by Karen Harper
Smallpox is sometimes called the only disease ever wiped out by man. It was officially certified as obsolete in 1980; however, because of recent fears that smallpox could be used in biological warfare (since most of the world's populace are no longer immunized against it), the World Health Organization has been debating whether or not to keep vials of it at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta. As a safety measure, U.S. armed forces serving in dangerous areas of the world are immunized against the pox.
As for interesting sidebars about some of the real-life characters in The Queen's Cure …
Katherine Grey bore a second son, Thomas, in 1563. Over the years, each time Katherine became ill, the queen sent one of her physicians to her. The royal physician Dr. Symonds was with her in her final illness.
Although at this point in her reign Elizabeth could not pin treason charges on Margaret, Matthew Stewart, and their son, Lord Darnley, Darnley later figures prominently in the royal lineage of England. (Stewart is the Scottish/English spelling for Stuart.) Lord Darnley's future son will become James VI of Scotland, James I of England.
Sir Thomas More officially became a Catholic saint in 1935. His prison cell in the Bell Tower of the Tower of London was recently opened for visitors.
Elizabeth refused to let Mary Sidney permanently exile herself after her disfiguring smallpox. The queen often brought Mary to Hampton Court so she could see her over the years. The mermaid pin Mary Sidney gave to her friend and queen still exists.
Elizabeth I's funeral effigy sustained water damage during World War II when fire hoses were used to put out an incendiary German bomb in Westminster Abbey. Only broken pieces of the wooden limbs remained of the body, but the head survived. Now refurbished, the effigy may be seen in the Undercroft Museum at the Abbey. The effigies of Elizabeth, Mary Tudor, and their grandparents are pictured in detail in the book The Funeral Effeigies of Westminster Abbey, ed. Anthony Harvey and Richard Mortimer.
In selecting contemporary quotes from medical and herbal books, I chose to include some from Nicholas Culpeper's The English Physician, although he lived just after Elizabeth (1616–1655). His knowledge certainly came from the Tudor era.
One of Elizabeth's court physicians, William Gilbert (1544–1603), who served her later in her reign, wrote something that I believe the queen herself could have said. It is such confidence that made her a great monarch—and in my world of fiction makes her a brilliant amateur detective:
There is nothing within this mortal circuit that
God hath, as it were, kept to Himself, and not
made subject to the industrious capacity of man to
unravel.
Karen Harper
December 2000
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
KAREN HARPER is the author of three previous Elizabeth I Mysteries: The Twylight Tower, The Tidal Poole, and The Poyson Garden, as well as a number of contemporary suspense and historical novels. She lives in Columbus, Ohio and Naples, Florida.
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Copyright © 2002 by Karen Harper
Map by James Sinclair
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Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 2001047430
eISBN: 978-0-307-56613-3
v3.0
Table of Contents
Cover
Other Books By This Author
Title Page
Dedication
Prologue
Chapter 1 - The First
Chapter 2 - The Second
Chapter 3 - The Third
Chapter 4 - The Fourth
Chapter 5 - The Fifth
Chapter 6 - The Sixth
Chapter 7 - The Seventh
Chapter 8 - The Eighth
Chapter 9 - The Ninth
Chapter 10 - The Tenth
Chapter 11 - The Eleventh
Chapter 12 - The Twelfth
Chapter 13 - The Thirteenth
Chapter 14 - The Fourteenth
Chapter 15 - The Fifteenth
Chapter 16 - The Sixteenth
Afterword
About the Author
Copyright