The courtships of Queen Elizabeth; a history of the various negotiations for her marriage . een of Navarre, butCatharine directed his attention to her bnjther. He is not so ugly nor so ill-favoured as the\say, do you think so .^ she asked. North of courseagreed with her, when she replied, It is from nofault on our part that the marriage with yourmistress has not taken {)lace. ^ When Lord Northtook leave of Alencon in November the prince wascareful not to mention love matters, but only spokeof service and duty, but, says Dale, he wrunghim by the arm, the old token between them, asone that would
The courtships of Queen Elizabeth; a history of the various negotiations for her marriage . een of Navarre, butCatharine directed his attention to her bnjther. He is not so ugly nor so ill-favoured as the\say, do you think so .^ she asked. North of courseagreed with her, when she replied, It is from nofault on our part that the marriage with yourmistress has not taken {)lace. ^ When Lord Northtook leave of Alencon in November the prince wascareful not to mention love matters, but only spokeof service and duty, but, says Dale, he wrunghim by the arm, the old token between them, asone that would say r/ n//)io ct tinicoy - North,however, went home with the fixed idea thatCatharine was making fun (jf his mistress. Hethought her praises of Elizabeths beauty weresuspiciously overdone, and told his Queen of course was furious; and when La MotheFenelon, instructed by the Queen-mother, oncemore advanced the marriage negotiations, he foundthe Queen on her dignity, and advised Catharine todiscontinue the matter for the present. La Mothe Fenelon Foreign
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectelizabethiqueenofeng