5> -■ \r><^^ * i^VvVr-^ ^O \v ♦ V^S .* ^'i|nioii: o[' 5ii?crci|. OUKKX i':iJ/.\i^i:rii. n favour : Parr\^ was knighted and made Treasurer of the Household, and on Mrs. Ashley's death in July, 1565, the Queen visited her in person and mourned her with great L;rief. It is probable that the inexperienced girl was really in love with the handsome, showy Seymour ; but how far their relations went will most likely never now be known. She indignantly wrote to the Protector complaining" of the slanders that were current about her, to the effect that she was with child by the Lord Admiral and demanded to be allowed to come to Court and " show herself as she was " ; but virtuous indignation, real and assumed, was always one of her favourite weapons. Tyrwhitt said he believed a secret compact had been entered into betw^een her and Ashley and Parry never to confess during their lives. "They all sing one song and she hath set the note for them." After this dangerous escapade and the execu- tion of Seymour, Elizabeth became almost ostenta- tiously saintly and straitlaced, until the accession of her sister made her the heiress presumptive to the crown and the hope of the Protestant party, now that Northumberland's nominees had been disposed of. Even before this event, the reforming part)' in England were anxious to further strengthen them- selves by allying her to a foreign prince ol Protes- tant leanings, not powerful enough to force her claims to the crown upon them, but of sufficient weight to give them moral support, whilst removing her from the way in England. As early as August, 1 55 1, Northumberland (or, as he was then, the Earl of Warwick) had put his agents upon the alert on the Continent to find a suitable match for her, and 12 THE COURTSHIPS OF •one of them, Sir Anthony Guidotti/ says that the Duke of Guise had sug-o-ested the Duke of P^errara's y son, "who was one of the goodhest young" men of all Italy." The youth was a son of that Ren^e of France, Duchess of Ferrara, who vied with her kinswoman, Jeanne d'Albret, in her attachment to the reformed faith, but Northumberland would hardly accept the recommendation of the Guises as disinterested ; and the matter w^ent no further. The same accent suo'ofests that the son of the Duke of Florence (Medici) who was then only eleven years old might do, and " if this party were liked it were an easy matter to be concluded without any exces- sive dote." This was less likely to please even than the previous proposal, and nothing was clone ; but the Ferrara family were apparently anxious for the connection, and early in 1553 Sir Richard Morysine,^ n/ the English envoy in Antwerp, wrote to the Council reporting that Francesco d'Este, the brother of the Duke of Ferrara, had approached him on the matter and had asked for a description of the Princess. Morysine replied that "If God had made her Grace a poor man's daughter he did not know of a prince that might not think himself happy to be the husband of such a lady," and added that d'Este was of the same opinion " at present." A much more likely match had been privately suggested to Cecil by Morysine shortly before this. 3 " Hans Frederick's (of Saxony) second son, who is the goodlier gentleman, would, if he durst, bear a great affection towards the Lady Elizabeth's grace. The land in Germany is divided, and as much comes to ^ Calendar of State Papers (Foreign). ^ Ibid. 3 Ibid. gu KKX ia.izAHi<:'ri(. 15 the secoiul son as to the eldest, which eldest is thought to be of no long life. Were Dukes Maurice and Frederick to die their lands <^o to Hans Frederick's sons. ' But the collapse of Northum- berland and the accession of Mary entirely changed Elizabeth's prospects, so that her marriage had to be considered in conjunction with Mary's own, and the capture of the Queen by the Spanish interest made it desirable to secure her sister if possible for the same side. In the autumn of 1553, Simon Renard had suggested to Mary a marriage between herself and Prince Philip. She herself was in grave doubt at that time and afterwards as to its wisdom or practicability. Young Courtney had been desig- nated by the public voice as the most fitting consort for her; and although the romantic theories of many historians as to her supposed attachment to him are unsupported by a single shred of evidence, it is. certain that for a' time she seriously contemplated the wisdom of conciliating English feeling by marry- ing the man who was one of her first competitors for the possession of the throne. Gradually, however, Renard, with his logical persuasiveness, convinced her that she would acquire more strength by an alliance with the only son of the Emperor than b)- a marriagey' with one of her own vassals, without credit, po\\\sr, or assistance, who has seen and knows nothing of the world, having been reared in servitude and never left P^ngland." ' Renard presented the Emperor's formal of^'er of his son's hand to the Queen on the 6th of October, and after some hesitation she asked him to put upon paper his arguments in favour of the match. He ' Renard Correspondence, Transcripts, IMSS. Record Oiiice. H THE COURTSHIPS OF did so in a long paper dated the i ith, which will be found in the Renard Correspondence transcripts in the Record Office. In it he tells her that she is surrounded by dangers against which only a power- ful marriage can protect her. She has, he says, four sets of enemies : namely, the heretics and schismatics, the rebels and friends of Northumber- land, the powers of France and Scotland, and Madam Elizabeth, who would never cease to trouble and threaten her. ]slary replied that she knew all about the French intrigues, and was certain to be kept well informed of approaches made by the French ambassador Noailles to Elizabeth and Courtney. In conversation with Renard afterw^ards she told hint, and he faithfully transmitted the con- versation to his master,^ that she had had a long- talk with Courtney three days before at the instance of his mother, and he had told her in all simplicity that an English lord had suggested to him that he should marry Elizabeth, since he could not now hope to obtain the Queen. If he took the Princess either he or his heirs might hope to succeed to the throne as the Queen was getting old. The idea seems to have originated with Lord Paget, who was doubtless the lord referred to by Courtney, and who thought to stand well with all parties in future by the device. As he was the principal supporter in the Privy Council of the Spanish match, Renard could not at first openly veto the suggestion. Mary consulted Renard upon the subject, and told him that Courtney had said that his own thought w^as only to ''marry a simple lady rather than Elizabeth who ' Renard to Charles \"., October 12, 1553. Renard tran- scripts. Record Office. QUEEN ELIZABETH. 15 7uas too proud a heretic and of a doubtful race on her mother's side.'' The imperial ambassador replied that such a marriage would have to be very deeply- weighed and discussed/ and so politely shelved the question. On the other hand, the idea was zealously promoted by Noailles, who, Courtney asserted some months afterwards, pressed him warmly to niarry Elizabeth,- and it was considered even by the strongest Spanish partisans in the Council to be a happy combination which would conjure away all dangers. How far Elizabeth herself was a con- senting party it is difficult to say, but Noailles, who was in the heart of the intrigue, writes to his king on the 14th of December that it depends entirely on Courtney whether she married him and joined him in Devonshire to raise the flag of revolt. "But the trouble," he says, "is that Courtney is so alarmed and timid that he dares nothing." So Courtney dis- appears promptly from the scene where soon such rough work was to be undertaken. Even before the arrival of Egmont in the winter of 1553 to offer formally Philip's hand to Mary, the Council was mainly opposed to the match. Paget was first bought over with a large sum of money, then Gar- diner, Courtney's greatest friend, was reluctantly won with the promise of a cardinal's hat, and (jthers by similar means ; but the self-seeking t^arl of Arundel immediately saw how his own interests might be benefited by the Spanish match. De Noailles says that he knew that at the Queen's age, and with her health, every month's delay decreased the probability of her having issue ; and he, therefore. ' Renard to Charles V., October 31, 1553. Record Office. ^ " Papiers d'Etat de Granvelle," vol. i\\ p. 256, i6 THE COURTSHIPS OF warmly supported the marriage with Philip, which could not be rapidly effected, in order to marry his young son to Elizabeth, and so, practically, get the reversion to the crown. The matter never seems to have got beyond a suggestion ; and the youth soon after dying, Arundel, as will be told, subsequently became a suitor himself. But whilst these nebulous speculations with regard to Elizabeth's hand were going on, Renard had been arranging a clever scheme by which the Spanish party should ensure to themselves the control of England not only during the Queen's life but after her death. W^hen Egmont and his splendid embassy arrived all England was in a whirlwind of panic and indigna- tion at the idea of a Spanish match. Elizabeth had retired to Woodstock, ostensibly on friendly terms with the Queen, but deeply wounded at her con- temptuous treatment, and at the equivocal position she occupied, now that the divorce pronounced by Cranmer of Henry VIII. and Catharine of Aragon had been quashed, and Elizabeth consequently bas- tardised. Egmont was instructed to point out to the Queen that all might be pleasantly settled by marrying her sister to the gallant young Emmanuel Philibert, Duke of Savoy, the son of the Emperor's sister, and consequently first cousin to Philip. His patrimonial states, all but a mere shred of them in the valley of Aosta, had been occupied by the French in the course of the war, and the prince was fighting like a heroin the P^mperor's army. But his blood was the bluest of any in Europe, and before he could marry Elizabeth she must be legitimised and placed in the order of the succession, without which the throne would probabh" pass on Mary's QUEEN ELIZABETH. 17 death to the French candidate, Mary of Scotland. This was oall and wormwood to Mary Tudor. They could not both be legitimate, if the grounds for the divorce of Oueen Catharine were good she was never Henry's lawful wife, and her daughter had no right to the crown. If they were bad, then Eliza- beth was necessarily the bastard that the law oi England inferentially had just declared her to be. The King of France, foiled in his attempts to pre- vent the Queen's Spanish marriage, instructed de Noailles ' to use every possible means to hinder a malch between Elizabeth and Savoy, " poor and dispossessed as he is " ; and. alert as the ambassador was, no great effort on his part was needed. The Oueen, bitterly jealous of her sister, who she knew was more or less openly working with the Carews. the Courtnex's, the Wyatts and others to undermine her throne, peremptorily refused to rehabilitate Elizabeth's birth. Then came the Wyatt rebellion and Elizabeth's imprisonment. In after years both Philip and Elizabeth often referred to the fact that at one juncture he had saved her life, and it is highl)- probable that the Princess was released from the Tower in Ma)-, 1554 on the recommendation of Renard, made in the name of the coming bride- groom of the Oueen. De Noailles writes that she was to go to Richmond from the Tower, and was there to receive two gentlemen from the iMnperor who were to sound her as to a marriage with Emmanuel of .Savoy. If she refused the match she- was to be taken to Woodstock under guard, again a prisoner. De Noailles knew that the best way ot l)reventing such a niatch was to arouse the Queen s ' Correspondence' de Xoailles. i8 THE COURTSHIPS OF suspicion that Elizabeth was plottino- with the French. So with deviHsh ingenuity he sent a man with a present of apples to the Princess to meet her on her arrival at Richmond. The man was seized and searched to the skin, and no letters were found, but to de Noailles' undisguised glee the Princess was hurried off at once to Woodstock without seeing the Emperor's envoys. Again by Philip's intercession Elizabeth was released, and invited to be present at the Queen's entry into London after her marriage. Philip had been anxious that his favourite cousin of Savoy should have come to England for the cere- mony, but E^mmanuel was in the midst of war in an important command, his own oppressed people, the prey of a ruthless invader, were imploring him, their prince, to come and rescue them ; he was desperately short of money, and his visit to England had to be deferred. Soon after the wedding he sent a confi- V dential envoy named Langosco to pave the w^ay for his coming, and subsequently (December, 1554) the Prince himself arrived. Elizabeth's town house, Somerset House, was placed at his disposal, and he was made as welcome as his cousin could make him. Philip tried his hardest to get him into the good graces of the Queen. She was kindh' and sympa- thetic ; gave him the Garter, and went so far to please Philip as once more to liberate Elizabeth at his urgent request, but she would not let the Prin- cess and her suitor meet. Emmanuel's thoughts, moreover, were elsewhere. An unsuccessful attempt was being made to patch up a peace between Spain and Prance, and the young Prince's one idea was to get his patrimonial Piedmont restored to him in the scramble. So he had to hurrv h-Ack ai>-ain to qu1':1':n i:liz.\hi:'i ii. 19 Manders with nothino' done about the marrlae^e. The idea was not dropped, however. Renard t^ave wise advice to PhiHp in his constant letters. He told him, amongst other things, that now that the Queen's hopes of progeny had proved illusive the only way to prevent England from slipping through iheir fingers was to get command of Elizabeth, "' You cannot, ' he said, "change the succession as laid down in King Henry's will without causing a rebellion. Marry Elizabeth to the Duke of Savoy, it will please the English and be popular, provided that her right to the succession be not interfered with ; and it might be a means towards expelling the French from Piedmont." Philip's agents found plenty of opportunities for trying to ingratiate them- selves with the Princess, but she was cool and cautious ; professed that she had no desire to marry, and so forth. She was quite aware of the reason for the Spanish desire that she should marry Savoy, and even thus early began her great policy of keeping people friendly by deferring their hopes. As the clouds gathered ever darker over the miserable Mary in the last sad months of her life, and Elizabeth's star rose, suitors became more plentiful. At the beginning of 1558 Philip had sent haughty Feria as his ambassador to his wife to drive her into providing men and money to help him in his war against France. Calais and Guisnes had just been lost to England, and Mary, all her hopes and illusions Bed, was fretting her heart out in despair. In April an ambassador arrived from the King of Sweden, Gustavus, with letters to the Queen proposing a treaty of commerce between the two countries, and the marriage of his eldest son. 20 THK COURTSHIPS OF Eric, with Princess Elizabeth. The ambassador was in no hurry to seek audience of the Queen — her day was already on the wane — but posted down to Hatfield to see the Princess, to whom he delivered a letter from Prince Eric himself. The Queen was overcome with rage at this and with fear that Philip would blame her for refusing- his request to restore Elizabeth in blood and marry her to Emmanuel of Savoy, and thus giving- rise to this embarrassing Swedish offer. Hearing that F'eria was about to send a courier to Elanders, she summoned him, and in a violent passion of tears reproached him with wishing to be beforehand with her in tellino- the storv to her husband. Feria says, " Her Majesty has been in great anguish about it, but since hearing that Madam Elizabeth gave answer that she had no desire to marry she has become calmer, but is still terribly passionate in the matter. One of the reasons why she is so grieved about the miscarriage is the fear that your Majesty should press her about Savov and Madam Elizabeth. Ficjueroa and I think that the opportunity of the coming of this ambassador, and the illusion about the pregnancy should be taken advantage of to do so ; but it must not be done at the same time as we press her about raising troops here. In short, I do not think now that she will stand in the way of her sister's succes- sion if providence do not bless your Majesty with children." ^ The Swedish anibassador was to have been Openly reproved b)- the Queen before the whole Court, but the Queen thoucrht better of it, and received him in the presence of Gardiner and the ' Feiia to Philip II., May i, 1558. MSS. Simancas. oui':i-:x i-.LizAHicni. 2] Marquis of Winchester only. She dismissed him curtly — almost rudely — and told him that after com- mitting" such a breach of etiquette as to deliver a letter to her sister before prc^sentini^" his credentials, he had better j^o home and never come back to England with such a message as that again. Before Feria left England to see his master in jul\, 155S. he visited Elizabeth at Hatfield, and did his best to persuade her that she had all Philip's sym- pathy, and that her safe course would be to adhere to the Spanish connection. He was no match tor her in diplomacy even then, and got nothing but smiles and genial generalities, in November Mary was dying, and Dassonleville, the Flemish agent, wrote to the King begging him to send Feria back again to forward Spanish interests, " as the common people are so full of projects for marrying Madam Elizabeth to the Earl of Arundel or some one else. ' On the 8th of November a committee of the Council went to Hatfield to see Elizabeth and deliver to her the dying Queen's message, begging her " when she should be Queen to maintain the Catholic Church and pay her (Mary's) debts." Elizabeth would pledge herself to nothing. She knew^ now that she must succeed, with or without Mary's good-will, and she meant to have a free hand. Before the Queen died even, Feria, who had arrived when she was already almost unconscious, hastened to Hatfield to see the coming Queen. So long as he confined himself to courteous commonplace she answered him in the same spirit, but as soon as he began to patronise her and hint that she owed her coming crown to the intervention and support of Philip, she stopped him at once, and said that she would owe it only to 22 THE COURTSHIPS OF her people. She was equally lirm and queenly when F'eria thus early hinted at her marriage with her vSpanish brother-in-law before the breath was out of Mary's body, and showed a firm determination to hold her own and resist all attempts to place her under the tutelage of Philip. A week afterw^ards the Queen died, and then began the keen contest of wits around the matrimonial possibilities of Elizabeth, which ended in the making of modern England. The first letter that Feria wrote to Philip after the new Queen's accession indicated how powerless had been all his blandishments to pledge Elizabeth. " The new Queen and her people," he says, "hold themselves free from your Majesty, and will listen to any ambassadors who may come to treat of marriage. Your Majesty understands better than I how important it is that this affair should go through your hands, which . . . will be difficult except with great negotiation and money. I wish, therefore, your Majesty to keep in view all the steps to be taken on your behalf; one of them being that the Emperor should not send any ambassador here to treat of this, for it would be inconvenient enough for Ferdinand to marry here even if he took the titbit from your Majesty's hand, but very much worse if it were arranged in any other w^ay. For the present, I know for certain they will not hear the name of the Duke of Savoy mentioned, as they fear he will want to recover his estates with English forces, and will keep them constantly at war. I am very pleased to see that the nobles are beginning to open their eyes to the fact that it will not do to marry this woman in the country itself. . . . The more I think over this business the more certain I am that every- (_)L'i-:i-:.\' i':i.i/.\ni: rn. 2.^ thino' dcjX'iicls upon the husl)and this woni;in i)ia\ take. If he be a suitable one, reHoious matters will 00 on well, and the kinodom will remain friendlx with your Majesty, but if not it will all be spoilt. If she decide to marry out of the country she will at once fix her eyes on your Majesty, althouoh some oi them here are sure to pitch upon the Archduke Ferdinand." ' Feria was wrong in his estimate of Elizabeth's character. From the first she had deter- mined to be a popular sovereign, and all observers remarked her almost undignified anxiety to catch the cheers of the crowd. She knew that the most unpopular step she could take would be one that bound her interests to Spain, and particularly a marriage with Philip. A French marriage was im- possible, for the heir to the crown of France was married to Mary Stuart, whose legal right to the English throne was undoubtedly stronger than that of Elizabeth herself. So the Englishmen began to pluck up heart and to think that the great prize might fall to one of them. Early in December the Earl of Arundel came over from Flanders, and Feria remarks in one of his letters that he had seen him at the palace, "looking very smart and clean, and they say he carries his thoughts very high." He was a widower of mature age, foppish and foolish, but, with the exception of his son-in-law, the Duke of Norfolk, the only English noble whose position and descent were such as to enable him without impropriety to aspire to mate with royalty, and for a short time after his arrival he was certainly looked upon by the populace as the most likely husband for the young Queen. ' Calendar of Spanish State Papers (Elizabeth), vol. i. CHAPTER II. The Spanish pohcy with regard to the Austrian match — English suitors for the Queen's hand — Arundel and Pickering — Philip II. — The Archduke Ferdinand — Lord Robert Dudley — The Prince of Sweden — Philip's attitude towards the Austrian match — The Archduke Charles — Pickering and Dudley — The Earl of Arran — Dudley's intrigues against the Archduke Charles' suit — Death of Lady Robert Dudley— Prince Eric again. Ix the same .ship that brought Arundel froni Flanders came that cunning old Bishop of Aquila, who was afterwards Philip's ambassador in England. He conveyed to Feria the King's real wishes with regard to Elizabeth's marriage, which were some- what at variance with those which appeared on the surface. Philip had now definitely taken upon him- self the championship of the Catholic supremacy, and his interests were hourly drifting further away from those of his Austrian kinsmen, who were largely dependent upon the reforming German princes. This was the principal reason why Sussex and other moderate Protestants in P^ngland were promoting an Austrian marriage which, it was assumed, would conciliate Philip without binding- England to the ultra-Catholic party. The Bishop's instructions were to throw cold water on the scheme whilst outwardly appearing to favour it, but if he saw that, such a marriaoe was ine\M table, then he THJ<: couR'rsiiips oi-' (jl'i-:i-:x i:i.i/..\1!i; i ii. 25 was to i^'ct the whole credit ot it tor his master, who was to subsidise his impecunious cousin, the Arch- duke, and make him the instrument of Spain. P'eria confessed himseU' puzzled. If he was not to forward the Archduke herdinand, he ditl not know, he said, whom he could su^'^est. Everybody kept him at arm's length and he could only repeat current o-Qssip. Some people thought the Earl of Arundel would be the man, others the Earl of W estmoreland ; then Eord Howard's son, and then Sir William Pickering ; " every day there is a new cry raised about a husband." "At present, " he said, " I see no disposition to enter into the discussion of an\ proposal on your Majesty's own behalf, either on her part or that of the Council, and when it has to be approached it should be mentioned first to her alone." The first step, he thought, should be to arouse the jealousy of each individual councillor of the Queen's marriage with any Englishman ; and at the same time to work upon the Queen's pride b) hinting that she would hardly stoop to a niarriage inferior to that of her sister. He thought, however, that a marriage with Philip would scarcely be accept- able, as he could not live in England, and Feria was still in hope that if they took any foreigner the Archduke Ferdinand would be the man. Feria's plan of campaign was an ingenious one. After he had aroused Elizabeth's jealousy of her dead sister and deprecated the idea of the degradation to the Queen of a marriage with a subject. " we can take those whom she might marry here and pick them to pieces one by one, which will not require much rhetoric, for there is not a man amongst them worth anvthin<:>', counting' the married ones and all. It, 26 THE COURTSHIPS OF after this, she incHnes to your Majesty, It will be necessar)- for you to send me orders whether I am to carry it any further or throw cold water on it and set up the Archduke Ferdinand, for I see no other person we can propose to whom she would agree." ' Philip had sent to the Queen a present of jewels by the Bishop of Aquila, with which she was de- lighted, and assured Feria that those who said her sympathies were French told an untruth. She was indeed quite coquettish with him sometimes, but he felt that he was outwitted. He could get no information as he did in the last reig^n. The councillors fought shy of him, anxious as ever for bribes and pensions, but willing to give no return for them, for the very good reason that they had nothing to give, they being as hopelessly in the dark as every one else as to the Queen's intentions. "' Indeed I am afraid that one fine day we shall find this wonian married, and I shall be the last man in the place to know anything about it," said Feria. In the meanwhile Arundel was ruining himself with ostentatious expenditure ; borrowing vast sums of money from Italian bankers and scattering gifts of jewels of great value amongst the ladies who surrounded the Queen. He was a man far into middle age at the time, with two married daughters, the Duchess of Norfolk and Lady Lumley, and was in antiquity of descent the first of English nobles ; but one can imagine how the keen young woman on the throne must have smiled inwardly at the idea of the empty-headed, flighty old fop, aspiring to be her partner. " There is a great deal of talk also," writes Feria, " lately about the Queen marrying the Duke ^ Spanish Calendar (Elizabeth), vol. i. OUl<:i':X VAAZAHKVW. 27 Adolphus, brother of the Kin^" of Denmark. One of the principal recommendations they find in him is that lie is a heretic, but I am persuading" them that he is a v^ery L>"ood CathoHc and not so comely as they make him out to be, as I do not think he would suit us." At last, after the usual tedious deliberation, the prayers and invocations for Divine guidance, Philip made up his mind that he, like another Metius Curtius, would save his cause by sacrificing himself. He approached the subject in a true spirit of martyrdom. Feria had been repeating constantl)' — almost offensively — how unpopular he was in England, ever since Mary died. He had. he was told, not a man in his favour, he was distrusted and disliked, and so on, but yet he so completely deceived himself with regard to the support to be obtained by Elizabeth from her people through her national policy and personal popularity, as to write to Feria announcing his gracious intention of sacrificing himself for the good of the Catholic Church and marrvintr the Oueen of Eno-land on condition of her becoming a Catholic and obtaining secret absolution from the Pope. "In this way it will be evident and manifest that I am serving the Lord in marrying her and that she has been con- verted b\' my act. . . . You will, however, not propose any conditions until you see how the Queen is disposed towards the matter itself, and mark well that you must commence to broach the subject with the Oueen alone, as she has already opened a way to such an approach." It must have been evident to Feria at this time (January, 1559) that the Oueen could not marry his master without losing her crown. The Protestant party 2S THE COURTSHIPS OF were ijovv paramount, the reformers had flocked back from Switzerland and Germany, and EHzabeth had cast in her lot with them. To acknowledge the Pope's power of absolution would have been to confess herself a bastard and an usurper. There was only one possible Catholic sovereign of England and that was Mary Queen of Scots, and it is difficult to see what could have been Philip's drift in making such an offer, which, if it had been accepted, would have vitiated his wife's claim to the crown of England and have strengthened that of the French candidate. In any case Elizabeth perceived it quickly enough, and when Feria approached her and delivered a letter from Philip to her, she began coyly to fence with the question. She knew she could not marry Philip ; but she was vain and greedy of admiration, and it would be some- thing to refuse such an offer if she could get it put into a form which would enable her to refuse it. So she began to profess her maiden disinclination to change her state; "but," says Feria. "as I saw whither she was tending, I cut short the reply, and by the conversation which followed ... as well as the hurry she was in to give me the answer, I soon understood what the answer would be ... to shelve the business with fair words." The end of it was that he refused to take any answer at all, unless it were a favourable one, and so deprived Elizabeth of the satisfaction of saying she had actually rejected his master's offer — which was a grievance with her for many years afterwards. Of all this the multitude knew nothing. They were busy with speculation elsewhere. "II Scha- (jLi':i:.\ i:Liz.\Hi':rii. 29 fanoya." the Italian o-ossip-mon<4er, oives an interest- ing account of the coronation ceremony and the self- sufficient pomposity of Arundel, who was Lord Steward, " with a silver wand a yard long, com- manding" everybody, from the Duke (of Norfolk) downwards."^ Lord Robert Dudley as Master of the Horse " led a fair white hackney covered with cloth of gold after the Queen's litter, " but no one as yet seemed to regard him as her possible consort. That came afterwards. Schafanoya, writing to the Mantuan ambassador in Brussels (January, 1559), says : " Some persons declare that she will take the Earl of Arundel, he being the chief peer of this realm, notwithstanding his being old in comparison with the Oueen. This report is founded on the constant daily favours he receives in public and private from her Majesty. Others assert that she will take a very handsome youth, eighteen or twent)' years of age and robust, judging from passion, and because at dances and other public places she prefers hini to any one else. A third opinion is that she will marry an individual who until now has been in France on account of his religion, though he has not yet made his appearance, it being well known how much she loved him. He is a ver\' handsome gallant <>entleman whose name I foro-et. But all are ao-reed that she will take an EnHishman, although the ambassadors of the King of Sweden, seek the contrary." The " \'er\' handsome youth " was perhaps the Earl of Oxford; the "handsome gentleman" was certainly Sir William Pickering, who for a time was the tax'ourite candidate. It is known that * Calciichif of W'lictian State Papers. 30 THE COURTSHIPS OF there had been love passages long before between Elizabeth and him, but to what extent was never discovered. He can hardly have been a very stable character, for he had fled to France under Mary, but had very soon entered into treacherous correspondence with the Spanish party to spy upon the actions of the Carews and the rest of the Protestant exiles. Shortly before Mary's death he had been commissioned to go to German)- and bring thence to England a regiment of mercenaries which had been raised for Mary. They were, however, used by Philip for his owm purposes, and when Elizabeth ascended the throne, Pickering thought proper to have a long diplomatic illness at Dunkirk, to learn how he would be received in England after his more than doubtful dealin'j;;s. As soon as he was satisfied that bygones would be bygones, he came to Plngland in fine leather. Tiepolo writes to the Doge, February 23rd : " Concerninu^ her marriao;"e it still continues to be said that she will take that Master Pickering, who from information received by me, is about thirty-six years of age, of tall stature, handsome, and very successful with women, for he is said to have enjoyed the intimacy of many and great ones." ' Parliament had sent a deputation to the Oueen to urge her to marry, and to represent the dis- advantages of a foreign match, to which the Queen had given a sympathetic l^ut cautious answer. This had raised the hopes of Pickering to a great height, and in the early spring he made his