Elizabeth I

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Elizabeth I Page 67

by Margaret George


  Tonight I would wear all white, intensified with diamonds and pearls. Likewise my officers and attendants would attire themselves. There is nothing more formal than white. I groaned a bit as I sat up and steeled myself for the long preparation. It was akin to a knight putting on his armor. But appearance is paramount.

  My vast dress, heavy white satin brocaded with white silk and covered with rows of pearls, had its own attached cape that framed my back. A heart-shaped gossamer collar rose up behind my head, its edges twinkling with diamonds. Inside that was a stand-up collar of purest pale lace. My hair—or should I say, my towering wig—was dotted with pearls and fanciful white flowers of silk. My toes, peeking out from under my skirt, gleamed with white satin.

  Draping a towel over my shoulders and neck, my ladies applied the face powder of ground alabaster, the rouge and lip color of fine cinnabar.

  “You look like Diana herself,” said Catherine, smoothing the makeup with her gentle fingers.

  “From a distance,” I said. “And candlelight is kind.”

  Philadelphia held out a vial of crushed violets and applied the perfume to my neck and wrists.

  “Violet in deepest winter,” I said. “A sort of magic.” The same magic I was attempting: to be something out of season. It was a fitting choice, then.

  The Great Hall was ablaze with torches and candles, the long tables covered with bright woven cloths, candelabra placed at intervals, their pale beeswax candles dripping already. The first part of the meal would be ordered and seemly, with servers bringing an endless stream of platters, the meat still steaming from the roasting fires. Nero himself could not have provided more choice and quantity. Showpieces, to be brought in and paraded around the hall before being eaten, were peacock, swan, and pastry fantasies sprinkled with sugar and nutmeg. Washing the food down, the guests had a choice of ale, malmsey, white burgundy, claret, beer, and sack.

  Decorous music, provided by lutes, viols, harps, and the clear voices of young singers, filled the hall with delicate melody.

  I took my place between the two envoys. Ambassador Mikulin told me that in Russia they constructed ice palaces in winter where they would hold such banquets.

  “All made of ice,” he said. “Each candle inside reflects a thousand times.”

  Duke Orsino shivered. “Uncivilized,” he said. “No one should live where winter lasts more than a month.”

  “We Russians like our winter,” Mikulin said. “If we have a short one, we become despondent.”

  I remembered the sables Czar Ivan had sent me. They must wear them year-round.

  At length the servers brought in a huge cake; in truth, it was several cakes baked separately, and then fitted together, as no oven could hold such a monster. Trumpeters sounded their silvery notes, followed by a drumroll, and John Harington stepped forward, standing before the cake. “As master of ceremonies, I invite you to take a piece of this cake. Somewhere within this half there is a bean, and within this half, a pea. Let the men take pieces from the bean side and the ladies from the pea. You all know the rule: The man who finds the bean is the Bean King, and the lady the Pea Queen. This night, you are to do whatever they command you. All rules are gone. You may speak to whomever you please, swap stations so that the servant becomes the master, and vice versa. To our distinguished foreign guests, please enjoy this English custom. Now!” He gestured toward the cake, laying down two knives on each side. “Help yourselves!”

  There was a mad scramble as people rushed to cut the cake. John brought me a piece. Although I bit carefully, I knew he would have made sure I did not get the pea. Let someone else be Queen for tonight.

  For a few moments there was only the sound of chewing. Then Catherine gave a gasp. “I have it. I have the pea!” She held it up for all to see.

  “So, Catherine, I am to obey you!” I said. “Give me a task!” The room grew quiet as everyone turned to see what would happen.

  She hesitated. Clearly she had not thought anything out, never expecting the role to fall to her. “Recite the Lord’s Prayer backward. In Latin.”

  “Am I allowed to write it out and then read it backward?”

  Used to allowing me anything, she hesitated again. “No,” she finally said. “That would be too easy.”

  All eyes turned to me as I tried to write the words out in my mind, picture them, and recite them. “Malo—a—nos libera sed,” I started. “Tentationem in inducas nos ne et.” I got as far as “nobis da quotidianum”—“give us today our daily”—before I got hopelessly tangled up and stopped, laughing.

  “That is not fair!” cried Harington. “It’s been over forty years since we’ve had Latin in church here. Who could remember?”

  “I would do better with Cicero,” I admitted.

  “Oh, but tonight you can’t choose!” said Catherine, turning to give another victim his orders.

  A few minutes later a cry went up on the other side of the hall. A young man was holding up the bean, looking surprised. He turned it around as if he could not believe it.

  “So!” said Harington, rushing over to him. “Tonight you will rule over us all!” He knelt before him. “Your servant, sir,” he said.

  The young man said, “Which character in the play would you be?”

  “The clown,” he said. “His song closes the play.”

  “Then sing for us,” the Bean King demanded.

  If he had known Harington, he could not have chosen a worse task. He was a poor singer, unable to carry even as simple a tune as “Fair Annie.” Turning red, he belted out an obscene ditty about a miller’s daughter.

  That brought the hall to clapping and yelling, and soon everyone was indulging in upside-down behavior: soldiers tripping a dainty measure, women shouting bawdy verses, servers helping themselves to the wine and refusing to pour for anyone, children, long past their bedtime, running wild, overturning tables, unscolded.

  The Bean King was thoroughly enjoying himself, ordering people about while stuffing himself with sweetmeats and bolting cup after cup of different wines.

  “They say it will make you sick,” he said. “But tonight all rules are suspended, and that means I can overindulge and mix whatever I like.”

  “Don’t be so sure of that,” I told him. “I do not think the laws of nature are set aside quite yet.”

  He squinted at me. Clearly the wine was behaving in its normal fashion inside him. “Your hair is red as a rooster’s comb,” he blurted out. “Perhaps I should order you to crow.” He hiccupped. “Crow!” he said.

  I threw my head back and gave an imitation of a cock crow. People clapped. Then someone came up to the Bean King and asked him, “But what of your brother? Why is he not here? Did he not want to see it performed?”

  “Busy writing. He has to finish something by next Wednesday.”

  I wondered who this boy was. He did look familiar, but I could not place him. I kept looking. Then I had it. He was one of the actors in the play, the dark one who had caught my eye.

  “Who is your brother?” I asked him. “Who are you, for that matter? I see you had a part in the Lord Chamberlain’s Men. Do you belong to that company?”

  “No, I do not belong to any one company, but act with whatever one will have me. It is hard to find work.”

  “I would think you would be suited to many different roles,” I said. It was true. He could play handsome, he could play plain, shy, bold, strong, or weak. He seemed a shape-shifter as far as his type went. “What did you say your name was?”

  “Edmund. Edmund Shakespeare.”

  Now I understood. His brother was the author of today’s play. “I have met your brother,” I said. “He is quite the success here in the public theater and at court.”

  “Yes, I know. He has been generous to me, but I try not to presume. I was only seven when he left Stratford, so in many ways we were strangers.”

  “That can happen.” As it had with me and my older sister.

  “You don’t know what it’s like
, having him be so famous, and in the same field. I’ll never escape his shadow, but I am compelled to keep acting. There isn’t anything else I want to do. But everywhere I look, there he is!”

  “Envy is a corrosive thing,” I said. “Try not to let it eat you, or you will cripple yourself.”

  “How would you know?” Truly, this night was a night of uncensored talk.

  I laughed. “How young you are, or you would never ask such a question. I certainly know firsthand what it is to follow someone whose success was outsized, legendary. I am, after all, the daughter of King Henry VIII.”

  “Oh!” He clapped his hand over his mouth. “Oh, forgive me!”

  “My dear Edmund, tonight everyone may speak freely. I am doing so in telling you that when I was your age, I never thought to attain one-tenth of the stature and wisdom of my father.”

  “And now they say you have eclipsed him, that you have achieved far more.”

  “They lie who say that. No one can eclipse or equal him. But it is possible to carve out a separate destiny and success, no matter who your father or brother is.” I reached out and took his chin. “Believe me.”

  79

  LETTICE

  January 1601

  They were everywhere—sprawled out in the hall, eating, complaining, the stink of their wet wool in the air nauseating. My house was not my own any longer, but a staging ground for disgruntled men—malcontents who looked to my son to lead them. To lead them where, and to what?

  He had emerged from his collapse a different man. I had known it the moment I saw his eyes when they opened after his near death. And the distant look in them had never faded away, as if he had traveled to a land so dreadful he could never come all the way back. He seemed stronger, as if he had won immunity, but indifferent, too, to his newfound strength.

  We had passed a dreary Christmas and New Year. We had no feast, no celebration. Our only guests, if you could call them that, were the men who milled in our courtyard lamenting their various grievances: the creditors who kept pressing them for payment, their lack of opportunities at court, and the failure of the world to value their services. There were pirates and failed courtiers and disinherited aristocrats, unemployed soldiers and sailors, rough retainers from our estates in Wales, whipped up by Gelli Meyrick.

  There were probably spies among them reporting everything back to Elizabeth and the Privy Council, but it was impossible to detect them. The government had to be aware that the crowd was a mass of discontent, but discontent has to be molded into some shape in order to be dangerous. So far they had no direction.

  Robert made a show of buying bottles of the same sweet wines he used to collect the duties from. He would pour out the golden liquid and stare at it like a lovelorn boy, then drink to the Queen’s health. “Every drop I drink is a penny in her purse,” he said, waving his glass about. “Am I not being a loyal subject to drink myself into oblivion, all in the Queen’s name?”

  “Here, here,” said Meyrick, joining him. “Let us kill ourselves to enrich the Queen.”

  Christopher, who had absented himself from my bed and my company since Robert’s collapse, sullenly drank with them but said not a word. Others—the Earls of Bedford and Rutland and Lords Monteagle and Sandys, Captain Thomas Lee and Robert’s feckless uncle George Devereux—were more vocal in their opinions.

  “Did you hear that Raleigh has been appointed governor of Jersey?” said Lord Sandys.

  “We know why,” said Henry Cuffe, filling another glass.

  “Why?” asked Uncle George.

  “It’s all part of Cecil’s plan,” said Cuffe. “His scheme to let the Spanish into England. It’s obvious. Raleigh is part of his faction, and now he will control the western defenses of the realm. Cobham, that other Cecil man, commands the Cinque Ports in the south. And who has the northern borders? Cecil’s brother Thomas. If that isn’t enough, Lord Buckhurst and Admiral Howard, Cecil’s supporters, control the treasury and the navy. They all stand ready to deliver us into the hands of Spain.”

  “Good God, man!” cried Robert. “Can this be possible?”

  “Think about it. Cecil has been pressing for peace with Spain. Was he not the leader of the group that persuaded the Queen to call a halt to our overseas attacks on Spain? He will be rewarded for that.” He swallowed the rest of his drink in one gulp. “He wants the Infanta of Spain to succeed Elizabeth. He said her claim was as good as James’s.”

  “He said this publicly?” demanded Christopher.

  “Yes, of course, or I wouldn’t have heard about it.” He paused. “I must write to James. He has to persuade Elizabeth to declare him her successor, before it is too late and Cecil—” Robert gave a heaving cry. “She is entirely in his power. She listens to whatever he tells her. Oh, that this day has come!”

  “And she was always so independent,” said Cuffe. “In the old days, when her mind was—”

  “Her mind is going,” cried Robert. “Her body went a long time ago!”

  I touched his arm and shook my head. He must not say such things, not in front of others. But Robert shook my hand off querulously.

  “I’m concerned for her. If she is incompetent, unable to rule, then Cecil and his minions will get control,” he said. “Her behavior toward me proves that she is not herself, that her mind is deteriorating. She locked me up, then held me without trial, then took away my livelihood on a whim—” He looked about to burst into tears. “Me, whom she loved!”

  His version of events conveniently left out any provocation on his part. I must speak to him privately. But for now it was enough to hush his attacks on her.

  “She has lately asked for more leniency for Catholics and even ... Jesuits!” hissed Thomas Lee. I had always found him sneaky and violent, an ominous combination. “More proof that she is being persuaded to offer conciliation to Spain. That, from the Queen who braved the Armada.”

  “Each thing by itself might have an explanation, but taken all together, there’s only one pattern: a Spanish one. Note whether she takes to wearing a mantilla. I wouldn’t be surprised,” murmured Bedford.

  “Maybe she’ll take up bullfighting!” cried Sandys.

  This elicited a roar of laughter.

  “She’s a man in all other ways, so why not fight bulls?” said Meyrick.

  I had to get them out of the house. This was dangerous talk. I spoke up. In case anyone was spying, I wanted him to report that I had defended the Queen. “Please. She is our Queen, and to speak thus of her is un-English.”

  “Scared you’ll be reported?” sneered Meyrick.

  I stared back at him. It was the first time he had openly challenged me, but I had sensed a duel between us for Robert’s loyalty and attention. “You are the one in danger of that. You should watch your mouth.”

  “Spoken like a cowardly woman,” he said. “But what else would you be?”

  “I am the mistress of this house,” I said. “Leave it. Speak your treason outside, with the faceless crowd.”

  Robert stood. “No. I am the master of this house. You may stay.” He shot a look at me, robbing me of words. I had never thought to see this day. I had lost my son.

  I left them to fulminate, shout, and denigrate the Queen. Robert had cause for resenting her, but most of the others could only blame their failure to achieve status at court on themselves. Elizabeth was astute, and through the years I had noticed that she used the aristocrats for window dressing at court, to dance and fulfill ceremonial positions, but the real power was held by clever commoners like the Cecils and Walsingham. She avoided anyone who reeked of personal trouble or instability, which let out most of the men in the next room. That they would hate her for it made sense. But now they would seek their redress through Robert. They would lead him into ruin, if he let them.

  But in his present state of mind, he could not even think clearly. And now he had turned aside from me and cast his lot with them.

  Nonetheless, at night they had to go home and Robert had to
return to his own chambers to sleep. I prowled the hall waiting to catch him; I met him as he rounded the stairs, hurrying to his rooms.

  “Robert.” I blocked his way. “I must talk to you. In private.”

  “Not now, Mother.” He tried to brush me aside, but I refused to budge. Strong man that he was, there has never been a man strong enough to dissuade a determined mother.

  “Yes, now.” I opened his door and was the one to usher him into his own room. Meekly he followed. It was a bad sign that his resistance could be so easily broken.

  “Be quick about it,” he said. “I still have work to do tonight.”

  “What sort of work?”

  “In all due respect, Mother, it is none of your business.”

  “Your business is my business.”

  “Not any longer.”

  “Our fates are bound together. Nothing can happen to you that does not affect me, and the entire family. Think of your children before you embark on any rash ventures.”

  “The children will fare well enough. What I do does not matter, now that I cannot support them.”

  “The family still has its good name. I beg you, do nothing to tarnish it. Leave your children an unblemished legacy, even if they are poor. There is no disgrace in honest poverty.”

  He laughed. “Odd words coming from you. You have fled from poverty your whole life.”

  “I see more clearly now.”

  “Mother, please leave. I told you, I have work to do.”

  “And I asked you, what sort of work? What sort of work is done late at night, in secrecy?”

  “Very well, then. I am going to write to King James as Cuffe suggested. He must be warned about Cecil and the Spanish.”

  “As Cuffe suggested. Why do you listen to him?”

  “He makes sense. For the first time, someone speaks logically and with my own best interest at heart.”

 

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