He begs that Burghley “will have respect
-that such consideration may be had of my service as
-shall make it manifest to the world how well her
-Majesty accepteth the same. My Lord Scroop, and
-others, were not unconsidered of for their short time of
-service.” And so in this condition of mind he waits for
-Burghley’s advice. He would have done better to risk
-the Queen’s displeasure and to lay down his gaoler’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>warrant on the plea of illness, even if in those days
-medical certificates were not so easy to procure and
-might not have been so potent. As for disfavour at
-Court, he could, as a strong and powerful private gentleman,
-take up his stand and keep up his vast property,
-though Elizabeth might wreak her annoyance on the
-young Cavendishes and Talbots. Had he summed up
-the courage to decide the matter after his own heart he
-would have lost nothing in the world’s esteem, been far
-better off in pocket, and possibly the barque of the
-Shrewsburys would have escaped the shoals and rocks of
-domestic bickerings, which in later middle-life led to
-such woeful wreckage of the vessel and the magnificent
-family crew.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>George Talbot did not foresee all this. He was not
-an imaginative man. He was a typical Government
-official, precise, sententious, cautious, faithful, anxious,
-hypersensitive. One imagines that his countess—who
-was not in the least <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">au fond</span></i> the typical discreet wife of a
-high official—spent a good deal of time goading him to
-revolt. He has admitted in a previous letter that she
-was not at all anxious for him to continue with his
-present duties. Of course, it was the business of
-Burghley to keep him at them. Shrewsbury was the
-most useful of all English nobles in this respect. All
-the conditions about him suited the Queen’s purposes in
-every way. The way in which she and Burghley put
-him off with fair promises and bamboozled him with
-vague promises of reward makes one gasp. As to
-current outlay—the £52 per week allowed him for this
-by the Council was far too little—one of the most
-ingenious suggestions Elizabeth ever made was that
-Mary should “defray her own charges with her dowry
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>of France.” Shrewsbury adds: “She seemed not to
-dislike thereof at all, but rather desirous&nbsp;... so she
-asked me in what sort and with what manner of liberty
-she should be permitted to same.” He urges that these
-details should be settled at once. “Assure yourself if
-the liberty and manner thereof content her as well as the
-motion, she will easily assent to it; and so I wish it, as
-may be without peril otherwise; and for the charges in
-safe-keeping her, I have found them greater many ways
-than some have accounted for, and than I have made
-show of, or grieved at; for in service of her Majesty I
-can think my whole patrimony well bestowed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>How the wary official, loyal and somewhat crushed,
-speaks in that last sentence! How irritating to his Bess
-with her superabundant business instinct and her ambitions
-for her family! He was ever on the watch, his
-conscience agog. She was continually “on the make,”
-seeking the quickest road to family aggrandisement
-which was compatible with decency.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The following letter belongs to this period, and shows
-Gilbert Talbot back in London. He had been previously
-there in communication with Court officials apropos
-of the accusations brought originally against his father
-and subsequently against himself by an ex-chaplain of
-the Earl, named Corker, in combination with another
-priest called Haworth. The letter roused the whole
-family. The Earl literally lashes out. It remains as
-the chief evidence of the first published imputations
-against the Earl’s honour. It evidently embodies the
-attitude of wife as well as husband. This is a very
-important point because of the dissension which arose
-later on this very question.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>“<em>To the right honourable my very good Lord,
-my Lord Burghley, Lord Treasurer of England.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Your Lordship’s friendly letters I accept in as
-friendly ways as I know to be meant to me. For
-Corker’s proceedings against my son Gilbert, I partly
-understand of his false accusation; which, in my conscience,
-is utterly untrue and thereupon I dare gage my
-life. The reprobate’s beginning was against me and
-now turned to Gilbert. His wicked speeches of me
-cannot be hid; I have them of his own hand, cast
-abroad in London, and bruited throughout this realm,
-and known to her Majesty’s Council. Her Majesty
-hath not heard of him ill of me, so it pleaseth her
-Majesty to signify unto me by her own gracious letters,
-which I must believe, notwithstanding his dealing against
-me is otherwise so notoriously known that if he escape
-sharp and open punishment dishonour will redound to
-me. This practice hath a further meaning than the
-varlets know of.... For mine own part I have
-never thought to allow any title, nor will, otherwise
-than as shall please her Majesty to appoint.... How
-can it be supposed that I should be disposed to favour
-this Queen for her claim to succeed the Queen’s
-Majesty? My dealing towards her hath shown the
-contrary. I know her to be a Stranger, a Papist, and
-my enemy; what hope can I have of good of her,
-either for me or my country? I see I am by my own
-friends brought in jealousy, wherefore I wish with all
-my heart that I were honourably read, without note or
-blemish, to the world of any want in me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Though the Earl’s enemy was satisfactorily condemned
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>to the pillory and the Fleet, the scandal
-proved many-headed, and again the poor official (accused,
-among other things, of being as much of a credulous
-fool as a knave in regard to Mary of Scotland) thunders
-protest.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Wherefore as touching that lewd fellow, who hath
-not only sought by unlawful libels extant, so much as
-in him lay, to deface my dutiful heart and loyalty, but
-also the rooting up of my house, utter overthrow and
-destruction of my lineal posterity, I neither hold him
-a subject nor yet account him worthy the name of a
-man, which with a watery submission can appease so
-rigorous a storm;<a id='r23' /><a href='#f23' class='c013'><sup>[23]</sup></a> no, if loss of my life, which he hath
-pretended would have fully contented him, I could
-better have been satisfied than with these, his unspeakable
-vilenesses.... I might be thought hard-hearted
-if, for Christianity’s sake, I should not freely forgive
-as cause shall require, and desire God to make him a
-better member, being so perilous a caterpillar in the
-Commonwealth. For I have not the man anywise in
-contempt, it is his iniquity and Judas dealing that I
-only hate.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In other words, “Reptile! But I forgive thee.”
-It is almost a parallel to the anecdote of a certain little
-girl with an over-stern nurse of gloomy religious tendencies,
-to whom the child, waking alone in the dark,
-called, “Nurse, nurse, come, come! I dreamed that
-the devil was here tempting me to call you a duffer—<em>but
-I resisted the temptation</em>!”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>The Corker affair, of course, provided fresh food
-for the imaginings and reports of Mary’s adversaries.
-People thought that it would necessarily mean the
-removal of Mary into fresh custody. Mary herself
-dreaded this. She did not love Shrewsbury, but she
-believed her life to be safe with him, though she may
-not have entirely trusted his wife. She heard that
-poison was to be used against her, and that there was
-a suggestion at Court “to make overtures to the
-Countess of Shrewsbury.” She was assured that if
-anyone poisoned her without Elizabeth’s knowledge,
-the latter “would be very much obliged to them for
-relieving her of so great a trouble.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>There is nothing on the Countess’s side to corroborate
-this wild statement. This horrible fear, however,
-was so implanted in Mary’s mind that she sent
-to France for “some genuine terra sigillata, as antidote.”
-But she did not apply to her sinister mother-in-law
-Catherine De Medici. “Ask M. the Cardinal
-my uncle,” she writes, “or if he has none, rather than
-have recourse to the Queen my mother-in-law, or to
-the King, send a bit of fine unicorn’s horn, as I am in
-great want of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The year 1574 travelled onward without realisation
-of her fears. The “caterpillar,” Corker, had not prevailed
-in the overthrow of the Earl’s house or of his
-“lineal posterity,” and Gilbert Talbot in this little note
-writes affectionately enough to his stepmother:—<a id='r24' /><a href='#f24' class='c013'><sup>[24]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My most humble duty remembered unto your
-good Ladyship, to fulfil your La. commandment, and
-in discharge of my duty by writing, rather than for any
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>matter of importance that I can learn, I herewith
-trouble your La. Her Majesty stirreth little abroad,
-and since the stay of the navy to sea here hath been all
-things very quiet.... I have written to my Lord of the
-bruit which is here of his being sick again, which I
-nothing doubt but it is utterly untrue: howbeit, because
-I never heard from my L. nor your La. since I came
-up, I cannot choose but be somewhat troubled, and yet
-I consider the like hath been often reported most falsely
-and without cause, as I beseech God this be. My
-Lady Cobbam asketh daily how your La. doth, and
-yesterday prayed me, the next time I wrote, to do her
-very hearty commendation unto your La., saying openly
-she remaineth unto your La. as she was wont, as unto
-her dearest friend. My La. Lenox hath not been at
-the Court since I came. On Wednesday next I trust
-(God willing) to go hence towards Goodrich; and
-shortly after to be at Sheffield. And so most humbly
-craving your La. blessing with my wonted prayer, for
-your honour and most perfect health long to continue.
-From the Court at Greenwich this 27th June, 1573.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your La. most humble and obedient son,</div>
- <div class='line in24'>“<span class='sc'>Gilbert Talbot</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“To my Lady.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I received a letter from my Lord since this letter
-was sealed, and then I had no time by this messenger
-to write again unto your La. which came in a comfortable
-season unto me.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>CHAPTER VIII<br /> <span class='small'>A CERTAIN JOURNEY</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c005'>It was now the autumn of the year 1574. The
-Shrewsburys had for the time being come triumphantly
-out of official complications, and despite
-their grave responsibilities lived as comfortably as
-might be, though they were often separated, because
-the wife, at any rate, had other duties besides that of
-gaolership. What social life was permitted to them by
-the restraint entailed by this charge could obviously be
-enjoyed only by the Countess, and even she must have
-found it difficult to meet her cronies, get her children
-married and provided for, and keep a firm hand on
-domestic expenditure at the various houses she owned.
-The guarding of Mary of Scotland certainly had its
-interesting, romantic side, and this to some extent was
-a set-off against the greyer side of the business and its
-financial disadvantages. Just now the chances of Mary
-were at their lowest. Bothwell was dying in exile,<a id='r25' /><a href='#f25' class='c013'><sup>[25]</sup></a> the
-Duke of Norfolk had shed his blood vainly for her,
-Charles Darnley, “The Young Fool,” as Mr. Lang
-most justly calls him, though dead, with all his vanity,
-treachery, and vice, could still harm her cause, more
-latterly perhaps through the popular stigma which attached
-to her than by the hatred of his relatives, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>family of Lennox. His family, sorely chastened by
-Elizabeth for his marriage with Mary, was, since his
-death, held in less odium at the English Court, though
-it did not suit the Queen’s gracious meanness to raise
-it out of poverty. Elizabeth and Darnley’s mother,
-poor soul—Countess of Lennox, <em>née</em> the Lady Margaret
-Douglas—had buried the hatchet after the boy’s
-death. For the benefit of those who forget her story—or
-ignore it—a word as to this lady:—</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_120fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>From a contemporary picture</em></span><br /><br />LADY MARGARET DOUGLAS, COUNTESS OF LENNOX<br /><br />MOTHER OF LORD DARNLEY<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_120'>120</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>The daughter of Queen Margaret of Scotland (a
-Tudor, and sister of Henry VIII) and of the Earl of
-Angus, a mere boy, she was born in a wild moment of
-flight over the border into England. The very castle
-into which her mother crept after the long journey on
-horseback was immediately besieged. Thereafter the
-child Margaret became a bone of contention between
-her divorced parents—as history tells. After three
-years of babyhood in the shelter of her royal uncle’s
-English Court she spent her youth in France and Scotland,
-often latterly a wanderer from castle to castle,
-abhorred by her mother the Scots Queen because of
-her devotion to her outlawed father. For years she
-had neither house nor pin-money, but was dependent
-always upon such hospitality and shelter as her father’s
-friends would yield her in their Northern fortresses.
-Though her mother never forgave her for her defection,
-the fortunes of the girl—beautiful and of imposing
-personality—mended and brought her at last into the
-sunshine of Tudor favours. Henry VIII had compassion
-on his niece and made her playmate of Princess
-Mary, at which time she so won his affections that he
-settled an annuity upon her and her father. Subsequently
-she was first lady-in-waiting to Anne Boleyn,
-and was installed as one of the household of the baby
-Princess Elizabeth. While Katherine of Aragon was
-being divorced and the star of Anne Boleyn waxed and
-waned she witnessed strange moments, and watched the
-violent changes by which her uncle declared now this
-one and now that one of his daughters illegitimate.
-Her own fortunes, even as a princess of the blood
-royal, were—in spite of her uncle’s genial expressions—nothing
-too secure, and marriage and a dowry were
-still dreams of the future. Possibly the King’s erotic
-irregularities allowed him no time for the love affairs
-of others, but at any rate he manifestly did not, like
-some of his successors, intend to doom his lady wards
-to perpetual virginity. When Lady Margaret showed
-favour to Lord Thomas Howard, kinsman of the
-Queen (Boleyn), Henry seemed to have winked at the
-courtship. So soon, however, as he killed his second
-consort and degraded her baby girl to the ranks of
-the illegitimate, matters assumed a very different colour.
-For the Lady Margaret Douglas was now the nearest
-heir to the throne. He married immediately, but no
-heir was speedily born. Meanwhile the Lady Margaret’s
-love affair grew and culminated in a formal if
-secret contract—that is to say a solemn betrothal, in
-every respect binding. Henry regarded this as a
-double offence. His blood niece, his heir apparent,
-had contracted herself without his permission; moreover
-she had pledged herself to a near relative of the
-abhorred Boleyn. He behaved in his proper, kingly,
-melodramatic way, sent man and maid to the Tower,
-speedily convicted them of high treason, and sentence
-of death followed. The execution of this, as usual,
-was delayed. The State document condemning both
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>is, as all the world knows, one of the most disgracefully
-illegal concoctions ever produced by the
-blundering rage of a ruler and the hypocrisy of his
-ministers. In addition it furnished the precedent for
-the gross interference of that ruler’s daughter, Elizabeth,
-in like cases. In addition to proving the Lady
-Margaret guilty of treason, it professed to prove her
-illegitimacy also, and so cleared the way for Henry’s
-future whims. The unhappy Lord Thomas, after a
-year or two, succumbed to close confinement and
-sorrow and died in the Tower. His lady was removed
-to Sion House Court, near London, one of the few
-religious houses upon which her uncle found it convenient
-to smile because it could play a most useful
-part in his affairs as a polite place of detention for
-ladies of quality who drooped under his displeasure.
-The birth of his prince—Edward VI—made him relent
-towards his niece, and she came about the Court once
-more, though her old penchant for the house of
-Howard, of which a second member—nephew of her
-betrothed—now wooed her, thrust her into shadow
-again. This was probably a harder blow than the
-first, though she was not this time shivering under
-the fear of the axe. For she had been fully restored
-to her old place; she had once more taken part in
-that melodramatic domestic merry-go-round of Henry’s
-consorts. She was first lady to the new royal Anne
-of Cleves, she had apartments assigned to her at
-Hampton Court, and she was “first lady” again to
-Anne’s successor, Katherine Howard. A weary period
-of detention at Sion House followed—sharply ended
-because the King now wished to shut up Katherine
-Howard there. So Lady Margaret was moved on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>to the care of the Duke of Norfolk on the East
-coast. The third Katherine whom Henry wooed—the
-widowed Parr—put an end to this banishment,
-and by her tact and kindness reconciliations took place
-all round in the royal house. Lady Margaret played
-bridesmaid and lady-in-waiting once more, and her
-uncle began to bestir himself about her marriage. The
-man she wedded at the age of thirty-two after so much
-tossing and chasing, imprisonment and poverty, was
-the very Matthew, Earl of Lennox, whose claim to
-the Scots Crown had by James V of Scotland, on the
-death of his two sons, been preferred against those
-of the Earl of Arran. Both earls were kinsmen of
-James, and because of their high ambitions were
-engaged in undying feud. The birth of a royal Scots
-heir, in Mary, reduced both lords to the same level,
-but did not diminish the pertinacity of Lennox, who
-returned from France to England with the design of
-wedding Mary’s mother, Mary of Lorraine, as soon
-as her widowhood pointed her out as eligible. He
-was a handsome fellow and perfected in the graces
-of courts after his long apprenticeship in France, but
-he did not have his way, and emissaries from England
-schemed to throw Lady Margaret Douglas in his path.
-England was eager that he should serve her purposes.
-As consort of Mary of Lorraine and financed by France
-he would be the worst enemy of England. With Lady
-Margaret England dangled before him a good dowry.
-The marriage, adorned by the blessing of Henry VIII,
-took place with great éclat in 1544, and the King
-flourished his sanction in a speech including the important
-declaration, “in case his own issue failed he
-should be right glad if heirs of her body succeeded
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>to the crown.” Nevertheless, though her husband
-was promised the regency of Scotland, and she was
-awarded residence in a royal palace (Stepney), she did
-not retain the King’s favour. Quarrels ensued;
-whether brewed by the spies in her own household
-in London or in Yorkshire (where she established
-herself in order to be nearer her husband, engaged
-in Border invasions), or by her act does not appear.
-Just before Henry died the breach was complete, and
-in spite of her having given birth to three legitimate
-Tudor heirs, of whom Henry Darnley was the second,
-her rights and those of her offspring from the regal
-succession in England were wiped out.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>With a strength, as of Antæus, the much-buffeted
-lady overrode trouble and travelled to London with
-her child Henry, now the eldest (her first-born died
-in infancy), to pay her respects to her cousin, the
-new King, Edward VI. How she faced the situation
-is a marvel. Her husband’s Border cruelties had
-made him unpopular, and she was coldly looked upon.
-Her position for some years was most equivocal, since,
-in spite of her close relationship to the queen dowager
-of Scotland, she could not present to this lady, her
-sister-in-law, her husband Earl Lennox, traitor to
-Scotland, or her sons, in whom the Tudor blood was
-tainted by that of Lennox. She lived, however, in
-stately fashion in Yorkshire, followed eagerly the ritual
-of the Romish Church, and educated her children in it.
-Quarrels with her father Angus, discussions as to the
-disposal of his property, the birth of her eighth child,
-and the impaired health of her lord engrossed her now
-sufficiently. Then came another subtle and sudden
-change of fortunes with the death of Edward VI,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>the abortive scheme on behalf of Lady Jane Grey, and
-the sudden triumph of the claims of Princess Mary over
-those of her younger sister Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>During the reign of Mary of England Lady Lennox
-passed into calmer waters. She did not abuse her
-opportunities, but the Queen’s favour did not make
-Margaret or her children heirs designate to Mary’s
-crown.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Exit Mary, enter Elizabeth, and with Elizabeth a
-short time of prosperity! Matthew Lennox secured
-eventually his regency in Scotland, and his wife was in
-waiting upon Elizabeth at Windsor. She must have
-felt like a bat emerging from a cellar after the constant
-misfortunes and rebuffs of the past. Disfavour, dispeace
-were, however, always her portion, and very soon
-closed in upon her. This time the occasion of disturbance
-was France. Its king died. Mary of Scotland
-became queen consort. Lady Lennox saw a rich chance
-of using influence so puissant for reinstating her husband
-and herself in Scotland. She sent one messenger
-of congratulation and again another. This seems to
-have been Henry Darnley, now her eldest son, who
-was just fifteen. Thus did she begin to lay the train
-of circumstances which exploded in the horrors of the
-night of Kirk-o’-Field. From this till the actual Darnley
-marriage it was the Lady Lennox even more than her
-husband who invited intrigue. She, like other keen
-aristocratic plotters of the day, employed not only
-codes, emissaries, and spies, but conjurors. Little she
-guessed at the eavesdroppers who lurked in the corners
-of her great house at Settrington, and of the spies whom
-the Earl of Leicester and Lord Burghley employed to
-catch every suspicious word and record every private
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>interview within her walls. One fine day the Queen’s
-officers invaded and seized her household, conjurors
-included, and she and her family were summoned sharply
-to Court. A sorry journey that, though not the first
-piece of pitiful travelling she had done. Servants,
-children, lord and lady reached the capital, and were
-disposed of in various quarters. The Lennoxes were
-ordered to their own apartments in Westminster Palace,
-while some of their retinue were put into the old Gate
-House prison close by. How young Lord Darnley
-managed to evade watching and quietly lose himself in
-London is a mystery. This did not make things easier
-for his parents, who were instantly punished by separation
-and imprisonment, he in the Tower, and she to
-strait keeping under the roof of Sir Richard and Lady
-Sackville, the Queen’s cousins, at Sheen. Lady Lennox’s
-religion and the unjust suggestion that she had been
-responsible for the harsh treatment, by the late Queen,
-of her sister Elizabeth, seemed to aggravate the case
-of both prisoners. After sickness, pleadings, and indignation,
-husband and wife were permitted to share
-confinement at Sheen. It would have been best for
-them if they had been kept there indefinitely. How
-Elizabeth ever came to free them in the midst of her
-suspicions and fears in regard to the marriage of Mary
-of Scotland is extraordinary. That she should actually
-have been prevailed upon to give the Earl and his eldest
-son a passport into Scotland is still more so. With
-the Darnley marriage began Lady Lennox’s long incarceration
-in the Tower itself—a more pitiful imprisonment
-than any she had experienced. Her children were
-far from her; her husband and eldest son were too
-wise to risk their fate by obeying Elizabeth’s absurd
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>order to return to Court. Freedom came hand in hand
-with the terrible news of Darnley’s murder. What
-could the woman do but break forth into loud complaints
-and passionate accusation in the royal presence?
-Was it strange that, worn with imprisonment, the
-beauty of her prime gone, her face disfigured with
-many sorrows, her dignity and royal blood degraded,
-she should address a petition begging the Queen to
-commit Mary to trial and secure the speedy execution
-of justice? Elizabeth would not have her hand forced.
-“It was not becoming,” said she, “to fix a charge so
-heinous upon the princess and her kinswoman without
-producing the clearest evidence.” She would not
-actually accuse, but she would not clear her enemy.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Thus there was reason enough for Elizabeth’s later
-clemency towards the Lennoxes. It suited the purpose
-of queen and prisoner that they should now join issue
-against the murderess, “the hure,” against “Bothwell’s
-wench.” It suited Lennox well that he should be installed
-guardian of the future James I, and Lady Lennox,
-as his grandmother, was now accorded a far more important
-position than she could have taken had her
-daughter-in-law been above suspicion. It is true that
-financially she was never unembarrassed. A mansion
-at Hackney, formerly the property of the ruined family
-of Percy, was awarded to her as a residence, but it does
-not seem to have been much of a home, or at least, her
-manner of living there seems to have been anything
-but luxurious. She does not appear to have been much
-at Court. Gilbert Talbot alludes to her in a letter
-already quoted, and written in this summer of 1574:
-“My Lady of Lennox hath not been at the Court since
-I came.” Up to the present her attitude towards Mary
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>was unchanged. When Lord and Lady Burghley visited
-Chatsworth in 1570, Margaret Lennox thought it necessary
-to flog a dead horse and add by letter her exhortations
-to the warnings of Elizabeth that Mr. Secretary
-should be on his guard against the wiles of Mary. Even
-Margaret—a woman—knew the force of the personal
-equation in this case. She is careful to add: “Not for
-any fear you should be won, which as her Majesty tells
-me she did speak to you at your departing, but to let you
-understand how her Majesty hath had some talks with
-me touching my Lord.... Her Majesty says that
-Queen works many ways—I answered her Majesty was
-a good lady to her and better I thought than any other
-prince would have been if they were in her case, for she
-staid publishing abroad her wickedness which was manifestly
-known.” In the self-same summer from Chatsworth
-Mary, the daughter-in-law, writes to her. The
-content and tone of the letters is pitiful enough.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Madame,—If the wrong and false reports of
-enemies well known as traitors to you, alas! too much
-trusted by me, by your advice, had not so far stirred
-you against my innocence (and I must say against all
-kindness) that you have not only as it were condemned
-me wrongfully, but cherished, as your words and deeds
-have testified to all the world, a manifest misliking
-against your own blood, I would not have omitted
-this long ago duty in writing to you, excusing me for
-those untrue reports made of me, but hoping with
-God’s grace and time to have my innocence confirmed,
-as I trust it is already, even to the most indifferent
-persons. I thought best not to trouble you for a time
-till now another matter is moved that toucheth us both,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>which is the transporting of your little son, and my
-only child, to the which I were never so willing, yet I
-would be glad to have your advice therein, as in all
-other things touching him. I have borne him, and God
-knoweth with what danger to him and to me, and of
-you he is descended. So I mean not to forget my duty
-to you in showing therein any unkindness to you notwithstanding
-how unkindly you have dealt with me, but
-will love you as my aunt and respect you as my mother-in-law.
-And if it please you to know further of my
-mind, in that and all things betwixt us, my ambassador,
-the Bishop of Ross, shall be ready to confer with you.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“And so after my hearty commendations, remitting
-you to the said ambassador and your better consideration,
-I commit you to the protection of Almighty God,
-whom I pray to preserve you, and my brother Charles,
-and cause you to know my part better than you do—By
-your loving daughter-in-law.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“(To my Lady Lennox, my mother-in-law.)”<a id='r26' /><a href='#f26' class='c013'><sup>[26]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This letter was delivered to Lady Lennox in the
-Queen’s presence some months after it was written, and
-Elizabeth was still at work defaming the writer to her
-mother-in-law. That was during the close of 1570.
-In 1574 their relations were in no wise altered. Lady
-Lennox evidently still believed her son’s wife guilty,
-while she pathetically insisted upon her rights as the
-grandmother of a king. In this capacity she applied
-to the Queen for a safe-conduct to her northern house
-of Settrington—now restored to her—whither she wished
-to repair with her son Charles because she had been
-informed of a plot to carry off her royal grandson and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>bring him to England. This seems to have been a
-rather well-worn excuse and was mistrusted by Elizabeth,
-who about this time began to entertain doubts of her
-lady’s real attitude towards the imprisoned “dowager of
-Scotland.” She and Lady Shrewsbury were old acquaintances
-at Court. The latter heard of the projected long
-journey, and invited the party to break it at one of the
-Shrewsbury “places.” Chatsworth offered itself as
-most suitable, but she was right in her surmise that
-this choice would only appear in a suspicious light to
-Elizabeth, who anticipated it in the admonition she bestowed
-on Lady Lennox before her departure. Her
-Ladyship showed a fine indignation at such a suggestion,
-but one wonders whether this was not merely a piece of
-“bluff,” for the complicity of Mary had been repeatedly
-denied by Bothwell and by other Scottish lords implicated
-in the dark business at Kirk-o’-Field. At any
-rate this northern journey gave colour to all kinds of
-imputations. It was suggested that Lady Lennox’s
-ultimate aim was simply a visit of tender enquiry and
-that she was bound actually for Scotland to assure
-herself of the welfare of the boy James. It was
-thought, again, that she herself would kidnap the child
-and bring him into England for her own purposes or for
-those of her daughter-in-law. At all events she had
-her way and started. Lady Shrewsbury also knew that
-Chatsworth was much too near Sheffield Castle to allow
-of the reception of this guest without literally disobeying
-orders from Court. She decided, therefore,
-upon Rufford Abbey as the most suitable place. Unhappily
-the scheme which lay behind this hospitality has
-not descended to posterity in the form of letters. But
-gradually the motives underlying the invitation show
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>themselves clearly enough. Lady Shrewsbury had still
-one unmarried daughter for whom she was exerting
-herself to find a good match. She had her eye upon a
-certain young Bertie, a son of the Duchess of Suffolk
-by a second marriage. This affair could not be accomplished,
-and she therefore worked upon the Duchess’s
-sympathy so as to secure her co-operation in a new
-direction. Lady Lennox and her son Charles on their
-journey halted first at the gates of the Duchess’s house.
-Six miles away was Rufford, where Lady Shrewsbury had
-taken her daughter and made all ready for goodly entertainment.
-To the Duchess’s house she sent a messenger,
-and backed up the invitation by a personal visit.
-Lady Lennox accepted the invitation, and with her son,
-coach, baggage-carts, mules, and attendants arrived at
-the Abbey. Previous to this there must surely have
-taken place an interesting three-cornered interview between
-the three great ladies. Though the Duchess of
-Suffolk may have been genuinely interested in helping
-to find a husband for wistful young Elizabeth Cavendish,
-one cannot acquit her of a certain malice. Her part in
-the transaction wears a very innocent air. Nothing
-happened under her roof for which she could be called
-to book by the Queen. At the same time she was a hot
-Protestant and could not have felt any very great
-sympathy for the Lady Lennox, nor for Lady Shrewsbury,
-who, as regards mere creed, must always have been
-a religious opportunist.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>At Rufford Lady Lennox fell ill. There was excuse
-enough after the exposure to cold and flood in the
-uncertain autumn weather during which she undertook
-her journey. She was forced to keep her room. Nothing
-could have fallen out more happily to assist the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>plot of the hostess. Her hands were occupied with
-her friend’s ailments. Their children must amuse one
-another. In five days the close companionship between
-Charles and Elizabeth could not but grow, fostered by
-the cleverness of the girl’s mother. Free to go and
-come in gardens and woodland, young and lithe, eager
-to escape from rules and duties and tutors, to forget
-sad things—Elizabeth Cavendish, the grim details of
-Sheffield Castle, its alarums and excursions, Charles
-Stuart, the tragedies of his family—they wooed each
-other readily. Glimpses of their courtship are visualised
-for the reader in imaginary dialogue following.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>CHAPTER IX<br /> <span class='small'>LOVE AND THE WOODMAN</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'><em>Scene</em>: A parlour in Rufford Abbey, October, 1574. Elizabeth
-Cavendish bending over her embroidery frame. The
-Countess of Shrewsbury seated writing.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>A man’s voice [<em>calling outside the window</em>]. Mistress!
-Mistress Elizabeth! Come out!</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>[<em>Elizabeth Cavendish starts, rises, looks at her mother.</em></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Countess</em> [<em>apparently stern</em>]. Say that I have set you a
-task. Now do not go to the window!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth</em> [<em>checking herself half-way to the window</em>]. Nay,
-my Lord, I cannot come indeed. [<em>Drops her voice.</em>] Oh!
-mother, if it were one of the grooms or only my
-brother!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Countess.</em> Little fool! It is the voice of Lennox.
-Mark you—play him wisely.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox</em> [<em>calling again</em>]. Mistress, there is no “cannot”
-when the sun calls!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> My Lord, lady mother says she&nbsp;... needs
-me.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> It is not true. She is brewing a hot posset
-for my mother. I saw her shoulders in the buttery.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Countess</em> [<em>her shoulders shaking</em>]. Oho! it was Mrs.
-Glasse he saw. I gave her once an old gown of mine
-to wear.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth</em> [<em>moving to the window</em>]. No, no, my Lord,
-she says it was Mrs. Gl.... [<em>The Countess springs up,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>catches her sharply by the wrist, and gives her a little rap
-with her fan.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Countess.</em> S-s-t! Let him think I am not here. Play
-him, play him!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> What is that you say, mistress?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth</em> [<em>embarrassed and miserable</em>]. Nothing....</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>[<em>Lennox throws his cap in at the window. It falls at
-her feet.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Countess.</em> Girl, do not touch it.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> Oh, mistress, how the sun calls! It has
-called my cap. Some magic has given wings to it and
-it is gone.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> It is here!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Countess.</em> Hush! Not yet—not yet.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>[<em>Enter at back a maid with a bowl of posset.</em>]</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> Mistress, is my cap flown in at your window
-perchance?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Countess</em> [<em>mimicking Elizabeth’s voice</em>]. Indeed, no.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> Oh—lady mother!</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>[<em>The maid with the posset giggles, and receives a frown
-and a box on the ear for her pains.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Maid.</em> Will your la’ship’s grace be pleased to taste?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Countess.</em> Nay, nay, I cannot abide tansy, but it is
-good for the joints and for rheumy distillations, and
-will serve the Lady Margaret finely. Go you and wait
-for me at her door with the bowl.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> Elizabeth, I know you have my cap. Without
-it I cannot walk abroad. The wind is cool.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth</em> [<em>softly</em>]. Oh, mother, he will have the
-rheum too!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Countess.</em> Then shall he stay longer and be well
-nursed and physicked also.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> Bring me my cap, fair mistress.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span><em>Bess</em> [<em>in Elizabeth’s voice</em>]. Come and fetch it, my Lord.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> That I will, if you will come out with me.
-But not till you promise.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess</em> [<em>to Elizabeth</em>]. Say no—say no.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> I cannot, because&nbsp;... because&nbsp;... I
-have much work to do, enough for&nbsp;... many days.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> It can tarry, lady. In two days I shall be
-over the Border.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth</em> [<em>agonised</em>]. Oh, mother!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess</em> [<em>in the feigned voice</em>]. Not without your cap, I
-trust, my Lord.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> What if you give it me back?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth</em> [<em>in tears</em>]. Mother, why does he not come
-to fetch it?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess.</em> Sh-sh. I scolded him well but half an hour
-ago, and bid him leave you alone and keep out of my
-parlour.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth</em> [<em>with dignity</em>]. Nay, lady mother, he shall
-have his cap. [<em>Picks it up.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess</em> [<em>taking it from her</em>]. He shall, young impudence,
-but he shall fetch it. Play him, Bet, play him well,
-and if he should ask you go into the meadows&nbsp;...
-say “Yes.” But not in haste, mark you!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth</em> [<em>on her knees, clinging to her mother’s gown</em>].
-Lady mother&nbsp;... I mislike it....</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess</em> [<em>disengaging herself</em>]. “It,” “it”? What is “it”?
-He is a pretty young man, and his blood runs high
-like Darnley’s. But God be thanked ’tis a wiser fool
-than his brother. Now remember to carry yourself as
-a Cavendish should. Be cautious! Make no false
-step. I go to cosset and posset the mother. S’death,
-I would I were in your shoes, Bet, to run into the
-woods instead of tiptoe round a sick-chamber.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span><em>Elizabeth</em> [<em>springing up</em>]. May I indeed go into the
-woods?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Bess</em> [<em>at the door</em>]. Sh-sh.... Cavendo tutus!<a id='r27' /><a href='#f27' class='c013'><sup>[27]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth</em> [<em>half runs to the window with the cap, stops,
-smiles</em>]. My Lord!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> Are you alone, mistress?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> Yes.... No....</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> Who is there?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> Your cap! [<em>Looks laughing out of the
-window.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> Coming, coming! [<em>A minute later he bursts
-open the door and greets her, walks to the embroidery frame,
-pushes it into a corner, and holds out his hand.</em>] Into the
-sun, Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth</em> [<em>shyly</em>]. I have not my hood, my Lord.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> Charles, Elizabeth!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> Charles&nbsp;... my Lord.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> Into the woods, my Lady. What matters
-your hood? The sun cannot fire your hair if you wear
-a hood! [<em>Draws her down the stairway. At the foot of it
-she slips her hand from his, and they pass demurely across the
-courtyard and out into the meadows, talking of light and little
-things. From time to time Lennox sings snatches of song. The
-larks trill overhead. They plunge into the woods.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> Oh, Charles, I feel as though I had grown
-lark’s wings&nbsp;... like your cap.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> No, no. If you would grow into a bird,
-then I shall needs become a fowler.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> Nay, you shall have wings too.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> Why have we not wings, Elizabeth?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth</em> [<em>looking up into the sky between the branches</em>].
-God is wise, Charles. And we have the beautiful warm
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>earth and all the flowers to joy us. Meseems it is more
-comfortable to talk upon the earth than in the branches....
-And to build our mansions on the earth, too.
-Charles....</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> Mansions? I hate them. Great chambers
-in which one must shiver in cold state because one is
-poor, great chairs in which one must sit very straight
-and look wise, great windows where the snow and rain
-beat and trickle in, or little ones which bar the sun.
-In Scotland they are like that, little and narrow in the
-great castles. I hate them.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth</em> [<em>proudly</em>]. In England we have great windows
-secure against storms. You should see my
-mother’s house at Hardwick, Charles. It has high
-windows. And so fair the house. And she says she
-will build one there still greater and fairer.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> But I desire no great house. You are little,
-I am not great.... I want a little house, a bower....</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> My Lord....</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox</em> [<em>with his arm about her</em>]. A bower with you,
-which I would build out of the trees, my own self, like
-the knight who loved the lady.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> Ah? Who was she?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> A lady, like you, Elizabeth, and not much
-taller, so I take it. I read of her in a little book. See&nbsp;... here it is. [<em>Pulls a volume out of the bosom of his
-jerkin.</em>] My brother Darnley gave it me once. It is a
-love tale, all in French, and very curious.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> Read it to me, Charles.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> Sweetheart, I cannot read it all because the
-words are so strange, but my brother writ portions of
-the rightful meanings on the margins.... Come&nbsp;...
-let us sit.... [<em>He draws her to a place under the trees.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span><em>Elizabeth.</em> Charles&nbsp;... I am afraid....</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> Not with me....</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> There are woodmen.... They go to
-and fro.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> What of that? There are woodmen in the
-story—many. [<em>Opens the book.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> Listen, I hear their axes—chip, chop.
-They are cutting into pieces the lovely trees they felled
-in the spring. It is very sad.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> Dear, you are sweetly foolish. They cannot
-hurt you.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth</em> [<em>sadly</em>]. So do they cut down the happy trees.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> Happy to be cut down to build bowers for
-you and me.... Listen.... [<em>Turns over the leaves.</em>]
-She was a fairy maiden.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth</em> [<em>shocked</em>]. Oh! Then she said no prayers.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> Her foster-father took her from the fairies,
-and what prayers she missed she learnt at the feet of
-love.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> Where did she first see her lover...?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> How can I tell? He loved her from the
-beginning&nbsp;... as I love you.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em>... The beginning?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> Two days ago.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth</em> [<em>starting up</em>]. A woodman comes. [<em>He pulls
-her down again.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> How can I tell the story if you run away?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> Indeed&nbsp;... I love to listen.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox</em> [<em>goes on rapidly</em>]. Well&nbsp;... thus was it. These
-two loved&nbsp;... oh, terribly! And the father of the
-knight, a great count, parted them, since the boy would
-not go fight against his country’s enemies except he wedded
-the lady&nbsp;... and the Count bid her foster-father shut
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>her in a prison so that she should weave no spells about
-him more.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> This is too sad a story. [<em>Wipes her eyes.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> It was a very fair prison in a great castle,
-dearest.... And she quickly escaped from it by her art.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> Good, good!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> But her love knew not where she went....
-And he said to his father, “If I trounce your foes in
-battle, let me but kiss my lady.” To which the lord
-said “Yes.” But he kept not his word, and put the
-knight in prison when he came home bruised and weary
-after battle.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> Alack!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> But she—she found the prison and sang
-through the window, and cut her hair to throw into the
-chamber that he might remember her.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth</em> [<em>slyly</em>]. Like your cap, but just now, Charles.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> Yes, yes.... And they called courage to
-one another till the soldiers came and she hid for fear
-they should kill her.... And then she walked far
-till she came to a great wood.... [<em>A woodman passes
-with his axe.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> There is the axe, again. It minds me of—of
-death, Charles!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> Dearest, it is only a foolish axe to chop your
-lady mother’s fuel.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> And how did the knight find his lady?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> When the Count deemed the fairy lady
-gone for ever he let his son the knight come out of the
-tower where he was, and feasted him. But the lady
-dwelt in the woods and he knew it not.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth</em> [<em>indignant</em>]. He stayed to feast while she
-wandered in a strange wood?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span><em>Lennox.</em> He stayed but little. And when he could
-he took his horse and rode out and came to five roads
-which met.... Stay&nbsp;... my brother writ of these
-cross-roads. It is a pretty conceit he made. The one
-was called “The World,” and another “The Wars,” a
-third was “Power,” and the fourth&nbsp;... see, can you
-read this?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> “Riches.” And the next word is “Poverty.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> There he waited—perplexed.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> Quick, quick! Which did he choose?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> Faith, he tried them all save “Poverty.”...
-Yet when he would travel down one or the other her
-voice called him back, and his horse stood like stone till
-the knight trembled in the twilight and feared she was
-all a fairy and no woman, but mocked him. And then
-from his bosom there fell a sheaf of her hair. When
-he stooped to gather it, it grew into a fine chain, the end
-whereof he could not see, and it closed about his
-wrist like a bracelet and drew him to the road called
-“Poverty.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> Then, surely, he rode fast?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> Horse and man were exceeding glad—so
-says the book&nbsp;... because of the noble road which
-opened before them.... And the moon and the sun
-shone together upon them till at last they were come to
-a little house of boughs twined with lilies.... Over
-the door was written, “Her Heart and My Desire”&nbsp;...
-and there he found his lady, singing fairy songs because
-she knew that he was faithful.... [<em>Closes the book and
-bends over her.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth</em> [<em>softly</em>]. And there they stayed surely a
-little while.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em>... To the end of the world....</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span><em>Elizabeth.</em>... But the woodman came by with his
-axe to cut down the bower.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> Not in this tale.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> The lilies faded.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> They were fadeless.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> They grew old&nbsp;... and&nbsp;... could not
-feel the sun....</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> Never, never.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> I would it were true, Charles. [<em>The sound
-of the axe again interrupts them. There is laughter from
-men, who pass and repass and point out the lovers to each
-other.</em>] There! They have seen us—the rude woodmen.
-We have no bower any more. [<em>Hurries away
-from the tree.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox</em> [<em>in pursuit</em>]. What mean you by this “woodman”...?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth</em> [<em>holding out her hands for protection</em>]. I mean
-there&nbsp;... is no for ever.... They died, and the lilies
-and the branches died. Let us go home&nbsp;... Charles,
-hide me&nbsp;... from the woodman!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> Always, always! Elizabeth, stay with me.
-Do not ever go from me. You&nbsp;... you shall never
-die!</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>[<em>He puts his cloak about her and they walk, closely knit, through
-the meadows till they reach the Abbey. At the gates
-they slip apart and go in demurely as before. The
-Countess looks through a window on to the court over
-which they pass.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Countess.</em> Bet, come instantly to your chamber!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox</em> [<em>saluting</em>]. My Lady, she cannot leave me.
-For so has she promised.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Countess.</em> Lord, Lord! What have you done?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> Lady mother, I&nbsp;...</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span><em>Countess.</em> Come in, come in, you sad fools. Every
-scullion will hear you. [<em>The three meet on the staircase and
-the Countess motions them austerely into the parlour.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Countess</em> [<em>to Lennox</em>]. I bid you stay far from
-Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> Oh, mother, make no more feints. He
-loves me. If he goes from me&nbsp;... [<em>Her voice breaks.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> My Lady, she will go to the Border with me
-and into the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Countess</em> [<em>with a cry of dismay</em>]. So, so.... “He
-loves me.”... “I will go over the Border.”... And
-how shall a poor woman permit such naughty contrivings!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> Mother.... We are not naughty. I
-did not know he loved me till&nbsp;... till we spoke of a
-story.... And then&nbsp;... it was very sweet, mother&nbsp;... till the woodmen came.... And I was frightened
-and ran, and&nbsp;... Charles bid me come home....
-He says the woodman&nbsp;... [<em>Turns to Lennox for protection.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Countess</em> [<em>with a cry of anger</em>]. The woodmen. What
-is this of the woodmen?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Elizabeth.</em> They mocked, and....</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Countess.</em> Lord, Lord!... What is to be done now...?
-You should both be whipped. The woodmen to
-see you kissing and cozening under the trees? The
-woodmen? And you a Cavendish! Stay you here till
-I have told the Lady Lennox. Oh, oh, oh! that I
-should have such a tale for her....</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>[<em>At the sound of her voice Lady Lennox, roused, comes down the
-corridor in her bedgown.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Countess.</em> My Lady!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> Mother....</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span><em>Lady Lennox.</em>... I was affrighted. I thought you
-wept, my Lady.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Countess.</em> Matter for weeping, in truth. [<em>Points to
-Elizabeth and Lennox, who stand together.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lady Lennox.</em> But&nbsp;... how? [<em>Sinks into a chair.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Countess</em> [<em>vehemently</em>].... My Lady,&nbsp;... these
-naughty children have carried themselves no better than
-a pair of turtle-doves; and all in the woods.... And
-the whole world knows it. My very woodmen&nbsp;...
-low fellows&nbsp;... laughed!... Your son plots to carry
-my Elizabeth over the Border an if she were a truss of
-hay! And she, the wretch, too, content to be bundled
-that way&nbsp;... any way&nbsp;... so long as it be on his
-road! Oh! my Lady, help us all, lest shame fall on
-my house.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox</em> [<em>defiant</em>]. No shame to love well, my Lady.
-Are there no priests? And this an Abbey!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lady Lennox.</em> Boy, go you to your room and leave
-me talk with my Lady here.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lennox.</em> I go with Elizabeth to the gallery. When
-you call, mother, we will come.... [<em>Kisses her hand
-and goes out with Elizabeth.</em>]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lady Lennox.</em> A priest! There is time enough....</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Countess.</em> How do I know if they will not fly like
-birds together if we say them “Nay”?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lady Lennox.</em>... The saints forbid!...</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Countess</em> [<em>quickly</em>]. The boy is wild&nbsp;... for love
-makes wildlings of men.... It is the only word of
-wisdom he has said&nbsp;... that of the priest.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Lady Lennox.</em> Great Heaven!...</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Countess.</em> Young fools.... Yet, if we part them&nbsp;... shall not our consciences give us everlasting
-punishment?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span><em>Lady Lennox.</em> True, true.... The girl is very
-gentle, my Lady.... There is a look in her eye that....
-And he is very ripe for love. [<em>The Countess punctuates
-her speeches with sympathetic gestures.</em>] And I have
-seen much sorrow, and the House of Lennox dies&nbsp;...
-with Charles.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Countess.</em> Come&nbsp;... let us not talk of death&nbsp;...
-but look properly upon this matter and devise, instead
-of funerals, weddings. Come, my sweet friend, dear
-Lady&nbsp;... to your chamber.... Rest, and let us
-comfort one another.... Come! [<em>She supports Lady
-Lennox out of the room.</em>]</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>CHAPTER X<br /> <span class='small'>AFTERMATH</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c005'>There was, as the two mothers agreed, but one
-way out of it all—a speedy marriage. No time
-to invite the blessing of the bride’s stepfather, no
-time for signing of deeds, or for collecting bride-gear,
-or for endowing boy and girl with house and lands.
-These things would as well be done afterwards as now,
-and a pompous family wedding in the Shrewsbury
-household would just now have been attended with all
-sorts of difficulties. Without more ado the matter was
-settled, and the actual wedding seems to have taken
-place at Rufford in the presence of only a very few
-persons. Indeed, in the words of one historian, the
-pair “married almost as soon as Lady Lennox was able
-to leave her bedroom.” It has been suggested by the
-same writer that the two dowagers, in aiding and
-abetting the marriage, were at cross purposes. It is
-certain that Lady Shrewsbury had met her match in
-character, purpose, and ability in intrigue. She could
-not have been able to persuade Margaret Lennox in the
-affair against her will and conscience. Henderson
-elaborates the suggestion thus: “The motive of Lady
-Lennox was probably reconciliation with the Queen of
-Scots, through the new connection formed with the
-Shrewsburys. If Elizabeth died—and there was a
-general impression that she would not live long—Mary
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>might very possibly succeed her; and though Lady
-Lennox thought it prudent to assert to Elizabeth that
-she never could have dealings with the Queen of Scots,
-since, being flesh and blood, she could not forget the
-murder of her child, yet she did not wish to debar
-herself from all further favour from the possible Queen
-of England, who was also the mother of her grandchild
-(i.e. James of Scotland). As for Mary, nothing could
-suit her better than a reconciliation with Lady Lennox,
-since it would mean the renewal of support from many
-Catholics who had been estranged from her by the circumstances
-attending the death of Darnley. In any
-case, whatever Mary’s part in the accomplishment of the
-marriage, and whether any understanding was then
-arrived at by her with Lady Lennox or not, Mary, after
-the death of Lady Lennox in 1578, affirmed that she
-had been reconciled to her for five or six years, and that
-Lady Lennox sent her letters expressing regret at the
-wrong she had done her in the accusations she had been
-induced to make against her, at the instance of Elizabeth
-and her Council.”<a id='r28' /><a href='#f28' class='c013'><sup>[28]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c006'>This is, however, a part of future history. The facts
-show that Mary seems to have had no hand in the
-marriage, and we cannot imagine that after carefully
-balancing all possibilities Lady Shrewsbury would have
-invited her interest. The whole thing would have been
-revealed and exaggerated by spies, and thus assume the
-form of a very serious plot. Lady Lennox certainly
-trusted to Elizabeth’s credence in her old enmity
-against her daughter-in-law to clear her from blame.
-Lady Shrewsbury doubtless pretended to herself that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>she could not be justly accused of a grab at royal rights,
-on behalf of her family, since Scotland had already its
-King and it was open to England to name a successor.
-La Mothe Fénélon, the French Ambassador, feared
-that the Lennox intimacy would estrange the Shrewsburys
-from Mary, and so make her case harder. The
-very contrary happened, as the correspondence reveals.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>For the moment we are concerned with the days
-immediately following that sudden ceremony at Rufford.
-Details of the itinerary of the bridal pair are
-not forthcoming, neither does it appear where the older
-Lady Lennox went after her momentous visit, nor
-whether young Elizabeth and her husband took shelter
-with her mother or his. News of the event did not
-reach the Queen till fully a month later. Instantly she
-scented treason. Here was a chance for her to behave
-once more after the pattern of her autocratic father.
-She belaboured the Earl of Shrewsbury, and despatched
-to both dowagers and the bride and bridegroom a
-summons to Court.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Lord Shrewsbury, who in these days scarcely ever
-put pen to paper except to expostulate, explain, and
-apologise, wrote three separate letters on the subject—to
-the Queen, to Burghley, and to Lord Leicester. It
-will suffice to quote the two first:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“May it please your excellent Majesty,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“The commandment your Majesty once gave
-me, that I should sometimes write to you, although I
-had little to write of, boldeneth me thus to presume,
-rather to avoid blame of negligence than dare tarry
-long for any matter worthy your Majesty’s hearing;
-only this I may write; it is greatly to my comfort to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>hear your Majesty passed your progress in perfect
-health and so do continue. I pray to Almighty God
-to hold it many years, and long after my days ended;
-so shall your people find themselves most happy.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“This Lady, my charge, is safe at your Majesty’s
-commandment.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“And, may it further please your Majesty, I understood
-of late your Majesty’s displeasure is sought
-against my wife, for marriage of her daughter to my
-Lady Lennox’s son. I must confess to your Majesty,
-as true it is, it was dealt in suddenly, and without my
-knowledge; but as I dare undertake and ensure to your
-Majesty, for my wife, she, finding her daughter disappointed
-of young Barté, where she hoped that the
-other young gentleman was inclined to love with a few
-days’ acquaintance, did her best to further her daughter
-in this match; without having therein any other intent
-or respect than with reverend duty towards your
-Majesty she ought. I wrote of this matter to my
-Lord Leicester a good while ago at great length. I
-hid nothing from him that I knew was done about the
-same, and thought not meet to trouble your Majesty
-therewith, because I took it to be of no such importance
-as to write of, until now that I am urged by
-such as I see will not forbear to devise and speak what
-may procure any suspicion, or doubtfulness of my service
-here. But as I have always found your Majesty
-my good and gracious Sovereign, so do I comfort myself
-that your wisdom can find out right well what
-causes move them thereunto, and therefore am not
-afraid of any doubtful opinion, or displeasure to remain
-with your Majesty of me, or of my wife, whom your
-highness and your council have many ways tried in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>times of most danger. We never had any thought or
-respect but as your Majesty’s most true and faithful
-servants; and so do truly serve and faithfully love and
-honour your Majesty, ever praying to Almighty God
-for your Majesty, as we are in duty bounden.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>Sheffield</span>, <em>2nd of December, 1574</em>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>The other letter is headed:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“To My Lord Tre....,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“My very good Lord, for that I am advertised
-the late marriage of my wife’s daughter is not well
-taken in the Court, and thereupon are some conjectures
-more than well, brought to her Majesty’s ears, in ill
-part against my wife; I have a little touched the same
-in my letters now to her Majesty, referring further
-knowledge thereof to letters I sent my Lord of Leicester
-a good while since, wherein I made a long discourse
-of that matter; and if your Lordship meet with anything
-thereof that concerns my wife or me, and sounds
-in ill part against us, let me crave of your Lordship so
-much favour as to speak your knowledge and opinion
-of us both. No man is able to say so much as your
-Lordship of our service because you have so carefully
-searched it, with great respect to the safe keeping of my
-charge. So I take leave of your Lordship.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>Sheffield</span>, <em>2nd December, 1574</em>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>These letters did not help matters in the slightest.
-The two Countesses were obliged to go to Court for
-chastisement, and apparently Bess Shrewsbury repaired
-thither before any interview could be secured with her
-husband. Nor have any letters from her been found
-to show whether she was awestruck or defiant, though
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>correspondence must have passed between wife and husband
-upon a matter so urgent.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The fateful northern journey took place about October
-9th. Queen Elizabeth’s summons was dated November
-17th, and reached the delinquents within a few days.
-Lady Lennox, who, in her royal capacity and as mother
-of the bridegroom, may legally be regarded as the
-prime offender, followed Lord Shrewsbury’s example
-of explanation and expostulation. She, too, wrote
-promptly to Lords Burghley and Leicester:—<a id='r29' /><a href='#f29' class='c013'><sup>[29]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“My very good Lord,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Assuring myself of your friendship I will use
-but few words at this present, other than to let you
-understand of my wearisome journey and the heavy
-burden of the Queen’s Majesty’s displeasure, which I
-know well I have not deserved, together with a letter
-of small comfort that I received from my Lord of
-Leicester, which being of your Lordship read, I shall
-desire to be returned to me again. I also send unto your
-Lordship, here enclosed, the copy of my letter now sent
-to my Lord of Leicester; and I beseech you to use
-your friendship towards me as you see time. Thus
-with my hearty commendations, I commit you to
-Almighty God, whom I beseech to send you long life to
-your heart’s desire. Huntingdon this 3 of December.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your Lordship’s assured loving friend,</div>
- <div class='line in24'>“<span class='sc'>Margaret Lennox</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“To the Right Honourable my very good Lord and
-friend, the Lord-Treasurer of England.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is unfortunate that one of the enclosures, the letter
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>from Leicester, is not to be found, for it would have
-been interesting to read that gentleman for once in a
-mood that was not suave and reassuring.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The letter to Leicester gives a graphic description of
-her uncomfortable journey across flooded country:—<a id='r30' /><a href='#f30' class='c013'><sup>[30]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>Huntingdon</span>, <em>December 3, 1574</em>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“My very good Lord,—The great unquietness and
-trouble that I have had with passing these dangerous
-waters, which hath many times enforced me to leave
-my way, which hath been some hindrance to me that
-hitherto I have not answered your Lordship’s letters
-chiefly on that point wherein your Lordship, with other
-my friends (as your Lordship says) seems ignorant how
-to answer for me. And being forced to stay this present
-Friday in Huntingdon, somewhat to refresh myself,
-and my overlaboured mules, that are both crooked and
-lame with their extreme labour by the way, I thought
-good to lay open to your Lordship, in these few lines,
-what I have to say for me, touching my going to Rufford
-to my Lady of Shrewsbury, both being thereunto
-very earnestly requested, and the place not one mile
-distant out of my way. Yea, and a much fairer way, as
-is well to be proved; and my Lady meeting me herself
-upon the way, I could not refuse, it being near XXX
-miles from Sheffield. And as it was well known to all
-the country thereabouts that great provision was there
-made both for my Lady of Suffolk and me—who friendly
-brought me on the way to Grantham, and so departed
-home again, neither she nor I knowing any such thing
-till the morning after I came to Newark. And so I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>meant simply and well, so did I least mistrust that my
-doings should be taken in evil part, for, at my coming
-from her Majesty, I perceived she misliked of my Lady of
-Suffolk being at Chatsworth, I asked her Majesty if I
-were bidden thither, for that had been my wonted way
-before if I might go. She prayed me not, lest it should
-be thought I should agree with the Queen of Scots.
-And I asked her Majesty, if she could think so, for I
-was made of flesh and blood, and could never forget the
-murder of my child. And she said, ‘Marry, by her
-faith she could not think so that ever I could forget it,
-for if I would I were a devil.’ Now, my Lord, for that
-hasty marriage of my son, Charles, after that he had
-entangled himself so that he could have none other, I
-refer the same to your Lordship’s good consideration,
-whether it was not most fitly for me to marry them, he
-being mine only son and comfort that is left me. And
-your Lordship can bear me witness how desirous I have
-been to have had a match for him other than this. And
-the Queen’s Majesty, much to my comfort, to that end
-gave me good words at my departure.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There were other letters from her repeating the statements
-about her careful avoidance of Chatsworth and
-Sheffield, the helpless position in which she was placed
-by “the sudden affection” of her son, and begging for
-the Queen’s compassion “on my widowed estate, being
-aged and of many cares.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>She reached Court on December 12th, and was accorded
-such a reception that La Mothe Fénélon thought
-it worth while to include, in his despatches to France,
-her fears and apprehensions. He records her dread of
-her old prison, the Tower, and her hope that she may
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>escape at least that indignity through the influence of
-good friends. She went meekly to her house at Hackney,
-with Charles and Elizabeth Lennox, who had
-scarcely learnt the meaning of the word honeymoon.
-There the three, forbidden to leave the precincts of the
-house, spent a joyless Christmas, while, in lieu of a
-royal festival greeting, Christmas Eve brought them
-Elizabeth’s orders that they were to have intercourse
-only with such persons as were named by the Privy
-Council. Immediately after Christmas the door of the
-Tower gaped and swallowed the Lennox dowager. To
-the Tower also, it seems, was sent her confederate. The
-comments of Bess of Shrewsbury have not been chronicled.
-But she probably remembered keenly enough the
-days when as “Sentlow” she had the sense to keep out
-of any active participation in the marriage of Lady
-Catherine Grey. Her thoughts in retrospect could not
-have been very pleasant, and genuine fears for the fate
-of her young and easily-led daughter must have jostled
-fears for her own skin.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>As for Lady Lennox, her sensations were still more
-poignant. “Thrice have I been cast into prison,” said
-she, “not for matters of treason, but for love matters.
-First, when Thomas Howard, son to Thomas first Duke
-of Norfolk, was in love with myself; then for the love
-of Henry Darnley, my son, to Queen Mary of Scotland;
-and lastly for the love of Charles, my younger son, to
-Elizabeth Cavendish.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>It was just after Christmas that Lord Shrewsbury
-again bestirred himself and applied to Burghley, though
-he ostensibly does it less on behalf of his wife than of
-Lady Lennox.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>“My very good Lord,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Upon my Lady Lennox’s earnest request, as to
-your Lordship I am sure shall appear, I have written to
-my Lords of the Council all I can find out of her behaviour
-towards this Queen and dealing when she was
-in these north parts; and if some disallowed of my
-writing (as I look they will, because they would have
-it thought that I should have enough to do to answer
-for myself) let such&nbsp;...<a id='r31' /><a href='#f31' class='c013'><sup>[31]</sup></a> reprove, or find any&nbsp;...<a href='#f31' class='c013'><sup>[31]</sup></a>
-respect to her Majesty in me or my wife is sought for,
-and then there is some cause to reprehend me, and for
-them to call out against me as they do. I take that
-Lady Lennox be a subject in all respects worthy the
-Queen’s Majesty’s favour, and for the duty I bear to her
-Majesty I am bound, methinks, to commend her so as
-I find her; yea, and to intreat you, and all of my Lords
-of the Council for her, to save her from blemish, if no
-offence can be found in her towards her Majesty. I do
-not nor can find the marriage of that Lady’s son to my
-wife’s daughter can any way be taken with indifferent
-judgment, be any offence or contemptuous to her
-Majesty; and then, methinks, that benefit any subject
-may by law claim might be permitted to any of mine
-as well. But I must be plain with your Lordship. It
-is not the marriage matter nor the hatred some bear to
-my Lady Lennox, my wife, or to me, that makes this
-great ado and occupies heads with so many devices.
-It is a greater matter; which I leave to conjecture,
-not doubting but your Lordship’s wisdom hath foreseen
-it, and thereof had due consideration, as always
-you have been most careful for it.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>“I have no more to trouble your Lordship withal,
-but that I would not have her Majesty think, if I could
-see any cause to imagine any intent of liking or insinuation
-with this Queen the rather to grow by this
-marriage, or any other inconvenience might come
-thereby to her Majesty, that I could or would bear
-with it, or hide it from her Majesty, for that Lady’s
-sake, or for my wife, or any other cause else; for
-besides the faith I bear her Majesty, with a singular
-love I look not by any means but by her Majesty only
-to be made better than I am; nor by any change to hold
-that I have—so take my leave of your Lordship.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Sheffield Castle (where my charge is safe), the 27th
-of December, 1574.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Your Lordship’s assured friend to my power,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>G. Shrewsbury</span>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>This letter is dignified, slightly defiant—claiming
-common justice for his people, as “any subject” may
-do—and doggedly loyal. He is no opportunist, and
-for any improvement in his fortunes he looks to Elizabeth
-only. He has acted whole-heartedly and with a
-single mind. He has tendered to the Lords of the
-Council all possible details which would assist in clearing
-Lady Lennox from imputations in regard to co-operation
-with Mary of Scotland. He fully recognises
-that this is the “greater matter” which “occupies
-heads with so many devices” and wherein lies the crux
-of the affair. He knew that a long official enquiry was
-inevitable. This took the form of a special Court under
-the Earl of Huntingdon, whom Mary of Scots and the
-Earl alike detested. The choice of him as grand inquisitor
-must have been the more galling just now,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>because reports were rife that this rash marriage had
-finally decided the Queen to supersede Lord Shrewsbury
-as incapable and unworthy of her reliance. Such
-rumours were always a part of her policy. She knew
-perfectly well who was most useful to her, and she was
-not going to relax her grip upon Shrewsbury, his endurance,
-his loyalty, his houses, and his income.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Lord Huntingdon’s enquiry went forward, and both
-ladies were ultimately acquitted of “large treasons.”
-If the gaoler-soldier Earl did not give his wife a sound
-verbal drubbing for endangering the peace of his whole
-house in so gratuitous a fashion it would be strange.
-From the very first, in spite of his assurances to the
-Queen, he must have scented his lady’s ambition with
-regard to any possible semi-royal offspring of the
-Rufford marriage. The matter weighed on him greatly
-in after life. One can only assume that his Bess at this
-period lost her sense of perspective, and that in one
-sense her noted long-headedness deserted her. The
-enquiry over, the principal offenders, crushed and
-humble (Lady Lennox at all events seemed so), retired
-to their homes. It is mentioned that the royal order
-giving Lady Shrewsbury her freedom included permission
-for her to repair to the baths at Buxton, a change
-of air which must have been extremely salutary after
-the poor ventilation of the Tower of London, even
-under the less rigorous conditions accorded to prisoners
-of quality.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>By the middle of May, Lady Lennox was once more
-at her Hackney house. A visit to Buxton waters for
-her was out of the question, both as regards policy and
-expense. At Hackney she rested, very much out of the
-world and very poor, with her gentle little daughter-in-law
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>and son, who spent the first year of their married
-life in a tolerably morose atmosphere of suspicion and
-unpopularity. They had, of course, a few visitors.
-Gilbert Talbot, who seems always to have been the
-spokesman of the family, and to have kept in touch
-with its various members, records the impression made
-by the Lennoxes on a certain “Mr. Tyndall,” who
-subsequently carried letters down to Derbyshire to the
-mother of Elizabeth Lennox:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“This bearer, Mr. Tyndall, was at Hackney, where
-he found them there well. And I trust very shortly that
-the dregs of all misconstruction will be wiped away, that
-their abode there after this sort will be altered.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This means that the inmates were socially taboo and
-were still kept “within bounds.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>In July of the same year there is a most pathetic
-little letter from the girl-wife Elizabeth, by this time
-in a fair way to produce an heir for the perishing house
-of Lennox. She makes no allusion to the fact in this
-piteous and formal little note to the mother who used
-her for family purposes much in the same way as she
-used a stone for the building of her other “workes.”
-The cause of the displeasure which the writer seeks
-to disarm is inexplainable. Elizabeth Cavendish was
-exactly the opposite in character to her mother, or her
-mother’s eldest daughter Mary, wife of Gilbert Talbot.
-The latter—of whom more presently—was a hot-tempered,
-vindictive, energetic creature, with plenty
-of intelligence. Elizabeth Cavendish was gentle, unassuming,
-tender-hearted. She would certainly take
-the line of least resistance. This is the letter:—<a id='r32' /><a href='#f32' class='c013'><sup>[32]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>“My humble duty remembered: beseeching your
-L. of your daily blessings: presuming of your motherlike
-affection towards me your child that trust I have
-not so evilly deserved as your La. hath made show,
-by your letters to others, which maketh me doubtful
-that your La. hath been informed some great untruth
-of me or else I had well hoped that for some small
-trifle I should not have continued in your displeasure
-so long a time. And I might be so bold as to crave
-at your La. hands that it would please you to extreme<a id='r33' /><a href='#f33' class='c013'><sup>[33]</sup></a>
-such false bruits as your La. hath heard reported of
-me as lightly as you have done when othere were in
-the like case, I should think myself much the more
-bound to your La. I beseech you make my hearty commendations
-to my aunt. I take my leave in humble wise.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Hackney, 25th of July.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your La. humble and Obedient daughter,</div>
- <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>E. Lenox</span>.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“To the right honourable the Countess</div>
- <div class='line in4'>of Shrewsbury my very good mother.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>At all events, the mother’s displeasure must have
-melted upon the birth of her Lennox grandchild.
-Unhappily for the ambitious Bess, this was not a son
-but a girl, christened Arabella, who was afterwards to
-play her part in just such a tragi-comedy of ambition,
-Court pageant, and luckless marriage as befell her grandmother
-Margaret Lennox, and the Ladies Catherine and
-Mary Grey. Had the child been a boy Queen Elizabeth
-might have been less inclined to clemency. Her sex,
-her helplessness, the poverty of her father’s house, and
-the dangerous and delicate condition of his health were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>all inducements to the Queen’s compassion, and also
-rendered the babe a useful item in the plans of the
-“Mistress Builder.” Her birth, of course, brought
-the Shrewsburys into an oddly contradictory relationship
-towards Mary of Scotland, who always showed the
-tenderest interest in the child. It must also have
-assisted to complete the better understanding between
-Darnley’s mother and widow. Already they had drawn
-closer in a mutual dread lest, since the assassination
-of the old Earl of Lennox, the evil practices of the
-present Regent, Lord Morton, should injure the young
-James of Scotland. Lady Lennox’s letter to Mary
-from Hackney, dated November 10th, 1575, makes
-their reconciliation very clear:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It may please your Majesty, I have received your
-letters and mind both by your letters and otherwise,
-much to my comfort specially perceiving what jealous
-natural care your Majesty hath of our sweet and peerless
-jewel in Scotland. I have been as fearful and as
-careful as your Majesty of him, so that the wicked
-governor should not have power to do harm to his
-person, whom God preserve from his enemies. I
-beseech your Majesty fear not, but trust in God
-all shall be well. The treachery of your traitors is
-evidently no better than before. I shall always play
-my part to your Majesty’s content so as may tend to
-both our comforts. And now I must yield your
-Majesty my most humble thanks for your good remembrance
-and bounty to our little daughter, her who
-some day may serve your highness. Almighty God
-grant unto your Majesty a long and happy life.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your Majesty’s most humble and</div>
- <div class='line in16'>loving mother and aunt,</div>
- <div class='line in20'>“<span class='sc'>Margaret Lennox</span>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>The “little daughter” is surely the young Elizabeth
-Lennox (<em>née</em> Cavendish), who adds this postscript to the
-letter:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I most humbly thank your Majesty that it pleased
-you to remember me, your poor servant, both with
-a token and in my La. Gr.’s letter,<a id='r34' /><a href='#f34' class='c013'><sup>[34]</sup></a> which is not little
-to my comfort. I can but wish and pray God for your
-Majesty’s long and happy estate.... I may do your
-Majesty better service, which I think long to do, and
-shall always be as ready thereto as any servant your
-Majesty hath, according as by duty I am bound. I
-beseech your highness to pardon these rude lines, and
-accept the good heart of the writer, who loves and
-honours your Majesty unfeignedly.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Your Majesty’s most humble and lowly servant
-through life,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>E. Lennox</span>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>Now the above convincing and pathetic letter of the
-dowager Lady Lennox, it seems, never reached Mary;
-but fortunately for Mary’s reputation and as proof of
-the accord between her and her mother-in-law with
-regard to the marriage and other matters, has been
-preserved.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Two years later, 1577, Queen and mother-in-law
-were toiling to get the Scottish prince away from the
-“wicked governor,” and Mary says of Lady Lennox,
-“I praise God that she becomes daily more sensible
-of the faithlessness and evil intentions of those whom
-she previously assisted with her name against me.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>CHAPTER XI<br /> <span class='small'>VARIOUS OCCURRENCES</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c005'>The Shrewsbury pair started the year 1575 in
-different fashion. She was in the Tower and not
-at all in a happy mood. He also in a fortress—Sheffield—but
-as warder and not prisoner, and more unhappy,
-because in the larger things he was always the more
-conscientious, yet bestirred himself to send a diplomatic
-present of rich gold plate to Lord Burghley, and was himself
-in the usual manner the recipient of bounties from
-his friends and tenants. Burghley acknowledges the
-present and his indebtedness in highly satisfactory terms
-to the master of Sheffield Castle:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And now, my Lord, I find such continuance or
-rather increase, of your good will to me, by your costly
-gift of plate this new year, as you may account me
-greatly in your debt and yet ready with my heart and
-service to acquit you. I humbly therefore pray your
-Lordship to make proof of my good will where my
-power may answer the same, and I trust you shall find
-the best disposed debtor that your Lordship hath to
-acquit my debt.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Lodge prints immediately before this letter from the
-Lord Treasurer a fragment (also from the Talbot manuscripts)
-in which Lord Shrewsbury lays his financial
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>case emphatically before the Queen, and there is no
-doubt that his appeal and the present of gold plate
-to her Lord Treasurer were incidents closely related:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Your Majesty was minded to allow me for the
-keeping of this Lady but £30 a week. When I received
-her into my charge at your Majesty’s hands, I understood
-very well it was a most dangerous service, and
-thought overhard to perform, without some great mischief
-to himself at least, and as it seemed most hard and
-fearful to others and every man shrunk from it, so
-much the gladder was I to take it upon me, thereby to
-make appear to your Majesty my zealous mind to serve
-you in place of greatest peril; and I thought it was the
-best proof your Majesty could make of me. I demanded
-not great allowance, nor did stick for anything as all
-men used to do. My Lords of your Council, upon
-good deliberation, assigned by your Majesty’s commandment,
-a portion of £52 every week (less by the half
-than your Majesty paid before she came to me) which
-I took, and would not in that doubtful time have
-refused your Majesty’s service of trust so committed to
-me, if my lands and life had lain thereon; and how
-I have passed my service, and accomplished your trust
-committed to me, with quiet, surety——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>That sudden break in the appeal, whatever its cause,
-has its own dramatic force.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>As regards Court matters, a long letter from Francis
-Talbot, the eldest son, who apparently wrote so rarely,
-belongs to the beginning of this year. It gives a picture
-of Queen Elizabeth in a mood of anxiety, depression,
-and perplexity in regard to foreign politics, especially
-touching the all-important decision as to whether or not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>she should accept the offer of the suzerainty of the
-Netherland States:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Her Majesty is troubled with these causes which
-maketh her very melancholy; and seemeth greatly to be
-out of quiet. What shall be done in these matters as
-yet is unknown, but here are ambassadors of all sides
-who labour greatly one against another.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To this year also belongs a kindly letter—this time
-on purely family matters—from the wife of Francis
-Talbot, Lady Ann, <em>née</em> Herbert, daughter of William,
-Earl Pembroke, to the Countess of Shrewsbury. In
-this the forthcoming “prograce” is mentioned, and the
-visit of Queen Elizabeth to the then Countess of Pembroke,
-her sister-in-law, <em>née</em> Catherine Talbot, and
-married to Henry, Earl Pembroke:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good Madame, I am to crave pardon for not writing
-to my Lord’s man Harry Grace. The cause I willed
-him to declare to your La. which was the extremity that
-my sister of Pembroke was in at that time; which hath
-continued till Thursday last. Since that day she hath
-been out of her swooning, but not able to stand or
-go. Her greatest grief is now want of sleep, and not
-able to away with the sight of meat; but considering her
-estate before we think ourselves happy of this change,
-hoping that better will follow shortly. The Queen
-Majesty hath been here with her twice; very late both
-times. The last time it was ten of the clock at night ere
-her Majesty went hence, being so great a mist as there
-were divers of the barges and boats that waited for
-her lost their ways, and landed in wrong places, but
-thanks be to God her Majesty came well home without
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>cold or fear. For the holding of the progress I am sure
-your La. heareth; for my part I can write no certainty,
-but as I am in all other matters, as I have always
-professed and as duty doth bind me, ready at your La.
-command; and in anything I may show it either at this
-time or when occasion serveth, if I be not as willing
-thereto as any child of your own, then let me be
-condemned according to my deserts; otherwise I humbly
-crave your La. good opinion of me not to decrease,
-remembering your La. commandment heretofore, to
-write to you as often as I could, which now in this
-place I shall have better means than I have had in the
-country, and thereupon presuming to lengthen my
-letter upon any occasion, although I count this of my
-sister very evil news, yet considering her recovery,
-I hope my long scribbling will the less trouble your La.
-And so with my most humble duty of my Lord and
-your La. I humbly take my leave. From Baynards
-Castle the 8th of May.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Your La. assured loving daughter to command,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>Anne Talbot</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“My sister of Pembroke hath willed to remember
-her humble duty to my Lord and you, with desire
-of his daily blessing. As soon as she is able she will do
-it herself.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“To the right honourable and my assured good Lady</div>
- <div class='line in4'>and mother, the Countess of Shrewsbury.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>That “my sister Pembroke” recovered from her
-swoonings and her convalescence is stated at the close
-of a long letter from Gilbert Talbot, in February, to
-both his parents.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>During the whole of the spring the Earl’s correspondence
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>was large. Sir Francis Walsingham and
-others kept him informed of all State events and
-possibilities which could affect politics. In a paper
-which the Earl endorses “Occurrences, from Mr.
-Secretary Walsingham” is contained the news of the
-disappearance from the French Court of Henry of
-Navarre, the overtures made to him by the French
-King, the gradual increase of his adherents among the
-Protestants, the multifarious schemes of the Duke of
-Guise, and all the details which made for civil war.
-The belief in magic seems to have had sufficient hold
-upon a statesman like Walsingham to induce him to
-include a note such as this:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“There is secret report, and that very constantly
-affirmed by men of credit, that a day or two before
-the King of Navarre departed, it happened the Duke
-of Guise and him to play at dice, upon a very smooth
-board, in the King’s cabinet; and that, after they had
-done, there appeared suddenly upon the board certain
-great and round drops of blood that astonished them
-marvellously, finding no cause in the blood of the
-world, but, as it were, a very prodigy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Another letter of this year is very interesting, as
-it shows the indefatigable Lady Shrewsbury once more
-at her match-making, and once again seeking to ally
-her family with one which could most assist it at Court—the
-family of Lord Burghley. Lord Shrewsbury’s
-letter making the proposal as suggested by his wife
-is not forthcoming, but Lord Burghley’s reply is full
-and detailed, and breathes caution in every word.
-His excuses for declining the offer are quite reasonable.
-At the same time he must have had sufficient
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>insight into her Ladyship’s masterful character to
-strengthen his refusal. He accentuates his fear of the
-Queen’s distrust by instancing the absurd reports
-circulated about him when he merely went to Buxton
-to drink the waters, and he concludes with a quaintly
-sententious condemnation of “human learning” in
-wishing well to the boy whom he did not desire for
-his son-in-law.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My very good Lord,—My most hearty and due
-commendations done, I cannot sufficiently express in
-words the inward hearty affection that I conceive by
-your Lordship’s friendly offer of the marriage of
-your younger son; and that in such a friendly sort,
-by your own letter, and as your Lordship writes, the
-same proceeding of yourself. Now, my Lord, as I
-think myself much beholden to you for this your
-Lordship’s kindness, and manifest argument of a faithful
-goodwill, so must I pray your Lordship to accept mine
-answer, with assured opinion of my continuance in the
-same towards your Lordship. There are specially
-two causes why I do not in plain terms consent by
-way of conclusion hereto; the one, for that my daughter
-is but young in years; and upon some reasonable
-respects, I have determined (notwithstanding I have
-been very honourably offered matches) not to treat
-of marrying her, if I may live so long, until she
-be above fifteen or sixteen, and if I were of more
-likelihood myself to live longer than I look to do,
-she should not, with my liking, be married before
-she were near eighteen or twenty. The second cause
-why I differ to yield to conclusion with your Lordship
-is grounded upon such a consideration as, if it were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>not truly to satisfy your Lordship, and to avoid a
-just offence which your Lordship might conceive of
-my forbearing, I would not by writing or message
-utter, but only by speech to your Lordship’s self.
-My Lord, it is over true and over much against
-reason that upon my being at Buxton last, advantage
-was sought by some that loved me not to confirm
-in her Majesty a former conceit which had been
-laboured to put into her head, that I was of late
-become friendly to the Queen of Scots, and that I
-had no disposition to encounter her practices; and
-now at my being at Buxton, her Majesty did directly
-conceive that my being there was, by means of your
-Lordship and my Lady, to enter into intelligence
-with the Queen of Scots; and hereof at my return
-to her Majesty’s presence I had very sharp reproofs
-for my going to Buxton with plain charging of me
-for favouring the Queen of Scots; and that in so
-earnest a sort I never looked for, knowing my integrity
-to her Majesty; but especially knowing how contrariously
-the Queen of Scots conceived of me for
-many things past to the offence of the Queen of Scots.
-And yet, true it is, I never indeed gave just cause by
-any private affection of my own, or for myself, to
-offend the Queen of Scots; but whatsoever I did
-was for the services of mine own sovereign Lady
-and Queen, which if it were yet again to be done
-I would do. And though I know myself subject to
-contrary workings of displeasure yet will I not, for
-remedy of any of them both, decline from the duty
-I owe to God and my sovereign Queen; for I know
-and do understand, that I am in this contrary sort
-maliciously depraved, and yet in secret sort; on the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>one part, and that of long time, that I am the most
-dangerous enemy and evil willer to the Queen of
-Scots; on the other side that I am also a secret well
-willer to her and her title, and that I have made my
-party good with her. Now, my Lord, no man can
-make both these true together; but it sufficeth such
-as like not me in doing my duty to deprave me, and
-yet in such sort is done in darkness, as I cannot get
-opportunity to convince them in the light. In all
-these crossings, my good Lord, I appeal to God who
-knoweth, yea (I thank him infinitely), who directeth
-my thoughts to intend principally the service and
-honour of God, and jointly with it the surety and
-greatness of my sovereign Lady the Queen’s Majesty;
-and for any other respect but it may tend to those
-two, I appeal to God to punish me if I have any.
-As for the Queen of Scots, truly I have no spot of
-evil meaning to her. Neither do I mean to deal with
-any titles to the Crown. If she shall intend any evil
-to the Queen’s Majesty, my sovereign, for her sake
-I must and will mean to impeach her; and therein
-I may be her unfriend, or worse.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Well now, my good Lord, your Lordship seeth I
-have made a long digression from my answer, but
-I trust your Lordship can consider what moveth me
-thus to digress. Surely it behoveth me not only to
-live uprightly, but to avoid all probable arguments that
-may be gathered to render me suspected to her Majesty
-whom I serve with all dutifulness and sincerity; and
-therefore I gather this, that if it were understood that
-there were a communication or a purpose of marriage
-between your Lordship’s son and my daughter I am
-sure there would be an advantage sought to increase
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>these former suspicions. Considering the young years
-of our two children&nbsp;... if the matter were fully
-agreed betwixt us, the parents, the marriage could not
-take effect, I think it best to refer the motion in silence,
-and yet so to order it with ourselves that, when time
-shall hereafter be more convenient, we may (and then
-also with less cause of vain suspicion) renew it. And
-in the meantime I must confess myself much bounden
-to your Lordship&nbsp;... wishing your Lordship’s son all
-the good education may be meet to teach him to fear
-God, love your Lordship, his natural father, and to
-know his friends; without any curiosity of human
-learning, which, without the fear of God, I see doeth
-great hurt to all youth in this time and age. My Lord,
-I pray you bear with me scribbling, which I think your
-Lordship shall hardly read, and yet I would not use my
-man’s hand in such a matter as this.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“From Hampton Court, 24th December, 1575.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Your Lordship’s most assured commandment,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>W. Burghley</span>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>The boy in question was Edward Talbot, the Earl’s
-fourth son. His matrimonial chances did not suffer by
-this just refusal, for in after years he married one of the
-twin heiresses of Lord Ogle of Northumberland, and
-eventually, after the death of his two elder brothers,
-succeeded to his father’s earldom.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>A single bill of items of the Earl’s expenditure
-in the year 1575 amounting to £300 is of a nature
-which shows how many and extensive were the purchases
-justifying his constant appeals to the Treasury.
-All these items he had to import from France by special
-messenger. Hogshead after hogshead of French wine
-was required for Mary’s use. Her household drank
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>it in preference to the heavier English brew of ale.
-Moreover, she was accustomed to use it for her bath,
-especially when indisposed. Buckram and canvas,
-damask and sheeting, vinegar and live quails (“with
-cages for the said quails”), paper and hempseed, “comfitures
-and other sugar-works,” and even “fourteen
-pounds of sleyed silk for my Lady, being of all colours,”
-go to this long bill of goods from Rouen.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>My Lady meanwhile was properly reinstated in the
-English Queen’s confidence. It would please Bess
-Shrewsbury well to know that this letter from the Earl
-of Leicester, written early in 1576 to her husband, has
-come down to posterity:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My Lord,—For that this bearer is so well known and
-trusted of you I will leave to trouble you with any long
-letters, and do commit the more to his report, for that
-he is well able to satisfy your Lordship fully of all
-things here. And, touching one part of your letter sent
-lately to me, about the access of my Lady, your wife, to
-the Queen there, I find the Queen’s Majesty well pleased
-that she may repair at all times, and not forbear the
-company of that Queen, having not only very good
-opinion of my Lady’s wisdom and discretion, but thinks
-how convenient it is for that Queen to be accompanied
-and pass the time rather with my Lady than meaner
-persons. I doubt not but your Lordship shall hear in
-like sort also from her Majesty touching the same, and
-yet I may well signify thus much, as from herself, to
-your Lordship. The rest I commend to this bearer,
-and your Lordship, with my good Lady, to the Almighty.
-In haste, this first of May.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your Lordship’s assured kinsman,</div>
- <div class='line in24'>“<span class='sc'>R. Leicester</span>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>Soon after, in June, Lord Shrewsbury, at Buxton
-with his “charge,” asks that he may remove her, not to
-Tutbury as suggested, but back to Sheffield Lodge.
-There was a “bruit” that Lord Leicester was going to
-Buxton for the waters, and it was necessary, seeing that
-his going would probably attract others in the world of
-fashion, not to allow Mary to linger at the baths. A
-letter from Gilbert Talbot, in July, 1576, full of the
-usual delightful chit-chat about Queen and Court, mentions
-the Buxton expedition in connection with the
-magnificent Leicester:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My duty most humbly remembered, right honourable
-my singular good Lord and father. Since my
-coming hither to the Court there hath been sundry
-determinations of her Majesty’s progress this summer.
-Yesterday it was set down that she would go to Grafton<a id='r35' /><a href='#f35' class='c013'><sup>[35]</sup></a>
-and Northampton, Leicester, and to Ashby, my
-Lord Huntingdon’s house, and there to have remained
-twenty-one days, to the end the water of Buxton might
-have been daily brought thither for my Lord of
-Leicester, or any other, to have used; but late yesternight
-this purpose altered, and now at this present her
-Majesty thinketh to go no further than Grafton; howbeit
-there is no certainty, for these two or three
-days it hath changed every five hours. The physicians
-have fully resolved that wheresoever my Lord Leicester
-be he must drink and use Buxton water twenty days
-together. My Lady Essex and my Lady Sussex will be
-shortly at Buxton, and my Lady Norris shortly after;
-I cannot learn of any others that come from hence.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“This day Mr. Secretary Walsingham has gotten the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>Bill signed for the S. Q.’s diet, and to-morrow early it
-shall be sent to the Exchequer, that as soon as possible
-we may receive the money, which shall be disposed
-according to your Lordship’s commandment in payment
-of all your debts here.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I have bespoken two pair of little flagons, for there
-are none ready made, and I fear they will not be
-finished before my departure hence. I have seen many
-fair hangings, and your Lordship may have all prices,
-either two shillings a stick or seven groats, three, four,
-five, or six shillings the stick, even as your Lordship
-will bestow; but there is of five shillings the stick that
-is very fair. But unless your Lordship send up a
-measure of what depth and breadth you would have
-them, surely they will not be to your Lordship’s liking;
-for the most of them are very shallow, and I have seen
-none that I think deep enough for a guest chamber, but
-for lodgings.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I have had some talk with my Lord of Leicester
-since my coming, whom I find most assuredly well
-affected towards your Lordship and yours. I never
-knew man in my life more joyful for their friend than
-he at my Lady’s noble and wise government of herself
-at her late being here; saying that he heartily thanked
-God of so good a friend and kinsman of your Lordship,
-and that you are matched with so noble and good a
-wife. I saw the Queen’s Majesty yesternight in the
-garden; but for that she was talking with my Lord
-Hunsden, she spake nothing to me, but looked very
-earnestly on me. I hear her Majesty conceiveth somewhat
-better of me than heretofore;<a id='r36' /><a href='#f36' class='c013'><sup>[36]</sup></a> and my Lord
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>of Leicester doubteth not in time to bring all well
-again.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I can learn no certain news worthy to write to your
-Lordship’s Secretary. William Winter hath not yet
-sent my resolute answer from the Flushingers and Prince
-of Orange touching our merchants’ ships and goods;
-for other matters of France. I know Mr. Secretary
-Walsingham’s wonted manner is to send your Lordship’s
-occurrents that come thence. Mr. Secretary Smith
-lieth still in hard case at his house in Essex, and, as I
-hear, this day or to-morrow setteth towards the baths
-in Somersetshire; the use of his tongue is clean taken
-from him that he cannot be understood, such is the
-continuance of the rheum that distilleth from his head
-downwards.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Thus, not knowing wherewith else to trouble your
-Lordship, I most humbly beseech your blessing, with
-my wonted prayer for your Lordship’s long continuance
-in all honour, and most perfect health.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“From the Court this Friday at night, the 6th of
-July, 1576.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your Lordship’s most humble and</div>
- <div class='line in8'>obedient loving son,</div>
- <div class='line in20'>“<span class='sc'>Gilbert Talbot</span>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>Otherwise the family affairs of the Shrewsburys were
-engrossing enough. The Lennox baby, born at Chatsworth,
-had, as stated, altered their domestic and social
-world considerably. My Lady was now the grandmother
-of a possible queen, a creature having equal
-right on her father’s side to the crowns of Scotland and
-England. It was very important that while Lady
-Shrewsbury still kept up towards the child’s aunt,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>Mary, a show of friendliness, she should curry favour
-on every occasion with the English Queen, who supported
-the rule of young James of Scotland. It
-was a nice and delicate game to play, and must have
-pleased her well. It was not likely now that Mary
-would ever come into power. Still, strange things
-happened. If Elizabeth died suddenly Mary might
-have her day at last, and every act of the Shrewsburys
-towards her in her captivity would be weighed in her
-judgment and awards as soon as she was in the seat of
-government. The two women had hitherto grown
-very friendly. All manner of confidences must have
-passed between them, and my Lady’s alert ears had
-supplied her quick tongue with many a bit of scandal
-which she could retail for the amusement of the royal
-“guest.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>From this period, however, she would practise greater
-caution. She had recently steered clear of great danger,
-and was toiling hard for the Queen’s smiles. It was
-well known that those who favoured and fêted Lord
-Leicester fêted the Queen in proxy. The visit of
-Leicester to Buxton in 1576 presented itself therefore
-as a great social chance.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>CHAPTER XII<br /> <span class='small'>MY LORD LEICESTER’S CURE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c005'>My Lord of Leicester was to have his cure. The
-physicians insisted upon it. It is chronicled in
-Gilbert Talbot’s letter with all the importance which
-would attend the bulletins of the health of a king. The
-Queen never resented a fuss of this kind made over her
-pampered darling. In his stuffed and padded Court
-costume, his feathered head-dress, and his jewels one
-cannot detect in him one of the virile qualities which so
-dominated her imagination. His treacheries were winked
-at, his vices condoned, even the people who accused him
-most violently of the murder of his first wife, Amy
-Robsart, when in perplexity crawled to his feet, either
-literally like poor Lady Catherine Grey, or in abject
-letters like Lady Lennox, who was one of his bitterest
-accusers and who had suffered under the spies he sent
-into her very house. Let us for a few moments recall
-the growth of this personage, this veritable bay-tree.
-He was just Robert Dudley, a younger son, the fifth of
-a ruined family lying under attainder—the Dukes of
-Northumberland. Mary of England restored him to
-his title, and drew him out of nonentity and poverty
-by appointing him Master of the Ordnance at the
-siege of S. Quentin. As soldier and courtier he certainly
-came into contact with the Princess Elizabeth,
-whose visits to Court were finally forced upon her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>unwilling sister. Elizabeth had scarcely been on the
-throne a few months before she indulged with much
-too evident relief in flirtations with him, as a counterblast
-to the incessant negotiations with the ambassadors
-of her successive foreign suitors. She coquetted with
-him in her boat, she kept his portrait in a secret cabinet,
-she showed off her learning, her airs and graces before
-him, she danced with him, and when she formally
-created him Earl of Leicester she “could not refrain
-from putting her hand in his neck, smilingly tickling
-him.” This honour, by the way, it will be remembered,
-she pretended to confer on him in order that his rank
-should fit him for marriage with Mary Queen of Scots,
-and so avoid the dangers and difficulties to England
-which would arise from her marriage with Darnley.
-There never was a pretence so thin. Elizabeth made a
-great show of her willingness to bestow on another her
-“brother and best friend, whom she would have married
-herself had she minded to take a husband.” Since she
-had decided to die a virgin she held that such a procedure
-in regard to Leicester would “free her mind of
-all fears and suspicions to be offended by any usurpation
-before her death, being assured that he was so
-loving and trusty that he would never suffer any such
-thing to be attempted in her time.” While she openly
-advertised Leicester as her favourite, she dangled him
-as a prize over the head of her chief enemy. She
-always loved playing with fire, and it is well that this
-time she did not burn her fingers, for Leicester was the
-complete courtier and could not decide between the
-two queens. In his eyes Mary had as much chance of
-ruling England as his present mistress. Mary did not
-at the beginning of her career in Scotland appear very
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>anxious for his wooing. All this helped Elizabeth.
-Creighton clearly takes the view that the latter promoted
-the Darnley marriage by the very pushing of
-Leicester’s claims. Whether or not he was personally
-commendable to Mary, it was greatly to his disadvantage,
-that, as creature of Elizabeth, he should be thrust
-upon her enemy.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Just at that period Leicester’s familiarity towards the
-Queen touched gross impudence. We see him in the
-royal tennis-court pausing in a match against the premier
-peer of England, the Duke of Norfolk, to wipe his face
-with the handkerchief quickly filched from the Queen’s
-hand as she sat amongst the onlookers. The Duke
-raged, offered violence, and, unfortunately for royal
-dignity, Elizabeth’s manner showed that she took the
-part of Leicester. She had already bestowed on him
-while a commoner the Garter. The Order of St. Michael
-was his next honour, and he was soon created Master of
-the Horse, Steward of the Household, Chancellor of
-Oxford, Ranger of the Forests south of Trent, and,
-later on, Captain-General of the English forces in the
-Netherlands. When age and his last illness brooded
-over him his queen planned for him a last dazzling post—a
-new creation—in the Lieutenancy of England and
-Ireland. Despite the scandals attached to his three
-marriages,<a id='r37' /><a href='#f37' class='c013'><sup>[37]</sup></a> he maintained his place in the eyes of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>Elizabeth, and only in after years seriously earned her
-displeasure. He had the rare art of “keeping on the
-right side” of Lord Burghley, between whom and himself
-a sort of armed neutrality existed, except when
-mutual advantage found them acting heartily in concert.
-Leicester, as all his history shows, was, like
-Buckingham, a gay dog, a ladies’ man. Pretty women
-hovered about him at Court—<em>vide</em> the letter from Gilbert
-Talbot under date May 11, 1573, quoted in full in a
-previous chapter—he had to keep them at peace not to
-give offence. He could play with their love, enjoy it,
-go to utmost lengths, so long as the Queen believed
-that in his heart no other woman could take her place.
-He entertained largely, he lived and dressed as befitted
-his position. It was above all highly important that
-he should keep his health in order, preserve the elegant
-lines of his soldier’s figure, and defer as long as possible
-the days when he would, in his own phrase, “grow
-high-coloured and red-faced.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>When he was ordered to Buxton it was imperative
-that he should be properly received and housed, and not
-lodged in the low wooden sheds which were used by
-the ordinary public during their “cure,” and where their
-fare seems to have consisted of “oat cakes, with a viand
-which the hosts called mutton, but which the guests
-strongly suspected to be dog.”</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_178fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>Photo by Emery Walker, after the picture in the National Portrait Gallery</em></span><br /><br />ROBERT DUDLEY, EARL OF LEICESTER<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_178'>178</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>Buxton waters, under the patronage of St. Anne “of
-Buckstone” and St. Andrew of Burton, were beset for
-many years before this with poor crippled pilgrims, who
-left symbols of their gratitude in the various shrines of
-the place in the way of crutches and candles. When the
-Cromwell of Henry VIII wiped England of popery
-these testimonials were all demolished, and he “locked
-up and sealed the baths and wells&nbsp;...” pending the
-royal permission “to wash” therein. This, however,
-did not prevent the Earl of Shrewsbury from building
-a suitable house for patients, and it is thus described by
-a physician of the day:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Joyninge to the chiefe sprynge betweene the river
-and the bathe is a very goodly house, four square, four
-stories hye, so well compacte with houses and offices
-underneath, and above and round about, with a great
-chamber, and other goodly lodgings to the number of
-thirty, that it is and will be a bewty to beholde; and
-very notable for the honourable and worshipful that
-shall need to repair thither, as also for others.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Yea, and the porest shall have lodgings and beds
-hard by for their uses only. The bathes also so beautified
-with seats round; defended from the ambyent air; and
-chimneys for fyre to ayre your garments in the bathes
-side, and other necessaries most decent.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Prices for baths varied according to the social position
-of the patient! An archbishop seems to head the
-scale with a compulsory payment of £5, while a yeoman
-only paid twelvepence, and was entitled to as long
-a cure as the Primate. Lord Leicester, coming in the
-category of Earls, was charged twenty shillings. One
-half of the fee went to the doctor in command, the rest
-towards a fund for the cure of the poorest cripples.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The aforesaid house, which four times sheltered both
-Mary of Scotland and once at least Lord Leicester, is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>now gone; in place of it is a hotel, and there is no
-trace of the “pleasant warm bowling-green planted
-about with large sycamore trees.” This, according to
-another authority, was part of its garden, and it was
-Gilbert Talbot’s duty to entertain his father’s dazzling
-guest and the Queen’s favourite in this pleasant spot.
-During the week of this memorable visit the young
-man never lost an opportunity of furthering his
-family’s cause and of sounding influential persons at
-all seasons. He, like others, had constant recourse to
-Leicester, both by word of mouth and pen. The letter
-which follows<a id='r38' /><a href='#f38' class='c013'><sup>[38]</sup></a> is a typical epistle of the kind which
-is scattered through the society correspondence of the
-day.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>We see by this that Gilbert was actually at “Buckstones”
-doing the honours of his father’s house there
-to any distinguished guests, while the Earl, his father,
-was nailed to his post at Sheffield, and the Countess
-presumably busying herself with the killing of the fatted
-calf at Chatsworth in readiness to honour Leicester on
-his going southward.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>She must have hailed this epistle with huge satisfaction,
-since it definitely announces the Earl’s presence
-at Buxton with his intention of accepting her invitation
-to Chatsworth, and at the same time assures her
-of his good offices on behalf of young Lady Lennox.
-Poor Elizabeth Cavendish was by this time a widow,<a id='r39' /><a href='#f39' class='c013'><sup>[39]</sup></a>
-almost penniless, and appealing to the Queen for financial
-support on behalf of the baby Lady Arabella. The
-letter is addressed to both of Gilbert’s parents:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>“My duty, etc,—This morning early I delivered your
-L.’s packet to my L. of Leicester, who, upon reading
-thereof, said he would write to your L. by a post that
-is here, and willed me to send away your lackey. I
-asked him how long he thought to tarry here, and
-prayed him to tarry as long as might be. And he said
-he knew not whether to go to Chatsworth on Tuesday
-or Wednesday or Thursday come seven nights, but one
-of those three days without fail. There came some score
-of fowl here on Saturday, which served here very well
-yesterday, and will do this three or four days. Sir Hugh
-Chamley sent hither to my L. of Leicester a very fat
-beef, which my L. of Leicester bade me go down to
-see, and to take him to use as I listed; but I told him
-I was sure your L. would be angry if I took him; yet
-for all this, he would force me to take him; and so I kept
-him here in the town till I know your L.’s pleasure
-what shall be done with him; he would serve very
-well for Chatsworth. Bayley thinketh that they will
-tarry two or three days at Chatsworth. There is no
-word yet come from my L. of Huntington and my La.
-whether they will meet my L. of Leicester at Chatsworth
-or not; if they do (as he hath written very
-earnestly to them) I think he will not come to Ashby,
-but go the next way to Killingworth and there tarry but
-two or three days only. My L. of Rutland, by reason
-of the foul afternoon yesterday, lay here all the last
-night in the chamber where Sir Henry Lea lodged. I
-showed the letter of my La. Lennox, your daughter, to
-my L. of Leicester, who said that he thought it were far
-better for him to defer her suit to her Majesty till his
-own coming to the Court than otherwise to write to her
-before; for that he thinketh her Majesty will suppose
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>his letter, if he should write, were but at your La.’s
-request, and so by another letter would straight answer
-it again, and so it do no great good; but at his meeting
-your La. he will (he saith) advise in what sort your
-La. shall write to the Queen Majesty, which he will
-carry unto her, and then be as earnest a solicitor
-therein as ever he was for anything in his life, and he
-doubteth not to prevail to your La. contention. To-morrow
-my L. of Leicester meaneth to go to Sir Peres
-a Leyes to meet with my L. of Derby, if the weather
-be any whit fair. And thus most humbly craving your
-Lo.’s blessing with my wonted prayer for your long
-continuance in all honour and most perfect health and
-long life I cease. At Buxton in haste this present
-Monday before noon.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Your Lo.’s most humble and obedient son,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>G. Talbot</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“The Lords do pray your L. to remember their case
-(of) knives.”<a id='r40' /><a href='#f40' class='c013'><sup>[40]</sup></a></p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_182fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>From a photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, after the picture at Hardwick Hall<br />&#8196; &#8196; By permission of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire</em></span><br /><br />QUEEN ELIZABETH<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_182'>182</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>There is no further comment from him on the subject
-of this visit, but later letters will show that it went
-off smoothly and resulted in benefit to the patient. As
-for his visit to Chatsworth it appears to have been a
-triumphant success. Many things were talked out
-between host, hostess, and guest in the few days of his
-sojourn. They had many experiences in common—to
-wit, the insane jealousy and suspicions of their
-Sovereign. But on this occasion their meeting hatched
-no unpleasant results in this respect. The Queen herself wrote to thank them for their good entertainment
-of her valued friend. And hereby hangs a little comedy,
-a mystery. Two letters, evidently of the same date,
-were dictated by the Queen. The skittish original in
-the handwriting of Sir Francis Walsingham was not
-sent. A sedate version of it was the one which the
-Shrewsburys opened. This is among the Talbot manuscripts.
-The lively edition remains in the Record Office
-among the Mary Queen of Scots MSS. for the amusement
-of posterity. Opinions differ as to the mood in
-which Elizabeth wrote it.<a id='r41' /><a href='#f41' class='c013'><sup>[41]</sup></a> It has been suggested that
-it was done in a flippant ironical spirit; it has also been
-taken as a symptom of wild elation born of Elizabeth’s
-belief that her marriage with Lord Leicester would
-really be achieved. It seems most likely that she
-certainly dashed it off in a flippant mood, with the
-intention of chaffing the serious apprehensive High
-Steward of England and his wife, and that Lord
-Burghley, or Walsingham, advised her to desist and to
-allow a copy to be made, excluding the “larky” passages.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>This is what she sent:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“The Queen to the Earl and Countess of Shrewsbury.</div>
- <div class='line'>“By the Queen.</div>
- <div class='line in2'>“Your most assured loving cousin and sovereign,</div>
- <div class='line in6'>Elizabeth R.</div>
- <div class='line'>“Our very good Cousins,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Being given to understand from our cousin of
-Leicester how honourably he was received by you our
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>cousin the Countess at Chatsworth, and his diet by you
-both discharged at Buxtons, but also presented with
-a very rare present, we should do him great wrong
-(holding him in that place of favour we do) in case we
-should not let you understand in what thankful sort
-we accept the same at your hands, not as done unto
-him, but to our own self, reputing him as another ourself;
-and, therefore, ye may assure yourselves, that we
-taking upon us the debt not as his but as our own, will
-take care accordingly to discharge the same in such
-honourable sort as so well-deserving creditors as ye are
-shall never have cause to think ye have met with an
-ungrateful debtor. In this acknowledgment of new
-debts we may not forget our old debt, the same being
-as great as a sovereign can owe to a subject; when
-through your loyal and most careful looking to this
-charge committed to you, both we and our realm enjoy
-a peaceable government, the best good hope that to any
-prince on earth can befall: This good hap, then, growing
-from you, ye might think yourselves most unhappy if you
-served such a prince as should not be as ready graciously
-to consider of it as thankfully to acknowledge the same,
-whereof ye may make full account, to your comfort
-when time shall serve. Given under our signet in our
-manor of Greenwich, the 25th day of June, 1577, and
-in the 19th year of our reign.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This is what Elizabeth, a sovereign of nineteen years’
-standing, a woman over forty years of age, wanted to
-send:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Being given to understand from our cousin of
-Leicester how honourably he was lately received and
-used by you, our Cousin the Countess of Chatsworth,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>and how his diet is by you both discharged at Buxtons,
-we should do him great wrong (holding him in that
-place of favour we do) in case we should not let you
-understand in how thankful sort we accept the same
-at both your hands—which we do not acknowledge to
-be done unto him but unto ourselves; and therefore
-do mean to take upon us the debt and to acknowledge
-you both as creditors, so you can be content to accept
-us for debtor, wherein is the danger unless you cut off
-some part of the large allowance of diet you give him,
-lest otherwise the debt thereby may grow to be so great
-as we shall not be able to discharge the same, and so
-become bankrupt, and therefore we think it meet for
-the saving of our credit to prescribe unto you a proportion
-of diet which we mean in no case you shall
-exceed, and that is to allow him by the day of his meat
-two ounces of flesh referring the quality to yourselves,
-so as you exceed not the quantity; and for his drink
-one-twentieth of a pint of wine to comfort his stomach
-and as much of St. Anne’s sacred water as he lusteth
-to drink. On festival days, as is fit for a man of his
-quality, we can be content you shall enlarge his diet
-by allowing unto him for his dinner the shoulder of
-a wren, and for his supper a leg of the same, besides
-his ordinary ounces. The like proportion we mean
-you shall allow unto our brother of Warwick,<a id='r42' /><a href='#f42' class='c013'><sup>[42]</sup></a> saying
-that we think it meet, in respect that his body is more
-replete than his brother’s, that the wren’s leg allowed
-at supper on festival days be abated; for that light
-suppers agreeth but with the rules of physic. This
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>order our meaning is you shall inviolably observe, and
-so you may right well assure yourselves of a most
-thankful debtor to so well-deserving creditors.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This letter is endorsed “M. of her Mates Ires to the
-Earl and Countess of Shrewsbury, of thanks for the
-good usage of my L. of Lec.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Indeed, it was well that it was not sent. From one
-point of view it reads suspiciously like a skit devised
-by Elizabeth on the statements periodically sent her by
-Lord Shrewsbury with regard to the “diet” of the
-Queen of Scots, and the number of courses and dishes
-allowed her on festival days.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The Earl writes presently to the Queen in his wife’s
-name, on this, his own, and other matters. His tone is
-artful, astute, and conventional:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“May it please your most excellent Majesty,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“The comfortable letters I lately received, of
-your own blessed handwriting, made me by oft looking
-on them, think my happiness more than any service
-(were it never so perfect) could merit; and myself more
-bounden to your Highness for the same than by writing
-I can express. And as it pleased your Majesty to write
-with assured confidence you have in my fidelity, and
-safe keeping of this lady, doubting nothing but lest
-her fair speech deceive me, so I am sure, although it
-please your Majesty to warn<a id='r43' /><a href='#f43' class='c013'><sup>[43]</sup></a> me of her, yet doth your
-wisdom see well enough by my many years’ service past
-any inclination to her was never further, nor otherwise
-than of her Majesty’s service....</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>“Nor have I cause to trust her. Were her speech
-fair or crabbed my only respect hath been, is still, and
-so shall continue, to the duty I owe unto your Majesty....
-I have her forthcoming at your Majesty’s commandment....</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“And may it now further please your Majesty to
-license my wife and me humbly to acknowledge ourselves
-the more bound to your Majesty, as well as for the
-comfortable message Mr. Julio brought us lately from
-your Majesty, as that it pleased your Majesty to vouchsafe
-our rude and gross entertainment of our devout
-friend, my kinsman, my Lord of Leicester; which
-although in respect of our duties to your Majesty
-and the great goodwill we bear to him, is not so well
-as it ought to be, yet are we sure it contenteth
-him, and displeaseth not your Majesty, that he is the
-welcomed friend to us of all others. My wife also bids
-me yield her humble thanks to your Majesty&nbsp;... and
-now (since we can do no more, nor your Highness
-have no more of us than our true and faithful hearts
-and service, wherein we will spend our lives and all we
-have, if your Majesty command it) we pray to God
-for your most excellent Majesty, as we are bounden.
-Sheffield, 4th of July, 1577.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Your Majesty’s most humble, faithful servant,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>George Shrewsbury</span>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>In this year, whether or no the weather specially tended
-to develop rheumatism or aggravate it, there seems to
-have been a positive rush of great persons to Buxton.
-A fortnight later Lord Burghley wrote to inform the
-Shrewsburys of his expedition to the baths and, like
-others, to beg for hospitality.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>“I am now thoroughly licensed by her Majesty to
-come thither with as much speed as my old crazed
-body will suffer me. And, because I doubt your Lordship
-is and shall be pressed with many other like suits
-for your favour, to have the use of some lodgings there,
-I am bold at the present to send this my letter by post”—that
-is to say, by special messenger. He goes on:
-“I am to have in my company but Mr. Roger Manners
-and my son, Thomas Cecil, for whom I am also to
-interest your Lordship to procure them, by your commandment,
-some lodging as your Lordship shall please.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The Earl of Sussex who preferred a doughty cure,
-drinking as much as three pints a day, made tender
-enquiries as to the result of the water on the Lord
-Treasurer. As to its effects on Lord Leicester, one
-can judge best by this letter from a friend to the
-Shrewsburys—Richard Topclyffe, a tremendous Protestant,
-by the way, and hunter of “mass-mongers and
-recusants,” to the Countess. He reassures her fully as
-to the health of the guest who had just quitted Chatsworth,
-quotes Leicester’s promise to further her welfare
-and that of her young stepsons, Henry and Edward
-Talbot, his kinsmen:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We did yesternight come to Ricote, my Lo.
-Norris’s, where late did arrive the Countesses of Bedford
-and Cumberland and the Earl of Cumberland, the Lord
-Wharton and his wife. The fat Earl<a id='r44' /><a href='#f44' class='c013'><sup>[44]</sup></a> cometh this day,
-my L. of Leicester being departed towards the Court,
-to Sir Thomas Gresham’s, thirty-three miles hence
-(whereby you may perceive of his health), only a little
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>troubled with a boil drawing to a head in the calf of
-the leg, which maketh him use his litter. The Countess
-kept him long waiting, asking if Buxton sent sound
-men halting home. But I never did hear him commend
-the place, nor the entertainment half so much: and did
-sware that he wished he had tarried three weeks longer
-with his charge&nbsp;... but, saith he, it hath, and would
-have cost my friends deeply. His L. wished her
-Majesty would progress to Grafton and Killingworth,
-which condition he would see Buxton this summer
-again. But the next year is threatened that journey.
-I can send your La. no more unpleasant news but
-that his Lo. hath said with me in vows that he will
-be as tender over your Lord and yourself, and both
-yours, as over his own health: and my Lo. is very
-careful over his two young cousins, Mr. Ed. and Mr.
-Hen., to have them placed at Oxford, wishing that he
-may find of his kindred to work his goodwill upon, as
-he hath done hitherto on many unthankful persons.
-Good madam, further you my good Lo., your husband’s
-disposition that way for your son Charles.... And
-therewith I end; in very humble sort. The 9th of
-July, 1577.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your La. ever at command,</div>
- <div class='line in12'>“<span class='sc'>Ric. Topcliffe</span>.”<a id='r45' /><a href='#f45' class='c013'><sup>[45]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>Everything as regards the Talbot and Cavendish
-family was going well—merrily as a marriage-bell, so
-far as “Bess” was concerned. The widowhood of her
-youngest daughter, Lady Lennox, did not affect her.
-It was only one more tool to her hand in scheming for
-the Queen’s favour, the Queen’s largesse, and in balancing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>any foolish and unwise notions which the Countess
-might have previously entertained in regard to Queen
-Mary’s cause.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Mary, it may be recalled here, had had more than
-one chance of marriage with Lord Leicester. He had,
-so to speak, meandered in and out of her affairs, now as
-suitor, now as go-between. As recently as 1574, three
-years previous to his Buxton visit, he seems for the
-second time to have entertained thoughts of making her
-an offer of marriage, whereas previously he had used
-his influence on behalf of the Duke of Norfolk’s wooing,
-and again with a view to averting his condemnation.
-In 1574 Mary was so firmly impressed with his attitude
-towards her that she advised her relations in France to
-pave the way for friendly overtures with a gift to
-Leicester. She was also about this time very anxious
-to refurbish her wardrobe, and took a great interest in
-securing brilliant and becoming materials and millinery
-of the kind most in vogue: “Send by and by Jean de
-Compiègne,” she writes, “and let him bring me patterns
-of dresses and samples of cloth of gold and silver and
-silk, the most beautiful and rare that are worn at Court,
-to learn my pleasure about them. Order Poissy to
-make me a couple of headdresses, with a crown of gold
-and silver, such as they have formerly made for me;
-and tell Breton to remember his promise, and obtain for
-me from Italy the newest fashions in headdresses, and
-veils and ribbons, with gold and silver....” There
-was no blindness about the way she regarded the possibility
-of such a marriage. She held that Leicester’s
-motives were anything but romantic or altruistic. But
-if so powerful a suitor could be secured, and above all
-seduced from allegiance to Elizabeth, Mary had no
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>objection to the match. Her letters to France are full
-of allusions to him:—<a id='r46' /><a href='#f46' class='c013'><sup>[46]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Leicester talks over M. de La Mothe to persuade
-him that he is wholly for me, and endeavours to gain
-over Walsingham my mortal enemy to this effect.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>And again: “M. de La Mothe advises me to entreat
-that my cousin of Guise, my grandmother and yours,
-will write some civil letters to Leicester, thanking him
-for his courtesy to me, as if he had done much for me,
-and by the same medium send him some handsome
-present, which will do me much good. He takes great
-delight in furniture; if you send him some crystal cup
-in your name, and allow me to pay for it, or some fine
-Turkey carpet, or such like as you may think most fitting,
-it will perhaps save me this winter, and will make
-him much ashamed, or suspected by his mistress, and
-all will assist me. For he intends to make me speak of
-marriage or die, as it is said, so that either he or his
-brother may have to do with this crown. I beseech you
-try if such small device can save me and I shall entertain
-him with the other, at a distance.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>How this letter reveals her impulse for romance,
-her pathetic, dogged attempts to believe herself all-powerful!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Leicester, naturally, was far too cautious to take the
-tremendous risk involved, and contented himself with
-keeping at a distance and in exchanging polite and
-friendly letters with the Shrewsburys, such as the one
-quoted on page <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>. He was an adept at this kind of
-sugary testimonial. Certainly no finer instance could
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>be given in support of the dignity, virtue, and innocence
-of an intriguing and busy lady from the pen of an
-arch-courtier—a man accused of wife-murder, seduction,
-poisoning, and political treachery.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>CHAPTER XIII<br /> <span class='small'>THE DIVIDED WAY</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c005'>Seeing that my Lady of Shrewsbury had triumphantly
-surmounted one of the greatest dangers
-she had ever drawn upon herself and hers, one can
-safely assume that after the foregoing letter she was in
-a tolerably prancing and jovial temper. Socially she
-really was for the moment a much more important
-item to be reckoned with than Mary Queen of Scots
-herself. All the difficulties of the past two years had
-only served to bring her into closer touch with both
-queens. Meantime she was a rich and honoured lady
-with a great many irons in the fire, and her wants and
-requirements were legion. She still wanted ale and wood
-and stone, she could not spend all her valuable time
-dancing attendance upon Mary, or sharing the dull semi-military
-routine of Sheffield Castle and Sheffield Lodge.
-She went to her beloved Chatsworth, and husband and
-wife exchanged letters. Here is a wistful appreciation
-from him:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My Sweetheart,—Your true and faithful zeal you
-bear me is more comfortable to me than anything I can
-think upon, and I give God thanks daily for his benefits
-he hath bestowed on me, and greatest cause I have to
-give him thanks that he hath sent me you in my old
-years to comfort me withal. Your coming I shall think
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>long for, and shall send on Friday your litter horses
-and on Saturday morning I will send my folks, because
-Friday they will be desirous to be at Rotherham Fair.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“It appears by my sister Wingfield’s letter there is
-bruit of this Queen’s going from me. I thank you for
-sending it me, which I return again, and will not
-show it till you may speak it yourself what you hear;
-and I have sent you John Knifton’s letter, that Lord
-brought me, that you may perceive what is [? bruited]
-of the young King. I thank you for your fat capon and
-it shall be baked, and kept cold and untouched until my
-sweetheart come; guess you who it is. I have sent
-you a cock that was given to me, which is all the
-dainties I have here.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I have written to Sellars to send every week a
-quarter of rye for this ten weeks, which will be as
-much as I know will be had there, and ten quarters
-of barley, which will be all that I can spare you. Farewell,
-my sweet true none and faithful wife.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“All yours,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>“<span class='sc'>Shrewsbury</span>.”<a id='r47' /><a href='#f47' class='c013'><sup>[47]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>Here is a letter from her to him, brisk, tart, affectionate
-all at once:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“My dear heart,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I have sent your letters again and thank you
-for them; they require no answer; but when you write
-remember to thank him for them. If you cannot get
-my timber carried I must be without it though I greatly
-want it; but if it would please you to command Hebert
-or any other, to move your tenants to bring it, I ken
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>they will not deny to do it. I pray you let me know if
-I shall have the ton of iron. If you cannot spare it
-I must make shift to get it elsewhere, for I may not
-now want it. You promised to send me money afore
-this time to buy oxen, but I see, out of sight out of
-mind with you.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“My son Gilbert has been very ill in his bed ever
-since he came from Sheffield: I think it is his old
-disease; he is now, I thank God, somewhat better and
-she very well. I will send you the bill of my wood
-stuff: I pray you let it be sent to Joseph, that he may
-be sure to receive all. I thank you for taking order for
-the carriage of it in Hardwick; if you would command,
-your waggoner might bring it thither: I think it would
-be safest carried. Here is neither malt nor hops. The
-malt come last is so very ill and stinking, as Hawkes
-thinks none of my workmen will drink it. Show this
-letter to my friend and then return it. I think you will
-take no discharge at Zouch’s hands nor the rest. You
-may work still in despite of them; the law is on your
-side.<a id='r48' /><a href='#f48' class='c013'><sup>[48]</sup></a> It cannot be but that you shall have the Queen’s
-consent to remove hither; therefore if you would have
-things in readiness for your provision, you might the
-sooner come. Come either before Midsummer or not
-this year; for any provision you have yet you might
-have come as well as at Easter as at this day. Here is
-yet no manner of provision more than a little drink,
-which makes me to think you mind not to come. God
-send my jewel health.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your faithful wife</div>
- <div class='line in12'>“<span class='sc'>E. Shrewsbury</span>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>“Saturday morn.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I have sent you lettuce for that you love them;
-and every second day some is sent to your charge and
-you. I have nothing else to send. Let me hear how
-you, your charge and love do, and commend me I pray
-you. It were well you sent four or five pieces of the
-great hangings that they might be put up; and some
-carpets. I wish you would have things in that readiness
-that you might come either three or four days after you
-hear from Court. Write to Baldwin to call on my Lord
-Treasurer for answer of your letters.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The expression in the postscript “your charge and
-love” has been variously interpreted by historians. It
-is utterly inconceivable that, as suggested, Lady Shrewsbury
-should have indicated Mary Queen of Scots by
-the last word. Had she wished to bring an accusation
-of this kind against her husband she would not immediately
-add her desire that he should join her as soon as
-possible. It is not unlikely that this perplexing sentence
-should run, “Let me hear how you, your charge, and
-(our) love do,” the “love” probably signifying a child
-or grandchild then with the Earl. Similarly the words
-“God send my jewel health” may apply to the same
-child, for in after years she uses this term of endearment
-almost exclusively in speaking of her precious
-grandchild, Arabella Stuart. Her peremptory request
-for “great hangings and carpets” is rather interesting,
-because a previous family letter, not yet included, gives
-a picture of the Earl’s parsimony in these details. This
-occurs as early as two years before the date of the above
-letters; and two long epistles from Gilbert to his stepmother
-show, first, how the long strain of his duties was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>telling upon the Earl, and, secondly, the unfavourable
-contrast produced on the minds of their children by the
-manner in which they were treated respectively by father
-and mother.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Gilbert, at Sheffield in 1575, describes the atmosphere
-of the house as utterly uncongenial. He is longing to
-be away and to have his own home. Lady Shrewsbury
-was away, probably at Chatsworth.<a id='r49' /><a href='#f49' class='c013'><sup>[49]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My L. is continually pestered with his wonted business,
-and is very often in exceeding choler of slight
-occasion; a great grief to them that loves him to see
-him hurt himself so much. He now speaketh nothing
-of my going to house, and I fear would be contented
-with silence to pass it over; but I have great hope in
-your La. at your coming, and in all my life I never
-longed for anything so much as to be from hence;
-truly, Madame, I rather wish myself a ploughman than
-here to continue.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Her Ladyship came and went, but does not seem to
-have had much effect in softening her lord. Soon afterwards
-Gilbert writes again, oppressed by his father’s lack
-of lavishness in regard to the fitting out of his son’s
-home—an attitude which he compares unfavourably with
-the generous methods of the stepmother.<a id='r50' /><a href='#f50' class='c013'><sup>[50]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Madame, where it hath pleased your La. to bestow
-on us a great deal of furniture towards house we can
-but by our prayers for your La. show ourselves dutiful
-as well for this as all other your La. continual benefits
-towards us, whereof we can never fail so long as it
-shall please God to continue His grace towards us. Presently
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>after your La., departure from hence my Lord
-appointed him of the wardrobe to deliver us the tester
-and curtains of the old green and red bed of velvet and
-satin that your La. did see; and the cloth bed tester
-and curtains we now lie in, and two very old counterpanes
-of tapestry; and forbad him to deliver the bed of
-cloth of gold and tawny velvet that your La. saw. That
-which your La. hath given us is more worth than all
-that is at Goodrich,<a id='r51' /><a href='#f51' class='c013'><sup>[51]</sup></a> or here of my Lord’s bestowing.
-On Wednesday my Lord went hence. Cooks brought
-in a piece of housewife’s cloth nothing dearer than
-twelve pence the yard, and so was holden; which Cooks
-told my Lord would very well serve my wife to make
-sheets, bore cloths and such like: which my L. at the
-very first yielded unto, and bade him carry it to
-Stele to measure, into the outer chamber, and he said he
-thought it very dear of that price, and thereupon my L.
-refused to buy it.... Thus I beseech your La. most
-humbly of your blessing to your little fellow<a id='r52' /><a href='#f52' class='c013'><sup>[52]</sup></a> and myself
-who is very well, thanks be to God....</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Sheffield, this Friday, 13th of October, 1575.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Here for the first time is the beginning of real dissension
-in the family. The Earl’s own son murmurs
-against him, and the wife, being the daughter of her
-husband’s stepmother, would naturally share his resentment
-towards the soldierly official towards whom she
-stood in such a very delicate double relationship. The
-young couple are placed in a very difficult position
-henceforth between Earl and Countess, and their letters
-show the growing jealousy of her absence and her independence
-in the Earl’s mind. The postscript strikes a
-tenderer note in the allusion to the childish days of the
-“lyttell fellow”—George, son and heir of Gilbert and
-Mary Talbot—and his awe of his “Lady Danmode”
-(Grandmother).</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_198fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, after the painting at Hardwick Hall</em><br />&#8196; &#8196; <em>By permission of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire</em></span><br /><br />ELIZABETH COUNTESS OF SHREWSBURY<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_198'>198</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>“My duty, most humble rem. R. Ho., my most
-singular good La. This day my Lo. intendeth to go
-to Worsopp; to-morrow to Rufford; and on Saturday
-hither again. He was not so inquisitive of me touching
-your La. since my last being at Chatsworth, as he was
-the time before; only he hath asked me many times
-when I thought your La. would be here: whereto I
-have answered sometimes that your La. was so ill at ease
-with the rheumatism as you knew not when God would
-make you able; other times, that I thought when your
-La. were well, you would desire to stay for some months
-if he would give you leave; for you assuredly thought
-my Lo. was better pleased with your absence than presence.
-Whereunto he replied very earnestly the contrary
-in such manner as he hath done heretofore when I
-have told him the like. I found occasion to tell him
-that your La. meant not to hold Owen as your groom
-any longer, since it was his pleasure to be so offended
-with him: howbeit (I said) your La. told me that you
-knew not what offence he had committed, nor other by
-him at all than that he was a simple, true man, and that
-you would be glad to understand something to lay to
-his charge when you should turn him out of your
-service. But he answered no other than that it was
-his will for divers causes which he would not utter.
-Further, I said your La. told me you meant to take
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>some wise fellow as your groom that should not be so
-simple as Owen was, but one who had been in service
-heretofore and knew what were fit and belonged to him
-to do in that service. Quoth he: ‘I believe she will
-take none of my putting to her.’ Since that time he
-gave no occasion of speech of your La., and indeed I
-have not been very much with him these four or five
-days, for he had much business with others. He is
-nothing so merry in my judgment as he was the last
-week; but I assure your La. I know not any cause at
-all. No other thing I know worthy of your La. knowledge
-at this present. Therefore, with most humble
-desire of your La. blessings to me and mine, and our
-prayer for your La. continuance in all honour, most
-perfect health and felicity, I cease.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Sheffield, this present Thursday, 1st August, 1577.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your La. most humble and obedient</div>
- <div class='line in16'>loving children,</div>
- <div class='line in12'>“<span class='sc'>Gilbert Talbot</span>, <span class='sc'>M. Talbot</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“George is very well, I thank God: he drinketh
-every day to La. Grandmother, rideth to her often, but
-yet within the Court; and if he have any spice, I tell
-him La. Grandmother is come and will see him; which
-he then will either quickly hide or quickly eat, and then
-asks where La. Danmode is.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Here it is very distinctly set forth, the growing distrust,
-the little suspicions nursed by husband and wife:
-“He was not so inquisitive of me touching your Ladyship.”
-“He asked me divers times when I thought
-your Ladyship would be here.” “You assuredly thought
-that my Lord was better pleased with your absence than
-presence.” And in expressing his mother’s willingness
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>to send away one of her grooms, since her lord was so
-offended with him, though she would gladly know of
-some offence to allege in giving the man his dismissal,
-he shows that my Lord still is mistrustful. “She’ll
-take no groom that I recommend to her” is his morose
-comment.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Another long letter from Gilbert the go-between gives
-the quarrel a more serious colour. Apparently it is
-the absurd old matter of household tapestries which
-is the immediate bone of contention. In vulgar phrase,
-there seems to have been a regular “row” over some
-embroiderers—upholsterer’s men as they would now be
-called—at Sheffield Lodge, who had been turned adrift
-instead of being carefully housed while at their work.
-The Earl’s steward, one Dickenson, evidently acted
-against express orders in his zeal to keep at a distance
-all persons who were not actually of the household and
-who might convey letters or messages to the captive.
-The Earl had expressed himself forcibly and the Countess
-could not forget his words. But she had not restrained
-her tongue either, and he had retorted that she scolded
-“like one that came from the Bank.” He does not
-like the groom, Owen (alluded to in the letter just
-quoted), and couples him with the embroiderer’s men.
-But the thing which most hurts him is that his wife
-should have left Sheffield, whither he is bound from
-Bolsover, the very day he arrives. He cannot forgive
-it, in spite of her suggestion that he should combine
-some business he has to transact in the Peak district
-with a visit to her at Chatsworth. He is, moreover,
-morbidly sensitive about the whole position, and thinks
-that his wife’s departure will make a very bad impression
-upon his household. Gilbert pleads her love
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>and devotion, and draws a vivid picture of her distress.
-The Earl melts; he concedes her love; he reiterates
-all he has done for her, all he has “bestowed.” And
-lastly he curses her building projects which take her
-so constantly away from him.</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_202fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>From a photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, after the picture at Hardwick Hall<br />&#8196; &#8196; By permission of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire</em></span><br /><br />GEORGE TALBOT, SIXTH EARL OF SHREWSBURY<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_202'>202</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>“My duty most humbly remembered. I trust your
-La. will pardon me in writing plainly and truly, although
-it be both bluntly and tediously. I met my L. at
-Bolsover yesterday about one of the clock, who at the
-very first was rather desirous to hear from hence than
-to enquire of Killingworth. Quoth he, ‘Gilbert, what
-talk had my wife with you?’ ‘Marry, my L.,’ quoth I,
-‘it hath pleased her to talk with me once or twice since
-my coming, but the matter she most spoke of is no small
-discomfort for me to understand.’ Then he was very
-desirous and bade me tell him what. I began: ‘Truly,
-Sir, with as grieved a mind as ever I saw woman in my
-life, she told me your L. was vehemently offended with
-her, in such sort, and with so many words and shows in
-your anger of evil will towards her, as thereby your L.
-said you could not but seem doubtful that all his wonted
-love and affection is clean turned to the contrary; for
-your L. further said, you had given him no cause at all
-to be offended.’ You hearing that your embroiderers
-were kept out of the Lodge from their beds by John
-Dickenson’s command said to my L. these words in the
-morning, ‘Now did you give command that the embroiderers
-should be kept out of the Lodge?’ and my
-L. answered ‘No.’ ‘Then,’ quoth your La., ‘they
-were kept from their beds there yesternight; and he
-that did so said John Dickenson had given that express
-command.’ Which my L. said was a lie. And he said
-it was utterly untrue. And so I would have gone on
-to have told the rest; how your La. willed him to
-enquire whether they were not in this manner kept
-out or no: but his proceeding into vehement choler
-and hard speeches he cut me off, saying it was to no
-purposs to hear any recital of this matter, for if he
-listed he said he could remember cruel speeches your La.
-used to him, ‘which were such as,’ quoth he, ‘I was
-forced to tell her, she scolded like one that came from
-the Bank.<a id='r53' /><a href='#f53' class='c013'><sup>[53]</sup></a> Then, Gilbert,’ said he, ‘judge whether I
-had cause or not. Well,’ quoth he, ‘I will speak no
-more of this matter: but she hath such a sort of varlets
-about her as never ceaseth carrying tales’; and then
-uttered cruel words against Owen chiefly and the embroiderers,
-over long to trouble your La. with. So
-being alighted from his horse all this while, said, ‘Let
-us get up and be gone; and I shall have enough to do
-when I come home.’ Then quoth I, ‘I think my La.
-be at Chatsworth by this time.’ ‘What!’ quoth he,
-‘is she gone from Sheffield?’ I answered, ‘By nine of
-the clock.’ Whereupon he seemed to marvel greatly,
-and said, ‘Is her malice such that she would not tarry
-one night for my coming?’ I answered that your La.
-told me that he was contented at your first coming you
-should go as yesterday: which he swore he never heard
-of. ‘Then,’ quoth I, ‘my La. further told me that
-when your L. was contented for her departure that day,
-he said that he had business in the Peake and would
-shortly come thither, and lie at Chatsworth.’ Quoth
-he, ‘Her going away thus giveth me small cause to
-come to Chatsworth,’ but answered not whether he
-said so or not. But I assure your La. before God,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>he was and is greatly offended with your going hence
-yesterday.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“After he had seen all his grounds about Bolsover,
-and was coming into the way homewards, he began with
-me again saying that all the house might discern your
-Ladyship’s stomach against him by your departure
-before his coming. I answered beside what I said
-before, that your La. said you had very great and earnest
-business as well at Chatsworth for your things there,
-as to deal with certain freeholders for Sir Thomas
-Stanhope, but he allowed not any reason or cause, but
-was exceeding angry for the same. Whereupon I spake
-at large which I beseech your La. to pardon my tediousness
-in repeating thereof, or at least the most thereof.
-Quoth I, ‘I pray your L. give leave to tell you plainly
-what I gathered by my Lady. I see she is so grieved and
-vexed in mind as I protest to God I never saw any
-woman more in my life; and after she told me how
-without any cause at all your L. uttered most cruel and
-bitter speeches against her, when she all the while never
-uttered any undutiful word, and had particularly imparted
-the whole matter, she plainly declared unto me
-that she thought your L. heart was withdrawn from
-her, and all your affection and love to hate and evil
-will’: saying that you took it as your cross that so
-contrary to your deservings he adjudged of you,
-applinge<a id='r54' /><a href='#f54' class='c013'><sup>[54]</sup></a> the manifold shows which you so indefinitely
-have made proof; and so forgot no earnest protestations
-that your La. pleased to utter to me of your dear
-affection and love to him both in health and sickness,
-taking it upon your soul that you wished his griefs were
-on yourself to disburden and quit him of [them].</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>“And quoth I, ‘My L., when she told me of this her
-dear love towards you, and now how your L. hath
-requited her, she was in such perplexity as I never saw
-woman’: and concluded, that your La. speech was that
-now you know he thought himself most happy when
-you were absent from, and most unhappy when you
-were with him. And this, I assure your La., he heeded;
-and although I cannot say his very word was that he had
-injured and wronged you, yet both by his countenance
-and words it plainly showed the same, and [he] answered,
-‘I know,’ quoth he, ‘her love hath been great to me:
-and mine hath been and is as great to her: for what can
-a man do more for his wife than I have done and daily
-do for her?’ And so reckoned at large, your La. may
-think with the most, what he hath given and bestowed.
-Whereunto I could not otherwise reply than thus.
-Quoth I, ‘My L., she were to blame if she considered
-not these things: but I gather plainly by her speech to
-me that she thinketh notwithstanding that your heart is
-hardened against her, as I have once or twice already
-told your Lordship, and that you love them that love
-not her, and believe those about you which hateth her.’
-And at your departure I said that your La. told me
-that you verily thought my L. was gladder of your
-absence than presence. Wherein, I assure your La., he
-deeply protested the contrary: and said, ‘Gilbert, you
-know the contrary; and how often I have cursed the
-buildings at Chatsworth for want of her company: but
-[quoth he] you see she careth not for my company by
-going away. I would not have done so to her....’
-But after this he talked not much; but I know it pinched
-him, and on my conscience I think so; but what effects
-will follow God knoweth.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>“I will write again to your La. what I find by him
-this day; for yesternight having not talked with any
-but myself, I know that his heart desireth reconciliation
-if he wist which way to bring it to pass. Living
-God grant it, and make his heart turn to your comfort
-in all things.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“To-morrow he will send me to Derby about Sir
-Thomas Stanhope’s matter. I most humbly beseech
-your La. blessing to me and mine. George rejoiced so
-greatly yesternight at my L. coming home, as I could
-not have believed if I had not seen it. Sunday at nine
-of the clock. For God’s sake, Madame, pardon my
-very tedious and evil favoured scribbling.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Your La. most humble and obedient loving son,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>Gilbert Talbot</span>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“The hasty letter from Sir John Constable was to
-advertise that there are two Scots that travel with linen
-cloths to sell, that gave letters of importance to this
-Queen: one of them is brother to Curle. My L.
-Huntington’s letter was refusal of land that my L.
-offered him to sell.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What effects will follow God knoweth!” Certainly
-1577 was an unhappy year for the house of Shrewsbury.
-“This world,” as Lord Leicester says in one of his
-letters to the great Earl, “is wholly given to reports and
-bruits of all sorts.” And these conjugal bickerings, as
-the Earl foresaw, would beget reports which, added to the
-“bruits” he had to face almost daily anent his prisoner,
-would certainly crush him and his wife. For the
-present the latter rumours were reviving in such force
-that he could not stop to think of his private affairs.
-In his letter to his wife—the first letter quoted in this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>chapter—he had alluded to one of these “bruits,” and
-his apprehensions naturally made him greatly desire the
-companionship of his Bess.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>These rumours were no laughing matter. Affairs
-in the Netherlands were now complicating England’s
-foreign policy, and the rumour of the wooing of Mary
-of Scotland by the gallant Don John of Austria caused
-all sorts of suspicions of her release. For this audacious
-and foolhardy soldier had projected a programme of
-exploits which included the subjugation of the Low
-Countries, the conquest of England, and, through
-Mary, the sovereignty over it and the restoration of the
-Romish faith. My Lord Treasurer promptly indited
-the following to Mary’s gaoler:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My very good Lord,</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I cannot but continue my thanks for all your
-liberal courtesies, praying your Lordship to assure
-yourself of my poor but yet assured friendship while I
-live. At my coming to the Court I found such alarm
-by news directly written from France, and from the
-Low Countries, of the Queen of Scots’ escape, either
-already made or very shortly to be attempted, as (surely
-knowing, as I did, your circumspection in keeping of
-her, and hearing all things in that country about you
-very quiet, and free from such dangers) I was bold to
-make small account of the news, although her Majesty,
-and the Council here, were therewith perplexed. And
-though time doth try these news for anything already
-done false, yet the noise thereof, and the doubt that her
-Majesty halts for secret hidden practices, to be wrought
-rather by corruption of some of yours whom you shall
-trust than by open force, moveth her Majesty to warn
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>your Lordship, as she said she would write to your
-Lordship that you continue, or rather increase, your
-vigilancy&nbsp;...; and as I think your Lordship hath
-carried your charge to Chatsworth, so I think that house
-a very meet bourn for good preservation thereof;
-having no town of resort where any ambushes&nbsp;...
-may lie.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Shrewsbury had removed Mary to Chatsworth during
-the late summer of 1577, and his motive in applying
-for leave to do so was apparently not unmixed with an
-earnest desire for that “reconciliation” at which Gilbert
-hinted. There was, besides, a very potent reason for
-the <em>rapprochement</em> of husband and wife. On Gilbert and
-Mary Talbot great sorrow had fallen. The adored
-baby son George, the “lytell fellow,” died suddenly.
-The Earl tells it to Burghley. He writes from Sheffield
-briefly, incoherently. The loss hits him very hard, and
-he acknowledges that this child is his best beloved, the
-Queen’s Majesty only excepted. In fear of the effect
-of the blow upon his excitable wife he suggests that
-Burghley’s reply and condolences should be addressed
-to her, and so help to “rule” and control her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My very good Lord,—When it pleased God of
-His goodness yesternight a little before supper to visit
-suddenly my dearest jewel under God next to my
-Sovereign, with mortality of sickness, and that it hath
-pleased God of his goodness to take that sweet babe
-from me, he surely was a toward child. I thought it
-rather by myself than by common report you should
-understand it from me, that though it nips me near, yet
-the fear I have of God and the dutiful care to discharge
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>my duty and trust my mistress puts me in, makes me
-now that he is gone to put away needless care and to
-look about me that I am put in trust withal—and, my
-Lord, because I doubt my wife will show more folly than
-need requires, I pray your Lordship write your letter to
-her, which I hope will greatly rule her. So wishing to
-your Lordship perfect health, I take my leave. Sheffield,
-12th of August, 1577.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your Lordship’s assured friend,</div>
- <div class='line in20'>“<span class='sc'>G. Shrewsbury</span>.”<a id='r55' /><a href='#f55' class='c013'><sup>[55]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>To Walsingham the Earl also announces this news,
-adding, “Howbeit, I do not willingly obey unto His
-will who took him, who only lent him me, without
-grudging thereat; but my wife (although she acknowledge
-no less) is not so well able to rule her passions,
-and hath driven herself into such case by her continual
-weeping, as it likes to breed in her further inconvenience.”
-Wherefore he is particularly anxious to join her
-at Chatsworth, and begs that the Queen shall be “moved”
-for the requisite permission.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>This visit was ended by the beginning of November,
-when Queen Mary was once more bundled back to
-Sheffield. At this time she seems to have been on the
-best of terms with Earl and Countess, and ready to do
-them every kindness in her power. For instance, she
-sent to France for a bed for them. But as this was not
-at the moment acceptable she mentions in a letter her
-intention to “fulfil my promise by another bed of finer
-stuff.” It came to her knowledge that they required
-half a dozen great hall candlesticks such as those “made
-at Crotelles,” whereupon she sent for “the largest,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>richest, and best made.” These were to be sent among
-articles ordered by her servants, “so that they may create
-no suspicion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>It is sometimes hard to distinguish from her bribes
-the presents Mary made out of sheer generosity.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>CHAPTER XIV<br /> <span class='small'>“BRUITS”</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c005'>In a letter quoted in the previous chapter Lord
-Burghley had told Lord Shrewsbury that the Queen
-herself would write to him on the subject of the new-old
-rumours about Mary’s escape. Elizabeth, of course,
-did write, and very seriously, about these reports “from
-sundry places beyond the sea,” and in that letter
-(of September, 1577) she gave her servant full powers
-to use his own discretion in making things secure. But
-by the spring of 1578 she was not quite so sure of him.
-The mischief-making at Court had done its usual work.
-The Queen was very cruelly placed always between two
-parties—Mary’s friends and Mary’s enemies. To all, as
-her courtiers, she must preserve a certain show of grace
-and unswerving discretion, holding always the balance
-between the Argus-eyed alertness of the first and the
-many-winged suspicions of the last. These suspicions
-were often grossly exaggerated. There were some at
-least who desired the prisoner’s freedom, but not her
-usurpation of the English throne and a third religious
-revolution. On the other hand, there were men, who,
-though powerful under Elizabeth, could quickly have
-transferred their allegiance to the other sovereign.
-Again, at all hours “posts” from various ports could
-bring in secret information under the excellently inclusive
-system organised by Elizabeth’s chief adviser.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>Tugged this way and that in her fears for the stability
-of the kingdom, and at times driven to a pitch of intense
-alarm, the Queen’s confidence in the capacity of the
-Earl at Sheffield varied according to the tales poured
-into her ear.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>A crisis of this kind had been slowly brewing since
-the autumn, till in the opening of this year it was
-actually decided to remove Mary to Leicestershire, and
-place her under the roof and guard of Lord Huntingdon.
-Everything was arranged, even down to the despatch
-of the usual warnings to the surrounding officials of the
-counties through which the Scots Queen must pass.
-And then—the usual hitch. Shrewsbury, of course,
-scented trouble and disgrace, and before definite orders
-could reach him as to the change, he wrote to the
-Queen: “To answer somewhat,” he rightly says, “in
-this letter is part of my duty, lest my silence should
-breed suspicion.” And no wonder! For “I am informed
-that there are reports&nbsp;... that I am too much
-at the devotion of this lady, and so the less to be
-trusted, and that it was considered better to dispose her
-elsewhere out of my custody, to my dishonour and
-disgrace.” He pleads stoutly, as always, for the recognition
-of his single-heartedness and loyalty. He
-desires only “to be acquitted of blame by the Queen’s
-own goodness.” He challenges her equity and good
-faith: “I presume with your favour not to excuse
-myself, but to be cleared thereof by your own just
-judgment.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>He points out that had he desired to espouse
-Mary’s cause he might have done so far earlier in the
-day:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“When her liberty was sought, and her case pleaded
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>with sword in hand, herself in force enough as she
-supposed to achieve her highest enterprise, if any hope
-had been to her of my inclination that way I might
-have had an office at her hand with little reward as the
-greatest traitor they had, and been offered golden mountains.”
-But even Mary, as he points out, knows her
-ground, and would not attempt to approach him: “She
-was without hope of me and durst reveal nothing to
-me.” He hates the notion of any upheaval in the
-realm: “A change bringeth nothing but destruction
-of him that desireth it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Queen, after her usual custom after writing a
-letter of admonition, softened it down by a kind and
-rather contradictory little message, to which he alludes
-in a postscript: “Thanks for your gracious messages by
-my son Gylbard, among others, that I should not credit
-bruits, but you would be careful of me.” Elizabeth also
-included gracious messages to his “daughter Lynox and
-her child,” the which, he assured the Queen, were a
-great comfort to Lady Shrewsbury.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>For the rest, how could the poor fellow help believing
-“bruits”? This kind of gracious royal message
-was very well in its way, but he must have
-known that it amounted to nothing. There arose,
-as he was well aware, other kinds of rumours concerning
-him and his which were much less mendacious,
-though they were probably grossly increased by scandalmongers.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Family correspondence has proved how strained were
-the conjugal relations of Earl and Countess, and how
-a barrier beginning, seemingly, with a foundation no
-less tangible than an armful of tapestries (but subsequently
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>solidified by the sheer masonry of Chatsworth)
-had grown up between them. All matters of private
-dispute were complicated by their own difficulties in
-regard to the tenants of their various estates and any
-neighbours with whom they were on bad terms. Little
-by little the fact that the house of Shrewsbury was not
-at peace with itself must penetrate to the greater world.
-Servants carried the news into the county. If my Lord
-blazed and my Lady retorted fiercely and shrilly, matters
-could not be kept within four walls. And so, though
-it belongs to a year later than the crisis which now
-brooded, a very long letter is here inserted because
-it is so pertinent to the affairs of the Talbots and
-Cavendishes. Without going needlessly into business
-details here, it must be explained that all the disputes
-with tenants, etc., to which the letter alludes, were
-calculated from the Queen’s point of view to disaffect
-the people in the immediate neighbourhood of the Earl,
-and give them ground for opposing him and furthering
-the cause of Mary merely out of spiteful motives.
-Certain tenants complained, it seems, that they had
-been turned out of properties leased to them by the
-Earl, and actually carried the matter up to the Lords
-of the Council for their arbitration. The Lords took
-no violent action in the matter, while the Earl denied
-the charges, and brought countercharge of ill-treatment.
-Eventually, after correspondence and discussion, the
-Council discharged the complainants without punishment
-beyond a little admonition; and after due examination
-of the man Higgenbotham mentioned in this letter,
-decided that his offence was exaggerated, and recommended
-him to the Earl’s clemency. Eventually the
-unfortunate Earl had to give in and reinstate his restive
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>men of Glossopdale in their farms, so that his own
-popularity might be assured in order to serve the
-purposes of his Queen.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The letter from Gilbert is addressed to “My Lord,
-my Father”:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My duty most humbly remembered, right honourable
-my singular good Lord and father. Your letters,
-sent by my lacquey of the 10th of this May, I received
-the 13th, at which time my Lord of Leicester was at
-Wanstead where he yet remains, and therefore I
-presently delivered your Lordship’s to the Queen’s
-Majesty to Mr. Secretary Walsingham, to be delivered
-by him, the weather being wet and rainy and therefore
-no hope that her Majesty would walk or come abroad,
-so as I might deliver it myself. But whilst I stood by
-he read your Lordship’s letter to himself, the which he
-liked very well; and said that he perceived thereby
-that your Lordship meant to deal well with your
-tenants, whereof he was very glad, for that he knew
-also that it would very well content her Majesty; but
-very little more speech he had with me at that time,
-and, since, I hear that he has delivered your Lordship’s
-letter to her Majesty, the which she also has taken in
-very good part. The other letter, to my Lord Leicester,
-I sent forthwith to him to Wanstead, but he returns
-not till to-morrow, having been there all this week;
-and I hear nothing from him thereof. I likewise
-delivered your Lordship’s letter to my Lord Treasurer,
-who liked it very well; and said that he was very glad
-that your Lordship took his plain dealing with you in
-his letter in so good part. And thus this tragedy I
-hope is at an end, until the coming up of Higgenbotham,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>with such proofs as your Lordship shall send
-against him.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“We have had no little ado with these unreasonable
-people of Ashford, whereof this bearer can inform your
-Lordship at length; but now they are all returned back
-again, and none of those letters that were sent up to
-the Council, or any other concerning that matter, were
-delivered, but sent down to my Lady again; yet it was
-thought good that I should make my Lord of Leicester
-privy to the coming of these persons; the which I did
-the same day that they came to town; and, when I had
-told him at length how the case stood, he agreed with
-me that it was a plain practice;<a id='r56' /><a href='#f56' class='c013'><sup>[56]</sup></a> yet, nevertheless wished
-that (if by any means possible) we should stay them
-from complaining; saying, in general words, that if
-they were not stayed, there would fall out greater inconvenience
-both to your Lordship and my Lady than
-you were aware of, how false and untrue soever their
-complaints were. But, before that, he enquired of the
-town where they dwelt, which when I had described to
-him, he well remembered, and that he had angled and
-fished at the end of that town; and said that he thought
-it belonged wholly to my Lady; and asked whether
-your Lordship did meddle therewith or not. I
-answered him that your Lordship had wholly left it
-to my Lady, to use at her pleasure, and was not privy
-that her Ladyship dealt therewith. ‘Well,’ quoth he,
-‘but for all that assure yourself that whosoever set
-these varlets and the others on, had no less evil meaning
-towards my Lord than my Lady; for there is no
-difference made, neither in the Queen’s opinion nor any
-others but whatsoever concerns one of them, touches
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>them both alike; and yet,’ quoth he, ‘I never heard
-of any practice for the removing of my Lordship’s
-charge, but, amongst other things, this was ever one:
-that there was no good agreement betwixt my Lord and
-my Lady: and that it was informed, both to the Queen
-and others, that there was a secret division between
-your doings, and,’ quoth he, ‘if it were known I
-verily believe the same has now been informed, and it
-is not long since I heard it, when I am assured that
-there never was any such thing; but,’ quoth he, ‘by
-the Eternal God, if they could ever bring the Queen to
-believe it that there were jars betwixt them, she would
-be in such a fear as it would sooner be the cause of the
-removing of my Lordship’s charge than any other
-thing; for I think verily,’ quoth he, ‘she could never
-sleep quietly after, as long as that Queen remained with
-them’; and, next to this it troubles the Queen most
-when she hears that you are not so well beloved of
-your tenants as she would wish, which was the cause
-of her late earnest letter, ‘the which,’ quoth he, ‘I
-could not stay if my life had lain thereon. Well,’
-quoth he, ‘I am glad all these former matters are so
-well satisfied; and, to conclude,’ quoth he, ‘I pray God
-that my Lord and Lady have none but faithful and true
-servants about them, and that none of them do, by
-indirect means, cause it to be informed sometimes
-hither that there are mislikes or disagreements betwixt
-them when there are none at all.’ I leave to write unto
-your Lordship my answers to many of these his Lordship’s
-speeches, for they would be too long; and your
-Lordship may think that either I answered according to
-my duty, and to the truth, or else I forgot myself overmuch.
-All this speech I had with him before he went
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>to Wanstead, which is five days since. The secret
-opinion is now that the matter of Monseigneur’s<a id='r57' /><a href='#f57' class='c013'><sup>[57]</sup></a>
-coming and especially the marriage, is grown very
-cold, and Simier like shortly to go over; and yet I
-know a man may take a thousand pounds in this town,
-to be bound to pay double so much when Monseigneur
-comes into England and treble so much when he
-marries the Queen’s Majesty, and if he neither do the
-one nor the other, to gain the thousand pound clear.
-This is all the news that I hear. And thus, my wife
-and I, most humbly beseeching your Lordship’s daily
-blessings, with our wonted prayer, upon our knees, for
-your long continuance in all honour, most perfect
-health, and long long life, I cease.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“At your Lordship’s little house near Charing Cross,
-this present Friday, late at night, 15th of May, 1579.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your Lordship’s most humble and</div>
- <div class='line in20'>obedient loving son,</div>
- <div class='line in24'>“<span class='sc'>Gilbert Talbot</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I wish it would please your Lordship to remember
-my Lord Chancellor with some gift. It would be very
-well bestowed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus, because of the possibility of larger treasons,
-the warder of Mary of Scotland and his family must
-needs swallow their private grievances, forgive their
-truculent tenants, and appear wreathed with smiles.
-They must maintain their estate, in spite of their
-increasing liabilities and the churlishness of the Royal
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>Exchequer, and above all they must keep my Lord
-Treasurer well supplied with <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">douceurs</span></i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Why they did not sell a portion of their vast
-inheritance at this juncture in order to make matters
-comfortable one cannot understand. In London the
-Earl’s creditors were pressing him, and he was too
-conscientious to let the matter stand longer than
-avoidable.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>A new responsibility was about to be thrust on
-the Talbots in securing the hereditary rights of their
-grandchild Arabella. For the Dowager Lady Lennox
-died in this year quite suddenly at her house at
-Hackney. It was odd that the guest who last saw
-her was the man whom she had accused of slaying
-his wife, and whose treachery she had once denounced.
-Lord Leicester went down to talk business with her
-at Hackney, relating, no doubt, to the sorry state
-of her financial affairs, and stayed to dine with her.
-Just after he left she was taken violently ill, and died
-two days later. What she had to bequeath—and
-Heaven knows it was little enough—in the way of
-jewels she left to Arabella Stuart. With the death
-of her son, Lennox, the ties which bound her to
-life practically disappeared, and she succumbed at
-the age of sixty-seven to a disease which must have
-been aggravated by the terrible misfortunes of her
-extraordinary life. Her own dowry of Scottish lands
-made her no return because of the war-bound condition
-of her native country; the sons who owned
-the estates conferred on her husband by Henry VIII
-were all dead. Her land in Yorkshire passed from
-her with the death, one presumes, of her last son,
-and her fatherless granddaughter was, as Strickland
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>says, “heiress to nought but sorrow and a royal pedigree.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>It was evident that a push must be made to protect
-the rights of the child. Queen Mary herself sent for
-the old lady’s jewels on behalf of her little niece, but
-on the other hand she urged her son’s guardians to
-put forward his claims. This was not with a view
-to destroying the chances of Arabella, but merely to
-assert his family rights, lest he should be regarded
-as a foreigner. A counterblast to this was the action
-of Elizabeth, who took the child under her protection.
-This fulfilled the heart’s desire of Elizabeth Shrewsbury.
-Yet it did not avail her much. The right to do as
-he chose with the earldom was by young James,
-under the influence of his nobles, claimed for Scotland,
-and he was made to grant the earldom to the
-Bishop of Caithness, a man advanced in years and
-without heir, chosen purposely for present convenience
-until another Stuart—Esmé Stuart, Lord d’Aubigny,
-should claim it. Lord and Lady Shrewsbury wrote
-in deprecation to Lord Leicester on the subject, entreating
-Elizabeth’s intervention:<a id='r58' /><a href='#f58' class='c013'><sup>[58]</sup></a> “Unless the Queen
-will write in most earnest sort to the King of Scotland
-on her little ward’s behalf&nbsp;... we cannot but be in
-some despair.... The Bishop of Caithness&nbsp;... is
-an old sickly man without a child; and I think it
-is done that D’Aubigny, being in France and the next
-heir male, should succeed him. My wife says that
-the old Lord Lennox told her long ago of D’Aubigny’s
-seeking to prevent the infant.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Subsequently Mary declined to open any negotiations
-with Esmé Stuart in her own affairs, both because she
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>did not trust him and because she was desirous not
-to give offence to “our right well-beloved cousin,
-Elizabeth, Countess of Shrewsbury.” This is proof
-enough that her first move in regard to the matter had
-been one of pure policy and was to be regarded as quite
-apart from her private sentiments. It were well if she
-had never sent the recommendation.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Other rumours of the moment gathered special force,
-and were perhaps of more importance to the nation at
-large than was the possible escape of Mary. They were
-rumours of the Queen’s marriage. Anjou’s wooing was
-a long business. It lasted over nine years. Elizabeth
-was just now revelling in rather a skittish mood in spite
-of the wild “bruits” about her health. It was said that
-she was threatened with epilepsy; at all events she
-could enjoy herself, and receive fantastic love letters,
-while she shortened the leash by which she held Mary,
-and docked her of any semblance of liberty. It did not
-seem to depress the Virgin Queen that her royal suitor
-was only twenty. She always pretended great coyness
-towards all gentlemen, and there is an odd touch in the
-way she scolded Gilbert Talbot for inadvertently gazing
-upon her in her early morning deshabille as she stood at
-a casement.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“On May Day I saw her Majesty, and it pleased her
-to speak to me very graciously. In the morning about
-eight o’clock I happened to walk in the Tiltyard, under
-the gallery where her Majesty used to stand to see the
-running at tilt; where by chance she was, and looking
-out of the window, my eye was full towards her, she
-showed to be greatly ashamed thereof, for that she was
-unready, and in her night stuff; so when she saw me
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>after dinner, as she went to walk, she gave me a great fillip
-on the forehead, and told my Lord Chamberlain, who
-was the next to her, how I had seen her that morning,
-and how much ashamed she was. And, after, I presented
-unto her the remembrance of your Lordship’s and my
-Ladyship’s bounden duty and service; and said that you
-both thought yourselves most bounden to her for her
-most gracious dealing towards your daughter my Lady
-of Lennox; and that you assuredly trusted in the continuance
-of her favourable goodness to her and her
-daughter. And she answered that she always found
-you more thankful than she gave cause....”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>That last sentence rings with ironical truth. As they
-read it Earl and Countess might well merge their differences
-and smile unanimously—a somewhat bitter smile!</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>CHAPTER XV<br /> <span class='small'>RUTH AND JOYUSITIE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c005'>The dashing suitor of Mary of Scotland, Don John
-of Austria, was dead. Her rival was on the edge
-of a marriage with a son of Mary’s stoutest champion—France.
-It was a bad moment for the prisoner. It
-was not a pleasant time for the Talbots. Life at Sheffield
-could be varied only by letters from Gilbert, though
-his parents must to some extent have been cheered by
-the prospect of his speedily having another heir. His
-wife was attended by no less a person than the famous
-physician of my Lord of Leicester, a certain Mr. Julio,
-who seems, on all accounts, to have known a great deal
-too much about the unholy drugs which the Medici found
-so useful, though his skill as a physician could not be
-gainsaid. Gilbert Talbot at least seems flourishing.
-He is free to come and go; he is quite a “citizen of
-the world.” He executes commissions for his family,
-his purchases are practical, and he is thoughtful for his
-stepmother’s needs. “There are two Friesland horses,”
-he writes, “of a reasonable price for their goodness;
-I have promised the fellow for them £33; I think
-them especial good for my Ladyship’s coach; I will
-send them down.” He despatches constant reports of
-his wife’s health, and of the repairs and decorations
-which he is superintending in “Shrewsbury House,”
-otherwise the Earl’s house in “Broad Street” from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>which Gilbert writes. A special ceiling was being designed
-for this, the building was to be newly glazed,
-and the family coat-of-arms inserted in the windows in
-stained glass. In a postscript he heralds a private letter
-from the Queen to Lady Shrewsbury, which is not
-forthcoming. “My Lord, my brother<a id='r59' /><a href='#f59' class='c013'><sup>[59]</sup></a> tarrieth only
-for her Majesty’s letter to my Lady, which, she saith,
-she will write in her own hand, so as nobody shall be
-acquainted with a word therein till my Lady receive it.
-I have not seen her look better a great while, neither
-better disposed; the living God continue it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The composition of this young gentleman is always
-rather vague and his punctuation hazy. He means, of
-course, that it is the Queen who is in such good health
-and humour. She was very busy puzzling everyone
-over her projected marriage, and sketching Court entertainments
-in connection with it. Even while she felt
-the gravity of such a step she would dally with it,
-thrust away apparently all but the lighter side of things.
-She kept her Privy Council sitting “from eight o’clock
-in the morning until dinner-time; and presently after
-dinner, and an hour’s conference with her Majesty’s
-Council again, and so till supper-time.” All this strain
-was induced, Gilbert assures the household at Sheffield,
-by “the matter of Monsigneur coming here, his entertainment
-here, and what demands are to be made unto
-him in the treaty of marriage&nbsp;...; and I can assure
-your Lordship it is verily thought this marriage will
-come to pass of a great sort of wise men; yet nevertheless
-there are divers others like Sr. Thomas of Jude
-who would not believe till he had both seen and felt.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>It is said that Monseigneur will certainly be here in
-May next.... It is said that he will be accompanied
-with three dukes, ten earls, and a hundred other gentlemen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The suitor came—but more or less secretly—and departed.
-It was not till nearly a year later that the cat-and-mouse
-game which Elizabeth played with him approached
-a crisis in the shape of a splendid pageant at Whitehall,
-which she organised to dazzle the French Ambassador,
-and to give the impression that this affair was really to
-be accomplished. Gay times those—with Sir Philip
-Sidney’s art and grace to lead the pomps and ceremonies!
-Everyone of importance was invited. “Her
-talk,”<a id='r60' /><a href='#f60' class='c013'><sup>[60]</sup></a> says a contemporary of Elizabeth, “was of
-tournaments and balls; her one desire was that the
-fairest ladies in England should grace her Court. The
-Lords were bidden to bring their families to London
-that there might be the bustle of constant gaiety. The
-merchants were ordered to sell their silks, velvets, and
-cloth of gold at a reduction of a quarter of the ordinary
-price that more should be induced to buy, and so
-enhance the general splendour.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Alack for the Shrewsburys! No gay invitation
-appears to have summoned them from the wilds of
-their county to witness the famous pageant and the
-battle of flowers and perfumes waged this year in the
-tiltyard at Whitehall, or applaud the splendid chariot
-of “my Lady Desire” and her four gallant sons, of
-whom Sir Philip Sidney personated one.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Such happiness and all that which Mary of Scotland,
-in a letter, termed “joyusitie” was a thing apart from
-existence at Sheffield, and she, who loved all such
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>fantastical gaieties, who knew as much as any of them
-of love practices and flowery games, who could play
-even with peasant folk like a child, looked wistfully
-forth upon the world from the leads of her castle-prison
-or from the meadows close to the Lodge, its neighbour.
-From 1579 to 1581 her affairs and those of the Talbots
-are full of small events, things which kept them alert,
-yet brought but little result. The Earl was watched
-closely by Elizabeth. He could not even leave home
-for two days without sharp reprimand, although he
-never absented himself for an hour without knowing
-that his prisoner was absolutely secure, while his
-servants kept him carefully informed of her condition.
-One of them, for example, by name George Skargelle,
-a constant eye-witness of the Shrewsbury tragi-comedy,
-not only reports upon the prisoner, but scours the
-immediate neighbourhood to see what is going on:
-“May yt plese your honner to understand that your L’
-house is quyet and well, God be pressed; and the
-Quene is sarvet wth. her vetteles and wille plesed for
-thes II dayes.” He goes to the Castle gardens “to see
-what stir there was of your Lordship’s follkes” and
-found certain fellows playing at dice, while in the town
-of Sheffield he discovered other gamblers at cards.
-After this he breaks a lance in speech with his master’s
-truculent “bad tenants of Glossopdale,” whom he so
-mistrusted that he gave information of their presence to
-the men at the bridges and the watches, and to the
-owners of the houses where the travellers lodged. The
-Queen heard of the Earl’s absence (for there were
-always people ready to report the least movement of so
-notable a county resident), and belaboured him in a
-letter. He begged her to allow him to come to Court
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>and justify himself. For many reasons he longed to do
-this. He was weary of writing endless letters to her
-and to the Treasury. His personal debts weighed on
-his conscience, and his enemies were always trying to
-make out that he could not be in any need of supplies
-because of his large estates. Big houses are big thieves,
-and what with his large double family and the costs
-entailed by his position, even his trade projects—he was
-among other things an owner of lead and exporter of it—did
-not keep him in sufficient ready money to maintain
-all his houses and fulfil his landlord’s liabilities as
-he would have wished. He was not personally an extravagant
-man, and displays none of the magnificent
-tastes of his wife in regard to his house and person. He
-declared that his creditors should be satisfied rather than
-he should use expensive household articles. “I would
-have you buy me glasses to drink in,” he wrote in 1580
-to his servant Baldwin. “Send me word what old plate
-yields the ounce, for I will not leave me a cup to drink
-in, but I will see the next term my creditors paid.” He
-may have made a special point of this in order that
-Baldwin should use the statement as a pathetic plea when
-making application to the Treasury for payments due to
-his master, the main reason the Earl had for keeping his
-representative in London. He had felt deeply the false
-reports of his income spread about by local detractors,
-who were probably also responsible for the statement
-that he was now keeping his prisoner on short commons.
-His sensations and those of the Countess on hearing
-of this from Lord Leicester can well be imagined. The
-statement had been handed on to him by the French
-Ambassador in London, and Leicester told him it would
-“much mislike her Majesty.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>The accusation runs: “That your Lordship doth of
-late keep the Scotch Queen very barely of her diet,
-insomuch as on Easter day last she had both so few
-dishes and so bad meat in them as it was too bad to see
-it; and that she finding fault thereat your Lordship
-should answer that you were cut off your allowance, and
-therefore could yield her no better.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>And yet Shrewsbury could forgive the Queen’s suspicions
-and, tolerably happy in the birth of a granddaughter,
-despite the fact that a male heir to Gilbert
-would have rejoiced him far more, instructed his son
-Francis to present for him a New Year’s present to
-Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Simultaneously no time was lost, no trouble grudged
-in worrying Burghley, “her Majesty’s housewife” as
-the Earl rather ironically terms him in one letter, with
-regard to a settlement of the everlasting claim for “this
-Queen’s diet.” Indeed, one can only imagine that this
-word “diet,” by which the cost of the board of the
-Scottish Mary is always signified in succeeding correspondence,
-must have held in the Earl’s mind and
-heart the same place as the name of Calais in the mind
-of Mary of England. Robert Beale, a clerk of the Privy
-Council and personal friend of the Shrewsburys, did his
-best for them, but despite his kindly despatches—one of
-which has a pretty allusion to “my little Lady Favour,”
-evidently Lady Arabella Stuart—payment was tardy.
-Even the scanty allowance originally decided upon had
-been deliberately reduced by royal order. For the
-hundredth time he tackled anew the official “housewife”
-with the words: “I have made suit to her Highness for
-some recompense, in which I do find so cold comfort
-that I am near driven to despair to obtain anything.”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>Elsewhere he speaks pathetically of “the cark and care”
-which is his portion. “My riches they talk of are in other
-men’s purses,” he complains bitterly; “God knows I
-make many shifts to keep me out of debt and to help
-my children, which are heavy burdens though comfortable,
-so long as they do well. I can say no more, but I
-have spies near about me and know them well.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>At last, in the August of 1582, in sheer despair of
-obtaining satisfaction, and sick of employing intermediaries,
-he wrote to the Queen:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“May it please your most excellent Majesty,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Having then ten years been secluded from
-your most gracious sight and happy presence, which
-more grieveth me than any travel or discommodity that
-I have suffered in this charge that it hath pleased your
-Majesty to put me in trust withal, I have taken the
-boldness most humbly to beseech your Majesty that it
-may please the same to license me for a fortnight’s
-journey towards your Majesty’s royal person; to the
-end you may by myself receive a true account of my
-said charge, and thereby know what my deservings are.
-Wherein, if I may (as I desire most earnestly) satisfy
-your Majesty, it shall be unto me a great encouragement
-to continue the most faithful duty and careful
-service that I owe unto your Majesty, and shall yield to
-my life’s end.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This permission was in a fair way to be granted as
-far as letters could show, and the good, timid, dogged
-Earl made all arrangements, settled the stages of his
-journey, ordered bedding and lodging, and planned his
-retinue: “I think my company will be twenty gentlemen
-and twenty yeomen, besides their men and my
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>horsekeepers.” He only waited for his journey till
-Chesterfield Fair was over and the crowds of suspicious
-loafers dispersed. But he waited far too long. The
-plague had seized London and had increased apace; he
-dreaded the cold journey south in the autumn storms;
-he dreaded an aggravated attack from “the enemy”—gout.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Simultaneously with this disappointment came sharper
-sorrow—the death of Francis Talbot. The event presented
-itself to Lord Leicester as worthy of one of
-those flowery, humbugging, sententious, idiotic letters
-of which he wrote so many in his crowded life. This
-unscrupulous idler, living on the fat of the land and
-overheaped with gifts and favours, presents a very odd
-picture as he conjures an afflicted, upright, and overburdened
-contemporary to count up his blessings:
-“The Lord hath blessed you many ways in this
-world, and not least with the blessing of children for
-your posterity.” This from a fellow who could disown
-his legitimate son by denying a lawful marriage with
-the mother! And again: “He that hath sent you
-many might have given you fewer, and He that took
-away this might also take away the rest. Be thankful
-to Him for all His doings, my good Lord, and take all
-in that good part which you ought; be you wholly His,
-and seek His kingdom, for it far surpasses all worldly
-kingdoms.” This from the shrewd sycophant who was
-waiting day after day to be announced as consort of the
-Queen of England!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>To return on our paces a little. The health of
-Queen Mary was extremely unsatisfactory. From 1579
-right on through the eighties she addressed letter after
-letter of piteous entreaties for freedom to Elizabeth,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>and to the ambassador Mauvissière. Sometimes, for
-weeks at a time, she could not leave her bed owing to
-the pain in her side. Sometimes the hardly won permission
-to go to Buxton would revive her spirits. On
-one occasion she fell backwards from her horse just as
-she was mounting, and injured herself severely. Sometimes
-she was kept closely guarded at Buxton, and
-on others she would be allowed to see something of
-the country close to it. In 1577 she was so ailing
-that she made her will. But she would revive to write
-endless spirited letters, to plead incessantly and indignantly
-against the way in which her French dowry, the
-only income she now had, was being dissipated and
-misappropriated in France, and to make eager preparations
-for hunting expeditions, to few of which,
-as she confessed, she expected Lord Shrewsbury
-would give his consent. At the end of 1581 she was so
-worn out by secret suspense in regard to her fate, by
-constraint, and by lack of air and exercise—the simple
-remedies which in years past had helped her to conquer
-all bodily ills—that for once her courage left her. She
-begged for special doctors other than those who ordinarily
-attended her. She worked herself into an
-agony over the position of her son, and finally begged
-that the Queen would send assistance to her “as that
-she might not be cast away for want of such help of
-physicians and things as she needed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Robert Beale, already mentioned in his connection
-with the Privy Council, who was really sent down at
-this juncture to Sheffield to investigate the political
-relationship between Mary and her son, found the
-household in a depressing condition. Lord Shrewsbury
-had a bad attack of gout, and though the Countess was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>not described as ill, her frame of mind cannot have
-been very cheerful. Everyone seems to have poured
-out his woes in Beale’s ears, while he stuck to his
-purpose, and tried to secure a definite answer as to
-whether or no Mary would formally yield the Scottish
-crown to her son. A clear answer from her he never
-had. She was ill, hysterical, and, to his thinking and
-that of the Earl, full of trickery. They believed that
-she asked for a special physician from London because
-it might give her a chance of carrying out some scheme
-to her advantage in connection with the Duke of
-Alençon, who was expected in England. One night
-when she sent specially for Beale he arrived to find the
-room in sudden darkness, and Mary in bed, with the
-dim shadowy figures of her chamberwomen hovering
-about her. Among those shadowy ladies in the bedchamber
-was still the devoted Mary Seton, to whom
-had come some years previously ruth which her mistress
-also shared. Not only had the loyal prægustator,
-John Beton, died in the earlier days of the long imprisonment,
-but his brother and successor in the post,
-Andrew, had passed away. With Andrew, who courted
-her passionately, the Seton had at last fallen in love.
-The only barrier to their union was a most inexplicable
-vow of celibacy which the girl had taken. With the
-approval of his brother, Archbishop Beton, and the
-encouragement of his royal mistress, the gallant Andrew
-overcame his lady’s dread of the married estate, and
-undertook to secure papal dispensation from her vow.
-It was on his journey back from Rome to Sheffield that
-he died.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Beale, as aforesaid, found himself nonplussed by the
-gloom of the Queen’s apartments; and as for talking
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>business it was impossible, for she received him with
-sobs.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Because of “her weeping and her women in the
-dark I brake off,” he wrote to Walsingham. He went
-away and reported this uncanny interview to the Earl,
-who sent his lady to her. Mary was asleep or shamming,
-and all Lady Shrewsbury could do was to chat
-vaguely with Mary Seton about “the suddenness of
-her sickness.” Later on the same careful enquiries
-were made by the Countess, whose shrewd deduction
-was, “I have known her worse and recover again.”
-Her Ladyship was, if not head nurse on these occasions,
-certainly official inspectress, and Beale reported that
-whether Mary was dangerously ill or not she was
-obliged to use medicine and poultices, at which he
-had himself sniffed inquisitively, and which Lady
-Shrewsbury had seen applied.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Presently there was a decided improvement in the
-condition of the invalid, and Elizabeth allowed Mary’s
-carriage to be sent to her so that she might drive
-within the limits of the Sheffield manor estate, whose
-circumference in those days, as Leader assures us, was
-eight miles, and covered an expanse of 2461 acres.
-Mary could not yet avail herself of this distraction, so
-sore and feeble was her weakened body. Yet at all times
-and seasons she was extraordinarily sensitive to the
-joys and sorrows of persons in her environment. The
-birth of Gilbert’s daughter already mentioned was just
-such an occasion for her goodness and generosity. She
-stood godmother to the child and sent to France for
-presents. These family occurrences complicated the
-Earl’s business considerably, and he took great precautions
-on this occasion that the event should not come to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>pass under the same roof as that which held his captive.
-At the end of the letter, in which he instructs Baldwin
-to make certain payments to his daughter-in-law’s
-nurse, he says: “I am removed to the castle, and
-most quiet when I have the fewest women here, and
-am best able to discharge the trust reposed in me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>He had still further occasion for this attitude, for
-another blow fell upon his family. Young Lady
-Lennox died. As usual it was the Earl who made the
-formal announcement of the loss at Court, for his wife
-was, as on a previous occasion, too distraught to collect
-her wits.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“My very good Lords,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“It hath pleased God to call to His mercy
-out of this transitory world my daughter Lennox,
-this present Sunday, being the 21st of January,
-about three of the clock in the morning. Both
-towards God and the world she made a most
-godly and good end, and was in most perfect memory
-all the time of her sickness even to the last hour.
-Sundry times did she make her most earnest and
-humble prayer to the Almighty for her Majesty’s most
-happy estate and the long and prosperous continuance
-thereof, and as one most infinitely bound to her Highness,
-humbly and lowly beseeched Her Majesty to have
-pity upon her poor orphan Arabella Stewart, and as at
-all times heretofore both the mother and poor daughter
-were most infinitely bound to her Highness, so her
-assured trust was that Her Majesty would continue the
-same accustomed goodness and bounty to the poor child
-she left, and of this her suit and humble petition my
-said daughter Lennox, by her last will and testament,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>requireth both your Lordships, to whom she found and
-acknowledged herself always most bound in her name,
-most lowly to make this humble petition to Her
-Majesty and to present with all humility unto Her
-Majesty a poor remembrance (delivered by my daughter’s
-own hands) which very shortly will be sent, with my
-daughter’s most humble prayer for her Highness’ most
-happy estate, and most lowly beseeching her Highness in
-such sort to accept thereof as it pleased the Almighty
-to receive the poor widow’s mite.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“My wife taketh my daughter Lennox’s death so
-grievously that she neither doth nor can think of anything
-but of lamenting and weeping. I thought it my
-part to signify to both your Lordships in what sort God
-hath called her to his mercy, which I beseech you make
-known to Her Majesty and thus with my very hearty
-commendations to both your good Lordships I cease.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Sheffield Manor this 21st January, 1581–2.</div>
- <div class='line in16'>“Your Lordships’ assured</div>
- <div class='line in32'>“<span class='sc'>G. Shrewsbury</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“To Lord Burghley and Lord Leicester.”<a id='r61' /><a href='#f61' class='c013'><sup>[61]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>CHAPTER XVI<br /> <span class='small'>VOLTE FACE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c005'>The death of her daughter Elizabeth Lennox proved
-a heavy blow to Bess Shrewsbury. At first she did
-not realise the full force of it. Everything possible had
-been done to secure puissant support and interest for
-Elizabeth and her child Arabella immediately on the
-death of her husband and mother-in-law.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The will executed by Queen Mary in 1577 specially
-named Arabella Stuart as heiress to her father’s earldom,
-in the clause: “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Je faitz don à Arbelle, ma niepce, du
-compté de Lennox, tenu par feu son père, et commande
-a mon filz comme mon heritier et successeur, d’obeyr en
-cest endroict à ma volonté.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Further, the young widow herself had found courage
-to address Lord Burghley:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I can but yield unto your Lordship most hearty
-thanks for your continual goodness towards me and my
-little one, and specially for your Lordship’s late good
-dealing with the Scots Ambassador for my poor child’s
-right, for which, as also sundry otherwise we are for ever
-bound to your Lordship whom I beseech still to further
-that cause as to your Lordship may seem best.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I can assure your Lordship that the Earldom of
-Lennox was granted by Act of Parliament to my Lord
-my late husband and the heirs of his body, so that they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>should offer great wrong in seeking to take it from
-Arbella, which I trust by your Lordships’ good means
-will be prevented, being of your mere goodness for
-justice sake so well disposed thereto. For all which
-your Lordship’s goodness as I am bound I rest in heart
-more thankful than I can anyway express.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I take my leave of your Lordship, whom I pray
-God long to preserve.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“At Newgate Street the 15th Aug. 1578.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your Lordship’s,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>“As I am bound,</div>
- <div class='line in20'>“<span class='sc'>E. Lennox</span>.”<a id='r62' /><a href='#f62' class='c013'><sup>[62]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>Again, immediately on the death of the old Lady
-Lennox Mary had executed this warrant dated Sept. 19,
-1579, appointing any heirloom jewels to Arabella:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“To all people be it knowne that we Marie be the
-grace of God Quene of Scotland, dowagier of Fraunce
-doo will and require Thomas Fowller soole executor to
-our dearest mother in lawe and aunt, the lady Margret
-countess of Lennox deceased, to deliver into the hands
-and cowstody of our right well belowed cousines Elizabeth
-contess of Shrewsbury all and every such juells,
-as the sayd Lady Margaret before her death delivered
-and committed in charge to the said Thomas Fowller
-for the use of the lady Arbella Stewart her graund chyld
-if God send her lyf till fowrten yeres of age; if not
-then, for the use of our deare and only sonne the prince
-of Scotland. In witness that this is owre will and
-desire to the sayd Fowller we have gewen the present
-under our owne hand at Shefild Manor, the XIX off
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>September the year of our lord M.D. threscore and
-nyntenth, and of our regne the thretty sixth.”<a id='r63' /><a href='#f63' class='c013'><sup>[63]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In addition Mary wrote at this time to “Monsieur
-de Glasgo” one of her Archbishops, in such a manner
-as shows her sincere attitude towards the Lennox succession.
-This letter embodies the important fact of the
-interposition of Queen Elizabeth, while the warrant
-just quoted awards the care of the jewels not to the
-mother but the maternal grandmother of the Stuart
-heiress.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The Countess of Lennox, my mother-in-law died
-about a month ago, and the Q. of E<sup>d</sup>. has taken into
-her care her ladyship’s grand daughter (Arabella S.). I
-desire those who are about my son to make instances in
-his name for this succession, not for any desire I have
-that he should actually succeed to it, but rather to testify
-that neither he nor I ought to be reputed or treated as
-foreigners in England who are both born within the
-same isle.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“This good lady was, thank God, in very good correspondence
-with me these 5 or 6 years bygone, and has
-confessed to me by sundry letters under her hand,
-which I carefully preserve, the injury she did me by the
-unjust pursuits wh. she allowed to go against me in her
-name, thro’ bad information, but principally, she said
-thro’ the express orders of the Q. of Ed. and the persuasions
-of her council, who took much solicitude that
-we might never come to good understanding together.
-But as soon as she came to know of my innocence, she
-desisted from any further suit against me.”<a id='r64' /><a href='#f64' class='c013'><sup>[64]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>Lady Shrewsbury may or may not have felt the
-support of Mary ineffectual, but she must have hoped
-everything from Elizabeth, and to Lord Burghley’s
-condolences wrote thus:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My honourable good Lord, your Lordship hath
-heard by my Lo. how it hath pleased God to visit me;
-but in what sort soever his pleasure is to lay his
-heavy hand on us we must take it thankfully. It is
-good reason his holy will should be obeyed. My
-honourable good Lord I shall not need here to make
-long recital to your Lo. how that in all my greatest
-matters I have been singularly bound to your Lo. for
-your Lo. good and especial favour to me, and how
-much your Lo. did bind me, the poor woman that is
-gone, and my Arbella, at our last meeting at Court,
-neither the mother during her life, nor can I ever forget,
-but most thankfully acknowledge it; and so I am well
-assured will the young babe when her riper years will
-suffer her to know her best friends. And now my good
-Lo. I hope her Majesty upon my most humble suit will
-let that portion which her Majesty bestowed on my
-daughter and jewel Arbella, remain wholly to the child
-for her better education. Her servants that are to look
-to her, her masters that are to train her up in all good
-learning and virtue, will require no small charges;
-wherefore my earnest request to your Lo. is so to recommend
-this my humble suit to her Majesty as it may
-soonest and easiest take effect; and I beseech your Lo.
-to give my son William Cavendish leave to attend on
-your Lo. about this matter. And so referring myself,
-my sweet jewel Arbella, and the whole matter to your
-honourable and friendly consideration, I take my leave
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>of your Lo. to pardon me for that I am not able to
-write to your Lo. with my own hand. Sheffield this
-28th January.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your L. most assured</div>
- <div class='line in12'>loving friend</div>
- <div class='line in16'>“<span class='sc'>E. Shrewsbury</span>.”<a id='r65' /><a href='#f65' class='c013'><sup>[65]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>Meanwhile the young King of Scotland took his own
-way, and Esmé Stuart stepped eventually into the shoes
-of the newly appointed Lord Lennox—the old Bishop
-of Caithness aforesaid—as intended by the nobles who
-surrounded the Scottish throne.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>There was from the standpoint of King James
-sufficient excuse for this device. Esmé was the nephew
-of the late Lord Lennox, Arabella’s grandfather, and a
-close kinsman of the young King. He had courtly
-training, culture, and diplomacy in his favour. He was
-nine years older than the little sovereign, and he came
-to Scotland from France as the accredited though secret
-representative of Rome and the Guises, to win Scotland
-at one stroke back to its alliance with France and its
-obedience to the Pope. He made his presence felt
-quickly enough and the first-fruits of his coming was
-the seizure and execution of Lord Morton—erstwhile
-Regent, and creature of Elizabeth—as a prominent
-agent in the murder of Lord Darnley. Here for the
-moment we leave Esmé Stuart, in Creighton’s concentrated
-phrase, as “master of Scotland&nbsp;... the English
-party practically destroyed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Meanwhile, all the Countess of Shrewsbury could
-do was to write abject letters to Elizabeth asking her
-to execute an order by which a settled allowance should
-be conferred on Arabella.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>The Countess could obviously now have nourished
-no hopes of utilising Mary’s influence. The Earl was
-in receipt of all outside information in regard to Scotland
-and the English Court. It was patent that no
-help for Mary could come from James, well primed
-since his cradle by the lords who hated his mother.
-Bess Shrewsbury’s glorious dream of a throne for
-Arabella stared at her now as a somewhat sickly vision.
-The only hopes for the child were from an influential
-marriage. That Arabella’s grandmother did confide her
-dream to Mary is evident from the very curious revelations
-which the latter makes in subsequent letters, when
-the Countess, once so friendly and communicative, if at
-times brusque and inquisitorial, had turned against her
-to the extent of grave “scandilation,” in the language
-of those days.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>This business of Arabella Stuart’s future marks a
-crisis in the Shrewsbury household. It was like the tap
-given to a very vivid and complex kaleidoscope, for it
-suddenly brought the relationship of the three important
-personages—Earl, Countess, and Scottish Queen—into
-new juxtaposition, and the true colour of the desires
-of the Countess shone out more vividly for the changed
-order of things. To the mere onlooker the matter is
-not made clear till much later. Only those immediately
-concerned were aware of her gradual change of front,
-especially towards her husband, and it was not yet that
-the full result of this apparent volte face could be perceived.
-In order to understand how marked was this
-change events must be anticipated by a year or two, and
-attention given to an extraordinary letter from Queen
-Mary which betrays all sorts of unauthorised intercourse
-between herself and Lady Shrewsbury. This
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>letter, penned by an always fanciful and extremely excitable
-woman, is of course, an exaggeration of the
-Countess’s opportunism. Yet, there has evidently been
-a gradual cessation of the friendly intimacy between the
-two women, and a sufficient revelation of the Countess’s
-mind to give Mary occasion to flare out to such a correspondent
-as the ambassador Mauvissière. In this
-letter, of the year 1584, she speaks fiercely of the
-treachery of Lady Shrewsbury—“La fausseté de mon
-honorable hostesse”—which she wishes made clear to
-Elizabeth: “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Rien n’a jamais aliené la susdite de moy
-que la vaine espérance par elle conçue de faire tomber
-cette couronne sur la teste d’Arbella sa petite-fille,
-mesmement par son mariage avec le fils du comte de
-Leicester, divers tokens estant passez entre les enfants
-nourris en cette persuasion, et leurs peintures envoyées
-d’une part et l’aultre.</span>” She goes on to say that but
-for this imaginary hope—“une telle imagination”—of
-making one of her race royal the countess would never
-have so turned away from Mary—“ne se fult jamais
-divertye de moy”—for, the writer continues:<a id='r66' /><a href='#f66' class='c013'><sup>[66]</sup></a> “she
-was so bound to me, and regardless of any other duty
-or regard, so affectionate towards me that, had I been
-her own queen, she could not have done more for me;
-and as a proof of this say to the Queen, pretending
-that you heard it from Mrs. Seton last summer when
-she went to France, that I had the sure promise of the
-said countess that if at any time my life were in danger,
-or if I were to be removed from here, she would give me
-the means of escape, and that she herself would easily
-elude danger and punishment in respect to this; that
-she made her son Charles Cavendish swear to me in her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>presence that he would reside in London on purpose
-to serve me and warn me of all which passed at the
-Court, and that he would actually keep two good strong
-geldings specially to let me have speedy intelligence
-of the death of the Queen, who was ill at the time;
-and that he thought to be able to do this.... Thereupon
-the said countess and her sons used every possible
-persuasion to prove to me the danger to which I was
-exposed in the hands of the Earl of Shrewsbury, who
-would deliver me into the hands of my enemies or
-allow me to be surprised by them, in such a manner
-that, without the friendship of the said countess, I was
-in very bad case. To begin with you need only put
-forward these two little examples, by which the Queen
-can judge what has gone to make up the warp and woof<a id='r67' /><a href='#f67' class='c013'><sup>[67]</sup></a>
-of the intercourse during the past years between myself
-and the said countess, whom, if I wished, I could place
-in a terrible position by giving the names of those
-persons who, by her express order, have brought me
-letters in cypher, which she has delivered to me with
-her own hand. It will be sufficient for you to tell the
-Queen that you heard these particulars from the said
-Mrs. Seton, and that you are positive that if it pleased
-her to make skilful enquiry into the misconduct of the
-said countess, I could disclose other features of greater
-importance which would cause considerable discomfort
-to others about her. Contrive, if possible, that she<a id='r68' /><a href='#f68' class='c013'><sup>[68]</sup></a>
-shall keep the matter secret without ever naming who
-had been induced to reveal these things by devotion
-to her welfare, that in short she may recognise what
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>faith she can place in the said countess, who in your
-opinion could be won over to my cause, if I thought
-well, by a present of two thousand crowns.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You have afforded me peculiar satisfaction by sending
-copies of my letters&nbsp;... into France and Scotland,
-by which the truth of these rumours may be known,
-rumours which I am certain only proceed from the said
-countess and her son Charles; but since the witnesses
-by whom I can prove my case are afraid to incur the
-displeasure of the Queen, I am constrained to bide
-until I can find others to assist at a public explanation
-and reparation.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Sheffield, 1584, March 21.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This letter flies like a thunderbolt across the Shrewsbury
-heaven. The lady’s ambition, according to her
-enemy, acknowledges no bounds, is no respecter of
-persons. Mary she not only casts aside like an old
-glove, but she assumes a triumphant, hostile attitude
-towards her. Through Lord Leicester’s heir, Arabella
-will ensure the favour of the English throne, while
-other means will be used to secure the Scottish throne
-itself for the child. Portraits and “divers tokens”
-have passed between the children. Bess is as sure of
-her power now as she was in the days when she boasted
-that she could both assist Mary to escape and herself
-elude retribution. Robust, rich, prosperous, swelled
-with her dreams, she counts herself unassailable. Her
-mood of excitement tempts her, however, further than
-her caution. Mary has spoken to Mauvissière of
-“rumours,” reports so serious that they have reached
-even to Scotland and France. She is sure that the
-Countess and her son Charles, once her sworn servants,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>are the source of these. A letter, which must be quoted
-in full here, written six months later to Mauvissière,
-makes the substance of these rumours perfectly clear.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>If the correspondence already quoted come like a
-thunderbolt, this next letter conveys a shock even
-greater. There is one really extraordinary passage in
-the first letter which, though it concerns the Earl, does
-not prepare the onlooker for the scandalous matter of
-the second epistle. This passage is the one in which
-his wife has the audacity, according to Mary, to warn
-the latter against the Earl. What is the psychological
-process which forces such a statement from the shrewd,
-worldly-wise woman whose fortunes, socially, are
-entirely bound to those of her husband? What can
-it be but blind jealousy arising from consciousness
-of their opposite natures and from the hostility of sex?
-The intrigues with Mary, the opportunism, the blatant
-ambition—these are comprehensible. Was it all true?
-In the light of later letters from Mary all such statements
-must be regarded very sceptically. Division
-there certainly was in the great household: scolding and
-bitterness, a great weariness of heart, a series of sordid
-misunderstandings. If in a wild reckless mood the
-emotional, powerful spirit of Bess Shrewsbury had
-escaped control, and she had uttered the ghost of such
-a warning as that quoted, it must have sprung from
-nothing but the blind hatred of Mary and jealousy of
-her husband, the last having its source in her fierce
-consciousness of an utter clash of temperaments. Her
-opportunism, her immense ambitions are conceivable;
-even, to a certain degree, the longing to intrigue with
-Mary. They are comprehensible if one estimates the
-Countess’s nature as one in which the love of domination,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>the quick sense of advantage, and the keen perception
-of the melodrama of life were combined. The
-Earl’s nature was the very opposite. To him she must
-have acted latterly like a goad, while his obstinacy
-maddened her. His dogged patience under unwilling
-service, his bitter and almost stupid resignation under
-the meanness and suspicion of his Queen, his caution
-and method, his intense sensitiveness to any unjust
-criticism, his horror of plots, his dread of any unauthorised
-move, be it ever so trifling, formed a granite
-barrier to his wife’s independent, self-concentrated, restless
-spirit. Her pugnacity tussled with his resolution,
-and discord ensued.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>She whom Elizabeth darkly called “The Daughter
-of Debate,” the captive Queen—was suddenly become
-as much of a thorn in the side of husband and wife
-as in that of their sovereign. Wheresoever Mary
-was there stalked complexity. This of itself, given
-the intricacies of her Stuart nature and her extraordinary
-life and circumstances, was sufficient. But that
-the Countess should have piled complexity upon complexity
-in such a way as to wreck her own household
-reduces the observer to stupefaction. By the second
-letter to Mauvissière it is seen that she was at Court.
-The mere fact of her presence there seems to rouse
-Mary to a sort of fury at her own helplessness. This
-letter is even more detailed, more excited than the one
-just quoted:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Wingfield, October 18, 1584.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“No reply having come from the Queen of England
-concerning the treaty proposed between her, me, and
-my son, and not having received any news from you
-for six weeks I cannot but doubt that this delay has
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>been purposed to give time and advantage to the
-Countess of Shrewsbury, in order that she may play
-her game and trouble those on every side possible,
-to escape the just punishment of her fault and treason,
-and to give the lie to the Queen her sovereign, to
-the malicious reports, so harmful to me. I would
-make, with all affection possible, the request from
-myself, and in the name of Monsieur, my good brother,
-and the noblemen, my relations in France, that you
-will give a satisfactory and clear explanation to the
-Queen of England and those of her Council of the
-false and scandalous rumours that everybody knows
-have been invented and spread abroad by the Countess
-of my intercourse with the Count of Shrewsbury. I
-beg you to proceed with all haste in a public examination
-or at least before the Council, and in your
-presence particularly, of her and her two sons, Charles
-and William Cavendish, whether they will confirm or
-refute the rumours and language they have previously
-maintained, that in the cause of reason and justice
-they may be punished as an example, there being no
-subject so poor, vile, and abject in this kingdom to
-whom common justice can be denied. Such satisfaction
-would be granted to the meanest subject, how
-much more to one of my blood and rank, and so
-closely related to the Queen. But here I am, bound
-hand and foot, and, I might say, almost tongue-tied.
-I can do nothing for myself to avenge this atrocious
-and wicked calumny. May it please you to remember
-the definite promise made to me by the Queen, which
-I have mentioned before in four or five letters to you,
-that she had always hated the liberty and insolence,
-so largely encouraged in this corrupt age in the slander
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>of Kings and primates, and that she would do all in
-her power to repress this evil. I will give her the
-names of the guilty originators of this scandal, and
-in proof of her words she will be obliged to execute
-a rigorous and exemplary punishment upon them. I
-name to her now the Countess of Shrewsbury and
-her son Charles especially, to convict them of this
-unhappy slander. If not, I ask but their own servants
-and those of the Count usually in the house should
-be put on their oath to God, and their allegiance to
-the Queen, and examined, for I know too well that
-some of them otherwise would never have the chance
-of giving witness, and the Countess would maintain
-her rumours were truth. One of her servants has
-told me that she has caused this scandal to be spread
-in divers parts of the kingdom, and that they have
-heard her in the room of the Count reproaching him
-similarly. And to come to particulars, for some
-months at Chatsworth there was staying one of the
-grooms of Lord Talbot specially to enquire concerning
-this. He has nothing to say of me under the
-name of the Lady of Bath. I cannot but think the
-Countess has power to silence her friends, who would
-otherwise be too convincing witnesses of the falsehood
-of their rumours against the Queen, her sovereign,
-so that she will do wisely not to force me to rouse
-the witnesses, for if I demand justice on them, and
-am refused, I will produce, before all the princes of
-Christendom, by articles signed by my own hand, an
-account of the honourable proceedings of this lady,
-as much against the Queen as against me, against
-whom she had formerly spread this rumour. I will
-give a declaration of the time, persons, and all friends,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>so necessary that it will not be pleasing to those who
-are constant in condemning. And in the wrongs
-that she has done them, if there are any of them to
-support her and to countenance those injuries which
-I have received from her, or if in such a case there
-is a question of my honour, it will always be to me
-more than earthly life. It may be after so long and
-painful captivity I am constrained and obliged to put
-before the public anything which may offend them
-or do harm. In that it is for them to remedy and
-obviate by giving me reparation and satisfaction for
-scandals and impostures. God grant that at the end
-I may find true what the Countess has formerly told
-me, that the more she could show herself my enemy,
-and work against me, she would be so much the more
-welcome and more favoured at Court.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>Marie R.</span>”<a id='r69' /><a href='#f69' class='c013'><sup>[69]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>The scandalous rumours suggesting a liaison between
-Mary of Scotland and Shrewsbury seem to have been on
-foot some two years previous to this letter, and were
-naturally combined with the suggestion of his connivance
-in her plans for escape and his vilification of his
-Queen. There is a long, tedious, pitiful letter from the
-Earl on the subject under the date of October 18th,
-1582, addressed, of course, to Lord Burghley. The
-“scandilation” is not mentioned as such, but the other
-allegations are strictly denied. Shrewsbury reminds his
-friend that on the last occasion on which he saw
-Elizabeth and “enjoyed the comfort of her private
-speech” she did “most graciously promise that she
-would never condemn” him without calling for his self-justification.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>He begs for a hearing now. He adds:
-“Among the rest of my false accusations, your Honour
-knoweth that I have been touched with some undutiful
-respects touching the Queen of Scots; but I am very
-well able to prove that she hath shewed herself an
-enemy unto me, and to my fortune; and that I trust
-will sufficiently clear me.” The letter is dated from
-Handsworth, the little manor which appears to have
-been the only place in this and after years in which
-the harassed man could possess his soul in quiet and
-dignity.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>CHAPTER XVII<br /> <span class='small'>THE COIL THICKENS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c005'>That last plaint of George Talbot was in 1582.
-Previous to this the curious letters quoted from
-Gilbert Talbot give a pretty graphic notion of the acute
-irritation between his parents. They still sometimes
-acted in concert. In 1583 (February 7th) both of them
-wrote simultaneously to Burghley to desire his good
-offices in appeasing the Queen anent the marriage of the
-Countess’s nephew, John Wingfield, to the Countess
-of Kent. By 1584 the affair seems to have developed
-into a very unequal family feud of five to two. As in a
-game of “oranges and lemons” Bess Shrewsbury, already
-backed by her sons Charles and William Cavendish,
-seems to have tugged not only her daughter Mary over
-to her side, but also Mary’s husband. He is no longer
-Gilbert the go-between, but the declared champion of
-his stepmother against his own father and his stepmother’s
-eldest son Henry Cavendish. Family affairs
-are certainly in a shockingly ungodly condition. William
-Cavendish is trying to screw his stepfather over a matter
-of £1800, and the quarrel between the Countess and
-Earl is so serious that the matter has passed into the
-hands of the Master of the Rolls and the Lord Chief
-Justice, who take opposite sides. The Countess has
-named her husband as “traytor” at Court, and he is
-resolved to go and exonerate himself. His secret
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>malady is betrayed to Gilbert by a family servant named
-Steele, whose confidences can only help to complicate
-matters. He has long conversations with Queen Mary’s
-secretary, Curle, and seems to have access to all her
-retinue and to know the attitude of every member
-of the Earl’s household towards Gilbert. The only
-redeeming feature is the steadfast loyalty of Henry
-Cavendish—heir to a portion of the Rufford and Langeford
-estates—to his stepfather. Gilbert adroitly urges
-his own poverty and his wife’s “necessite,” but is sharply
-silenced. Shrewsbury is very jealous of his heir’s long
-absence at the hated Chatsworth, but at the same time
-promises to defray the fees of the physician attending
-Mary—the redoubtable Mary Talbot.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>This lady is the true outcome of her mother. Bess
-Shrewsbury was accustomed to speak of her many
-building enterprises as her “workes.” One of her
-most pathetically characteristic “workes” was Mary
-Talbot. Later on in regard to Arabella Stuart’s career
-history shows how the mother’s intriguing match-making
-tactics repeated themselves in the daughter.
-For the moment it is her pertinacity, her love of possessions,
-her hot uncontrolled temper, and her vindictiveness
-which concern us.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Again we must anticipate by some years and include
-here as explanatory and pertinent an episode which displays
-the violence and bitterness of Mary Talbot’s
-nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Between the Stanhopes of Nottingham and the
-Cavendishes there was a deadly feud in the course of
-which blood was shed on both sides. In the height
-of this strife Mary Talbot (by that time Countess of
-Shrewsbury) sent the following deadly message to Sir
-Thomas Stanhope of Shelford. It was not written, but
-delivered by two messengers, and the message has come
-down to posterity in this form, as quoted in Johnson’s
-<em>Extracts from Norfolk Papers</em>:—</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_252fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, from the picture at Hardwick Hall<br />&#8196; &#8196; By permission of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire</em></span><br /><br />MARY CAVENDISH, COUNTESS OF SHREWSBURY<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_252'>252</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>“My Lady hath commanded me to say this much to
-you. That though you be more wretched, vile, and
-miserable than any creature living; and, for your
-wickedness, become more ugly in shape than the vilest
-toad in the world; and one to whom none of reputation
-would vouchsafe to send any message; yet she
-hath thought good to send thus much to you—that
-she be contented you should live (and doth noways
-wish your death) but to this end—that all the plagues
-and miseries that may befall any man may light upon
-such a caitiff as you are; and that you should live to
-have all your friends forsake you; and without your
-great repentance, which she looketh not for, because
-your life hath been so bad, you will be damned perpetually
-in hell fire.” The chronicler goes on to say
-that the heralds added many other opprobrious and
-hateful words, which could not be remembered, because
-the bearer would deliver it but once, as he said he was
-commanded, but said if he had failed in anything, it
-was in speaking it more mildly and not in terms of such
-disdain as he was commanded.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was this free-tongued, easily infuriated nature with
-which the Earl had to cope in addition to his wife’s
-excitability and financial ambitions, his son’s cry of
-“Give, give!” the suspicions of his Queen, the lies and
-slanders of his enemies, and the intrigues of his captivating
-captive. The wonder is that he could be even
-so generous, affectionate, and level-headed as the following
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>letter shows; that he could forgive Gilbert, and laugh
-with my Lord of Rutland, who seems to have visited
-Shrewsbury solely to pour balm on his friend’s wounds
-and put him in a happier frame of mind, so that at
-Gilbert’s coming the difficulties of a business discussion
-about the disposal of Welbeck—at which place the
-Countess eventually established her son Charles Cavendish,
-and concerning which she appears to have had
-important financial transactions with her husband—was
-made easy. Owing to the guest’s <em>bonhomie</em>, father and
-son are placed on a footing which enables them to discuss
-things composedly, and Gilbert is informed of the
-false reports of his father’s attitude towards Mary
-Talbot.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c017'><em>Gilbert and Mary Talbott to the Countess of Shrewsbury</em><br /> (1583).</h3>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My bounden duty, duty, etc.—On Friday at night
-my L. sent to me to be with him the next morning
-early. I came to Worsop about 9 o’clock, and found
-the two earls together, but saw them not till dinner was
-on the table. After ordinary greeting at the board, my
-L. speaking of Welbeck, my L. of Rutland said he was
-sure my L. would pay for it, and ‘so,’ quoth he, ‘you
-promised me yesternight,’ which my L. denied; ‘but,’
-said my L., ‘your L. was exceeding earnest with me
-so to do’; whereat they were both very merry; and he
-still was earnest with my L. therein, but he laughed it
-off. After dinner my L. called me to him in his
-chamber, and told me a long tale of the cause of his
-meeting with that Lord; the effect in substance was to
-continue friendship with him; and recited many reasons
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>that he had to trust him better than any nobleman;
-and said that I had like cause to do so, both in respect
-of kindred, and that he loveth me exceeding well; and
-sware by God he was never more earnestly dealt with
-than he had been by him since his coming, for me;
-both to be good to me in present and hereafter; and
-bade me take knowledge thereof and give him thanks,
-and that in any case I should go to Newark to him.
-And before had ended all that it seemed he would have
-said, he was called away by the other being ready to go
-down to horse. So when I came out I briefly gave him
-thanks for what my L. had told me; and he wished he
-were able to do me any pleasure, desired me to come to
-Newark, and he would tell me more, and none living
-be better welcome; and so we parted. Then I rode
-some part of my L. way with him. He told me that
-the cause he would not have me carry my wife to
-London was, for that he thought your La. would go
-up to London, and then would my wife join with you
-in exclaiming against him, and so make him to judge
-the worse of me, with much to that effect. I alleged
-the necessity of my wife’s estate; how ill I could live
-here without any provisions; but he cut me off, saying
-he looked hourly for leave to go up, and after he had
-been there himself, I might carry her if I would, and if
-I did before, he could not think I loved him; and for
-her health, he said physicians might be sent for, though
-he bare the charges; and would not suffer me to speak
-a word more thereof, but bade me now do it if I would.
-Then he told me that Lewis being at Newark, Hercules
-Foliambe told him that he heard my L. had commanded
-me to put away my wife; and called Lewis, and he
-affirmed it, and so my L. willed me to charge Foliambe
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>therewith and make him bring out his author. Then he
-told me that the matters were hard between your La.
-and him; that Sir W. M. and the Master of the Rolls
-were wholly on your side, and would have set down an
-order clean against him; but that the Lord Chief
-Justice would not thereto consent, but stuck to him as
-friendly as ever man did. He would honour and love
-him for it whilst he lived; and that the order was deferred
-till Thursday last; and that this last week he had
-found out and sent up all the pay books written by
-Ryc. Cooke, of all manner of conveyances whatsoever,
-whereby it appeared that Knifton and Cooke dealt the
-most treacherously with him that ever any men had
-done; but recited not wherein, saying that he hath not
-Hardwick and the West country lands without impeachment
-of waste, as he would be sworn his meaning
-was. Further that W. Cavendish he said was not
-ashamed to demand £1800 for [it] and made such a
-matter of it, as was never heard; whereof he spake so
-out of purpose, as it were in vain to write it. Then
-commended H. Cavendish exceedingly for maintaining
-his honour, which he said he should fare the better for;
-and told that divers noble men had of late answered for
-him very stoutly, especially the Earl of Cumberland.
-Then told that Bentall, hearing how evil he was spoken
-of at London, and for that your La. had called him
-traitor, he desired leave to go up, either to be cleared or
-condemned, and that he hath written by him to my L.
-Treasurer and my L. of Leicester that he might be
-thoroughly tried, and have as he had deserved. As for
-his knowledge of him, he wrote he had found him the
-truest and most faithful servant that he ever had. He
-said Bentall rather chose to go up of himself than to be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>sent for; and that he had been twice examined before
-my L. Treasurer and my L. of Leicester, and had sped
-well, and so would do he hoped. These are all the
-special points that I can remember he spoke of. I began
-many times to tell him my griefs, and to open my estate,
-but he would not suffer me to speak, but said he loved
-me best of all his children, and that I had never given
-him cause of offence but in tarrying so long at Chatsworth;
-which thing he also would not suffer me to
-answer, but said it was past, and he would not hear
-more thereof. When I was parted with my L. I met
-Style<a id='r70' /><a href='#f70' class='c013'><sup>[70]</sup></a> with the stuff. The secret he told me of the
-estate of my L. body was that swelling which he said
-he thought none but himself did know, but when I told
-him where it was, he marvelled that I knew it. He
-told me that Bentall persuaded my L. that he was able
-to do him such service above as he never had done him,
-and to discover the secrets of all things, especially by his
-brother that serves my L. of Leicester; but Steele said
-he verily thought he should be laid up in prison. He
-said he talked with Curle all the day before he went,
-and all that morning, but I could get out no particular
-thing of him besides his continual familiarity with all
-the Scots. He said there is not any about my L.
-but Stringer but seeketh my undoing.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I am in hope to meet Mr. Serjante Roods at
-Winkfield. Herein is enclosed a note for your La.
-to read. The remainder of Rufford and Langford is
-assuredly [rested] in my brother H. Cavendish, as the
-other lands that are unrevocable are.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I desire to know whether your La. thinketh that
-her Majesty will be offended with my going to Newark
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>to that Earl or not, considering what speeches she used
-to me of him. If it be not in that respect, I think it
-is very necessary I go thither, seeing that he hath used
-so good offices for me to my L. My L. said to one
-that my L. of Leicester was Bentall’s great friend.
-God prosper your La. in all things. We most humbly
-beseech your La. blessing to us all.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>G. Talbott.</span> <span class='sc'>Mary Talbott.</span>”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is patent which way the wind blows, and how the
-Earl is regarded by his principal antagonists. There is
-open war; his words are repeated, his moves watched,
-and he is simply become a fine grape to be squeezed for
-their advantage.</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_258fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby</em></span><br /><br />HARDWICK HALL, SHOWING ENTRANCE GATEWAY<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_258'>258</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>Things were brewing to a head, and in 1584 Chatsworth,
-the beautiful, the detested of the Earl, was
-literally besieged by him. It must be recalled here
-that his wife had already divided her own two houses
-amongst her two elder sons. On Henry, as eldest
-Cavendish she had bestowed Chatsworth; on William,
-her best beloved, her own Hardwick. For Charles,
-her youngest, as instanced, she had other plans, namely,
-Welbeck. Now Henry had married the Earl’s daughter,
-Lady Grace. The quarrel naturally concentrated itself
-on Chatsworth, which, through Grace, was shared by
-the Talbot side of the family. The Earl refused to be
-done out of certain rights in this property. His lady,
-irritated by the fact that Henry was on the Earl’s side,
-bore down upon the house, dismantled it, and sent the
-greater part of the contents to Hardwick, while Charles
-and William Cavendish practically manned the empty
-building. Up rode the Earl with his gentlemen and
-servants to demand admittance, and was, according to
-his own statements,<a id='r71' /><a href='#f71' class='c013'><sup>[71]</sup></a> resisted by William “with halberd
-in hand and pistol under his girdle.” The whole
-position was naturally rendered more and more painful
-by this undignified occurrence, and all parties concerned
-were foolishly guilty of wanton waste of a good
-summer’s day. Meanwhile the Countess was practically
-without a suitable house, since she could now
-share none of her husband’s lordly residences. Here
-follows a tragic and unforgettable letter from the Earl,
-almost alone, as it were with his back against a wall.
-He writes not to Burghley this time, but to Lord
-Leicester. Ostensibly the letter is one of condolence.
-Leicester’s son by Lettice Knollys died in babyhood
-in July of this year, at the time when the Earl and
-his retinue hammered at the doors of Chatsworth. It
-was open to Shrewsbury to requite his friend’s sanctimonious
-epistle, previously quoted, on the death of
-Francis Talbot by just such another. The soldier
-Earl, however, is of different stuff from the courtier.
-His heart cannot dissemble, and the occasion becomes
-an excuse for bitter confidences, elicited evidently by
-a letter from Leicester which informs him of the blow
-and makes kindly allusion, possibly admonitory, to
-Gilbert Talbot, who himself had lost an only son and
-heir.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“My good Lord,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“For that I perceive your Lordship takes God’s
-handiwork thankfully, and for the best, doubt not but
-God will increase you with many good children, which
-I wish with all my heart. And where it pleases you
-to put me in mind of Gilbert Talbot, as though I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>should remember his case by my own, truly, my Lord,
-they greatly vary. For my son, I never dissuaded him
-from loving his wife, though he hath said he must
-either forsake me, or hate his wife, this he gives out,
-which is false and untrue. This I think is his duty;
-that, seeing I have forbad him for coming to my wicked
-and malicious wife, who hath set me at naught in his
-own hearing, that contrary to my commandment, hath
-both gone and sent unto her daily by his wife’s persuasion,
-yea and hath both written and carried letters
-to no mean personages in my wife’s behalf. These ill
-dealings would he have salved by indirect reports, for
-in my life did I never seek their separation; for the
-best ways I have to content myself is to think it is
-his wife’s wicked persuasion and her mother’s together,
-for I think neither barrel better herring of them both.
-This my misliking to them both argues not that I
-would have my son make so hard a construction of me
-that I would have him hate his wife, though I do
-detest her mother. But to be plain, he shall either
-leave his indirect dealings with my wife, seeing I take
-her as my professed enemy, or else indeed will I do
-that to him I would be loth, seeing I have heretofore
-loved him so well; for he is the principal means and
-countenance she has, as he uses the matter, which is
-unfit; yet will I not be so unnatural in deeds as he
-reports in words, which is that I should put from him
-the principal things belonging to the Earldom. He
-hath been a costly child to me, which I think well
-bestowed if he come here again in time. He takes
-the way to spoil himself with having his wife at
-London; therefore if you love him, persuade him to
-come down with his wife and settle himself in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>country; for otherwise, during his abode with his wife
-at London, I will take the £200 I give him yearly
-besides alienating my good will from him,&nbsp;... If he allege it be her Majesty’s pleasure
-to command him to wait, let his wife come home,
-as more fit it is for her.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“The assurance of your Lordship’s faithful friendship
-towards me hath, by so many years’ growth, taken
-so deep root as it cannot now fade nor decay,
-neither any new friendship take my faithful goodwill
-away, as time and occasion shall try; and so hoping
-your Lordship will be satisfied without further doubt
-or scruple therein, I commend your Lordship to the
-discretion of the Almighty.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This letter is not signed by Shrewsbury, but simply
-endorsed: “The copy of my letter of 8th Aug., 1584,”
-which fixes the date.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>That the dignified George Talbot should stoop to
-such a slang expression as “neither barrel better herring”
-in regard to his once adored and brilliant
-Countess shows the complete wreckage of all their joy,
-their high comradeship, their mutual reverence.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Into the same confessional, the ear of the astute
-Treasurer, Bess Shrewsbury poured out her side, writing
-from Hardwick on August 2nd: her husband was
-using her very hardly, he sought to take Chatsworth
-from her, he had induced her son Henry to deal most
-unnaturally with her, wherefore she hoped that Burghley
-would remonstrate, as his letters would do more with
-the Earl than those of any other living person, etc. etc.
-A little over a fortnight after, the Earl, who had already
-given his version of the Chatsworth affair, placed details
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>of the “insolent behaviour” of William Cavendish
-before the Privy Council. The State Papers show that
-the Council took prompt action here, but to their reply
-informing the Earl of the committal of William to
-prison, and expressing their opinion that it was not
-meet that a man of his mean quality should use himself
-in a contemptuous sort against one of his Lordship’s
-station and quality, they add a clause stating that the
-Queen desired that “he should suffer the Cavendishes
-to enjoy their own lands unmolested.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>To all this quarrel over possessions, which reads for
-all the world like a prolonged act out of a new version
-of the ancient drama <cite>All-for-Money</cite>, was added the
-distasteful business of the now flourishing scandal about
-Queen Mary and the Earl. Doubtless his wife and
-stepsons were ready to bite out their tongues by the
-time the scandal they apparently fostered of his intimacy
-with Mary of Scots was generally known. Though their
-nerves were less sensitive they could not but see that
-the affair was passing beyond their control and that
-only harm could ensue. The time was approaching
-when they must be publicly called to account. Meanwhile
-lesser persons were already being interrogated.
-The actual details of the slander are located in the
-extract from a letter in diary<a id='r72' /><a href='#f72' class='c013'><sup>[72]</sup></a> form written by the
-Recorder of London, William Fletewood, to Lord
-Burghley:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Thursdaie,<a id='r73' /><a href='#f73' class='c013'><sup>[73]</sup></a> the next daie after, we kept the generall
-sessions at Westminster Hall for Middlesex. Surelie it was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>very great! We satt the whole daie and the next after
-also at Fynsburie. At this sessions one Cople and one
-Baldwen my Lord of Shrewsburie’s gent. required me
-that they might be suffered to indict one Walmesley of
-Islyngton an Inn-holder for scandilation of my Lord their
-master. They shewed me two papers. The first was under
-the clerk of the council’s hand of my Lord’s purgation,
-in the which your good Lordship’s speeches are specially
-set downn. The second paper was the examinations of
-divers witnesses taken by Mr. Harris; the effect of all
-which was that Walmesley should tell his guests openlie
-at the table that the Erle of Shrowsbury had gotten the
-Scottish Quene with child, and that he knew where the
-child was christened, and it was alleged that he should
-further adde that my Lord should never go home
-agayne, with lyke wordes, etc. An indictement was
-then drawne by the clerk of the peace the which I
-thought not good to have published, or<a id='r74' /><a href='#f74' class='c013'><sup>[74]</sup></a> that the evidence
-should be given openlie, and therefore I caused
-the jurie to go to a chamber, where I was, and heard the
-evidence given, amongst whom one Merideth Hammer,
-a doctor of divinitie and Vicar of Islyngton was a
-witnes, who had dealt as lewdlie towards my Lord
-in speeches as did the other, viz. Walmeslye. This
-doctor regardeth not an oathe. Surelie he is a very bad
-man: but in the end the indictement was indorsed Billa
-Vera.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Of course this true bill was satisfactory in one sense.
-At the same time mud sticks, and the publicity of such
-a case always helps to arouse wider interest in the possible
-rumours. Both Queen Mary and the Earl were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>rampant and eager for a proper official enquiry. She
-even sent a message to Elizabeth on the subject when in
-committee with an emissary of the Queen in regard to
-other matters. This talk was duly noted down and is
-included among the Marian MSS.:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She thanked her Majesty for the promise to punish
-the authors of the slanders against her; Toplif [Topcliff]
-was one, and Charles Candish another; the Countess
-of Shrewsbury did not bear her that goodwill
-which the Queen supposed, ‘who with her divers times
-laughed at such reports, and now did accuse her. It
-touched his Lordship as well as her, wherefore she
-trusted as a nobleman he would regard his house.’
-She wished this to be signified to the Lord Treasurer,
-Leicester, and Walsingham, desiring their favour in this
-suit.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is interesting and piquant to find that Mary’s
-suspicions should alight upon that egregious Papist-baiter
-Topcliffe, but this pompous gentleman does not
-appear to have been successfully impugned in this case.
-Otherwise Mary eventually had her will. The Earl at
-last succeeded in obtaining permission to go to Court
-to clear himself, and to relinquish finally his heavy
-duty. Indeed, he was soon formally delivered from his
-charge, but the change of officers did not take place
-immediately. Some time elapsed before formalities and
-details were carried through, and he and his prisoner
-paid in July, 1584, their last visit in company to Buxton.
-There Mary wrote her famous Latin couplet with
-a diamond on a window-pane:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Buxtona quae calidae celebraris nomine Lymphae,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Forte mihi post hac non adennda, Vale.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>The permission for which the Earl longed came in
-August, and his successor was Sir Ralph Sadler, who
-has previously figured in this record. It was not an
-easy transfer. The poor Earl’s departure was complicated
-by the business of transferring his prisoner to
-Wingfield Manor from Sheffield. There were delay and
-trouble, so that the cavalcade did not leave till early in
-September, and it was not till the 7th of that month,
-after fifteen years of hard service, that he was a free
-man.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>CHAPTER XVIII<br /> <span class='small'>“FACE TO FACE”</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c005'>A free man, a free agent! But at what a price
-was Shrewsbury free!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>His honour was undermined by his own family, his
-fortunes impaired by his Queen’s penuriousness, his
-prime was past, his best given in return for apparently
-naught. Even the gratitude of his captive—and she
-never seems to have been regardless of such leniency as
-he was permitted to show her—had it been emphatically
-expressed, would have been no real reward to him, for
-it would only have placed him under suspicion. He
-had but one testimonial to his credit—the fact that in
-the midst of Mary’s dangers and terrors she felt that
-she was safer in his keeping “than in that of any other.”
-His farewell to her cannot have been anything but a
-strained and painful matter, with the hateful barrier of
-“scandilation” to mar the dignity and courtesy of it on
-both sides. She wished him to convey her letters to
-Elizabeth. He declined, and her new gaoler sent them
-with his official correspondence. Thus parted, after the
-strange intimacy of fifteen years, Mary of Scotland and
-George Talbot. When they met again it was as principal
-actors in the “tragedy of Fotheringay” in the
-autumn of 1586.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The Earl travelled to London with his retinue of
-gentlemen and grooms—a business of four to five days.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>Face to face he and his sovereign stood at last and the
-second formal step in the scandal affair was taken.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>He was “very graciously used by her Majesty,” who
-showed herself “very desirous to comprehend the controversies
-between him and the lady, his wife.” Walsingham,
-commenting on this, writes that he feared this
-reconciliation would “not be performed over easily.”
-Elizabeth kept her promise and set to work at once.
-The Lords of the Council were summoned to testify to
-his loyalty, uprightness, and honour, and he was called to
-face them and receive their magnificent and pompous declaration,
-“a memorable testimonial by Queen Elizabeth
-and the Lords of the Council as to the discharge of his
-duty faithfully, and trust in the custody of the Queen
-of Scots.” It is not necessary to quote the whole document
-here. The actual domestic scandal is only touched
-very vaguely in it thus:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And if in some trifles, and private matters of small
-moment, not appertaining to the Queen’s Majesty, his
-Lordship thought that his honour and reputation had
-been touched by the evil reports of any, he was required
-to think that the same was common to them and others
-as well as to himself in this world, howbeit, if any
-person could be particularly charged by his Lordship,
-it was reason that he should be called to answer the
-same; and, therefore, his Lordship was desired to
-assure himself of this their Lordships’ good and
-honourable opinion concerning his Lordship, and so to
-sit down as a person that was very meet for the company,
-then to serve her Majesty and the realm; and so, therewith,
-he took his place in Council according to his
-degree and office.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>Thus did their Lordships pour oil on the bruises of
-their battered colleague. But he needed more than
-words. The pain was too deep to be healed by that
-bland reminder of the general prevalence of false witnesses
-in the world. The phrase “if any person could
-be particularly charged&nbsp;... it was reason that he
-should be called to answer the same” is far more
-curative. Two such persons had been dealt with. But
-his lady was not to escape. Beale, his good friend, took
-a serious view of the situation. “I have dealt with the
-Earl,” he wrote to Walsingham, “touching his son, and
-find him well affected towards him save that he says he
-is ruled by his wife, who is directed by her mother. I
-think his hatred for her will hardly be appeased, as he
-thinks the slanders and other information made to her
-Majesty have proceeded from her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Both Mary and Shrewsbury were to have their full
-satisfaction. Mary was from the first most explicit, and,
-not content with her excited outpourings to the French
-Ambassador, herself wrote to Elizabeth at this date from
-Wingfield Manor after Shrewsbury and she had parted.
-She alludes in this letter to Elizabeth’s “honourable
-promise.” She declares that she will never desist from
-her demands for satisfaction until her reputation is
-formally cleared in regard to the Countess’s slanders.
-It is a final challenge which Elizabeth could not in
-decency resist.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>In December of this year Bess Shrewsbury with
-William and Charles were called to their account before
-the Lords of the Council. Full satisfaction was received—of
-a kind. There could be nothing very triumphant
-about it from Mary’s point of view. There was really
-none of that magnificent abasement of her trio of enemies
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>which she painted subsequently to a correspondent in
-one of her letters after her removal to Chartly. This is
-her version:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The Countess of Shrewsbury (I thank God) hath
-been tried and found to her shame, in her attempt
-against me, the same woman indeed that many have had
-opinion that she was, and at the request of my secretary
-Nau, he being at the Queen of England’s Court in the
-month of December, ’84, the said lady upon her knees,
-in presence of the Queen of England and some principals
-of her Council, denied to her the shameful bruits
-by herself spread abroad against me.”<a id='r75' /><a href='#f75' class='c013'><sup>[75]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As a matter of fact, the accused three unanimously
-asserted total ignorance of the entire scandal and its
-possible sources alike, and their declaration made before
-the Privy Council was solemnly recorded, and is included
-in the mass of State documents, while an exact copy of
-it is among the Talbot papers. It is not a very interesting
-or savoury little document, but highly important
-to George Talbot and his heirs as a second certificate of
-merit. It covers exactly the same ground as the extract
-quoted from Fletewood’s “dyarium.” At its conclusion,
-after testifying boldly to the dignity and honour of
-Mary, the mother and sons offer to uphold the truth of
-their wholesale disclaimer against any person whomsoever,
-whenever the occasion should arise. Thus, though
-posterity is afforded that vision of their abject position
-“on their knees in the royal presence” as stated by
-Mary, the attitude, contrasted with their denial, is
-rather that of reverent dignity than of sheer abasement.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>Thus was the honour of the Talbots saved, but at
-such cost and after such a pitiful process of the public
-washing of family linen that it does very little real credit
-to the parties concerned. The poor Earl could only
-point to his Queen’s testimonial and console himself by
-thinking on his family doggerel:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>The Talbot true that is,</div>
- <div class='line'>And still hath so remaynde,</div>
- <div class='line'>Lost never noblenesse</div>
- <div class='line'>By princke of spot distaynde:</div>
- <div class='line'>On such a fixed fayth</div>
- <div class='line'>This trustie Talbot stayth.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>For there is no real honour left to a house divided
-against itself. The quarrel of man and wife had become
-the property of the world. Matters must be patched up
-somehow with the aid of friends and Court officials.
-Everything, to the eye, was now put on a highly respectable
-basis. The bland disclaimer by the Cavendishes
-paved the way at any rate for a more decent family
-relationship.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>For the fourth time in her life Bess Hardwick had
-faced and surmounted a great danger. As Lady St.
-Loe she had laid herself in some way open to back-biters,
-had triumphantly quashed them, and had escaped
-being deeply involved in the affair of Lady Catherine
-Grey; as Lady Shrewsbury she had braved the wrath of
-Elizabeth over the Lennox marriage, and now triumphed
-over Mary and the Earl. Upon this last occasion she
-emerged with a slate at least superficially clean.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Superficially. The thing extorts your admiration after
-the reading of Mary’s detailed accusations. But there is
-yet one more letter which Mary planned to send hurtling
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>towards the Court. It is a bomb more deadly than
-any of the rest, and had it found its mark even the
-indomitable Lady Shrewsbury might have been annihilated—would
-certainly have been hopelessly discountenanced.
-It is the production known to all students of
-this historical period as “The Scandal Letter,” here
-translated with the exception of passages which are best
-in the original French. Again, full allowance must be
-made here for the overwrought condition of the writer.
-This letter tallies with the spirit of the letters on the
-same subject already seen. Moreover, it is on all sides
-adjudged by experts to be a genuine document in
-Mary’s own hand. This epistle, which in itself formed
-a safety-valve for the tumult of the writer’s brain, either
-was not despatched and was afterwards found among
-her papers, or may have been intercepted in full flight—possibly
-by Burghley, for it rests to this day among the
-Hatfield MSS. Events show that it can never have
-reached Elizabeth. The publication of such pernicious
-matter could not have done any good or have diverted
-in any way Elizabeth’s disapproval from her prisoner.
-Nor could it have altered Mary’s fate. If there be, as
-one cannot but think, a certain basis of truth in it—the
-Countess had a lively tongue, as the world knows—the
-road by which this lady travelled between 1578 and
-1584 must have literally overhung a ghastly social
-precipice.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Madame,<a id='r76' /><a href='#f76' class='c013'><sup>[76]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“In accordance with what I promised you and
-have ever since desired, I must—though with regret
-that such matters should be called in question, still
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>without passion and from motives of true sincerity, as
-I call God to witness—declare to you that what the
-Countess of Shrewsbury has said of you to me is as
-nearly as possible as follows. I assure you I treated
-the greater part of her statements, while rebuking the
-said lady for thinking and speaking so licentiously of
-you, as matters in which I had no belief, either then or
-now, knowing the nature of the Countess and the spirit
-which animated her against you.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Premièrement, qu-un, auquel elle disoit que vous
-aviez faict promesse de mariage devant une dame de
-votre chambre, avait couché infinies foys avvesques
-vous, avecque toute la licence et privaulté qui se peut
-user entre mari et femme; mais qu’indubitablement
-vous n’estiez pas comme les aultres femmes, et pour
-ce respect c’estoit follie a tous ceulz qu-affectoient
-vostre mariage avec M. le duc d’Anjou, d’aultant qu’il
-ne se pourrait accomplir, et que vous ne vouldriez
-jamais perdre la liberté de vous fayre fayre l’amour
-et avoir vostre plésir tousjours avecques nouveaulx
-amoureulx, regrettant, ce disoit elle, que vous ne
-vous contentiez de maister Haton et un aultre de ce
-royaulme: mays que, pour l’honneur du pays, il lui
-fashoit le plus que vous aviez non seulement engagé
-vostre honneur avecques un étranger nommé Simier,
-l’alant trouver la nuit dans la chambre d’une dame, que
-la dicte comtesse blamoit fort a ceste occasion là, où
-vous le baisiez et usiez avec lui de diverses privautez
-deshonestes; mays aussi lui revelliez les segrets du
-royaulme, trahisant vos propres conseillers avex luy.
-Que vous vous esties desportée de la mesme dissolution
-avvec le Duc son maystre, qui vous avoit esté trouver
-une nuit à la porte de vostre chambre, où vous l’aviez
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>rencontré avvec vostre seulle chemise et manteau de
-nuit, et que par après vous l’aviez laissé entrer, et qu’il
-demeura avecques vous près de troys heures.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“As for the aforenamed Hatton [it was said] that you
-literally pursued him, displaying your love for him so
-publicly that he was obliged to withdraw, that you gave
-Killigrew<a id='r77' /><a href='#f77' class='c013'><sup>[77]</sup></a> a box on the ear because he did not bring
-back Hatton when sent in pursuit, the latter having left
-your presence in anger because of insulting remarks
-you had made about some gold buttons on his coat.
-[The Countess said] that she had worked to achieve the
-marriage of the said Hatton with the late Countess of
-Lennox, her daughter, but that he would not listen to
-the proposal for fear of you. Again, that even the
-Earl of Oxford durst not live with his wife lest he
-should lose the advantages which he hoped to receive
-for making love to you, that you were lavish towards
-all such persons and to all who were engaged in similar
-intrigues; for example, that you gave a person of the
-Bedchamber, named George, a pension of £300 for
-bringing you the news of the return of Hatton; that
-towards all other persons you were very thankless and
-stingy, and that there were but three or four in your
-kingdom whom you had ever benefited. The Countess,
-in fits of laughter, advised me to place my son among
-the ranks of your lovers as a thing which would do
-me good service and would entirely disable the Duke,
-whose affair, if allowed to continue, would be very
-prejudicial to me. And when I replied that such an
-act would be interpreted as sheer mockery, she answered
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>that you were so vain, and had such a good opinion
-of your beauty—as if you were a sort of goddess from
-heaven—that she wagered she could easily make you
-take the matter seriously and would put my son in the
-way of carrying it through.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“[She said] that you were so fond of exaggerated
-adulation, such as the assurance that no one dared to
-look full into your face, since it shone like the sun,
-that she and other ladies at Court were obliged to
-employ similar forms of flattery; that on her last
-appearance before you she and the late Countess of
-Lennox scarcely ventured to interchange glances for
-fear of bursting into laughter over the way in which
-they were openly mocking you. She begged me on
-her return to scold her daughter because she could not
-persuade her to do likewise; and as for your daughter
-Talbot she was assured that she would never fail to
-sneer at you. The said Lady Talbot, immediately upon
-her return, after she had made her obeisance to you and
-taken the oath as one of your servants, related it to me
-as a mere empty pretence, and begged me to receive a
-similar act of homage, one which she felt, however, more
-deeply and rendered absolutely to me. This for a long
-time I refused, but in the end, disarmed by her tears,
-I let her yield it to me, she declaring that she would
-not for worlds be in personal attendance upon you, for
-fear lest if you were angry you would treat her as you
-did her Cousin Skedmur (whose finger you broke, pretending
-to those at Court that it was caused by the fall
-of a chandelier), or as you did another, who while waiting
-on you at table received a great cut on the hand
-from a knife from you. In a word, from these latter
-details and the rumours of common gossip you can see
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>that you are made game of and mimicked by your
-ladies as if they were at a play, and even by my women
-also, though, when I perceived it, I swear to you that I
-forbade my women to have anything to do with the
-matter.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“In addition the said Countess once informed me that
-you wanted to induce Rolson<a id='r78' /><a href='#f78' class='c013'><sup>[78]</sup></a> to make love to me and
-attempt to dishonour me, either literally or by scandalous
-rumours, and that he had instructions to this effect from
-your own lips; that Ruxby came here about eight years
-ago to make an attempt on my life after being received
-by you personally, and that you told him to do all that
-Walsingham should command and direct.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“That when the Countess was promoting the marriage
-of her son Charles with one of Lord Paget’s nieces,
-while you on the other hand wanted to secure her by the
-exercise of your unlimited and absolute prerogative for
-a member of the Knollys family, she had raised an
-outcry against you and declared it was pure tyranny that
-you should want to carry off all the heiresses of the
-country according to your own fancy, and that you had
-disgracefully abused the said Paget, but that in the end
-the nobility of the kingdom would not stand it, even
-if you appealed to other than those whom she knew
-well.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Il y a environ quatre ou sinq ans que, vous estant
-malade et moy aussy au mesme temps, elle me dit que
-vostre mal provenoit de la closture une fistulle que
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>vous aviez dans une jambe: et que son doubte, venant
-à perdre vos moys, vous mourriez bientost.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“In this she rejoiced on the strength of a vain notion
-she has long cherished, based on the predictions of one
-named John Lenton, and upon an old book which foretold
-your death by violence and the accession of another
-queen, whom she interpreted to be me. She merely
-regretted that according to this book it was predicted
-that the queen who was to succeed you would only
-reign three years and would die, like you, a violent
-death. All this was actually represented in a picture
-in the book, the contents of the last page of which she
-would never disclose to me.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“She knows that I always looked upon all this as
-pure nonsense, but she did her utmost to ingratiate herself
-with me and even to ensure the marriage of my son
-with my niece Arbella.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“In conclusion I once more swear to you on my
-faith and honour that all this is perfectly true, and that
-where your honour is concerned it was never my intention
-to wrong you by revealing it, and that it should
-never be known through me, who hold it all to be very
-false. If I may have an hour’s speech with you I will
-give more particulars of the names, times, places, and
-other circumstances to prove to you the truth of this
-and other things, which I reserve until fully assured
-of your friendship. This I desire more than ever.
-Further, if I can this time secure it you will find no
-relative, friend, nor even subject more loyal and
-affectionate than myself. For God’s sake, believe the
-assurance of one who will and can serve you.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“From my bed, forcing my arm and my sufferings to
-satisfy and obey you.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>Marie R.</span>”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>This letter, of course, is concentrated venom. Mary
-could embroider with her pen as well as with her clever
-needle. She could entwine and order her imaginings
-with magnificent effect. She had heaps of fantasy and
-romance and could employ them more than puckishly.
-The document is a <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tour de force</span></i> of craft and power. Its
-double aim is unerring. With this one poisoned shaft
-the writer seeks to destroy the security of the two
-Elizabeths—so similar in their autocratic natures, their
-vitality and joy in intrigue. A fiendish delight lurks
-behind every suggestion aimed at the person and
-amours of Elizabeth. Even these, taking into account
-the ghastly suspense of her imprisonment and the
-wreckage of her mental balance, might be forgiven to
-Mary. But the statement suggesting Elizabeth’s betrayal
-of her State secrets to a mere envoy like the Frenchman
-Simier, while admitting him to the grossest intimacy,
-is too wickedly sane in its vindictiveness to be forgivable.
-In her most impulsive, most overwrought
-moments Lady Shrewsbury would never have dared to
-suggest a thing so base or so impossible. The letter
-condemns itself throughout, and undermines the truth
-of many of the previous wild complaints by Mary of the
-Countess’s words and deeds. Naturally, every breath
-of scandal attaching to the Queen’s intercourse with the
-innumerable persons of the opposite sex with whom
-her position brought her into contact was treasured and
-retailed in all directions, and exaggerated versions of
-every incident would, of course, be transmitted to Mary.
-To achieve such a letter she had only to collect the titbits,
-put them into the mouth of one she hated, profess
-to expose all the rottenness of Elizabeth’s so-called
-friends, and serve up the whole gallimaufry with a crowning
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span><i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bonne bouche</span></i> in the assertion of her own innocence,
-truth, and loyalty. The Arch-Tempter guided her pen
-in this hour, and that last plea of weakness and despair,
-“de mon lit, forçant mon bras et mes douleurs pour
-vous satis fayre et obéir,” is scarcely convincing. The
-devil was assuredly in it, and she must have saved up all
-her energy for such a production. Don Bernardino de
-Mendoza, when alluding in a letter of 1585 to the
-release of Shrewsbury from his task and his retirement
-to his estates, declared that he thanked the Queen for
-delivering him from two devils, the Scottish Queen
-and his wife:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span lang="es" xml:lang="es">El conde de Shreubury ha partido para ir en Darbissier
-siendo lugartheniente de dos condados de Darbi
-y Stafford. Besso los manos a la Regna de Inglaterra,
-diziendole, hazello por havelle librado de dos diablos,
-que heran la Regna de Scozia y su muger.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This is probably a partial exaggeration. Of course
-Elizabeth could not free him from his wife. It was her
-pleasurable business to bring them together again. A
-lengthy matter and badly begun!</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>CHAPTER XIX<br /> <span class='small'>HAMMER AND TONGS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c005'>There is no other title possible for the condition
-of things with which this chapter deals. That
-public vindication of the Earl, it will be remembered,
-was in 1584, coupled with his wife’s formal disclaimer
-of the scandal circulated about him. Still there is nothing
-to heal the estrangement, and the Earl, hearing
-disturbing reports, writes to Lord Burghley from his
-country seclusion in the autumn of the following year,
-1585:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“My noble good Lord,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Since my coming into the country, my wife and
-her children have not ceased to inform her Majesty,
-most slanderously of me, that I have broken her Highness’s
-order; and at length they have obtained her
-gracious letters, and Mr. Secretary’s to me, the which I
-have answered, and sent up my servant Christopher
-Copley with them; praying your Lordship that he may,
-with your favour, attend on you, and acquaint you
-thoroughly from time to time with my causes, and that
-it would please you to further him with your advice and
-continuance of your good favour. My Lord, she makes
-all means she can to be with me, and her children have
-her living, whereunto I will never agree, for if I have
-the one, I will have the other, which was thought reasonable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>by the Lord Chancellor, and the Lord of Leicester;
-but by her letters she desires to come to me herself,
-but speaks no word of her living.<a id='r79' /><a href='#f79' class='c013'><sup>[79]</sup></a> I have been much
-troubled with her, and almost never quiet to satisfy her
-greedy appetite for money, to pay for her purchases to
-set up her children; besides the danger I have lived in,
-to be compassed daily with those that most maliciously
-hated me, that if I were out of the way, presently they
-might be in my place. It were better we lived as we
-do, for in truth, I cannot away with her children, but
-have them in jealousy; for till Francis Talbot’s death,
-she and her children sought my favour, but since those
-times they have sought for themselves and never for
-me. Thus, with my hearty commendations, I commit
-your good Lordship to the tuition of the Almighty.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Sheffield, this twenty-third of October, 1585.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your Lordship’s most faithful friend,</div>
- <div class='line in16'>“<span class='sc'>G. Shrewsbury</span>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“My noble good Lord,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Finding you so honest and constant a friend to
-me, I have been willing, and yet doubtful to trouble
-you with my gouty fist, unless I had matters of some
-importance, knowing your Lordship so troubled with
-her Majesty’s affairs; but now, perceiving what untrue
-surmises have and are daily invented by my wife and
-her children of me, and I think will be during their
-lives, I am therefore to request your Lordship thus
-much; if they shall exclaim of me from time to time
-without cause as they do, considering how manifestly
-they have disproved in all their accounts, that they may
-make trial of their complaints against me before they are
-heard; and so shall her Majesty and her Council be less
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>troubled with these untrue surmises, and by the Grace
-of God, my doings and dealings have and shall be such
-as I wish, my wife and her imps, who I know to be
-mortal enemies, might daily see into my doings which I
-took for no less but they will do their best. So, wishing
-your Lordship health as my own, I take my leave.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Sheffield, this ninth of November, 1585.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Your Lordship’s most faithful ever assured friend,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>G. Shrewsbury</span>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>The word “imp” in Elizabethan times really only
-implied “offshoot” and “offspring” and was used also
-in an agricultural sense. But the application of it here
-is maliciously grotesque to the modern sense. The
-word strikes one oddly also in the epitaph of the son of
-Leicester, the baby Lord Denbigh, described on his
-tomb as “this noble imp.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>On November 9th from Sheffield Castle Shrewsbury
-reopens his formal campaign, and the real tussle in
-London begins. Lord Leicester, his good friend, is no
-longer on the spot, owing to his absence in the Netherlands.
-In the long letter to this Lord, quoted hereafter,
-though belonging to a date slightly previous, it will be
-seen that mention is made of the Queen’s preliminary
-arbitration in the quarrel. The main points showing
-the fluctuations of this strife are set forth in the State
-documents, and the whole of Vol. CCVII is devoted to
-them, showing that the years 1586–7 are given up to a
-regular formal ballyragging on both sides. On the
-31st of January, 1586, the Earl is found appealing to
-Walsingham, requiring that his wife should be ordered
-to make public retractation of her slanderous speeches
-about him. (This evidently refers to fresh backbiting,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>for as regards the great scandal already named matters
-had been thrashed out long since.) He adds that he
-must bend his mind to trouble though his years do
-otherwise move him; meanwhile he has brought a suit
-against Charles Cavendish and Henry Beresford, accusing
-them of the same slander. The Queen intervenes
-and requests him to stay the suits. Shrewsbury, however,
-persists on the score of the statute “De scandalis
-magnatum.”<a id='r80' /><a href='#f80' class='c013'><sup>[80]</sup></a> The Cavendishes on their side pleaded
-for the abandonment of the two suits just named and for
-the impartial examination of witnesses. Evidence is
-next included by Shrewsbury’s servants of the prejudicial
-statements of Beresford, while the Cavendishes employed
-a servant of the Countess to attest the great partiality
-with which the examination of Beresford was conducted,
-to the disadvantage of the Countess’ case. Upon this the
-Queen sent to Sir Charles Cavendish for details of the
-exact state of affairs between his mother and stepfather.
-These he submitted to Walsingham in March. On
-May the 12th the Queen wrote to the Earl expressing
-her earnest desire that all controversies between him and
-his lady and her younger sons should cease, and by her
-mediation be brought to some good end and accord.
-She reminded him that his years required repose,
-especially of the mind, and stated that she enclosed an
-order for the settlement of the dispute, the result of
-her conference with the Lord Chancellor, the Earl
-of Leicester, and the Treasurer and Chief Secretary of
-State.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Lady Shrewsbury meanwhile objected strongly to all
-the Earl’s proceedings, accused him of displacing certain
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>of her tenants, and assured the Queen that he
-refused to restrain the slander suits. This is a fragment
-of her many complaints, and is endorsed:—</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>“Objections used by the Countess to the Earl of Shrewsbury’s answers, who has not obeyed the Queen’s last letter.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“To all these answers drawn by my Lord’s learned
-counsel, as may appear, who never want words to answer
-whatsoever:—</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I allege that for her Majesty’s order I must appeal
-to her own gracious remembrance, which particularly
-was expressed by her last letter to my Lord, though not
-obeyed. And (I) do avow on my whole credit with her
-Majesty for ever that the things he hath entered to is
-worth nine hundred pounds a year, and that he hath
-repaid but eight and fifty pound of near two thousand
-pounds, which in that (case?) would have been to my
-sons and me. That he displaceth sundry tenants, and as
-myself allegeth meaneth to continue the suits.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“In all these things I most humbly beseech speedy
-redress if they be true, and discredit and her Majesty’s
-disfavour if they be found untrue.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“May, 1586.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On June 15th Shrewsbury, writing to Walsingham,
-begged him to favour his suit against the Countess, and
-asked that the Queen should banish her from Court,
-adding that he was ashamed to think of his choice of
-such a creature, and piteously entreated Walsingham to
-persuade his son Gilbert Talbot to leave “that wicked
-woman’s company.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The action went through against Beresford, for the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>next item in the State record is a note upon the York
-Assizes in June. At the same time the Countess petitioned
-the Council denying the charges of the Earl
-that she had ever maintained her servant Beresford
-against him. Next follows an important note by Charles
-Cavendish on the force and effect of the Queen’s order
-which was intended to produce a united reconciliation
-and cohabitation.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The Earl was by this time slowly coming to terms,
-but he required that Henry Cavendish should be reinstated
-in Chatsworth and assured of certain lands,
-while his debts, it was stipulated, were to be paid by
-the Countess. The Countess and her two sons, on the
-other hand, stated that they had been much out of
-pocket for three years by the Earl’s aggressive proceedings,
-and begged for redress.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Into this hotchpotch are flung notes of the yearly
-allowances which the Earl gave his Countess when they
-were together, of the amount of rent paid by certain
-tenants, and all other disputes about the jointures of
-the Countess, leases, houses, lands, and other property
-settled upon various members of the family by father
-and mother. Not a single scrap of personal or real
-estate seems to have been forgotten. The unhappy couple
-tussled especially hard over their plate. In the Hatfield
-MSS. catalogue the inquisitive will find a full list of the
-articles. They include “a podinger” (of which the dish
-seems to be in my Lady’s hands, while her Lord retains
-the lid), a “great silver salt having many little ones
-within it to be drawn out,” one “George,” enamelled
-white and set with diamonds, costing £38, “a cup of
-assay,” gilt “talbots,” ewers, plates, standing-pots, bowls,
-candlesticks, trenchers, “parcel gilt and double gilt.”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>Then there was the same pull-devil pull-baker business
-over household linen, mattresses, and hangings—those
-hangings which were always such a cause of bother to
-the couple all through their fifteen years of menage in
-connection with their troublesome prisoner-guest. The
-demands of the Earl on his part infuriate his wife, and
-there is a scornful and sarcastic entry in the Hatfield
-MSS., endorsed by Burghley, to the effect that “the
-parcels above demanded by the Earl are things of small
-value and mere trifles for so great and rich a nobleman
-to bestow on his wife in nineteen years.” The Countess
-then reminds him of her share in the way of gifts:
-“the Earl hath received of her at several times, pots,
-flagons, dishes, porringers, warming-pans, boiling-pot,
-a charger or voider of silver, with many other things
-she now remembereth not. Besides, better than £1000
-of linen consumed by him, being carried to sundry of
-his houses to serve his Lordship’s turn. And with his
-often being at Chatsworth with his charge and most of
-his stuff there spoiled.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>In addition, she quotes an annual contribution of 30
-to 40 mattresses, 20 quilts, etc. etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>All these absurd and pitiful obstacles made the Queen’s
-order for cohabitation very distasteful, and in July the
-Earl lashed out in an important and emphatic letter to
-Court. His wife had of her own will left him, and he
-did not see why he should receive her under his roof
-now simply because she offered to come. “It appeareth,”
-goes on the statement, “by her words and deeds she
-doth deadly hate him, and hath called him knave, fool,
-and beast to his face, and hath mocked and mowed
-at him.” Here follow two letters from the contending
-parties. Her Ladyship had written to my Lord on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>August 4th, 1586, to which he sends the long reply
-quoted. She again writes on August 11th.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Earl of Shrewsbury to his Countess.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Wife, in the three first lines of your last letter dated
-Thursday, 4 August, 1586, you hold yourself importunate
-for demanding my plate and other things, part
-whereof, in the same letter you confess, which at your
-being with me you desired to have, and the residue of
-the plate and hangings you pass over in silence, for
-which I take light occasion to be displeased with you by
-writing (as you say) and demand this question of me—What
-new offence is committed since her Majesty
-reconciled us? To the first part of your letter I answer
-that there is no creature more happy and more fortunate
-than you have been for when you were defamed and to
-the world a byword, when you were St. Loo’s widow, I
-covered those imperfections (by my intermarriage) with
-you and brought you to all the honour you have, and to
-the most of that wealth you now enjoy. Therefore,
-you have cause to think yourself happier than others,
-for I know not what she is within this realm that may
-compare with you either in living or goods; and yet
-you cannot be contented. The reconciliation that her
-Majesty moved betwixt us was—that I should take a
-probation of your good behaviour toward me for a
-year, and send you to Wingfield upon my charges, to
-which I yielded (being much pressed by her Highness)
-with these conditions: that I should not bed nor board
-with you; those servants that were now about you, I
-would put from you and put others to you; your
-children, nor Gilbert Talbot, nor his wife should come
-at you whilst you were with me; your living I would
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>have, and my goods (which you and William Cavendish
-had taken) I would have restored. Yet you still
-pressed her Majesty further, that you might come to
-me at my house to Chelsea, which I granted, and at your
-coming I told you that you were welcome upon the
-Queen’s commandment, but though you were cleared in
-her Majesty’s sight for all offences, yet I had not cleared
-you, nor could trust you till you did confess that
-you had offended me. Nor can I be contented to
-accept of you, if you do not this in writing and upon
-your knees and before such as her Majesty shall
-appoint. It was promised that I should find you
-obedient unto me in all points. I thought it unfit
-that there should be suits betwixt your children and
-me, if I should accept of you, which made me to try
-you, and demand my plate of you, etc. What greater
-disobedience could you shew unto me than deny me
-that which is my own? You will hardly suffer me
-to be master of any of yours, when you cannot be
-pleased to restore me mine own. Is it fit that you
-should gage my plate and mine arms upon it? Can
-you do me greater dishonour? You say that, if your
-estate were able, you would not stand with me upon
-such toys. You never esteemed how largely you
-cut quarters out of my cloth; but you have carried
-always this mind towards me, that, if you once got
-anything of me, you cannot be contented to restore
-it again. As (if you remember) you borrowed £1000
-of me, etc., and gave me your bill for it; I was not
-ignorant that I could not recover any money by it,
-but it is a witness that you had the money and yet
-you never paid it me again. As touching her
-Majesty’s order for your living, she pronounced the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>same at Greenwich, and ordered me £500 a year
-and divers other things which they thought fit, and
-we assented to be set down in the draft of the books,
-as may appear. And as touching this, that if I did
-at any time receive you and cohabit with you, the
-Lords thought it reasonable—and you assented to it—that
-I should have your living during the time
-of our cohabitation, and hereupon I refer myself to
-their opinions. Marry, this difference there was,
-that if you disliked to cohabit and dwell with me,
-then your sons to have your living, upon a signification
-to be made, the form whereof could not be
-agreed upon, as may appear. Your children’s names
-were used only for this cause, because you were not
-capable yourself, but they were thought meetest to
-deal for you, till I liked to take you to me. And
-I think their commission extended to it, or else you
-would not have laboured their great pains which they
-took in it, and they would have been glad then that
-I should have taken you and your living also, which
-your children desired not, if I could have agreed to
-it. I am sorry to spend all these words with you,
-but assure yourself this shall be the last time that
-I will write much to you in the matter or trouble
-myself; and likewise, if you intend to come to me,
-advise yourself in these points before remembered,
-that I will have you to confess that you have offended
-me, and are heartily sorry for it, in writing, and upon
-your knees (without either if or and). Your living
-you shall bring with you to maintain you with, and
-to pay such debts as is expressed in the consideration
-of the deed. For neither by the said deed, nor yet
-by her Majesty’s order, it was meant that your sons
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>should have your living, which appertaineth to me,
-being my enemies, and have sought my defamation
-and destruction of my house, and I to have you without
-that which the laws giveth me. My goods you
-shall restore me before we come together. And, if
-you cannot be content to do this I protest before God,
-I will never have you come upon me, whatever shall
-[happen]. I could allege many causes why you have thus
-disobediently behaved yourself against me. One chief
-cause was when I had made you my sole executrix
-you persuaded me to make a lease in trust to two
-of your friends for threescore years, minding thereby
-to have the benefit thereof by the executorship. You
-caused me in my extremity of sickness to pass my
-lands by deed enrolled—to your friends—in bargain
-and sale, and the indenture which did lease the houses
-was not enrolled, so that if I had then died, the same
-might have been embezzled, and so my posterity for
-that land in the case of St. Loo. But, when I perceived
-in what danger I stood, I put you out of my
-will, and have since started to remedy those my great
-imperfections that I was not able to benefit my children
-nor recompense my servants. At length it came to
-your ear, though there were not many that knew it,
-and then you began to play your part, and hath used
-me ever since in such despiteful sort as I was not able
-to bear or abide it: and this is one of the causes that
-you deal with me in this wise as you do, and not such
-causes as you allege to her Majesty of my dislike of
-you. All offences done by you are esteemed nothing
-as was the offence of Henry Beresford, that was found
-guilty of such slanderous speeches that he had spoken
-of me, that, if they had been true, as they be most
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>false, had overthrown me and my house. Also, in
-regard to your confederacy with him and his son, I
-cannot but remember that the young fellow should
-swear he never spoke any such speeches by me as
-was laid in my action which, till it was discovered,
-moved great favour towards Beresford, and had like
-both to have abused both her Majesty and Mr.
-Secretary, and clearly to have dishonoured me (as
-Mr. Secretary informed me). This I take to be a
-grievous offence done unto me. I thought good not
-to omit this, but to put you in remembrance thereof,
-what great favour you have showed him, and was
-very unfit to have been supported by you, when the
-case did touch me so near, which I look for at your
-hands that you will confess.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“And thus I end.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“From Chelsea the 5th of August, 1586.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><em>Endorsed</em>: “The copy of my Lord’s letter to the
-Countess his wife, V. August, 1586.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>The Countess of Shrewsbury to the Earl.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My Lord, I hold myself most unfortunate that
-upon so slight occasion it pleaseth you to write
-in this form to me: for what new offence is committed
-since her Majesty reconciled us? If the denial
-of the plate be the only cause, why then, my Lord,
-the true affirmation thereof in my letter is more
-than my words, neither such a trifle I hoped could
-have wrought so unkind effects; and were my state
-able I would not stand upon such toys as those you
-speak of. Touching my son’s living, that is no new
-cause, for it was long ago moved by you, and could
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>never be consented to by us, in respect of the reasons in
-my last letter alleged.... My Lord, I know not how
-justly you can term me insatiable in my desire of gaining,
-for my losses have been so great, with my charges,
-that makes me desire honestly to discharge my debt
-with my children’s lands, which you have no need of, and
-will not in my time discharge them though we should
-live on nothing; and I am greedy of nobody’s lands,
-but would keep the rest, which by all law, order, and
-conscience they ought to possess. Neither my case and
-fortune hath been to maintain my miseries with untruths,
-for receiving daily manifest discourtesies I need
-not blush to speak truly.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I assure you, my Lord, my meaning is not to
-molest or grieve you with demanding, neither I trust
-it can be thought greediness to demand nothing, for
-I desire no more than her Majesty’s order giveth, and
-wish your happy days to be many and good....</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Touching the postscript, my desire hath been so
-great to be with you and save your long delays, that
-made me be an humble suitor to her Majesty to be
-earnest with you, but not as you write.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“For the other that I labour your stay, I assure you,
-my Lord, I did not, but yet would be very glad that all
-were perfected here and then to go down with you, and
-hoped also ere this we should have been on our way into
-the country.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“So, beseeching Almighty God to make you better
-conceive of me, I end, wishing myself, without offence,
-with you,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your obedient faithful wife,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>“<span class='sc'>Elizabeth Shrewsbury</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Richmond, this Thursday.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>Like a pedal note through the long jangle runs the
-Queen’s order, upon which Sir Charles Cavendish comments
-more than once. The main part of it, of course,
-deals with the disposal of property, the outcome of the
-affair being that the couple should travel down to
-the country together, and the lands belonging to the
-Cavendishes revert to them. A footnote to one copy
-of the order says that the meaning of this is not to
-take away anything in the way of concessions already
-arranged, but only “to better the Countess’s part.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Elizabeth was accused of partiality by the Earl. Her
-own attitude towards him had been rather like that
-of some of his children, for she had always made use
-of his possessions to suit her own purpose without any
-intention of repayment. It is possible that from the
-innate stinginess of her disposition she may have resented
-the fashion in which he coupled accusations
-against his wife’s rapacity with his sore, justifiable complaint
-that Mary’s imprisonment had impoverished him.
-In a letter to Lord Leicester he can no longer control
-his feelings against the Queen. Though written in
-1585, it is quoted here as being pertinent.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Bitter and rambling, it is in reply to one from
-Leicester, which shows plainly that the Queen, as arbitrator,
-has thrown her weight into the balance with the
-Countess. The document is quoted by Lodge from
-a rough copy endorsed “The Earl of Shrewsbury’s
-answer to the Earl of Leicester’s letter&nbsp;... ultimo
-Aprilis, 1585,” and is therefore unsigned.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“My good Lord,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Since her Majesty hath declared her mind in
-the matter betwixt me and my wife, and doubts not but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>in every respect I will observe it as her Highness hath
-set it down and that the Lord Chancellor should take
-order with me for the accomplishment thereof, well
-weighing her Majesty’s hard censure of me and my
-causes; since my coming to Chelsea, I have not been
-well, nor able to return my answer by your Lordship’s
-servant so speedily as I would, but have now thought
-good to send this bearer, my servant, Christopher
-Copley, unto your Lordship with this answer; that as
-her Majesty doth demand and look for at my hands
-faith and due obedience, as is the duty of every good
-subject to spend lands and life in the defence of her
-Majesty’s person and realm, which I and my ancestors
-have done and am ready at her Majesty’s commandment,
-so, for the maintenance of my honour and
-credit, do I claim and demand of her Majesty justice
-and benefit of her Majesty’s laws, never denied by her
-Majesty nor by any of her noble progenitors, to any of
-the meanest of her subjects before this; yet not doubting
-but that her Majesty will have better consideration
-of me and my cause when she hath thoroughly weighed
-of it; and that if she (for all my careful and faithful
-service, to my great charges above my allowance in the
-keeping of that Lady for sixteen years last past: with
-the extraordinary charges and expense of her Majesty’s
-commissioners sent down, as of Sir Walter Mildmay,
-Mr. Beale, and Sir Ralph Sadler, and others, their
-horse and men, for so long time as they continued with
-me), will bestow nothing on me yet I even thought she
-would have left me with what her Majesty’s laws had
-given me. Since that her Majesty hath set down this
-hard sentence against me, to my perpetual infamy and
-dishonour, to be ruled and overrun by my wife, so bad
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>and wicked a woman, yet her Majesty shall see that I
-will obey her commandment, though no curse or plague
-in the earth could be more grievous to me. These
-offers of my wife’s enclosed in your letters I think
-them very unfit to be offered to me. It is too much to
-make me my wife’s prisoner, and set me down the
-demesnes of Chatsworth, without the house and other
-lands leased, which is but a pension in money. I think
-it stands with reason that I should choose the £500 by
-year ordered by her Majesty where I like best, according
-to the rate William Cavendish delivered to my
-Lord Chancellor; or else I shall think myself doubly
-wronged, which I am sure her Majesty will not offer
-unto me. And thus I commit your Lordship to the
-tuition of the Almighty.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The last sentence is entirely ironical after the preceding
-outburst. Leicester was not the man to take
-spiritual counsel or to bestir himself to his own disadvantage.
-He was essentially a “trimmer,” and the
-guardianship of the Almighty was only a matter of
-speech for him. He seems to have remained fairly
-neutral after this, to judge from what Henry Talbot
-writes from London on the 6th of August to his
-father:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“All your Lordship’s affairs here are well; and your
-wife doth exclaim against my Lord Leicester, because,
-as she saith, he hath not been so good as his promise.
-Her Majesty, praise to God, is well, and marvelleth
-she can hear nothing from your Lordship, and she
-useth the best speeches that may be of your Lordship.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To this letter there is a delightful postscript giving a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>suggestive and greedy message from one of Shrewsbury’s
-friends:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My Lord Mayor hath his humble duty remembered
-unto your Lordship, and says he hopes your Lordship’s
-bucks are fat this summer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>So did all the world sponge upon the once wealthy
-George Talbot.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Another letter from Henry Talbot is a sort of amplification
-of the attitudes of his Queen and wife, and
-though he could not but be flattered by that of the
-first there was everything to torture him acutely in her
-professions after the treatment he had received:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“May it please your Honour to be advertised that
-I came from Court upon the 20th of this present where
-I left all things very well, and her Majesty saith she
-doth marvel greatly that she hath received but one letter
-from your Lordship since your going down. Moreover
-she herself told me that she marvelled she heard
-no oftener from you, whom it pleased to term her love,
-declaring further what care she had of your health, and
-what a trouble your sickness was unto her; whereunto
-I answered that your Lordship’s chiefest comfort, and
-speedy recovery of your health, proceeded from her
-Majesty’s so gracious favour and countenance bestowed
-upon you; whereat her Majesty smiled, saying, “Talbot,
-I have not yet shewed unto him that favour which
-hereafter we mean to do.””</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Words, words! This was the coin in which Elizabeth
-paid the faithful among her subjects, her kinsmen
-included. But to resume the letter: “As touching
-your wife’s causes, she lieth still in Chancery Lane, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>doth give out that she meaneth to continue there and
-not to go into the country. My Lord, my brother’s wife,
-and her brother, the Knight”—meaning Sir Charles
-Cavendish—“do attend very diligently at Court, and
-little respect there is had of them; nevertheless they
-cease not to follow, to the end the world may say they
-are in credit.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The nearest approach to a final and reasonable settlement
-was suggested by the Earl’s proposal to settle
-£1500 a year on his wife, with Chatsworth House and
-other lands, under certain conditions, a document which
-raised a good deal of discussion on both sides. Out of
-this cauldron of anger, misery, and sordidness emerged
-at last once more the royal order, final and distinct:
-The Earl was to receive his wife, and take probation
-of her obedience for one year, and if she proved forgetful
-of her duty was to place her in her house at
-Chatsworth. Rents and assurance of lands were also
-clearly set forth, and it was ordained that all actions for
-plate, jewels, and hangings were to be stayed.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The Countess had the last word on this, for her
-practical instinct prompted her instantly to request that
-her Majesty should appoint someone to be an eye-witness
-“in house” with the Earl and herself. Further,
-she begged that she might not, failing their final agreement,
-be confined to Chatsworth House only, and
-besought her Majesty “to conclude her honourable and
-godly work” as speedily as possible.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Early in August, 1586, the Queen passed this final
-order of reconciliation. Assured of the willingness of
-the couple to cease their strife, she summoned them to
-her presence, and “in many good words showed herself
-very glad thereof, and the Earl and Countess in good
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>sort departed together very comfortably.” Wingfield
-was their destination, and was named in the original
-order drawn up already in March.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c017'>THE QUEEN’S ORDER.</h3>
-
-<p class='c018'>“An order pronounced by her Majesty between the
-Earl of Shrewsbury and the Countess his wife in the
-presence of the Secretary (Walsingham).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“That the said Earl shall give present order for the
-conveying of the said Countess to some one of his principal
-manor houses in Derbyshire, furnished for her to
-remain in, with liberty to go either to Chatsworth or
-Hardwick, and to return to the Earl’s house at her
-pleasure.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“That the said Earl shall allow to the said Countess
-towards the defraying of the charges of household £300
-and fuel until he shall yield to cohabitation, and doth
-also promise in respect of her Majesty’s mediation
-further gratuity of yearly provision for the maintenance
-of her said house.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“That the said Earl shall appoint four or five of his
-own men to attend upon the said Countess and shall
-pay them their wages.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“The said Earl promiseth her Majesty to resort sometimes
-to the house where the said Countess shall lie, as
-also to send for the said Countess upon notice given of
-her desire to some other house where he himself shall
-remain, and in case she shall so behave herself toward
-him as one that by good and dutiful ways [?] will
-do her best endeavour to recover his former good
-opinion and love, then it is to be hoped that continual
-cohabitation will follow, which her Majesty greatly
-desires.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>All this looks highly promising. It arouses glowing
-hopes in the minds of the onlookers that after many
-toils and dangers, social and political, such a man and
-such a woman, born to eminence and possessed of great
-qualities, will enjoy many happy years together, quit of
-their old intolerable burden, the care of “the Daughter
-of Debate.” Such a letter as this from the faithful
-Gilbert Dickenson, which welcomes my Lord home to
-his manor and his acres, telling of the folk who gather
-to greet him, and of the fatted calf in preparation, completes
-the picture:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“May it please your Lo. to understand that divers
-honest men have heard of your Lo. coming home and
-would have come to meet your Lo. but that I have
-stayed them till I hear further of your Lo. pleasure;
-and there is such running from house to house to tell
-that your Lo. did lie at Wingfield all night and everyone
-preparing to meet your L.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Your Lo. should come into the country with such
-love as never did man in England, which is a greater
-comfort to us than any worldly riches, and for sheep,
-oxen, and lambs shall not be wanting nor anything which
-can be got, God willing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Alack for love and hope! Only two months after
-this stately cavalcade of Earl and Lady travelled home,
-the Countess addressed the Treasurer again. She had
-sore complaints to make of her husband.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“My singular good Lord,” she wrote, “I most
-humbly and heartily thank your Lo. for your letter
-sent by my son William Cavendish. It is my greatest
-comfort that it pleaseth your Lo. to have care of me,
-else grief and displeasure would have ended my days.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>Since my coming into the country my Lo. my husband
-hath come to his home Wingfield, where I most remain,
-not past three times; more I have not seen him; he
-stayed not over a day at a time at his being here.... Since
-my coming down, he hath allowed me gross provisions
-as beef, mutton, and corn to serve my house, but now
-not long since he hath sent me word that he will not
-allow me any further and doth withdraw all his provision,
-not suffering me to have sufficient fire.”<a id='r81' /><a href='#f81' class='c013'><sup>[81]</sup></a> She goes on
-to say that if all were as her Majesty desired and
-assured her, namely, that she might be always with her
-husband, she would not need such allowances of provision,
-etc. etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>This attitude of the Earl strikes one as a little petty
-at this juncture. He had, after all, large estates and
-many houses, and there was no need to starve his lady
-out of Wingfield, even if their characters and moods
-were finally and utterly incompatible.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>All through these years 1586–7 he was still worried
-by Gilbert’s affairs. The letters which follow explain
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>The first is a denunciation of Gilbert’s extravagant
-wife:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Son Gilbert,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I thank you for your pains taken in certifying
-me of those your sundry news, being the very same in
-effect that I heard of the day before I received your
-letter. For answer thereto, you shall understand my
-meaning towards you is as good as it was at that our
-departure you put me in mind of; but for any help
-about the payment of your debts I do advise you
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>altogether to rely on yourself, and the best discharge
-you shall be able to make thereof, than any ways upon
-me; who, least my silence in that behalf, and at this
-time, might breathe some hope agreeable to your conceived
-opinion, do in sadness, as you did in jest, return
-you a short answer for your long warning; willing you
-either to provide for yourself, as you may, or else be
-disappointed; for during my life, I would not have you
-to expect any more at my hands than I have already
-allowed you, whereof I know you might live well, and
-clear from danger of any, as I did, if you had that
-governance over your wife, as her pomp and court-like
-manner of life were some deal assuaged. And, for
-mine own part, and your good, I do wish you had
-but half so much to relieve your necessities as she and
-her mother have spent in seeking, through malice, mine
-overthrow and dishonour, and I in defending my just
-cause against them: by means of whose evil dealings,
-together with other bargains wherein I have entangled
-myself of late, I am not able either to help you, or
-store myself for any other purpose I shall take in hand
-these twelve months. Thus praying God to bless you,
-I bid you farewell.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Sheffield Lodge, the 17th of June, 1587.</div>
- <div class='line'>“Your loving father,</div>
- <div class='line in12'>“<span class='sc'>G. Shrewsbury</span>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>The next is from the newest mediator between Talbot
-and Cavendish, Sir Henry Lee, a long-winded but
-delightful personage of romantic and fantastic temperament.
-Lodge assures us that he was “bred from
-infancy in Courts and camps,” and that this induced
-him not only to take a leading part in tilts and tournaments,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>but led to his assumption of the “self-created
-title of Champion of the Queen,” and that he made a
-vow to present himself in the tiltyard in that character
-on the 27th of November in every year, till disabled by
-age. This vow he kept, and upon his retirement at the
-age of sixty installed as his successor the Earl of
-Cumberland in the presence of Queen and Court,
-“offering his armour at her Majesty’s feet, and clothing
-himself in a black velvet coat and cap.”</p>
-
-<h3 class='c017'><em>Sir Henry Lee to Lord Talbot.</em></h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Sir,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“On Monday last I received your letter; on
-Thursday I went to Sheffield, my Lord, your father’s,
-where I found him much amended, after his physic, of
-the gout, which took him at Brierly, and troubled him
-until then. My being there made him much better
-disposed, of whom I received many sundry kindnesses
-and more favours than I have or ever may deserve.
-Acknowledgment is small requital, but that I do and
-will, to him, yourself, and yours, in as sundry ways as
-by my wit, will, and fortune I may. Dinner done, and
-all rising saving his Lordship and my poor self, I told
-him I had written to you, according to his liberty given
-me upon such talk as his Lordship had last with me
-at Worksop; that I received an answer which then I
-presented unto him. I left him alone; Mr. Henry
-Talbot, Roger Portington, your very good friend, with
-myself, standing at the window, where I, that knew the
-sundry contents of the letter, might see any alteration
-in himself, as they that stood by imagined by his sighs,
-guessed according to their humours. Your letter perused
-(and well marked, as it did well appear unto me
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>by his speeches immediately after), rising from the
-board, with more colour in his cheeks than ordinary,
-he led me by the hand into his withdrawing chamber,
-where he told me he did well perceive the contents
-of your letter; that you had been long a disobedient
-child to him; that you joined and practiced against
-him, and with such as sought his overthrow, and consequently
-your own undoing, and the espials and parties
-you had in his house did show your care to be more
-for that he had himself; but, withal, he knew you
-had many good parts, but those overruled by others
-that should be better governed by yourself. More
-regard, he says, to your old father, would do well; who
-has been ever loving unto you and must be requited
-with more love and obedience, or else (by his divination)
-your credit will slowly increase. He is glad, as he says,
-that you live in those parts (but he speaks ironia) where
-some good may be learned, but more to be shunned;
-yet all well where grace is, so you are able to go
-through withal; but for the feeding of such vain time
-and superfluous excess as should do best for yourself to
-diminish, he is not able, he says, and I fear will never
-be willing, to maintain. He reckoned how many had
-been in hand with him for the payment of your debts;
-my Lord Treasurer and others. His answer was that,
-through the wilfulness of him, who shunned his advice,
-and the imperfections of others, his undoing should not
-grow, that they themselves might have cause to pity
-him in his age, through his folly and their persuasions.
-There, my Lord, he told that three thousand pounds
-nearly went out of his living to his children, and many
-other sums to small purpose to remember. He confessed
-he sent you such a letter as you write of, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>written by a man of his, but altogether by his direction.
-But he was old, lame of the gout, and now no more able
-to write himself. He spake much of your inconstancy in
-your friendships, and especially to my Lord of Leicester;
-sometimes, as you favoured, there was not such; and
-laboured himself to rely more upon him, altogether
-misliking such humours as favoured and disfavoured in
-such sort, and in so short a time; but, for himself,
-he would fly such variety, and perform his friendship
-and faith. Truly, my Lord, he used many of these
-speeches before I interrupted him, and good reason I
-had to forbear, for he spoke not without grief, as I
-guess, and passion, I am sure; therefore [I] thought best
-to stay until the storm was somewhat overblown. At the
-last I besought him to tell me whether these old grievances
-were not remitted upon conference between yourselves;
-and whether your abode there was not with his
-good allowance, that you should procure yourself to be
-joined with him in his offices; further, that you should,
-by good means, procure some honourable office for
-your better understanding. All this he did not deny,
-but, touching his discourse, I think not fit to set it down,
-my messenger is so uncertain, and my meaning to do
-good, if I may, but no hurt. He is old and unwieldy
-and deceived by such he trusteth, and you shun to
-assist him, and therefore will let out all; but that I
-believe not. I found one thing in your letter: I said
-that I feared, and made me sorry; that your favouring
-so much your own credit, and finding so small means
-to answer your creditors, you might fall into some hard
-course; and, before these words were all out of my
-mouth, he said, ‘Yea, marry, some desperation.’
-Therefore I took hold: ‘Good my Lord, license me
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>to speak with your favour, that speak nothing by
-practice again, but through a dutiful mind to you, now
-in years, and for yours, by course of nature likely to
-succeed you. If he should, as you have termed it, take
-any desperate way, pass into those parts which this
-doubtful time brings, to many dangers, and especially to
-our nation, were not this peril great, and, by presumption,
-not to be recovered? You cannot be ignorant,
-for all your mislike, what a son you have; esteemed
-of the highest, favoured of the best, and the best judgments,
-and how much he differs from other men’s sons
-of your own conditions; so much your love, care, and
-regard should be the more by how much your loss
-were more (to be balanced by reason) than all the rest
-put together. Your country may and will challenge a
-part and party in him, as a wise man, fit and able to
-serve it. You yet find not what a Lord Talbot you
-have; but if he should by any extraordinary accident
-be taken from you, and not to be recovered, yourself,
-with your grief, would accompany your white hair to
-your end with a grave full of cares; and who doth
-sooner enter into desperation than great wits accompanied
-with mighty and honourable hearts, which hardly
-can away with want, but never with discredit?’ This,
-my Lord, sunk somewhat into him. He confessed
-much of this. He mused long, and spake little: he
-stayed, standing long, without complaining of his legs
-(by reason he was earnest) one hour and a half at the
-least before we parted. So, in many doubts, I left him,
-minding to send such letters as you required, to Welbeck
-and thence to be sent to you: wherewith I took
-my leave.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I will never take upon me to advise you. You see
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>now what passed, and upon what grounds; therefore
-resolve, upon temperate blood and good judgment, and
-free advice, for the time present: remembering both love
-and duty, and that you deal with a kind man. I wish
-a sudden journey, at the least to see him; he must
-needs take it well, and I know your age may endure it;
-your friends desire it, and I among the rest (to see you
-ere I go from these parts) that loveth you, whose being
-here with my Lady, would have made this country to
-me far otherwise than it is, and my abode much longer
-than it is like to be. I have troubled you long. The
-news is that my Lady Talbot, the widow, and your
-sister my Lady Mary, with my Lady Manners, as I take
-it came to Sheffield this night past. I think my Lord
-will to Hatfield the next week that cometh, or the week
-following, with such company as he hath, but the
-certainty I know not: but whether he go there, or no,
-I wish you would haste to meet him. My brother,
-Mr. Portington, Mr. Lascelles, with myself, and
-Mr. Fawley, recommendeth our love and service to
-your good Lordship. I beseech you let me be remembered
-humbly unto my Lady, and to good Sir
-Charles Candishe and his family, wishing them both the
-best happiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“From Lettwell, the 13th of August, 1587.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your Lordship’s poor and faithful friend ever,</div>
- <div class='line in28'>“<span class='sc'>Henry Lee</span>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c017'><em>The Earl of Shrewsbury to Sir Henry Lee.</em></h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Good Sir Henry Lee,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I have perused that enclosed letter you sent me
-within yours, and do account you most faithful and
-forward to do good where you profess friendship.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>Neither can the eloquence of the one, nor the earnest
-desire of the other, persuade me to do otherwise in that
-matter than I have already, upon good consideration,
-determined. My son compares my words with his own
-conceits, and means to save his credit as shall content
-me, but when he sealeth I will assure. I proposed to
-leave him in better case than my father left me, and if I
-give him so much as I cannot withhold, I am not in his
-debt. I forgave him all his faults, but I promised him
-not that I would trust him. He can bring the honour
-of his house now to make for his purpose, but he
-remembereth not how he went about to dishonour it.
-He laboured not to make sure my Lord of Leicester of
-their side that went about to accuse his father of treason.
-He did not countenance his wife and her mother against
-me in all their bad actions. His deceits never moved
-me to be displeased. Well, if they did, I pronounce
-forgiveness thereof to his friend, as I have done before
-unto him. He knoweth whereof his grief grew; let
-him henceforth avoid the occasions. He says he is not
-overruled by his wife, but attributes that to my speeches:
-but I say, if he be not he will quickly recover, and live
-better of his annuity than I could do when I bare his
-name, with less allowance. Yet (notwithstanding his
-doubtful words of your welcome hither, in respect you
-have moved me for his good) I beseech you come ten
-times for every one past; assuring you that the most
-eloquent orator in England can do no more with me than
-you have, till I perceive a new course. Thus, with my
-hearty commendations, I bid you farewell.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Sheffield, September 6th, 1587.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your loving friend,</div>
- <div class='line in12'>“<span class='sc'>G. Shrewsbury</span>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>The long letter from Sir Henry Lee gives a pathetic
-and vivid portrait of the old Government official who
-feels himself at last like a worn-out tool, unloved, unnecessary
-to the world—save when his position as a
-premier peer required him to raise levies for the
-defence and contest of Ireland, or county matters called
-him from retirement in his military and judicial capacity.
-To the very end he was a prompt official, and his
-family motto, “Prest d’Accomplir,” his watchword.
-In 1586 he was still among those who receive urgent
-orders to arm and prepare bodies of Derbyshire fighting
-men, and must give his attention to the most absurd
-details of uniform, such as the “convenient hose and
-doublet, and a cassock of motley&nbsp;... either sea-green
-colour or russet,” noted among the regulations issued
-by his fellows of the Privy Council.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>These things are, however, only flashes in the pan.
-He is getting old. All the world was growing old, and
-all his contemporaries, in the phrase of the day, were
-“a little thing sickish.” The intrepid and laborious
-Walsingham is described as being “troubled with his
-old diseases: the tympany and carnosity,” and so is
-absent from Court. Letters still flowed in to the Earl,
-news of the Netherlands campaign, from the now
-depressed Lord Leicester, the Governor, news of the
-Queen’s movements, of Spain, of the legal strife of his
-contemporaries and friends. They are only sticks and
-straws flung into the deep and turgid current of his
-lonely, embittered life.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>It was in the midst of such disputes as these that the
-summons had come to him from Fotheringay.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>CHAPTER XX<br /> <span class='small'>FADING GLORIES</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c005'>His own household and many of his tenants were
-faithful to the Earl Marshal. Fortunately he had
-not at the moment much leisure for private broodings.
-The Babington conspiracy had churned up the old
-alarms about Mary, the Royal Commission for her trial
-was being appointed, and, though he was fortunately
-able to plead illness as an excuse for once more repairing
-to London to take his seat in this important meeting
-of the Council, he was obliged by letter to Burghley to
-assert his willingness to add his name to the decree of
-the Privy Council in regard to Mary’s sentence, at
-the same time enclosing his seal and giving the Lord
-Treasurer full authority to sign for him. Did he at
-the moment of writing recall that broidered motto
-which must have flashed at him many times from the
-dais which his prisoner contrived for herself in her
-imprisonment: “En ma fin est mon commencement”?
-If so, the pride and pathos of it must have struck home
-terribly. For he too was nearing his end. He too had
-naught but sorrow in his heir, and though Gilbert,
-Edward, and Henry Talbot still lived to carry on his
-name, it could not be in a very hopeful spirit that he
-thought upon the continuance of his line so long as
-he apprehended the renewal of family strife and could
-not forgive or love again his high-handed lady.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>Many things had happened to Mary since they parted,
-notably the failure of the last great conspiracy for her
-freedom. Of all these he was fully informed, and sums
-up her affairs in a single phrase in the ensuing letter:—</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>“<em>To the Right Honourable my verie good Lord the Lord Burghley, Lord Thresorer of England.</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“My noble good Lord,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I have received your Lordship’s letters both of
-the 12th November and the 14th of the same, whereby
-I find myself greatly beholden unto your Lordship for
-your good remembrance of me, with the proceeding of
-the foul matters of the Scots Queen; sentence whereof,
-I understand by your Lordship, is given and confirmed,
-and for execution to be had accordingly. I perceive it
-now resteth in her Majesty’s hands; for my own part
-I pray that God may so inspire her heart to take that
-course as may be for her Majesty’s own safety; the
-which I trust her Majesty’s grave wisdom will wisely
-foresee; which in my consent cannot be without speedy
-execution.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“And thus wishing to your good Lordship as to
-myself, do bid you right heartily farewell. Your Lordship’s
-assuredly,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>Shrewsbury</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Orton Longville, this 17th November, 1586.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In spite of illness, Shrewsbury could not escape the
-wretched responsibility of assisting at the tragedy of
-Fotheringay. There he was forced, on February 8th,
-1587, to stand upon the high stage, seven feet square
-and five feet high, to receive Mary as she mounted it to
-her death. “At the two upper corners were two stools
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span>set,” runs the record,<a id='r82' /><a href='#f82' class='c013'><sup>[82]</sup></a> “one for the Earl of Shrewsbury,
-another for the Earl of Kent; directly between the said
-stools was placed a block one foot high, covered with
-black, and before that stood a little cushioned stool for
-the Queen to sit on while her apparel was taken off....
-Being come into the hall, she stayed and with a smiling
-countenance asked Shrewsbury why none of her own
-servants were suffered to be present. He answered that
-the Queen, his mistress, had so commanded. ‘Alas,’
-quoth she, ‘far meaner persons than myself have not
-been denied so small a favour, and I hope the Queen’s
-Majesty will not deal so hardly with me.’ ‘Madam,’
-quoth Shrewsbury, ‘it is so appointed to avoid two
-inconveniences: the one that it is likely your people will
-shriek and make some fearful noise in the time of your
-execution, and so both trouble you and us, or else press
-with some disorder to get of your blood and keep it for
-a relic, and minister offence that way.’ ‘My Lord,’
-she answered, ‘I pray you for my better quietness of
-mind let me have some of my servants about me, and I
-will give you my word that they shall not offend in any
-sort.’ Upon which promise two of her women and five
-of her men were sent for, who coming into the hall and
-seeing the place of execution prepared and their sovereign
-mistress expecting death, they began to cry out in
-most woeful and pitiful sort; wherewith she held up
-her hand, willing them for her sake to forbear and be
-silent, ‘for,’ quoth she, ‘I have passed my word to
-these lords that you shall be quiet and not offend them.’
-And presently there appeared in them a wonderful show
-of subjection and loyal obedience as to their natural
-prince, whom even at the instant of death they honoured
-with all reverence and duty. For though their breasts
-were seen to rise and swell as if their wounded hearts
-would have burst in sunder, yet did they, to their double
-grief, forbear their outward plaints to accomplish her
-pleasure.</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_310fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby</em></span><br /><br />STATUE OF MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS AT HARDWICK HALL<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_310'>310</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span>“As soon as she was upon the stage there came to her
-a heretic called Doctor Fletcher, Dean of Peterborough,
-and told her how the Queen his sovereign, moved with an
-unspeakable care of her soul, had sent him to instruct
-and comfort her in the true words of God. At which
-she somewhat turned her face towards him, saying, ‘Mr.
-Doctor, I will have nothing to do with you nor your
-doctrine’; and forthwith kneeled down before the block
-and began her meditations in most godly manner.
-Then the doctor entered also into a form of new-fashioned
-prayers; but the better to prevent the hearing
-of him, she raised her voice, and prayed so loud, as he
-could not be understood. The Earl of Shrewsbury then
-spoke to her and told her that he would pray with her
-and for her. ‘My Lord,’ quoth she, ‘if you will pray
-for me I thank you; but, in so doing, pray secretly by
-yourself, for we will not pray together.’ Her meditations
-ended, she arose up and kissed her two gentlewomen,
-and bowed her body towards her men, and
-charged them to remember her to her sweet son, to
-whom she sent her blessing, with promise to pray for
-him in heaven; and lastly to salute her friends, and so
-took her last farewell of her poor servants.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“The executioners then began, after their rough and
-rude manner, to disrobe her, and while they were so
-doing, she looked upon the noblemen, and smilingly
-said, ‘Now truly, my Lords, I never had two such
-grooms waiting on me before!’ Then, being ready
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>for the block, one of her women took forth a handkerchief
-of cambric—all wrought over with gold needlework—and
-tied it about her face; which done, Fletcher
-willed her to die in the true faith of Christ. Quoth
-she: ‘I believe firmly to be saved by the passion and
-blood of Jesus Christ, and therein also I believe according
-to the faith of the Ancient Catholic Church of Rome,
-and therefore I shed my blood.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>After this the Earl went home, evidently to Sheffield,
-with time enough to brood once more upon his sickness
-and his troubles. In 1587 he was certainly at Wingfield
-with his wife—at least for a brief space—for he wrote
-to inform Burghley of the fact in obedience to her
-Majesty’s request. But he was still thoroughly suspicious
-and distrustful of her attitude. On one occasion,
-as it seems by the following letter from Nicholas Kynnersley,
-my Lady had just left Wingfield when my Lord
-sent his man Gilbert Dickenson to enquire her movements.
-The letter which puts the magnificent pair in
-such a pitiful light is relieved by a gracious allusion
-to little Arabella, left behind at Wingfield, apparently
-in Kynnersley’s charge:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The night after John was come with my letter
-Elizabeth told me that Gilbert Dickenson came to her
-in the [bakehouse] and asked if your Ho. were here; and
-she answered ‘No.’ And he asked when you went
-away, and she said ‘Yesterday.’ He asked when you
-would come again; she answered ‘Shortly as she
-thought.’ And late at night there came a boy from
-Sheffield in a green coat, and talked with them in the
-stable, and said he must go very early in the morning to
-Sheffield again. What the meaning of these questions
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span>and the lackey coming so late and going so early in the
-morning, I know not, except it be to bring me Lo.
-words of your absence here, and so that he might come
-upon you sudden and find you away. So I leave it to
-your Ho. wisdom to consider of it as you think best;
-but I think good you were there. Mr. Knifton rode
-by to-day to Sheffield as I was told, and called not
-as I&nbsp;... told which I marvel of. My La. Arbella at
-eight of the clock this night was merry, and eats her
-meat well; but she went not to the school these six days;
-therefore I would be glad of your La. coming, if there
-were no other matter but that. So I beseech the
-Almighty preserve your La. in health, and send you
-soon a good and comfortable end of all your great
-troubles and griefs.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Wingfield, this Tuesday, the 5th of November, at
-8 of the clock at night, 1588.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your Ho. most dutyful bound obedient servant,</div>
- <div class='line in24'>“<span class='sc'>Nicholas Kinnslay</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“To the right Ho. my singular good La. and Mistress
-the Countess of Salop give this with speed.”<a id='r83' /><a href='#f83' class='c013'><sup>[83]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>While this “singular good lady” was still busy trying
-to induce the Earl to live with her “in house,” he had
-sundry official business to transact. In 1588 he was
-hard at work “routing recusants,” egging on the
-Sheffield Commissioners appointed to that duty, and
-certifying himself and the Queen of the military
-efficiency of the counties under his lieutenancy—for
-the Spanish fleet hovered ever round the English coast.
-More “seminary priests” did he rout, and used his
-energy in inducing folk to go to the Established Church,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>offering his old “lame body” for the Queen’s service,
-since “her quarrel should make him young again.”
-Within a few months of his death he is mentioned in
-State records as having successfully pounced upon a
-certain papistical Lady Foljambe and committed her to
-polite imprisonment in the house of her relative.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>This next letter from Gilbert and Mary Talbot to
-their mother shows entire devotion to her at this difficult
-period, and is happily free from the old tale-bearing
-and espionage of previous years:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Our bounden duty most humbly remembered. In
-like humbleness we render your La. thanks for your
-letter; the last though not the least of your infinite goodnesses
-towards us and ours. We are safely come hither
-to Dunstable (we thank God) this Shrove Monday at
-night; and for that the foul way is past, we think best
-to return your La. letter again from hence.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Such news as on the Queen’s highways we have
-met with, your La. shall now understand. First that
-her Majesty (royally in person) was at the parliament
-house the first day of this parliament; where Serjeant
-Snagge was admitted for the Speaker of the lower
-house. My Lord of Derby is Lord Steward during
-this session. That yesterday one told a man of mine
-that as yet nothing of any moment hath been touched
-in the lower house, neither any expectation that any
-great matters will be handled, but it will shortly end.
-That a day or two before the parliament began, the
-Lord Chancellor and the Lord Treasurer, with one or
-two more of the privy council, and Mr. Attorney and
-Mr. Solicitor were with the Earl of Arundel in the
-Tower; since which time there hath been no such
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>speech of his arraignment, as there was before. This
-is all the Queen’s highways hath afforded us of news.
-Yet further we hear that all your Ladyship’s&nbsp;...<a id='r84' /><a href='#f84' class='c013'><sup>[84]</sup></a> are
-very well. And thus in haste, most humbly beseeching
-your La. blessing to us and all ours who pray evermore
-to the most highest to grant unto your La. all contentment
-with long life, we humbly cease, till our next letter,
-which shall not be long.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Your La. most humble and obedient loving children,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>“Gilb. Talbott</span>. <span class='sc'>Mary Talbott.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“We have desired your La. letter men to bring a letter
-to your La. from Beskewood, where Mrs. Markham’s
-earnest entreaty made us to leave her till the return
-thereof. I beseech the Almighty to send your La.
-my La. Arball and the rest of your La.’s a most happy
-long life.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“To my Lady.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The date of this is 1589. Shrewsbury by this time
-has lapsed into retirement. He falls finally into old
-age. Elizabeth’s boasting promise that she would give
-him still greater proof of her trust he would be justified
-in receiving with a sardonic grunt. Of what use were
-her favours to him now? She, well into her fifties,
-could dance, sing, ride, pester her ladies, and flirt with
-her gentlemen. “The Queen,” writes a friend of the
-Talbots in 1589, “is so well as I assure you: six or
-seven gallyards in a morning, besides music and
-singing, is her ordinary exercise.” This is just a year
-after the death of her adored Leicester, immediately
-upon his return from his governorship of the Netherlands,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span>which he had so hated. The days of his departure
-for that task were the days of Elizabeth’s disfavour.
-“My Lord,” he wrote pathetically to Shrewsbury in
-1585, “no man feeleth comfort but they that have
-cause of griefe, and no men have so much neede of
-reliefe and comfort as those that go in these doubtful
-services. I pray you, my Lord, help us to be kept in
-comfort, for that we wyll hazard our lyfe for it.”
-Shrewsbury and his Countess could echo that cry
-from the depths of their hearts, for they too were
-of the company of those “that go in&nbsp;... doubtful
-services.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Thus Leicester, the splendid lover, was dead—of a
-fever caught on his way home to Kenilworth. Elizabeth
-still danced, still had zest and appetite for masque and
-ceremonial. But Shrewsbury and Burghley, after they
-had written their stately condolences to the Queen,
-corresponded with one another about health matters.
-In 1589 the former sends a pathetic old man’s gift to
-his friend of ointment for his joints and “a small rug”
-to wrap about his legs “at times convenient,” while a
-flask of fine “oyle of roses” was in these days more
-necessary than ale to the once stalwart Earl Marshal of
-England.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>From time to time Burghley sends to his friend the
-State news, with suppressed allusions here and there to
-his illnesses and sorrows. Lady Burghley was dead,
-and though her husband was able to write in his old
-dignified fashion of affairs at Court, he avoids all its
-recreations. “The Queen is at Barn Elms, but this
-night I will attend her at Westminster, for I am no
-man meet for feastings,” runs a pathetic postscript from
-him.</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_316fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, from the painting by Zucchero at Hardwick Hall</em><br />&#8196; &#8196; <em>By permission of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire</em></span><br /><br />QUEEN ELIZABETH<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_316'>316</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span>To Elizabeth, Shrewsbury had played the part which
-she assigned to one of her lovers, the Duke of Anjou,
-to whom she wrote apropos of his persistency that she
-should never cease to love and esteem him as the dog
-which, being often chastised, returns to its master:
-“comme le chien qui estant souvent batu retourne a son
-maitre.” To her lovers she could say such things with
-impunity, to her servants she only implied them. Her
-beaten yet steadfast hound, Shrewsbury, true to his
-family’s emblem of the faithful “Talbot dog,” lay
-chiefly in these days at his small manor of Handsworth
-pouring out his soul in letters. There seem to be
-none available from his wife during his last years,
-though she was to the end truly anxious to be on
-happier terms with him, and made every possible effort
-to achieve this. Once more Elizabeth used her good
-offices with the honest intent to restore him to happiness.
-In what was practically the last private letter she
-ever wrote him, despatched in December, 1589, she
-addressed him as “her very good old man,” was anxious
-for news of his health, particularly at this inclement
-season, sympathised with his gout, and begged him to
-permit his wife sometimes to have access to him according
-to her long-cherished wish. He seems to have
-brooded heavily, as of yore—to a conscience so tender
-the brooding nature is often a sorry twin brother—and
-to have discussed the matter without any happy result.
-About this time he wrote to his intimate friend the
-Bishop of Lichfield on the subject. The Bishop’s views
-are set forth in his reply. His view of the married
-estate is a highly morose one. Yet he begs the Earl,
-for decency’s sake, to patch up the quarrel finally.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>
- <h3 class='c017'><em>The Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry to the Earl of Shrewsbury.</em></h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Right honourable, my singular good Lord,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I am bold according to my promise, to put
-you in remembrance of some matters already passed
-between us in talk. It is an old saying, and as true as
-old, a thing well begun is half ended. It pleased your
-good Lordship, at my late being with you, to confer
-with me about divers points touching the good estate
-of this our shire, whereof yourself, next under her
-Majesty, is the chief governor; and I hope, as you
-then begun them in good time, so very shortly they
-will be brought to very good perfection....
-Thus much for those common affairs we had in
-conference; now the chief and last matter that we
-talked of, and a matter indeed both in conscience chiefly
-to be regarded of you, and in duty still to be urged
-and called upon by me, was the good and godly reconciliation
-of you together, I mean my Lordship and my
-Lady your wife. I humbly thank your good Lordship
-you were content then to take my motion in good part,
-and to account it for a good piece of mine office and
-charge to travel in such cases, as indeed it is, and therefore,
-I trust you will be as willing now to see me write
-as you were then to hear me speak in that matter; and
-the more, because I speak and write as well of mere love
-and goodwill to yourself, as for any respect also of discharging
-my duty unto God; and yet, also, you must
-think chiefly and principally that I speak and write to
-discharge my duty to God, and must take all that I do
-to proceed, not as from a common friend and hanger-on,
-but as from a special ghostly father, stirred up of God
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_319'>319</span>purposely, as I hope, to do good unto you both by my
-ghostly advice. My honourable good Lord, I cannot
-see but that it must needs rest as a great clog to your
-conscience, if you consider the matter as it is, and will
-weigh the case according to the rule of God’s word: I
-say I cannot see but that it must needs rest and remain
-a great clog and burthen to your conscience to live
-asunder from the Countess your wife, without her own
-good liking and consent thereto; for, as I have told
-you heretofore, it is the plain doctrine of Saint Paul that
-the one should not defraud the other of due benevolence
-nor of mutual comfort and company, but with the
-agreement of both parties, and that also but for a time,
-and only to give yourselves to fasting and prayer. This
-is the doctrine of Saint Paul, and this doctrine Christ
-Himself confirmed in the Gospel when He forbiddeth all
-men to put away their wives unless for adultery, a thing
-never suspected in my Lady your wife. I could bring
-forth many authorities and examples both of the Holy
-Scriptures and other, profane writers, to prove that
-such kind of separations have always been holden unlawful
-and ungodly, not only among the people of God,
-but also among the heathen themselves that never knew
-God; and I could likewise show what fearful judgments
-of God have followed such unlawful separations,
-and what great plagues have fallen upon not only the
-offenders themselves, but also upon their houses and
-children, and all their posterity after them; but I shall
-not need to use any such discourse to your Lordship,
-because so wise, so grave, so well disposed as indeed
-you are of yourself if other evil counsellors did not
-draw you to the contrary; who also shall not want
-their part in the play, for, as the proverb saith, so
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span>experience proveth the same to be true, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">consilium malum
-consultori pessimum</span></i>, evil counsel falleth out worst to the
-counsel giver.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“But some will say in your Lordship’s behalf that
-the Countess is a sharp and bitter shrew, and therefore
-like enough to shorten your life if she should keep you
-company. Indeed, my good Lord, I have heard some
-say so, but if shrewdness or sharpness may be a just
-cause of separation between a man and wife, I think
-few men in England would keep their wives long; for
-it is a common jest, yet true in some sense, that there
-is but one shrew in all the world and every man hath
-her; and so every man might be rid of his wife that
-would be rid of a shrew. My honourable good Lord,
-I doubt not but your great wisdom and experience hath
-taught you to bear some time with the woman as with
-the weaker vessel; and yet, for the speeches I have
-had with her Ladyship in that behalf, I durst pawn all
-my credit unto your Lordship (and, if need be, also
-bind myself in any great bond), she will so bridle herself
-that way, beyond the course of other women, that she
-will rather bear with your Lordship, than look to be
-borne withal; and yet to be borne withal sometimes
-is not amiss for the best and wisest and patientest of
-us all. But peradventure some of your friends will
-object greater matter against her; as that she hath
-sought to overthrow your whole house; but those that
-say so I think are not your Lordship’s friends, but
-rather her Ladyship’s enemies, and their speech carrieth
-no resemblance of truth; for how can it be likely that
-she should seek or wish the overthrow of you or your
-house, when not only, being your wife, your prosperity
-must needs profit her very much, but also, having
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_321'>321</span>joined her house with your house in marriage, your
-long life and honourable state must needs glad her
-heart to the uttermost; if not for your own sake, yet
-for the issue of both your bodies, whom she loveth,
-I dare say, as her own life, and would not see by her
-goodwill to fall into any decay, either of honour or any
-other good state of life or livings; although, also, I
-dare say she wisheth all good unto you for your own
-sake, as well as theirs, or else she would not be so
-desirous of your life and company as she is. And
-therefore, I beseech your Lordship remove all such
-conceits far from you as are beaten into your head by
-evil counsellors, and rather think this unlawful separation
-to be a stain to your house, and a danger to your
-life; for that God, indeed, is not well pleased with
-it, Who will visit with death or sickness all that live
-not after His laws, as of late yourself had some little
-touch or taste given you of it by those or the nearest
-friends of those whom you most trusted about you.
-For my own part, I wish your Lordship all good, even
-from my heart; both long life and honourable state,
-with all increase of honour, and joy and comfort in the
-Lord to your own heart’s desire; but yet both I and
-you, and all of us that are God’s children, must think
-that such visitations are sent us of God to call us home,
-and if we despise them when they are sent, He will
-lay greater upon us. Thus I am bold, my good Lord,
-both in the fear of God and in goodwill towards yourself,
-to discharge the duty of your well-willing ghostly
-father, and if your Lordship accept it well, as I hope
-you will, I beseech you let me understand it by a line
-or two, that I may give God thanks for it; if not,
-I have done my part; the success I leave to God;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>and rest yours, notwithstanding, in what I may, and
-so I humbly take my leave of your good Lordship.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“From Eccleshall, the 12th of October, 1590.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your Lordship’s in all duty to command,</div>
- <div class='line in18'>“<span class='sc'>W. Coven. and Lich.</span>”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is not necessary to lay stress on the sheer fatuity
-and unwisdom of three-fourths of such a letter. But
-the gross injustice of it has never been fully appreciated
-by historians. In the first place, Bess of Hardwick was
-not a mere shrew—as has been amply set forth. She
-was a woman of great capabilities, and superabundant
-driving power which, insufficiently controlled, ended in
-a blindness to any point of view but her own, and so
-caused her to utter under provocation, stress, and disappointment
-hard and foolish things which the Earl
-could not forget. The estrangement had certainly gone
-too far for peace. The time for such things as a renewal
-of trust and love between the two was past.
-Within a month or two—in the January of 1591—the
-Earl died. Gossip—wise after the event—declared that
-with his last breath he groaned over the possibilities
-of disaster which would descend upon his family through
-his wife’s schemes for Arabella.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>In the previous year the great Walsingham, worn out
-by stress of affairs and labour, succumbed also—to his
-“tympany and carnosity.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>And, since the world and his wife must be amused,
-and the Queen needed distraction from heavy cares of
-State, she went forth to be entertained at a public fête
-a day after the death of her much-enduring “good old
-man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>To the last he could not forget the great slander.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span>Even his tomb witnesses, in his own words, to his virtue.
-He must have brooded carefully over this epitaph and
-the memorial which bears it in Sheffield Church. All
-allusion to his second wife is omitted, and in regard to
-the scandal he urges the fact of his official presence at the
-execution of Mary as the surest proof of the innocence
-of his relations with her. All he asked of his posterity
-was that upon his death the date should be added to the
-tomb. This they omitted to do.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>CHAPTER XXI<br /> <span class='small'>HEIR AND DOWAGER</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c005'>A family circle made up of ingredients so pugnacious
-could scarcely be expected to act unanimously
-when it came to a question of the division of
-property after the Earl’s death. Instantly the fragments
-in the Talbot kaleidoscope rearranged themselves. It
-was my Lady who now fought practically single-handed,
-and the new Earl, Gilbert, and her own child Mary
-were against her. They fought, as usual, in letters, and
-confided largely in their friends. Gilbert and Mary
-in one of their previous letters had called upon the
-Almighty “speedily to grant your Ladyship all contentment
-with long life.” When this new family feud
-began they must have regretted that wish. Had they
-foreseen that they had to encounter her strong will and
-keen business instinct for the space of another seventeen
-years they might possibly have compromised matters
-more quickly. The fact is Gilbert and Mary were
-innately pugnacious. It is written in their faces as
-they look down from the walls of the great picture-gallery
-of Hardwick. Neither face is unrefined, both
-are shrewd, and Mary’s, at any rate, has, added to a
-touch of scorn, a certain humorous sparkle. Neither,
-however, possesses the dignity of the parents. Mary
-has not her mother’s good features and innately aristocratic
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span>air. Gilbert lacks the breadth and steadiness
-expressed by the Earl.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Gilbert had taken his place now as seventh Earl,
-received the usual pompous letters of condolence from
-Lord Burghley and others, and was duly admitted to
-the order of the Garter. His notions of earldom
-expressed themselves chiefly in a gorgeous style of
-living which (in Hunter’s opinion) “alone earned for
-him the title of the great and glorious Earl of Shrewsbury,”
-irrespective of either intellectual or official distinction.
-Naturally his wife with her “pomp and court-like
-ways” was in full accord with him, and the renewal
-of the “All-for-Money” family fray was inevitable.
-In addition to his strife with the old Countess, he
-fought with Henry Talbot his younger brother, with
-Lady Talbot the widow of his elder brother Francis,
-with his own mother’s people the Manners family,
-with a prominent neighbour Sir Richard Wortley of
-Wortley, and, as aforesaid, with the Stanhopes of Nottinghamshire,
-to whom his wife despatched the violent
-message of hatred quoted in a previous chapter. It
-stands to reason also that he could not live at peace
-with his tenantry. As an ordinary man he does not
-seem to have been mentally vigorous enough, as a man
-of the world not sufficiently master of his hates and
-prejudices to come to an understanding with them. It
-was, after all, the most difficult task of his Lordship, and
-one for which his Court and town experiences had not
-fitted him in the least. Most pitiful of all was his
-deadly feud with his brother Edward. As Gilbert’s
-letters show, this arose entirely out of the dissensions
-over property, though Edward and Henry, appointed as
-executors of their father’s will, were wise enough to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>decline the task and allow it to devolve on to the
-experienced shoulders of their splendid stepmother.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>This feud between Edward and Gilbert flourished
-wickedly. There is no need to bore the reader with
-the insertion of the pages of truculent correspondence
-which ensued. Gilbert eventually challenged the other
-to a duel, and Edward firmly declined to fight his own
-flesh and blood. From the ancient chivalric standpoint
-this may look like a lack of virility. But to fight would
-have been the height of unwisdom for two young,
-well-born men, fathers of families, and in circumstances
-that would have been wholly preposterous<a id='t326'></a> except
-for their absurd expenditure. It is this very refusal of
-Edward Talbot which causes one to discount the current
-story—set forth with the support of arguments,
-probabilities, and reasons in the Harleian MSS.—to the
-intent that Edward conspired, in Medici fashion, with
-Gilbert’s own physician, Dr. Wood, against Gilbert’s
-life, the medium chosen for the murder being a subtly
-poisoned pair of perfumed gloves.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Thus it was as well for the whole family that my
-Lady came to the fore again and wrestled with Gilbert,
-for he had flattery enough from some of his friends to
-feed his vanity in his new position. The garrulous
-Richard Topcliffe covered several pages in a letter expressing
-gladness that it had pleased God to set the heir
-in the seat of his noble ancestors. “At such an alteration
-of a house as now hath chanced by your father’s
-death, there is ever great expecting towards the rising
-of the sun.” It is an absurd, toadying letter, of which
-the only sincere part is the writer’s definition of it at
-the close as “my tedious dream.” Of such letters
-Gilbert received his share, like his father, and was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span>flooded with all sorts of other correspondence—official,
-semi-official, and private. He assumes his father’s office
-in the lieutenancy of three counties, issues his orders
-for armament. He meant excellently well no doubt,
-but was not in the worldly sense a success. He could
-never, like his father, have borne the Queen’s heavy
-burdens from sheer devotion to a patriotic ideal and
-from horror of incurring her disfavour. His disputes
-with his tenantry so overpowered him that he was forced
-to refer the matter to the Queen. Her opinion was
-against him and on the side of the tenants. Meanwhile
-the Stanhope quarrel became a regular county
-affair, and, as Hunter puts it, “was pursued by both
-parties with such precipitation and violence that it was
-rendered impossible for the neighbouring gentry to preserve
-neutrality.” It is not surprising that five years
-after his father’s death he was thoroughly out of favour.
-Yet Elizabeth could be very kind to his children. One
-of her gentleman ushers, his friend, Richard Brakenbury,
-writing from Court, sent him in a letter to
-Rufford a pretty picture of the way she fondled his
-little girl:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If I should write how much her Majesty this day
-did make of the little lady your daughter, with often
-kissing (which her Majesty seldom useth to any) and
-then amending her dressing with pins, and still carrying
-her with her Majesty in her own barge, and so into
-the Privy Council lodgings, and so homeward from the
-running, you would scarce believe me. Her Majesty
-said (as true it is) that she is very like my Lady her
-grandmother. She behaved herself with such modesty
-as I pray God she may possess at twenty years old.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span>Indirectly the magnificent Dowager could only be
-gratified by such favours. Her main energies now
-were given to “pushing” Arabella in the great world.
-Incidentally also it was her affair to go on building,
-building, that she might live and flourish. Constructive
-imagination of a certain kind she undoubtedly had.
-She loved grandeur, comfort, and domestic beauty,
-and could conceive and plan their achievement. She
-was led to her building by her sense of importance,
-coupled with the praiseworthy desire to establish her
-offspring in a fine house, and so increase their social
-advantages. That was the beginning, and her practical
-imagination aided her. But rumour says that it is
-not by the golden light of imagination that she was
-helped to expand and continue her enterprises, but
-by the glare of morbid superstition. Some soothsayer
-she met—history does not say at what period
-of her life—told her that so long as she went on
-building she would never die. All hard-headed as
-she was she has not escaped the imputation of credence
-in fortune-telling, for she went on building to the end.
-Moreover, there is the more excuse for her superstition,
-since, as we know, crystal-gazers and conjurers with
-their charmed plates of gold, their phials and symbols,
-came and went in the country and about the English
-and foreign courts. It is more than possible that
-such persons, though included in Shrewsbury’s roll
-of “practicers” and suspects, occasionally found their
-way into my Lady’s parlour in Chatsworth or Hardwick.
-There is behind this old soothsayer’s story a
-deeper meaning. She built that she might exist, but
-in her building she truly lived, for in her strongly
-constructive instinct all her higher faculties, in their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span>finest, their Aristotelian sense, found their outlet, while
-her heart realised a certain happiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>By this time she was just seventy, and still in full
-vigour, though tolerably scarred and embittered in
-heart and soul. Through Arabella and her second
-son William, both of whom she really seems to have
-adored, she had still a great hold upon life. It was
-her main business now to fight old age, face her fourth
-widowhood resolutely, live in comfort, and provide
-for those she loved or who were in any sense dependent
-on her.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Arabella cannot, of course, have had a particularly
-joyous or smooth childhood under the sway of that
-keen, tempestuous temperament, but at any rate she
-imbibed and inherited an enormous amount of vitality.
-She was too young to be overcast by the pitiful, short-lived
-love story of her parents, and her grandmother
-brought her up jealously and in an atmosphere of state
-which helped to single her out from the other grandchildren
-of the family and from the family circle. A
-letter from the Countess, written when Arabella was
-but a baby, may be included here:—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“<em>The Countess of Shrewsbury to Lord Burghley, respecting
-the assignment of an Income to the Lady Arabella.</em> <span class='fss'>A.D.</span>
-1582.<a id='r85' /><a href='#f85' class='c013'><sup>[85]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“After my very hearty commendations to your good
-Lo. where it pleased the Queen’s Majesty my most
-gracious Sovereign, upon my humble suit to grant unto
-my late daughter Lennox four hundred pounds, and to
-that her dear and only daughter Arbella two hundred
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span>pounds yearly for their better maintenance, assigned
-out of part of the land of her inheritance: whereof
-the four hundred pounds is now at her Majesty’s disposition
-by the death of my daughter Lennox, whom
-it pleased God (I doubt not in mercy for her good, but
-to my no small grief, in her best time) to take out of
-this world, whom I cannot yet remember but with a
-sorrowful troubled mind. I am now, my good L., to
-be an humble suitor to the Queen’s Majesty that it
-may please her to confirm that grant of the whole six
-hundred pounds yearly for the education of my dearest
-jewel Arbella, wherein I assuredly trust to her Majesty’s
-most gracious goodness, who never denied me any suit,
-but by her most bountiful and gracious favours every
-way hath so much bound me as I can never think
-myself able to discharge my duty in all faithful service
-to her Majesty. I wish not to leave after I shall
-willingly fail in any part thereof to the best of my
-power. And as I know your L. hath special care for
-the ordering of her Majesty’s revenues and of her
-estate every way, so trust I you will consider of the
-poor infant’s case, who under her Majesty is to appeal
-only unto your Lo. for succour in all her distresses;
-who, I trust, cannot dislike of this my suit on her
-behalf, considering the charges incident to her bringing
-up. For although she were ever where her mother was
-during her life, yet can I not now like she should be
-here nor in any place else where I may not sometimes
-see her and daily hear of her, and therefore charged
-with keeping house where she must be with such as
-is fit for her standing, of whom I have special care, not
-only such as a natural mother hath of her best beloved
-child, but much more greater in respect how she is in
-blood to her Majesty: albeit one of the poorest as
-depending wholly on her Majesty’s gracious bounty and
-goodness, and being now upon seven years, and very
-apt to learn, and able to conceive what shall be taught
-her. The charge will so increase as I doubt not her
-Majesty will well conceive the six hundred pounds
-yearly to be little enough, which as your Lo. knoweth
-is but so much in money, for that the lands be in lease,
-and no further commodity to be looked for during
-these few years of the child’s minority. All which I
-trust your L. will consider and say to her Majesty what
-you think thereof; and so most heartily wish your L.
-well to do.</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_330fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>From a photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, after the painting at Hardwick Hall<br />&#8196; &#8196; By permission of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire</em></span><br /><br />ARABELLA STUART<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_330'>330</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span>“Sheffield this 6th day of May.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your L. most assured loving friend,</div>
- <div class='line in24'>“<span class='sc'>E. Shrewsbury</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“To the right honourable and my very good Lord
-the Lord Burghley, L. Treasurer of England.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To this Arabella, aged seven, adds her pretty French
-postscript:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Je prieray Dieu Monsr. vous donner en parfaicte
-en entiere santé, tout heureux et bon succes, et seray
-tousjours preste a vous faire tout honneur et service.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>Arbella Steward.</span>”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>The new Hardwick, the present hall, was not actually
-finished till seven years after the Earl’s death, and there
-and at the older house the Dowager and the semi-royal
-grandchild spent many years together. The former
-was, as has been instanced, busy betimes with making
-matches for the child. After the disappointment about
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>Lord Leicester’s little son, the old ambitious spirit
-flares up gloriously in the proposal that Arabella, who
-was just ten years old, should marry James of Scotland.
-She was suggested by Walsingham, presumably at the
-Queen’s desire, as an alternative bride to a Danish
-princess. James was not inclined to make up his mind
-at the moment, and in the following year another bridegroom
-was suggested—Rainutio, son of the Duke
-of Parma. Since the Duke was suspected of laying
-claim to the English throne, these negotiations were
-carried on secretly, not so secretly, however, that they
-escaped the knowledge of Burghley. State papers show
-that he was well aware that a servant of Sir Edward
-Stafford was employed “from beyond the sea, to practise
-with” Arabella about this marriage. “He was sent
-once before for her picture, and has been thrice to
-England this year,” is the conclusion of the secret
-information sent to Court. It is likely that the picture
-named might be a copy of one of the two hanging
-now in the great gallery at Hardwick Hall. Both are
-deeply interesting, and one, in which she is shown as
-a little, dignified, grandly dressed child of two holding
-a gay stiff doll, is very moving. The other, of which
-the original seems to be at Welbeck, shows her “in her
-hair,” in the old phrase. Part of her hair is drawn over
-a puff above her forehead and adorned with a drop
-jewel, and the rest hangs down fine and straight like
-a soft veil behind her shoulders. Her dress is white,
-with sleeves either of ermine or white velvet with black
-spots; her gold fan has a dull red cord, and a girdle
-of jewels is about her waist. On either side of her
-hangs a portrait of James VI as a little boy. In one
-he carries a hawk—symbol of the passion for sport which
-seems to have been, save for his obstinacy, his only
-strong point; in the other he is in correct fashionable
-dress and plumed cap, and wears a tiny sword—symbol
-of the courage he never possessed, and forerunner of the
-full-grown weapon which he could carry with swagger,
-but dared not use on his mother’s behalf. Even as his
-little presence hedges Arabella in this gallery on both
-sides, so in life his position dominated hers most cruelly
-in years to come.</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_332fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, from the picture at Hardwick Hall<br />&#8196; &#8196; By permission of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire</em></span><br /><br />ARABELLA STUART<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_332'>332</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span>The proposed marriage alluded to, which set abroad
-all manner of fears of conspiracy in connection with
-Arabella in 1592, caused Lord Burghley to write warnings
-to the Countess. All the old caution and authority
-show in her reply:—</p>
-
-<h3 class='c017'><em>The Countess of Shrewsbury to Lord Burghley: representing her care of the Lady Arabella.</em><a id='r86' /><a href='#f86' class='c013'><sup>[86]</sup></a></h3>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My honourable good Lord,—I received your Lordship’s
-letter on Wednesday towards night, being the
-20th of this September, by a servant of Mr. John
-Talbott, of Ireland. My good Lord, I was at the first
-much troubled to think that so wicked and mischievous
-practices should be devised to entrap my poor Arbell
-and me, but I put my trust in the Almighty, and will
-use such diligent care as I doubt not but to prevent
-whatsoever shall be attempted by any wicked persons
-against the poor child. I am most bound to her
-Majesty that it pleased her to appoint your Lordship
-to give me knowledge of this wicked practice, and I
-humbly thank your Lordship for advertising it: if any
-such like hereinafter be discovered I pray your Lordship
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span>I may be forewarned. I will not have any unknown or
-suspected person to come to my house. Upon the least
-suspicion that may happen here, anyway, I shall give
-advertisement to your Lordship. I have little resort to
-me: my house is furnished with sufficient company:
-Arbell walks not late, at such time as she shall take the
-air, it shall be near the house, and well attended on:
-she goeth not to anybody’s house at all: I see her
-almost every hour in the day: she lieth in my bedchamber.
-If I can be more precise than I have been I
-will be. I am bound in nature to be careful for Arbell:
-I find her loving and dutiful to me, yet her own good
-and safety is not dearer to me, nor more by me
-regarded than to accomplish her Majesty’s pleasure, and
-that which I think may be for her service. I would
-rather wish many deaths than to see this or any such
-like wicked attempt to prevail.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“About a year since, there was one Harrison, a seminary,
-that lay at his brother’s house about a mile from
-Hardwick, whom I thought then to have caused to
-be apprehended, and to have sent him up; but found
-he had licence for a time. Notwithstanding, the
-seminary, soon after, went from his brother’s, finding
-how much I was discontented with his lying so near
-me. Since my coming now into the country, I had
-some intelligence that the same seminary was come
-again to his brother’s house: my son William Cavendish
-went thither of a sudden to make search for
-him, but could not find him. I write this much to
-your Lordship that if any such traitorous and naughty
-persons (through her Majesty’s clemency) be suffered
-to go abroad, that they may not harbour near my
-houses Wingfield, Hardwick, or Chatsworth in Derbyshire:
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span>they are the most likely instruments to put a
-bad matter in execution.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“One Morley, who hath attended on Arbell, and
-read to her for the space of three years and a half,
-showed to be much discontented since my return into
-the country, in saying he had lived in hope to have
-some annuity granted him by Arbell out of her lands
-during his life, or some lease of grounds to the value
-of forty pounds a year, alleging that he was so much
-damaged by leaving the University, and now saw that
-if she were willing, yet not of ability, to make him any
-such assurance. I understanding by divers that Morley
-was so much discontented, and withal of late having
-some cause to be doubtful of his forwardness in religion
-(though I cannot charge him with papistry), took occasion
-to part with him. After he was gone from my
-house, and all his stuff carried from hence, the next
-day he returned again, very importunate to serve without
-standing upon any recompense, which made me more
-suspicious, and the more willing to part with him. I
-have no other in my house who will supply Morley’s
-place very well for the time. I will have those that
-shall be sufficient in learning, honest, and well disposed
-so near as I can.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I am forced to use the hand of my son William
-Cavendish, not being able to write so much myself for
-fear of bringing great pain to my head. He only is
-privy to your Lordship’s letter, and neither Arbell nor
-any other living, nor shall be.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I beseech your Lordship I may be directed from
-you as occasion shall fall out. To the uttermost of
-my understanding, I have and will be careful. I beseech
-the Almighty to send your Lordship a long and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span>happy life, and so I will commit your Lordship to His
-protection. From my house at Hardwick the 21st of
-September, 1592.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Your Lordship’s as I am bound,</div>
- <div class='line in20'>“<span class='sc'>E. Shrewsbury</span>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_336fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby</em></span><br /><br />THE PICTURE GALLERY FROM THE NORTH, HARDWICK HALL<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_336'>336</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_337'>337</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>CHAPTER XXII<br /> <span class='small'>ARABELLA DANCES INTO COURT</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c005'>The death of Mary Queen of Scots was the signal
-for the Countess to insure that Arabella should be
-as near the Court as possible. She was kept hard at her
-lessons, but, though the various members of the family
-were at variance over property, the Dowager was far too
-wise to spoil the girl’s prospects by forbidding her intercourse
-with her “Court-like” aunt, Gilbert’s Mary. As
-regards the young Shrewsbury pair she was, of course,
-at once a possible stumbling-block and a possible stepping-stone
-to their advantage. Her parentage gave her
-social precedence, and though her present worldly status
-was not very great, she might at any time, by an important
-marriage, assume a position far above them and
-be regarded as a source of Court favours. In fact, both
-sides of the complicated family co-operated to help her
-on in the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Already at the age of thirteen she was introduced to
-the Court. Her young uncle, Sir Charles Cavendish,
-writes of it with great appreciation: “My Lady Arbell,
-has been once to Court. Her Majesty spoke twice to
-her&nbsp;... she dined in the presence, but my Lord
-Treasurer had her to supper; and at dinner, I dining
-with her, and sitting over against him, he asked me
-whether I came with my niece. I said I came with her:
-then he spake openly, and directed his speech to Sir
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_338'>338</span>Walter Rawley, greatly in her recommendation, as that
-she had the French, the Italian, played of instruments,
-dances, and writ very fair; wished she were fifteen years
-old, and with that rounded Mr. Rawley in the ear, who
-answered it would be a happy thing.... My Lady
-Arbelle and the rest are very well, and it is wonderful
-how she profiteth in her book, and believe she will dance
-with exceeding good grace, and can behave herself with
-great proportion to everyone in their degree.”<a id='r87' /><a href='#f87' class='c013'><sup>[87]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Old Lady Shrewsbury worked hard for Arabella and
-played for Elizabeth’s favour now more than ever, with
-a keen hope of seeing the girl named as her Majesty’s
-successor. James of Scotland was, of course, playing a
-similar game, and while he pressed the Queen in regard
-to the succession, up to the point of making her angry,
-he kept on good terms with Arabella, to whom he
-wrote now and then an affectionate, cousinly letter.
-His tactics were practical, for he now proposed as her
-bridegroom Esmé Stuart, a piece of diplomacy on
-which, under the magnificent guise of her restoration
-to her own title of Lennox, he must have prided himself
-enormously. This offer was declined; a shortsighted
-refusal, as it proved both in the future and in
-the present, for matters in regard to Elizabeth’s favour
-did not prosper. Old age and bitterness made her
-resentful and increased her hydra-headed suspicion. It
-was always so easy for any ill-minded person to raise
-a papistical scare and accuse Arabella—whose aunt, the
-young Countess, was notoriously in favour of the proscribed
-priesthood—as being the heart and soul of every
-such plot.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Yet the Dowager Countess still laboured on. We
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span>find Arabella sending the Queen a “rare New Year
-gift,” to which her Majesty’s return was acknowledged
-by a confidential correspondent as a very poor one.
-The Queen, however, in discussion with the writer
-announced her intention to be kind and promised to be
-“very careful of Arabella.” Again this was a case of
-“Words, words!”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>It was in 1592 that Arabella refused Esmé Stuart.
-In 1596 no less a person than the French King discussed
-her as a possible bride for the Dauphin. Meanwhile
-she, who was in no sense an <em>intrigante</em>, and seems to
-have inherited all the simplicity of her mother, with
-the energy and the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">joie de vivre</span></i> of her grandmother, was
-in no way concerned in the wretched schemes attributed
-to her by wild gossip. She was more desirous of love
-and companionship than of place and glory, and of
-a decent competence than the splendour of courts. In
-her twenty-eighth year (1603) she attempted to make
-her own choice. It was a curious one as regards discrepancy
-in age. She sought to betroth herself to a boy
-fifteen years old, young William Seymour. This was
-no less than the grandson of that same unhappy Earl
-Hertford who had wedded poor Lady Catherine Grey.
-The whole affair would be puzzling if it were not for
-the fact that Arabella’s thoughts were turned in this
-direction by the fact that he, like herself, was partly of
-royal blood. At the same time, he was not hampered
-by the possession of a crown, and with all the attendant
-difficulties and dangers of a royal marriage. The matter
-did not go very far, for the bare suggestion of such
-a thing aroused the most absurd excitement in the
-Queen’s mind. Arabella was at once arrested.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Elizabeth, it will be remembered, was already dying
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span>by inches in the cold spring of 1603. The accusation
-that Arabella’s action killed her has no ground whatsoever;
-but it was an unfortunate moment to incur
-royal displeasure. Naturally when the question of
-succession came up finally and Elizabeth was asked
-if she could contemplate young William Seymour’s
-father, Lord Beauchamp, as her heir, the old irritation
-against the Hertford marriage flared up in that memorable
-dying retort of hers: “I will have no rascal’s son
-in my place.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Bitterly indeed must Bess Shrewsbury have raved at
-Hardwick against the unjust fate which caused the
-fortunes of her “juwell” to decline so miserably at this
-critical moment. The succession of James was thereby
-assured, and when it became fact was a bitter pill for
-Talbot and Cavendish to swallow. By this time the
-good Burghley was dead, and his son, Sir Robert Cecil,
-undertook to mediate for Arabella with James. She
-was for the moment removed to polite imprisonment in
-the country, whence she wrote breezy and innocent letters
-to her family, notably to her step-uncle, Edward Talbot,
-in which she disclaims her guilt in a somewhat veiled
-and fantastic manner. “Noble gentleman,” runs one
-sentence, “I am as unjustly accused of contriving a
-comedy as you in my conscience a tragedy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>While she awaited the King’s pleasure James was
-making his first royal progress, and Gilbert Shrewsbury
-had the honour of entertaining him magnificently at
-Worksop Manor, which must have made the Dowager
-fearfully jealous. Cecil set to work as soon as possible
-on his protégée’s behalf, and, seeing that she presented
-no problem of political danger, eventually procured her
-liberty—that is, with certain reservations. He undertook that she should reside with the Marchioness of
-Northampton at Sheen.</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_340fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>From an engraving by Walker, after a drawing by Malton</em></span><br /><br />WELBECK ABBEY<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_340'>340</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_341'>341</span>All this while the Countess Dowager kept well in the
-background. Arabella, she knew, was of an age to
-manage her own affairs, and could deal shrewdly and
-promptly with Cecil in regard to her maintenance by the
-King in her right as one of royal blood. She managed
-this difficult situation so well that she was presently
-taken into the bosom of the Court. This happy event
-was gracefully achieved thus. The arrival in England
-of the Queen-Consort some months after her husband
-was the cause for further display on the part of both
-Cavendishes and Talbots. Bess Shrewsbury planned
-a great reception for Anne of Denmark at Chatsworth,
-and tendered the invitation through Arabella. It was
-declined, and it has been suggested that the royal
-motive for this was the unhappy association of the
-great hostess with the mother of James. Though the
-mere fact of the Countess’s former position of assistant-gaoler
-may not have sufficed, memories of strife and
-“scandilation” would certainly stick in the memory
-of those who surrounded James, and their advice could
-scarcely favour the invitation. Arabella was, however,
-authorised to go to Welbeck to assist her uncle, Sir
-Charles Cavendish, to receive Anne. At the same
-time she was to be introduced to the young Princess,
-to whom she was appointed State governess. Earl
-Gilbert’s house was once more honoured, and his wife
-and he incited to impoverish themselves anew for their
-second magnificent royal entertainment in the year of
-the accession.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>At Welbeck Sir Charles Cavendish vied with his
-half-brother and contrived an elaborate sylvan pageant
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span>in which Arabella figured as Diana. Poor Diana! At
-twenty-seven she could personate with zest the chaste,
-invincible, tireless goddess. Could she have foreseen
-that rôle assigned to her for life by the criminal selfishness
-of James, she would have forsworn all courts in
-that hour, and preferred the groves in which she and
-William Seymour would willingly have walked in years
-to come, hand in hand, poor and happy.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>So—as in Elizabeth’s day—the girl, spirited, cultured,
-good, and warm-hearted, danced herself into the heart
-of Queen Anne, and above all into that of the young
-Elizabeth, whom she charmed instantly. Away went
-Arabella now to Court in the new Queen’s train, and
-thenceforward appeared constantly in the company of
-her clever, tart, intriguing Shrewsbury aunt. Her
-uncle Gilbert kept a steady eye on her. For she was
-lively, brilliant; not beautiful, but of great magnetic
-attraction. Withal, she was quick of tongue, and he
-feared lest she should slip into indiscretion of speech
-and give advantage to back-biters at Court.</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_342fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby</em></span><br /><br />THE DINING-ROOM, HARDWICK HALL<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_342'>342</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span>She escaped at least one danger this autumn—infection
-from the plague. In spite of all her duties and
-dangers she was in close touch with her relatives.
-Naturally there were difficult moments. Now she displeases
-her tremendous grandmother, and now her
-pugnacious aunt. Again and again she tries to act as
-go-between, and at odd times secures favours for one
-or the other—a barony for William Cavendish, a
-bride for his son. At intervals she visited her grandmother,
-but generally with a view to making peace
-between Gilbert and the hostess of Hardwick. To
-him she wrote in a very touching manner after a visit
-to the old lady: “I found so good hope of my grandmother’s good inclination to a good and reasonable
-reconciliation betwixt herself and her divided family
-that I could not forbear to impart to your Lordship
-with all speed. Therefore I beseech you, put on such
-a Christian and honourable mind as becometh you to
-bear to a lady so near to you and yours as my grandmother
-is. And think you cannot devise to do me
-greater honour and contentment than to let me be the
-only mediator, moderator, and peacemaker betwixt you
-and her. You know I have cause only to be partial on
-your side, so many kindnesses and favours I have received
-from you, and so many unkindnesses and disgraces
-have I received from the other party. Yet will
-I not be restrained from chiding you (as great a lord as
-you are) if I find you either not willing to be asken to
-this good notion or to proceed in it as I shall think
-reasonably.... If I be not sufficient for this treaty
-never think me such as can add strength and honour to
-your family.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Such matters were hard for both sides, and one’s
-sympathy inclines to the ageing, fighting, building
-Dowager. “Your unkindness sticks sore in her teeth,”
-wrote one of Gilbert’s informants. To Gilbert, however,
-she managed to maintain a proud front, and busied
-herself about a fresh building enterprise.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>This project was partly the outcome of her extraordinary
-pugnacity. Her neighbour, Sir Francis Leake,
-had designed and was building in the county a fine
-house, Sutton, which rivalled Hardwick in magnificence.
-Invidious comparisons were evidently drawn, and she
-declared scornfully that she would build as good a house
-“for owls” as he for men. The mansion she built was
-therefore called Owlcotes, and was not far from Hardwick.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_344'>344</span>The first year of Arabella’s royal post was certainly
-one fraught with peril, for it closed with the trial of Sir
-Walter Raleigh, accused, as all will remember, of plotting
-to dethrone James in favour of Arabella. Even
-Henry Cavendish was suspected of complicity. It is
-not necessary here to go into the details which proved
-Arabella’s innocence. It was quickly proved and her
-Court life went on as before, gaily, with masques,
-drawing-rooms, ballets, and even the nursery games in
-which it pleased the ladies of the Danish Anne to
-indulge.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>At the close of her second year at Court (1605)
-another proposal, this time from the King of Poland,
-reached Arabella and was refused. She does not yet
-seem to have tired of the frivolous and exhausting
-life, though her letters—whimsical, affectionate, quaintly
-sententious, often highly graphic—are shortened at times,
-and, though loyal, she complains roundly of “this everlasting
-hunting.” For in their passion for sport King
-and Queen dragged their courtiers hither and thither,
-and the latter were often miserably housed and served
-during these expeditions.</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_344fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>From a photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, after the painting at Hardwick Hall<br />&#8196; &#8196; By permission of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire</em></span><br /><br />JAMES THE FIFTH OF SCOTLAND<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_344'>344</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_345'>345</span>The Dowager at Hardwick was well informed of
-Court affairs, for she paid a handsome retaining fee to
-no less a person than the Dean of the Chapel Royal in
-order that he should keep her well posted. In this
-year (1605) she was taken seriously ill and summoned
-Arabella. The girl was evidently afraid of her, for she
-took precautions to insure welcome in the shape of a
-letter from the King himself, desiring the Countess to
-receive her granddaughter with kindness and bounty.
-This incensed the old lady a good deal. Though she
-was now more or less like a sleeping dragon guarding
-her hoard, as in the Norse legend, she could still rouse
-herself to snarl in a letter. She did not write to the
-King direct, but devised an epistle to the Dean, in which
-she emphatically declared her astonishment at the royal
-message. This he was ordered to show to the King.
-“It was very strange to her,” she said, “that my Lady
-Arabella should come to her with a recommendation as
-either doubting of her entertainment or desiring to
-come to her from whom she had desired so earnestly
-to come away. That for her part she thought she had
-sufficiently expressed her good meaning and kindness to
-her that had purchased her seven hundred pounds by
-year land of inheritance, and given her as much money
-as would buy a hundred pound by year more. And
-though for her part she had done very well for her
-according to her poor ability, yet she should always be
-welcome to her, though she had divers grandchildren
-that stood more in need than she, and much the more
-welcome in respect of the King’s recommendation; she
-had bestowed on Arabella a cup of gold worth a hundred
-pound, and three hundred pound in money which deserved
-thankfulness very well, considering her poor
-ability.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>James could afford to laugh at such a communication,
-which fortunately did not prejudice Arabella in his eyes.
-Her return to Court was not long delayed, for her
-grandmother recovered, and the Court lady was once
-more free to stand godmother to royal babies, play,
-hunt, and dance, and suffer perpetual financial embarrassment
-owing to the ridiculous expenditure to which
-courtiers of both sexes were put in making royal gifts
-and providing the costly, fantastic costumes which the
-successive masques entailed.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_346'>346</span>It was during the production of the famous “Masque
-of Beauty,” written for <cite>Twelfth Night</cite>, and produced in
-honour of the visit of the King of Denmark, that Bess
-Shrewsbury sank into her last illness. For this masque
-Arabella, it is recorded, appeared in jewels and robes
-worth more than £100,000. From such scenes of
-colour and luxuriance she was called to that stately,
-lonely deathbed at Hardwick.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Of the Countess’s danger her relatives were fully
-aware, and the various family partisans took good care
-to be on the look-out for any hostile movements with
-regard to property from their opponents. The following
-extract from one of Gilbert’s letters to Henry
-Cavendish gives an ugly little picture of the situation.
-The date is January 4th, 1607:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“When I was at Hardwick she did eat very little,
-and not able to walk the length of the chamber betwixt
-two, but grew so ill at it as you might plainly discern it.
-On New Year’s Eve, when my wife sent her New Year’s
-gift, the messenger told us she looked pretty well and
-spoke heartily; but my Lady wrote that she was worse
-than when we last saw her, and Mrs. Digby sent a secret
-message that her Ladyship was so ill that she could not
-be from her day nor night. I heard that direction is
-given to some at Wortley to be in readiness to drive
-away all the sheep and cattle at Ewden instantly upon
-her Ladyship’s death.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>“These being the reasons that move me thus to
-advise you, consider how like it is that when she is
-thought to be in danger your good brother will think it
-time to work with you to that effect, and—God forgive
-me if I judge amiss—I verily think that, till of late, he
-hath been in some hope to have seen your end before
-hers, by reason of your sickliness and discontentment of
-mind. To conclude, I wish and advise you to take no
-hold of any offer that shall be made unto you, etc.</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_346fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby</em></span><br /><br />TOMB OF ELIZABETH COUNTESS OF SHREWSBURY<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_346'>346</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_347'>347</span>“You have not been forgot to my Lady, neither for
-yourself nor for Chatsworth, but we have forborne to
-write you thereof, knowing that one of your brother’s
-principallest means to keep us all so divided one from
-another, etc.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Your good brother” is certainly William Cavendish,
-of whom the whole family were wildly jealous, and
-who planned to seize certain cattle belonging to the
-Countess, in advance of his brothers, so soon as she had
-drawn her last breath.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Very few details are extant of the death of the great
-Bess. Grateful pensioners she had, and certainly some
-devoted servants. Her intimate friends were few, and
-nearly all her contemporaries predeceased her. We
-come across nothing more interesting as a bare record of
-her death than the following entry in Simpson’s <cite>National
-Records of Derby</cite> for 1607:—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The old Countess of Shrewsbury died about Candlemas
-this year, whose funeral was about Holy Thursday.
-A great frost this year. The witches of Bakewell
-hanged.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>So into limbo this contemptuous entry dismisses a
-great lady. Pouf! Out with the candles! The frost
-is over; some women have been hung at Bakewell; an
-old lady is dead.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>To the end she never ceased her doughty and defiant
-game with stone, wood, and mortar. While her “home
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_348'>348</span>for owls” was in erection there came that same “great
-frost” named in the old Derby chronicle. Naturally the
-mortar at “Owlcotes” froze. The masons could do
-nothing. Instantly she issued orders that it was to be
-thawed with boiling water. This was unavailing, and
-the order came to use ale also, in the hope that the
-thicker fluid might prevent crystallisation. About this
-there is the true Elizabethan touch. But even ale,
-poured out like water, failed, and my Lady went out—with
-the holy candles.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>How Arabella—faithful, loyal, vital, intense—danced,
-toiled, and loved—to her doom; how energetic, ambitious
-Mary Shrewsbury, like her mother before her,
-enjoyed imprisonment in the Tower because of her
-match-making intrigues; how William Cavendish became
-not only an earl, but one of the first colonists in
-Virginia and Bermuda; how Henry Cavendish died of
-his “sickliness and discontentment of mind”; how
-Henry Talbot, also, passed away before he could share
-the splendour or the thriftlessness of his race; how
-Charles Cavendish made Bolsover Castle a fit guesthouse
-for the King, for whom his son prepared a famous
-masque and banquet; how Gilbert Shrewsbury, his
-presence-chamber crowded with spongers and creditors,
-pawned his plate and jewels, and how his younger
-brother and chief enemy, Edward Talbot, became eighth
-Earl in his stead, belong to an epoch which escapes the
-limit of this survey.</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_348fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby</em></span><br /><br />ENTRANCE HALL, HARDWICK HALL<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_348'>348</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_349'>349</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>CHAPTER XXIII<br /> <span class='small'>MY LADY’S MANSIONS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c005'>It is universally conceded by our nation that the
-French have a sense of the theatre which we shall
-never possess. The only set-off we can produce is a
-pre-eminent “sense of the house.” In France this has
-to a great extent died out. In French and in most
-continental cities the greater number of people live like
-pigeons in large cotes. It is the tendency of all towns,
-though in England the notion takes hold slowly. In
-the country the sense of the house is as strong as ever,
-with this change—that it is the day of the little house.
-Of the great house in its perfect sense as a home there
-are but few happy instances. It is the day of little
-things—little books, little songs, little pictures, little
-buildings, little frequent journeys, little incomes, and
-little sports. Above all, the little incomes! Little
-incomes laugh defiance at great houses. For great
-houses, as aforesaid, are great thieves. Bess and her
-Lord knew it, in the end, to their sorrow. Slowly
-English men and women have come to realise this, and
-not to aspire enviously to great houses. That notion
-was long a-dying, that obsession of the great house.
-Its long decline meant assuredly much that was tragic,
-wounding, self-torturing. Oh! those mistaken, ostentatious
-shams and pomposities of the early Victorian days
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_350'>350</span>when many a kindly, highly cultured, hypersensitive
-group of persons dwelt the lives of immured cabbages!
-And all this because of false pride, because of a penury
-they deliberately huddled round them, like a coward,
-who flings his cloak over his head so that he may not
-see even the opportunity for the courage which must
-go to the changed order of things.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>And so the little incomes of to-day—the day of the
-triumph of the exploitation of limited resources—laugh
-at the great houses because the first have been forced to
-learn that trick of defiance side by side with the bitter
-lesson of monetary limitations which they share with
-the last. Yet behind their defiance is a great admiration
-of the big mansions. And behind the admiration, if
-they but guessed it, a great sense of indebtedness. For
-it is the little incomes, and not the little houses, which
-laugh at great mansions. Is it not by virtue of the past
-life and compassion of the great houses that the little
-ones achieve their beauty in miniature, and, lastly,
-their sweet appropriateness to the usages of modern
-life? The great house begat these little ones of to-day—no
-hovels, but decent homes—which spring up all
-over England and Scotland and Ireland—in the hollows
-or heights of downs, in richly watered places, on ridges,
-by the fringes of woods, upon the sea flank—creeping
-up almost impudently to the very skirts of the great
-“places” which have passed into the traditions of history.
-Some of these remain to us as dazzling show places,
-some few are also emphatically homes. Whether applied
-in the present to this most beautiful and intimate
-purpose or not, all the great mansions of Elizabeth
-Lady Shrewsbury were most truly intended for sweet
-daily uses. Two principal houses had she of her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_351'>351</span>own—Hardwick and Chatsworth. Eight more George
-Talbot brought her—Wingfield, Sheffield, Rufford, Welbeck,
-Worksop, Tutbury, Bolsover. One smaller place
-he cherished for his old age, a little country house at
-Handsworth in the same county, and one more, as
-already explained, she in her old age founded—Owlcotes
-or Oldcotes—besides beginning the rebuilding of Bolsover
-Castle. Great houses indeed! Four of them,
-in especial, were widely sung and praised. How runs
-the curious old rhyme?</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Hardwicke for hugeness, Worsope for height,</div>
- <div class='line'>Welbecke for use, and Bolser for sighte.</div>
- <div class='line'>Worsope for walks, Hardwicke for hall,</div>
- <div class='line'>Welbecke for brewhouse, Bolser for all.</div>
- <div class='line'>Welbecke a parish, Hardwicke a Court,</div>
- <div class='line'>Worsope a pallas, Bolser a fort.</div>
- <div class='line'>Bolser to feast in, Welbecke to ride in,</div>
- <div class='line'>Hardwicke to thrive in, and Worsope to bide in.</div>
- <div class='line'>Hardwicke good house, Welbecke good keepinge,</div>
- <div class='line'>Worsope good walkes, Bolser good sleepinge.</div>
- <div class='line'>Bolser new built, Welbecke well mended,</div>
- <div class='line'>Hardwicke concealed, and Worsope extended.</div>
- <div class='line'>Bolser is morn, and Welbecke day bright,</div>
- <div class='line'>Hardwicke high noone, Worsope good night;</div>
- <div class='line'>Hardwicke is now, and Welbecke will last,</div>
- <div class='line'>Bolser will be and Worsope is past.</div>
- <div class='line'>Welbecke a wife, Bolser a maide,</div>
- <div class='line'>Hardwicke a matron, Worsope decaide.</div>
- <div class='line'>Worsope is wise, Welbecke is wittie,</div>
- <div class='line'>Hardwicke is hard, Bolser is prettie.</div>
- <div class='line'>Hardwicke is riche, Welbecke is fine,</div>
- <div class='line'>Worsope is stately, Bolser divine.</div>
- <div class='line'>Hardwicke a chest, Welbecke a saddle,</div>
- <div class='line'>Worsope a throne, Bolser a cradle.</div>
- <div class='line'>Hardwicke resembles Hampton Court much,</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_352'>352</span>And Worsope, Welbecke, Bolser none such.<a id='r88' /><a href='#f88' class='c013'><sup>[88]</sup></a></div>
- <div class='line'>Worsope a duke, Hardwicke an earl,</div>
- <div class='line'>Welbecke a viscount, Bolser a pearl.</div>
- <div class='line'>The rest are jewels of the sheere</div>
- <div class='line'>Bolser pendant of the eare.</div>
- <div class='line'>Yet an old abbey hard by the way—</div>
- <div class='line'>Rufford—gives more alms than all they.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>It is curious that Chatsworth, so famous in history,
-has no part in the rhyme. Save for an old engraving
-of it in the new, the present Chatsworth, no trace of the
-fabric of the second mansion, the house planned by
-William Cavendish the first, exists; and in the grounds
-no relic is to be found belonging to the date of Queen
-Mary’s imprisonment except a scrap of ivied ruin known
-as her “bower.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>What is the fate of the rest of the long list? Wingfield
-is an exquisite ruined fragment. The relic of
-that which was once Sheffield Castle is only to be found
-thickly embedded among the workshops and factories of a
-great smoke-belching town; and the whole property has
-passed to the dukedom of Norfolk.</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_352fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby</em></span><br /><br />BOLSOVER CASTLE<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_352'>352</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_353'>353</span>Oldcotes, as we know, Bess Hardwick never finished,
-nor Bolsover, for that last duty fell upon her son, Sir
-Charles Cavendish, who “cleared away the loose cement
-and tottering stones and began to lay the foundation of
-the newe house at Bolsover,” only finished by his son,
-Marquis of Newcastle. Strangely enough, it is not this—the
-beautiful Elizabethan mansion, which witnessed
-now glorious pageants and now civil war—that remains
-for habitation, but a portion of the original stronghold.
-Says one descriptive writer: “The figure of Hercules,
-supporting the balcony over the principal doorway, is
-an appropriate symbol of the Castle’s strength. The
-fortress is habitable, and makes a very unconventional
-and picturesque residence, with its pillar parlour ornamented
-with old-fashioned devices; its noble Star
-Chamber lined with sombre portraits of the twelve
-Cæsars and ceilinged with blue and gold to represent
-the firmament at night; and its quaint bed-chambers,
-two of which are covered with pictures indicative of
-Heaven and Hades&nbsp;... pictures&nbsp;... of angels reclining
-on clouds, or wandering in delightful glades;
-and of angels of darkness, hideous&nbsp;... and writhing
-in torment.” The which, says this chronicler, so
-affected the conscience of one inhabitant that he
-effaced them—“took a lime brush and ruthlessly
-wiped out both sinners and saints.” The ruin near
-this building must have stood finely “on the grand
-terrace to the south” in its heyday when the elasticity
-of good Bolsover steel spears and buckles was a household
-word in England.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Tutbury Castle lies a ruin by the Dove, unregretted,
-well detested by all who were ever immured there.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Welbeck—how true to the rhyme!—lasts and “will
-last”—“day bright,” a “saddle,” a place to “ride in,”
-a great “parish,” a home for use, for “good keepinge,”—in
-a word, an institution for posterity to wonder at.
-Such also is Rufford, one of the few great buildings which
-have escaped fire. Among the list of the disestablished
-monasteries it passed into the hands of the Talbots, who
-made good use of its Elizabethan gallery and its state
-chambers. On the other hand, the original manor house
-of Worksop—“the wise,” the “pallas,” the “throne,”
-was burnt down in 1761, was “decaide” very soon.
-Bolser the “maid” as aforesaid is now grown very
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_354'>354</span>grey, but is still lovely, the more wonderful in its
-isolation because of the ugly little new town below it.
-Welbeck “the wife” flourishes, has grown, is much
-increased.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Hardwick the “matron” endures. In her “hugeness,”
-in her character of spacious court and hall, in her
-seclusion and peace, her well-being, her riches and
-comfort, well warmed with the sun of prosperity, as at
-“high noone”—in her rôle as “chest,” as storehouse of
-unassailable fortunes, as a place “to thrive in,” Hardwick
-is the chiefest of all these houses, because, saving
-the church of All Saints at Derby, with the monument
-Bess Shrewsbury erected in it to herself, and the almshouses
-in the same town, it is the only thing of all her
-“workes” upon which her sole impress remains. Into
-this grey stone house, which bears her maiden name,
-has passed her extraordinary and very fine “sense of the
-home,” and the doggerel just quoted adds to that almost
-a portrait of herself. Time was when she wore stiff
-outstanding dresses, encrusted with network of jewels or
-bordered and lined with fur, like others who visited
-Court or the weddings and pageants of her circle. In
-the principal portrait of her, the one which hangs in the
-centre of the Cavendish group in the glorious Hardwick
-gallery—a stretch of 170 feet, of which the walls carry
-nearly two hundred portraits—she is, however, presented
-just in the character of matron and widow. Her
-child-bearing days were over, her schemes were many.
-One cannot read the rhymes quoted without feeling
-that when Hardwick is named in the jingle she herself
-passes in and out of the string of words, which in itself
-is like a ladies’ chain in a country dance. She is in
-black velvet with a rich quadruple necklace of pearls.
-Her chest, with gold and documents and household
-“stuff,” goes with her; we hear the jingle of her
-household keys, her ringing, authoritative voice, meet the
-glance of those clear, keen eyes, and follow the line of
-the thin, sensitive mouth, which could help that far-seeing
-brain of hers so much. That mouth could
-flatter, but it could also speak with terrible sharpness;
-it could repeat a good joke, a spicy scandal, or quiver
-with grief; it could say tender things—“my juwell and
-love, my dearest harte”—and it could bargain finely.
-“Hardwick is hard,” says the rhyme, and her lips seem
-to tighten to that phrase. She could certainly be both
-terribly hard and tender.</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_354fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby</em></span><br /><br />PICTURE GALLERY, HARDWICK HALL<br /><br />(Showing the fireplace and a portrait of Mary Queen of Scots)<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_354'>354</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_355'>355</span>There is another smaller portrait of her, in her
-Countess’s coronet and an ermine tippet, which is
-rather more gracious in expression than the stiff, beruffed,
-matronly picture above mentioned. Close about
-her are her husbands—all save Barlow. Most comfortable
-of these is Sir William Cavendish, sturdy, bearded,
-and well-liking, in his furred robe and flat cap. Close
-by, and matching the figure of Arabella Stuart in sheer
-pathos, is that of the quiet, childless Grace Talbot,
-whom Fate so soon made the widow of the much-travelled
-Henry Cavendish. It is that of a dumpy
-little woman in black, holding in one hand a single pale
-eglantine—the flower of the Cavendishes. Her reddish-brown
-hair, her pale lips, a spinet of which the under
-portion of the open lid is faintly decorated with red-winged
-cherubs, and a dark green table-cloth, are the
-only scraps of colour in the sombre scheme. Her
-psalter, with diamond notation, lies open at the words
-“<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Sois moy seigneur ma garde et mon appuy, Car en
-toy gist toute mon esperance.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_356'>356</span>In the same group one finds Burghley, rosy, astute,
-richly clad, a prince of dignitaries, than whom no statesman
-ever had richer experience of men and things, of
-power and place, of sovereigns and the royal caprice,
-who on the eve of death could still write to his first-born,
-over the trembling signature of “Your anguished
-father,” the words “Serve God by serving of the
-Queen, for all other service is indeed bondage to the
-devil.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Very warm and full of life is the portrait of William
-Cavendish the younger, the Countess’s favourite son.
-To him in his right as first Earl and ancestor of the
-Dukes of Devonshire belongs, after his mother, the
-whole of this glorious gallery, typical of this magnificent
-house.</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_356fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>From a photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby, after the picture by P. Oudry<br />&#8196; &#8196; at Hardwick Hall, by permission of his Grace the Duke of Devonshire</em></span><br /><br />MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_356'>356</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_357'>357</span>The end wall is given up to the portraits of the three
-English Queens. In the centre is Elizabeth, magnificent
-and monstrous, the clothes hiding the woman, the
-whole art of portraiture merged in the painter’s dogged
-intent to reproduce every detail of her jewels, her lace,
-and the birds, beasts, and reptiles with which her enormous,
-billowing dress is embroidered. On her right
-stands Queen Anne, very dull, complacent, and richly
-attired; on her left Queen Mary, solemn, handsomely
-robed, dignified. An opposite wall bears the other
-often-painted Mary, the Arch-Enigma, she whose
-personality, to my thinking, is so much more subtle
-and dominant than that of her magnificent English
-sisters. This is the famous Mary of Oudry’s brush,
-graceful, simple, subtle, the face diaphanous and elusive.
-There is an odd likeness between the motto she chose
-for her dais and that which the baby Arabella bears on
-the jewel pendent from her necklace: “Pour parvenir
-j’endure” is the legend. And both women bear witness
-to that determination in their faces, in their tragic fates.
-That and the old “En ma fin est mon commencement”
-ring in your ears as you turn from the gallery and from the
-beautiful presence-chamber with its wonderful coloured
-plaster frieze to the little bedroom dedicated to the
-relics of the Scots Mary. The curtains she embroidered,
-the coverings for the chairs, the tapestry,
-the very bed in which she slept and tossed and wept,
-are all proudly cherished. Mary never stayed at Hardwick,
-<em>pace</em> Horace Walpole, nor possibly ever saw it.
-Nor was she ever housed at the old Hardwick, which
-stands now like a ghostly, ruined parent of the newer
-building, at right angles to it. The old house served
-“Building Bess” not only as model for her new hall,
-but furnished her, it is said, with actual material. It
-was, for those days, a good model that she took, and its
-high and countless windows made it hygienically a great
-improvement upon the gloom of Tutbury and Sheffield.
-No trace of superstition or pettiness has gone to the
-building, begun soon after she acquired the house—either
-by purchase or by legacy from her brother James
-Hardwick—some years before the death of her fourth
-husband, and completed seven years or so after it—that
-is in 1597. At first, says tradition, she seems to have
-intended to make her home at the older house and
-reserve the new one for ceremonial and entertainment,
-“as if she had a mind to preserve her Cradle and set it
-by her Bed of State.” The stones of that “Cradle”
-she eventually took for the “Bed,” and into that
-bed she literally wove all that was best of herself.
-Of mere personal feminine vanity she expresses little,
-of personal importance much. She was fond of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_358'>358</span>her crest, and the modelled stags of her own
-family are devised to flatter her duly in an inscription
-(in the great drawing-room) to the intent
-that noble as is the stag, in all its animal perfection, its
-nobility is enhanced by bearing the arms of the Countess.
-She doted also on her initials. They are worked into
-the stone scrolling which adorns her four towers, into
-the main gateway, and into the low wall which flanks
-the square garden where you enter. They are repeated
-in the flower-beds. She must have loved signing her
-name also, for scarcely a scrap, it seems, of the household
-accounts concerning her buildings exists but bears
-evidence of her minute scrutiny. Here is her signature
-as it appears often repeated under such items as “thre
-ponde hyght pence,” or at the close of a letter thus:—</p>
-
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_358.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>The Hardwick wages-book between New Year, 1576,
-and the close of December, 1580, with the list of her men—stone-breakers,
-gardeners, moss-gatherers, thatchers,
-wall-builders, ditchers—was made up by her once a
-fortnight and signed. Inside the house too are her
-initials, with the arms of her father, the stags and the
-roses of the Hardwicks, and into a famous inlaid table
-(brought, it is said, by her son Henry from the East)
-is woven the cryptic poetical motto of her father’s
-family:—</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div id='i_358fp' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_358fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby</em></span><br /><br />MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS BED, NOW AT HARDWICK HALL<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_358'>358</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_359'>359</span>“The redolent smell of aeglantyne</div>
- <div class='line in1'>We stagges exault to the deveyne.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>This legend is to be faintly traced in the interior of
-the ruined old hall. With the exception of the Shrewsbury
-coronet and the initials, you find very little suggestion
-of the Talbots. Everywhere the arms of
-Hardwick predominate in panel, fireplace, and lock.
-They strike the eye the instant you enter the house by
-the great entrance-hall. Large and magnificent, they
-are set forth on the right wall: in heraldic language,
-“a saltire engrailed <em>azure</em>; on a chief of the second
-three cinquefoils of the field,” set in a lozenge-shaped
-shield and bearing the aforesaid coronet. The supporters
-are two “stags <em>proper</em>, each gorged with a
-chaplet of roses, <em>argent</em>, between two bars <em>azure</em>.”
-To these supporters the lady had no right because
-her family had none. But she assumed them, turning
-to account the stag of her family crest. Her
-son William adopted a variation of this, and in the
-Devonshire arms of to-day we again find the wreathed
-stags <em>proper</em>, while the shield bears three harts’ heads.
-In the Mary Queen of Scots bedroom you will find
-in plaster work again the Hardwick arms, but also
-those of Cavendish and of the Countess’s mother,
-Elizabeth Leake. Needless to say, the house is built
-in the grand manner. The great entrance-hall runs
-to the height of two stories, and besides its panelling
-and old furniture has screens of tapestry. Just
-off the stairway on the left is the curious little chapel
-shut off from the landing by an open-work oak
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_360'>360</span>screen. Close by is a state bedroom, and adjoining
-it is a fine dining-room, whence a minstrels’ gallery
-leads to the wainscoted and tapestried drawing-room.
-The splendid presence-chamber, sixty-five feet long,
-thirty-three wide, and twenty-six high, is another remarkable
-feature, and besides its pictures and tapestry
-has the famous ancient frieze, already mentioned, in
-coloured plaster relief representing the Court of Diana.
-The choice of theme was, no doubt, out of compliment
-to the Queen, for her initials and arms are in
-this room substituted for those of the Countess, who,
-in spite of her dreams, never had the delight of receiving
-Elizabeth here.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>In regard to the sheer details of furniture and
-tapestries the guide-books have sufficiently noted such
-items, and this is not the place for an inventory. But
-in the household lists, carefully catalogued and cherished,
-are noted “silver cloath of tissue and cloath of gold,
-velvet of sundry colours, needlework twelve feet deep,
-one piece of the picture of Faith and her contrary
-Mahomet, another piece with Temperance and her
-contrary Sardynapales.” And there are others “wrought
-with Flowers and slipps of Needlework,” while a “white
-Spanish rugg,” great chairs and little chairs, French
-stools, “a little desk of mother o’ pearl, a purple sarcanet
-quilt,” are duly noted, in addition to carpets and hangings
-galore storied with myth and legend. Good rich
-things over which to fight when it was a case of family
-quarrels! Many of these and the other famous tapestries
-with which the lovely house is crammed are being wisely
-guarded, and, where possible, delicately repaired, while
-taste and gracious sympathy with every object are
-turning the Hall into a place which is a perfect museum
-with the added grace of a house. The very ring—attached
-to the foot of the Countess’s writing-table—through
-which she slipped the leash of her dog, is still
-preserved.</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_360fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby</em></span><br /><br />THE PRESENCE-CHAMBER, HARDWICK HALL<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_360'>360</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_361'>361</span>Set high upon a fine hill in the centre of a park, encircled
-with rolling country, and facing east and west,
-the great, old windows of Hardwick look out above
-colonnades upon a new world. At no great distance
-are mines like those which have spoiled Bolsover
-and Worksop. The masons still labour at the stonework
-of Hardwick, for storms have worn the elaborate
-scrolling of those four proud towers, and the flagged
-pathway from gate to house-door is pitted and hollowed
-by frost and rain and the feet of generations. And
-still it stands, a monument and a living record of one
-who knew in her strange, active life much grief
-and much joy, who loved flattery and self-assertion
-and the struggle for individual development, and yet
-could write in letters of stone over the door of her
-presence-chamber: “The conclusion of all thinges is
-to feare God and keepe His commaundements.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>She had the great secret of living almost to the last
-in the “high noone” of her desires. When the western
-sun bathes her façade she lives again, walks again upon
-her terrace and under her colonnades. And with her
-goes that great procession, pathetic and vital, of her
-“workes”—her children, her friends, her buildings,
-her household gods, her intrigues, her dazzling dreams,
-her bargains—and all of them seem to have a part in the
-music of that duet of notions ever running in her
-head—“of bricks and mortar to yield grandeur, of
-human beings to yield wealth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>She has been turned into ridicule by Horace Walpole,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_362'>362</span>whose flippant vulgarity nevertheless acknowledged her
-magnificence. She was called shrew by a pompous
-bishop, but she had too much brain for a shrew. She
-could certainly scold—“like one from the banke”—but
-so could her royal mistress. In these two Elizabeths
-there is, after one allows for the difference in their actual
-circumstances, a strange likeness. Both were violent
-natures; both, in spite of their extraordinary sense of
-dignity, had a strong dash of the hoyden. Both had
-immense vitality, relished life intensely, loved to play
-with schemes. Both were obstinate, affectionate, vindictive,
-pugnacious, essentially women of their era, a
-type to which Elizabeth herself set the measure and
-called the tune. While the sum of all sorrow is
-the same, their sorrows differed in detail. Elizabeth
-of England, called to the immense sacrifice of her
-womanhood for England, fell back in private on
-petty vanities, and had her reward in the love of the
-larger public of her day and in the enlightened
-homage of posterity to her sacrifice and her statesmanship.
-Elizabeth Shrewsbury justly refused to sacrifice herself
-to the official burdens put upon her earl, unjustly
-refused to go shares with him in their common responsibilities,
-and so in her the “combat for the individual”
-ran to exaggeration, with its harvest of sheer
-bitterness and errors. In body and soul she represented
-that spirit of individualism set in an epoch
-of intrigue, sensation, change, uncertainty, wide and
-violent contrast, in days of large treasons and international
-piracy, of high feeding and large ideas, of
-scented gloves, masks, doublets, and ill-managed
-kitchen heaps, of plot and counter-plot, of Court splendour
-and national drama.</p>
-<div class='section'>
-
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_362fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='left'><em>Photo by Richard Keene, Ltd., Derby</em></span><br /><br />HARDWICK HALL FROM THE WEST GARDEN<br /><br /><span class='right'>Page <a href='#Page_362'>362</a></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_363'>363</span>Tobie Matthew, Archbishop of York, preached a fine
-funeral sermon upon this “costly Countess,” in which
-she was likened to the ideal virtuous woman of Solomon,
-while Hunter, on the other hand, ironically suggests
-that Massinger based his character of Sir Giles Overreach
-upon her. Lodge has termed her violent,
-treacherous, tyrannical. Such in many ways was the
-nature of England’s Elizabeth. Yet both women were
-makers and builders, often blind, always resourceful,
-achieving immense results in their several capacities.
-And since the royal symbol of the one is the stately
-Tudor rose, so also shall the lovely “redolent aeglantyne”
-of the motto of the other entwine and weave
-through the ages the memory of all that was finest in
-the amazing Lady of Hardwick. With that sweet
-savour—regarding it as the final evaporation of her
-complex, rampant, thorny, vital nature—let all harsher
-thoughts of her now be chased away.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_365'>365</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>INDEX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<ul class='index c002'>
- <li class='center'>A</li>
- <li class='c020'>Adderley, Mr., <a href='#Page_108'>108</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Alsope, Hugh, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Alva, Duke of, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>–3</li>
- <li class='c020'>Anjou, Duke of, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>, <a href='#Page_317'>317</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Anne Boleyn, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Anne of Cleves, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Anne of Denmark, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a>–2, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a>, <a href='#Page_356'>356</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Appleyard, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Argyle, Earl of, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Arran, Earl of, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Arundel, Earl of, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a></li>
- <li class='center'>B</li>
- <li class='c020'>Barlow, Antony, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Barlow, Robert, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_355'>355</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Beale, Robert, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Bedford, Countess of, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Bedford, Earl of, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Bell, William, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>–3</li>
- <li class='c020'>Bentall, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a> <em>et sqq.</em></li>
- <li class='c020'>Beresford, Henry, <a href='#Page_282'>282</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Beton, Andrew, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Beton, Archbishop, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Beton, John, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Beauchamp, Lord, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a></li>
- <li class='c020'><span class='pageno' id='Page_366'>366</span>Bolsover, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>, <a href='#Page_347'>347</a>, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a> <em>et sqq.</em></li>
- <li class='c020'>Bolton, Castle, Mary Queen of Scots at, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Bonaparte, Napoleon, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Bothwell, Earl of, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>–9, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Boughton, Elizabeth. <em>See</em> Cavendish</li>
- <li class='c020'>Brackenbury, Richard, <a href='#Page_327'>327</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Bruce, Mrs., <a href='#Page_66'>66</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Burghley, Lady, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_316'>316</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Burghley, Robert Cecil, Lord, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a>–1</li>
- <li class='c020'>Burghley, Thomas Cecil, Lord, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Burghley, William Cecil, Lord, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>–5, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>, <a href='#Page_302'>302</a>, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>, <a href='#Page_316'>316</a>, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>and Lady Catherine Grey’s marriage, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>;</li>
- <li>and Mary Queen of Scots’ marriage, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>;</li>
- <li>letters written to, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>–5, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a>, <a href='#Page_333'>333</a>;</li>
- <li>and Lady Mary Grey’s marriage, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>;</li>
- <li>and imprisonment of Mary Queen of Scots, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>–5, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>;</li>
- <li>visits Mary Queen of Scots, 80, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_367'>367</span>letters from, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>;</li>
- <li>and Lascelles, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>–3;</li>
- <li>and Norfolk’s death, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>;</li>
- <li>and the Norwich high treason trial, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>–3;</li>
- <li>his and Elizabeth’s distrust of the Shrewsburys, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and Lady Lennox, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>;</li>
- <li>and the Lennox marriage, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>;</li>
- <li>Shrewsbury’s present of plate to, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>;</li>
- <li>and Lady Shrewsbury’s match-making, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>goes to Buxton, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>;</li>
- <li>and the accusation against Lord Shrewsbury, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>;</li>
- <li>and the Shrewsbury quarrel, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_285'>285</a>, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>;</li>
- <li>and Shrewsbury’s slanderers, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>;</li>
- <li>and the “Scandal Letter,” <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>;</li>
- <li>and Mary Queen of Scots’ trial, <a href='#Page_308'>308</a>–9;</li>
- <li>and Lady Arabella’s income, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and Lady Arabella’s proposed marriage, <a href='#Page_333'>333</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>his death, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a>;</li>
- <li>his portrait at Hardwick, <a href='#Page_356'>356</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c020'>Butts, Sir William, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Buxton, Mary Queen of Scots at, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a></li>
- <li class='center'>C</li>
- <li class='c020'>Caithness, Bishop of, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Catherine de Medici, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Cavendish, Anne, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Cavendish, Sir Charles, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>–8, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>, <a href='#Page_282'>282</a>, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>, <a href='#Page_337'>337</a>, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a>–1, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a></li>
- <li class='c020'><span class='pageno' id='Page_368'>368</span>Cavendish, Elizabeth. <em>See</em> Lennox</li>
- <li class='c020'>Cavendish, Elizabeth, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Cavendish, Lady Grace, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>, <a href='#Page_355'>355</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Cavendish, Henry, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a>, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a>, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a>, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a>, <a href='#Page_355'>355</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Cavendish, Thomas, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Cavendish, Sir William, “Bess of Hardwick’s” second husband, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_355'>355</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Cavendish, William. <em>See</em> Earl of Devonshire</li>
- <li class='c020'>Cecil. <em>See</em> Lord Burghley</li>
- <li class='c020'>Chamley, Sir Hugh, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Chatsworth, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a>, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a>–5, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a>–7, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a>, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a>, <a href='#Page_347'>347</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Cobham, Lord, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Cobham, Lady, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Cooke, R., <a href='#Page_256'>256</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Copley, Christopher, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Corker, Chaplain, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a> <em>et sqq.</em></li>
- <li class='c020'>Crompe, James, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Cumberland, Countess of, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Cumberland, Earl of, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Curle, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a></li>
- <li class='center'>D</li>
- <li class='c020'>Darcy, Lord, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Darnley, Henry, Earl of, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>–9, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Derby, Earl of, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Devonshire, first Earl of, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a>–5;
- <ul>
- <li>and Lady Arabella Stuart, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_369'>369</span>and Mary Queen of Scots, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>–9;</li>
- <li>and Hardwick Hall, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>–9, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>;</li>
- <li>Lady Shrewsbury’s love for, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a>, <a href='#Page_356'>356</a>;</li>
- <li>barony conferred on, <a href='#Page_342'>342</a>;</li>
- <li>family’s jealousy of, <a href='#Page_347'>347</a>;</li>
- <li>earldom conferred on, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a>;</li>
- <li>and Chatsworth, <a href='#Page_352'>352</a>;</li>
- <li>his portrait at Hardwick, <a href='#Page_356'>356</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c020'>Dickenson, Gilbert, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Dudley, Lady Amy, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Dudley, Lord Robert. <em>See</em> Earl of Leicester</li>
- <li class='c020'>Dyer, Edward, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></li>
- <li class='center'>E</li>
- <li class='c020'>Edward VI, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Elizabeth, Queen, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>–17, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>–2, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>, <a href='#Page_307'>307</a>, <a href='#Page_360'>360</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>and Lady Catherine Grey’s elopement, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>;</li>
- <li>her suitors, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>, <a href='#Page_317'>317</a>;</li>
- <li>and Lady Mary Grey’s marriage, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>;</li>
- <li>and “Bess of Hardwick’s” fourth marriage, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and the custody of Mary Queen of Scots, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and Queen Mary’s expenditure, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>;</li>
- <li>courtiers’ opinion of, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>–5;</li>
- <li>and Mary’s release, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>–1;</li>
- <li>and Queen Mary’s attachment to the Duke of Norfolk, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>;</li>
- <li>her suspicions of the Shrewsburys, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>–8, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, 212, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_370'>370</span>and Norfolk’s trial and execution, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>–6;</li>
- <li>her affection for the Earl of Leicester, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_315'>315</a>;</li>
- <li>her favourites, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>–2, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>;</li>
- <li>and Lady Lennox, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>;</li>
- <li>and Elizabeth Cavendish’s marriage to the Earl of Lennox, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>;</li>
- <li>consigns Lady Lennox and Lady Shrewsbury to the Tower, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>;</li>
- <li>her allowance to Shrewsbury, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>;</li>
- <li>her depression, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>–3;</li>
- <li>visits the Countess of Pembroke, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>;</li>
- <li>Burghley’s loyalty to, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>–8;</li>
- <li>her possible successor, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a>;</li>
- <li>and Leicester’s visit to the Shrewsburys, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>her letter to the Shrewsburys, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>letter written to, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>;</li>
- <li>her fear of Queen Mary, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>–7, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and the pageant at Whitehall, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>;</li>
- <li>Queen Mary’s appeals to, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>–1;</li>
- <li>and Lady Arabella Stuart, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>, <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and Mary’s attack on the Shrewsburys, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and the Shrewsbury slander, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>–4, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>;</li>
- <li>and the Shrewsbury quarrel, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>the “Scandal Letter” to, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>her pursuits, <a href='#Page_315'>315</a>–16, <a href='#Page_362'>362</a>;</li>
- <li>her fondness for children, <a href='#Page_327'>327</a>;</li>
- <li>and the provision for Lady Arabella, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and Lady Arabella’s proposed marriage, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_371'>371</span>her portrait at Hardwick, <a href='#Page_356'>356</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c020'>Essex, Countess of, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a></li>
- <li class='center'>F</li>
- <li class='c020'>Fawley, Mr., <a href='#Page_305'>305</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Fénélon, La Mothe, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Fletcher, Dr., Dean of Peterborough, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>–12</li>
- <li class='c020'>Fletewood, William, Recorder of London, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Foljambe, Hercules, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Fowller, Thomas, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a></li>
- <li class='center'>G</li>
- <li class='c020'>Gerrard, Judge, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>–3</li>
- <li class='c020'>Glasgow, Archbishop of, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Gresham, Sir Thomas, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Grey, Lady Catherine. <em>See</em> Countess of Hertford</li>
- <li class='c020'>Grey, Lady Jane, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Grey, Sir John, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Grey, Lady Mary. <em>See</em> Keys</li>
- <li class='c020'>Grey, Lord Leonard, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a></li>
- <li class='center'>H</li>
- <li class='c020'>Hall, John, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Hammer, Rev. Merideth, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Hardwick, Elizabeth (“Bess of Hardwick”). <em>See</em> Countess of Shrewsbury</li>
- <li class='c020'>Hardwick, Elizabeth (mother of “Bess of Hardwick”), <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Hardwick Hall, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a>, <a href='#Page_331'>331</a>–2, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a>, <a href='#Page_342'>342</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a>–2</li>
- <li class='c020'>Hardwick, John (father of “Bess of Hardwick”), <a href='#Page_1'>1</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a></li>
- <li class='c020'><span class='pageno' id='Page_372'>372</span>Hatton, Sir Christopher, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>–3</li>
- <li class='c020'>Haydon, Sir Christopher, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Henry VIII, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>–4, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Henry of Navarre, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Herbert, Lady Anne. <em>See</em> Talbot</li>
- <li class='c020'>Herbert. <em>See</em> Pembroke</li>
- <li class='c020'>Hereford, Viscount, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Hertford, Countess of, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Hertford, Dowager Countess of, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>–8</li>
- <li class='c020'>Hertford, Earl of, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Howard, Hon. Francis, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Howard, Lord Thomas, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>–2, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Hunsden, Lord, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Huntingdon, Earl of, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>–6, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a></li>
- <li class='center'>J</li>
- <li class='c020'>Jackson, Henry, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>James I, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>, <a href='#Page_332'>332</a>, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a>, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a> <em>et sqq.</em></li>
- <li class='c020'>John of Austria, Don, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Julio, Mr., <a href='#Page_223'>223</a></li>
- <li class='center'>K</li>
- <li class='c020'>Katherine of Aragon, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Katherine Howard, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Katherine Parr, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Kennet, Bishop, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Kent, Earl of, <a href='#Page_310'>310</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Keys, John, Serjeant Porter, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Keys, Lady Mary, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a></li>
- <li class='c020'><span class='pageno' id='Page_373'>373</span>Kighley, Anne. <em>See</em> Cavendish</li>
- <li class='c020'>Killigrew, Sir William, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Knifton, Mr., <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Knollys, Sir Francis, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Knollys, Lettice. <em>See</em> Countess of Leicester</li>
- <li class='c020'>Kynnersley, Nicholas, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a></li>
- <li class='center'>L</li>
- <li class='c020'>Lascelles, Hersey, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Leake, Elizabeth, <a href='#Page_359'>359</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Leake, Sir Francis, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Lee, Sir Henry, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a> <em>et sqq.</em></li>
- <li class='c020'>Leicester, Douglas, Countess of, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Leicester, Lettice, Countess of, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Leicester, Robert Dudley, Earl of, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>, <a href='#Page_303'>303</a>, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>–7;
- <ul>
- <li>and Lady Catherine Grey’s marriage, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>;</li>
- <li>Queen Elizabeth’s love for, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>, <a href='#Page_315'>315</a>;</li>
- <li>and the Norwich conspiracy trial, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>;</li>
- <li>his gaiety, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>–1, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>;</li>
- <li>and the Lennox marriage, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>letter written by, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>;</li>
- <li>chit-chat concerning, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>–2;</li>
- <li>his visit to Buxton, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>his insolence to the Queen, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>;</li>
- <li>Elizabeth’s letter concerning, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and the Shrewsbury tenantry, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>–16;</li>
- <li>and Francis Talbot’s death, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>;</li>
- <li>and Bentall, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>death of his son, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>;</li>
- <li>and the Shrewsbury quarrel, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>;</li>
- <li>letter written to, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>;</li>
- <li>his death, <a href='#Page_315'>315</a>–16</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c020'><span class='pageno' id='Page_374'>374</span>Lennox, Charles Stuart, Earl of, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Lennox, Matthew, Earl of, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Lennox, Elizabeth, Countess of, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a>, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>–4;
- <ul>
- <li>her courtship, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>her marriage, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>–6;</li>
- <li>the Queen’s anger against, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>;</li>
- <li>pathetic letter to her mother, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>–8;</li>
- <li>birth of her daughter, Lady Arabella Stuart, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>;</li>
- <li>letter to Queen Elizabeth, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>;</li>
- <li>her widowhood, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>;</li>
- <li>her death, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>the Queen’s allowance to, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c020'>Lennox, Margaret, Countess of, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;
- <ul>
- <li>letters written by, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>–8, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c020'>Lenton, John, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Leviston, Lady, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Lichfield, Bishop of, <a href='#Page_317'>317</a> <em>et sqq.</em></li>
- <li class='c020'>Livingstone, Lady, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a></li>
- <li class='center'>M</li>
- <li class='c020'>Manners, Roger, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Manners, Lady, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Margaret Queen of Scotland, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Mary, Queen, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_356'>356</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Mary of Lorraine, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Mary Queen of Scots, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>, <a href='#Page_308'>308</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>her marriage to Darnley, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>;</li>
- <li>Elizabeth’s plotting against, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_375'>375</span>her life as a prisoner, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>–6;</li>
- <li>her description of Tutbury Castle, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>–3;</li>
- <li>and the Duke of Norfolk, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>–9, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>;</li>
- <li>goes to Wingfield, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>–1;</li>
- <li>her ill-health, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and Norfolk’s execution, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>;</li>
- <li>strict surveillance of, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>–6, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>;</li>
- <li>her misfortunes, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>;</li>
- <li>her claims, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>;</li>
- <li>her fear of assassination, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>;</li>
- <li>and the Countess of Lennox, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>letter written by, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;</li>
- <li>her reconciliation with the Countess of Lennox, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>–6, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>;</li>
- <li>and the birth of Lady Arabella Stuart, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>;</li>
- <li>Lord Burghley and, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>at Buxton, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>;</li>
- <li>her friendship with Lady Shrewsbury, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>;</li>
- <li>and Leicester, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>–7, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>–1;</li>
- <li>her reported escape, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>;</li>
- <li>and Lady Arabella Stuart’s heritage, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>her love of gaiety, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>–6;</li>
- <li>her diet, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>;</li>
- <li>her accusations against Lady Shrewsbury, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>the slander against, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>her execution at Fotheringay, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a>, <a href='#Page_309'>309</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a>, <a href='#Page_337'>337</a>;</li>
- <li>her “Scandal Letter” to Elizabeth, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>her bower at Chatsworth, <a href='#Page_352'>352</a>;</li>
- <li>her portrait at Hardwick Hall, <a href='#Page_356'>356</a>–7</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c020'><span class='pageno' id='Page_376'>376</span>Matthew, Tobie, Archbishop of York, <a href='#Page_363'>363</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Mauvissière, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a> <em>et sqq.</em></li>
- <li class='c020'>Mendoza, Don Bernardino de, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Middleton, Antony, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Mildmay, Sir Walter, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Moray, Earl of, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Morton, James Douglas, Earl of, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a></li>
- <li class='center'>N</li>
- <li class='c020'>Norfolk, fifth Duke of, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Norfolk, Thomas, fourth Duke of, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>–9, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Norris, Lord, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Norris, Lady, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a></li>
- <li class='center'>O</li>
- <li class='c020'>Ogle, Cuthbert Lord, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Ogle, Jane. <em>See</em> Shrewsbury</li>
- <li class='c020'>Osborne, Peter, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Oseley, Solicitor-General, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Owlcotes, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Oxford, Earl of, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a></li>
- <li class='center'>P</li>
- <li class='c020'>Paget, Lord, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Parker, Archbishop, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Parma, Duke of, <a href='#Page_332'>332</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Pembroke, Catherine Countess of, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Pembroke, Henry Herbert, second Earl of, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Pembroke, William Earl of, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Philip of Spain, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Pierrepoint, Sir George, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>–1</li>
- <li class='c020'>Pierrepoint, Sir Henry, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a></li>
- <li class='c020'><span class='pageno' id='Page_377'>377</span>Pierrepoint, Lady, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Poland, King of, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Portington, Roger, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a></li>
- <li class='center'>R</li>
- <li class='c020'>Raleigh, Sir Walter, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Rawley, Sir Walter, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Robsart, Amy. <em>See</em> Dudley</li>
- <li class='c020'>Rolson, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Roods, Mr. Serjeant, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Ross, Bishop of, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Rufford, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_327'>327</a>, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Rutland, Edward Manners, third Earl of, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a> <em>et sqq.</em></li>
- <li class='c020'>Ruxby, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a></li>
- <li class='center'>S</li>
- <li class='c020'>Sackville, Lady, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Sackville, Sir Richard, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Sadler, Sir Ralph, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>St. Loe, Sir William, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a> (“Bess of Hardwick’s” third husband), <a href='#Page_13'>13</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Scrope, Lord, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Seaton, Mrs., <a href='#Page_64'>64</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Seton, Mary, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>–7, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>–3, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>–3</li>
- <li class='c020'>Seymour, Lady Jane, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Seymour, William, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a>, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a>, <a href='#Page_342'>342</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Sheffield, Lady. <em>See</em> Countess of Leicester.</li>
- <li class='c020'>Sheffield Castle, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Mary Queen of Scots at, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a> <em>et sqq.</em></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c020'>Shrewsbury, Edward Talbot, eighth Earl of, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_308'>308</a>, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a>–6, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a>, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Shrewsbury, Elizabeth Countess of: her birth, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>;
- <ul>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_378'>378</span>her early life, <a href='#Page_2'>2</a>;</li>
- <li>her early marriage and widowhood, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>;</li>
- <li>her second marriage to Sir William Cavendish, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>;</li>
- <li>her family, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>–13, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>;</li>
- <li>rebuilds Chatsworth, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>instructions to her steward, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>;</li>
- <li>death of her husband, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>;</li>
- <li>her third marriage to Sir William St. Loe, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>letters written to, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>–8, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>;</li>
- <li>letters written by, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a>, <a href='#Page_333'>333</a>;</li>
- <li>death of her husband, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>;</li>
- <li>and Lady Catherine Grey’s marriage, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>;</li>
- <li>her suitors, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>–3;</li>
- <li>her fourth marriage to Earl of Shrewsbury, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and Mary Queen of Scots’ imprisonment, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>–7, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>–1, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>–6;</li>
- <li>and Author’s interlude at Tutbury Castle, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>at Wingfield Manor, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and Queen Elizabeth’s suspicion of, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>–3, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>;</li>
- <li>and Henry Lascelles, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and Mary and Norfolk, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>her business instincts, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>;</li>
- <li>Mary’s attitude to, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>;</li>
- <li>and her daughter Elizabeth’s marriage, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>her imprisonment in the Tower, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_379'>379</span>released from the Tower, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>;</li>
- <li>the birth of her grandchild, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>–9, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>–4;</li>
- <li>her love of match-making, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>restored to Elizabeth’s favour, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>;</li>
- <li>entertains Leicester at Chatsworth, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>her social importance, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>;</li>
- <li>her household needs, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>;</li>
- <li>and Gilbert Talbot, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>;</li>
- <li>family quarrels, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>the dissension between the Earl and, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>–14, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>–13, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and her love of building, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>;</li>
- <li>her grief at her grandchild’s death, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>–9, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>;</li>
- <li>presents to, from Mary, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>;</li>
- <li>the tenantry and, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and the rights of Lady Arabella Stuart, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_328'>328</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_333'>333</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>, <a href='#Page_345'>345</a>;</li>
- <li>and Elizabeth’s flattery, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a>;</li>
- <li>and Mary Queen of Scots’ illness, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>;</li>
- <li>and the death of her daughter, Lady Lennox, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and Mary Queen of Scots’ complaints of, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and the Shrewsbury scandal, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and Gilbert Talbot’s monetary affairs, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>division of her property, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a>–5;</li>
- <li>and Queen Elizabeth as peacemaker, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>–8, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a>, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>;</li>
- <li>appears before the Lords of the Council, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_380'>380</span>and the “Scandal Letter,” <a href='#Page_271'>271</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and the Earl’s financial proposal, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>appeals to Burghley, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>;</li>
- <li>Bishop of Lichfield and, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>her characteristics, <a href='#Page_322'>322</a>, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a>–5, <a href='#Page_361'>361</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>quarrels with Gilbert and Mary, <a href='#Page_324'>324</a>, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a>;</li>
- <li>builds Owlcotes, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a>;</li>
- <li>her serious illness, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a>, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a>;</li>
- <li>her death, <a href='#Page_347'>347</a>;</li>
- <li>her mansions, <a href='#Page_349'>349</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>her portrait at Hardwick, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c020'>Shrewsbury, George Talbot, sixth Earl of (“Bess of Hardwick’s” fourth husband), <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>his ancestry, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>–5;</li>
- <li>honours bestowed on, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>;</li>
- <li>his marriage to “Bess of Hardwick,” <a href='#Page_36'>36</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>his enormous correspondence, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>;</li>
- <li>letters written by, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>–9, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>–7, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a>, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>;</li>
- <li>his charge of Mary Queen of Scots, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>–1, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>;</li>
- <li>his allowance for Mary, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>–14, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>;</li>
- <li>and Mary’s life at Tutbury, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>at Wingfield, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>his illness, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>–3;</li>
- <li>Queen Elizabeth’s complaints of, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>–7, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>–8, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>;</li>
- <li>and Queen Mary’s health, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>;</li>
- <li>and the attack on his wife, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>–8;</li>
- <li>and Duke of Norfolk’s trial, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>–7;</li>
- <li>letters written to, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_381'>381</span>his characteristics, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>;</li>
- <li>and the priests’ accusation, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and Elizabeth Cavendish’s marriage, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and his wife’s imprisonment, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>his present to Burghley, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>–2;</li>
- <li>and his son’s proposed marriage, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>his expenditure, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>–8;</li>
- <li>and Leicester at Buxton, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>;</li>
- <li>entertains Leicester at Chatsworth, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>his parsimony, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>;</li>
- <li>disagreements with his children, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>disagreements with his wife, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and Mary’s reported escape, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>;</li>
- <li>and his grandchild’s death, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>–9;</li>
- <li>Mary’s friendliness towards, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>;</li>
- <li>pleads to Queen Elizabeth, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>;</li>
- <li>difficulties with his tenants, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and his grandchild Arabella, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>;</li>
- <li>wishes to visit the Queen, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>;</li>
- <li>death of his son Francis, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>;</li>
- <li>and Mary’s ill-health, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and the death of Lady Lennox, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>–5;</li>
- <li>the slander against, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and Mary Talbot, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>his dislike of Chatsworth, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>–9;</li>
- <li>released from his charge of Mary, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a>;</li>
- <li>visits Elizabeth, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a>–7;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_382'>382</span>and Elizabeth as peacemaker, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>his monetary disputes with the Countess, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and Elizabeth’s partiality for the Countess, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and Elizabeth’s profession, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a>, <a href='#Page_315'>315</a>;</li>
- <li>Elizabeth’s decision, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>reproves Mary Talbot’s extravagance, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a>;</li>
- <li>Sir Henry Lee and, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>his lonely old age, <a href='#Page_307'>307</a>–8, <a href='#Page_315'>315</a>–16;</li>
- <li>summoned to Fotheringay, <a href='#Page_307'>307</a>;</li>
- <li>and execution of Mary Queen of Scots, <a href='#Page_309'>309</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>Bishop of Lichfield’s advice to, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>his death, <a href='#Page_322'>322</a> <em>et sqq.</em></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c020'>Shrewsbury, Gilbert Talbot, seventh Earl of, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a>, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>, <a href='#Page_308'>308</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>his marriage, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>–5;</li>
- <li>letters written by, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a>;</li>
- <li>his varied duties, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>;</li>
- <li>letters written to, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>;</li>
- <li>and his first child, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>;</li>
- <li>and the priests’ accusations against his father, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>–15, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>–18;</li>
- <li>Court chit-chat by, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>entertains Leicester at Buxton, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>;</li>
- <li>his illness, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>;</li>
- <li>and his uncongenial home, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>dissension with his father, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and his parents’ quarrels, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>and the Shrewsbury tenantry, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_383'>383</span>and Elizabeth’s “deshabille,” <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>–2;</li>
- <li>champions his stepmother, Lady Shrewsbury, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>–2;</li>
- <li>death of his son, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>;</li>
- <li>his monetary difficulties, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a>;</li>
- <li>his love for his stepmother, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>–15;</li>
- <li>succeeds his father, <a href='#Page_324'>324</a>–5, <a href='#Page_327'>327</a>;</li>
- <li>his portrait at Hardwick Hall, <a href='#Page_324'>324</a>;</li>
- <li>quarrels with his brother Edward, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a>;</li>
- <li>entertains the King, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a>–1;</li>
- <li>and Lady Arabella Stuart, <a href='#Page_342'>342</a>;</li>
- <li>quarrels with his stepmother, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c020'>Shrewsbury, Jane, Countess of, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Shrewsbury, John Talbot, first Earl of, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>–5</li>
- <li class='c020'>Shrewsbury, Mary, Countess of, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>, <a href='#Page_324'>324</a>, <a href='#Page_337'>337</a>, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a>, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Sidney, Sir Philip, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Simier, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Skargelle, George, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Skipwith, Henry, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Smith, Sir Thomas, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Snagge, Serjeant, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Somerset, Duke of, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Southwell, Francis, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Stafford, Sir Edward, <a href='#Page_332'>332</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Stanhope, Sir Thomas, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>–3, <a href='#Page_327'>327</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Steele, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Story, Dr., <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>–3</li>
- <li class='c020'>Stuart, Esmé, Lord d’Aubigny, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Stuart, Lady Arabella, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>–13, <a href='#Page_315'>315</a>, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a>, <a href='#Page_355'>355</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>her birth, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>–9, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>;</li>
- <li>her rights, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_384'>384</span>the allowance for, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>death of her mother, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>;</li>
- <li>and her succession to her father’s earldom, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>–7;</li>
- <li>Mary’s bequest of jewels to, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>–8;</li>
- <li>appeals to Elizabeth on behalf of, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>–9;</li>
- <li>Lady Shrewsbury’s ambitions for, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>, <a href='#Page_322'>322</a>, <a href='#Page_328'>328</a>, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a>;</li>
- <li>proposed alliances for, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>, <a href='#Page_332'>332</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a>, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a>;</li>
- <li>her postscript to Lord Burghley, <a href='#Page_331'>331</a>;</li>
- <li>goes to Court, <a href='#Page_337'>337</a> <em>et sqq.</em>;</li>
- <li>her betrothal to William Seymour, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a>;</li>
- <li>her arrest, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a>, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a>;</li>
- <li>appointed State Governess, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a>;</li>
- <li>summoned to Lady’s Shrewsbury’s bedside 344–5</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c020'>Suffolk, Duchess of, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Sussex, Earl of, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Sussex, Countess of, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a></li>
- <li class='center'>T</li>
- <li class='c020'>Talbot, Lady Anne, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Talbot, Lady Catherine. <em>See</em> Pembroke</li>
- <li class='c020'>Talbot, Lord Edward. <em>See</em> Shrewsbury</li>
- <li class='c020'>Talbot, Lady Francis, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Talbot, Lord Francis, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a>, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Talbot, Lady Grace. <em>See</em> Cavendish</li>
- <li class='c020'>Talbot, George. <em>See</em> Sixth Earl of Shrewsbury</li>
- <li class='c020'>Talbot, George, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a></li>
- <li class='c020'><span class='pageno' id='Page_385'>385</span>Talbot, Gilbert. <em>See</em> Seventh Earl of Shrewsbury</li>
- <li class='c020'>Talbot, Henry, Lord, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>–5, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>, <a href='#Page_308'>308</a>, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a>, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Talbot, Lady Jane, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Talbot, John. <em>See</em> First Earl of Shrewsbury</li>
- <li class='c020'>Talbot, Mary. <em>See</em> Countess of Shrewsbury</li>
- <li class='c020'>Talbott, John, <a href='#Page_333'>333</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Throgmorton, Sir Nicholas, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>–3</li>
- <li class='c020'>Thurlby, Bishop, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Thynne, Sir John, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Topcliffe, Richard, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>his letter to Lady Shrewsbury, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c020'>Tutbury Castle, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a>, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Mary Queen of Scots at, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>;</li>
- <li>Author’s Dramatic Interlude at, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a> <em>et sqq.</em></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='center'>W</li>
- <li class='c020'>Walpole, Horace, <a href='#Page_357'>357</a>, <a href='#Page_361'>361</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Walsingham, Sir Francis, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>–8, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a></li>
- <li class='c020'><span class='pageno' id='Page_386'>386</span>Warner, Sir Edward, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Warwick, Ambrose Earl of, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Watts, Archdeacon, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Welbeck Abbey, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a>, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a> <em>et sqq.</em></li>
- <li class='c020'>Wharton, Lord, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>White, Nicholas, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Wilson, Dr., <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>–3, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Wingfield, Mr., <a href='#Page_37'>37</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Wingfield Manor, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a>, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Mary Queen of Scots at, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a> <em>et sqq.</em>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c020'>Winter, Sir William, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Wood, Dr., <a href='#Page_326'>326</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Worksop Manor, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a>, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a> <em>et sqq.</em></li>
- <li class='c020'>Wortley, Sir Richard, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a></li>
- <li class='center'>Z</li>
- <li class='c020'>Zouche, Sir John, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a></li>
- <li class='c020'>Zouche, Lady, <a href='#Page_2'>2</a>, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<hr class='c021' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r1'>1</a>. <span class='pageno' id='Page_387'>387</span>Collins’ <cite>Noble Families</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r2'>2</a>. The Marquis of Dorset.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r3'>3</a>. State MS.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r4'>4</a>. ? Almoner.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r5'>5</a>. Avoid = clear out.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r6'>6</a>. Lady Jane Grey.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f7'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r7'>7</a>. State MS.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f8'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r8'>8</a>. According to Leland, “Halamshire beginneth a ii. mile from
-Rotheram. Sheffield iii miles from Rotheram, wher the lord of
-Shreusbyre’s castle, the chefe market towne of Halamshire. And
-Halamshire goeth one way vi or vii miles above Sheffield by west, yet as
-I here say, another way the next village to Sheffield is in Derbyshire.
-Al Halamshire go to the seesions of York and is counted as a membre of
-Yorkshire. Aeglesfield and Bradfeld ii townelettes or villages long to
-one paroche chirche. So by this meanes (as I was enstructed) ther be
-but iii paroches in Halamshire that is of name, and a great Chapelle.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Hunter sums up these three parishes as Sheffield, Ecclesfield, and
-Hansworth, with the chapelry of Bradfield.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f9'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r9'>9</a>. Hunter’s <cite>Hallamshire</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f10'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r10'>10</a>. None = own. Probably an abbreviation of “mine own.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f11'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r11'>11</a>. Hunter’s <cite>Hallamshire</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f12'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r12'>12</a>. His disaffected tenants at Bolsover.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f13'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r13'>13</a>. Construction.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f14'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r14'>14</a>. When Lady Catherine Grey was imprisoned in the Tower for her
-secret marriage with the Earl of Hertford she took amongst her belongings
-some pet monkeys. These played havoc with the hangings, not
-in first-rate condition, with which, by Elizabeth’s order, the cheerlessness
-of her prison apartments was mitigated.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f15'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r15'>15</a>. The famous scandal-letter about the Countess of Shrewsbury from
-Mary to Elizabeth, to which reference follows later.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f16'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r16'>16</a>. Blank in the MS.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f17'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r17'>17</a>. Of Norfolk.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f18'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r18'>18</a>. A servant of the Shrewsburys.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f19'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r19'>19</a>. Daughters of William, Lord Howard of Effingham.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f20'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r20'>20</a>. Blank In the MS.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f21'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r21'>21</a>. Hunter’s <cite>Hallamshire</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f22'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r22'>22</a>. In the light of after events this is a somewhat rash offer!</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f23'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r23'>23</a>. Corker had apparently eaten his words in a whining counter statement.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f24'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r24'>24</a>. Hunter’s <cite>Hallamshire</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f25'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r25'>25</a>. His death took place in 1575, but Mary did not hear of it till a year
-later.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f26'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r26'>26</a>. Leader, <cite>Mary Queen of Scots in Captivity</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f27'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r27'>27</a>. The Cavendish motto, meaning “Secure by taking care.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f28'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r28'>28</a>. <cite>Mary Queen of Scots: Her Environment and Tragedy</cite>, by T. F.
-Henderson.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f29'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r29'>29</a>. State Papers—Domestic, quoted by Miss Strickland.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f30'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r30'>30</a>. State Papers—Domestic.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f31'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r31'>31</a>. Blank in the original, as given in Lodge’s <cite>Illustrations of British
-History</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f32'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r32'>32</a>. Hunter’s <cite>Hallamshire</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f33'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r33'>33</a>. Explain or set aside.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f34'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r34'>34</a>. Lady Grace’s letter.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f35'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r35'>35</a>. The Queen had a small palace here, in Northamptonshire.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f36'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r36'>36</a>. Gilbert Talbot had apparently fallen out of favour. The matter is,
-however, so unimportant that no explanation remains of it.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f37'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r37'>37</a>. His three wives were: Amy or Anne, daughter and heir to Sir
-John Robsart; Douglas, daughter of William Lord Howard of Effingham
-and widow of John Lord Sheffield, by whom he had one son, Sir
-Robert Dudley; and Lettice Knollys, daughter of Sir Francis Knollys
-and widow of Walter Earl of Essex. Amy Robsart died suddenly at
-Kenilworth, and he did not even attend her funeral; Lady Sheffield he
-repudiated because of his passion for Lettice Knollys, whose death took
-place under suspicious circumstances. He declared his son by Lady Sheffield to be illegitimate, and she, though married to him, was so frightened
-by his attempt to remove her by poison, in order that he might wed the
-widowed Countess of Essex, that, though legally bound to him, she
-became the wife of Sir Edward Stafford, of Grafton.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f38'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r38'>38</a>. Hunter’s <cite>Hallamshire</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f39'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r39'>39</a>. Her husband died of consumption within two years of the hasty
-and romantic wedding at Rufford Abbey.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f40'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r40'>40</a>. Hallamshire knives, or “whittles,” were famous, and the Earl often
-sent gifts of sets to his friends in these early days of the development of
-Sheffield cutlery.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f41'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r41'>41</a>. Creighton takes the view that this was Elizabeth’s elaborate method
-of flogging the couple at Chatsworth for luring Leicester to Chatsworth,
-and that she highly disapproved of the visit.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f42'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r42'>42</a>. Ambrose Earl of Warwick, to whom Lord Leicester bequeathed
-his estates, only making his own son, Robert Dudley, heir in the second
-place.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f43'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r43'>43</a>. In sending her thanks for Leicester’s entertainment Elizabeth apparently
-despatched also to Shrewsbury a separate letter embodying her old
-suspicious fears.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f44'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r44'>44</a>. Could this be the Earl of Warwick, who, as suggested in Elizabeth’s
-skittish letter just quoted, had been invited to Chatsworth with Lord Leicester?</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f45'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r45'>45</a>. Hunter’s <cite>Hallamshire</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f46'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r46'>46</a>. Letters of Mary Queen of Scots, quoted by Leader.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f47'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r47'>47</a>. Hunter’s <cite>Hallamshire</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f48'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r48'>48</a>. The Earl and Sir John Zouch, a kinsman of the Countess, were
-contesting the right to sell some Derbyshire lead mines.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f49'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r49'>49</a>. Hunter’s <cite>Hallamshire</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f50'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r50'>50</a>. <em>Ibid.</em></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f51'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r51'>51</a>. Goodrich Castle, in Herefordshire; also one of the Shrewsbury
-properties at this date.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f52'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r52'>52</a>. His little son.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f53'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r53'>53</a>. The mouth of a coal-pit.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f54'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r54'>54</a>. Probably “detailing” or “appealing to.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f55'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r55'>55</a>. Hunter’s <cite>Hallamshire</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f56'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r56'>56</a>. That is, clearly a plot against Shrewsbury.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f57'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r57'>57</a>. The Duke of Anjou, Elizabeth’s new suitor, whom she called her
-“Frogg,” while his ambassador, Simier, who so nearly, in his own
-opinion, secured for his master the bride of his ambitions, was known at
-Court as the “Monkey.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f58'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r58'>58</a>. Leader.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f59'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r59'>59</a>. Evidently his elder brother Francis Talbot, who was probably about
-to visit his parents.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f60'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r60'>60</a>. Quoted in Creighton’s <cite>Elizabeth</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f61'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r61'>61</a>. Ellis’s <cite>Letters</cite> (Lansdowne MSS.).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f62'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r62'>62</a>. Ellis’s <cite>Letters</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f63'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r63'>63</a>. Labanoff.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f64'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r64'>64</a>. <em>Ibid.</em></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f65'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r65'>65</a>. Ellis’s <cite>Letters</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f66'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r66'>66</a>. Labanoff. <cite>State Papers</cite>, Mary Queen of Scots.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f67'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r67'>67</a>. I have translated this freely. Mary means the tissue of treachery,
-the fabrications of the Countess during their acquaintance.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f68'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r68'>68</a>. The Queen.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f69'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r69'>69</a>. Labanoff. This translation is the one given by Leader.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f70'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r70'>70</a>. Steele.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f71'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r71'>71</a>. Vol. CCVII State Papers.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f72'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r72'>72</a>. This “dyarium” is reprinted by Wright, Vol. II, <cite>Queen Elizabeth
-and her Times</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f73'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r73'>73</a>. The day after Michaelmas.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f74'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r74'>74</a>. Ere.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f75'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r75'>75</a>. Letter to Liggons, May 18, 1586. State MSS. Mary Queen of
-Scots.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f76'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r76'>76</a>. Labanoff.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f77'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r77'>77</a>. Killigrew was a deadly enemy of Mary, for he had been sent in
-1572 to Scotland by Elizabeth to propose the demand by the Scots of
-the surrender of Mary on condition that she should be executed.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f78'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r78'>78</a>. Rolson was a gentleman pensioner of Elizabeth who betrayed his
-father, one of the conspirators who engaged in 1570 with the sons of the
-Earl of Derby in a plot to convey Mary out of Chatsworth through
-a window. She mentioned him four years later in a letter to “Monsieur
-de Glasgo” with the greatest abhorrence, both as filial traitor and as author
-of a design to poison her.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f79'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r79'>79</a>. I.e. Of her keep and its cost.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f80'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r80'>80</a>. The Act referred to is one passed in the reign of Richard II to
-punish the slander of high personages or officials.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f81'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r81'>81</a>. State MSS.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f82'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r82'>82</a>. By “A Catholic,” State MSS.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f83'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r83'>83</a>. Hunter’s <cite>Hallamshire</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f84'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r84'>84</a>. Blank in the MS.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f85'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r85'>85</a>. Ellis’s <cite>Letters</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f86'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r86'>86</a>. Ellis’s <cite>Letters</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f87'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r87'>87</a>. Costello.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f88'>
-<p class='c006'><a href='#r88'>88</a>. “None-Such”—one of the royal palaces at this time.</p>
-</div>
-
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