LAURA COWIE
... Miss Cowie began her theatrical career with Sir Herbert Tree at His Majesty's and one of her earliest successes was as Anne Boleyn in Henry VIII when she endowed a small part with significance and beauty Hal Linden ...
... Miss Cowie began her theatrical career with Sir Herbert Tree at His Majesty's and one of her earliest successes was as Anne Boleyn in Henry VIII when she endowed a small part with significance and beauty Hal Linden ...
... unexpected gift, and in due course increased its amenities by adding a battlemented bridge in honour of his owne darling, Anne Boleyn mother of Queen Eliza beth. In this wonderful palace where Henry grew accustomed to spending his honeymoons, doubtless ...
... lived the singer, Jenny Lind; Rydal Mount, at Ambleside, haunt of the Lake poets Hever Castle, in Kent, childhood home of Anne Boleyn; Knole Park, near Sevenoaks, woven for ever into the complex tapestry of English history; Hinton Ampner in Buckinghamshire ...
... attention to the Castle at Windsor and particularly to the Chapel oj the Order in the lower ward of the Castle. window where Anne Boleyn sat when he saw her first. HERALDIC BEASTS THE Lower Ward is dominated by the immense heraldic beasts which have lately ...
... put in much of his great work in secretly translating the Bible into English. It is ironic to learn that Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn stayed here in 1535 when the plague in Bristol kept the Court at a safe distance. The author of Westward Ho!, Hereward the ...
... from page 25) king's initial being amorously entwined on the walls (still to be seen in the Presence Chamber) with that of Anne Boleyn, provok ing the public to merriment at the sight of the ensuing syllables: HA!. HA! St. James's became the official home ...
... the Cophetuatherne and the first film she made in Hollywood. HLSA Lanchester as Anne of Cleeves, in The Private Life of Henry JO j VIII, conveys the wit and brusquerie of Anne but hardly fulfils Henry's uncomplimentary description of her as the Flanders ...
... Fancy Dress balls as Peter Pan You may not. But she does, all the same. How much better she would look as Anne Boleyn. No one ever saw Anne Boleyn's ankles --except Henry VIII. He had her executed, didn't he MOST of you will know my friends, the Slit herington ...
... But this seems to be derived from Rosinis, a Celtic word meaning nothing more than the moorland isle or promontory. Anne Boleyn is associated with the more popular theory. Henry VIII had brought her here for their honeymoon and, wondering what the ...
... bundle of dirty linen. She goes, and God speed her. Down in the crypt of the palace it was that Thomas Cranmer extorted from Anne Boleyn, ill-fated wife of Henty VIII, a confession of her guilt, three days before she went to meet her death on the execution ...
... procession of Kings who have built up its wonderful history. These are the Dean's cloisters, where Henry the Eighth first saw Anne Boleyn sitting at that window. His ghost still moans here at night. And This stone ceiling was hand-carved in the reign of Henry ...
... While they were mak ing selections from the score of princes who expressed themselves willing to espouse the daughter of Anne Boleyn, the Queen fell in love with her handsome Robert Dudley. There could be no thought of marriage between them, for Dudley ...