believed to be of Dorothy and Penelope Devereux c. 1581 Penelope Rich was considered one of the beauties of Elizabeth's court. She was golden-haired with dark eyes, a gifted singer and dancer, fluent in French, Italian, and Spanish. Penelope is traditionally thought to have inspired Philip Sidney's
sonnet sequence Astrophel and Stella (sometimes spelt
Astrophil and Stella). Likely composed in the 1580s, it is the first of the famous English sonnet sequences, and contains 108
sonnets and 11 songs. Many of the poems were circulated in manuscript form before the first edition was printed by Thomas Newman in 1591, five years after Sidney's death. They were set by the French lutenist
Charles Tessier and published in London in 1597. and verses from other poets including
Thomas Campion,
Samuel Daniel and
Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford. Whether Sidney fell passionately in love with Penelope in the years between her arrival at court in 1581 and his own marriage in 1583, or whether the "Stella" sonnets were courtly amusements reflecting fashionable poetic conceits may never be known. In her essay "Sidney, Stella, and Lady Rich", Katherine Duncan-Jones writes: Sidney died of wounds received at the
Battle of Zutphen in 1586. In 1590, Penelope's brother Essex married Sidney's widow
Frances, daughter of Sir
Francis Walsingham, and Lady Rich was much cultivated by poets and musicians during her brother's ascendancy at court in the 1590s. Poet
Richard Barnfield dedicated
The Affectionate Shepherd, his first work, which was published anonymously in November 1594, to Penelope Rich. In 1586 she was a godmother to the daughter of
Nicholas Hilliard, the queen's
miniaturist. Hilliard is known to have painted two miniatures of Lady Rich, in 1589 and 1590 for her brother, the Earl of Essex. He sent one to
James VI of Scotland (later James I of England), and the poet
Henry Constable wrote a sonnet about the portrait. Essex gave the second miniature to the French ambassador for
Henry IV. A miniature in the
Royal Collection (above) may be one of these. It was said that Lady Rich wrote to James VI in 1589, saying that Elizabeth could only live a couple of years longer, encouraging his hopes for the
English succession. In December 1595, James's consort
Anne of Denmark asked for portraits of the Earl of Essex and Lady Rich. Charles Tessier dedicated his book of part-songs in French and Italian,
Le premier livre de chansons, to "Madame Riche", commending (in Italian) her musical judgement, and
John Dowland composed "My Lady Rich's Galliard" in her honour. ==Affair and charge of treason==