M6
?
LAW 20
PARTI:DONOTCOMMITTO
ANYONE,
BUTBECOURTEDBYALL
Ifyou
allow
people
to
feel
they
possessyou
to
anydegree,
you
loseall
power
overthem.
By
not
committingyouraffections, tfwy
will
only
try
harderto
win
you
over
Stayaloof
and
yougain
the
power
thatcomes
from
theirat—
tentionand
frustrated
desire.
Play
the
VirginQueen:
Givethem
hope
but
never
satisfaction.
OBSERVANCEOFTHELAW
When
Queen
ElizabethIascendedthethroneof
England,
in
1558,
there
wasmuchto-doabouther
finding
ahusband.TheissuewasdebatedinPar-
liament,
andwasa.main
topic
ofconversation
amongEnglishmen
ofall
classes;
they
often
disagreed
astowhom
sheshould
marry,
but
everyone
thought
sheshould
marry
assoonas
possible,
fora
queen
must
havea
king,
andmustbearheirsforthe
kingdom.
Thedebates
raged
onfor
years.
Meanwhilethemosthandsomeand
eligible
bachelorsintherealm-Sir
Robert
Dudley,
the
Earlof
Essex,
SirWalter
Ra.leigh———vied
forElizabetlfs
hand.She
didnot
discourage
them,
but
she
seemedtobeinno
hurry,
and
herhintsastowhichman
might
beherfavoriteoftencontradictedeach
other.In
1566,
Parliamentsenta
delegation
toElizabeth
urging
herto
marry
beforeshewastoooldtobearchildren.Shedidnot
argue,
nordid
she
discourage
the
delegation,
butsheremaineda
virgin
nonetheless.
Thedelicate
game
thatElizabeth
played
withhersuitors
slowly
made
herthe
subject
ofinnumerablesexualfantasiesand the
object
of
cultish
worship.
Thecourt
physician,
Simon
Forman,
usedhis
diary
todescribe
hisdreamsof
deflowering
her.Painters
represented
herasDianaandother
goddesses.
The
poet
Edmund
Spenser
andotherswrote
eulogies
totheVir-
gin
Queen.
Shewasreferredtoas“tha,wor1d’s
Empresse,”
“that
virtuous
Virgo”
whorulestheworldandsetsthestars
inmotion.In
conversation
with
her,
her
many
malesuitorswould
employ
boldsexual
innuendo,
a
darethatElizabethdidnot
discourage.
Shedidallshecouldtostirtheirin
terestand
simultaneouslykeep
themat
bay.
ThroughoutEurope,kings
and
princes
knewthata
marriage
withEliz-
abethwouldsealanalliancebetween
England
and
any
nation.The
king
of
Spain
wooed
her,
asdidthe
prince
ofSwedenandthearchdukeofAustria.
She
politely
refused
themall.
The
greatdiplomatic
issueofElizabetlfs
day
was
posedby
therevolt
oftheFlemishandDutch
Lowlands,
whichwerethen
possessions
of
Spain.
Should
England
breakitsalliancewith
Spain
and
choose
Franceasits
main
ally
onthe
Continent,
thereby
encouraging
FlemishandDutch
indepen-
dence?
By
1570 ithadcometoseemthatanalliancewithFrancewouldbe
England’s
wisestcourse.Francehadtwo
eligible
menofnoble
blood,the
dukesof
Anjou
and
Alencon,
brothersoftheFrench
king.
Wouldeitherof
them
marry
Elizabeth?Bothhad
advantages,
andElizabeth
kept
the
hopes
ofbothalive.Theissuesimmeredfor
years.
Thedukeof
Anjou
madesev-