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Copyright De Gruyter Open Sp. z o.o. Jun 2012

Abstract

[...]Elizabeth was a queen playing a king in official situations, and the first such display was her theatrical prayer during her coronation procession. In her speech to Parliament of 10 February 1559 she declares she wants to stay a virgin forever: "And in the end this shall be for me sufficient: that a marble stone shall declare that a queen ... lived and died a virgin" (Marcus et al. 2000: 58).3 In one of her last speeches of 1601 she reminds her folk about her sacrifice: "I have diminished my own revenue that I might add to your security, and been content to be a taper of true virgin wax, to waste myself and spend my life that I might give light and comfort to those that live under me" (Marcus et al. 2000: 347). [...]among the roles the Queen plays are the typically female ones of a virgin and a mother. According to Il Schifanoya, the Venetian ambassador who wrote a report on the procession to the Castellan of Mantua, Elizabeth was wearing "a royal robe of very rich cloth of gold", and a raised stiffpile, her hair was covered with "a coif of cloth of gold", while on her head a gold crown was set with precious stones, and on her hands nothing but gloves. [...]in 1572 Elizabeth played a similar part in an entertainment at Sudeley castle, where she saved Daphne from Apollo (Woodcock 2003: 111). [...]Elizabeth's saving Daphne was a symbolic act which mirrored the Queen's personal life, as she "saved" herself from an undesirable state of matrimony.

Details

Title
ICONICIZING KINGSHIP IN ELIZABETHAN ENGLAND: STRATEGIC ACTING BY QUEEN ELIZABETH I
Author
Kizelbach, Urszula
Pages
147-160
Publication year
2012
Publication date
Jun 2012
Publisher
De Gruyter Poland
ISSN
00816272
e-ISSN
20825102
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1645149563
Copyright
Copyright De Gruyter Open Sp. z o.o. Jun 2012