BOOKS AND READING
BY HILDEGARDE HAWTHORNE
THE PASSING OF THE MIDDLE AGES
Henry VII does not appear to have made a striking impression on the romance writers however, possibly because he was rather a dry, cold, avaricious kind of king, under whom the country prospered, but who was neither picturesquely wicked nor admirably good.
Frank Cowper wrote a good story set in the early years of this reign, called “The Captain of the Wight.” There is plenty of stir and adventure to the pages, and quite a feeling of the times. And there are two books about The Fortunes of [[Q549757|]], a remarkable impostor who claimed to be a son of one of the little Princes in the Tower, murdered by wicked Richard. But Perkin asserted that the elder had escaped and lived to become his father, and that Perkin was, therefore, a Plantagenet, and rightful heir to the throne,
You can fancy that this created tremendous excitement, and the book “A Trusty Rebel,” by Mrs. H. Clarke, gives us Perkin at his best, making all England hum with his goings-on. Mrs. Shelley has also made this bold adventurer her hero in her story of the same period, “Perkin Warbeck.” You ought to be able to find one of these books.
The last years of Henry’s reign, with the young
Prince Henry as the hero, are told of in E. Everette Greene’s book
From photograph by Franz Haufstanengle..
Henry VIII
From the painting by Holbein. “The Heir of Hascombe Hall.” There are some fine scenes in the south of England and in London. A book that takes up the tale about where Greene drops it is “The Arrow of the North,” by R. H. Foster (Long, 1906). This is a rousing tale, full of adventure, that you will be sure to enjoy, and it is laid in other sections of England, so that the two pretty well cover the island from the latter part of the fifteenth century on to 1513.
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