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QUEEN ELIZABETH,

In the dress in which she went to St Pauls, to return thanks for the defeat of the Spanish Armadas?

Engraved by Bond, from the extremely rare print by
Crispin de Posse, after a drawing by Isaac Oliver.

Published by Longman Hurst, Rees, Orme & Brown, London, March 121818.

O

MEMOIRS

OF

THE COURT

OF

QUEEN ELIZABETH.

BY LUCY AIKIN.

IN TWO VOLUMES.

VOL. I.

SECOND EDITION.

LONDON:

PRINTED FOR LONGMAN, HURST, REES, ORME, AND BROWN,

PATERNOSTER-row.

1818.

Printed by A. Strahan, Printers-Street, London.

4494,4
Br 1735.49.2

MARYARD COLLPOT LIRBARY

1875, March 22, Walker Bequest.

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PREFACE.

In the literature of our country, however copious, the eye of the curious student may still detect important deficiencies.

We possess, for example, many and excellent histories, embracing every period of our domestic annals;-biographies, general and particular, which appear to have placed on record the name of every private individual justly entitled to such commemoration; and numerous and extensive collections of original letters, state-papers and other historical and antiquarian documents;whilst our comparative penury is remarkable in royal lives, in court histories, and especially in that class which forms the glory of French literature,-memoir.

To supply in some degree this want, as it affects the person and reign of one of the most illustrious of female and of European sovereigns, is the inten

vi

PREFACE.

tion of the work now offered with much diffidence

to the public.

Its plan comprehends a detailed view of the private life of Elizabeth from the period of her birth; a view of the domestic history of her reign; memoirs of the principal families of the nobility, and biographical anecdotes of the celebrated characters who composed her court; besides notices of the manners, opinions, and literature of the reign.

Such persons as may have made it their business or their entertainment to study very much in detail the history of the age of Elizabeth, will doubtless be aware that in the voluminous collections of Strype, in the edited Burleigh, Sidney, and Talbot papers, in the Memoirs of Birch, in various collections of letters, in the chronicles of the times, so valuable for those vivid pictures of manners which the pen of a contemporary unconsciously traces,-in the Annals of Camden, the Progresses of Nichols, and other large and laborious works which it would be tedious here to enumerate, a vast repertory existed of curious and interesting facts seldom recurred to for the composition of books of lighter literature, and possessing with respect to a great majority of readers the grace of novelty. Of these and similar works of

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