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Henry VIII. to Anne Boleyn.
[ October, 1528? ]
To inform you what joy it is to me to understand of your conformableness with reason, and of the suppressing of your
inutile and vain thoughts with the bridle of reason. I assure you all the greatness of this world could not counterpoise
for my satisfaction the knowledge and certainty thereof. Therefore, good sweetheart, continue the same, not only in this,
but in all your doings hereafter; for thereby shall come, both to you and me the greatest quietness that may be in this
world. The cause why the bearer stays so long, is the gear I have had to dress up for you1 which I trust,
ere long, to see you occupy;2and then I trust to occupy yours, which shall be recompense enough to me for
all my pains and labour.
The unfeigned sickness of this well-willing legate3 doth somewhat retard
this access to your person; but I trust verily, when God shall send him health, he will with diligence recompense his
demur. For I know well when he hath said (touching the saying and bruit4 that he is thought imperial),5
that it shall be well known in this matter that he is not imperial;5 and this, for lack of time. Farewell.
Written with the hand which fain would be yours, and so is the heart,
H. R.
1. The furnishing of Suffolk House.
2. To use.
3. Cardinal Campeggio, who was expected to open the legantine court,
and pronounce the divorce. Anne suspected that his illness was fictitious.
4. Noise or report, rumours.
5. Meaning that he was not devoted to the interests of Queen Katherine's nephew, the emperor.
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Source:
Letters of the Kings of England. Vol I. James Orchard Halliwell, Ed.
London: Henry Colburn, 1848. 319-320.
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Created by Anniina Jokinen on October 28, 2018.
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The Tudors
The Parents of Henry VIII
King Henry VII
Elizabeth of York
The Six Wives of Henry VIII
Queen Catherine of Aragon
Queen Anne Boleyn
Queen Jane Seymour
Queen Anne of Cleves
Queen Catherine Howard
Queen Katherine Parr
The Children of Henry VIII
Henry Fitzroy, Duke of Richmond
King Edward VI
Queen Mary I
Queen Elizabeth I
The King's Advisors
Cardinal Thomas Wolsey
Archbishop Thomas Cranmer
Thomas Cromwell
Sir Thomas More
European Monarchs
Margaret Tudor, Queen of Scotland
James IV, King of Scotland
James V, King of Scotland
Mary of Guise, Queen of Scotland
Mary Tudor, Queen of France
Louis XII, King of France
Francis I, King of France
Ferdinand II, King of Aragon
Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor
Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor
Popes
Pope Julius II
Pope Leo X
Pope Clement VII
Pope Paul III
English Nobility
Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk
Edward Stafford, D. of Buckingham
Thomas Howard, 3rd D. of Norfolk
John Dudley, D. of Northumberland
Thomas Boleyn, Earl of Wiltshire
George Boleyn, Viscount Rochford
John Russell, Earl of Bedford
Thomas, Lord Audley
Richard de la Pole
Thomas Seymour, Lord Admiral
Edward Seymour, Protector Somerset
Clergy
Cardinal Lorenzo Campeggio
Cardinal Reginald Pole
Bishop Stephen Gardiner
Edmund Bonner, Bishop of London
Nicholas Ridley, Bishop of London
John Hooper, Bishop of Gloucester
John Aylmer, Bishop of London
John Fisher, Bishop of Rochester
Archbishop William Warham
Richard Fox, Bishop of Winchester
Edward Fox, Bishop of Hereford
William Tyndale
Hugh Latimer
William Grocyn
Thomas Linacre
Historical Events
The Battle of the Spurs, 1513
Field of the Cloth of Gold, 1520
Dissolution of Monasteries, 1536-40
Pilgrimage of Grace, 1536
The Siege of Boulogne, 1544
The Sweating Sickness
Tudor Legal System
Common Law
Court of Common Pleas
Court of King's Bench
Court of Star Chamber
Council of the North
Attainder
Oath of Supremacy
The Act of Supremacy, 1534
The Act of Succession, 1534
The Ten Articles, 1536
The Six Articles, 1539
Royal Residences
Greenwich Palace
Hatfield House
Richmond Palace
Windsor Palace
Tudor Literature
See section
16th-century Renaissance English Literature
More at Encyclopedia
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