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during which time the queen bore three children, of whom two died in infancy, and the third Mary, succeeded to the throne of England. At this time the king pretended to have misgivings regarding the legality of his marriage with his brother's widow, and secret conferences were held with Wolsey and others of his court who were slaves of his will, with the view of bringing about a divorce. But cleverly as the true cause of the royal inquietude was at first concealed, it was not long before it became apparent that his heart was estranged from his now aged and ailing queen, by a romantic passion, which he had determined, at the sacrifice of every feeling of honour and humanity, to gratify. Anne Boleyn, the daughter of Sir Thomas Boleyn, one of Catherine's maids of honour, was soon discovered to be the object of the king's adoration. This young and beautiful second queen, whose usurpation of her husband's heart had hurried the divorced Catherine to the grave, lived but two years to enjoy her dearly bought dignity ere she was doomed to the block for crimes of which there is strong evidence to believe her innocent. Her daughter Elizabeth lived to be queen regnant of England by the right of succession. The next unfortunate third queen consort was Jane Seymour, daughter of Sir John Seymour, also a maid of honour, and a young lady of singular beauty and merit. Henry married her on the day after the execution of Anne Boleyn. This queen brought him a son, afterwards Edward VI.; she died two days after her confinement, and left Henry to make a new choice. Having seen a flattering picture of Anne of Cleves, the royal widower determined to espouse that princess. Anne was sent over to England, but to his great disappointment Henry found she was utterly destitute of grace and beauty, and to heighten his disgust she could speak nothing but Dutch, a language of which he was entirely ignorant; he, however, was too gallant a knight to refuse her his hand, she therefore became his fourth queen; and he continued, notwithstanding his unconquerable aversion to her, to treat her with great kindness until he obtained a divorce; this was not long in being accomplished, and he married his fifth wife, Catherine Howard, niece of the Duke of Norfolk. In this marriage he con sidered himself perfectly blessed; the agreeable person and disposition of Catherine had entirely captivated his affections, and in the height of his transport he publicly in his chapel returned solemn thanks to heaven for the unspeakable felicity the conjugal state afforded him. His bliss was soon fated to terminate, and in the bitter disappointment he experienced in Catherine, Heaven seemed to revenge upon him the cruelty with which he had sacrificed his former wives her transition from the throne to the scaffold occupied but eighteen months. Catherine Parr, the widow of Lord Latimer, was Henry's sixth and last queen, and she, like Anne Boleyn and Catherine Howard, would also have been brought to the block on a point of religious controversy, had not her ready wit appeased the king's anger, by pretending her opposition to his tenets was but to divert his attention from the

pain he was suffering from a wound in his leg. This last and comparatively fortunate queen survived the royal tyrant, whose death, in the fourth year of their marriage, released her from great fears and troubles, her committal to the Tower on the charge of high treason being constantly hanging over her; and the natural ferocity of the king being increased by the tortures of his wound, it required all her patience and fortitude to minister to his sufferings, and endure the savage outbursts of his rage. Kings of England ̧ p. 92.

ANNE BOLEYN.

On the 19th of May, 1534, the queen (Anne Boleyn) was brought in marvellous splendour of state and rejoicing, by the mayor and aldermen, in a gilded barge, adorned with banners and devices, surrounded with wonderous pageants of the Bachelor's and City Companies, in their boats and barges of ceremony, from Greenwich, along the Thames, through a fleet of ships and wherries, which, together with the banks on either side, were crowded with spectators, all in their holiday clothes, anxious to behold and do honour to the young and beautiful new object of their monarch's adoration, to the Tower of London, where she was welcomed by the king, who kissed her, and led her with great show of joy and affection, amid noises of sweet music and peals of great guns, into the royal apartments, there to remain until the happy morning of the next day, which was appointed for her solemn coronation.

On the 1st May, 1536, the traitor's gate opened to receive a royal prisoner, and eighteen days afterwards, on the 19th of May, the headless body of the queen, who but two years before had been the occasion of so much rejoicing and happiness, was hastily thrown into a chest made to contain arrows, and buried without form or ceremony in the Tower chapel.

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Such was the short-lived triumph and melancholy end of the beauteous Anne Boleyn. That Henry had grown tired of her there is little doubt, and that she was condemned on very questionable evidence by the influence of the Duke of Suffolk, who, by wholly applying himself to the king's humour" with regard to Jane Seymour, thought to secure for himself the royal favour, is also a fact most generally acknowledged. The marriage of Henry with the new idol of his affection on the morning after the axe had dissolved his last contract, speaks volumes to confirm the popular belief that Anne Boleyn was the victim of a foul conspiracy, and that her only crime was having outlived her husband's liking.* Kings of England, p. 120.

* Henry was married to Anne Boleyn on the 25th January, 1533, in a garret, at the western end of the palace at Whitehall. She is described by a contemporary chronicler as "a fair young creature, so exquisitely moulded in form and feature, and gifted with wit so sparkling and pleasant, that she enslaved alike the eyes and understanding of all whom she encountered." And such is the interest with which her memory is still invested, that numbers daily visit her chamber at Hever Castle

CARDINAL WOLSEY.

Thomas Wolsey was born at Ipswich, in March, 1471. There is some doubt among his biographers whether his father was a butcher or grazier, or both. However this may be, the son received a learned education, and being endowed with an excellent capacity, he was admitted into the Marquis of Dorset's family as tutor to his children. Having obtained the confidence of his patron, he was presented by that nobleman to the rectory of Lymington, in Somersetshire, Oct. 10, 1500. Being of a gay and sociable disposition, he accompanied some of his neighbours to a fair in the neighbourhood, where creating a disturbance, he was put in the stocks by Sir Amyas Powlet, a justice of the peace. This seems not to have been any obstacle to his advancement. By the recommendation of Sir John Naport, he was made one of the King's chaplains. While in this situation he insinuated himself into the favour of Fox, Bishop of Winchester, who recommended him to Henry VII., as a fit person to negotiate a marriage betwixt that monarch and the Duchess of Savoy. He acquitted himself so well in this embassy, that on his return he was made Dean of Lincoln, and Prebendary of Walton Brinhold.

Wolsey was in these circumstances when Henry VIII. became king. He soon insinuated himself into the confidence of that monarch. He was admitted to Henry's parties of pleasure, he took the lead in every jovial conversation, and promoted all that frolic and fun which he found agreeable to the age and inclination of the king. He was then forty years of age, but neither that nor his character of a clergyman appears to have been any check upon his gaiety; and he laughed, danced, sung and rallied, and laid aside all the severity appertaining to his station. His power over the king became almost absolute. Henry made him a member of his council, and abandoned to him the entire direction of the administration. He was promoted to the archiepiscopal see of York, which he was allowed to hold in conjunction with the rich bishoprics of Winchester and Durham. He held in commendam the abbey of St. Albans, and many other church preferments. In short, the wealth and honours he possessed were almost without

(near Edenbridge, in Kent), and eagerly listen to the romantic traditions which point out the hill where Henry used to sound his bugle when he came to visit her, in their happy days of courtship, from his palace at Eltham; and the exact spot in the garden where, at the turn of a walk, she suddenly came upon the king, who was so struck with her wonderous beauty, which the confusion wrought by so unexpected a meeting greatly augmented, that from that moment he was inspired with the fatal passion which raised its unfortunate object to the throne but to translate her to the block. The axe with which the " little neck" of the cruelly-sacrificed queen was severed is still preserved in the Tower, and shares with her grave in the chapel the melancholy interest which for more than three hundred years has been associated with her name.

It is said that during the night which followed her execution, her body was secretly removed from its grave before the altar in the Tower chapel, and buried in the church of Salle, in Norfolk, where a black marble slab is shown as the cover ing of her remains.

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