Henry VIII. to Anne Boleyn.
[ 1527? ]
To my mistress.
Because the time seems very long since I heard concerning your health and you,
the great affection I have for you has induced me to send you this bearer, to be better informed
of your health and pleasure, and because, since my parting from you, I have been told that the
opinion in which I left you is totally changed, and that you would not come to court either with
your mother, if you could, or in any other manner; which report, if true, I cannot sufficiently
marvel at, because I am sure that I have since never done anything to offend you, and it seems a
very poor return for the great love which I bear you to keep me at a distance both from the speech
and the person of the woman that I esteem most in the world; and if you love me with as much affection
as I hope you do, I am sure that the distance of our two persons would be a little irksome to you, though
this does not belong so much to the mistress as to the servant. Consider well, my mistress, that absence
from you grieves me sorely, hoping that it is not your will that it should be so; but if I knew for
certain that you voluntarily desired it, I could do no other than mourn my ill-fortune, and by degrees
abate my great folly. And so, for lack of time, I make an end of this rude letter, beseeching you to
give credence to this bearer in all that he will tell you from me. Written by the hand of your entire servant,
H.R.
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