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14 <Metadata name="Content">biography of Queen Elizabeth I (1533-1603) by Edward Spencer Beesly, 1892</Metadata>
15 <Metadata name="Page_topic">biography of Queen Elizabeth I (1533-1603) by Edward Spencer Beesly, 1892</Metadata>
16 <Metadata name="Author">Marilee Mongello</Metadata>
17 <Metadata name="Title">Secondary Sources: Queen Elizabeth by Edward Spencer Beesly, 1892: Chapter IV</Metadata>
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30
31&lt;table border=&quot;0&quot; cellpadding=&quot;3&quot; width=&quot;100%&quot; height=&quot;667&quot;&gt;
32 &lt;tr&gt;
33 &lt;td width=&quot;25%&quot; height=&quot;29&quot;&gt;&lt;/td&gt;
34 &lt;td valign=&quot;top&quot; width=&quot;50%&quot; height=&quot;29&quot;&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/td&gt;
35 &lt;td width=&quot;25%&quot; height=&quot;29&quot;&gt;&lt;/td&gt;
36 &lt;/tr&gt;
37 &lt;tr&gt;
38 &lt;td width=&quot;25%&quot; height=&quot;3&quot;&gt;&lt;/td&gt;
39 &lt;td width=&quot;50%&quot; height=&quot;3&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/td&gt;
40 &lt;td width=&quot;25%&quot; height=&quot;3&quot;&gt;&lt;/td&gt;
41 &lt;/tr&gt;
42 &lt;tr&gt;
43 &lt;td width=&quot;25%&quot; height=&quot;610&quot;&gt;&lt;/td&gt;
44 &lt;td valign=&quot;top&quot; width=&quot;50%&quot; height=&quot;610&quot;&gt;
45 &lt;p align=&quot;center&quot;&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;7&quot;&gt;Queen Elizabeth&lt;br&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;
46 &lt;font size=&quot;4&quot;&gt;by Edward Spencer Beesly, 1892&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
47 &lt;p align=&quot;center&quot;&gt;
48 &lt;img border=&quot;2&quot; src=&quot;_httpdocimg_/eliz1-ermine.jpg&quot; width=&quot;400&quot; height=&quot;478&quot; alt=&quot;'The Ermine Portrait' of Elizabeth I, c1585, by Nicholas Hilliard&quot;&gt;&lt;p align=&quot;center&quot;&gt;
49 &lt;i&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;2&quot;&gt;'The Ermine Portrait' of Elizabeth I, c1585, by Nicholas
50 Hilliard;&lt;br&gt;from the &lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=0&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fwww.marileecody.com%2feliz1-images.html&quot;&gt;Portraits of Queen Elizabeth I&lt;/a&gt; website&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/td&gt;
51 &lt;td width=&quot;25%&quot; height=&quot;610&quot;&gt;&lt;/td&gt;
52 &lt;/tr&gt;
53&lt;/table&gt;
54&lt;blockquote&gt;
55 &lt;blockquote&gt;
56 &lt;font face=&quot;Times New Roman&quot;&gt;
57 &lt;div align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;
58 &lt;b&gt;CHAPTER IV&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
59 &lt;b&gt;ELIZABETH AND MARY STUART: 1559-1568&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/div&gt;
60 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;WHEN Elizabeth mounted the throne, it was
61 taken for granted that she was to marry, and marry with the least possible
62 delay. This was expected of her, not merely because in the event of her
63 dying without issue there would be a dispute whether the claim of Mary
64 Stuart or that of Catherine Grey was to prevail, but for a more general
65 reason. The rule of an unmarried woman, except provisionally during such
66 short interval as might be necessary to provide her with a husband, was
67 regarded as quite out of the question. It was the custom for the husbands of
68 heiresses to step into the property of their wives and stand in the shoes,
69 so to speak, of the last male proprietor, in order to perform those duties
70 which could not be efficiently performed by a woman. Elizabeth's sister,
71 while a subject, had no thought of marrying. But her accession was
72 considered by herself and every one else to involve marriage. If the nobles
73 of England could have foreseen that Elizabeth would elude this obligation,
74 she would probably never have been allowed to mount the throne. Her marriage
75 was thought to be as much a matter of course, and as necessary, as her
76 coronation. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
77 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;Accordingly the House of Commons, which met a
78 month after her accession, immediately requested her to select a husband
79 without delay. Her declaration that she had no desire to change her state
80 was supposed to indicate only the real or affected coyness to be expected
81 from a young lady. There was no lack of suitors, foreign or English. The
82 Archduke Charles, son of the Emperor and cousin of Philip, would have been
83 welcomed by all Catholics and acquiesced in by political Protestants like
84 Cecil. The ardent Protestants were eager for Arran, and Cecil, till he saw
85 it was useless, worked his best for him, regardless of the personal
86 sacrifice his mistress must make in wedding a man who was not always quite
87 sane and eventually became a confirmed lunatic. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
88 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;Not many months of the new reign had passed
89 before it began to be suspected that Elizabeth's partiality for Lord Robert
90 Dudley had something to do with her evident distaste for all her suitors. To
91 her Ministers and the public this partiality for a married man became a
92 cause of great disquietude. They not unnaturally feared that with a young
93 woman who had no relations to advise and keep watch over her, it might lead
94 to some disastrous scandal incompatible with her continuance on the throne.
95 Marriage with Dudley at this time was out of the question. But within four
96 months of her accession, the Spanish ambassador mentions a report that
97 Dudley's wife had a cancer, and that the Queen was only waiting for her
98 death to marry him. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
99 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;About the humble extraction of Elizabeth's
100 favourite much nonsense was talked in his lifetime by his ill-wishers, and
101 has been duly repeated since. He was as well born as most of the peerage of
102 that time; very few of whom could show nobility of any antiquity in the male
103 line. The Duke of Norfolk being the only Duke at Elizabeth's accession, and
104 in possession of an ancient title, was looked on as the head of his order.
105 Yet it was only seventy-five years since a Howard had first reached the
106 peerage in consequence of having had the good fortune to marry the heiress
107 of the Mowbrays. Edmund Dudley, Minister of Henry VII. and father of
108 Northumberland, was grandson of John, fourth Lord Dudley; and
109 Northumberland, by his mother's side, was sole heir and representative of
110 the ancient barony of De L'Isle, which title he bore before he received his
111 earldom and dukedom. In point of wealth and influence, indeed, the favourite
112 might be called an upstart. The younger son of an attainted father, he had
113 not an acre of land or a farthing of money which he did not owe either to
114 his wife or to the generosity of Elizabeth. This it was that moved the
115 sneers and ill-will of a people with whom nobility has always been a
116 composite idea implying, not only birth and title, but territorial wealth.
117 Moreover his grandfather, though of good extraction, was a simple esquire,
118 and had risen by helping Henry VII. to trample on the old nobility. After
119 his fall his son had climbed to power under Henry VIII. and Edward VI. in
120 the same way. Lord Robert Dudley, again, had to begin at the bottom of the
121 ladder. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
122 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;No one will claim for Elizabeth's favourite
123 that he was a man of distinguished ability or high character. He had a fine
124 figure and a handsome face. He bore himself well in manly exercises. His
125 manners were attractive when he wished to please. To these qualities he
126 first owed his favour with Elizabeth, who was never at any pains to conceal
127 her liking for good-looking men and her dislike of ugly ones. Finding
128 himself in favour, and inheriting to the full the pushing audacity of his
129 father and grandfather, he professed for the Queen a love which he certainly
130 did not feel, in order to serve his soaring ambition. Elizabeth, it is my
131 firm conviction, never loved Dudley or any other man, in any sense of the
132 word, high or low. She had neither a tender heart nor a sensual temperament.
133 But she had a more than feminine appetite for admiration; and the more she
134 was, unhappily for herself, a stranger to the emotion of love, the more
135 restlessly did she desire to be thought capable of inspiring it. She was
136 therefore easily taken in by Dudley's professions, and, though she did not
137 care for him enough to marry him, she liked to have him as well as several
138 other handsome men, dangling about her, &amp;quot;like her lap-dog,&amp;quot; to use her own
139 expression. Further she believed--and here came in the mischief --that his
140 devotion to her person would make him a specially faithful servant. &lt;/font&gt;
141 &lt;/p&gt;
142 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;We know, though Elizabeth did not, that in
143 1561, Dudley was promising the Spanish ambassador to be Philip's humble
144 vassal, and to do his best for Catholicism, if Philip would promote his
145 marriage with the Queen; that, in the same year, he was offering his
146 services to the French Huguenots for the same consideration; that at one
147 time he posed as the protector of the Puritans, while at another he was
148 intriguing with the captive Queen of Scots; whom, again, later on, he had a
149 chief share in bringing to the block. But we must remember that very few
150 statesmen, English or foreign, in the sixteenth century could have shown a
151 record free from similar blots. Those who, like Elizabeth and Cecil, were
152 undeniably actuated on the whole by public spirit, or by any principle more
153 respectable than pure selfishness, never hesitated to lie or play a double
154 game when it seemed to serve their turn. William of Orange is the only
155 eminent statesman, as far as I know, against whom this charge cannot be
156 made. When this was the standard of honour for consistent politicians and
157 real patriots, what was to be expected of lower natures? Dudley's conduct on
158 several occasions was bad and contemptible; and he must be judged with the
159 more severity, because he sinned not only against the code of duty binding
160 on the ordinary man and citizen, but against his professions of a tender
161 sentiment by means of which he had acquired his special influence. I have
162 said that he was not a man of great ability. But neither was he the
163 empty-headed incapable trifler that some writers have depicted him. He was
164 not so judged by his contemporaries. That Elizabeth, because she liked him,
165 would have selected a man of notorious incapacity to command her armies,
166 both in the Netherlands and when the Armada was expected, is one of those
167 hypotheses that do not become more credible by being often repeated. Cecil
168 himself, when it was not a question of the marriage--of which he was a
169 determined opponent--regarded him as a useful servant of the Queen. I do not
170 doubt that Elizabeth estimated his capacity at about its right value. What
171 she over-estimated was his affection for on, he had a chief share in
172 bringing to the block. But we must remember that very few statesmen, English
173 or foreign, in the sixteenth century could have shown a record free from
174 similar blots. Those who, like Elizabeth and Cecil, were undeniably actuated
175 on the whole by public spirit, or by any principle more respectable than
176 pure selfishness, never hesitated to lie or play a double game when it
177 seemed to serve their turn. William of Orange is the only eminent statesman,
178 as far as I know, against whom this charge cannot be made. When this was the
179 standard of honour for consistent politicians and real patriots, what was to
180 be expected of lower natures? Dudley's conduct on several occasions was bad
181 and contemptible; and he must be judged with the more severity, because he
182 sinned not only against the code of duty binding on the ordinary man and
183 citizen, but against his professions of a tender sentiment by means of which
184 he had acquired his special influence. I have said that he was not a man of
185 great ability. But neither was he the empty-headed incapable trifler that
186 some writers have depicted him. He was not so judged by his contemporaries.
187 That Elizabeth, because she liked him, would have selected a man of
188 notorious incapacity to command her armies, both in the Netherlands and when
189 the Armada was expected, is one of those hypotheses that do not become more
190 credible by being often repeated. Cecil himself, when it was not a question
191 of the marriage--of which he was a determined opponent--regarded him as a
192 useful servant of the Queen. I do not doubt that Elizabeth estimated his
193 capacity at about its right value. What she over-estimated was his affection
194 for herself, and consequently his trustworthiness. Sovereigns--and
195 others--often place a near relative in an important post, not as being the
196 most capable person they know, but as most likely to be true to them.
197 Elizabeth had no near relatives. If we grant--as we must grant--that she
198 believed in Dudley's love, we cannot wonder that she employed him in
199 positions of trust. A female ruler will always be liable to make these
200 mistakes, unless her Ministers and captains are to be of her own sex. &lt;/font&gt;
201 &lt;/p&gt;
202 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;On the 3rd of September 1560, two months
203 after the Treaty of Leith, Elizabeth told De Quadra that she had made up her
204 mind to marry the Archduke Charles. On the 8th, Lady Robert Dudley died at
205 Cumnor Hall. On the 11th, Elizabeth told De Quadra that she had changed her
206 mind. Dudley neglected his wife, and never brought her to court. We cannot
207 doubt that he fretted under a tie which stood in the way of his ambition.
208 Her death had been predicted. It is not strange, therefore, that he should
209 have been suspected of having caused it. Nevertheless, not a particle of
210 evidence pointing in that direction has ever been produced, and it seems
211 most probable that the poor deserted creature committed suicide. A coroner's
212 jury investigated the case diligently, and, it would seem, with some animus
213 against Foster, the owner of Cumnor Hall, but returned a verdict of
214 accidental death. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
215 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;Anyhow, Dudley was now free. The Scotch
216 Estates were eagerly pressing Arran's suit, and the English Protestants were
217 as eagerly backing them. The opportunity was certainly unique. Though
218 nothing was said about deposing Mary, yet nothing could be more certain than
219 that, if this marriage took place, the Queen of France would never reign in
220 Scotland. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
221 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;At her wits' end how to escape a match so
222 desirable for the Queen, so repulsive to the woman, Elizabeth had announced
223 her willingness to espouse the Archduke in order to gain a short
224 breathing-time. Vienna was at least further than Edinburgh, and difficulties
225 were sure to arise when details began to be discussed. At this moment, by
226 the sudden death of his wife, Dudley became marriageable. If Elizabeth had
227 been free to marry or not, as she pleased, it seems to me in the highest
228 degree improbable that she would ever have thought of taking Dudley. But
229 believing that a husband was inevitable, and expecting that she would be
230 forced to take some one who was either unknown to her or positively
231 distasteful, it was most natural that she should ask herself whether it was
232 not the least of evils to put this cruel persecution to an end by choosing a
233 man whom at least she admired and liked, who loved her, as she thought, for
234 her own sake, and would be as obedient &amp;quot;as her lap-dog.&amp;quot; When nations are
235 ruled by women, and marriageable women, feelings and motives which belong to
236 the sphere of private life, and should be confined to it, are apt to invade
237 the domain of politics. If Elizabeth's subjects expected their sovereign to
238 suppress all personal feelings in choosing a consort, they ought to have
239 established the Salic law. No woman, queen or not queen, can be expected
240 voluntarily to make such a sacrifice. Her happiness is too deeply involved.
241 &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
242 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;In the autumn, then, of 1560, when Elizabeth
243 had been not quite two years on the throne, she seriously thought of
244 marrying Dudley. It is difficult to say how long she continued to think of
245 it seriously. With him, as with other suitors, she went on coquetting when
246 she had perfectly made up her mind that nothing was to come of it. Perhaps
247 we shall be right in saying that, as long as there was any question of the
248 Archduke Charles, she looked to Dudley as a possible refuge. This would be
249 till about the beginning of 1568. It seems to be always assumed, as a matter
250 of course, that Cecil played the part of Elizabeth's good genius in
251 persistently dissuading her from marrying Dudley. I am not so sure of this.
252 If she had been a wife and a mother many of her difficulties would have at
253 once disappeared, and the weakest points in her character would have no
254 longer been brought out. It ended in her not marrying at all. I am inclined
255 to think that another enemy of Dudley, the Earl of Sussex, showed more good
256 sense and truer patriotism when he wrote in October 1560:-- &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
257 &lt;blockquote&gt;
258 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;&amp;quot;I wish not her Majesty to linger this
259 matter of so great importance, but to choose speedily; and therein to
260 follow so much her own affection as [that], by the looking upon him whom
261 she should choose, omnes ejus sensus titillarentur; which shall be the
262 readiest way, with the help of God, to bring us a blessed prince which
263 shall redeem us out of thraldom. If I knew that England had other rightful
264 inheritors I would then advise otherwise, and seek to serve the time by a
265 husband's choice [seek for an advantageous political alliance]. But seeing
266 that she is ultimum refugium, and that no riches, friendship, foreign
267 alliance, or any other present commodity that might come by a husband, can
268 serve our turn, without issue of her body, if the Queen will love anybody,
269 let her love where and whom she lists, so much thirst I to see her love.
270 And whomsoever she shall love and choose, him will I love, honour, and
271 serve to the uttermost.&amp;quot; &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
272 &lt;/blockquote&gt;
273 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;Perhaps I may be excused for expressing the
274 opinion that the ideal husband for Elizabeth, if it had been possible, would
275 have been Lord James Stuart, afterwards Earl of Moray. Of sufficient
276 capacity, kindly heart, undaunted resolution, and unswerving rectitude of
277 purpose, he would have supplied just those elements that were wanting to
278 correct her defects. King of Scotland he perhaps could not be. Regent of
279 Scotland he did become. If he could, at the same time, have been Elizabeth's
280 husband, the two crowns might have, in the next generation, been worn by a
281 Stuart of a nobler stock than the son of Mary and Darnley. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
282 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;When Mary Stuart, on the death of her husband
283 Francis II., returned to her own kingdom (August 1561), she found the
284 Scotch nobles sore at the rejection of Arran's suit. Bent on giving a
285 sovereign to England, in one way or another, they were now ready,
286 Protestants as well as Catholics, to back Mary's demand that she should be
287 recognised as Elizabeth's heir-presumptive. To this the English. Queen could
288 not consent, for the very sufficient reason, that not only would the
289 Catholic party be encouraged to hold together and give trouble, but the more
290 bigoted and desperate members of it would certainly attempt her life, lest
291 she should disappoint Mary's hopes by marrying. &amp;quot;She was not so foolish,&amp;quot;
292 she said, &amp;quot;as to hang a winding-sheet before her eyes or make a funeral
293 feast whilst she was alive,&amp;quot; but she promised that she would neither do
294 anything nor allow anything to be done by Parliament to prejudice Mary's
295 title. To this undertaking she adhered long after Mary's hostile conduct had
296 given ample justification for treating her as an enemy. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
297 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;Openly Mary was claiming nothing but the
298 succession. In reality she cared little for a prospect so remote and
299 uncertain. What she was scheming for was to hurl Elizabeth from her throne.
300 This was an object for which she never ceased to work till her head was off
301 her shoulders. Her aims were more sharply defined than those of Elizabeth,
302 and she was remarkably free from that indecision which too often marred the
303 action of the English Queen. In ability and information she was not at all
304 inferior to Elizabeth; in promptitude and energy she was her superior. These
305 masculine qualities might have given her the victory in the bitter duel, but
306 that, in the all-important domain of feeling, her sex indomitably asserted
307 itself, and weighted her too heavily to match the superb self-control of
308 Elizabeth. She could love and she could hate; Elizabeth had only likes and
309 dislikes, and therefore played the cooler game. When Mary really loved,
310 which was only once, all selfish calculations were flung to the winds; she
311 was ready to sacrifice everything, and not count the cost--body and soul,
312 crown and life, interest and honour. When she hated, which was often,
313 rancour was apt to get the better of prudence. And so at the fatal
314 turning-point of her career, when mad hate and madder love possessed her
315 soul, she went down before her great rival never to rise again. Here was a
316 woman indeed. And if, for that reason, she lost the battle in life, for that
317 reason too she still disputes it from the tomb. She has always had, and
318 always will have, the ardent sympathy of a host of champions, to whom the
319 &amp;quot;fair vestal throned by the west&amp;quot; is a mere politician, sexless, coldblooded,
320 and repulsive. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
321 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;In 1564 Mary, as yet fancy-free, was seeking
322 to match herself on purely political grounds. She was not so fastidious as
323 Elizabeth, for she does not seem to have troubled herself at all about
324 personal qualities, if a match seemed otherwise eligible. The Hamiltons
325 pressed Arran upon her. But he was a Protestant. He was not heir to any
326 throne but that of Scotland; and, though a powerful family in Scotland, the
327 Hamiltons could give her no help elsewhere. Philip, who, now that the Guises
328 had become his protégés, was less jealous of her designs, wished her to
329 marry his cousin, the Archduke Charles of Austria. But this prince, whom
330 Elizabeth professed to find too much of a Catholic, was, in the eyes of
331 'Mary and her more bigoted co-religionists, too nearly a Lutheran; and she
332 doubted whether Philip cared enough for him to risk a war for establishing
333 him and herself upon the English throne. For this reason the husband on whom
334 she had set her heart was Don Carlos, Philip's own son, a sort of wild
335 beast. But Philip received her overtures doubtfully; the fact being that he
336 could not trust Don Carlos, whom he eventually put to death. Catherine de'
337 Medici loved Mary as little as she did the other Guises, but the prospect of
338 the Spanish match filled her with such terror that she proposed to make the
339 Scottish Queen her daughter-in-law a second time by a marriage with Charles
340 IX., a lad under thirteen, if she would wait two years for him. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
341 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;On the other hand, Elizabeth impressed upon
342 Mary that, unless she married a member of some Reformed Church, the English
343 Parliament would certainly demand that her title to the succession, whatever
344 it was, should be declared invalid. The House of Commons was strongly
345 Protestant, and had with difficulty been prevented from addressing the Queen
346 in favour of the succession of Lady Catherine Grey. Apart from religion
347 there was deep irritation against the whole Scotch nation. Sir Ralph Sadler,
348 who had been much employed in Scotland, denounced them as &amp;quot;false, beggarly,
349 and perjured, whom the very stones in the English streets would rise
350 against.&amp;quot; When Elizabeth was dangerously ill in October 1562, the Council
351 discussed whom they should proclaim in the event of her death. Some were for
352 the will of Henry VIII. and Catherine Grey. Others, sick of female rulers,
353 were for taking the Earl of Huntingdon, a descendant of the Duke of
354 Clarence. None were for Mary or Darnley. Mary's chief friends--Montagu,
355 Northumberland, Westmoreland, and Derby--were not on the Council. &lt;/font&gt;
356 &lt;/p&gt;
357 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;Parliament and the Council being against her,
358 Mary could not afford to quarrel with the Queen. Elizabeth told her that she
359 would regard a marriage with any Spanish, Austrian, or French prince as a
360 declaration of war. Help from those quarters was far away, and at the mercy
361 of winds and waves: the Border fortresses were near, and their garrisons
362 always ready to march. Besides, whichever of the two she might
363 obtain--Charles IX. or the Archduke--she drove the other into the arms of
364 Elizabeth. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
365 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;But there was another possible husband who
366 had crossed her mind from time to time; not a prince indeed, yet of royal
367 extraction in the female line, and, what was more, not without pretensions
368 to that very succession which she coveted. Henry Lord Darnley, son of
369 Matthew Stuart, Earl of Lennox, was, by his father's side, of the royal
370 family of Scotland, while his mother was the daughter of Margaret Tudor,
371 sister of Henry VIII., by her second husband, the Earl of Angus. Born and
372 brought up in England, where his father had been long an exile, he was
373 reckoned as an Englishman, which, in the opinion of many lawyers, was
374 essential as a qualification for the crown. He was also a Catholic, and if
375 Elizabeth had died at this time, it was perhaps Darnley, rather than Mary,
376 whom the Catholics would have tried to place on the throne. Elizabeth had
377 promised that, if Mary would marry an English nobleman, she would do her
378 best to get Mary's title recognised by Parliament. To Elizabeth, therefore,
379 Mary now turned, with the request that she would point out such a nobleman,
380 not without a hope that she would name Darnley (March 1564). But, to Mary's
381 mortification, she formally recommended Lord Robert Dudley. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
382 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;This recommendation has often been treated as
383 if it was a sorry joke perpetrated by Elizabeth, who had never any intention
384 of furthering, or even permitting, such a match. But nothing is more certain
385 than that Elizabeth was most anxious to bring it about; and it affords a
386 decisive proof that her feeling for Dudley, whatever name she herself may
387 have put to it, was not what is usually called love. Cecil and all her most
388 intimate advisers entertained no doubt that she was sincere. She undertook,
389 if Mary would accept Dudley, to make him a duke; and, in the meantime, she
390 created him Earl of Leicester. She regarded him, so she told Mary's envoy
391 Melville, as her brother and her friend; if he was Mary's husband she would
392 have no suspicion or fear of any usurpation before her death, being assured
393 that he was so loving and trusty that he would never permit anything to be
394 attempted during her time. &amp;quot;But,&amp;quot; she said, pointing to Darnley, who was
395 present, &amp;quot;you like better yonder long lad.&amp;quot; Her suspicion was correct.
396 Melville had secret instructions to procure permission for Darnley to go to
397 Scotland. However, he answered discreetly that &amp;quot;no woman of spirit could
398 choose such an one who more resembled a woman than a man.&amp;quot; &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
399 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;How was Elizabeth to be persuaded to let
400 Darnley leave England? There was only one way to disarm suspicion: Mary
401 declared herself ready to marry Leicester (January 1565). Darnley
402 immediately obtained leave of absence for three months ostensibly to recover
403 the forfeited Lennox property. In Scotland the purpose of his coming was not
404 mistaken, and it roused the Protestants to fury. The Queen's chapel, the
405 only place in the Lowlands where mass was said, was beset. Her priests were
406 mobbed and maltreated. Moray, who till lately had supported his sister with
407 such loyalty and energy that Knox had quarrelled with him, prepared, with
408 the other Lords of the Congregation, for resistance. Elizabeth, and Cecil
409 also, had been completely overreached. A prudent player sometimes gets into
410 difficulties by attributing equal prudence to a daring and reckless
411 antagonist. Elizabeth, as a patriotic ruler, desired nothing but peace and
412 security for her own kingdom. If she could have that, she had no wish to
413 meddle with Scotland. Mary, caring nothing for the interests of her
414 subjects, was facing civil war with a light heart; and, for the chance of
415 obtaining the more brilliant throne, was ready to risk her own. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
416 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;Undeterred by Elizabeth's threats, Mary
417 married Darnley (29 July 1565). Moray and Argyll, having obtained a
418 promise of assistance from England, took arms; but most of the Lords of the
419 Congregation showed themselves even more powerless or perfidious than they
420 had been five years before. Morton, Ruthven, and Lindsay, stoutest of
421 Protestants, were related to Darnley, and were gratified by the elevation of
422 their kinsman. Moray failed to elicit a spark of spirit out of the
423 priest-baiting citizens of Edinburgh, and the Queen, riding steel cap on
424 head and pistols at saddle-bow, chased him into England. Lord Bedford, who
425 was in command at Berwick, could have stepped across the Border and
426 scattered her undisciplined array without difficulty. He implored Elizabeth
427 to let him do it; offered to do it on his own responsibility, and be
428 disavowed. But he found, to his mortification, that she had been playing a
429 game of brag. She had hoped that a threatening attitude would stop the
430 marriage. But as it was an accomplished fact she was not going to draw the
431 sword. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
432 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;This was shabby treatment of Moray and his
433 friends, and to some of her councillors it seemed not only shameful but
434 dangerous to show the white feather. But judging from the course of events,
435 Elizabeth's policy was the safe one. The English Catholics--some of them at
436 all events, as will be explained presently--were becoming more discontented
437 and dangerous. The northern earls were known to be disaffected. Mary
438 believed that in every country in England the Catholics had their
439 organisation and their leaders, and that, if she chose, she could march to
440 London. No doubt she was much deceived. In reluctance to resort to violence
441 and respect for constituted authority, England, even north of the Humber,
442 was at least two centuries ahead of Scotland, and, if she had come attended
443 by a horde of savage Highlanders and Border ruffians, &amp;quot;the very stones in
444 the streets would have risen against them.&amp;quot; It was Elizabeth's rule--and a
445 very good rule too--never to engage in a war if she could avoid it. From
446 this rule she could not be drawn to swerve either by passion or ambition, or
447 that most fertile source of fighting, a regard for honour. All the old
448 objections to an invasion of Scotland still subsisted in full strength, and
449 were reinforced by others. It was better to wait for an attack which might
450 never come than go half-way to meet it. An invasion of Scotland might drive
451 the northern earls to declare for Mary, which, unless compelled to choose
452 sides, they might never do. Some people are more perturbed by the
453 expectation and uncertainty of danger than by its declared presence. Not so
454 Elizabeth. Smouldering treason she could take coolly as long as it only
455 smouldered. As for the betrayal of the Scotch refugees, Elizabeth never
456 allowed the private interests of her own subjects, much less those of
457 foreigners, to weigh against the interests of England. Moray, one of the
458 most magnanimous and self-sacrificing of statesmen, evidently felt that
459 Elizabeth's course was wise, if not exactly chivalrous. He submitted to her
460 public rebuke without publicly contradicting her, and waited patiently in
461 exile till it should be convenient for her to help him and his cause. Mary,
462 too, though elated by her success, and never abandoning her intention to
463 push it further, found it best to halt for a while. Philip wrote to her that
464 he would help her secretly with money if Elizabeth attacked her, but not
465 otherwise, and warned her against any premature clutch at the English crown.
466 Elizabeth's seeming tameness could hardly have received a more complete
467 justification. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
468 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;Mary had determined to espouse Darnley,
469 before she had set eyes on him, for purely political reasons. There is no
470 reason to suppose she ever cared for him. It is more likely, as Mr. Froude
471 suggests, that for a great political purpose she was doing an act which in
472 itself she loathed. A woman of twenty-two, already a widow, mature beyond
473 her years, exceptionally able, absorbed in the great game of politics, and
474 accustomed to admiration, was not likely to care for a raw lad of nineteen,
475 foolish, ignorant, ill-conditioned, vicious, and without a single manly
476 quality. One man we know she did love later on--loved passionately and
477 devotedly, no slim girl-faced youngster, but the fierce, stout-limbed,
478 dare-devil Bothwell; and Bothwell gradually made his way to her heart by his
479 readiness to undertake every desperate service she required of him. What
480 Mary admired, nay envied, in the other sex was the stout heart and the
481 strong arm. She loved herself to rough it on the war-path. She surprised
482 Randolph by her spirit:--&amp;quot;Never thought I that stomach to be in her that I
483 find. She repented nothing but, when the Lords and others came in the
484 morning from the watches, that she was not a man, to know what life it was
485 to lie all night in the fields or to walk upon the causeway with a jack and
486 a knapscap, a Glasgow buckler and a broadsword.&amp;quot; &amp;quot;She desires much,&amp;quot; says
487 Knollys, &amp;quot;to hear of hardiness and valiancy, commending by name all approved
488 hardy men of her country, although they be her enemies; and she concealeth
489 no cowardice even in her friends.&amp;quot; Valuable to Mary as a man of action,
490 Bothwell was not worth much as an adviser. For advice she looked to the
491 Italian Rizzio, in whom she confided because, with the detachment of a
492 foreigner, he regarded Scotch ambitions, animosities, and intrigues only as
493 so much material to be utilised for the purpose of the combined onslaught on
494 Protestantism which the Pope was trying to organise. Bothwell was at this
495 time thirty, and Rizzio, according to Lesley, fifty. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
496 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;In spite of all the prurient suggestions of
497 writers who have fastened on the story of Mary's life as on a savoury
498 morsel, there is no reason whatever for thinking that she was a woman of a
499 licentious disposition, and there is strong evidence to the contrary. There
500 was never anything to her discredit in France. Her behaviour in the affair
501 of Chastelard was irreproachable. The charge of adultery with Rizzio is
502 dismissed as unworthy of belief even by Mr. Froude, the severest of her
503 judges. Bothwell indeed she loved, and, like many another woman who does not
504 deserve to be called licentious, she sacrificed her reputation to the man
505 she loved. But the most conclusive proof that she was no slave to appetite
506 is afforded by her nineteen years' residence in England, which began when
507 she was only twenty-five. During almost the whole of that time she was
508 mixing freely in the society of the other sex, with the fullest opportunity
509 for misconduct had she been so inclined. It is not to be supposed that she
510 was fettered by any scruples of religion or morality. Yet no charge of
511 unchastity is made against her. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
512 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;When Darnley found that his wife, though she
513 conferred on him the title of King, did not procure for him the crown
514 matrimonial or allow him the smallest authority, he gave free vent to his
515 anger. No less angry were his kinsmen, Morton, Ruthven, and Lindsay. They
516 had deserted the Congregation in the expectation that when Darnley was King
517 they would be all-powerful. Instead of this they found themselves neglected;
518 while the Queen's confidence was given to Catholics and to Bothwell, who,
519 though nominally a Protestant, always acted with the Catholics. The
520 Protestant seceders had in fact fallen between two stools. It was against
521 Rizzio that their rage burnt fiercest. Bothwell was only a bull-headed,
522 blundering swordsman. Rizzio was doubly detestable to them as the brain of
523 the Queen's clique and as a low-born foreigner. Rizzio, therefore, they
524 determined to remove in the time-honoured Scottish fashion. Notice of the
525 day fixed for the murder was sent to the banished noblemen in England, so
526 that they might appear in Edinburgh immediately it was accomplished. &lt;/font&gt;
527 &lt;/p&gt;
528 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;Randolph, the English ambassador, and
529 Bedford, who commanded on the Border, were also taken into the secret, and
530 they communicated it to Cecil and Leicester. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
531 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;It is unnecessary here to repeat the
532 well-known story of the murder of Rizzio. It was part of a large scheme for
533 bringing back the exiled Protestant lords, closing the split in the
534 Protestant party, and securing the ascendancy of the Protestant religion. At
535 first it appeared to have succeeded. Bedford wrote to Cecil that &amp;quot;everything
536 would now go well.&amp;quot; But Mary, by simulating a return of wifely fondness,
537 managed to detach her weak husband from his confederates. By his aid she
538 escaped from their hands. Bothwell and her Catholic friends gathered round
539 her in arms. In a few days she re-entered Edinburgh in triumph, and Rizzio's
540 murderers had to take refuge in England. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
541 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;But if the Protestant stroke had failed, Mary
542 was obliged to recognise that her plan for re-establishing the Catholic
543 ascendancy in Scotland could not be rushed in the high-handed way she had
544 proposed as a mere preliminary to the more important subjugation of England.
545 At the very moment when she seemed to stand victorious over all opposition,
546 the ground had yawned under her feet, and, while she was dreaming of
547 dethroning Elizabeth, she had found herself a helpless captive in the hands
548 of her own subjects. The lesson was a valuable one, and if she could profit
549 by it her prospects had never been so good. The barbarous outrage of which,
550 in the sixth month of pregnancy, she had been the object could not but
551 arouse widespread sympathy for her. She had extricated herself from her
552 difficulties with splendid courage and clever-ness. The loss of such an
553 adviser as Rizzio was really a stroke of luck for her. All she had to do was
554 to abandon, or at all events postpone, her design of reestablishing the
555 Catholic religion in Scotland, and to discontinue her intrigues against
556 Elizabeth. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
557 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;Her prospects in England were still further
558 improved when she gave birth to a son (19 June 1566). Once more there was
559 an heir-male to the old royal line, and, as Elizabeth continued to evade
560 marriage, most people who were not fierce Protestants began to think it
561 would be more reasonable and safe to abide by the rule of primogeniture than
562 by the will of Henry VIII., sanctioned though it was by Act of Parliament.
563 There can be no doubt that this was the opinion and intention of Elizabeth,
564 though she strongly objected to having anything settled during her own
565 lifetime. But she had herself gone a long way towards settling it by her
566 treatment of Mary's only serious competitor. Catherine Grey had contracted a
567 secret marriage with the Earl of Hertford, son of the Protector Somerset.
568 Her pregnancy necessitated an avowal. The clergyman who had married them was
569 not forthcoming, and Hertford's sister, the only witness, was dead.
570 Elizabeth chose to disbelieve their story, though she would not have been
571 able to prove when, where, or by whom her own father and mother had been
572 married. She had a right to be angry; but when she sent the unhappy couple
573 to the Tower, and caused her tool, Archbishop Parker, to pronounce the union
574 invalid and its offspring illegitimate, she was playing Mary's game. The
575 House of Commons elected in 1563 was still undissolved. It was strongly
576 Protestant, and it favoured Catherine's title even after her disgrace. In
577 its second session, in the autumn of 1566, it made a determined effort to
578 compel Elizabeth to marry, and in the meanwhile to recognise Catherine as
579 the heirpresumptive. The zealous Protestants knew well that the Peers were
580 in favour of the Stuart title, and they feared that a new House of Commons
581 might agree with the Peers. To get rid of their pertinacity Elizabeth
582 dissolved Parliament, not without strong expressions of displeasure (2 January 1567). Cecil himself earned the thanks of Mary for his attitude on this
583 occasion. It cannot be doubted that he dreaded her succession; but he saw
584 which way the tide was running, and he thought it prudent to swim with it.
585 &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
586 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;It was at this moment that Mary flung away
587 all her advantage, and entered oh the fatal course which led to her ruin.
588 Her loathing for Darnley, her fierce desire to avenge on him the insults and
589 outrage she had suffered, left no room in heart or mind for considerations
590 of policy. She would have been glad to obtain a divorce. But the Catholic
591 Church does not grant divorce for misconduct after marriage. Some pretext
592 must be found for alleging that the marriage was null from the beginning.
593 This did not suit Mary. It would have made her son illegitimate, and would
594 have placed her in exactly the position of Catherine Grey. A mere separation
595 a toro would not have suited her any better, for it would not have enabled
596 her to contract another marriage. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
597 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;When Mary's reliance on Bothwell grew into
598 attachment, when her attachment warmed into love, it is impossible to fix
599 with any exactness. Her infatuation presented itself to him as a grand
600 opening for his daring ambition. A notorious profligate, he loved her--if
601 the word is to be so degraded--as much or as little as he had loved twenty
602 other women. What, however, he desired in her case, was marriage. A more
603 sensible man would have foreseen that marriage would mean certain ruin for
604 himself and the Queen. But he was accustomed to despise all difficulties in
605 his path, being intellectually incapable of measuring them, and believing in
606 nothing but audacity and brute force. Husband of the Queen, why should he
607 not be master of the kingdom? Why not King? When such an idea had once
608 occurred to Bothwell, Darnley's expectancy of life would be much the same as
609 that of a calf in the presence of the butcher. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
610 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;The wretched victim had alienated all his
611 friends among the nobility. Some owed him a deadly grudge for his treachery.
612 Others had been offended by his insolence. To all he was an encumbrance and
613 a nuisance. Several, therefore, of the leading personages were more or less
614 engaged in the compact for putting him out of the way. Moray, Argyll, and
615 Maitland offered to assist in ridding Mary of her husband by way of a
616 Protestant sentence of divorce, on condition that Morton and his friends in
617 exile should be pardoned and recalled. The bargain was struck, and Mary
618 assented to it. Nothing was said about murder. No one had any interest in
619 murder except Mary and Bothwell, whose project of marriage was as yet
620 unsuspected. At the same time, if Bothwell liked to kill Darnley on his own
621 responsibility, as no doubt he made it pretty plain that he would--why, so
622 much the better. It relieved the other lords of all trouble. It was a
623 simple, thorough, old-fashioned expedient, which had never been attended
624 with any discredit in Scotland, and had only one inconvenience --that it
625 usually saddled the murderer with a blood feud. In the present case Lennox
626 was the only peer who would feel the least aggrieved; and he was in no
627 condition to wage blood-feuds. Anyhow, that was Bothwell's look-out. &lt;/font&gt;
628 &lt;/p&gt;
629 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;So obvious was all this that it was hardly
630 worth while to observe secrecy except as to the exact occasion and mode of
631 execution. Many persons were more or less aware of what was going to be
632 done; but none cared to interfere. Moray was an honourable and conscientious
633 man, if judged by the standard of his environment--the only fair way of
634 estimating character. But Moray chose to leave Edinburgh the morning before
635 the deed; and thought it sufficient to be able to say afterwards that &amp;quot;if
636 any man said he was present when purposes [talk] were held in his audience
637 tending to any unlawful or dishonourable end, he spoke wickedly and
638 untruly.&amp;quot; The inner circle of the plot consisted of Bothwell, Argyll, Huntly,
639 Maitland, and Sir James Balfour. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
640 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;That Darnley was murdered by Bothwell is not
641 disputed. That Mary was cognisant of the plot, and lured him to the
642 shambles, has been doubted by few investigators at once competent and
643 unbiassed. She lent herself to this part not without compunction. Bothwell
644 had the advantage over her that the loved has over the lover; and he used it
645 mercilessly for his headlong ambition, hardly taking the trouble to pretend
646 that he cared for the unhappy woman who was sacrificing everything for him.
647 He in fact cared more for his lawful wife, whom he was preparing to divorce,
648 and to whom he had been married only six months. Mary was tormented by
649 jealousy of her after the divorce as well as before. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
650 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;The murder of Darnley (10 February 1567) was
651 universally ascribed to Mary at the time by Catholics as well as Protestants
652 at home and abroad, and it fatally damaged her cause in England and the rest
653 of Europe. In Scotland itself--such was the backward and barbarous state of
654 the country--it would probably not have shaken her throne if she had
655 followed it up with firm and prudent government. She might even have
656 indulged her illicit passion for Bothwell, with little pretence of
657 concealment, if she had not advanced him in place and power above his
658 equals. There was probably not a noble in Scotland, from Moray downwards,
659 who would have scrupled to be her Minister. The Protestant commonalty
660 indeed, who with all the national laxity as to the observance of the sixth
661 commandment, were shocked by any trifling with the seventh, would no doubt
662 have made their bark heard. But their bite had not yet become formidable;
663 and in any case they were not to be propitiated. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
664 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;What brought sudden and irretrievable ruin on
665 Mary was not the murder of Darnley, but the infatuation which made her the
666 passive instrument of Bothwell's presumptuous ambition. The lords, Catholic
667 and Protestant alike, allowed the murder to pass uncondemned and unpunished;
668 but they were furious when they found that Darnley had only been removed to
669 make room for Bothwell, and that they were to have for their master a noble
670 of by no means the highest lineage, bankrupt in fortune, and generally
671 disliked for his arrogant and bullying demeanour. The project of marriage
672 was not disclosed till ten weeks after the murder (19 April 1567). Five
673 days later, Bothwell, fearing lest he should be frustrated by public
674 indignation or interference from England, carried off the Queen, as had been
675 previously arranged between them. His idea was that, when Mary had been thus
676 publicly outraged, it would be recognised as impossible that she should
677 marry any one but the ravisher. In this coarse expedient, as in the clumsy
678 means employed for disposing of Darnley, we see the blundering foolhardiness
679 of the man. The marriage ceremony was performed as soon as Bothwell's
680 divorce could be managed (15 May). Just a month later Mary surrendered to
681 the insurgent lords at Carberry Hill, and Bothwell, flying for his life,
682 disappears from history. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
683 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;The feelings with which Elizabeth had
684 contemplated the course of events in Scotland during the last six months
685 were no doubt of a mixed nature. At the beginning of 1567, her seven-years'
686 duel with Mary appeared to be ending in defeat. The last bold thrust, aimed
687 in her interest if not by her hand --the murder of Rizzio--had not improved
688 her position. It seemed that she would soon be obliged to make her choice
689 between two equally dreaded alternatives: she must either recognise Mary as
690 her heir or take a husband. From this unpleasant dilemma she was released by
691 the headlong descent of her rival in the first six months of 1567. But all
692 other feelings were soon swallowed up in alarm and indignation at the
693 spectacle of subjects in revolt against their sovereign. As tidings came in
694 rapid succession of Mary's surrender at Carberry Hill, of her return to
695 Edinburgh amidst the insults and threats of the Calvinist mob, of her
696 imprisonment at Loch Leven, of the proposal to try and execute her,
697 Elizabeth's anger waxed hotter, and she told the Scotch lords in her most
698 imperious tones that she could not, and would not, permit them to use force
699 with their sovereign. If they deposed or punished her, she would revenge it
700 upon them. If they could not prevail on her to do what was right, they must
701 &amp;quot;remit themselves to Almighty God, in whose hands only princes' hearts
702 remain.&amp;quot; &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
703 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;This language, addressed as it was to the
704 only men in Scotland who were disposed to support the English interest, was
705 imprudent. In her fellow-feeling for a sister sovereign, and her keen
706 perception of the revolutionary tendencies of the time, Elizabeth spoilt an
707 unique opportunity of placing her relations with Scotland on a footing of
708 permanent security, of providing for the English succession in a way at once
709 advantageous to the nation and free from risk to her own life, and lastly,
710 of escaping from the constant worry about her own marriage. She had seen
711 clearly enough what might be made of the situation. Throgmorton had been
712 despatched to Scotland with instructions to do his best to get the infant
713 Prince confided to her care. Once in England, she would virtually have
714 adopted him. She would have possessed a son and heir without the
715 inconvenience of marriage. To a Parliamentary recognition, indeed, of his
716 title she would assuredly not have consented. It would have made him
717 independent and dangerous. But if he behaved well to her, his succession
718 would be more certain than any Act of Parliament could make it. Mary, if
719 released and restored to power, would no longer be formidable. If she were
720 deposed or put to death, Elizabeth would indirectly govern Scotland, at all
721 events, till James should be of age. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
722 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;This splendid opportunity Elizabeth lost by
723 her peremptory and domineering language. The old Scotch pride took fire. The
724 Anglophile lords, who would have been glad enough to send the young Prince
725 to England, could not afford to appear less patriotic than the Francophiles.
726 Throgmorton's attempt to get hold of James was as unsuccessful as that of
727 the Protector Somerset to get hold of James's mother had been twenty years
728 before. He was told that, before the Prince could be sent to England, his
729 title to the English succession must be recognised; a condition which
730 Elizabeth could not grant. Her claim that Mary should be restored without
731 conditions was equally unacceptable to the Anglophile lords. They might have
732 been induced to release her if she would have consented to give up Bothwell,
733 or if they could have caught and hanged him. But such was her devotion to
734 him, that no threats or promises availed to shake it. It was in vain that
735 they offered to produce letters of his to the divorced Lady Bothwell, in
736 which he assured her that he regarded her still as his lawful wife, and Mary
737 only as his concubine. The unhappy Queen had been aware even before her
738 marriage--as a pathetic letter to Bothwell shows--that her passionate love
739 was not returned. Two days after the marriage, his unkindness had driven her
740 to think of suicide. But nothing they could say could shake her constancy.
741 &amp;quot;She would not consent by any persuasion to abandon the Lord Bothwell for
742 her husband. She would live and die with him. If it were put to her choice
743 to relinquish her crown and kingdom or the Lord Bothwell, she would leave
744 her kingdom and dignity to go as a simple damsel with him; and she will
745 never consent that he shall fare worse or have more harm than herself. Let
746 them put Bothwell and herself on board ship to go wherever fortune might
747 carry them.&amp;quot; This temper made it difficult for the Anglophile lords to know
748 what to do with the prisoner of Loch Leven. They were disappointed and angry
749 that Elizabeth, instead of approving their enterprise, and sending the money
750 for which, as usual, they were begging, should treat them as rebels, and
751 even secretly urge the Hamiltons to rescue Mary by force. The Hamiltons were
752 in arms at Dumbarton. They wanted either that the Prince should be
753 proclaimed King, with the Duke of Chatelherault for Regent, or that Mary
754 should be divorced from Bothwell and married to Lord John Hamilton, the
755 Duke's second son, and, in default of the crazy Arran, his destined
756 successor. With Argyll, too, disgust at Mary's crime was tempered by a
757 desire to marry her to his brother. Lady Douglas of Loch Leven herself, for
758 whom Sir Walter Scott has invented such magnificent tirades, desired nothing
759 better than to be her mother-in-law. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
760 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;The prompt action of the confederate lords
761 foiled these schemes. By the threat of a public trial on the charge of
762 complicity in her husband's murder, or, as her advocates believe, by the
763 fear of instant death, Mary was compelled to abdicate in favour of her son,
764 and to nominate Moray Regent (29 July 1567). Elizabeth would not recognise
765 him; partly from a natural fear lest she should be suspected of having been
766 in collusion with him all along, partly from genuine abhorrence of such
767 revolutionary proceedings. The French Government, on the other hand, casting
768 principle and sentiment alike to the winds, courted his alliance. He might
769 keep his sister in prison, or put her to death, or send her to be immured in
770 a French convent: only let him embrace the French interests, and an army
771 should be sent to support him --a Huguenot army if he did not like
772 Catholics. But Moray turned a deaf ear to these solicitations, and waited
773 patiently till Elizabeth's ill-humour should give way to more statesmanlike
774 considerations. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
775 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;The escape of Mary from Loch Leven (2 May
776 1568), and the rising of the Hamiltons in her favour, were largely due to
777 the unfriendly attitude assumed by Elizabeth to the Regent's government.
778 After the defeat of Langside (13 May) it would perhaps have been difficult
779 for the fugitive Queen to make her way to France or Spain. But it was not
780 the difficulty which deterred her from making the attempt. Both Catherine
781 and Philip, later on, were disposed to befriend her, or, rather, to make use
782 of her; but at the time of her escape from Scotland, she had nothing to
783 expect from them but severity. Elizabeth was the only sovereign who had
784 tried to help her. Moreover, Mary had always laboured under the delusion
785 that because most Englishmen regarded her as the next heir to the crown, and
786 a great many preferred the old religion to the new, she had as good a party
787 in England as Elizabeth herself, if not a better. During her prosperity, she
788 had made repeated applications to be allowed to visit the southern kingdom.
789 She was convinced that, if she once appeared on English ground, Elizabeth's
790 throne would be shaken; and Elizabeth's unwillingness to receive the visit
791 had confirmed her in her belief. If she now crossed the Solway without
792 waiting for the permission which she had requested by letter, it was not
793 because she was hard pressed. The Regent had gone to Edinburgh after the
794 battle. At Dundrennan, among the Catholic Maxwells, Lord Herries guaranteed
795 her safety for forty days; and, at an hour's notice, a boat would place, her
796 beyond pursuit. Her haste was rather prompted by the expectation that
797 Elizabeth, alarmed by her application, would refuse to receive her. To
798 Elizabeth the arrival of the Scottish Queen was, indeed, as unwelcome as it
799 was unexpected. For ten years she had governed successfully, because she had
800 managed to hold an even course between conflicting principles and parties,
801 and to avoid taking up a decisive attitude on the most burning questions.
802 The very indecision, which was the weak spot in her character, and which so
803 fretted her Ministers, had, it must be confessed, contributed something to
804 the result. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
805 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;Cecil might groan over a policy of letting
806 things drift. But it may be doubted whether they had not often drifted
807 better than Cecil would have steered them if he might have had his way. To
808 do nothing is not, indeed, the golden rule of statesmanship. But at that
809 time, England's peculiar position between France and Spain, and between
810 Calvinism and Catholicism, enabled her ruler to play a waiting game. This
811 was the general rule applicable to the situation. Elizabeth apprehended it
812 more clearly than her Ministers did, and she fell back on it again and
813 again, when they flattered themselves that they had committed her to a
814 forward policy. It was safe. It was cheap. It required coolness and
815 intrepidity--qualities with which Elizabeth was well furnished by nature.
816 But it was not spirited: it was not showy. Hence it has not found favour
817 with historians, who insist that it ought to have ended in disaster. As a
818 matter of fact, England was carried safely through unparalleled
819 difficulties; and, when all is said, Elizabeth is entitled to be judged by
820 the general result of her long reign. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
821 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;Mary's arrival was unwelcome to Elizabeth,
822 because it seemed likely to force her hand. To do nothing would be no longer
823 possible. The Catholic nobles and gentry of the north flocked to Carlisle to
824 pay court to the heiress of the English crown. It was not that they believed
825 her innocent of her husband's murder. The suspicion of her complicity was at
826 that time universal. But they supposed that it would never amount to more
827 than a suspicion. They did not expect that the charge would ever be formally
828 made. They were not aware that it could be supported by overwhelming
829 evidence. Later on, when the proofs were produced, they had already
830 committed themselves to her cause, and were bound not to be convinced.
831 &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
832 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;If the attitude of these Catholics be thought
833 to indicate some moral callousness, it may be fairly argued that it was less
834 cynical than that of Elizabeth herself, who, while not unwilling that Mary
835 should be suspected, would not allow her to be convicted. Steady to her main
836 purpose, though hesitating, and even vacillating, in the means she adopted,
837 she still adhered, notwithstanding all that had lately taken place, to her
838 intention that Mary, if her survivor, should be her successor. Like all the
839 greatest statesmen of her time, she placed secular interests before
840 religious opinions. She was persuaded that the maintenance of the principle
841 of authority was all-important. Nothing else could hold society together or
842 prevent the rival fanaticisms from tearing each other to pieces. For
843 authority there was no other basis left than the principle of hereditary
844 succession by primogeniture. This principle must, therefore, be treated as
845 something sacred--not to be set aside or tampered with in a short-sighted
846 grasping at any seeming immediate utility. To allow it to be called in
847 question was to shake her own title. Already, in France, the Jesuits were
848 preaching that orthodoxy and the will of the people were the only legitimate
849 foundation of sovereignty. Few English Catholics had learned that doctrine;
850 but they would not be slow to learn it if the hereditary claim of Mary was
851 to be set aside. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
852 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;If Mary had been content to claim what
853 primogeniture gave her--the right to the succession--there would have been
854 no quarrel between her and Elizabeth. But it was notorious that she had all
855 along been plotting to substitute herself for Elizabeth. Never had she
856 cherished that dream with more confidence than when the Percys and Nevilles
857 crowded round her at Carlisle. In her sanguine imagination, she already saw
858 herself mistress of a finer kingdom than that which had just expelled her,
859 and marching, at the head of her new subjects, to wreak vengeance on her old
860 ones. She seemed likely to be no less dangerous as an exile in England than
861 as a Queen in Scotland. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
862 &lt;/font&gt;&lt;font style=&quot;font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif&quot;&gt;
863 &lt;font face=&quot;Times New Roman&quot;&gt;
864 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;Elizabeth had now reason to regret the
865 unnecessary warmth with which she had espoused Mary's cause. To suppose that
866 she had any sentimental feelings for one whom she knew to be her deadly
867 enemy is, in my judgment, ridiculous. Elizabeth was not a generous
868 woman--especially towards other women; and in this case generosity would
869 have been folly, and culpable folly. She did not hate Mary--she was too cool
870 and self-reliant to hate an enemy--but she disliked her. She was jealous,
871 with a small feminine jealousy, of her beauty and fascinations. The
872 consciousness of this unworthy feeling made her all the more anxious not to
873 betray it. And so, at a time when she did not expect to have Mary on her
874 hands, she had been tempted to use language implying a pity, sympathy, and
875 affection which assuredly she did not feel, and which it would not have been
876 creditable to her to feel. Petty insincerities of this kind have usually to
877 be paid for sooner or later. She had now to exchange the language of
878 sympathy for the language of business with what grace she could; and she has
879 not escaped the charge, certainly undeserved, of deliberate treachery. It
880 was awkward, after such exaggerated professions of sympathy, to be obliged
881 to hold the fugitive at arm's-length, and even to put restraint on her
882 movements. But no other course was possible. No sovereign, at any time in
883 history, has allowed a pretender to the crown to move about freely in his
884 dominions and make a party among his subjects. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
885 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;Wince as she might, and did, under the
886 reproach of treachery, Elizabeth was not going to allow her unwise words to
887 tie her to unwise action. Only one arrangement appeared to her to be at once
888 admissible in principle and prudent in practice. Mary must be restored to
889 the Scottish throne; but in such a way that she should thenceforth be
890 powerless for mischief. She must be content with the title of Queen. The
891 real government must be in the hands of Moray. Thus the principle of
892 legitimacy and the sacredness of royalty would be saved, and the English
893 Catholics would be content to bide their time. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
894 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;Cecil, for his part, was also anxious to see
895 Mary back in Scotland; but not as Queen. Though regarded in Catholic circles
896 as a desperate heretic, he was really a &lt;i&gt;politique&lt;/i&gt;, a worldly-minded
897 man--I mean the epithet to be laudatory--and he would probably have admitted
898 in the abstract the wisdom of Elizabeth's opinion--that it was of more
899 importance to England to have a legitimate sovereign than a gospel religion.
900 But he was not prepared to submit frankly to the application of this
901 principle. His personal prospects were too deeply concerned. It was all very
902 well for Elizabeth to lay down a principle in which she might be said to
903 have a life-interest. She was thirteen years his junior; but she might
904 easily predecease him; and, with Mary on the throne, his power would
905 certainly go, and, not improbably, his head with it. It was not in human
906 nature, therefore, that he should cherish the principle of primogeniture as
907 his mistress did; and, as far as his dread of her displeasure would allow
908 him, he was always casting about for some means of defeating Mary's
909 reversion. Her sudden plunge into crime was to him a turn of good fortune
910 beyond his dreams. If he could have had his will she would have been
911 promptly handed over to the Regent on the understanding that she was to be
912 consigned to perpetual imprisonment, or, still better, to the scaffold.
913 &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
914 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;In order to carry out her plan, Elizabeth
915 called on Mary and the Regent to submit their respective cases to a
916 Commission, consisting of the Duke of Norfolk, the Earl of Sussex, and Sir
917 Ralph Sadler. Mary was extremely reluctant, as she well might be, to face
918 any investigation; but she was told that, until her character was formally
919 cleared, she could not be admitted to Elizabeth's presence; and she was at
920 the same time privately assured that her restoration should, in any case, be
921 managed without any damage to her honour. Moray received an equally positive
922 assurance that if his sister was proved guilty, she should not be restored.
923 The two statements were not absolutely irreconcilable, because Elizabeth
924 intended to prevent the worst charges from being openly proved. Her sole
925 object--and we can hardly blame her--was to obtain security for herself and
926 her own kingdom. She did not wish the Queen of Scots to be proved a
927 murderess in open court; but she did desire that the charge should be made,
928 and also that the Commissioners should see the originals of the casket
929 letters. Any public disclosure of the evidence might be prevented, and some
930 sort of ambiguous acquittal pronounced, on grounds which all the world would
931 see to be nugatory: such, for instance, as the culprit's own solemn denial
932 of the charge; which was, in fact, the only answer Mary intended to make.
933 What was known to the Commissioners would come to be more or less known to
934 all persons of influence in England, and would surely discredit Mary to such
935 a degree that even her warmest partisans would cease to conspire in her
936 favour. Mary herself (so Elizabeth hoped), when made aware that this
937 terrible weapon was in reserve, and could at any moment be used against her,
938 would be permanently humbled and crippled, and would be glad to accept such
939 terms as Elizabeth would impose. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
940 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;The Commissioners opened their court at York
941 (October 1568). But they had not been sitting long before Elizabeth
942 discovered that Norfolk was scheming to marry Mary, and that the project was
943 approved by many of the English nobility. Their purpose was not, as yet,
944 disloyal. They thought that, married to the head of the English peerage, and
945 residing in England, Mary would have to give up her plots with France, while
946 her presence would strengthen the Conservative party, which desired to keep
947 up the old alliance with Spain, and looked for the re-establishment sooner
948 or later of the old religion. This scheme, though not disloyal, was
949 extremely alarming to Elizabeth. Norfolk was nominally a Protestant. But she
950 had placed him on the Commission as a representative of the Conservative
951 party, believing that, while he would lend himself to hushing up Mary's
952 guilt, his eyes would be opened to her real character. Yet here he was, like
953 the Hamiltons, Campbells, and Douglases, ready to take her with her smirched
954 reputation, simply for the chance of her two crowns. It was not a case of
955 love, for he had never seen her. He seems to have been staggered for a
956 moment by the sight of the casket letters, and to have doubted whether it
957 was for his honour or even his safety to marry such a woman. But in the end,
958 as we shall see, he swallowed his scruples. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
959 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;On discovering Norfolk's intrigue, Elizabeth
960 hastily revoked the Commission, and ordered another investigation to be held
961 by the most important peers and statesmen of England. The casket letters and
962 the depositions were submitted to them. Mary's able and zealous advocate,
963 the Bishop of Ross, could say nothing except that his mistress had sent him
964 on the supposition that Moray was to be the defendant: let her appear in
965 person before the Queen, and she would give reasons why Moray ought not to
966 be allowed to advance any charges against her. To make no better answer than
967 this was virtually to admit that the charges against her were unanswerable.
968 &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
969 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;It was thought that she was now sufficiently
970 frightened to be ready to accept Elizabeth's terms, and they were
971 unofficially communicated to her. Her return to Scotland was no longer
972 contemplated, for Moray had absolutely declined to charge her openly with
973 the murder or produce the letters unless she were detained in England. But
974 in order to get rid of the revolutionary proceedings at Loch Leven she
975 herself, as it were of her own free will, and on the ground that she was
976 weary of government, was to confer the crown on her son and the regency on
977 Moray. James was to be educated in England. She herself was to reside in
978 England as long as Elizabeth should find it convenient. It was not mentioned
979 in the communication, but it was probably intended, that she should marry
980 some Englishman of no political importance, in order to produce more
981 children who would succeed James if, as was likely enough, he should die in
982 his infancy. If she would accept these conditions the charges against her
983 should be &amp;quot;committed to perpetual silence;&amp;quot; if not, the trial must go on,
984 and the verdict could not be doubtful (December 1568). &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
985 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;A woman less daring and less keen-sighted
986 than Mary would assuredly, at this point, have given up the game, and
987 thankfully accepted the conditions offered. They would not have prevented
988 her from ascending the English throne if she had outlived Elizabeth. But
989 that was a delay which she had always scouted as intolerable, and she was
990 one to whom life was worth nothing if it meant defeat, retirement, even for
991 a time, from the public scene, and the abandonment of long-cherished
992 ambitions. Moreover her quick wit had divined that Elizabeth was using a
993 threat which she did not mean to put into execution. There would be no
994 verdict--not even any publication to the world of the evidence. Guilty
995 therefore as she was, and aware that her guilt could be proved, she coolly
996 faced &amp;quot;the great extremities&amp;quot; at which Elizabeth had hinted, and rejected
997 the conditions. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
998 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;Perhaps even Mary's daring would have
999 flinched from this bold game but for a quarrel between Elizabeth and Philip,
1000 to be mentioned presently. Hitherto Philip, much to his credit, had declined
1001 to interfere in Mary's behalf. To him, as to every one else, Catholic as
1002 well as Protestant, her guilt seemed evident. She had been only a scandal
1003 and embarrassment to the Catholic cause. But if there was to be war with
1004 England, every enemy of Elizabeth was a weapon to be used. Accordingly he
1005 now began, though reluctantly, to think of helping the Queen of Scots, and
1006 even of marrying her to his brother Don John of Austria. With the prospect
1007 of such backing it was not wonderful that she declined to own herself
1008 beaten. &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
1009 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot;&gt;Elizabeth's calculations, though reasonable,
1010 were thus disappointed. The inquiry was dropped without any decision. The
1011 Regent was sent home with a small sum of money, and Mary remained in England
1012 (January 1569). &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
1013 &lt;/font&gt;&lt;hr&gt;
1014 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;&lt;font style=&quot;font-family: Times New Roman&quot; size=&quot;2&quot;&gt;From &lt;i&gt;
1015 Queen Elizabeth&lt;/i&gt; by Edward Spencer Beesly.&amp;nbsp; Published in London by
1016 Macmillan and Co., 1892.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
1017 &lt;/font&gt;
1018 &lt;font face=&quot;Times New Roman&quot; size=&quot;2&quot;&gt;
1019 &lt;/blockquote&gt;
1020&lt;/blockquote&gt;
1021
1022 &lt;p align=&quot;center&quot;&gt;
1023 &lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fbeeslychapterfive.html&quot;&gt;to Chapter
1024 V: Aristocratic Plots: 1568-1572&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
1025 &lt;p align=&quot;center&quot;&gt;
1026 &lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fmonarchs%2feliz1.html&quot;&gt;to the Queen
1027 Elizabeth I website&lt;/a&gt;&amp;nbsp; /&amp;nbsp;
1028 &lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2frelative%2fmaryqos.html&quot;&gt;to the Mary,
1029 queen of Scots website&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
1030 &lt;p align=&quot;center&quot;&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fsecondary.html&quot;&gt;
1031 to Secondary Sources&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
1032 &lt;/font&gt;
1033
1034
1035
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1038</Content>
1039</Section>
1040</Archive>
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