, ; engraving by Richard Thomson, of a painting by Peter Cross. Pepys owned a copy of this engraving and displayed it over his desk at the
Admiralty Late in 1667,
George Villiers, 2nd Duke of Buckingham, took on the role of unofficial manager for Gwyn's love affairs. He aimed to provide King Charles with someone who would supplant
Barbara Palmer (Duchess of Cleveland and Countess of Castlemaine), his principal mistress and Buckingham's cousin, moving Buckingham closer to the King's ear. The plan failed; reportedly, Gwyn asked £500 a year to be kept and this was rejected as too expensive. Buckingham had an alternative plan, which was to set the King up with
Moll Davis, an actress with the rival
Duke's Company. Davis was Gwyn's first rival for the King. Several anonymous satires from the time relate a tale of Gwyn, with the help of her friend
Aphra Behn, slipping a powerful
laxative into Davis' tea-time cakes before an evening when she was expected in the King's bed. The love affair between the King and Gwyn allegedly began in April 1668. Gwyn was attending a performance of
George Etherege's ''She Wou'd if She Cou'd'' at the theatre in
Lincoln's Inn Fields. In the next box was the King, who from accounts was more interested in flirting with Gwyn than watching the play. Charles invited Gwyn and her escort, Mr. Villiers, a cousin of Buckingham's, to supper along with his brother the
Duke of York. The anecdote turns charming if perhaps apocryphal at this point: the King, after supper, discovered that he had no money on him; nor did his brother, and Gwyn had to foot the bill. "Od's fish!" she exclaimed, in an imitation of the King's manner of speaking, "but this is the poorest company I ever was in!" , as Cupid, by
Peter Lely. Charles II had this hung behind a landscape, which he swung back to allow favoured guests to peer at Having previously been the mistress of Charles Hart and Charles Sackville, Gwyn jokingly called the King "her Charles the Third". By mid-1668, Gwyn's affair with the King was well-known, though there was little reason to believe it would last long. She continued to act at the King's House, her new notoriety drawing larger crowds and encouraging the playwrights to craft more roles specifically for her. June 1668 found her in Dryden's ''
An Evening's Love, or The Mock Astrologer'', and in July she played in Lacy's
The Old Troop, a farce about a company of
Cavalier soldiers during the
English Civil War, based on Lacy's own experiences. Possibly, Gwyn's father had served in the same company, and Gwyn's part — the company whore — was based on her own mother. As her commitment to the King increased, though, her acting career slowed, and she had no recorded parts between January and June 1669, when she played Valeria in Dryden's successful tragedy
Tyrannick Love. King Charles had a considerable number of mistresses during his life, both short affairs and committed arrangements. He also had a wife, Portuguese princess
Catherine of Braganza, whose pregnancies all ended in miscarriages, and who had little or no say over the King's choice to have mistresses. This had come to a head shortly after their marriage in 1662, in a confrontation between Catherine and Barbara Palmer, which became known as the "Bedchamber crisis". Ostracised at court and with most of her retinue sent back to
Portugal, Catherine had little choice but to acquiesce to the King's mistresses being granted semi-official standing. During Gwyn's first years with Charles, there was little competition in the way of other mistresses: Barbara Palmer was on her way out, while others, such as Moll Davis, kept quietly away from the spotlight of public appearances or
Whitehall. Gwyn gave birth to her first son fathered by Charles II,
Charles Beauclerk, on 8 May 1670. He was the King's seventh son by five separate mistresses. Several months later,
Louise de Kérouaille (Duchess of Portsmouth) came to England from France, ostensibly to serve as a maid of honour to Queen Catherine, but also to become another mistress to King Charles, probably by design on both the French and English sides. She and Gwyn were rivals for many years to come. They were opposites in personality and mannerism; Louise a proud woman of noble birth used to the sophistication of
Versailles, Gwyn a spirited and pranking ex-orange-wench. Gwyn nicknamed Louise "Squintabella" for her looks and the "Weeping Willow" for her tendency to sob. In one instance, recorded in a letter from
George Legge to
Lord Preston, Gwyn characteristically jabbed at the Duchess' "great lineage," dressing in black at court, the same mourning attire as Louise when a prince of France died. Someone there asked, "What the deuce was the Cham of Tartary to you?" to which Gwyn responded, "Oh, exactly the same relation that the French Prince was to Mademoiselle de Kérouaille." The Duchess of Portsmouth's only recorded riposte was, "anybody may know she has been an orange-wench by her swearing". Their relationship was not strictly adversarial; they were known to get together for tea and cards, for example.
Basset was the popular game at the time, and Gwyn was a frequent — and high-stakes — gambler. Gwyn returned to the stage again in late 1670, something Beauclerk calls an "extraordinary thing to do" for a mistress with a royal child. Her return was in Dryden's
The Conquest of Granada, a two-part epic produced in December 1670 and January 1671. This may have been her last play; 1671 was almost certainly her last season. Gwyn's theatrical career spanned seven years and ended at the age of 21 (if we take 1650 to be her birth year). In the cast list of Aphra Behn's
The Rover, produced at Dorset Garden in March 1677, the part of Angelica Bianca, "a famous Curtezan" is played by a Mrs Gwin. This has sparked some confusion. The spelling of "Gwin" does not refer to Nell Gwyn, but to Anne Quin. Nell Gwyn had left the stage by this point. In February 1671, Gwyn moved into a brick
townhouse at 79
Pall Mall. The property was owned by the Crown and its current resident was instructed to transfer the lease to Gwyn. It would be her main residence for the rest of her life. Gwyn seemed unsatisfied with being a lessee only — in 1673, a letter written by
Joseph Williamson stated that "Madam Gwinn complains she has no house yet." Gwyn is said to have complained that "she had always conveyed free under the Crown, and always would; and would not accept [the house] till it was conveyed free to her by an Act of Parliament". In 1676, Gwyn was granted the
freehold of the property, which remained in her family until 1693; as of 1960
the property was still the only one on the south side of Pall Mall not owned by the
Crown Estate. Gwyn gave birth to her second child by the King, christened James Beauclerk, on 25 December 1671, or Christmas Day. There are two stories about how the eldest of her two children was given the Earldom of Burford, both of which are unverifiable. The first, and most popular, is that when Charles was six years old, on the arrival of the King, Gwyn said, "Come here, you little bastard, and say hello to your father." When the King protested against her calling Charles that, she replied, "Your Majesty has given me no other name by which to call him." In response, Charles created him
Earl of Burford. Another is that Gwyn grabbed young Charles and hung him out of a window of
Lauderdale House in
Highgate, where she briefly resided, and threatened to drop him unless he was granted a peerage. The King cried out "God save the Earl of Burford!" and subsequently officially created the peerage, saving his son's life. On 21 December 1676, a warrant was passed for "a grant to Charles Beauclerc, the King's natural son, and to the heirs male of his body, of the dignities of Baron of Heddington, co. Oxford, and Earl of Burford in the same county, with remainder to his brother, James Beauclerc, and the heirs male of his body". A few weeks later, James was given "the title of Lord Beauclerc, with the place and precedence of the eldest son of an earl". Shortly afterwards, the King granted Gwyn and their sons a house, which was renamed Burford House, on the edge of the
Home Park in
Windsor. She lived there when the King was in residence at
Windsor Castle. In addition to the properties mentioned above, Gwyn had a summer residence on the site of what is now 61–63
King's Cross Road, London, which enjoyed later popularity as the Bagnigge Wells Spa. According to
The London Encyclopaedia, she "entertained Charles II here with little concerts and breakfasts". An inscribed stone of 1680, saved and reinserted in the front wall of the present building, shows a carved mask which is probably a reference to her stage career. Just after the death of
Henry Jermyn, 1st Earl of St Albans on 5 January 1684, King Charles granted his son Charles the title of
Duke of St Albans, gave him an allowance of £1,000 a year, and also granted him the offices of Chief Ranger of
Enfield Chase and
Master of the Hawks in reversion; i.e., after the death of the current incumbents. King Charles died on 6 February 1685.
James II, obeying his brother's deathbed wish, "Let not poor Nelly starve", eventually paid most of Gwyn's debts and gave her an annual pension of £1,500. He also paid off the
mortgage on Gwyn's
Nottinghamshire lodge, which remained in the Beauclerk family until 1940. At the same time, James applied pressure on Gwyn and her son Charles to convert to
Roman Catholicism, something she resisted. == Death ==