LOVE AND FRIENDSHIP and Other Early Works also spelled LOVE AND FREINDSHIP by Jane Austen

committed such extensive mischeif, had not these vile and

abandoned Men connived at, and encouraged her in her Crimes. I

know that it has by many people been asserted and beleived that

Lord Burleigh, Sir Francis Walsingham, and the rest of those who

filled the cheif offices of State were deserving, experienced,

and able Ministers. But oh! how blinded such writers and such

Readers must be to true Merit, to Merit despised, neglected and

defamed, if they can persist in such opinions when they reflect

that these men, these boasted men were such scandals to their

Country and their sex as to allow and assist their Queen in

confining for the space of nineteen years, a WOMAN who if the

claims of Relationship and Merit were of no avail, yet as a Queen

and as one who condescended to place confidence in her, had every

reason to expect assistance and protection; and at length in

allowing Elizabeth to bring this amiable Woman to an untimely,

unmerited, and scandalous Death. Can any one if he reflects but

for a moment on this blot, this everlasting blot upon their

understanding and their Character, allow any praise to Lord

Burleigh or Sir Francis Walsingham? Oh! what must this

bewitching Princess whose only freind was then the Duke of

Norfolk, and whose only ones now Mr Whitaker, Mrs Lefroy, Mrs

Knight and myself, who was abandoned by her son, confined by her

Cousin, abused, reproached and vilified by all, what must not her

most noble mind have suffered when informed that Elizabeth had

given orders for her Death! Yet she bore it with a most unshaken

fortitude, firm in her mind; constant in her Religion; and

prepared herself to meet the cruel fate to which she was doomed,

with a magnanimity that would alone proceed from conscious

Innocence. And yet could you Reader have beleived it possible

that some hardened and zealous Protestants have even abused her

for that steadfastness in the Catholic Religion which reflected

on her so much credit? But this is a striking proof of THEIR

narrow souls and prejudiced Judgements who accuse her. She was

executed in the Great Hall at Fortheringay Castle (sacred Place!)

on Wednesday the 8th of February 1586–to the everlasting

Reproach of Elizabeth, her Ministers, and of England in general.

It may not be unnecessary before I entirely conclude my account

of this ill-fated Queen, to observe that she had been accused of

several crimes during the time of her reigning in Scotland, of

which I now most seriously do assure my Reader that she was

entirely innocent; having never been guilty of anything more than

Imprudencies into which she was betrayed by the openness of her

Heart, her Youth, and her Education. Having I trust by this

assurance entirely done away every Suspicion and every doubt

which might have arisen in the Reader’s mind, from what other

Historians have written of her, I shall proceed to mention the

remaining Events that marked Elizabeth’s reign. It was about

this time that Sir Francis Drake the first English Navigator who

sailed round the World, lived, to be the ornament of his Country

and his profession. Yet great as he was, and justly celebrated

as a sailor, I cannot help foreseeing that he will be equalled in

this or the next Century by one who tho’ now but young, already

promises to answer all the ardent and sanguine expectations of

his Relations and Freinds, amongst whom I may class the amiable

Lady to whom this work is dedicated, and my no less amiable self.

Though of a different profession, and shining in a different

sphere of Life, yet equally conspicuous in the Character of an

Earl, as Drake was in that of a Sailor, was Robert Devereux Lord

Essex. This unfortunate young Man was not unlike in character to

that equally unfortunate one FREDERIC DELAMERE. The simile may

be carried still farther, and Elizabeth the torment of Essex may

be compared to the Emmeline of Delamere. It would be endless to

recount the misfortunes of this noble and gallant Earl. It is

sufficient to say that he was beheaded on the 25th of Feb, after

having been Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, after having clapped his

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