[2] Lady Elizabeth and her husband were keen on music and employed resident musicians Edward Johnson and twenty years his junior the madrigalist John Wilbye.
[4] Philip Gawdy wrote that she was ill in 1593 and when she recovered danced all night in token of thanksgiving.
[5] In October 1605 she told Gawdy that his nephew had made the acquaintance of an unsuitable woman, Mistress Havers.
Elizabeth had requested that her funeral should be free of pomp and should be either very early or late in the day.
She was buried at Hengrave church and her statue was added to that of her husband and his first wife in a large memorial that she had commissioned in 1608.