Memoirs of Lady Fanshawe / Wife of Sir Richard Fanshawe, Bt., Ambassador from Charles II to the Courts of Portugal and Madrid.
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WIFE OF SIR RICHARD FANSHAWE, BT. AMBASSADOR FROM CHARLES II. TO THE COURTS OF PORTUGAL & MADRID WRITTEN BY HERSELF CONTAINING EXTRACTS FROM THE CORRESPONDENCE OF SIR RICHARD FANSHAWE EDITED WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY BEATRICE MARSHALL AND A NOTE UPON THE ILLUSTRATIONS BY ALLAN FEA
There is a deathless charm, despite the efforts of modern novelists and playwrights to render it stale and hackneyed, attaching to the middle of the seventeenth century—that period of upheaval and turmoil which saw a stately debonnaire Court swept away by the flames of Civil War, and the reign of an usurper succeeded by the Restoration of a discredited and fallen dynasty.
So long as the world lasts, events such as the trial and execution of Charles Stuart will not cease to appeal to the imagination and touch the hearts of those at least who bring sentiment to bear on the reading of history.
It is not to the dry-as-dust historian, however, that we go for illuminating side-lights on this ever-fascinating time, but rather to the pen-portraits of Clarendon, the noble canvases of Van Dyck, and above all to the records of individual experience contained in personal memoirs. Of these none is more charmingly and vivaciously narrated or of greater historic value and interest than the following memoir (first published in 1830) of Sir Richard Fanshawe, Knight and Baronet, one of the Masters of the Requests, Secretary of the Latin Tongue, Burgess of the University of Cambridge, and one of His Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council of England and Ireland, and His Majesty's Ambassador to Portugal and Spain. It was written by his widow in the evening of her days, after a life of storm and stress and many romantic adventures at home and abroad, for the benefit of the only son who survived to manhood of fourteen children, most of whom died in their chrisom robes and whose baby bones were laid to rest in foreign churchyards.
Ann Fanshawe
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MEMOIRS OF LADY FANSHAWE
INTRODUCTION
NOTES ON THE ILLUSTRATIONS
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
NOTES ON THE ILLUSTRATIONS
INTRODUCTORY MEMOIR
MEMOIRS OF LADY FANSHAWE
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
INTRODUCTORY MEMOIR
MEMOIRS OF LADY FANSHAWE
EXTRACTS
FROM THE DUKE DE MEDINA DE LAS TORRES, TO SIR RICHARD FANSHAWE.
TO HIS EXCELLENCY DENZILL LORD HOLLES, AMBASSADOR EXTRAORDINARY IN THE COURT OF FRANCE. FOR HIS MAJESTY'S SPECIAL SERVICE.
SIR RICHARD FANSHAWE TO THE FRENCH AMBASSADOR.
TO MR. SECRETARY BENNET.
TO MR. SECRETARY BENNET.
TO MR. SECRETARY BENNET.
TO MR. SECRETARY BENNET.
TO MR. SECRETARY BENNET.
TO THE LORD CHANCELLOR.
TO LORD ARLINGTON.
TO LORD ARLINGTON.
TO LORD ARLINGTON
FROM LORD SANDWICH TO SIR RICHARD FANSHAWE
TO THE LORD CHANCELLOR.
TO SIR PHILIP WARWICK.
TO HIS MAJESTY.
FROM LYONEL FANSHAWE, ESQ., TO JOSEPH WILLIAMSON, ESQ.
THE FORM OF A PRAYER USED BY MY LORD'S CHAPLAIN, IN THE DAILY SERVICE IN HIS EXCELLENCY'S CHAPELIN PORTUGAL AND SPAIN.
A PRAYER USED IN THE DAILY SERVICE OF THE CHAPEL, AFTER THE DEATH OF HIS EXCELLENCY THE LORD AMBASSADOR.