Blanche Parry At St Faith’s Church, Bacton…
She kneels to her Queen
And to her God.
Faith, certainly, in both,
As confidante to her monarch
And humble servant to her Lord,
But blind to both,
Her eyesight having failed with age
And unable to perceive the tears of her matriarch…
Depicted as an icon, the Tudor Queen’s pose,
Is that of St Faith, a protector of those without sight.
So honoured, this Chief Gentlewoman of the Queen’s Privy Chamber
Was rewarded in death by royal and deity’s might.
Yet the once colourful monument in Bacton’s village church
Was sculpted, sadly in vain,
For Blanche was interred at Westminster,
Befitting the Keeper of the Jewels during Elizabeth’s reign…
Pete Ray
Blanche Parry also looked after the Queen’s books and furs, plus, for two years, the Great Seal of England.
She accepted money for the monarch, acted as a
personal assistant, passing on various pieces of
information and was a channel for parliamentary bills.
She was a cousin and friend of Sir William Cecil, Lord Burghley.
The monument in St Faith’s Church, Bacton,
Herefordshire once faced the altar and it is believed that this depiction of Elizabeth as an icon is the earliest known.
The fragment of altar cloth pictured is now
considered to be made from a dress worn by Queen Elizabeth I.
I saw it inside the church, mounted on a wall but it has since been regarded as highly prized and was been whisked away to London…







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