Saturday, June 11, 2016

Elizabeth Fremantle's The Girl in the Glass Tower: Arbella Stuart's courageous and tragic story

“It was the sheer size of the windows that made the rooms at Hardwick so impossible to heat… Grandmother seemed impervious to the chill and could not hide her delight at her vast shimmering rectangles of glass, fit for a cathedral, the talk of all Derbyshire.”

Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire (photo by Mark Johnson)

Hardwick Hall, more glass than wall: so went a common saying about this large Elizabethan country house. Built at a time when glass was exceptionally expensive, it was the pride of Bess of Hardwick, Countess of Shrewsbury, the richest woman in England after the Queen herself. If you look carefully in the photo above, you can see her initials ("ES," for Elizabeth Shrewsbury) atop many of the towers; she knew how to stake her claim. It's now a National Trust property, and Mark and I paid a visit to Hardwick Hall and its grounds on our trip to England in 2014. Portraits of its former residents, the country's monarchs, and other English notables grace the interior walls. If you get the opportunity to see it in person, go!

Elizabeth Fremantle’s The Girl in the Glass Tower delves into the life story of another Elizabethan woman who resided there, but whose story was more tragedy than triumph: Lady Arbella Stuart, granddaughter of both Bess of Hardwick and Margaret Douglas (Henry VIII’s niece). Though she's a minor figure now, for much of her lifetime Arbella was considered a likely successor to Elizabeth I. Her royal lineage proved to be a terrible burden. Other parties wrought conspiracies around her for their own ends, and her long-lived grandmother, Bess, kept her under tight control, ostensibly for her own protection. While some of Arbella’s decisions cost her dearly, Fremantle shows in no uncertain terms how her behavior was a natural result of the restrictive environment she endured.

Half of the novel comprises Arbella’s memoir, written in Jacobean times while incarcerated in the Tower of London, where she looks out on the courtyard from above, recollecting her too-short life, which comprises constant reminders of “the impossibility of freedom.” Her mother died when she was a child, and her female role models are few. Her aunt, Mary Queen of Scots, is executed as a traitor.  An earlier potential successor to Elizabeth’s throne, the late Katherine Grey, had married against the Queen’s wishes and paid a great price.

Hardwick Hall and gardens (photo by Mark Johnson)

The stories of these women are threaded through the novel’s melancholy atmosphere; they haunt Arbella and remind her of their fate, which could also be hers.

Raised by Bess of Hardwick to be a future queen, Arbella grows up too aware of her position, leading to missteps that make her appear haughty. In this world of plots and counterplots political and religious, she does have loyal servants and loving relatives, but not everyone family included has her best interests at heart.

Arbella Stuart, later in life
(public domain)
Alternating sections introduce Aemilia Lanyer, called Ami, a talented poet banished from court because King James didn’t approve of her feminist writing. Left impoverished after her spendthrift husband’s death, and determined to conceal the identity of her son Hal’s true father, Ami contends with a treacherously nosy neighbor and unwanted advances from her landlord (I particularly enjoyed how the subplot involving these characters turned out). The two women's tales are nicely harmonized. Their lives intersect at a few critical moments, and it’s only after Arbella’s death, and she reads her memoir, that Ami truly knows the person who Arbella was.

The Girl in the Glass Tower is a deep, intimate exploration of a royal woman’s life. It was published by Michael Joseph (Penguin Random House UK) on June 2nd in hardback (£14.99, 453pp) and ebook.

10 comments:

  1. Poor Arabella Stuart, another tragic figure manipulated by others. I'm looking forward to reading more about her relationship with Bess of Hardwick so will definitely add this book to my TBR pile.

    I was trying to make sense of the title of this book so thanks for the snippet of information about Hardwick House being more glass than wall. It now falls into place.

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    1. The title will make even more sense after you read the beginning of the book - Arbella looking out a tower window, pondering escape but knowing she can't.

      I had known the basics about her life but not the full story, and am glad I read the book.

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  2. Learned about her story many years ago from a novel, Too Near The Throne, by Molly Costain Haycraft. Sad tale, another tragic Tudor pawn denied happiness, first by Elizabeth, then by James. If you want a good biography, I'd recommend Sarah Gristwood's Arbella: England's Lost Queen.

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    1. Thanks, I'll look into Gristwood's bio. Fremantle mentions it in her bibliography, I believe. I read Molly Costain Haycraft's biographical novels when I was younger, though unfortunately don't remember much about them now.

      Arbella has a Facebook page of interest, which I find fascinating!

      https://www.facebook.com/TheRoyalCousin/

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    2. Thanks, Sarah, will check it out.

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  3. Anonymous4:05 PM

    Aemilia is the subject of two novels within the past few years, I believe.

    Sarah OL

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    1. Sally O'Reilly's Dark Aemilia (which I haven't read yet) and Mary Sharratt's The Dark Lady's Mask (which was very good). Girl in the Glass Tower focuses on Aemilia after her husband's death, a part of her life which isn't really covered in Dark Lady's Mask.

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    2. I read Sally O'Reilly's book last fall. Interesting story, didn't know anything about Aemilia, liked it overall, although I remember a few parts I didn't care for.

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  4. Anonymous4:11 PM

    The author seems to be going more "recent" with each book - I wonder what her next one will be about. Something re James I and court?

    Sarah OL

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    1. An email I received from the author's publicist said that she was signed for another four books. An interview over at the Lady Jane Grey reference guide has more info on her next release, a psychological thriller about the Overbury affair see last question on this page).

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