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Grampian, Scotland

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Forres, Moray, Scotland

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IMAGINARY CoNVERS,VrION&

... knew the face. Tie Sir Thomas Boleyn's daughter--one who aspired to be Queen of England. Thy reign, girl, was brief: and, by the look of thy neck, thou didst come to an inglorious end. It is easy to conjure op Anne Boleyn's meek reply. Yes, lady, I came ...

THE LUST I'IAN43

... hidden away for four hundred years. Was the lace all bundled away in some old and little•used cabinet in order that Mistress Anne Boleyn should not preen herself in the plumage of the outraged Catherine! If so, what a feminine touch! What a human touch! And ...

THREE LANCASTRIAN HENRIES

... together in 1509 with all the splendour one would naturally associate with Bluff King Hats large ideals. He married Anne Boleyn over • score of years later, putaway the old Queen, and on the Ist ofJune, 1533. gave the former waiting-woman of hie discarded ...

The Oiligarehy

... Well, ain't he now ? Elderly Female. Don't he look it, too ? Mrs Probbit. Ah, don't he. Elderly Female (looking at Anne Boleyn). Anne Bowline. (Jocosely.) That's a rum dree• [Addressing probably her hasband. Respectable, hot-looking, and silent Man (accom- ...

fOllllOl DRAIN MABKI

... free hand in the matter of selection. As far as that goes, Bluff King Hal treated Anne of Cleves, whom he married for convenience, no worse than lovely Anne Boleyn, whom he married from a sudden wild and transitory fancy. Very remarkable is the love ...

OUR LONDON CORRESPONDENT

... Ellen Terry as Katharine of Aragon, and Mr William Terries as the King. On that occasion also Miss Violet Vanbrugh played Anne Boleyn. Now she will take Miss Terry's part, and her husband—Mr Arthur Bourchier—is cast for that of the great Reformer London's ...

I(ORRES, ELGIN, AND NAIRN GAZErrE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 11, 1879

... both generous in their patronage of the Hospital. In the days of the destruction of religious houses at the Befornia- Goa, Anne Boleyn, in her legal right of patronage as Queen Consort, interceded for the preservation of this charity. But it was ultimately ...

A THING OF THE PAST

... a splendid bit of flattery as that fine panegyric with which Shakespeare almost concludes llenry VIII. To deal with Anne Boleyn in the reign of her daughter was rather a daring matter, and it was perhaps quite as well censor of plays existed then. ...

AND VIZ SICK 110011

... lineal descendant of the Sir John Norris, or No revs, who was accused together with Lord Eoehfort of adultery with Queen Anne Boleyn. Moores Centenary Festival arrives opportunely to show that there are souse people left to appre. ciliate that now much ...

COW MEDAL-HIRHILST AWARD

... born and range with humble livers iu content, than to be perk'd op in glistening grief and wear a golden sorrow, says Anne Boleyn in Shakespeare's drama Henry VIII.; and there are few who, perusing the latest news of the plot against the unfortunate ...

YESTERDAY'S TELEGRAMS

... : what is the bright side of legs, It all right to rave over recian noses in WICK BRANCH. relations of Henry VIII. and Anne Boleyn, for poetry. but the nose we admire it, everyday life is Trains ware Wick Therm at 5.40 mid 11.1111 a.m.. sad THE SCENERY ...