Contents
- Preface
- Editorial Principles
- Texts
- Part One: The Princess Elizabeth (1533-1558)
- Historical Background
- Parentage and Infancy
- JOHN FOXE
- From Acts and Monuments (1583)
- Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn
- The Birth and Baptism of Elizabeth
- The Death of the Lady Katherine and of Queen Anne
- WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE and JOHN FLETCHER
- From Henry VIII (1613)
- Cranmer Prophesies the Glories of Elizabeth's Reign
- Princess and Prodigy
- PRINCESS ELIZABETH
- Letter of Dedication to Katherine Parr (1544)
- Verse Translation of the 13th Psalm of David (1548)
- CHURCH OF ENGLAND
- Psalm 13 from the Great Bible (1540)
- JOHN BALE
- From the Preface to A Godly Meditation of the Christian Soul (1548)
- Threats and Imprisonment
- PRINCESS ELIZABETH
- Letter to Edward Seymour (1549)
- Letter to Mary Tudor (1554)
- "Oh Fortune, thy wresting wavering state" (1554-55?)
- "'Twas Christ the Word" (1554-55?)
- "No Crooked Leg" (ca. 1558)
- Prayers (1554)
- JOHN FOXE
- From Acts and Monuments
- "The Life, State, and Story of Thomas Cranmer" (1583)
- "The Miraculous Preservation of the Lady Elizabeth" (1563)
- Retrospectives on Mary and Elizabeth
- THOMAS HEYWOOD
- From If You Know Not Me, You Know No Body; Or, The troubles of Queen Elizabeth, Part One (1605)
- EDMUND SPENSER
- From The Faerie Queene (1590)
- Arthur Defeats Orgoglio, Duessa, and the Beast
- Part Two: Coronation and the Problems of Legitimacy, Religion, and Succession (1559-1566)
- Historical Background
- The New Queen's First Words
- QUEEN ELIZABETH
- Words Spoken by Her Majesty to Master Cecil" (1558)
- "Words Spoken by the Queen to the Lords" (1558)
- Questions Concerning the Legitimacy of Female Rule
- JOHN KNOX
- From The First Blast of the Trumpet (1558)
- JOHN AYLMER
- From An Harbor for Subjects (1559)
- The Coronation Pageants
- RICHARD MULCASTER
- From The Passage of our Most Dread Sovereign Lady (1559)
- Prayers and Exhortations
- CHURCH OF ENGLAND
- "A Prayer for the Queen's Majesty (1559)
- From "A Form of Prayer to be used in Private Houses Every Morning and Evening" (1562)
- From "An Exhortation Concerning Good Order and Obedience" (1559)
- WILLIAM WHITTINGHAM
- From the Dedicatory Epistle to the Geneva Bible (1560)
- ANNE LOCK
- From Sermons of John Calvin upon the Song that Hezekiah Made (1560)
- Dedicatory Epistle
- "A Meditation of a Penitent Sinner: Written in Manner of a Paraphrase upon the 51st Psalm of David"
- QUEEN ELIZABETH
- Prayers from Precationes Privatae (1563)
- Questions at Home and Wars Abroad
- QUEEN ELIZABETH
- First Speech before Parliament (1559)
- Answer to the Commons' Petition That She Marry (1563)
- Proclamation on the Return of Soldiers from Newhaven (1563)
- Elizabeth among Her People
- QUEEN ELIZABETH
- Latin Oration at Cambridge (1564)
- WILLIAM BIRCH
- "A Song between the Queen's Majesty and England" (1564)
- Part Three: Mary Stuart, the Northern Rebellion, and Protestant Discontent (1567-1571)
- Historical Background
- The Matter of Mary Stuart
- QUEEN ELIZABETH
- Letters to Mary Stuart (1567)
- JOHN LESLEY
- From A Defense of the Honor of the Princess Mary, Queen of Scotland (1569)
- The Rebellion of the Northern Earls
- QUEEN ELIZABETH
- Proclamation against the Earl of Northumberland (1569)
- Letter to Mary Stuart (1570)
- POPE PIUS V
- The Bull Excommunicating Elizabeth (1570)
- THOMAS NORTON
- From A Disclosing of the Great Bull (1570)
- Protestant Protests and Prayers
- EDWARD DERING
- From the "Unruly Heifer" Sermon (1570)
- JOHN CONWAY
- From Meditations and Prayers (1571)
- ANONYMOUS
- "A Prayer for Wisdom to Govern the Realm" (1569)
- Mary Stuart and the Ridolfi Plot
- QUEEN ELIZABETH
- Letter to Thomas Smith, Authorizing the Torture of Two Prisoners (1571)
- "The Doubt of Future Foes" (1570?)
- EDMUND SPENSER
- Britomart's Dream at Isis Church and the Defeat of Radigund
- From The Faerie Queene (1596)
- Part Four: Changing Alliances (1572-1577)
- Historical Background
- Prospects of Marriage and Trouble in France
- QUEEN ELIZABETH
- Letters to Sir Francis Walsingham (1572)
- CHURCH OF ENGLAND
- A Thanksgiving and Prayer (1572)
- Elizabeth on Summer Progress
- ANONYMOUS
- "The First Anointed Queen I Am" (1573?)
- GEORGE GASCOIGNE
- The Princely Pleasures at the Court at Kenilworth (1575)
- ROBERT LANEHAM (pseud.)
- From A Letter on the Entertainments at Kenilworth (1575)
- Prayers, Advice, and Praise for the Queen
- ELIZABETH TYRWHIT
- From Morning and Evening Prayers (1574)
- EDWARD HAKE
- From A Commemoration of the Most Prosperous Reign of Our Sovereign Elizabeth (1575)
- JAMES SANFORD
- From the Preface to Hours of Recreation, or Afterdinners (1576)
- NICHOLAS HILLIARD
- From The Art of Limning (1570s?)
- EDWARD DE VERE
- "What Cunning Can Express" (1576)
- Part Five: The French Marriage Negotiations (1578-1582)
- Historical Background
- The Queen, the French Ambassadors, and the Visit to Norwich
- BERNARD GARTER and WILLIAM GOLDINGHAM
- The Joyful Receiving of the Queen's Most Excellent Majesty into Her Highness's City of Norwich (1578)
- Elizabeth, Anjou, and the Debate at Court
- QUEEN ELIZABETH
- Letters to the Duke of Anjou and Catharine de Medici (1579-82)
- WLLIAM CECIL, LORD BURGHLEY
- "To the Queen's Majesty. Advice about Her Match" (1579)
- SIR PHILIP SIDNEY
- From "A Discourse . . . to Queen's Majesty, Touching Her Marriage with Monsieur" (1579)
- The Widening Controversy
- WILLLIAM ELDERTON
- "A New Ballad, Declaring the Dangerous Shooting of the Gun at the Court" (1579)
- JOHN STUBBS
- From A Gaping Gulf (1579)
- SIR PHILIP SIDNEY
- From the Old Arcadia (ca. 1579-80)
- "As I my Little Flock on Ister Bank"
- GEORGE PUTTENHAM
- From Partheniads (1579)
- "A Very Strange and Rueful Vision"
- "Another Vision"
- JOHN LYLY
- From Euphues and His England (1580)
- THOMAS BLENERHASSET
- From A Revelation of the True Minerva (1582)
- CHRISTOPHER mARLOWE
- From Dido, Queen of Carthage (ca. 1581-86)
- Anjou's Departure and the Queen's Grief
- QUEEN ELIZABETH
- "I Grieve and Dare Not Show My Discontent" (1582)
- Part Six: Favorites, Assassins, and the Death of Mary Stuart (1582-1587)
- Historical Background
- Cupid at Court
- QUEEN ELIZABETH
- "When I was Fair and Young" (ca. 1580s)
- "Now Leave Me and Let Me Rest" (ca. 1580s)
- SIR WALTER RALEGH
- "Sweet Are the Thoughts" (ca. 1582-87)
- "Calling to Mind Mine Eye Long Went About" (ca. 1582-87)
- Verse Exchange with Elizabeth (1587)
- "Like Truthless Dreams, So Are My Joys Expired" (1589?)
- ROBERT DEVEREAUX, EARL OF ESSEX
- "It Was a Time When Silly Bees Could Speak" (ca. 1587-89)
- Accession Day Celebrations
- THOMAS BENTLEY
- From The Monument of Matrons (1582)
- SIR PHILIP SIDNEY
- From the New Arcadia
- The Joust between Philisides and Lelius (ca. 1584-85)
- GEORGE PEELE
- From The Arraignment of Paris (1584)
- Attacks and Assassination Attempts
- WILLIAM ALLEN
- From A True, Sincere and Modest Defense of English Catholics (1584)
- THOMAS HEYWOOD
- From If You Know Not Me, You Know Nobody, Part II (1585)
- The Assassination Attempt of William Parry
- CHURCH OF ENGLAND
- "Prayer and Thanksgiving for the Preservation of the Queen's Majesty's Life and Safety" (1585)
- The Execution of Mary Stuart
- QUEEN ELIZABETH
- Speech at the Closing of Parliament (1585)
- Replies to Parliament on the matter of Mary Stuart (1586)
- MARY STUART
- Letter to Henry III (1587)
- ROBERT WYNGFIELD
- From A Circumstantial Account of the Execution of Mary, Queen of Scots (1587)
- ADAM BLACKWOOD
- From The History of Mary, Queen of Scots
- Richard Fletcher
- Sermon after the Execution (1587)
- QUEEN ELIZABETH
- Letter to James VI on the Execution of His Mother (1587)
- JAMES VI
- Reply to Elizabeth (1587)
- Part Seven: The Spanish Armada and Its aftermath (1588-1592)
- Historical Background
- Prophecies and Provocations
- CYPRIAN VON LEOWITZ
- From Of the End of This World (1564)
- RICHARD HARVEY
- From An Astrological Discourse (1582)
- CARDINAL WILLIAM ALLEN
- "Declaration of the Sentence and Deposition of Elizabeth" (1588)
- The Destruction of the Armada
- JAMES ASKEE
- From Elizabetha Triumphans (1588)
- The Defeat of the Armada
- THOMAS HEYWOOD
- From If You Know Not Me, You Know Nobody, Part II (1606)
- The Destruction of the Armada
- The Queen at Tilbury
- QUEEN ELIZABETH
- Verse Exchange with Philip (1588)
- Speech to the Troops at Tilbury (1588)
- THOMAS DELONEY
- "The Queen's Visiting of the Camp at Tilbury" (1588)
- JAMES ASKEE
- From Elizabetha Triumphans (1588)
- The Queen at Tilbury
- Victory Celebrations
- QUEEN ELIZABETH
- Prayer on the Defeat of the Armada (1588)
- Song on the Armada Victory (1588)
- Letter to James VI on the Fate of the Armada (1593)
- CHURCH OF ENGLAND
- From the Armada Liturgy (1588)
- DAVID GWYN
- "In Commemoration of Sir Francis Drake" (1588)
- GEORGE PUTTENHAM
- From The Art of English Poesy (1589)
- "Her Majesty Resembled to the Crowned Pillar"
- The Wit and Wisdom of the Queen
- JANE SEAGER
- From The Divine Prophecies of the Ten Sibyls (1589)
- ANONYMOUS
- "A Peddler's Tale" (1591)
- A Return to Summer Progresses
- ANONYMOUS
- The Entertainment at Elvetham (1591)
- QUEEN ELIZABETH
- Latin Oration at Oxford (1592)
- Part Eight: A Changing Court and Aging Queen (1592-1597)
- Historical Background
- Breaking with Old Favorites and Friends
- SIR WALTER RALEGH
- Poems from Prison (1592)
- "If Cynthia Be a Queen"
- "My Body in Walls Captived"
- From The Twenty-First and Last Book of the Ocean to Cynthia
- QUEEN ELIZABETH
- Letter to Henry IV (1593)
- From her translation of Boethius's Consolation of Philosophy (1593)
- New Faces on Accession Day
- SIR WILLIAM SEGAR
- From "Jousts at the Tiltyard" (1590)
- The Retirement of Sir Henry Lee
- GEORGE PEELE
- From Anglorum Feriae, England's Holidays (1595)
- ROBERT DEVEREUX, EARL OF ESSEX
- Device for the Accession Day Tilts (1595)
- SIR FRANCIS BACON
- Essex's entertainment, Of Love and Self-Love (1595)
- The Woman behind the Mask
- SIR JOHN HARINGTON
- From Epigrams (1616, 1618)
- "To the Queen's Majesty, When She Found Fault with Some Particular Matters in Misacmos"
- "To the Ladies of the Queen's Privy Chamber, at the Making of their Perfumed Privy at Richmond"
- "Against Lynus, a Writer, That Found Fault with the Metamorphosis"
- "Of Soothsaying, to the Queen of England"
- "Against Pius Quintus, that Excommunicated Queen Elizabeth"
- HENRY LOK
- A Square in Verse (1593)
- JOHN LYLY
- "Prologus" from The Woman in the Moon (1597)
- ANDRÉ HURAULT
- A private audience with Elizabeth (1597)
- Part Nine: Ireland, Rebellion, and the Passing of the Queen (1598-1603)
- Historical Background
- Tyrone's Rebellion and the Fall of Essex
- QUEEN ELIZABETH
- On Sending the Army into Ireland (1599)
- Letter to Essex in Ireland (1599)
- SIR JOHN HARINGTON
- Letters on the Irish Campaign and the Fall of Essex (1599-1601)
- From Epigrams (1616, 1618)
- "Of the Earl of Essex"
- "Of Misacmos's Success in a Suit"
- "To the Queen's Majesty, in Praise of Her Reading"
- QUEEN ELIZABETH
- Proclamation on the Seizure of Essex (1601)
- The Queen in Her Final Glory
- QUEEN ELIZABETH
- The Golden Speech (1600)
- MARY SIDNEY HERBERT, COUNTESS OF PEMBROKE
- From the Sidney Psalms (ca. 1599)
- Dedicatory Poem "To Queen Elizabeth"
- Psalm 72 (1593-1600)
- ANONYMOUS
- Psalm 72 from the Geneva Bible (1560)
- SIR FRANCIS BACON
- Three New Year's Letters (ca. 1600)
- ANONYMOUS
- "Ode of Cynthia" (1602)
- SIR JOHN DAVIES
- "Verses of the Queen" (1603)
- Elizabeth's Decline and Death
- SIR JOHN HARINGTON
- From a Letter to Lady Mary Harington, on the Queen's Decline (1602)
- HENRY, EARL OF NORTHUMBERLAND
- From a letter to James VI on the Queen's decline (1603)
- ROBERT CAREY
- "The Queen's Last Sickness and Death" (1603)
- ELIZABETH SOUTHWELL
- "A True Relation of What Succeeded at the Sickness and Death of Queen Elizabeth" (1607)
- England in Mourning
- THOMAS DEKKER
- From The Wonderful Year (1603)
- "The Sickness and Death of Queen Elizabeth"
- THOMAS NEWTON
- From "The Death of Delia" (1603)
- ANONYMOUS
- "A Mournful Ditty" (1603)
- HENRY PETOWE
- From Eliza's Funeral (1603)
- From "A Few April Drops Showered on the Hearse of Dead Eliza"
- Eulogies and the End of an Age
- LADY DIANA PRIMROSE
- A Chain of Pearl (1603)
- WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
- From Sonnets (1609)
- Sonnet 107
- MICHAEL DRAYTON
- From Idea (1605)
- Sonnet 51
- From The Muses' Elizium (1630)
- ANONYMOUS LADY IN WAITING
- "Gone is Elizabeth" (1612)
- Part Ten: Lingering Images of the Queen
- A Queen of Many Guises
- THOMAS DEKKER
- Prologue to Old Fortunatus (1600)
- SIR WALTER RALEIGH
- "Now We Have Present Made" (ca. 1582-87)
- Elizabeth as Shepherdess
- EDMUND SPENSER
- From The Shepherd's Calendar (1579)
- "April"
- MICHAEL DRAYTON
- "Rowland's Song in Praise of Beta" (1593?)
- MARY SIDNEY
- "A Dialogue Between Two Shepherds" (c. 1599)
- Elizabeth as Petrarchan Mistress
- GEORGE PUTTENHAM
- From Partheniads (1579)
- "A Riddle of the Princess Paragon"
- HENRY CONSTABLE
- "To the Queen" (1594)
- JOHN LYLY
- "A Ditty" from an Entertainment at Cowdray (1591)
- Elizabeth as Goddess of the Moon
- SIR WALTER RALEGH
- "Praised be Diana's Fair and Harmless Light" (ca. 1580s?)
- EDMUND SPENSER
- From The Faerie Queene, Book II (1590)
- Braggadoccio and Trompart encounter Belphoebe
- GEORGE CHAPMAN
- From "Hymnus in Cynthiam" (1594?)
- RICHARD BARNFIELD
- Cynthia (1595)
- ANONYMOUS
- "To Cynthia" (1600)
- BEN JONSON
- "Hymn to Cynthia" (1600)
- Elizabeth as Fairy Queen
- SIR WALTER RALEGH (1590)
- "A Vision upon This Conceit of the Fairy Queen"
- EDMUND SPENSER
- From The Faerie Queene, Book I (1590)
- Arthur's vision of the Fairy Queen
- The Red Cross Knight's vision of Gloriana's city of Cleopolis
- From Amoretti (1595)
- Sonnets 74 and 80
- Elizabeth as Goddess of Justice
- GEORGE PEELE
- From Descensus Astraeae (1591)
- EDMUND SPENSER
- From The Faerie Queene, Book V (1596)
- Astraea instructs Artegall in justice and abandons the earth
- SIR JOHN DAVIES
- From Hymnes of Astraea (1599)
- Elizabeth as the Ever-Virgin Queen
- GEORGE PUTTENHAM
- From Partheniads (1579)
- "She Has a Serpent's Head and Angel's Face"
- SIR PHILIP SIDNEY
- From the Old Arcadia (ca. 1579-80)
- "Now Was Our Heav'nly Vault"
- FULKE GREVILLE, BARON BROOKE
- From Caelica (1594)
- Sonnet 81
- WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
- From A Midsummer Night's Dream (1595)
- Oberon tells Puck of a virgin enthroned in the west
- EDMUND SPENSER
- From The Faerie Queene (1596)
- Prince Arthur and Artegall behold Mercilla
- Commentary and Criticism
- Early Accounts of the Queen
- Raphael Holinshed, From The Third volume of Chronicles (London: John Harison, et al. 1586).
- Sir John Harington, Reminiscences from a Letter to Markham (1606).
- Sir Francis Bacon, From The Felicity of Queen Elizabeth and Her Times (London: George Latham, 1651), 23-31, 36-41.
- William Camden, From The History of the Life and Reign of Elizabeth, late Queen of England (London: Benjamin Fisher, 1630), selected pages.
- Sir Robert Naunton, From Fragmenta Regalia or Observations on the Late Queen Elizabeth (London: s.n., 1641), 4-9.
- Sir John Hayward, From The Beginning of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth (London: John Partridge, 1636), 448-54.
- George Ballard, Memoirs of Several Ladies of Great Britain (Oxford: W. Jackson, 1752), selected pages.
- Agnes Strickland, Lives of the Queens of England, volume 3 (Philadelphia: Blanchard and Lea, 1866), selected pages.
- Elizabeth's Strategies for Rule
- J.E. Neale, "The Affability of their Prince," in Queen Elizabeth I (London: Jonathan Cape, 1934; rpt. Garden City, NY: Anchor/Doubleday, 1957), 212-19.
- David Loades, Chapter 13: "The Great Queen," in Elizabeth I (London and New York: Humbledon and London, 2003), 303-19.
- Natalie Mears, Queenship and Political Discourse in the Elizabethan Realms (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005), assorted pages.
- The Virgin Monarch
- Susan Doran: "Why Did Elizabeth Not Marry?" in Dissing Elizabeth: Negative Representations of Gloriana, edited by Julia Walker (Durham and London: Duke University Press, 1998), 30-59.
- The Queen's Religious Position
- Patrick Collinson, "Windows in a Woman's Soul: Questions about the Religion of Queen Elizabeth I," in Elizabethan Essays, by Patrick Colinson (London: Hambledon Press, 2003), 87-118.
- The Poems and Speeches of Elizabeth
- Ilona Bell, "Elizabeth I: Poet," Explorations in Renaissance Culture 30.1 (Summer 2004): 1-22.
- George P. Rice, Jr. "The Speaker and the Speeches", in The Public Speaking of Queen Elizabeth: Selections from Her Official Addresses (New York: Columbia University Press, 1951), 43-59
- The Progresses and Entertainments
- J.E. Neale, "The Affability of Their Prince," in Queen Elizabeth I (London: Jonathan Cape, 1934; rpt. Garden City, NY: Anchor/Doubleday, 1957), 212-19.
- Mary Hill Cole, Introduction, in The Portable Queen: Elizabeth I and the Politics of Ceremony Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1999), 1-5.
- Zillah Dovey, Introduction to An Elizabethan Progress: The Queen's Journey into East Anglia, 1578 (Phoenix Mill: Sutton, 1996), 1-6.
- The Queen's Portraits
- Sir Roy Strong, from Chapter 1: Introduction to Gloriana (London: Thames and Hudson, 1987), 10-44.
- Elizabeth in Literature
- John N. King, "Queen Elizabeth I: Representations of the Virgin Queen," Renaissance Quarterly 43.1 (Spring 1990): 30-75.
- Jeffrey Knapp, Introduction to The Empire Nowhere: England, America, and Literature from "Utopia" to the "Tempest" (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1992), 1-7, 12-17.
- Frances Yates, from Part II, Chapter 1: "Queen Elizabeth I as Astraea," in Astraea: The Imperial Theme in the Sixteenth Century (London and Boston: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1975), 59-74, 76-87.
- Criticizing Elizabeth
- Carole Levin, "Wanton and Whore," in The Heart and Stomach of a King: Elizabeth I and the Politics of Sex and Power (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1994), 67-90.
- Donald Stump, "Abandoning the Old Testament: Shifting Paradigms for Elizabeth, 1578-82," Explorations in Renaissance Culture 30.1 (Summer 2004): 89-110.
- The Queen on Film
- Thomas Betteridge, "A Queen for All Seasons," in The Myth of Elizabeth, edited by Susan Doran and Thomas S. Freeman (Houndmills, Basingstoke, and New York: Palgrave/Macmillan, 2003), 243-59.
- Selected Bibliography
- Glossary
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