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Monday, 10 January 2022

Read an #excerpt from Rosemary Griggs' fabulous novel - A Woman of Noble Wit #HistoricalFiction @RAGriggsauthor


A Woman of Noble Wit
By Rosemary Griggs


Publication Date: 28th September 2021
Publisher: Troubador
Page Length: 423 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction

Few women of her time lived to see their name in print. But Katherine was no ordinary woman. She was Sir Walter Raleigh’s mother. This is her story.

Set against the turbulent background of a Devon rocked by the religious and social changes that shaped Tudor England; a Devon of privateers and pirates; a Devon riven by rebellions and plots, A Woman of Noble Wit tells how Katherine became the woman who would inspire her famous sons to follow their dreams. It is Tudor history seen though a woman’s eyes.

As the daughter of a gentry family with close connections to the glittering court of King Henry VIII, Katherine’s duty is clear. She must put aside her dreams and accept the husband chosen for her. Still a girl, she starts a new life at Greenway Court, overlooking the River Dart, relieved that her husband is not the ageing monster of her nightmares. She settles into the life of a dutiful wife and mother until a chance shipboard encounter with a handsome privateer, turns her world upside down.…..

Years later a courageous act will set Katherine’s name in print and her youngest son will fly high.


May 1536 and Katherine celebrates the season in Devon with her three year old daughter, while baby John sleeps in the nursery at Greenway Court.  Later in the month John Gilbert, uncle to Katherine’s husband Otho, is paying a visit when Otho brings shocking news…………….

May Day came. Katherine no longer went out early to wash her face in the morning dew as she had as a girl at Modbury. But Bessie had picked armfuls of spring flowers, and they were trying to encourage Katie to help weave them into garlands with hawthorn and woodbine. 

“When you’re older, Katie, I’ll take you to the May fair at Modbury,” Katherine said with a bright smile. 

But Katie was not to be won over with promises. She soon wandered off, to be found later pulling the heads off the primroses in the orchard. 

Unbeknown to them all, unbelievably shocking events were unfolding at the court while they went a-Maying. Toward the end of the month, John Gilbert rode over from Compton to pay yet another visit to the nursery. Katherine set down a pitcher of hippocras beside him and had just picked up the cup ready to pour when Otho burst through the door. 

“The King has cut off Queen Anne’s head!” he shouted from the doorway. 

Katherine sat down hard on the bench beside the old man, letting the empty cup fall from her hands to roll across the floor with a clatter. 

“Surely not, lad,” said Uncle John. “It’ll be some tall tale, grown taller in the telling.” 

“No, ’tis true as I do stand here,” was the reply. Otho threw back his head and thrust out his chest. “I had it from Master Richard Prideaux, the Mayor of Dartmouth, and from Master Rowe the lawyer. It’s not just idle chatter on the docks. What a story! It all seems to have happened so fast. One minute Queen Anne was watching the May Day tournament, all decked out in her best, cheering on her brother George and Henry Norris, the King’s close friend. You know? He’s the one that served in the privy chamber. Well, the next minute the King had gone from his place and those two gentlemen, and some others as well, were all arrested there and then! Then Queen Anne was taken to the Tower. There’s not many go in there and come out with their head still on their shoulders!” 

Katherine shuddered and gripped the bench hard. 

“Go on then, boy,” said the old man, shaking his head from side to side. “You’d best spit out the whole sorry tale.” 

“Well, ’tis shocking indeed. She was charged with adultery with no fewer than five men, including some lowly musician and even her own brother. Two others are held under suspicion: Thomas Wyatt and Richard Page. Those two are still in the Tower, but not so the others, and not so Queen Anne. All found guilty in hastily arranged trials. The Duke of Norfolk was one who sat in judgement on his own nephew and niece. He sent them to their deaths.” 

“Do you mean to say that the King has actually signed his wife’s death warrant? Is she actually dead, then?” John Gilbert thundered. “What on earth is the world coming to? He was hot enough for her not so long since. I had little time for her, I’ll own. But to send his own wife to the block! Norfolk, you say? Harrumph! He was happy enough to profit from her elevation, but I’m guessing he showed no remorse at her downfall. He’d be callous enough to condemn his whole family to death if he thought it would save his own skin and make him rich.” 

“How can the King be so cruel? Could he not have sent her to a nunnery, or put her aside as he did his first wife? I can’t believe it,” whimpered Katherine, rubbing her eyes. “Did they all have to die?” 

“Now this is odd. He could have set her aside,” said Otho, sitting down beside her and taking her hand. “Apparently Archbishop Cranmer obligingly gave his view that the marriage had never been lawful on account of King Henry’s earlier affair with Mary Boleyn. Master Rowe told me that Cranmer tried to defend the Queen. She’d been a strong ally to the Archbishop in the religious reforms that he holds so close to his heart. Master Rowe’s pleased to see her gone, of course. He says Cranmer must have seen that the King’s mind was set against his former lover, so he delivered the result that was demanded. But it did not save her. The King showed some mercy and ordered a swordsman from France to strike off the Queen’s head with a single blow. And then he went to have dinner with Jane Seymour the very same day!” 

“That’s a very small measure of mercy if you ask me!” Katherine exclaimed, holding her hands around her own slim neck. “Can there be any truth in those dreadful allegations? Surely not! She seemed such a clever woman. Would she really risk all, just for a few moments’ pleasure with those men? To think they even accused her, a woman of refinement and education, of the dreadful sin of incest...” She bent to retrieve the cup and, with shaking hands, began to fill it, sloshing more than a little of the spiced wine onto the floor. The spreading puddle of red made her think of Queen Anne’s blood. She felt her legs turn to jelly, and sat down again with a bump. 

“Rowe said that her brother put up a spirited defence to the most shocking allegations. But no one dared listen. His own wife, Jane Parker, was the one that betrayed him.” 

“I smell Master Cromwell’s hand in this,” growled Uncle John. “I wonder how he managed to get those confessions and enough evidence to condemn them all?” 

“It does seem strange that none of these men are close friends of Master Cromwell,” said Katherine, putting into words what had been in all their minds. “Wyatt and Page are both associates of the King’s Chief Minister and they live still, from what you say. There’s surely no coincidence in that.” 

“Hold your peace, girl. ’Tis not for the likes of you to speak so,” John snapped. “Can you not curb your wife’s tongue, boy? It’ll get us all into trouble one day.” He flashed a cold, thin-lipped smile in Katherine’s direction. “Women should know their place.” 

“Yes, Uncle John,” said Otho, though he must have felt Katherine’s scathing stare like a knife between his shoulder blades. “But listen. The King’s already married again to Jane Seymour, and the red-haired child is no longer a Princess, but must now be called the Lady Elizabeth. She’s gone to Hatfield in the charge of Mistress Margaret Bryan.” 

“Hmm! This will strengthen Cromwell’s hand,” the old man grumbled. “He’ll be hot for reform, and he’ll come after the wealth of the monasteries with a vengeance. No good will come of it.” 

But some benefit did come of Anne Boleyn’s demise. Kat was appointed to serve the Lady Elizabeth. 

Amazon UK • Amazon US • Amazon CA • Amazon AU • Barnes and Noble • Waterstones • iBooks • WHSmith • Foyles



Rosemary Griggs is a retired Whitehall Senior Civil Servant with a lifelong passion for history. She is now a speaker on Devon’s sixteenth century history and costume. She leads heritage tours at Dartington Hall, has made regular costumed appearances at National Trust houses and helps local museums bring history to life.

1 comment:

  1. Thank you for hosting a stop on my blog tour and for everything you do.

    Rosemary

    ReplyDelete

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