Refine Search

Countries

Counties

Lanarkshire, Scotland

Access Type

31

Type

31

Public Tags

DR SAINT-SAENS'S NEW OPERA

... 'rieseo-soprno soliloquy fsor Anne. A de>t between Catherine and Anne, which even,- tuallv becomes a ratlier' angry oep, and th e sixrval of the Legate of thec Pope practios~y. cio.e the act: ' The duet between the King and Anne is. howe-ver, ?? chief feature ...

TOWN AND TABLE TALK ON LITERATURE, ART, &c

... other portrait is bluff King Hal seen so fully to the life. He does 1 all but speak to Wolsev or Anne Boleyn and in no other -miniature do we see Anne of Cleves so fair, so fresh-as if - three hundred years had passed over her comely looks, as they have ...

THE ROYAL ACADEMY EXHIBITION

... s dawn of jealousy. The Queen is passing by an open door, through which she perceives' Henry fanning and flirting with Anne Boleyn. There are numerous figures in the composition. Mr Marks will be re- presented by one large picture St Francis Preach- ...

LITERATURE

... LITE-RATUPRE. (1) Inse Boleyn, Without intending it, the author of this work, who eudeavours to throw fresh light en the causes of the English Reformation, makes Anne Boleyn a greater woman than, notwithstanding the sympathy felt for her and the general ...

LITERATURE

... of England. The author sets out with the biography of Anne of Bohemia, the well-beloved Queen of Richard II., and the patroness of Wickliffe-the morning star of the Reformation. The death of Anne preceded the great events in the sixteenth century by at ...

AN IMPRESSION OF THE NATIONAL PORTRAIT EXHIBITION

... queenly though vain woman who succeeded her. No forger could give that. Who wants to be told that No. 132 is Anne of Cleves? Of course it is Anne o Cleves, with the face of a stupid, heavy, Flemish servant of to.day, eyes innocent enough, but heavy cheeks ...

MUSIC AND THE DRAMA

... this country. The French librettists have, of course, provided a strong love interest in this opera, for it seems I that Anne Boleyn has, a short time before, j indulged in a violent flirtation with the Spanishi! ; Ambassador, who holds a conipromising ...

LITERATURE

... Friend Anne, which Messrs Frederick t Warne & Co. have published, and of which MissF Jessie Armstrong is the author, is a story of the : 16th century, and of that part of it during which i Kina Henry VIII. reigned. The heroine is the unftunate Anne Boleyn ...

CCC. NOTABLE BOOKS

... diowhich brought £192;- a 1535 Primer o velnprinted by John Byddell, whose title- ~ebears a woodcut of thez arms of Heniry end Anne Boleyn impaled, valued at £225;. the rare 1546 edition of W~illiam Roy's Satire; a ,perfect example of The Blook of Hawitng, printed ...

LITERATURE

... Lorrl trie King, and of the Lady Anne (Boleyn), his lawful wife, Queen of this realm, and nor tlhe utmost increase of their high houour, under whose auspices the Christian faith again flourishes. It was in ?? with another Anne, Princess of C.'ees, also lawful ...

LITERATURE

... of the Tadors, of whom it might be said that she was a greater | 9nafn than Henry the Eighth and a 1 weaker woman than Anne Boleyn -is T scarcely so striking as Mr Froude's, if the I IPhilip of his pages is nt exactly that of Mr t I Tennyson1 and Mr Henry ...

I iEW BOOKS OF THE WEEK

... grotesque about Anne Boleyn racing all over the country searching for the lovely Laura in satisfaction of the King's desires, but one must not be too par- ticular about the doings of that indiscreet per- son. Laura is captured at last, but Anne Boleyn gets Henry ...