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LOVE FINDS A WAY

COUNTESS IN A BASKET. EARL DISGUISED AS. BAKEiE. A correspondent of tlie “Children's Newspaper/’ who has been looking; into the history of some of Britain’s great families, relates a curious talc concerning one of them. Fiction, says, the correspondent, may feel that it lias a grudge against the family of the Marquess of Northampton, for he re-established the family fortune by a device which no novel excels in pleasant audacity. He was oiie of the Comptons, an old Northamptonshire house whose affairs were in a grave disrepair when the first earl was a young man and Queen Elizabeth of gracious memory was on the throne.

At the same time there was living in the city, at famous Crosby Hall, Sir J’olin Spencer, fabulously rich, Lord Mayor of London, and with a beautiful only daughter, Elizabeth. Northampton, a gay and gallant figure, sought her hand, but the old merchant prince would not hear of the match. The young woer had influence at Court, and succeeded in getting Spencer imprisoned for a time on a charge of lil-usmg his daughter, but even with, the father out of the way ho was not able to win the fair Elizabeth, who either would not- consent to marriage or was kept too securely imprisoned. Eventually an irate Sir John was released, naturally more hostile than ever to the suit of the young; aristocrat. But he happened to be in a particularly good temper when lie met a stalwart baker’s youth coming down the stairs witji a basket on liis head, and the old knight stopped and gave him a sixpence for his punctuality. Not for a little time later did he learn that in the' basket was his daughter Elizabeth, the baker’s assistant being none other than young Lord Northampton disguised for the adventure. Never, Sir John* vowed, should liis son-intlaw receive a penny more of liis money than the sixpence which he had given to the supposed baker’s boy. A year passed; then one day Queen Elizabeth sent for Sir John. She wanted him to go and be “gossip” with her -to a newly-born baby whom she hoped he would adopt in place of his disinherited daughter. Of course, lie could not refuse, and, needless to say, the baby proved to be Sir John’s' own grandchild, and a complete reconciliation followed. The boy was named Spencer after his grandfather and grew up to play a large part in the history of his age and to die in battle at Hopton Heath, near Stafford, one of the most famous of the Cavalier commanders.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HAWST19330127.2.53

Bibliographic details

Hawera Star, Volume LII, 27 January 1933, Page 8

Word Count
432

LOVE FINDS A WAY Hawera Star, Volume LII, 27 January 1933, Page 8

LOVE FINDS A WAY Hawera Star, Volume LII, 27 January 1933, Page 8