Page:A Biographical Dictionary of the Celebrated Women of Every Age and Country (1804).djvu/777

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OF CELEBRATED WOMEN.
763

Thomas four children, Edward, Elizabeth, Anne, and Thomas Posthumus, who, according to the account she gives of him to her brother, lord treasurer Burleigh, by his excessive extravagance and want of duty gave her much uneasiness. From this letter it appears, she was a lady of great spirit and: sense, as well as an excellent economist.

Some years after the death of Sir Thomas, she married Lord John Russel, son and heir to the second earl of Bedford of that name; who, dying before his father in the year 1584, was buried in the abbey church at Westminster, where is a very noble monument erected to his memory, embellished with inscriptions in Greek, Latin and English, drawn up by his lady. She had by him one son, who died young; and two daughters, Anne and Elizabeth.

She translated from the French into English, a tract intituled, A Way of Reconciliation of a good and learned Man, touching the true Nature and Substance of the Body and Blood of Christ in the Sacrament, printed 1605; and dedicated to her daughter, Anne Herbert, wife to the Lord H. Herbert.

Where or when this worthy lady died we do not find. But by a letter she wrote to her nephew Cecil, without date, it seems to have been about the year 1597; she complains much of her bad health, and the infirmities of old age, being apprehensive of a sudden death; and concludes, "your lordship's owld awnt of compleat 68 years, that prays for your lordship's long life,

Elizabeth Russel, Dowager."

Poetical inscriptions and epitaphs were a favourite kind of composition with Lady Russel. She wrote epitaphs

for