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Damask
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Sep 26, 2010 04:34AM

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Does anyone have any feelings on NL's Anne? Is she too sympathetic? Is it likely that seh might just have committed adultery in the way described?
Damask wrote: "Sorry if I got it wrong, I thought maybe it shoudl be a "royal" theme?
Does anyone have any feelings on NL's Anne? Is she too sympathetic? Is it likely that seh might just have committed adult..."
I never thought she committed adultery but she was framed IMO by Henry. He just wanted to move on so anything to get rid of her. I still think he may have had syphilis. That wss a theory that I heard long ago.
Does anyone have any feelings on NL's Anne? Is she too sympathetic? Is it likely that seh might just have committed adult..."
I never thought she committed adultery but she was framed IMO by Henry. He just wanted to move on so anything to get rid of her. I still think he may have had syphilis. That wss a theory that I heard long ago.

Incidentally, a close second on my list of favorite novels about her is Margaret Campbell Barnes's Brief Gaudy Hour. It begins earlier and gives some attention to the Henry Percy affair, and ir really brings to life the men who were accused with Anne. (And it describes a delicious moment during George's trial.)
Somehow, I doubt that Henry deliberately or directly ordered her framed. He just let it be known among his henchmen that he wanted to be rid of her and looked the other way when they went to work.



Of course if adultery did indeed take place then by definition more than one person is involved, but the point so far of this thread has been that AB's adultery was never proven,and the accusation thereof well have been a political move to remove her , rather than a reflection of her actual behaviour.

I think it is unlikely...but perhpas Lofts was of the "no smoke without fire" shcool feelign that if Anne was accused, maybe there Was something "in it"...

Still, in real historical terms the dates and times they gave at her trial were patently nonsense for the most part and could easily have been disproved
Mary says in message 5 above
"Somehow, I doubt that Henry deliberately or directly ordered her framed. He just let it be known among his henchmen that he wanted to be rid of her and looked the other way when they went to work"
I think that is dead right ( pardon the pun). Another case of "who will rid me of this turbulent.....

Yes, Emma is a marvelous creation! I like the way NL presents her as first resentful at being "lent" to Anne without being consulted but coming to respect her, then seeing her as a way to advance the Protestant cause, and admitting to herself how much she cares about Anne as a person only after Anne is arrested.

I think that perhaps Henry WAS a bad breeder.. HE had comparativley few children and I think he may have had bedroom problems. I dont think that she woudl have takne the risk even then of trying to get pregnant by soemone else.
As for the trial etc. I think that it was a case of Cromwell changing sides, due to feeling that Anne was a problem.. SHe hadn't produced a son, she was a hindrance to making alliances abroad, and Henry was now in love iwth Jane Seymour, so he looked around, as Lofts indicates to see what he could do to get rid of her.
I think that Anne's flirtatiousness however provided him with "evidenece" that was helpful to him and perhaps evidnece that he had not expected to get so easily...She DID apparently quarrel with Henry Norris, and say that he "looeked for dead mens shoes", she did flirt with her men freinds and so it was possible to imply that there was more than flirtation going on.. and Mark Smeaton did confess to adultery, probably because of torture but also because he was in love with Anne...

I've read several historians, medical experts, whatever, who say Henry's inability to have many children (and his queens' inability to carry many of them to term) was due to syphilis, which they say was also responsible for the fact that the wound on his leg never would heal.
Sure would've been nice to have that knowledge in the 15th and early 16th centuries, h'mm?!


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