downward. The rest of the mourners were clad in white and they walked slowly carrying lighted torches and chanting funeral dirges.

They passed from Abbeville to Montreuil and so to Calais. When they reached Dover they were met by processions of bishops and priests and so they brought the King home to his capital city.

He was buried in the chapel of the Confessor in Westminster Abbey and a chantry was endowed in his honour.

As soon as the funeral was over Katherine hurried to Windsor to see her child.

He had been nine months old when his father had died.

She took him at once to London and rode in a carriage through the streets with him seated on her lap. They had curled his little hands about the sceptre but they could not put the crown on his baby head.

It did not matter. The significance was plain. Henry the Fifth was dead and the disastrous reign of Henry the Sixth had begun.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Armitage-Smith, Sydney Aubrey, William

Hickman Smith Bryant, Arthur Church, Rev A. J. Costain, Thomas B.

Davies, J. D.Griffith Davis, W. W. C. Froissart, Sir John

Gairdner, James

Green, John Richard Guizot, M. (Translated by

Robert Black) Hume, David

McFarlane, K. B.

Ramsay, Sir James H. of

Bamff Stenton, D. M.

Stephen, Sir Leslie and

Lee, Sir Sydney Strickland, Agnes Wade, John Waugh, W. T. Wylie, James Hamilton

John of Gaunt

National and Domestic flistory

of England The Medieval Foundation Henry the Fifth The Last Plantagenets The Pageant of England

1377-^4^3 King Henry IV

England Under the Angevins

The Chronicles of England,

France, Spain etc, Lollardy and the Reformation in

England History of England History of France

History of England from the Invasion of Julius Caesar to the Revolution

Lancastrian Kings and Lollard Knights

Genesis of Lancaster

English Society in the Middle

Ages The Dictionary of National

Biography Lives of the Queens of England British History The Reign of Henry V History of England under

Henry the Fourth (Four

Volumes)

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?,?.^M?,f. I"'"!: IIBROBV

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(Continued from front flap)

Dominating the court was Harry of Monmouth, his fingers itching to take the crown, his reckless conduct causing scandal since he frequented disreputable company in the low-class taverns of East Cheap with his crony Sir John Oldcastle.

There came a time when the disease which had caused the King to hide himself away claimed him and Harry became King Henry the Fifth. The change was miraculous both for him and Oldcastle. The licentious youth became the great King, and the rake Oldcastle turned into a religious reformer. Oldcastle ultimately was a martyr to his cause and Harry became the conquering hero of Agincourt.

The star of Lancaster was in the ascendant. Harry had brought France to her knees and married her Princess. It seemed that the long war was at an end. But a greater enemy than the French awaited Harry, and the rising star of Lancaster was finally to depend on a nine-month-old child.

Jean Plaidy is the pseudonym of a well-known author who resides in England and has captured the world with her writing.

G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS

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