, 1611 Arbella refused to be chief mourner at the funeral of Elizabeth I. She came to the court of
James VI and I in August 1603. She was given precedence as a Princess of the Blood. A Venetian diplomat
Scaramelli noted that she carried the train of the dress of the queen,
Anne of Denmark, when she went to chapel. In March 1608 Anne of Denmark, Prince Henry, and Arbella's friend the courtier
John Elphinstone wrote to her at Sheffield to request that her lutenist Thomas Cutting be sent to the queen's brother
Christian IV of Denmark. Arbella reluctantly agreed. Cutting soon returned to England but joined Prince Henry's household. At the end of 1609, Arbella was in trouble for her involvement with an imposter, the "Prince of Moldavia" and other actions deemed suspicious, but she was forgiven, and the King gave her silver plate worth £200 as a
New Year's Day gift. On 5 June 1610 Arbella danced in
Samuel Daniel's masque ''
Tethys' Festival'', one of the festivities at the investiture of Prince Henry as
Prince of Wales. She followed, in order of precedence, Anne of Denmark and
Princess Elizabeth. Arbella, who was fourth in line to the English throne, was in trouble again in 1610 for planning to marry
William Seymour, then known as Lord Beauchamp, who later succeeded as 2nd
Duke of Somerset. Lord Beauchamp was seventh-in-line, grandson of
Lady Katherine Grey, a younger sister of
Lady Jane Grey and a granddaughter of
Mary Tudor, younger sister of King
Henry VIII and Arbella's ancestor, Margaret Tudor. Under the circumstances, the King wondered whether the marriage was the prelude to an attempt to seize
the Crown itself. Although the couple at first denied that any arrangement existed between them, they later married in secret on 22 June 1610 at
Greenwich Palace. For marrying without his permission, King James imprisoned them: Arbella in Sir Thomas Perry's house in
Lambeth and Lord Beauchamp in the
Tower of London. The couple had some liberty within those buildings, and some of Arbella's letters to Beauchamp and to the King during this period survive. When the King learned of her letters to Lord Beauchamp, however, he ordered Arbella's transfer to the custody of
William James,
Bishop of Durham. Arbella claimed to be ill, so her departure for
Durham was delayed. The couple used that delay to plan their escape. Arbella raised some money by selling a collection of
embroideries made by Mary, Queen of Scots to her aunt for £850. Arbella, who was lodged at Highgate, dressed as a man to escape. This involved putting on French-fashioned
hose over her petticoat, a man's
doublet, a male wig over her hair, a black hat, black cloak, russet boots with red tops, and wearing a rapier. Imogen, the virtuous, cross-dressed heroine of
William Shakespeare's play
Cymbeline (1610–1611), has sometimes been read as a reference to Arbella, but the warrant for the couple's arrest is dated 3 June 1611 and
Simon Forman recorded seeing a production of that play in April 1611. The black hat and riding
safeguard worn by one woman reminded a witness, John Bright, of
Moll Cutpurse. Beauchamp also disguised himself to escape from the Tower. Both told some of the servants they left behind that they were going in disguise to meet their partner. Arbella went by boat on the
Thames to Lee (in
Kent). She sailed to France before Lord Beauchamp arrived. Beauchamp caught the next ship to
Flanders. Arbella's ship was overtaken by King James's men just before it reached
Calais. She was returned to England and imprisoned in the
Tower of London. She never saw her husband again. Later in the summer of 1610, Arbella embroidered a pair of gloves for
Anne of Denmark and sent them to her lady-in-waiting
Jane Drummond. She hoped to regain the queen's favour and kiss her hands again. Arbella expected to be released to attend the marriage of
Princess Elizabeth in February 1613 and she bought pearls and a gown embroidered with pearls to wear from the jeweller
Abraham der Kinderen. She was not invited and pawned and sold most of the pearls for funds a few months later. Abraham der Kinderen petitioned for the return of the gown after her death. In her final days as a prisoner in the
Tower of London, Arbella Seymour (her married name), refusing to eat, fell ill, and died on 25 September 1615. She was buried in
Westminster Abbey on 29 September 1615. In the 19th century, during a search for the tomb of James VI and I, Arbella's lead coffin was found in the vault of Mary, Queen of Scots (her aunt by marriage) and placed directly on top of that of the Scots queen. ==Literary legacy==