. Walks in London . made her, faintly cried, I go, Igo. . And whereas she had used many other words in the time ofher extremity, yet now, at the last, she did aptly utter these, and nonebut these.—Funeral Sermon for the Princess Mary^ by jf. Leech,preached in Henry VII.*s Chanel, Sept. 23, 1607. * On the right is Princess Sophia (1606), fourth daughter of James I.,who died at Greenwich three days after her birth. It is a charminglittle monument of an infant in her cradle— a royal rose-bud, pluciiedby premature fate, and snatched away from her parents, that shemight flourish again in the rosary
. Walks in London . made her, faintly cried, I go, Igo. . And whereas she had used many other words in the time ofher extremity, yet now, at the last, she did aptly utter these, and nonebut these.—Funeral Sermon for the Princess Mary^ by jf. Leech,preached in Henry VII.*s Chanel, Sept. 23, 1607. * On the right is Princess Sophia (1606), fourth daughter of James I.,who died at Greenwich three days after her birth. It is a charminglittle monument of an infant in her cradle— a royal rose-bud, pluciiedby premature fate, and snatched away from her parents, that shemight flourish again in the rosary of Christ. ** This royal babe is represented sleeping in her cradle, wherewith • 1^aliers * Worthies, i. 490. NORTH AISLE OF CHOIR. -ui vulgar eyes, especially of the weaker sex, are more affected fas level totheir cognizance, more capable of what is pretty than what is pompous)than with all the magnificent monuments in Westminster.—FullersWsrthies, At the foot of the steps leading to Henry Chapel. Cliantiy o; Homy V., Wcstniiiistcr. is the grave of Edward Hyde, Earl of Clar€ndo7i (1673),grandfather of Queen Mary II. and Queen Anne, who diedin exile at Rouen, having been impeached for must look back from the northern ambulatory upon therichly sculptured arch of Henry chantry. It is this arch 283 fVALICS JN LONDON, which was so greatly admired by Flaxman. The Corona-tion of Heniy V. is here represented as it was perfornnedin this church by Thomas Arundel, Archbishop of Canter-bury, and Henry Beaufort, the uncle of the king. Overthe canopies which surmount the figures are the alternatebadges of the Antelope and Swan (from the kings mother,co-heiress of the Bohuns, and the same animals appear onthe cornices chained to a tree, on vhich is a flaming cresset,a badge which was borne by Henry V. alone, and which wasintended as typical of the light by which he hoped to guidehis people to follow him in all honour and virtue/* On the left are the beaut
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