In 1573 Elizabeth again endeavoured to suppress "the silk glittering with silver and gold lace," but in vain.
The Queen was a great lover of foreign novelties. All will call to mind how she overhauled the French finery of poor Mary Stuart[[860]] on its way to her prison, purloining and selecting for her own use any new-fashioned article she craved. We even find Cecil, on the sly, penning a letter to Sir Henry Norris, her Majesty's envoy to the court of France, "that the Queen's Majesty would fain have a tailor that has skill to make her apparel both after the French and Italian manner, and she thinketh you might use some means to obtain such one as suiteth the Queen without mentioning any manner of request in the Queen's Majesty's name." His lady wife is to get one privately, without the knowledge coming to the Queen Mother's ears, "as she does not want to be beholden to her."
It is not to be wondered at, then, that the New Year's Gifts and Great Wardrobe Accounts[[861]] teem with entries of "doublets of peche satten all over covered with cut-work and lyned with a lace of Venyse gold,[[862]] kyrtells of white satten embroidered with purles of gold-like clouds, and layed round about with a bone lace of Venys gold."[[863]] This gold lace appears upon her petticoats everywhere varied by bone lace of Venys silver.[[864]]
That the Queen drew much fine thread point from the same locality her portraits testify, especially that preserved in the royal gallery of Gripsholm, in Sweden, once the property of her ill-fated admirer, Eric XIV. She wears a ruff, cuffs, tucker, and apron of geometric lace, of exquisite fineness, stained of a pale citron colour, similar to the liquid invented by Mrs. Turner, of Overbury memory, or, maybe, adopted from the saffron-tinted smocks of the Irish, the wearing of which she herself had prohibited. We find among her entries laces of Jean[[865]] and Spanish lace; she did not even disdain bone lace of copper, and copper and silver at 18d. the ounce.[[866]] Some of her furnishers are English. One Wylliam Bowll supplies the Queen with "lace of crowne purle."[[867]] Of her sylkwoman, Alice Mountague, she has bone lace wrought with silver and spangles, sold by the owner at nine shillings.[[868]]
The Queen's smocks are entered as wrought with black work and edged with bone lace of gold of various kinds. We have ourselves seen a smock said to have been transmitted as an heirloom in one family from generation to generation.[[869]] It is of linen cloth embroidered in red silk, with her favourite pattern of oak-leaves and butterflies (Fig. 122). Many entries of these articles, besides that of Sir Philip Sidney's, appear among the New Year's Gifts.[[870]]
Fig. 122.
Queen Elizabeth's Smock.
It was then the custom for the sponsors to give "christening shirts," with little bands and cuffs edged with laces of gold and various kinds—a relic of the ancient custom of presenting white clothes to the neophytes when converted to Christianity. The "bearing cloth,"[[871]] as the mantle used to cover the child when carried to baptism was called,[[872]] was also richly trimmed with lace and cut-work, and the Tree of Knowledge, the Holy Dove (Fig. 123), or the Flowerpot of the Annunciation (Fig. 124), was worked in "hollie-work" on the crown of the infant's cap or "biggin."
| Fig. 123. | Fig. 124. |