Read Sir Walter Raleigh: In Life & Legend Online
Authors: Mark Nicholls and Penry Williams
Tags: #Nonfiction, #Biography & Autobiography, #History, #England/Great Britain, #Virginia, #16th Century, #Travel & Exploration, #Tudors
61 Consider, for example, Simon Jones's characterization of Ralegh in the popular BlackadderTV series, and Stewart Lee's delightful Elizabeth and Raleigh - Late but Live in 2008.
62 V. Westbrook, 'What remains of Rawleigh/Raleigh/Ralegh', pp. 80-7.
63 The Vincent Price version of Ralegh makes nice girls run a mile. See P. Hammer, 'The private lives of Elizabeth and Essex and the romanticization of Elizabethan politics', in S. Doran and T. S. Freeman (eds), Tudors and Stuarts on Film: historical perspectives (Basingstoke, 2009), pp. 190-203, at 194.
64 Susan Doran calculates that Elizabeth must 'hold the record for the most cinematically exposed British monarch', 'From Hatfield to Hollywood: Elizabeth I on film', in Doran and Freeman (eds), Tudors and Stuarts on Film, pp. 88-105, at p. 88.
65 The dating agency was Lavalife, while Stephen Pound kept a courtier's eye on the wet pavement, only to see Hazel Blears neatly sidestep his coat!
66 The Scottish political commentator and author Andrew Marr chose Ralegh alongside, among others, Miss Marple as one of his four studies in Englishness for a BBC Radio 4 series in the autumn of 2007.
67 During the months after the death of her brother on the Italian Front in the last year of the GreatWar,Vera Brittain recalled how three lines from Ralegh's 'farewell verses kept beating through [her] brain' (Testament of (nth (London, 1979), p. 446).
68 S. J. Greenblatt (Sir Walter Ralegh: the renaissance man and his roles (London, 1973), pp. 15-16) sees in Ralegh's scaffold performance a 'demonic parody' of Thomas More's execution. Raymond Himehck thinks that Ralegh in 'The Passionate Man's Pilgrimage' might draw on Thomas More's Dialogue of Comfort in the 'everlasting head' language, and in the preoccupation with decapitation. This poem was attributed to Ralegh only posthumously, after 1625, although it had circulated anonymously twenty years before (Himehck, 'Walter Ralegh and Thomas More: the uses of decapitation', Moreana 11:2 (June 1974), 59-63; Rudick, Poems, pp. lxix-lxxii and poem 54).
69 See Lorimer, 'Ralegh's gold mine', p. 84.
70 Greenblatt, Sir Walter Ralegh, p. 167.
71 Naunton, Fragmenta Regalia, p. 30;Vivienne Westbrook points out that John Donne had used a similar analogy to describe Philip Howard, Earl of Arundel ('that tennis ball whome fortune after tossing and banding brickwald into the hazard'). See 'What remains of Rawleigh', p. 89.
72 Inscription on a nineteenth-century tablet commemorating the burial of Ralegh in St Margaret's Westminster.
CHAPTER 15
1 A. R. Beer, My Just Desire: the life of Bess Ralegh, wife to Sir Walter (New York, 2003), pp. 258-65.
2 See the article on Wilkes in ODNB.
3 Syon MS U.1.3aa, Robert Delaval, declaration, 1 April 1603-25 March 1604.
4 HMC, Hatfield, iv, p. 563.
5 J. Aubrey, Brief Lim, ed. Andrew Clark (London, 1898), ii, p. 179.
6 BL,Add. MS 11402, fo. 118.
7 See ODNB.
8 Beer, My Dist Desire, pp. 252-3.
9 HMC, Various Collections, in, p. 223.
10 See R. Davies, Thomas Harriot and the Guiana Voyage in 1595 (Durham Thomas Harriot Seminar Occasional Paper 24, 1997), pp. 30-2; R. A. McIntyre, 'William Sanderson: Elizabethan financier of discovery', William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd series, 13 (1956), pp. 184-201, at 195.
11 A nuncupative will is a will declared orally in front of witnesses.
12 TNA, PROB 11 /323, to. 79v.
15 Ralegh pedigrees can be found in J. L. Vivian, The Visitations of the Comity of Devon (Exeter, 1895), pp. 638-9, and P. Le Neve, Pedigrees of the Knights (London, 1873), p. 74.
13 A. L. Rowse, Ralegh and the Throckmorton (London, 1962), p. 334.
14 TNA, PROB 11 /454, fos 98v-99.
Bodleian Library, MSS Ashmole, Carte, Poetry, Rawlinson, Tanner.
British Library, Cotton, Egerton, Harley, Lansdowne, Sloane, Stowe and Additional MSS.
Huntington Library MS HM 60322.
Inner Temple, Petyt MSS.
Lambeth Palace Library MSS.
The National Archives, E407, PROB 11, SP 12, SP 14, SP 63.
National Library of Ireland, MS 6135.
Manuscripts of His Grace the Duke of Northumberland preserved at Alnwick Castle and (formerly) at Syon House.
Queen's College, Oxford, MS 32.
St John's College, Cambridge, MS I.4.
Papers of the Marquess of Salisbury at Hatfield House, Hertfordshire.
University of North Carolina, Chapel HillWilson Library UNCCH, Raleigh Collection.
Papers of the Wingfield Digby family at Sherborne Castle.
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J. N. Ball, 'Sir John Eliot and parliament, 1624-1629', in K. Sharpe (ed.), Faction and Parliament: essays on early Stuart history (Oxford, 1978), pp. 173-208.
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G. Carew, Calendar of Carew Manuscripts, 1575-88, eds J. S. Brewer and W. Bullen (London, 1868).
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R. Davies, "'The Great Day of Mart": returning to texts at the trial of Sir Walter Ralegh in 1603', Renaissance Forum 4:1 (1999).
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