Golden Lads - A Study of Anthony Bacon, Francis, and their Friends
In an age of poets and privateers, perfumed courtiers and scheming monarchs, three men - Francis Bacon, Anthony Bacon and Robert Devereaux - play out their roles against the tumultuous background of Queen Elizabeth's England. Prior to the publication of Daphne du Maurier's biography, the elusive Anthony Bacon was merely glimpsed in the shadow of his famous younger brother, Francis. A fascinating historical figure, Anthony Bacon was a contemporary of the brilliant band of gallants who clustered round the court of Elizabeth I, and he was closely connected with the Queen's favourite, the Earl of Essex. He also worked as an agent for Sir Francis Walsingham, the Queen's spymaster, living in France where he became acquainted with Henri IV and the famous essayist Michel de Montaigne. It was in France that du Maurier discovered a secret that, if disclosed during Bacon's lifetime, could have put an end to his political career. Du Maurier did much to shed light on matters that had long puzzled historians, and, as well as a consummate exercise in research, this biography is also a strange and fascinating tale...