登陆注册
27054500000127

第127章 ENGLAND UNDER ELIZABETH(10)

He was a man who could find comfort and occupation in his books,and he did so for a time;not the least happy time,I dare say,of his life.But it happened unfortunately for him,that he held a monopoly in sweet wines:which means that nobody could sell them without purchasing his permission.This right,which was only for a term,expiring,he applied to have it renewed.The Queen refused,with the rather strong observation-but she DID make strong observations-that an unruly beast must be stinted in his food.Upon this,the angry Earl,who had been already deprived of many offices,thought himself in danger of complete ruin,and turned against the Queen,whom he called a vain old woman who had grown as crooked in her mind as she had in her figure.These uncomplimentary expressions the ladies of the Court immediately snapped up and carried to the Queen,whom they did not put in a better tempter,you may believe.The same Court ladies,when they had beautiful dark hair of their own,used to wear false red hair,to be like the Queen.So they were not very high-spirited ladies,however high in rank.

The worst object of the Earl of Essex,and some friends of his who used to meet at LORD SOUTHAMPTON'S house,was to obtain possession of the Queen,and oblige her by force to dismiss her ministers and change her favourites.On Saturday the seventh of February,one thousand six hundred and one,the council suspecting this,summoned the Earl to come before them.He,pretending to be ill,declined;

It was then settled among his friends,that as the next day would be Sunday,when many of the citizens usually assembled at the Cross by St.Paul's Cathedral,he should make one bold effort to induce them to rise and follow him to the Palace.

So,on the Sunday morning,he and a small body of adherents started out of his house-Essex House by the Strand,with steps to the river-having first shut up in it,as prisoners,some members of the council who came to examine him-and hurried into the City with the Earl at their head crying out 'For the Queen!For the Queen!A plot is laid for my life!'No one heeded them,however,and when they came to St.Paul's there were no citizens there.In the meantime the prisoners at Essex House had been released by one of the Earl's own friends;he had been promptly proclaimed a traitor in the City itself;and the streets were barricaded with carts and guarded by soldiers.The Earl got back to his house by water,with difficulty,and after an attempt to defend his house against the troops and cannon by which it was soon surrounded,gave himself up that night.He was brought to trial on the nineteenth,and found guilty;on the twenty-fifth,he was executed on Tower Hill,where he died,at thirty-four years old,both courageously and penitently.His step-father suffered with him.His enemy,Sir Walter Raleigh,stood near the scaffold all the time-but not so near it as we shall see him stand,before we finish his history.

In this case,as in the cases of the Duke of Norfolk and Mary Queen of Scots,the Queen had commanded,and countermanded,and again commanded,the execution.It is probable that the death of her young and gallant favourite in the prime of his good qualities,was never off her mind afterwards,but she held out,the same vain,obstinate and capricious woman,for another year.Then she danced before her Court on a state occasion-and cut,I should think,a mighty ridiculous figure,doing so in an immense ruff,stomacher and wig,at seventy years old.For another year still,she held out,but,without any more dancing,and as a moody,sorrowful,broken creature.At last,on the tenth of March,one thousand six hundred and three,having been ill of a very bad cold,and made worse by the death of the Countess of Nottingham who was her intimate friend,she fell into a stupor and was supposed to be dead.She recovered her consciousness,however,and then nothing would induce her to go to bed;for she said that she knew that if she did,she should never get up again.There she lay for ten days,on cushions on the floor,without any food,until the Lord Admiral got her into bed at last,partly by persuasions and partly by main force.When they asked her who should succeed her,she replied that her seat had been the seat of Kings,and that she would have for her successor,'No rascal's son,but a King's.'

Upon this,the lords present stared at one another,and took the liberty of asking whom she meant;to which she replied,'Whom should I mean,but our cousin of Scotland!'This was on the twenty-third of March.They asked her once again that day,after she was speechless,whether she was still in the same mind?She struggled up in bed,and joined her hands over her head in the form of a crown,as the only reply she could make.At three o'clock next morning,she very quietly died,in the forty-fifth year of her reign.

That reign had been a glorious one,and is made for ever memorable by the distinguished men who flourished in it.Apart from the great voyagers,statesmen,and scholars,whom it produced,the names of BACON,SPENSER,and SHAKESPEARE,will always be remembered with pride and veneration by the civilised world,and will always impart (though with no great reason,perhaps)some portion of their lustre to the name of Elizabeth herself.It was a great reign for discovery,for commerce,and for English enterprise and spirit in general.It was a great reign for the Protestant religion and for the Reformation which made England free.The Queen was very popular,and in her progresses,or journeys about her dominions,was everywhere received with the liveliest joy.I think the truth is,that she was not half so good as she has been made out,and not half so bad as she has been made out.She had her fine qualities,but she was coarse,capricious,and treacherous,and had all the faults of an excessively vain young woman long after she was an old one.On the whole,she had a great deal too much of her father in her,to please me.

Many improvements and luxuries were introduced in the course of these five-and-forty years in the general manner of living;but cock-fighting,bull-baiting,and bear-baiting,were still the national amusements;and a coach was so rarely seen,and was such an ugly and cumbersome affair when it was seen,that even the Queen herself,on many high occasions,rode on horseback on a pillion behind the Lord Chancellor.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 豪门蜜恋:傻傻老公宠爱无限

    豪门蜜恋:傻傻老公宠爱无限

    韩琤雪穿越了,成了大玥国第一丑颜皇后。洞房花烛夜:“长的这么丑,朕怕做恶梦。”“……”某天某夜,韩琤雪忍无可忍,一脚踢开:“不是嫌老娘长的丑么?干嘛还要天天杵进来。”明明有那么多妃子,偏偏要赖在她这里。——三年未央,潸然泪醒,镜花水月梦一场。可是…一张画像掉落在脚边,画中的女子长发披肩,乌黑的发遮住大半张脸。她惊讶的捂住双唇,“她是……”“乖,还给我,这是我的爱妻。”男人长臂一挥,连人带画一同卷入怀中。——她是被遗弃的落魄千金,只想过最简单的生活,他却步步紧逼。“慕逸枫,我不喜欢你,求你别再缠着我了。”“没关系,反正我也不喜欢你。”我爱你。——她不知道,他用生命作祭,才换来今生的萍水相逢。
  • 宿命兄弟

    宿命兄弟

    这里有血雨腥风,这里有手足之情,这里有爱恨情仇,在这个没有希望的世界里,你有勇气与安龙一起凭着毅力,勇气踏上一段传奇之旅么?和安龙一起感受热血拼杀的激情,收获兄弟之情,醉倒温柔乡,那就让我们一起进入【宿命兄弟】吧......
  • 血瞳武尊

    血瞳武尊

    灵灵大陆,灵力为尊。天穹之下,上三天,中三天,下三天,势力如云。青阳镇少年,从母亲遗物之中无疑获得血轮眼之力。神秘的血轮眼,精彩的武魂界。看少年如何以一颗血轮眼,透视,寻宝,发动幻术,开启武魂空间,一步步,跨上天穹,成为天穹主宰、绝对的爽文,绝对的热血,尽在《血瞳武尊》
  • 废柴逆天腹黑王爷快走开

    废柴逆天腹黑王爷快走开

    一朝穿越,21世纪让人闻风丧胆的她竟成了人见人厌的废物------京城第一废柴蓝梦梵:嫡母嫌弃,好,我让你爬不上主母之位;姐妹虐待,很好,我让你们血债血偿;皇上为难,非常好,我让你的天下不得安宁。什么?这还不算最惨的,她还惹来一条腹黑大灰狼;什么?大灰狼在向她求爱。“不,我不答应。”一阵微风掠过:“蓝梦梵,你刚刚说什么?”“我说......我说我答应。”“恩,很好。那我们去洞房吧。”“哎?哎?别啊,我......”
  • 八极星

    八极星

    地球毁灭,人类想到星际移民。八极星,是人类探索到环境最为恶劣的八颗星球。适合人类生存的星球有十几颗,分为四派:致华盟,北欧盟,绝裂盟,四星盟。
  • 神威浩荡

    神威浩荡

    大千世界,无奇不有!神书出世,谁与争锋!天地初开之时,唯有十本至尊神书,每一本都拥有无穷的奥秘。“神武”“八荒”“山海”“苍穹”“龙血”“极芒”“天机”“仙剑”“不灭”“霸世”一个天赋逆天,张狂嚣张的少年崛起,得神书而镇天下!
  • 阴缘难尽:神秘鬼夫

    阴缘难尽:神秘鬼夫

    一切的一切都要从头说起,可是,一句两句又怎么说的清楚?父亲的离世让她受到打击,然而,父亲交给她的东西,却暗藏着她神秘的秘密。遗物,开启了神秘之旅。当冷漠霸道的鬼夫步步逼近,白绾灵往后退去,“人鬼殊途,你不要乱来!”然而,他道:“是吗?你忘了你的身份?”
  • 一弦一顾付流年

    一弦一顾付流年

    慵懒的躺在床上日光浴,心里确定了一个纠结的问题:这辈子最想做的一件事,就是和心爱的人呆在自己设计的房子里,安静地享受阳光,吃男票煮的饭。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 两界杀

    两界杀

    在很久以前,有人说:“既然相看两厌,那我们便从此不见。这世界,你们一半,我们一半。”从此,这个世界便被一分为二。伤口总会有愈合的一天,世界也会重新聚合,原来一个世界的生灵,终将会重新见面。
  • 绝色尼姑

    绝色尼姑

    她,什么也没有,除了钱,却让王孙贵族沸腾。她,什么也不是,只是一介尼姑,却让公子王孙留恋。她,什么也不要,唯有一世长宁,却折折磨磨,分分合合,身边人去复来,来复去。她,什么也不求,独愿伴君身侧,共一世。