<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VII"></SPAN>CHAPTER VII<br/> <span class="subhead">1547-1548</span> <span class="subhead">Katherine Parr’s unhappy married life—Dissensions between the Seymour brothers—The King and his uncles—The Admiral and Princess Elizabeth—Birth of Katherine’s child, and her death.</span></h2></div>
<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> belated idyll of love and happiness enjoyed
by “Kateryn the Quene” was of pitifully short
duration. During the first days of September 1548,
some fifteen months after the stolen marriage at
Chelsea, a funeral procession left Sudeley Castle,
and the body of the wife of the Lord Admiral
was carried forth to burial, Lady Jane Grey, his
ward, then in her twelfth year, acting as chief
mourner.<SPAN name="FNanchor_61" href="#Footnote_61" class="fnanchor">61</SPAN></p>
<p>Jane had good cause to mourn, in other than
an official capacity. It is hard to believe that, had
Katherine Parr been living, the child she had cared
for and who had made her home under her roof,
would not have been saved from the doom destined
to overtake her not six years later.</p>
<p>Katherine’s dream had died before she did, and
the period of her marriage, short though it was,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81">81</SPAN></span>
must have been a time of rapid disillusionment.
It could scarcely, taking the circumstances into
account, have been otherwise. Seymour was not
the man to make the happiness of a wife touching
upon middle age, studious, learned, and devout,
“avoiding all occasions of idleness, and contemning
vain pastimes.”<SPAN name="FNanchor_62" href="#Footnote_62" class="fnanchor">62</SPAN> His love, if indeed it had been ever
other than disguised ambition, was short-lived, and
Katherine’s awakening must have come all too swiftly.</p>
<p>Nor was the revelation of her husband’s true
character her only cause of trouble. Minor vexations
had, from the first, attended her new condition
of life, and she had been made to feel that the wife
of the Protector’s younger brother could not expect
to enjoy the deference due to a Dowager-Queen.
To Katherine, who clung to her former dignity, the
loss of it was no light matter, and her sister-in-law,
the Duchess of Somerset, and she were at open war.</p>
<p>Contemporary and early writers are agreed as
to the nature of the woman with whom she had
to deal. “The Protector,” explains the Spanish
chronicler, giving the popular version of the affair,
“had a wife who was prouder than he was, and she
ruled the Protector so completely that he did whatever
she wished, and she, finding herself in such
great state, became more presumptuous than
Lucifer.”<SPAN name="FNanchor_63" href="#Footnote_63" class="fnanchor">63</SPAN> Hayward attributes the subsequent
disunion between the brothers, in the first place,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82">82</SPAN></span>
to “the unquiet vanity of a mannish, or rather a
devilish woman ... for many imperfections
intolerable, but for pride monstrous”;<SPAN name="FNanchor_64" href="#Footnote_64" class="fnanchor">64</SPAN> whilst
Heylyn represents the Duchess as observing that, if
Mr. Admiral should teach his wife no better manners,
“I am she that will.”<SPAN name="FNanchor_65" href="#Footnote_65" class="fnanchor">65</SPAN></p>
<p>The struggle for precedence carried on between
the wives could scarcely fail to have a bad effect
upon the relationship of the husbands, already at
issue upon graver questions; and Warwick,
Somerset’s future rival, was at hand to foment
the strife between Protector and Admiral, and,
“secretly playing with both hands,” paved the
way for the fall of the younger brother and the
consequent weakening of the forces which barred
the way to the attainment of his personal ambitions.</p>
<div id="ip_82" class="figcenter" style="width: 463px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_082.jpg" width-obs="463" height-obs="600" alt="" />
<p class="p0 in0 smaller">From a photo by W. Mansell & Co. after an engraving.</p>
<div class="caption"><p>KATHERINE PARR.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>Nor can there be any doubt that, apart from
the ill offices of those who desired to separate the
interests of the brothers, the Protector had good
reason to stand upon his guard. When Seymour
was tried for his life during the winter of 1548-9,
dependants and equals alike came forward to bear
witness to his intriguing propensities, their evidence
going far to prove that, whatever may be thought
of Somerset’s conduct as a brother in sending him to
the scaffold, as head of the State and responsible for
the government of the realm, he was not without<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83">83</SPAN></span>
justification. It is clear that from the first the
Admiral, jealous of the position accorded to the
Duke by the Council, had been sedulously engaged
in attempting to undermine his power, and had
not disguised his resentment at his appropriation
of undivided authority. Never had it been seen
in a minority—so he informed a confidant<SPAN name="FNanchor_66" href="#Footnote_66" class="fnanchor">66</SPAN>—that
the one brother should bear all rule, the other
none. One being Protector, the other should
have filled the post of Governor to the King, so
he averred; although, on another occasion, contradicting
himself, he declared he would wish the
earth to open and swallow him rather than accept
either post. There was abundant proof that he
had done his utmost, whenever opportunity was
afforded him, to rouse the King to discontent.
It was a disagreeable feature of the day that men
were in no wise slack in accusing their friends in
times of disgrace, thereby seeking to safeguard their
reputations; and Dorset came forward later to
testify that Seymour had told him that his nephew
had divers times made his moan, saying that “My
uncle of Somerset dealeth very hardly with me, and
keepeth me so straight that I cannot have money at
my will.” The Lord Admiral, added the boy, both
sent him money and gave it to him.<SPAN name="FNanchor_67" href="#Footnote_67" class="fnanchor">67</SPAN></p>
<p>Perhaps the most significant testimony brought
against the Admiral was that of the little King<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84">84</SPAN></span>
himself, who asserted that Seymour had charged
him with being “bashful” in his own affairs, asking
why he did not speak to bear rule as did other Kings.
“I said I needed not, for I was well enough,” the
boy replied on this occasion. At another time,
according to his confession, a conversation took
place the more grim from the simplicity of the
language in which it is recorded.</p>
<p>“Within these two years at least,” said Edward,
now eleven years old, “he said, ‘Ye must take upon
yourself to rule, and then ye may give your men
somewhat; for your uncle is old, and I trust he will
not live long.’ I answered it were better that he
should die.”<SPAN name="FNanchor_68" href="#Footnote_68" class="fnanchor">68</SPAN></p>
<p>It was scarcely possible that the Protector should
not have been cognisant of a part at least of his
brother’s machinations; and he naturally, so far as
was possible, kept his charge from falling further
under the influence of his enemies. The young
King’s affection for his step-mother had been a
cause of disquiet to her brother-in-law and his
wife, care being taken to separate him from her
as much as was possible. So long as Katherine
remained in London it had been Edward’s habit to
visit her apartments unattended, and by a private
entrance. Familiar intercourse of this kind terminated
when she removed to a distance; and, so
far as the Lord Protector could ensure obedience,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85">85</SPAN></span>
little communication was permitted between the
two during the short time the Queen had to live.
The boy, however, was constant to old affection, and
used what opportunities he could to express it.</p>
<p>“If his Grace could get any spare time,” wrote
one John Fowler, a servant of the royal household,
to the Admiral, “his Grace would write
a letter to the Queen’s Grace, and to you. His
Highness desires your lordship to pardon him, for
his Grace is not half a quarter of an hour alone.
But in such leisure as his Grace has, his Majesty
hath written (here enclosed) his commendations to
the Queen’s Grace and to your lordship, that he is
so much bound to you that he must remember you
always, and, as his Grace may have time, you shall
well perceive by such small lines of recommendations
with his own hand.”<SPAN name="FNanchor_69" href="#Footnote_69" class="fnanchor">69</SPAN></p>
<p>The scribbled notes, on scraps of paper, written
by stealth and as he could find opportunity, by the
King, testify to the closeness of the watch kept
upon him; their contents show the means by which
the Admiral strove to maintain his hold upon his
nephew.</p>
<p>“My lord,” so runs the first, “send me, per
Latimer, as much as ye think good, and deliver it
to Fowler.” The second note is one of thanks.</p>
<p>An attempt was made by the Admiral to obtain<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86">86</SPAN></span>
a letter from the King which, complaining of the
Protector’s system of restraint, should be laid before
Parliament; but the intrigue was discovered, the
Admiral summoned to appear before the Council,
and, though he was at first inclined to bluster, and
replied by a defiance, a hint of imprisonment brought
him to reason, and some sort of hollow reconciliation
between the brothers followed.</p>
<p>The King, the unfortunate subject of dispute, was
probably lonely enough. For his tutor, Sir John
Cheke, and for his school-mate, Barnaby Fitzpatrick,
he appears to have entertained a real affection; but
for his elder uncle and guardian he had little liking,
nor was the Duchess of Somerset a woman to win
the heart of her husband’s ward. From his step-mother
and the Admiral he was practically cut off;
and his sisters, for whom his attachment was genuine,
were at a distance, and paid only occasional visits to
Court. Mary’s influence, as a Catholic, would
naturally have been feared; and Elizabeth, living
for the time under the Admiral’s roof, would be
regarded likewise with suspicion. But the happiness
of the nominal head of the State was not a
principal consideration with those around him, mostly
engaged in a struggle not only to secure present
personal advantages, but to ensure their continuance
at such time as Edward should have attained his
majority.</p>
<p>The relations between the Seymour brothers being<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87">87</SPAN></span>
that of a scarcely disguised hostility, the Admiral had
the more reason to congratulate himself upon having
obtained the possession and disposal of the person
of Lady Jane Grey—third, save for her mother,
in the line of succession to the throne. Should her
guardian succeed in effecting her marriage with the
King the arrangement might prove of vital importance.
On the other hand, Somerset’s matrimonial
schemes for the younger members of the
royal house were of an altogether different nature.
He would have liked to marry the King to a daughter
of his own, another Lady Jane, and to have obtained
the hand of Lady Jane Grey for his son, young
Lord Hertford.</p>
<p>Such projects, however, belonged to the future.
Nothing could be done for the present, nor does it
appear that, when Somerset’s scheme afterwards
became known to the King, it met with any favour
in his eyes; since, noting it in his journal, he added
his private intention of wedding “a foreign princess,
well stuffed and jewelled.”</p>
<p>So far as Katherine was concerned, her domestic
affairs were probably causing her too much anxiety
to leave attention to spare for those of King or
kingdom, except as they were gratifying, or the
reverse, to her husband. Since the May day when
she had given herself, rashly and eagerly, into
the keeping of the Lord Admiral, she had been
sorrowfully enlightened as to the nature of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88">88</SPAN></span>
man and of his affection; and, if she still loved
him, her heart must often have been heavy. The
presence of the Princess Elizabeth under her roof
had been disastrous in its consequences; and,
though it was at first the interest of all to keep
the matter secret, the inquisition made at the time
of the Admiral’s disgrace into the circumstances
of his married life affords an insight into his wife’s
wrongs.</p>
<p>In a conversation held between Mrs. Ashley,
Elizabeth’s governess, and her cofferer, Parry, after
the Queen’s death, the possibility of a marriage
between the widower and the Princess was discussed,
Parry raising objections to the scheme, on the score
that he had heard evil of Seymour as being covetous
and oppressive, and also “how cruelly, dishonourably,
and jealously he had used the Queen.”</p>
<p>Ashley, from first to last eager to forward the
Admiral’s interests, brushed the protest aside.</p>
<p>“Tush, tush,” she replied, “that is no matter.
I know him better than ye do, or those that do so
report him. I know he will make but too much of
her, and that she knows well enough.”<SPAN name="FNanchor_70" href="#Footnote_70" class="fnanchor">70</SPAN></p>
<p>The same witness confessed at this later date that
she feared the Admiral had loved the Princess too
well, and the Queen had been jealous of both—an
avowal corroborated by Elizabeth’s admissions,
when she too underwent examination concerning the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89">89</SPAN></span>
relations which had existed between herself and her
step-mother’s husband.</p>
<p>“Kat Ashley told me,” she deposed, “after the
Lord Admiral was married to the Queen, that if my
lord might have had his own will, he would have
had me, afore the Queen. Then I asked her how
she knew that. Then she said she knew it well
enough, both from himself and from others.”<SPAN name="FNanchor_71" href="#Footnote_71" class="fnanchor">71</SPAN></p>
<p>If the correspondence quoted in a previous page is
genuine,<SPAN name="FNanchor_72" href="#Footnote_72" class="fnanchor">72</SPAN> Elizabeth, though she may have had reason
to keep her knowledge to herself, can have been in
no doubt as to the Admiral’s sentiments at the time
of her father’s death. With a governess of Mrs.
Ashley’s type, a girl of fifteen such as Elizabeth
was shown to be by her subsequent career, and a
man like Seymour, it would not have been difficult
to prophesy trouble. That the Admiral was in
love with his wife’s charge may be doubted; in
the same way that ambition, rather than any other
sentiment, may be credited with his desire to obtain
her hand a few months earlier. What was certain
was that he amused himself, after his boisterous
fashion, with the sharp-witted girl to an extent calculated
to cause both uneasiness and anger to the
Queen. That no actual harm was intended may be
true—he could scarcely have been blind to the consequences
had he dared to deal otherwise with the
daughter and sister of Kings; and the whole story,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90">90</SPAN></span>
when it subsequently came to light, reads like an
instance of coarse and vulgar flirtation, in harmony
with the nature of the man and the habits of the
times. What is less easy to account for is Katherine’s
partial connivance, in its earlier stages, at the rough
horse-play, if nothing worse, carried on by her
husband and her step-daughter. A scene, for
example, is described as taking place at Hanworth,
where the Admiral, in the garden with his wife and
the Princess, cut the girl’s gown, “being black cloth,”
into a hundred pieces; Elizabeth replying to Mrs.
Ashley’s protests by saying that “she could not
strive with all, for the Queen held her while the
Lord Admiral cut the dress.” Nor was this the
only occasion upon which Katherine appears to have
looked on without disapproval whilst her husband
treated her charge in a fashion befitting her character
neither as Princess nor guest.</p>
<p>The explanation may lie in the fact that the unfortunate
Queen was attempting to adapt her taste
and her manners to those of the man she had married.
But the condition of the household could not last.
A crisis was reached when one day Katherine, coming
unexpectedly upon the two, found Seymour with the
Princess in his arms, and decided, none too soon,
that an end must be put to the situation. It was
not long after that the households of Queen and
Princess were parted, “and as I remember,” explained
Parry the cofferer, “this was the cause why she was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91">91</SPAN></span>
sent from the Queen, or else that her Grace parted
from the Queen. I do not perfectly remember
whether of both she [Ashley] said she went of herself
or was sent away.”<SPAN name="FNanchor_73" href="#Footnote_73" class="fnanchor">73</SPAN></p>
<p>There can be little doubt, one would imagine, that
it was Katherine who determined to disembarrass
herself of her visitor. A letter from Elizabeth, evidently
written after their separation, appears to show
that farewell had been taken in outwardly friendly
fashion, although the promise she quotes Katherine
as making has an ambiguous sound about it. The
Princess wrote to say that she had been replete in
sorrow at leaving the Queen, “and albeit I answered
little, I weighed it more deeply when you said you
would warn me of all evils that you should hear of
me; for if your Grace had not a good opinion of
me, you would not have offered friendship to me
that way, that all men judge the contrary.”<SPAN name="FNanchor_74" href="#Footnote_74" class="fnanchor">74</SPAN></p>
<p>It is not difficult to detect the sore feeling underlying
Elizabeth’s acknowledgments of a promise of
open criticism. Katherine must have breathed more
freely when the Princess and her governess had
quitted the house.</p>
<p>Meantime, in spite of disappointment and anger
and care, the winter was to bring the Queen one
genuine cause of rejoicing. Thrice married without
children, she was hoping to give Seymour an heir,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92">92</SPAN></span>
and the prospect was hailed with delight by husband
and wife alike. In her gladness, and the chief cause
of dissension removed, her just grounds of complaint
were forgotten; her letters continued to be couched
in terms as loving as if no domestic friction had
interrupted her wedded happiness, and she ranged
herself upon Seymour’s side in his recurrent disputes
with his brother with a passionate vehemence
out of keeping with her character.</p>
<p>“This shall be to advertise you,” she wrote some
time in 1548, “that my lord your brother hath
this afternoon made me a little warm. It was
fortunate we were so much distant, for I suppose
else I should have bitten him. What cause have
they to fear having such a wife! It is requisite for
them continually to pray for a dispatch of that hell.
To-morrow, or else upon Saturday ... I will see
the King, where I intend to utter all my choler to
my lord your brother, if you shall not give me
advice to the contrary.”<SPAN name="FNanchor_75" href="#Footnote_75" class="fnanchor">75</SPAN></p>
<p>Another letter, also indicating the strained relations
existing between the brothers, is again full of affection
for the man who deserved it so ill.</p>
<p>“I gave your little knave your blessing,” she tells
the Admiral, alluding to the unborn child neither
parent was to see grow up, “... bidding my
sweetheart and loving husband better to fare than
myself.”<SPAN name="FNanchor_76" href="#Footnote_76" class="fnanchor">76</SPAN></p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93">93</SPAN></span>
A few months more, and hope and fear and love
and disappointment were alike to find an end.
Sudeley Castle, where the final scene took place,
was a property granted to the Admiral on the death
of the late King, from which he took his title as Lord
Seymour of Sudeley. It was a question whether
those responsible for the government had the right
of alienating possessions of the Crown during the
minority of a sovereign, and the tenure upon which
the place was held was therefore insecure, Katherine
asserting on one occasion that it was her husband’s
intention to restore it to his nephew when he should
come of age. In awaiting that event Seymour and
his wife had the enjoyment of the beauty for which
the old building had long been noted.</p>
<p>“Ah, Sudeley Castle, thou art the traitor, not
I!” said one of its former lords as, arrested by the
orders of Henry IV. for treason, and taken away to
abide his trial, he cast a last look back at his home—a
possession worthy of being coveted by a King,
and by the attainder of its owner forfeited to the
Crown.</p>
<p>Here, during the summer of 1548—the last
Katherine was to see—a motley company gathered
round the Queen. Jane Grey, “the young and
early wise,” was still a member of her household,
and the repudiated wife of Katherine’s brother, the
Earl of Northampton—placed, it would seem, under
some species of restraint—was in the keeping of her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94">94</SPAN></span>
sister-in-law. Her true and tried friend, Lady
Tyrwhitt, described by her husband as half a Scripture
woman, kept her company, as she had done in her
perilous days of royal state. Learned divines, living
with her in the capacity of chaplains, were inmates
of the castle, charged with the duty of performing
service twice each day—exercises little to the taste
of the master of the house, who made no secret of
his aversion for them.</p>
<p>“I have heard say,” affirmed Latimer, in the
course of one of the sermons, preached after
Seymour’s execution, in which the Bishop took
occasion again and again to revile the dead man,
“I have heard say that when the good Queen that
is gone had ordained daily prayer in her house,
both before noon and after noon, the Admiral
getteth him out of the way, like a mole digging in
the earth. He shall be Lot’s wife to me as long as
I live.”<SPAN name="FNanchor_77" href="#Footnote_77" class="fnanchor">77</SPAN></p>
<p>To Sudeley also had repaired, in the course of
the summer, Lord Dorset, possibly desirous of
assuring himself that all was well with his little
daughter. He may have had other objects in view.
According to his subsequent confession, Seymour
had discussed with him the methods to be pursued
in order to gain popularity in the country, making
significant inquiries as to the formation of the
marquis’s household.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95">95</SPAN></span>
Learning that Dorset had divers gentlemen who
were his servants, the Admiral admitted that it was
well. “Yet,” he added shrewdly, “trust not too
much to the gentlemen, for they have something
to lose”; proceeding to urge his ally to make much
of the chief yeomen and men of their class, who
were able to persuade the multitude; to visit them
in their houses, bringing venison and wine; to use
familiarity with them, and thus to gain their love.
Such, he added, was his own intention.<SPAN name="FNanchor_78" href="#Footnote_78" class="fnanchor">78</SPAN></p>
<p>Another inmate had been received at Sudeley
not more than a few weeks before Katherine’s confinement.
This was the Princess Elizabeth, who
appears, by a letter she addressed to the Queen when
the visit had been concluded, to have been at this
time again on terms of friendship and affection
with her step-mother, since writing to Katherine
with very little leisure on the last day of July, she
returned humble thanks for the Queen’s wish that
she should have remained with her “till she were
weary of that country.” Yet in spite of the
hospitable desire, she can scarcely have been a
welcome guest, and it must have been with little
regret that her step-mother saw her depart.</p>
<p>Meantime, the birth of the Queen’s child was
anxiously expected. Seymour characteristically desired
a son who “should God give him life to live
as long as his father, will avenge his wrongs”—the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96">96</SPAN></span>
problematical wrongs of a man who had risen to
his heights. Elizabeth, who had done her best to
wreck the Queen’s happiness and peace, was “praying
the Almighty God to send her a most lucky deliverance”;
and Mary, more sincere in her friendship,
wrote a letter full of affection to her step-mother.
The preparations made by Katherine for the new-comer
equalled in magnificence those that might
have befitted a Prince of Wales; and though the
birth of a girl, on August 30, must have been in
some degree a disappointment, she received a
welcome scarcely less warm than might have been
accorded to the desired son. A general reconciliation
appears to have taken place on the occasion, and
the Protector responded to the announcement of
the event in terms of cordial congratulation, regarding
the advent of so pretty a daughter in the
light of a “prophesy and good hansell to a great
sort of happy sons.”</p>
<p>Eight days after the rejoicings at the birth Katherine
was dead.</p>
<p>Into the circumstances attending her illness and
death close inquisition was made at a time when
it had become an object to throw discredit upon the
Admiral, and foul play—the use of poison—was
suggested. The charge was probably without
foundation; the facts elicited nevertheless afford
additional proof of the unsatisfactory relations existing
between husband and wife, and throw a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97">97</SPAN></span>
melancholy light upon the closing scene of the
union from which so much had been hoped.</p>
<p>It was deposed by Lady Tyrwhitt, one of the
principal witnesses, that, upon her visiting the
chamber of the sick woman one morning, two days
before her death, Katherine had asked where she
had been so long, adding that “she did fear such
things in herself that she was sure she could not
live.” When her friend attempted to soothe her by
reassuring words, the Queen went on to say—holding
her husband’s hand and being, as Lady
Tyrwhitt thought, partly delirious—“I am not well
handled; for those that be about me care not for
me, but stand laughing at my grief, and the more
good I will to them the less good they will to me.”</p>
<p>The words, to those cognisant of the condition
of the household, must have been startling. The
Queen may have been wandering, yet her complaint,
as such complaints do, pointed to a truth. Others
besides Lady Tyrwhitt were standing by; and
Seymour made no attempt to ignore his wife’s
meaning, or to deny that the charge was directed
against himself.</p>
<p>“Why, sweet heart,” he said, “I would do you
no hurt.”</p>
<p>“No, my lord, I think not,” answered
Katherine aloud, adding, in his ear, “but, my
lord, you have given me many shrewd taunts.”</p>
<p>“These words,” said Lady Tyrwhitt in her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98">98</SPAN></span>
narrative, “I perceived she spake with good memory,
and very sharply and earnestly, for her mind was
sore disquieted.”</p>
<p>After consultation it was decided that Seymour
should lie down by her side and seek to quiet her
by gentle words; but his efforts were ineffectual, the
Queen interrupting him by saying, roundly and
sharply, “that she would have given a thousand
marks to have had her full talk with the doctor on
the day of her delivery, but dared not, for fear of
his displeasure.”</p>
<p>“And I, hearing that,” said the lady-in-waiting,
“perceived her trouble to be so great, that my heart
would serve me to hear no more.”<SPAN name="FNanchor_79" href="#Footnote_79" class="fnanchor">79</SPAN></p>
<p>Yet on that same day the dying Queen made
her will and, “being persuaded and perceiving the
extremity of death to approach her,” left all she
possessed to her husband, wishing it a thousand
times more in value than it was.<SPAN name="FNanchor_80" href="#Footnote_80" class="fnanchor">80</SPAN></p>
<p>Whether pressure was used, or whether, in spite
of all, her old love awakened and stirred her to
kindness towards the man she was leaving, there
is nothing to show. But the names of the witnesses—Robert
Huyck, the physician attending her, and
John Parkhurst, her chaplain, afterwards a Bishop—would
seem a guarantee that the document, dictated
but not signed—no uncommon case—was genuine.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_99">99</SPAN></span>
For the rest, Seymour was coarse and heartless, a
man of ambition, and intent upon the furtherance
of his fortunes. It is not unlikely that, when his
wife lay dying, his thoughts may have turned to
the girl to whom he had in his own way already
made love; who, of higher rank than the Queen,
might serve his interests better, and whom her
death would leave him free to win as his bride.
And Katherine, with the memories of the last two
years to aid her and with the intuitions born of
love and jealousy, may have divined his thoughts.
But of murder, or of hastening the end by actual
unkindness, there is no reason to suspect him. The
affair was in any case sufficiently tragic, and one
more mournful recollection to be stored in the
minds of those who had loved the Queen.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100">100</SPAN></span></p>
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