. Trinity College and Trinity Hospital; a historical sketch. -\1A1<( III- DENMARK, QUEEN CJF SCUTLAMi{circa) 14S4. (From Paiiiling in Holyrooil House.) (4) lUetWL-en paj;i:s 200-1. THE RE-BURIAL OF MARY OF GUELDRES. 201 may possibly be due, the curious intermingling of sacred allegory andportraiture in this altar-piece of the Collegiate Church—even if wesuppose St Cecilia to preserve the portraiture of the Royal Foundress,and assume the attendant angel to represent the affianced princess ofthe House of York. In truth, if the stories of old chroniclers are to be reliedupon, the Queen


. Trinity College and Trinity Hospital; a historical sketch. -\1A1<( III- DENMARK, QUEEN CJF SCUTLAMi{circa) 14S4. (From Paiiiling in Holyrooil House.) (4) lUetWL-en paj;i:s 200-1. THE RE-BURIAL OF MARY OF GUELDRES. 201 may possibly be due, the curious intermingling of sacred allegory andportraiture in this altar-piece of the Collegiate Church—even if wesuppose St Cecilia to preserve the portraiture of the Royal Foundress,and assume the attendant angel to represent the affianced princess ofthe House of York. In truth, if the stories of old chroniclers are to be reliedupon, the Queen was no saint. The Church which she founded was,in more ways than one, a curious historical memorial of her age; andits sculptures—from which many of the tail-pieces of these chaptershave been selected—furnished some singular disclosures relative tothe faith of the 2c H CHAPTER XVII. A SURPRISE, AND WHAT IT LED TO.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidtrinitycolle, bookyear1896