with any suspect person out of my hearing, that she
do not by any means either receive or send any message,
letter or token, to or from any manner of person,
which, under your honourable corrections, must thus
answer to that, as touching conference with suspected
persons, if your Lordships mean strangers, and such
as be not daily attending upon her person by your
assents and privities, with the help above said, I
dare take upon me that to do. But if you mean
general conference with all persons, as well within
her house as without, I shall beseech you of pardon,
for that I dare not take upon me, nor yet for message,
letter or token, which may be conveyed by any of the
three women of her privy chamber, her two grooms of
the same or the yeomen of the robes, all which persons
and none others be with her Grace at her going to her
lodging, and part of them all night, and until such
time as her grace cometh to her dining-chamber, the
grooms always after going abroad within the house,
having full opportunity to do such matter as is prohibited.
And hereunto I beseech your honours ask my Lord Chamberlain
whether it will be within possibility for me to do
it or no, whose order in all things I have and do,
according to my poor wit and endeavour put in use;
and upon his declaration to direct order possible.
At the present writing hereof one Marbery, my lady
Grace’s servant, brought his wife, Elizabeth
Marbery, to have been received to have wait upon her
Grace, in the stead of Elizabeth Sands, and because
I received no manner of warrant from you my Lords,
to do it, I have required the said Marbery to stay
himself and his wife hereabouts, till I might receive
the same, which I pray you to do with all speed, for
they been very poor folks, and unable to bear their
own charge as I perceive.
“Her Grace, thanks be to God, continueth in
reasonable health and quietness, as far as I can perceive;
but she claimeth promise of the mouth of my Lords
Treasurer and Chamberlain to have the liberty of walk
within the whole park of Woodstock. This she hath
caused to come to mine ear by my Lady Gray, but never
spoke of it to me by express words . . . . Her
Grace hath not hitherto made any request to walk in
any other place than in the over and nether gardens
with the orchard, which, if she happens to do, I must
needs answer I neither dare nor will assent unto it,
till by the Queen’s Highness and your honours
I be authorised that to do . . . . Cornwallis,
the gentleman-usher, did move me to assent that the
cloth of estate should be hanged up for her Grace,
whereunto I directly said nay, till your Lordships’
pleasures were known therein.
“Postscript.—There was some peril
of fire within the house, which we have without any
loss to be regarded, escaped. Thanks be to God.”
In answer to the above the Council thanked and commended
Sir Henry for all that he had hitherto done, adding:—