[Henry VIII And His Court by Louise Muhlbach]@TWC D-Link book
Henry VIII And His Court

CHAPTER XIX
10/12

First of all, then, tell me the result of your meeting to-day.

He does not doubt that you are the queen ?" "No, he believes it so firmly that he would take the sacrament on it.
That is to say, he believes it now because I have promised him to give him publicly a sign by which he may recognize that it is the queen that loves him." "And this sign ?" inquired her father, with a look beaming with joy.
"I have promised him that at the great tournament, the queen will give him a rosette, and that in that rosette be will find a note from the queen." "Ah, the idea is an admirable one!" exclaimed Lord Douglas, "and only a woman who wishes to avenge herself could conceive it.

So, then, the queen will become her own accuser, and herself give into our hands a proof of her guilt.

The only difficulty in the way is to bring the queen, without arousing her suspicion, to wear this rosette, and to give it to Surrey." "She will do it if I beg her to do so, for she loves me; and I shall so represent it to her that she will do it as an act of kindness to me.
Catharine is good-natured and agreeable, and cannot refuse a request." "And I will apprise the king of it.

That is to say, I shall take good care not to do this myself, for it is always dangerous to approach a hungry tiger in his cage and carry him his food, because he might in his voracity very readily devour our own hand together with the proffered meat." "But how ?" asked she with an expression of alarm.


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