Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- CHAPTER I 1533 TO 1536
- CHAPTER II 1536 TO 1542
- CHAPTER III 1542 TO 1547
- CHAPTER IV 1547 TO 1549
- CHAPTER V 1549 TO 1553
- CHAPTER VI 1553 AND 1554
- CHAPTER VII 1554 AND 1555
- CHAPTER VIII 1555 TO 1558
- CHAPTER IX 1558 AND 1559
- CHAPTER X 1559
- CHAPTER XI 1560
- CHAPTER XII 1560
- CHAPTER XIII 1561
- CHAPTER XIII 1561 TO 1565
- CHAPTER XIV 1565 AND 1566
- CHAPTER XV 1567 AND 1568
- CHAPTER XVI 1568 TO 1570
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- CHAPTER I 1533 TO 1536
- CHAPTER II 1536 TO 1542
- CHAPTER III 1542 TO 1547
- CHAPTER IV 1547 TO 1549
- CHAPTER V 1549 TO 1553
- CHAPTER VI 1553 AND 1554
- CHAPTER VII 1554 AND 1555
- CHAPTER VIII 1555 TO 1558
- CHAPTER IX 1558 AND 1559
- CHAPTER X 1559
- CHAPTER XI 1560
- CHAPTER XII 1560
- CHAPTER XIII 1561
- CHAPTER XIII 1561 TO 1565
- CHAPTER XIV 1565 AND 1566
- CHAPTER XV 1567 AND 1568
- CHAPTER XVI 1568 TO 1570
Summary
Notwithstanding the uniform success and general applause which had hitherto crowned her administration, at no point perhaps of her whole reign was the path of Elizabeth more beset with perplexities and difficulties than at the commencement of the year 1567.
The prevalence of the Scottish faction had compelled her to give a pledge to her parliament respecting matrimony, which must either be redeemed by the sacrifice of her darling independence, or forfeited with the loss of her credit and popularity. Her favorite state-mystery,—the choice of a successor,—had also been invaded by rude and daring hands; and to such extremity was she reduced on this point, that she had found it necessary to empower the commissioners whom she sent into Scotland for the baptism of the prince, distinctly to propound the following offer. That on a simple ratification by Mary of only so much of the treaty of Edinburgh as engaged her to advance no claim upon the English crown during the lifetime of Elizabeth or any posterity of hers, a solemn recognition of her right of succession should be made by the queen and parliament of England.
The Scottish ministry, instead of closing instantly with so advantageous a proposal, were imprudent enough to insist upon a previous examination of the will of Henry VIII., which they fondly believed that they could show to be a forgery: and the delay which the refusal of Elizabeth occasioned, gave time for the interposition of circumstances which ruined for ever the character and authority of Mary, and rescued her sister-queen from this dilemma.
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- Memoirs of the Court of Queen Elizabeth , pp. 415 - 454Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1818