ELIZABETH I DIED shortly before three o’clock on the morning of March 24, 1603. She had lived to her seventieth year—sixteen years after the death of her cousin queen—and was the first English ruler to survive to that age. She was still unmarried and had steadfastly refused to identify her successor, at least officially. The myth that she named Mary’s son, James VI of Scotland, as her successor on her deathbed is unsupported by solid evidence. As she had by then lost the power of speech, the most she might have done was to signal her assent by a gesture. And even that is guesswork.
All the same, James was acknowledged as king-in-waiting. He was proclaimed James I of England and Ireland with beguiling ease. The formalities took no more than a few hours. At ten o’clock, a group of nobles and privy councilors appeared with the heralds at the gates of Whitehall Palace and in the City of London to declare the new king’s accession.
The proclamation is a memorable document. It said that James was rightfully king of England because he was “lineally and lawfully descended” from Margaret Tudor, daughter of Henry VII. He was the great-great-grandson of the founder of the Tudor dynasty, the great-grandson of Margaret Tudor, who—the heralds took considerable pains to stress—was Henry VIII’s sister. He was therefore king “by law, by lineal succession and undoubted right.”
Mary, of course, was not mentioned. But the proclamation is luminously clear that James succeeded by virtue of his hereditary rights. Henry VIII’s will was disregarded. This was little short of a recognition of Mary’s own claim to be Elizabeth’s lawful successor had she lived. She had finally won. Her victory was more conclusive than even she might have dared to hope, because every subsequent British ruler has been descended from her, and all derive their claim to the throne from her and not Elizabeth.
Once James had arrived in London and established himself as king, he came to regret his rejection of his mother, for which he attempted to atone. After her execution, Mary’s embalmed body had been kept in a lead coffin at Fotheringhay Castle for six months before it could be buried. A series of highly charged debates took place as to whether she should be buried obscurely in the local parish church or allowed a state funeral at Peterborough Cathedral. In the end, she was given a state funeral, but with a strictly limited number of mourners, the ritual of interment performed in the dead of night. She was placed on the south side of the chancel, not far from the tomb of Catherine of Aragon, Henry VIII’s first and most unhappy queen.
Soon after his accession, James commissioned two magnificent monumental tombs, each with a recumbent effigy, to be built in Henry VII’s chapel at Westminster Abbey, one for Elizabeth and the other for his mother. Elizabeth’s memorial was built in the north aisle of the chapel and Mary’s in the south. James did not envisage a pair of precisely matching designs. The tombs were similar in style, but Mary’s was larger and cost the astronomical sum of £2000, whereas only £765 was spent on Elizabeth’s.
In October 1612, Mary’s body was exhumed from Peterborough and reinterred at Westminster. An exercise in mythmaking was under way. When Elizabeth died, the Venetian ambassador reported that many portraits of her were taken down and replaced by those of Mary. She was a queen worthy of honor again, whereas Edward VI and Mary Tudor, Elizabeth’s brother and sister, were eclipsed. James built no memorials for them. He left Edward where he lay, and although Elizabeth had originally been laid to rest in her grandfather Henry VII’s grave beneath the altar of his chapel, James moved her to the aisle to share her elder sister’s grave. He then built her monument over the site as if she were its only occupant. Only a short Latin verse on the side of the tomb indicated that Mary Tudor was also tucked away beneath.
His mother, Mary Stuart, was then carried in a solemn procession from Peterborough and reburied in the south aisle along with the bodies of Margaret Beaufort, Henry VI Is mother, and James’s paternal grandmother, the Countess of Lennox. This was a shameless piece of dynastic revisionism, intended to put James himself at the hub of British history.
Yet it was very successful. The new dynastic symbols were literally set in stone: to this day they are among Westminster Abbey’s biggest tourist attractions. And the “Mary” who occupies the larger and grander monument is Mary Queen of Scots! At a stroke, James honored his two “parents,” his natural mother find his political one, and in the process legitimized the Stuarts as the founders of what James loved to call his “empire” of Great Britain.
The new king also encouraged the leading historian of the age, William Camden, to complete his unfinished Annals of Elizabeth’s reign. Camden was a serious and independent-minded scholar who worked from original documents. He was highly respected, and his account of Mary’s reign in Scotland was carefully researched, providing the perfect foil to the vilification of her by his Scottish counterpart, George Buchanan, in his History of Scotland and elsewhere.
This was what James was looking for. Camden eulogized Mary to the point where the first English abridged edition of his Annals could be published in 1624 as a History of the Life and Death of Mary Stuart, Queen of Scotland and not as a History of Elizabeth at all. His interpretation of Mary’s rule in Scotland flatly contradicted Buchanan’s traducement of her.
According to Camden, Mary was “fixed and constant in her religion, of singular piety towards God” and possessed “invincible magnanimity of mind, wisdom above her sex, and admirable beauty.” Her political catastrophe could not be discounted. She had to be ranked among those rulers “which have changed their felicity for misery and calamity,” but that was not through her own defects of character, but because she was a princess “tossed and disquieted” by fortune. She was a victim of her “ungrateful and ambitious subjects,” chiefly her half-brother and leading councilor, James Stuart, Earl of Moray.
Camden swiped at Buchanan, whom he accused by name. He was particularly skeptical of the lords’ story as presented in the dossier that Buchanan had supplied to Moray and through him to Cecil after Mary’s flight to England in 1568. It was this same dossier that had underscored the accusations of the Casket Letters and the Detection of the doings of
Mary Queen of Scots, touching the murder of her husband . . . , which Cecil had authorized for publication in imitation Scots.
“What Buchanan hath written,” said Camden trenchantly, “there is no man but knoweth by the books themselves printed.” This was far more insulting than it sounds today. Camden was saying he could find nothing in the archival sources to justify Buchanan’s allegations. His remarks were stinging because his knowledge of Cecil’s and Walsingham’s papers—to which he and his collaborators had enjoyed a uniquely privileged access—was known to be encyclopedic.
A more reckless and tendentious defense of Mary came from the pen of Adam Blackwood, a Catholic Scot and ultraroyalist exiled in France, the doyen of her apologists at the time of her execution. He even traveled to Peterborough to hang an inscription on a pillar next to her grave, eulogizing her as “the ornament of our age” and a martyr to “the majesty of all kings and princes.” She was “a light truly royal . . . by barbarous and tyrannical cruelty extinct.” He published a defense of her martyrdom, Martyre de la Royne d’Éscosse, in Paris in 1587, starting a debate that fiercely intensified when her tomb at Westminster came to be revered as the shrine of a canonized saint and was associated with a number of miracles.
As Mary’s champions could scarcely fail to remark, few of the Scottish lords who had thwarted her during her turbulent reign had lasted long. Almost all came to a sticky end. Moray’s quick intelligence, bluff humor and infamously “regal manner” were not enough to see him through. He lived to enjoy his coveted position as regent of Scotland for less than eighteen months. He was assassinated in January 1570 while riding through the streets of Linlithgow.
He had partly brought it on himself by his own unscrupulous deceptions. He had supported the Duke of Norfolk’s plan to marry Mary, then betrayed it to Elizabeth. This was too much for Norfolk’s allies, who tried to murder Moray on his journey home after Elizabeth’s tribunal to inquire into the Casket Letters. He evaded his assassins, and on arriving in Edinburgh claimed that he was as devoted as ever to the marriage project and that his accusations against his sister had been forced on him by Elizabeth and Cecil.
Having gained time in this way, he reasserted himself as regent and secured a formal indemnity for all his proceedings against Mary. In April 1569, he threw the Duke of Châtelherault, the leader of the Hamiltons, into prison. The duke had returned to Scotland after two years of voluntary exile after the Rizzio plot, when he had taken up Mary’s cause alongside Huntly and Argyll. Moray would be assassinated nine months after signing the warrant for the duke’s imprisonment. The fatal bullet, which went right through his body, was fired by James Hamilton of Bothwellhaugh. Hamilton also had a personal grudge, because Moray had deprived his wife of some property near Edinburgh and allowed her to be forced out of her house.
Moray was barely forty when he died. His passing went unmourned by Mary, who seems to have made no reference whatsoever to it. The funeral sermon at St. Giles Kirk was preached by Knox, and Buchanan devised a Latin epitaph praising Moray as a man of virtue and a Scottish patriot. It was inscribed on a brass plate set above the tomb.
Maitland, “the Scottish Cecil,” otherwise nicknamed “Mekle Wylie” and “the chameleon,” died three years after Moray. He had soon fallen out with his old ally over the skullduggery surrounding the Casket Letters, copies of which he may have leaked to Mary’s advocates at Elizabeth’s tribunal, which he had attended as a member of the Scots’ delegation.
On his return to Scotland, Maitland was accused by Moray of complicity in Darnley’s murder, but secured a discharge and his freedom on the evening of the murdered regent’s funeral. He rejoined Huntly and Argyll, Mary’s chief supporters, but his efforts came to nothing, and in 1573 he was forced to surrender while seeking refuge in Edinburgh Castle. Morton had stormed the castle with massive English aid, and Maitland gave himself up to Drury, the former English border official at Carlisle who had been promoted to command these forces. Maitland’s surrender availed him little. He was said to have committed suicide in prison at Leith. According to Sir James Melville, “he took a drink and died as the old Romans were wont to do.”
Morton, the most sinister of the leading lords, who had thirsted for revenge on Darnley after the Rizzio plot and offered to do Cecil “such honor and pleasure as lies in my power” as he traveled to rendezvous with Bothwell at Whittingham Castle, survived until 1581. Strongly backed by Elizabeth and Cecil, he became regent of Scotland for a full six years after 1572, but his fiscal and sexual rapacity made him many enemies. He had lived by factionalism and was to die by it. He was ousted when d’Aubigny returned to Scotland, then executed for his role in Darnley’s murder.
The Earl of Lennox, Darnley’s father, would fare no better. He had first appeared on the scene as the elder Earl of Bothwell’s rival for Mary’s mother’s hand. He would be appointed regent, succeeding Moray, then stabbed in the back fourteen months later by one Captain Calder during a skirmish after a surprise raid on Stirling by Mary’s supporters in 1571. Wounded, he rode to the safety of the castle, but bled to death within a few hours. He died in agony. More than most, however, he died content. His last words were “If the bairn’s well, all’s well.” He meant that as long as his grandson, James VI, remained alive, the Lennox claim to the English throne would be vindicated, so that his and his wife’s efforts to obtain a crown for their family would not have been in vain.
As to the indomitable John Knox, he at last showed his true colors. Maitland plucked up the courage to tell him, “You are but a drytting [i.e., shitting] prophet.” When he was fifty Knox had married a girl of sixteen and never recovered from the scandal. Thomas Randolph, who had been sidelined by Elizabeth as postmaster-general but who returned briefly as ambassador to Scotland during Mary’s captivity, quipped gleefully how Knox had gone “quiet,” having more on his mind than sermons. The preacher had reemerged at James Vi’s coronation, to expound on the text “I was crowned young.” He suffered a stroke in 1570, which explains his letter to Cecil written “with his one foot in the grave.” He died in 1572 at the age of fifty-eight and was buried in the kirkyard of St. Giles. Two years later, his young widow married Andrew Ker of Fawdonside, the man who had pointed a loaded pistol at Mary during the Rizzio plot, then lurked in the alleyway close to Kirk o’Field. The mind boggles at what they must have talked about in bed.
Perhaps surprisingly, Walsingham, the man who led Mary to her destruction in the Babington plot, went unrewarded. Elizabeth had little time for the murky world of spies and intelligence. By 1586, she wanted Mary dead but resented the methods used to entrap her. When Walsingham died in 1590, he was described by Camden as “a man exceeding wise and industrious . . . a diligent searcher out of hidden secrets, who knew excellently well how to win men’s minds unto him and to apply them to his own uses.” This was cutting rather than flattering. Walsingham had many more talents than this, but it is as Cecil’s spymaster that he is remembered.
The man who lived longest and enjoyed himself the most was William Cecil. Not even Mary’s execution tempted him to retire. He suffered from gout and bad teeth in his old age, but the profits of office were lucrative, and he had several luxurious houses and amassed a fortune. Elizabeth had raised him to the peerage as Lord Burghley in 1571, and he liked nothing more than to ride around his gardens on a mule, admiring his ornamental trees and plants. Shakespeare lampooned Cecil as old Polonius, the establishment bureaucrat whose idea of politics was haplessly eavesdropping behind the arras. In his last sickness, Elizabeth sat at his bedside and fed him with a spoon. He died in 1598, a few weeks short of his seventy-eighth birthday.
More than anyone else, Cecil was Mary’s nemesis. The volatile factionalism of the lords had gradually worn her down, and their refusal to put the interests of Scotland above their private feuds seriously weakened the monarchy. But it was Cecil who had actively encouraged their first revolt of 1559–60. He afterward stood behind Moray, Maitland and Morton, whom he covertly aided and with whom he constantly corresponded, and without his backing they would have made little headway.
Cecil had an apocalyptic, almost messianic vision of England as a Protestant state. When the revolt of the Lords of the Congregation erupted, he knew it gave him a unique opportunity to transform the British Isles into a single Protestant community. He was, of course, English through and through. He treated Scotland as a satellite state of England, just as much as Henry VIII and Protector Somerset had before him. The role of the Scottish nationalist fell most conspicuously, if perhaps ironically, to the swashbuckling adventurer the Earl of Bothwell.
Most of all, Cecil feared the Guise dynastic plan for a Franco-British empire. He considered Mary to be his and his country’s most dangerous adversary from the moment her uncle the Cardinal of Lorraine ordered the royal arms of England to be quartered with those of Scotland and France on her badges and escutcheons. Although Mary was barely sixteen, he saw her as the instigator and main beneficiary of an international Catholic conspiracy to depose and kill Elizabeth and destroy the true faith. Cecil believed this so strongly he referred to it in the epitaph he composed for his tomb in his hometown of Stamford in Lincolnshire. His life’s achievement, he declared, had been to “safeguard” the queen and the Protestant state.
The collapse of Mary’s rule in Scotland was not an accident. All along, Cecil had been following a script of his own creation. It is one of the most remarkable documents in the whole of British history, because it became a template for the actual course of events. He had written it two years before Mary’s return from France. It took the form of a memo dated “31 August 1559” and entitled “A memorial of certain points meet for restoring the realm of Scotland to the ancient weal.” The wording seems innocuous. The contents were dynamite, because by “the ancient weal” Cecil meant his view of Scotland as a “satellite,” as he was convinced it had been under Edward I, who had claimed the feudal overlordship of Scotland in the 1290s.
Scotland, said Cecil, was not to be administered by a governor or regent, in the case of an absentee ruler such as Mary, but by a council of nobles appointed “to govern the whole realm.” And if Mary, already now queen of France, “shall be unwilling to this,” then quite simply, said Cecil, she should be deposed. “Then is it apparent,” he wrote portentously, “that Almighty God is pleased to transfer from her the rule of that kingdom for the weal of it.”
Two years before Mary left France, Cecil had already taken his first tentative steps toward her forced abdication. His ideal was for the Protestant lords to call themselves by the name of the “States of Scotland” in order to supplant her. Cecil, like Knox, portrayed Mary from the start in the language of biblical prophecy. She was “Jezebel” and “Athalia,” and in his heart he was a supporter of Knox’s theory of armed resistance to “tyrannous” (i.e., Catholic) rulers.
Cecil went on to serve Elizabeth for forty years. He was her “loyal subject” and “humble servant,” as he fervently protested, even as he went behind her back. And yet his chief priorities were to exclude Mary from the English succession by fair means or foul, while undermining her rule in Scotland by destabilizing her at critical moments—whereas Elizabeth respected Mary’s rights as independent Queen of Scots and was repelled by Henry VIII’s cavalier disregard for the principles of hereditary succession in his will. Repeatedly, Cecil complained that Elizabeth had been far too generous and understanding to Mary and far too willing to compromise.
The deeper the modern scholar digs into the Elizabethan State Papers, the more Cecil demands scrutiny. The well-entrenched interpretation that sees Elizabeth and Mary as rival queens goes only so far. Of course there was rivalry, and Elizabeth was ruthless in her attempts to dictate the terms and the object of Mary’s marriages. But the two queens had much more in common than this reductionist model allows. In particular, they had a clear understanding of the ideological issues. That is, when female monarchs had to deal with male councilors in a dynamic political environment informed by religious sectarianism, more than just business as usual was at stake.
What we glimpse in Elizabeth’s relationship with Mary are the contradictions inscribed in a monarchy where the vagaries of dynastic succession competed with loyalties to an ideal of an exclusively Protestant commonwealth. When Elizabeth spoke in her own voice, hereditary rights took priority over religion, but when Cecil did the talking, it was always the other way around. And whereas Elizabeth stood for the ideal of monarchy and was prepared to defend Mary’s rights as an anointed queen, Cecil was working toward a definition of Protestant citizenship and toward a framework in which Parliament had the sovereign right to determine the succession in order to defend its citizens’ religious beliefs.
Despite the electrifying stage confrontation between Mary and Elizabeth dramatized in Friedrich von Schiller’s Mary Stuart in 1801, itself the inspiration of Donizetti’s opera first performed in 1835, the two “British” queens never met. Elizabeth in the end would not grant Mary the personal interview she had always craved. And as the years passed, the real reason became apparent from her many lame excuses. She feared that the younger, possibly more beautiful Queen of Scots was so magnetic, so brilliant in conversation, that she would overshadow or surpass her.
Mary herself was a mass of contradictions, but some qualities abided. She was glamorous, intelligent, gregarious, vivacious, kind, generous, loyal to her supporters and friends, and devoted to her Guise relations, whether or not they returned her love. She could be ingenious and courageous with a razor-sharp wit, and never more animated and exuberant than when riding her horse at the head of her army wearing her steel cap.
But she had deep emotional needs. She expected love and needed to be loved. And to a large extent she got what she demanded: from her Guise family as a child, from her Maries as an adult, from her domestic servants and, until she married Bothwell, from her people, who were spellbound by her youth, beauty and glamour. Maitland came closest to the mark when he predicted that the ordinary people of Scotland would be captivated by her merest smiles or frowns. But as queen she lacked the love of a partner, an equal, who could have bolstered her in her anxieties and tempered her impulsiveness. And this hunger for a partner, a husband, a king, led her to her most grotesque and uncharacteristic miscalculations.
Although her rank meant that she was never alone, loneliness must often have consumed her, and it was a sign of her emotional isolation during her later years that her pets became everything to her. Her final reckless throw of the dice in 1586, endorsing a madcap plot in which not even the motives of the principals were clear, is a reflection of her desperation.
Beyond this, Mary was a genuine celebrity. She brought out the crowds to her wedding at the cathedral of Notre-Dame in Paris and to her triumphal entries into Edinburgh and Perth. After her return to take up her throne, she brought something different and altogether more vibrant and compelling to the drab routine of Scottish government. When she was led through the streets of Edinburgh for the last time before her journey to Lochleven, the cries of “Burn her, burn her . . . kill her, drown her” came not from the masses but from a group of dissidents handpicked by the Confederate Lords.
For these lords, with their honor code based on tribal loyalties and regional ties, the rules of the game were quite different. Love and loyalty could be bought and sold like a commodity. For Mary, it was to become an unequal contest. The portrait that emerges of her is not of a political pawn or a manipulative siren, but of a shrewd judge of character who could handle people just as masterfully as her English cousin and counterpart. She relished her role as queen and, for a time, managed to hold together a divided and fatally unstable country. Contrary to Knox’s well-worn stereotype, she knew how to rule from the head as well as the heart. In fact, she made the transition from France back to Scotland so successfully that within six months Maitland could report to Cecil: “The queen my mistress behaves herself so gently in every behalf as reasonably we can require. If anything be amiss, the fault is rather in ourselves.”
Mary was a queen to the last fiber of her body and soul. One of her regal attributes was her desire to defend her honor and keep up appearances. Yet she could be willful as well as astonishingly naive. She was naive in thinking that blood would be thicker than water, that her uncle and her half-brother, the Cardinal of Lorraine and Moray, would not put their own interests before hers time and time again. She was naive in expecting Bothwell to love her simply because she had fallen in love with him. She was naive in fleeing to England after losing the battle of Langside and expecting Elizabeth to help her to recover her lost throne. She was perhaps most naive in expecting a son, who could not remember anything about her, never to betray her.
She had an innate belief in her destiny. However many times she was let down by her uncles or the Scottish lords, she tried to rebuild her bridges, until Darnley’s murder made it impossible for her to do so. Her courage has never been in doubt. Even Knox applauded what he called her “manly” ability to stand her ground against Darnley after the Rizzio plot, when she won him over and escaped with him at midnight from Holyrood, riding through the night to Dunbar while heavily pregnant and stopping only to be sick. She made two escape attempts from Lochleven in a rowboat, the second successful, and after the battle of Langside rode for sixty miles at a stretch.
She stuck as best she could with her unhappy marriage to Darnley despite his intolerable behavior. She decided to put him under house arrest at Craigmillar Castle only when she was faced with the prospect of a coup d’état. She kept up appearances with Bothwell after their marriage, even when his true colors emerged and his violent temper raged unrestrained. She allowed nothing to slip during her captivity. Her household followed the strict protocol of a royal court in exile, and she always contrived to look her best, even when in the privacy of her bedroom she must have watched with sadness and dismay as her hair thinned and her waist thickened. She was determined to live up to her image, though her youth and beauty were fading, and spent extraordinary sums and energy to acquire the most sumptuous clothes and jewels to wear in the closed world of her confinement.
Her “solution” to the issue of female monarchy was hardly a radical one. “Not to marry,” she told Randolph at St. Andrews shortly before she married Darnley, “you know it cannot be for me.” She did what the (male) councilors in all the European dynastic monarchies expected of a woman ruler: she married and settled the succession in her country. Her choice of her first and second husbands is explicable solely on dynastic criteria. The enigma relates to her third husband. Here the truth is more complex. She first saw Bothwell in the role of queen’s protector against the incessant infighting of the lords, and then married him to seal the bond. It was a calculated move. In the kaleidoscopic world she had inhabited since her return to Scotland, Bothwell seemed to offer the one chance of stability. “This realm,” she said, “being divided in factions as it is, cannot be contained in order unless our authority be assisted and set forth by the fortification of a man.” Where she went disastrously wrong was in allowing Bothwell, still a married man, to seduce her at Dunbar. Her worst mistake was to allow herself, a queen, to fall in love.
Mary was the unluckiest ruler in British history. A more glittering and charismatic queen could not be imagined, and yet Scotland was a small and divided country, prey to its larger neighbors. On top of this, the Protestant Reformation had combined with the factionalism of the lords to create a moment when the monarchy was more than usually vulnerable. “Mary Queen of Scots got her head chopped off” is still a familiar children’s skipping rhyme in Scotland. But to let the end of her life overshadow the whole is an injustice. The odds were stacked against her from the beginning.
In England and throughout the English-speaking world, Mary is known to almost everyone, even if they do not realize why. One of the best known children’s nursery rhymes relates to her:*
Mary, Mary, quite contrary,
How does your garden grow?
With silver bells and cockleshells
And pretty maids all in a row.
The garden refers to the ornamental garden at the palace of Holyroodhouse. The silver bells are the Sanctus bells used in Mary’s private chapel at Mass. The cockleshells refer to the pilgrim badges beloved of all devout Catholics, especially those obtained at the shrine of Saint James in the cathedral of Santiago de Compostela in Spain. And the pretty maids are the four Maries, Mary’s playmates and companions for as long as she could remember, who shared so many of her joys and sorrows.
To begin with, Mary’s enemies won the argument. While she was alive, Buchanan was Scotland’s (and England’s) official historian. Thereafter, the debate has raged and will continue to do so for as long as she exerts a fascination on biographers. When Blackwood described her as “by barbarous and tyrannical cruelty extinct,” he completely missed the point. If Elizabeth had triumphed in life, Mary would triumph in death. Far from disappearing into oblivion, as Cecil had intended, she rose from the ashes to become one of Britain’s most celebrated and beguiling rulers. In choosing the phoenix as her last emblem, she had written her own epitaph: “In my end is my beginning.”