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The "Ditchley Portrait" of Elizabeth
I
TO
THE MOST HIGH,
MIGHTIE
and
MAGNIFICENT
EMPRESSE RENOVV-
MED FOR PIETIE, VER-
TVE, AND ALL GRATIOVS
GOVERNMENT ELIZABETH BY
THE GRACE OF GOD QVEENE
OF ENGLAND FRAVNCE AND
IRELAND AND OF VIRGI-
NIA, DEFENDOVR OF THE
FAITH, &. HER MOST
HVMBLE SERVANT
EDMVND SPENSER
DOTH IN ALL HV-
MILITIE DEDI-
CATE, PRE-
SENT
AND CONSECRATE THESE
HIS LABOVRS TO LIVE
VVITH THE ETERNI-
TIE OF HER
FAME.
Dedication,
The Faerie Queene, Edmund Spenser, 1596.
Elizabeth I's reign was remembered as much or more for what it
did not contain as for what it did. It did not contain a successful
invasion of England by foreign enemies in support of Catholicism
(far more likely than later generations would remember). It did
not contain the type of internal religious wars or, at the least,
extreme and bloody religious persecution experienced almost everywhere
else in Europe during her reign, and which would lead England itself
to Civil War only 40 years later, under other, less agile, monarchs.
It did not end with the assassination or overthrow of the monarch
by conspiracies organized by France, Spain, Mary of Scotland, and/or
the Pope. It did not reveal yet another example of the disastrous
rule of women like Mary I and Mary, Queen of Scots; the one unable
to function without male direction, the other unable to resist romantic
entanglements, both based on spectacular bad judgment of men and
politics. It did not contain endless uprisings in which the turbulent
Tudor nobles raised personal armies and marched against or deposed
the current king, or the types of disastrous internal power plays
which had destroyed the chief ministers of her young brother, Edward.
It did not require a foreign king or a jumped-up English noble as
king of England to provide firm and secure rule in a brutally warlike
age.
Yet none of the 45 years of the reign was free from the danger
of some or (at times) all of these disasters. Some biographies of
Elizabeth paint her reign as one long, mostly tranquil sea voyage,
the initial dangers of her youth overcome, and a happy ending (crowned
by Shakespeare) ending in the thrilling colonization of a New World.
In reality, Elizabeth's reign was one long turbulence more or less
effectively controlled by one strong-willed, controlling, difficult
woman who never for one moment appears to have relaxed her guard
against any or all of the difficulties she must have cooly analyzed
at her succession. The famous "Ditchley portrait" - perhaps
the most recognizable portrait of the great Queen - shows her standing
upon a map of her realm and Europe, triumphant and serene. But for
the happy conjunction of the times and the woman, the story could
have ended far otherwise.

Visscher's magnificent panorama of a revitalized
London, 1616.
Medieval St. Paul's Cathedral is upper center; Shakespeare's "Globe"
theatre
is the second round building, center foreground.
The memory of Elizabeth's reign is inextricably
linked with the works of William Shakespeare, only the most marvelous
of an extraordinary flowering of learning, literature, and culture
which includes the magnificent poetry of Marlowe, Sidney, and Spencer,
the polymath learning of a Ralegh or Sir Francis Bacon, the stirrings
of science, the exploration of new worlds, the explosion of a vitalized
and exuberant architecture. The hard-won peace and stability of
the reign was one of many factors leading to this mini-Renaissance,
and for that, Elizabeth is rightly praised. She was raised in the
great traditions of a Renaissance prince, patron of arts and artists.
Decades of internal stability helped create a new sense of possibilities,
that turbulence between a dying and new order that helped inspire
Spencer in his ode to his Eliza. They would not have existed without
her England; she would not have been glorified without them.
Yet often she was penurious and hated spending
on foreign wars; as a result, most of her subjects lived two slow
generations and more in peace and increasing prosperity. The great
religious compromise of 1559, while it displeased radicals on both
sides, gave the mass of English churchgoers a stable, national faith
in place of the wild swings of earlier reigns. Her instinctive understanding
of a spectacular, prideful monarchy accessible to the people was
a gift singularly lacking in her successors, the Stuarts. Pride
in themselves, and in their independence from hostile Europe, cemented
all ranks of her people over the slow decades of peace. Even though
that peace faltered towards the end, it was foreign war, not civil
war, that her people suffered.
One feature of Elizabeth's intelligent grasp
of possibilities was her judgment of men and their motives. Both
her half-sister, Mary I, and Mary, Queen of Scots, suffered from
terrible judgment of the men around them. Much of Elizabeth's glory
came from the painstaking statesmanship of a Cecil, the mania for
security of a Walsingham, the contributions of all the men who made
up her Council over long decades. But it was Elizabeth's finger
which, crooked, brought their influence to court and her shrewdness
in judging their talents which helped to make them, and her, succeed.
Elizabeth had many weaknesses, some of them
serious in a monarch. She was intellectually arrogant; often right,
she was grudging when she was wrong. Her temper as she aged became
uncertain, although to the end she could charm anyone she chose.
She was excessively vain and increasingly domineering. Her political
judgments were shrewd but her mind was inflexible and had difficulty
grappling with new concepts in statecraft. Perhaps most significantly,
she believed absolutely in the divine nature of kingship, although
she was generous in granting access to her subjects. As long as
she lived, it was the prince's right to rule the people and the
people should be grateful for such care. Under Elizabeth, there
would be no real changes, no moves to parliamentary democracy. Her
turbulent youth had left her too fond of the stability she knew.
The final irony may be that, when she died, perhaps no one recalled
how unlikely it had seemed on her accession that a "weak and
feeble woman" could rule a nation alone.
NEXT:
BIBLIOGRAPHY AND LINKS
Sources:
Quotations from The Faerie Queene
from the online text, Renascence
Editions. Portion of Visscher's magnificent panorama of London,
original 1616, variant 1625, from "Londinium Florentissima Britanniae
Urbs."
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