The Story of Katharine Howard. Ford Madox Ford

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The Story of Katharine Howard - Ford Madox Ford

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       Ford Madox Ford

      The Story of Katharine Howard: Historical Novels

      (The Fifth Queen, Privy Seal & The Fifth Queen Crowned)

      Published by

      Books

      - Advanced Digital Solutions & High-Quality eBook Formatting -

       [email protected]

      2019 OK Publishing

      EAN 4064066052256

      Table of Contents

       The Fifth Queen; And How She Came to Court

       Privy Seal

       The Fifth Queen Crowned

      The Fifth Queen; And How She Came to Court

       Table of Contents

       Part One: The Coming

       I

       II

       III

       IV

       V

       VI

       VII

       Part Two: The House of Eyes

       I

       II

       III

       IV

       V

       VI

       VII

       VIII

       IX

       Part Three: The King Moves

       I

       II

       III

       IV

       Part One

       The Coming

       Table of Contents

      I

       Table of Contents

      Magister Nicholas Udal, the Lady Mary’s pedagogue, was very hungry and very cold. He stood undecided in the mud of a lane in the Austin Friars. The quickset hedges on either side were only waist high and did not shelter him. The little houses all round him of white daub with grey corner beams had been part of the old friars’ stables and offices. All that neighbourhood was a maze of dwellings and gardens, with the hedges dry, the orchard trees bare with frost, the arbours wintry and deserted. This congregation of small cottages was like a patch of common that squatters had taken; the great house of the Lord Privy Seal, who had pulled down the monastery to make room for it, was a central mass. Its gilded vanes were in the shape of men at arms, and tore the ragged clouds with the banners on their lances. Nicholas Udal looked at the roof and cursed the porter of it.

      ‘He could have given me a cup of hypocras,’ he said, and muttered, as a man to whom Latin is more familiar than the vulgar tongue, a hexameter about ‘pocula plena.’

      He had reached London before nine in one of the King’s barges that came from Greenwich to take musicians back that night at four. He had breakfasted with the Lady Mary’s women at six off warm small beer and fresh meat, but it was eleven already, and he had spent all his money upon good letters.

      He muttered: ‘Pauper sum, pateor, fateor, quod Di dant fero,’ but it did not warm him.

      The magister had been put in the Lady Mary’s household by the Lord Privy Seal, and he had a piece of news as to the Lady’s means of treasonable correspondence with the Emperor her uncle. He had imagined that the news — which would hurt no one because it was imaginary — might be worth some crowns to him. But the Lord Privy Seal and all his secretaries had gone to Greenwich before it was light, and there was nothing there for the magister.

      ‘You might have known as much, a learned man,’ the porter had snarled at him. ‘Isn’t the new Queen at Rochester? Would our lord bide here? Didn’t your magistership pass his barge on the river?’

      ‘Nay, it was still dark,’ the magister answered. The porter sniffed and slammed to the grating in the wicket. Being of the Old Faith he hated those Lutherans — or those men

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