Elizabeth I
English queen, Golden Age
Sayings by Elizabeth I
I will rather be a beggar than a queen, if I cannot govern as I please.
I know how to rule, and I will rule.
God forgive you, but you have done God's work.
I have desired to live to see this day, wherein I have had a sight of my people. I bless God that I am come amongst you, and I hope I shall never depart from you.
Though I may not have children of my body, I shall never be without them in my heart.
There is no prince in the world who has such subjects as I have, and I will not change them for any other, not even for the King of Spain's Indies.
This is a thing that I have ever feared above all things.
I am not afraid of the word 'danger,' for I was born in it.
I assure you I am more afraid of you than of the King of Spain.
I will not open my window to see the passage of rebels.
I should be sorry to have such a husband as would not be content to be governed by me.
Princes, you know, are set as it were upon stages, in the sight and view of all the world.
I am resolved in the name of God to be a king and rule, and I will gladly do so.
God has given me a kingdom, and I will govern it.
I know the least of any creature that is in the world.
My power is my people.
I am no more afraid of death than I am of marriage.
If I am not Queen, then I am not English.
I will make a good end to my life, if I cannot make a better beginning.
The Queen of Scots is a most dangerous woman.