'Jerome de Groot has made a skilful use of the collection of poems addressed to Henrietta Maria by the University of Oxford in the early 1640s as the basis for a consideration of the use of gender as a weapon... Mary Pryor's pioneering study showed years ago that Oxford women played a crucial part in cementing the bonds of family and friends. Barbara Harris has extended this insight to a wider and more aristocratic sphere. Elizabeth Clarke's essay on women's spiritual diaries that show the extent to which men directed or exploited these writings is a valuable reminder of the complexities of gender relationships.' Parergon ’This is a strong, valuable collection. It certainly goes far to demonstrate the public prowess of aristocratic women in the Tudor and early Stuart eras.’ H-Albion