A captive king and a foolish queen

July 29, 1469 was not a good day for the House of York, for it was on this date that Edward was captured and taken as a prisoner to his cousin, the Earl of Warwick. However, I had great fun writing this scene and the succeeding scenes, as Edward showed he was more than a skilled battle commander and a playboy prince. He had a first-rate brain, too, and he was one of those rare men who were at their best when things were at their worst, although sadly he was at his worst when things were at their best. Warwick had always underestimated him, and that would prove to be a costly mistake. Writers usually have favorite chapters and Edward’s capture at Olney is one of mine. So, too, are the scenes with Warwick, so smugly sure he has the upper hand, while Edward smiles and complies with the demands made upon him and makes plans of his own. Plans that come to fruition when Warwick returns to Middleham and is shocked to discover that Edward has managed to summon the lords of the realm--and an army led by his young brother Richard and the loyal Will Hastings.
The Sunne in Splendour, pages 152-153
* * *
The men were watching Warwick with expectant interest; several, like Jack Howard, were openly challenging. Warwick’s eyes moved from face to face, until at last he found the one he sought. Edward was standing with the Archbishop of York. The latter was resplendent in the jeweled miter and robes of a Prince of the Church, but as white of face as one being marched to the gallows. Edward had been laughing as Warwick entered the hall; he was flushed with triumph, looked surprisingly young and suddenly carefree.
For a moment, time seemed to fragment, the intervening eight years seemed to disappear as if they’d never been, and Warwick was seeing again the jubilant nineteen year old youth who’d ridden beside him into London to deafening cheers on that long-ago February day that was to lead to the throne. And then the eerie illusion shattered and Warwick was facing a man who watched him with hard mocking eyes and a smile that promised not remembrance, but retribution.
* * *
July 29th was also the date in 1565 when Mary Queen of Scots made a mistake so monumental that it can be argued this was her first step on the road to the gallows at Fotheringhay Castle. I am not a fan of Mary’s, having always been a member of Team Elizabeth, but even I wish I could time-travel back to the day of her wedding to Lord Darnley and warn her not to marry him. Not that she’d have heeded me. Mary was never one for listening to good advice.
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Published on July 29, 2015 05:42
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message 1: by Leila (new)

Leila Re Mary Queen of Scots Sharon, they do say love is blind! I too have always found Elizabeth a far more interesting personality. Never really liked Warwick either - a devious, ruthless and ambitious man. Now Edward! Wow what a King! A brilliant mind, a likeable and handsome man. The ladies sure liked him. LOL. Thank you Sharon for the excerpt from my favourite Sharon Penman novel.


message 2: by Terelyn (last edited Jul 31, 2015 06:55AM) (new)

Terelyn Marks I recently read an excellent bio of Mary -- An Accidental Tragedy by Roderick Graham -- and Mary basically careened from one disaster to another and her response was to sit down and cry and blame someone else. She really was an interesting woman, just not a very bright one. She was raised to be be a queen consort and have lots of sons. Even though she was married to a sickly boy....

Elizabeth was a fascinating woman and the ultimate survivor. Brilliant, well-educated, willing to do whatever it took to stay alive and then to stay queen.

Warwick was a ruthless bastard that wanted, if not to be king, to control the king. He backed the wrong one, thinking he could manage Edward.

I have wondered what kind of king Richard could have actually been if his reign hadn't been cut so brutally short. I admit it, I lean toward the Ricardians and think he got much undeserved 'bad press.'

My shameless fangirl swoon: LOVE Sunne In Splendour!!! It was the first one of your books I ever read -- you autographed my much-read, battered, taped together copy -- and because of it, I've snatched up all of your other books as soon as they hit the shelves. I think I have most of them in first editions. Some autographed. :) I keep hoping one of your book tours will bring you back to Virginia -- preferably Northern or Richmond area. That way, I can get the rest of them signed too.


message 3: by Sharon (new)

Sharon Thank you so much, Terelyn. It means so much to me that Sunne continues to resonate with readers so strongly over three decades after its publication. My publisher has sent me to the DC and Northern VA area in the past, but not for a while. If you'd like signed books plates from me, though, I'd be happy to send you some.


message 4: by Sharon (new)

Sharon Thanks,Leila!


message 5: by Sharon (new)

Sharon Thank you so much, Penny. You made my day!


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