Authors: Leanda de Lisle
âIn the midst of the deathly silence of the room we heard her reciting “
In manus tuas, Domine, confido spiritum meum
” (Into your hands, O Lord, I commend my spirit)', the doctor recalled. As the executioner hesitated to strike, she repeated the words again, and again. The tension in the room had reached breaking point when at last he swung his axe. It smashed into Mary's head. Some thought they heard a cry. A second stroke almost severed the neck. The axe was then used like a cleaver on a chicken wing to cut it free. As the head fell the executioner raised it up, with the shout âGod save the queen', only to have it drop out of his hand leaving him clutching her chestnut wig. It had been severed from its moorings by the botched strike of the axe. As Shrewsbury wept, the executioners began to tear the dead queen's stockings from her corpse. In was a perk of the job to be allowed to keep or sell their victim's clothes. Their action disturbed her little dog, hidden under her skirts. Covered with blood, it rushed up and down the body, howling plaintively.
16
As the news of Mary's death reached court, fires were lit across London in jubilation. In Paris, where she was mourned as a former Queen of France, it was said with disgust that the London mobs had demanded more fuel from the house of the French ambassador to celebrate the execution.
17
But Elizabeth put on mourning clothes and promised the French ambassador that Mary's death would âwring her heart as long as she lives'. In a manner it did. It gave Elizabeth no pleasure to have been obliged to take the life of her fellow queen. But now she had to focus on the immediate crisis. Elizabeth sent a letter to James swearing her innocence of Mary's death and laying the blame with those who had delivered the warrant. James refused the messenger
his presence for several days. Eventually, however, he accepted Elizabeth's version of events.
Mary's last request, to be buried alongside her mother in France, was denied her. This was not out of spite or cruelty, but again was a consequence of political anxieties: a burial in France would have risked prolonging the outrage there over what had occurred. Instead, after six months of Mary's corpse rotting at Fotheringhay, Elizabeth decided she should be buried at Peterborough Cathedral, the resting place of that other Catholic queen, Anne Boleyn's rival, Katherine of Aragon. Elizabeth now had to face in war Katherine's great-nephew, Philip II, and the full might of the world's greatest power.
âT
HE KING AND HIS
A
RMADA ARE BECOMING RIDICULOUS
', P
OPE
Sixtus observed to the Venetian ambassador in Rome. Five months after the execution of Mary, Queen of Scots, the Pope had given Philip's invasion of England his financial as well as moral support, but by the new year of 1588 he judged that Philip's plan to conquer Elizabeth's small island kingdom had little chance of success. There were interminable delays, and he found he rather admired Elizabeth's courage in confronting Philip's global empire. âIf that woman were only a Catholic, she would be loved by us more than any other sovereign for she has great qualities', he sighed.
1
With Mary, Queen of Scots dead, Philip could claim England in his own right, as a descendant of John of Gaunt. That the son of the man who had sacked Rome in 1527 should become still more powerful was not a prospect that gladdened the Pope's heart.
Come the spring of 1588 Sixtus refused a request to pay out any more money to Philip. He would give more only when the invasion had achieved its objective to overthrow Elizabeth and announced he had âstrong presentments' that it would not.
2
Nevertheless, on 30 May the 130 ships of the Armada, carrying over 18,000 men, set sail from Lisbon for the invasion of England. The intention was that the Armada join the Duke of Parma's army in the Netherlands, where Parma would provide the main invasion force. The fleet reached Calais on 7 August,
sailing in a perfect crescent formation, flags flying from ships that resembled castles of oak. Impressive though the sight was, however, their wooden hulls made them vulnerable to fire, and when the English fleet sent eight blazing fireships in amongst these timber fortresses, the Spanish formation began to break up. Cannon then thundered into the ships.
The English began firing at 8 a.m. on 8 August and were still firing at 7 p.m. when the Armada was already âin the Act of retiring', a Spanish captain called Cuellar recorded. His ship, the galleon
San Pedro
, was filling with water through huge holes made by cannonballs and â less easy to spot â also from shot. The wind blew them north and âI don't know how I can say it â the fleet of our enemy followed behind us to drive us from their country', he wrote.
3
As the Spanish fleet continued northwards Elizabeth set off in her barge from St James's Palace for Gravesend. She knew the Armada was badly damaged and the enemy had suffered mass casualties from England's cannonade. But the battle was not over yet and as she disembarked at West Tilbury âin princely robes and rich array' to inspect the army, she faced a defining moment in her reign.
Elizabeth had to be careful how she approached the coming spectacle. To the English of this period the notion of a female warrior was a perversion of nature, akin to a talking dog, or a baby born with a cow's head.
4
Her sister Mary I had, however, already negotiated an inspection of her troops highly successfully. On 20 July 1553, when Mary I was poised to take her crown from the usurper Jane Grey, she had ridden âout from Framlingham Castle to muster and inspect the most splendid and loyal army'. A contemporary described Mary's troops drawn up in battle line, âthe banners unfurled and the military colours set up'. She was mounted on a white horse and the men fell on their knees as she approached. Mary's animal had shied as she reached the line, so she had dismounted and walked, talking to each in turn. Elizabeth now rode by her troops and âHer faithfull soldiers, great and small, upon their knees began to fall.' Her horse was better
behaved than her sister's. Elizabeth was able to stay mounted, and when she spotted more troops further up the hill, âon her feet upright she stepped, tossing up her plume of feathers . . . waving her royal hand'.
5
The next day Elizabeth returned to Tilbury for a march past and a further inspection. Robert Dudley, who had been in charge of establishing the camp, was there to greet her. The former lovers had grown old. Robert Dudley was florid and sickly while Elizabeth, at fifty-four, was a generation older than Mary had been at the inspection of her army in 1553. Elizabeth was, however, once more âbravely mounted on a stately steed', and this time she rode in a grand procession behind Robert Dudley and the Lord Marshal who carried their plumed hats in their hands.
6
Eight footmen walked at her stirrups and her ladies-in-waiting followed her in diamonds and cloth of gold, while she shone âattired like an angel bright', carrying a staff as a symbol of her authority.
7
One description refers to her âas armed Pallas'.
8
This has been misunderstood to mean Elizabeth was wearing armour. In fact Elizabeth was being compared to the classical figure of Pallas Athene, as Mary I had been in a Florentine pageant at her accession. In both cases it was done to project a positive image of a woman in a military context. Elizabeth probably wore white and gold, certainly not the breastplate of modern film fiction as she watched the march past of the men.
When Elizabeth's army came to a halt she rode alone with Robert Dudley to inspect the companies. She had not liked to see the men kneel in the mud the previous day, and as she passed the troops the men dipped their pikes, colours and lances in salute instead. Elizabeth now rode to a high spot to give her address. In 1554, when Mary I had given a speech that had mobilised London against the Wyatt rebellion, it was rumoured she had âeven asked to go and fight herself'.
9
According to a contemporary ballad account Elizabeth too now promised that âin the midst of all your troop, we ourselves will be in place/to be your joy, your guide, your comfort, even before your enemies face'.
Decades later a chaplain who had been at Tilbury recalled Elizabeth's speech in full.
10
There had been fears that coming to Tilbury would put Elizabeth at risk of assassination. Robert Dudley had countered this, telling Elizabeth her visit would âcomfort not only these thousands but many more will get to hear of it.'
11
Elizabeth's famous address achieved far more than that and remains one of the most stirring speeches in the English language:
My loving people, we have been persuaded by some, that are careful of our safety, to take heed how we commit ourself to armed multitudes for fear of treachery, but I assure you, I do not desire to live to distrust my faithful, and loving people. Let tyrants fear, I have always so behaved myself, that under God I have placed my chief strength, and safeguard in the loyal hearts and goodwill of my subjects. And therefore I am come amongst you as you see, at this time, not for my recreation and disport; but being resolved in the midst, and heat of the battle to live, or die amongst you all, to lay down for my God, and for my kingdom, and for my people, my Honour, and my blood even in the dust. I know I have the body, but of a weak and feeble woman, but I have the heart and stomach of a king, and of a King of England too, and think foul scorn that Parma or Spain, or any prince of Europe should dare to invade the borders of my Realm, to which rather than any dishonour should grow by me, I myself will take up arms, I myself will be your General, Judge, and Rewarder of every one of your virtues in the field.
12
Happily, there was to be no battle on English soil and the Spanish ships continued sailing north, up the east coast of England and around Scotland. Short of water, they were forced to throw their horses overboard and the animals were seen swimming desperately for a shore they would never reach. In time their masters would also be swimming in a series of shipwrecks as they continued on the long route home.
Cuellar recalled how, clinging to the top of the poop of his sinking ship in Sligo Bay, âI gazed at the terrible spectacle' of other Spanish ships also breaking up in a storm: âMany were drowning within the ships: others, casting themselves into the water, sank to the bottom without returning to the surface; others on rafts and barrels, and gentlemen on pieces of timber.' The Spaniard reached shore, and with difficulty made his way to what he hoped would be the sanctuary of a monastery. âI found it deserted, and the church and images of the saints burned and ruined, and twelve Spaniards hanging within the church by order of the Lutheran English, who went about searching to make an end of all of us.'
13
At least 9,000 men from the Armada perished, either drowned, murdered for their gold, or summarily executed in Ireland after being handed over to the English authorities. Elizabeth wrote to King James in Scotland that Philip's plans to destroy her had instead âprocured my greatest glory'.
14
She was right. But the war was not over, and Elizabeth's most difficult years were yet to come.
15
J
OURNEYING HOME TO
K
ENILWORTH IN
W
ARWICKSHIRE, JUST A FEW
weeks after the defeat of the Armada, Robert Dudley wrote to ask Elizabeth âhow my gracious lady doth, and what ease of her late pains she finds?' He was also ill, but he assured her that he had been taking the medicine she had sent him for his fever and said it made him feel âmuch better than any other thing given me'. It did not prove enough. He died six days later, at Cornbury in Oxfordshire. âHis last letter', Elizabeth wrote on it sorrowfully, and put it in a cabinet by her bed, where she kept her most precious and personal possessions.
1
Dudley's death signalled the passing of the old order, but Elizabeth still hoped she could continue ruling according to her motto, â
Semper eadem
' (Always the same). As the years began to pass and her servants died she either did not replace them or found a near equivalent to the servant she had lost. Dudley's replacement was to be his stepson, the tall, handsome, soldier-scholar Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex. A man who longed for military glory and fame, he represented the aspirations of a young and frustrated generation of courtiers. When Essex joined Elizabeth's Privy Council in 1593 he was twenty-seven, while the average age of his fellow councillors was almost sixty and the seventy-three-year-old William Cecil, Lord Burghley had a secured position of unrivalled authority. The only other young member was
Burghley's son, Robert Cecil, appointed to the council in 1591 when he was twenty-eight, and he was being groomed to replace his father, just as Essex had replaced Dudley.
Robert Cecil was short, no more than five feet two, and hunch-backed. Elizabeth would refer to Cecil affectionately as her âpygmy'; his many enemies preferred to call him âRobert the Devil'. He was notoriously corrupt, even at a time when corruption had grown commonplace. Theft by royal official was adding to the burden of the vast cost of the continuing war with Spain and further impoverishing the queen. She did what she could to economise, and in consequence was accused of growing âvery covetous in her old days'. It was said Elizabeth neglected the court and âpeople were weary of an old woman's government'.
2
Essex's followers, who fought in the war with Spain and gained little profit from their loyalty, resented the fact those âgoose-quilled gents', the pen-pusher Cecils, were so successful at lining their pockets and, increasingly, their hopes seemed to lie in the passing of the Virgin Queen.