No reign ever was more glorious or better for the people than
Queen Elizabeth's. It was a time when there were many very great
men living —soldiers, sailors, writers, poets—and they
all loved and look up to the queen as the mother of her country.
There really was nothing she did love like the good of her people,
and somehow they all felt and knew it, and "Good Queen Bess" had
their hearts—though she was not always right, and had some
serious faults.
The worst of her faults was not telling the truth. Somehow kings
and rulers had, at that time, learnt to believe that when they were
dealing with other countries anything was fair, and that it was not
wrong to tell falsehoods to hide a secret, nor to make promises
they never meant to keep. People used to do so who would never have
told a lie on their own account to their neighbor, and Lord
Burleigh and Queen Elizabeth did so very often, and often behaved
meanly and shabbily to people who had trusted to their promises.
Her other fault was vanity. She was a little woman, with bright
eyes, and rather hooked nose, and sandy hair, but she managed to
look every inch a queen, and her eye, when displeased, was like a
lion's. She had really been in love with Lord Leicester, and every
now and then he hoped she would marry him; indeed, there is reason
to fear that he had his wife secretly killed, in order that he
might be able to wed the queen; but she saw that the people would
not allow her to do so, and gave it up. But she liked to be
courted. She allowed foreign princes to send her their portraits,
rings, and jewels, and sometimes to come and see her, but she never
made up her mind to take them. And as to the gentlemen at her own
court, she liked them to make the most absurd and ridiculous
compliments to her, calling her their sun and goddess, and her hair
golden beams of the morning, and the like; and the older she grew
the more of these fine speeches she required of them. Her
dress—a huge hoop, a tall ruff all over lace, and jewels in
the utmost profusion— was as splendid as it could be made,
and in wonderful variety. She is said to have had three hundred
gowns and thirty wigs. Lord Burleigh said of her that she was
sometimes more than a man, and sometimes less than a woman. And so
she was, when she did not like her ladies to wear handsome
dresses.
One of the people who had wanted to marry her was her
brother-in-law, Philip of Spain, but she was far too wise, and he
and she were bitter enemies all the rest of their lives. His
subjects in Holland had become Protestants, and he persecuted them
so harshly that they broke away from him. They wanted Elizabeth to
be their queen, but she would not, though she sent Lord Leicester
to help them with an army. With him went his nephew, Sir Philip
Sydney, the most good, and learned, and graceful gentleman at
court. There was great grief when Sir Philip was struck by a cannon
ball in the thigh, and died after nine days pain. It was as he was
being carried from the field, faint and thirsty, that some one had
just brought him a cup of water, when he saw a poor soldier, worse
hurt than himself, looking at it with longing eyes. He put it from
him untasted, and said, "Take it, thy necessity is greater than
mine."
After the execution of Mary of Scotland, Philip of Spain
resolved to punish Elizabeth and the English, and force them back
to obedience to the pope. He fitted out an immense fleet, and
filled it with fighting men. So strong was it that, as armada is
the Spanish for a fleet, it was called the Invincible Armada. It
sailed for England, the men expecting to burn and ruin all before
them. But the English ships were ready. Little as they were, they
hunted and tormented the big Spaniards all the way up the English
Channel; and, just as the Armada had passed the Straits of Dover,
there came on such dreadful storms that the ships were driven and
broken before it, and wrecked all round the coasts—even in
Scotland and Ireland—and very few ever reached home again.
The English felt that God had protected them with His wind and
storm, and had fought for them.
Lord Leicester died not long after, and the queen became almost
equally fond of his stepson, the Earl of Essex, who was a brave,
high-spirited young man, only too proud.
The sailors of Queen Elizabeth's time were some of the bravest
and most skilful that ever lived. Sir Francis Drake sailed round
the world in the good ship Pelican, and when he brought her into
the Thames the queen went to look at her. Sir Walter Raleigh was
another great sailor, and a most courtly gentleman besides. He took
out the first English settlers to North America, and named their
new home Virginia—after the virgin queen—and he brought
home from South America our good friend the potato root; and, also
he learnt their to smoke tobacco. The first time his servant saw
this done in England, he thought his master must be on fire, and
threw a bucket of water over him to put it out.
The queen valued these brave men much, but she liked none so
well as Lord Essex, till at last he displeased her, and she sent
him to govern Ireland. There he fell into difficulties, and she
wrote angry letters, which made him think his enemies were setting
her against him. So he came back without leave; and one morning
came straight into her dressing chamber, where she was sitting,
with her thin grey hair being combed, before she put on one of her
thirty wigs, or painted her face. She was very angry, and would not
forgive him, and he got into a rage, too; and she heard he had said
she was an old woman, crooked in temper as in person. What was far
worse, he raised the Londoners to break out in a tumult to uphold
him. He was taken and sent to the Tower, tried for treason, and
found guilty of death. But the queen still loved him, and waited
and waited for some message or token to ask her pardon. None came,
and she thought he was too proud to beg for mercy. She signed the
death warrant, and Essex died on the block. But soon she found that
he had really sent a ring she once had given him, to a lady who was
to show it to her, in token that he craved her pardon. The ring had
been taken by mistake to a cruel lady who hated him, and kept it
back. But by-and-by this lady was sick to death. Then she repented,
and sent for the queen and gave her the ring, and confessed her
wickedness. Poor Queen Elizabeth—her very heart was broken.
She said to the dying woman, "God may forgive you, but I cannot."
She said little more after that. She was old, and her strength
failed her. Day after day she sat on a pile of cushions, with her
finger on her lips, still growing weaker, and begging for the
prayers the archbishop read her. And thus, she who had once been so
great and spirited, sank into death, when seventy years old, in the
year 1602.
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