Page:A Biographical Dictionary of the Celebrated Women of Every Age and Country (1804).djvu/534

This page has been validated.
520
BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY

several more of her letters, extremely curious: one on the subject of her delicacy, in never having written but to three men; one of affection for her sister; one after the death of Anne Boleyn; and one, very remarkable, of Cromwell to her. In Haynes's State Papers are two, in Spanish, to the emperor Charles V. There is also a French letter, printed by Strype, in the Cotton Library, in answer to a haughty mandate of Philip, when he had a mind to marry Elizabeth to the duke of Savoy, against the queen's and princess's inclination. It is written in a most abject manner, and in a wretched style.

Female Worthies. Biog. Dict.



MARY II. and MARY, Queen of Scots.

See Stuart.




MARY, an Anglo-Norman Poetess, of the 13th Century.

It is well known that all the Northern nations had a sort of oral, itinerant poets, who were admired and revered by them, under different titles. The Normans, being a colony from Norway and Denmark, it is probable that many would accompany Rollo at the time of his expedition into France, and leave behind them successors in the art; who in time, mixing with the people, became Troubadours or Norman Rymours; who were in the following century introduced into England by Rollo's descendant, William the Conqueror. Among these Anglo-Norman Trouveurs, Mary, who has been

called