Book contents
- Frontmatter
- CHAPTER XVII 1571 TO 1573
- CHAPTER XVIII 1573 TO 1577
- CHAPTER XIX 1577 TO 1582
- CHAPTER XX 1582 TO 1587
- CHAPTER XXI 1587 AND 1588
- CHAPTER XXII FROM 1588 TO 1591
- CHAPTER XXIII FROM 1591 TO 1593
- CHAPTER XXIV FROM 1593 TO 1597
- CHAPTER XXV 1595 TO 1598
- CHAPTER XXVI 1597 AND 1598
- CHAPTER XXVII 1599 TO 1603
- ON THE DOMESTIC ARCHITECTURE OF The Reign of Elizabeth
- INDEX
CHAPTER XVIII - 1573 TO 1577
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2011
- Frontmatter
- CHAPTER XVII 1571 TO 1573
- CHAPTER XVIII 1573 TO 1577
- CHAPTER XIX 1577 TO 1582
- CHAPTER XX 1582 TO 1587
- CHAPTER XXI 1587 AND 1588
- CHAPTER XXII FROM 1588 TO 1591
- CHAPTER XXIII FROM 1591 TO 1593
- CHAPTER XXIV FROM 1593 TO 1597
- CHAPTER XXV 1595 TO 1598
- CHAPTER XXVI 1597 AND 1598
- CHAPTER XXVII 1599 TO 1603
- ON THE DOMESTIC ARCHITECTURE OF The Reign of Elizabeth
- INDEX
Summary
Great as had been the injustice committed by Elizabeth in the detention of the queen of Scots, it must be confessed that the offence brought with it its own sufficient punishment in the fears, jealousies and disquiets which it entailed upon her.
Where Mary was concerned, the most approved loyalty, the longest course of faithful service, and the truest attachment to the protestant cause, were insufficient pledges to her oppressor of the fidelity of her nobles or ministers. The earl of Shrewsbury, whom she had deliberately selected from all others to be the keeper of the captive queen, and whose vigilance had now for so long a period baffled all attempts for her deliverance, was, to the last, unable so to establish himself in the confidence of his sovereign as to be exempt from such starts of suspicion and fits of displeasure as kept him in a state of continual apprehension. Feeling with acuteness all the difficulties of his situation, this nobleman judged it expedient to cause Gilbert lord Talbot, his eldest son, to remain in close attendance on the motions of the queen; charging him to study with unremitting attention all the intrigues of the court, on which in that day so much depended, and to acquaint him with them frequently and minutely. To this precaution of the earl's we owe several extant letters of lord Talbot, which throw considerable light on the minor incidents of the time.
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- Information
- Memoirs of the Court of Queen Elizabeth , pp. 30 - 53Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1818