Recent Winners on the Every Woman Dreams Blog!


WinnersThese ladies were recent winners on the Every Woman Dreams Blog. Congratulations to Luthien 84, who received an eBook copy of A Touch of Emerald: The Conclusion of the Realm Series from the “George IV’s Reign” post. Meanwhile, Diana Wilder, Judy Cozart and tgruy will receive eBooks from the #LightonOurLadies blog tour. Diana and Judy will also receive a copy of A Touch of Emerald, and tgruy an eBook copy of The First Wives’ Club. Congratulations to all! 

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Chaucer’s Influence (Part 2): The Canterbury Tales

1414477077What should every learner of British literature know of Chaucer’s “The Canterbury Tales”? Chaucer, in the persona of the narrator and civil servant relates the stories from the different characters found within the tales. The pilgrims are making a journey to Canterbury to the site of the assassination of Saint Thomas a Becket. Chaucer meant to write his stories to “create” a national literature to replace the French influence (after the Conquest of 1066) on English language and literature. The tales were to reflect the English “experience.” 

(For Part I of Chaucer’s Influence on British Literature, specifically his minor stories and poems, look HERE.)

He lifted the common vernacular, using it to develop a literary language. Chaucer sowed the seeds of modern English poetry and turned the English language into an acceptable form of literary expression. 

The original plan was for 120 stories (30 pilgrims telling 2 stories each on the way to Canterbury and 2 more each on their return journey). Unfortunately, only 22 stories were completed, but those 22 provide us with a historical glimpse into 14th Century English life. The description of the characters in the prologue provide us a cross section of English society of the time: the good, the bad and the ugly. There are characters of every rank and a variety of professions and both genders. The prologue provides the reader a telescope into the accepted rituals, etiquette, beliefs and superstitions, food, dress, religious beliefs, etc., of the time. 

The travelers were…

A worthy Knight who had never once spoke discourtesy to any living creature. He was the “perfect” knight and not gaily clad. Though he was valorous, he was prudent and meek as a maid of his bearing. 

A young squire who was the knight’s son. The squire was twenty years of age and described as courteous, modest, and helpful. He sang often and loved to play upon the flute. 

A yeoman served as their attendant. He understood well all the practice of woodcraft.

A Prioress by the name of Madame Eglantine who took her in all courtesy. She was full diverting, pleasant and amiable of bearing and was said to possess a charitable heart. 

Another nun, a chaplain, and three priests traveled with the Prioress. 

A Monk, who was a great rider about the countryside and a lover of hunting. He followed the ways of the newer world. His pleasure was in hunting the hare, and he spared no cost in doing so. 

A begging Friar, who was wanton and jolly. He was an easy man to give penance when he looked to have a good dinner. If a man gave, the friar knew the man was contrite. He possessed a pleasant voice while singing and was competent on the fiddle. Anywhere that advantage might follow he was courteous, lowly and serviceable. He was the best beggar in his convent. 

Another traveler was a Merchant, who uttered his opinions pompously, ever tending to the increase of his own profit. 

The Oxford Clerk possessed a hollow-cheeked and grave appearance. He was a philosopher. He held little gold in his money box, but was rich in his desire to learn and to teach. 

There was a discreet Sergeant of the Law, a man of great distinction (or so he seemed as such). It was said that nowhere was there so busy a man; yet, he seemed busier than he was. 

Next, we have a ruddy faced and sanguine tempered Franklin, who held the opinion that perfect felicity stood in pleasure alone.

We find a Haberdasher, a carpenter, a weaver, a dyer, and upholsterer, as well as a cook among the traveling party. 

The Shipman paid no heed to nice conscience. In an enterprise, he acted both bold and shrewd. 

The Doctor of Physic was known for his skill in medicine and surgery. Not another could be held above him. However, he was moderate in spending and kept what he won during the pestilence. 

The Goodwife was from near Bath. She had had five husbands, as well as other company, in her youth. She was said to know about about love and its remedies. She could laugh well and prate in company. Reportedly, she was somewhat deaf. In appearance, her countenance was bold and fair and red, and she was gap toothed.

The Parson was poor, but rich in holy thought and deed. He was known to be benign, wondrously diligent, and patient in adversity. In little did he find deficiency. First, he wraught and afterwards taught. He was not pitiless to sinful men. There was nowhere a better priest than he. 

The Ploughman was the Parson’s brother. He was a faithful and good toiler, who lived his life in peace and perfect charity. 

The Miller was a stout man, full of bones and brawn. He was a loud orator and a ribald jester, and it was mostly of sin and scurrility. 

The Manciple of the Inns of Court was said to be an example of how other stewards might practice craftiness in buying victuals. 

The Reeve was a slender, bilious man. There was no churl whose tricks and craftiness he knew not. He knew how to pick up wealth and had a rich privy hoard. 

The Sumner was a fine, red cherubim-faced fellow, as hot and lecherous as a sparrow. He was a kind rogue and gentle. However, his visage frightened children. 

The Pardoner was gentle of nature. As for his grade there was not such another pardoner. With flattering deceit, he made the parson and the people his dupes. He could well read a lesson and best of all sing an offertory to win silver.

Now, let’s take a quick look at the more popular tales:

The Prioresses’ Tale

There was a Jewish quarter in a great Asian city, and at the end of it stood a Christian school. A widow’s son of seven was among the schoolboys. He would always kneel and say his Ave Maria when he viewed the image of Christ’s mother. One day he heard Alma Redemptoris Mater sung and was captivated by the melody. He learned the first verse by heart and begged his fellow to explain the meaning of it to him. He learned that the song was a salute to the blessed Lady and instructed that she be his succor when he died. Pleased, he set out to learn the hymn by heart. He would sing it on his way to and from school each day. The Devil convinced the Jews that boy was being irreverent to their faith and should be eliminated. The Jews seized him. slit his throat, and cast the boy’s body into a well. 

His mother searched extensively for him. At length, she came near the well and called his name. The boy sang loudly and clearly so the whole quarter could hear the Alma Redemptoris. The child was drawn up and the Jews punished for their deeds. As he lay on his bier, the child continued to sing. When questioned why he sang, he explained that he imagined a grain placed on his tongue by his Lady. He would sing until the grain was removed. A holy monk took the grain from the child’s tongue, and the boy straightway died. 

The Friar’s Tale

The Friar’s tale is directed against the summoner. He tells a tale of one of this profession who accepted the bribes from the people. Once he met a yeoman who professed to be a bailiff. As they began to exchange secrets of the profession, the bailiff confessed that he was the Devil, but like the summoner, engaged in winning profits. The two struck a bargain to become partners and divide their gain. They came upon a carter whose cart was in a ditch. The carter cursed his horse, saying “The Devil take you!” But the Devil did not act for he knew the carter did not mean his words. Later, they encountered a woman of whom the summoner demanded money. In return, she wished that the Devil would take the summoner, and as she meant her words, the Devil took his profits off to Hell. 

The Nun’s Priest Tale

A poor widow had a cock named Chanticleer. This noble cock, of grand and austere appearance, had seven hens, his sisters and paramours, of whom the fairest was Damoiselle Parltet. One night he groaned in his sleep, and upon begin chided by Partlet told her that he dreamed of beast like a hound, between red and yellow in color, who would kill him. Partlet said the dream is caused by a superfluity of red choler. But the learned reference Chanticleer shows that dreams are to be feared.

One night a fox, sly and unrighteous, burst through the hedge. Chanticleer was out walking in the sun and singing when he spotted the shadow of the fox, but the fox spoke so kindly that Chanticleer did not run away. The fox praises Chanticleer’s father, saying the father was a great singer. The fox suggests that if Chanticleer wishes to be as great as his father, he must stand on tip-toe, stretching his neck forth, and closing both eyes. Chanticleer imitated his father. Sir Russel, the fox, caught Chanticleer by the neck and carried him home to his den. 

The widow sends out the hounds to track the fox, and Chanticleer advises the fox to turn and tell them to turn back since he intends to eat the cock. The fox did, and as he opened his mouth, Chanticleer skipped free. The fox tried to say he was just scaring him and never meant any harm. But Chanticleer saw through the guile. The Nun’s Priest moral is “take the fruit and leave the chaff.”

The Wife of Bath’s Tale 

In the prologue, she discusses in a highly realistic manner the concepts of virginity and marriage. She holds little respect for the former, and in detail describes her relationship with her various husbands, emphasizing how she henpecked some and really loved the one who beat her. Her tale is that of the Knight who would be put to death unless he could find the answer to a riddle: What is woman’s greatest desire? It is another version of the Tale of Florent told by John Gower. 

The Pardoner’s Tale

The theme of the prologue is “My aim is all for gain and not at all for correction of sin.” In Flanders there lived a company of young people who followed after folly, living riotous evil lives spent in gluttony, drinking, gaming, swearing, and vice. In this group were three rioters in particular whom this tale concerns. They discover that a corpse passing was that of an old friend. The three said that if Death was such a terrible person, they would search Death out and “kill” him. 

Meeting an old man they greet him churlishly. They ask what he knows of Death. The man tells the three that can find Death waiting for them by a certain tree. They go to the spot and find almost eight bushels of gold florins. They draw lots as to who shall go to town for bread and wine to tide them over until they can move their treasure to safety during the dark of night. The youngest does the biding. 

The two who remain behind plan to kill the youngest upon his return so they can split the fortune only two ways instead of three. Meanwhile, the youngest decides to poison the other two with the wine upon his return to the tree. The youngest is slain by the other two. They drink merry, but fall dead from the poison. 

The Franklin’s Tale

Arveragus was forced to journey and leave his wife Dorigen behind. Aurelius thereupon falls in love with her. In jest, she tells him that she will return his love when he can remove all the rocks from the sea coast. Through a magician, Aurelius has the rocks removed and asks for his reward. Rather than be untrue, Dorigen determines she must die. Before she can take her life, however, Arveragus returns and bids her keep her word. When Aurelius learns of Averagus’ goodness, he repents and frees Dorigen of her promise. She and Averagus live happily. 

The Basic Criticisms of Chaucer’s Tales:

  1. Chaucer’s tales are reproductions of old stories. It was Chaucer’s function to tell the story better than it was told before. The pardoner tells his story as a pardoner might have told it, not as Chaucer would have told it if he were telling the story. 
  2. Chaucer made his group of pilgrims into a picture of the society of his times, the life of which is hardly to be found elsewhere. Except for royalty and the nobles on the one hand, and dregs of the people on the other, two classes which probability excluded from taking a pilgrimage, he painted in brief, the whole English nation. 
  3. There is an omnipresent sense of humor and the Tales are characterized by astonishingly brilliant types, individualized by the freshness and sharpness of the impression. They are the greatest evidence of Chaucer’s dramatic power. 

GradeSaver says, “Scholars do not know whether the Tales we have are a complete text, and the textual history of the Tales is long and checkered. The first printed edition, printed by William Caxton in 1478, was based on a manuscript now lost, and the 82 manuscripts which survive include 14 perfect (or nearly perfect) copies containing all of the Tales, 41 which are very nearly complete, only missing a few pages, 7 copies which are very fragmentary, and 20 which contain a single tale or a single passage deliberately cut out of the larger work. No manuscript can be dated within Chaucer’s lifetime, meaning that every manuscript was written between 1400 and the time of Caxton’s printing press (just less than a century later).

“There are two basic camps into which these manuscripts fall into: and these two differing texts of the Tales are known as the Ellesmere and the Hengwrt manuscripts respectively.

“The Ellesmere manuscript contains the most complete text of the Tales that we have, written in a large, clear book hand which covers 232 leaves of fine quality thin vellum, printed on unusually large pages with unusually generous margins. Famously, the main attraction of the manuscript is the lavish illumination, illustration and decoration: huge, golden and colorful initials joined to elaborate borders appear on seventy-one pages. Facing the first line of each of the Tales is an illustration of its narrator (the very famous illustration of Chaucer is featured opposite).

“The Hengwrt manuscript of the Tales is less complete than the Ellesmere, and its tales are in a different and unique order. The manuscript, made of vellum, is in poor condition, stained, and with vermin having eaten about 9cm from the outer corners of its pages. However, its text is very regular, and is therefore now used by most modern editors.”

For a closer look at Chaucer’s influence, check out Bachelor and Master HERE.

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The Reign of George IV + a Giveaway of “A Touch of Emerald”

 George IV | The Regency Inkwell theregencyinkwell.wordpress.com


George IV | The Regency Inkwell
theregencyinkwell.wordpress.com

The last year of his reign and the passing of King George IV serves as the backdrop for the last book in my award-winning REALM series, A Touch of Emerald. Those of us who write books situated during the Regency era know something of Prince George and his many excesses and include “Prinny” in our plot lines, but few of us write much of his life during his actual reign. However, to write the conclusion to this series, it was necessary for me to learn more of George IV’s time on the throne. King George IV served as his father’s “Regent” (hence the name “Regency” period) from 1810 to 1820.

“George III (George William Frederick; 4 June 1738[a] – 29 January 1820) was King of Great Britain and Ireland from 25 October 1760 until the union of the two countries on 1 January 1801, after which he was King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland until his death. He was concurrently Duke and prince-elector of Brunswick-Lüneburg (“Hanover”) in the Holy Roman Empire until his promotion to King of Hanover on 12 October 1814. He was the third British monarch of the House of Hanover, but unlike his two predecessors he was born in Britain, spoke English as his first language, and never visited Hanover.

“His life and reign, which were longer than any other British monarch before him, were marked by a series of military conflicts involving his kingdoms, much of the rest of Europe, and places farther afield in Africa, the Americas and Asia. In the later part of his life, George III had recurrent, and eventually permanent, mental illness. Although it has since been suggested that he had the blood disease porphyria, the cause of his illness remains unknown. After a final relapse in 1810, a regency was established, and George III’s eldest son, George, Prince of Wales, ruled as Prince Regent. On George III’s death, the Prince Regent succeeded his father as George IV.” [Wikipedia

George IV reigned for a little over ten years (twenty years if one counts his time as Regent). Unlike his father, Prince George had extravagant tastes and was often in debt. The 1772 Royal Marriage Act said that descendants of George II could not marry without the consent of the reigning monarch. However, on 15 December 1785, the then Prince George married the twice-widowed Maria Anne Fitzherbert, who was a practicing Roman Catholic. Although considered a canonically sound marriage by the Catholic church, it was an invalid marriage according to the Royal Marriage Act. The 1701 Act of Settlement would make Prince George’s succession to the throne invalid if the marriage was not considered legitimate. Under the Act of Settlement, anyone who becomes a Roman Catholic or who marries one is disqualified from inheriting the throne.

Even so, George IV sired two children with Mrs. Fitzherbert. Much to his chagrin, George IV was forced to deny his marriage to lady. In return his debts were paid off. Next, a marriage to Caroline of Brunswick was arranged. The pair despised each other, and George IV would not permit his wife to attend his coronation in 1820. He tried upon multiple occasions to have his marriage annulled. Princess Charlotte was their only child. Caroline died in 1821 with claims of being poisoned.
Surprisingly, he did not support Catholic emancipation until 1829 when he joined the Duke of Wellington in the passing of the Catholic Relief Act. In 1822, George IV was the first monarch to visit Scotland since the reign of Charles II in the mid 1600s. Sir Walter Scott convinced King George to wear full Scottish regalia, which led to the revival of wearing the Scottish tartans that had been banned since the days of the Jacobite Rebellion.

George IV’s indulgences led to his being obese and suffering from gout. He was said to be mentally unstable in his later years. He died of a heart attack. Because his daughter Charlotte passed in 1817, George IV was succeeded upon the throne by his brother William IV.

Name: King George IV
Full Name: George Augustus Frederick
Born: August 12, 1762 at St. James Palace
Parents: George III and Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
Relation to Elizabeth II: 3rd great-granduncle
House of: Hanover
Ascended to the throne: January 29, 1820 aged 57 years
Crowned: July 19, 1821 at Westminster Abbey
Married: Caroline, daughter of Duke of Brunswick
Children: One daughter,and at least two illegitimate children
Died: June 26, 1830 at Windsor Castle, aged 67 years, 10 months, and 12 days
Buried at: Windsor
Reigned for: 10 years, 4 months, and 26 days
Succeeded by: his brother William IV
[Royal Family History
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

ATOE eBook Cover - Green TextA Touch of Emerald: The Conclusion to the Realm Series
(Fiction/Historical; Historical Romance/Mystery/Adventure; Regency)

Four crazy Balochs. A Gypsy band. An Indian maiden. A cave with a maze of passages. A hero, not yet tested. And a missing emerald.

For nearly two decades, the Realm thwarted the efforts of all Shaheed Mir sent their way, but now the Baloch warlord is in England, and the tribal leader means to reclaim the fist-sized emerald he believes one of the Realm stole during their rescue of a girl upon whom Mir turned his men. Mir means to take his revenge on the Realm and the Indian girl’s child, Lady Sonalí Fowler.

Daniel Kerrington, Viscount Worthing, has loved Lady Sonalí since they were but children. Yet, when his father, the Earl of Linworth, objects to Sonalí’s bloodlines, Worthing thinks never to claim her. However, when danger arrives in the form of the Realm’s old enemy, Kerrington ignores all caution for the woman he loves.

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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Excerpt: [Shaheed Mir, a Baloch warlord, took six daughters of the REALM members prisoners. He leaves them in the Chistlehurst Caves outside of London. Maarah is the wife of the Realm’s former enemy, Murhad Jamot. The gypsy girl is also one of Mir’s hostages.]

Sonalí thought the conditions deplorable, especially for young ladies accustomed to fine homes and servants, and tears filled her eyes as the girls spread one of the blankets left behind by Mir’s men when they brought Maarah to this den upon the floor and settled down for some rest. Lady Amelia nestled Louisa close to her. Earlier Sonalí’s sister had all the girls frightened by the possibility of rats in the caves.

“There are no rats this far below ground,” Maarah assured as she cradled Louisa in her embrace. “If we were closer to the opening, perhaps, but…”

“If we were kept close to the opening, we could walk out into the moonlight.” Margaret Wellston declared.

Louisa’s lips trembled.

“What if the bad men left a trail of bread crumbs to lead the rats to us?”

Her sister’s imagination proved as active as the duchess’s.

Maarah announced in conciliation.

“I will make my bed before the door. If Mir’s men acted dishonorably, the rats will come upon me first.”

Although insensibility riddled the gypsy woman’s declaration, it proved the thing to relieve Louisa’s qualms; that is, until Sonalí thought to bed down near the opening also. Louisa insisted that Sonalí should permit Maarah to face the rats alone. Her younger sister’s show of entitlement embarrassed Sonalí, but she offered no words of apology until the child slept.

She left a candle lantern burning so the pale light would cut a thin line in the perfect blackness. Sonalí reasoned the light would calm the girls. Yet, it was she who required the flicker of hope the light provided. Despite her best efforts, the prospect of being caught in a tunnel with no means of escape reared its ugly head. She recalled the desperation she felt when the lantern her “Uncle James” thrust into her small hands went out during her escape from Mir’s men. Irrational fears filled her chest much as they did her younger sister.

“Lady Louisa did not mean to be cruel,” Sonalí said as she sat in weariness upon the earthen floor and handed Maarah a small apple.

The gypsy shrugged her shoulders as if Louisa’s remarks had little significance, but even in the poor light, Sonalí noted the wounded flick of annoyance upon the woman’s features.

“I am accustomed to the strange looks I receive from children,” Maarah said in acceptance.

“Are you?” Sonalí asked perceptively. “I fear I am not. Even as a duke’s daughter, I am often the source of curiosity among the ton. I cannot say I like it much.”

Maarah offered a wry twist of her lips.

“I never spoke of enjoying the experience, my lady.”

“No. I suppose you did not.”

They sat in silence for several minutes.

“What are our chances of surviving this madness?’ Sonalí turned toward the woman. “It would seem to me there should be workers in the mines. Surely someone should stumble upon us.”

The gypsy stared off as if she meant not to answer, before providing an opinion.

“I held the same hopes at first. I’ve been with my husband’s former leader fer what I assume to be a fortnight. In the beginning, I thought Murhad would come for me, but Lord Mir’s conniving proved Jamot no match.”

“Your husband searches for you,” Sonalí assured. “He tracked Mir about England. I saw him once, and Lord Worthing and his father, the Earl of Linworth, spotted your husband upon my father’s land.”

The woman’s tone spoke of bitterness.

“Yet, his efforts prove for naught.”

“You should not abandon hope,” Sonalí encouraged. “Needless to say, you did not know this room for weeks, and I am certain your husband is checking each of your previous locations.” She paused before adding, “Please do not think me uncaring, but could you speak of what happened. In the time you were with Mir, did you learn anything of our enemy to aid in an escape?”

“Until two days prior, we moved from place to place,” Maarah explained. “At first, two men accompanied him, but one went on a mission for Lord Mir and never returned.”

“Lord Worthing captured Mir’s agent near my home. My father and his associates placed the man in custody.”

The gypsy weighed what Sonalí shared.

“Lord Mir knew great displeasure. I thought he’d kill me that particular night: Mir supposed Jamot caught the man.”

“Did Mir offer you an offense?”

Sonalí did not wish to think upon what Jamot’s wife suffered, but she needed to know.

The woman shook her head in denial.

“A hard slap. A shove. A twist of my arm. Yet, a woman doesn’t die from such treatment. I be fortunate. I didn’t earn the wrath the Baloch exacted upon others.”
Sonalí swallowed the question of whether Maarah knew something of Mir’s revenge against Sonalí’s mother.

“Do you hold an opinion on what we should do? Dare we attempt an escape?”

“I don’t know if it’s wise, but I fear if we don’t, once Mir possesses the emerald, he’ll permit his men to claim us,” Maarah said matter-of-factly.

A shiver of cold shot down Sonalí’s spine.

“All of us? Even the girls?”

“The first night Mir left me here, I attempted to find my way out. All I discovered was the man Mir left in guard. If I didn’t scratch his face with me nails, leaving me mark, I believe he’d do me harm. Instead, he knocked me cold and returned me to this room. I’m certain next time he’ll not stop.”

“Again, I will ask: Is there no chance the workers will stumble upon us in the morning?”

Maarah shook off Sonalí’s suggestion.

“Lord Mir took great enjoyment in informing me the mine be closed. Men no longer work below ground.”

NOW FOR THE GIVEAWAY! I HAVE 2 eBOOK COPIES OF A TOUCH OF EMERALD AVAILABLE. LEAVE A COMMENT BELOW TO BE ELIGIBLE FOR THE GIVEAWAY. THE GIFTING WILL END AT MIDNIGHT EST SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015. 

 

Posted in British history, Great Britain, Living in the Regency, real life tales, Regency era, Victorian era | Tagged , , , , | 3 Comments

The Witchcraft Acts in Great Britain


witch_on_a_broom_stick_clip_art_19687
In the 16th Century, ill-fortune was often blamed on acts of witchcraft. In England, Ireland, Wales, and Scotland, there have been a series of acts to prevent the practice of witchcraft. The first of those was Henry VIII’s Witchcraft Act of 1542. It was the first to define the practice of witchcraft as a felony and to prescribe a punishment of death for the accused.

The convicted would also have to forfeit all goods and chattels to the government. The act forbid all citizens to “use devise practise or exercise, or cause to be devysed practised or exercised, any Invovacons or cojuracons of Sprites witchecraftes enchauntementes or sorceries to thentent to fynde money or treasure or to waste consume or destroy any persone in his bodie membres, or to pvoke [provoke] any persone to unlawfull love, or for any other unlawfull intente or purpose … or for dispite of Cryste, or for lucre of money, dygge up or pull downe any Crosse or Crosses or by such Invovacons or cojuracons of Sprites witchecraftes enchauntementes or sorceries or any of them take upon them to tell or declare where goodes stollen or lost shall become.” (Wikipedia) The act also removed the “benefit of clergy” right for the individual convicted of witchcraft. This legal maneuvering spared anyone from hanging who could read a passage from the Bible. Henry’s son, Edward VI, repealed this statute in 1547. Even so, the act was restored in 1562. 

“A further law was passed in 1604 during the reign of James I, who took a keen interest in demonology and even published a book on it. The 1562 and 1604 Acts transferred the trial of witches from the Church to the ordinary courts.” (Living Heritage)

An Act Against Conjurations, Enchantments and Witchcraft was passed in 1562, during the reign of Elizabeth I. It showed a bit of mercy by demanding the death penalty only when the accused caused harm to another. Lesser offenses resulted in imprisonment. The Act said that anyone who should “use, practise, or exercise any Witchcraft, Enchantment, Charm, or Sorcery, whereby any person shall happen to be killed or destroyed, was guilty of a felony without benefit of clergy, and was to be put to death.”(Wikipedia)

The Scottish Witchcraft Act of 1563 spoke to the practice of witchcraft and consulting with witches. Both were considered capital offenses. The Act was on the Scottish law books until 1735.

With James’ accession to the English throne, the Elizabethan Act was broadened to bring the penalty of death without benefit of clergy to any one who practiced the black arts or who consorted with familiars. The act’s official name was An Act against Conjuration, Witchcraft and dealing with evil and wicked spirits. The self-styled Witch-Finder General, Matthew Hopkins, used the act freely to accuse his victims. (Wikipedia

The practice of witchcraft became a felony with the installation of Elizabeth’s and James’s acts. As a felony, the accused was removed from the ecclesiastical courts’ jurisdiction and placed under the judgment of the common court. Burning at the stake was eliminated, except in cases of witchcraft that were also petty treason. As a criminal court proceeding, most convicted were hanged. If a witch was found guilty of a minor offense (punishable by one year in prison) and then committed a second one, he/she was sentenced to death.

Formal accusations were often made against elderly women living in poverty. The practiced peaked in the late 16th Century, with the majority of the accusations centering in southeast England. Between 1560 and 1700, 513 witches were sent to trial. 112 of the accused were executed, with the last known execution taking place in Devon in 1685. The last witch trial took place in Leicester in 1717. (Living Heritage)

The Witchcraft Act of 1735 saw a change in the manner in which “witches” were treated. The change came in the attitude of the educated electorate, who assumed that witchcraft was nothing more than superstition and an impossibility to actually perform. Instead, the punishment was for the pretense of witchcraft. Those who claimed magical powers were punished as vagrants and were subject to fines and imprisonment. The Act applied to the whole of Great Britain, repealing both the 1563 Scottish Act and the 1604 English Act. (Wikipedia) The MPs found the Act quite amusing when it was first proposed by John Conduit in Parliament. Conduit’s wife, coincidentally, was the niece of Sir Isaac Newton, the father of modern science, who was supposedly quite interested in the occult. (Living Heritage)

Parliament passed the Vagrancy Act in 1824. This act made fortune-telling, astrology, and spiritualism punishable offenses. (Living Heritage)

Although it was never actually applied, the Witchcraft Act remains legally in force in Northern Ireland. The Act is still in force in Israel, having been introduced into the legal system of the British Mandate over Palestine; Israel gained its independence before the law was repealed in Britain in 1951. Article 417 of the Israeli penal code of 1977, incorporating much legislation inherited from British and Ottoman reigns, sets two years’ imprisonment as the punishment for witchcraft, fortune telling, or magic. The law in Israel applies only to practitioners of witchcraft who charge a fee. (Wikipedia) The Fraudulent Mediums Act repealed the previous “witchcraft” acts in 1951, but ti was repealed in 2008. (Living Heritage)

For a different perspective, have a look at Traditional Witch and at Persecution and ‘Witchcraft’ (Laws relating to Witchcraft in the UK legal system) http://www.johnnyfin…/witchcraft.htm

(or)

From the BBC, have a look at “Britain’s ‘Last Witch’: the Campaign to Pardon Helen Duncan.”

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A Regency Era Whig Conversation Club, King of Clubs

unknown4The King of Clubs was a famous Whig conversation club, founded in 1798. In contrast to its mainly Tory forerunner The Club (established by Samuel Johnson, Edmund Burke and Sir Joshua Reynolds), it was a predominantly Whig fraternity of some of the most brilliant minds of the day. For an early description of the club see W.P. Courtney’s description in ‘Lord Byron and his Times.’ (Lord Byron and His Times)

Membership

The Pope of Holland House: Selections From the Correspondence of John Whishaw and His Friends 1813-1840 (Classic Reprint)

The Pope of Holland House: Selections From the Correspondence of John Whishaw and His Friends 1813-1840 (Classic Reprint)

The Rev. Sydney Smith’s older brother, Robert – nicknamed “Bobus” – provided the original inspiration for the club. Bobus gained a reputation at Eton for being such a clever Latin “versifier.” The group of friends who served as the founding members first met at the house of James Mackintosh in February, 1798. Along with Mackintosh, Samuel Rogers, James Scarlett, 1st Baron Abinger, Richard “Conversation” Sharp (see my post on Sharp), the historian John Allen and Robert Smith were those involved. By 1801, what had started as a small clique of friends transformed into a properly constituted club comprising the following members:

 

Richard Porson
Smithson Tennant
John Courtney
Bryan Edwards
“Bobus” Smith
Jo. Richardson
John Allen
Samuel Rogers
Charles Butler
Richard Sharp
James Scarlett, 1st Baron Abinger
James Mackintosh
William Dickinson
John Whishaw
Josiah Wedgwood II
Pierre Etienne Louis Dumont
Henry Vassall-Fox, 3rd Baron Holland (King of Clubs)

Within seven years the club expanded to include such additional illustrious names as

Thomas Moore
John Wedgwood
Henry Brougham
Thomas Creevey
William Smith
Lord Petty
George Philips
Francis Horner
Rev. Peter Elmsley
Samuel Romilly
John Ward, 1st Earl of Dudley
Rev. Sydney Smith
John Hopper
Samuel Boddington (Lord Byron and His Times)

Well known throughout London as an exclusive Whig dining club where erudite conversation on all matters pertaining to books, authors and literature took place, but where the discussion of politics was positively excluded, the King of Clubs knew great success. Tom Campbell described the club as “a gathering-place of brilliant talkers, dedicated to the meetings of the reigning wits of London”.

“The annual subscription was originally £2 2s. It dropped in 1804 to £2, but in 1808 was raised to 3s. From 1810 onwards the subscription was fixed at £3, and each member when dining paid 10s. 6d. extra. In 1802 the club met monthly at the “Crown and Anchor” in the Strand. For many years the dinners were held at the Freemasons’ Tavern, the last meeting there being on July 3, 1819. They met on February 7, 1820, at Grillion’s Hotel, in Albemarle Street, and dined there for the last time on February 3, 1821. The next gathering was at the Clarendon Hotel, on March 6, 1821. The price of the dinner became a guinea for each person, exclusive of wine and wax-lights, the charge for the latter item being invariably 21s. for the evening. About a dozen persons dined at each meeting, and they drank from six to twelve bottles of wine. Champagne never appears in the list of wines. Claret was the popular drink, and on one occasion five bottles were supplied at a charge of £3 2s. 6d., i.e., 12s. 6d. per bottle.” (Lord Byron and His Times)

“When Thomas Campbell returned to London from Altona in April, 1801, he received an invitation from Lord Holland to dine at the “King of Clubs.” “Thither with his lordship,” says the poet in his diary, “I accordingly repaired, and it was an era in my life. There I met in all their glory and feather, Mackintosh, Rogers, the Smiths, Sydney, and others. In the retrospect of a long life, I know no man whose acuteness of intellect gave me a higher idea of human nature than Mackintosh; and, without disparaging his benevolence—for he had an excellent heart—I may say that I never saw a man who so reconciled me to hereditary aristocracy as the benignant Lord Holland.” (Lord Byron and His Times)

 As a dining club, an additional charge of 10 shillings and 6 pence was made for dinner, a considerable sum in those days, and princely suppers were held in Harley Street and later at the Crown and Anchor, Arundel Street, in the Strand. The Crown and Anchor was the very inn where Samuel Johnson and James Boswell once enjoyed supping together; and it was especially popular among the Whigs after it hosted a great banquet in honour of Fox’s birthday in 1798, when an enormous crowd of 2000 Reformers toasted The People – the Source of Power! (King of Clubs)

Such was the popularity of the King of Clubs, and so sought after did membership become, that in 1808 a decision was taken to limit membership to a maximum of thirty people who were resident in England. By this time the membership had gained:

Lord Melbourne
Earl Cowper
William Blake
Abercromby (Lord Dunfermline)
Alexander Baring, 1st Baron Ashburton
Charles Kinnaird, 8th Lord Kinnaird
Henry Luttrell
R.P. Knight
Thomas Malthus
Lord John Townshend MP
John Fleming
John Playfair
George Lamb
Lord King
Henry Hallam
David Ricardo
Lord Thomas Denman, 1st Baron Denman (King of Clubs)

From Mary D. Archer and Christopher D. Haley, we find, “A near neighbor to the Shipman property was a fellow Emmanuel student, Thomas Smith, who owned the Manor of Easton Grey in Wiltshire. Tennant was a frequent guest at Easton Grey, and there befriended many of the leading figures of English political and economic life: David Ricardio, Thomas Malthus, Leonard and Francis Horner, Samuel Romilly, Lord Brougham and others who moved among the Whigs at Holland House, the Kensington mansion of Lord and Lady Holland. He soon gained access to their London gatherings as well, and in 1799 he became a member of a dining and conversation club known as the ‘King of Clubs.’ The club members met on the first Saturday of each month at the Crown and Anchor in the Strand and the typical meeting consisted chiefly of  literary reminiscences, anecdotes of authors, criticisms of books, etc., made palpable by bottles of sherry, madeira, port, bacillus and claret, as the bill for one dinner indicates. Such close interactions with the leading intellectuals of the day made Tennant a keen student of political economy, and he even contemplated founding a chair of political economy at Cambridge and writing books on the subject.” (The 1702 Chair of Chemistry at Cambridge: Transformation and Change)

Despite such unashamed conviviality there is no evidence that alcohol in any way impeded the flow or the quality of the conversation that took place, and we may imagine that the reverse was probably the case since the atmosphere was always a happy blend of the jovial and the serious. It was expected that members should give time to the preparation of their bon-mots, witticisms and anecdotes so that in due course these could be woven into the discussion as productively and effectively as possible. Clayden recalls how on one occasion Sharp, in fun, chanced upon Boddington’s notes before a meeting, made a mental note of all his stories and brought them into the conversation before Boddington could relate them himself. (King of Clubs)

The preparation that members were expected to undertake before attending meetings of the King of Clubs does not seem to have spoiled either the spontaneity of what occurred or the enjoyment of those who attended. Yet when Francis Horner had his first experience of the club, on 10 April 1802, he gained a very mixed impression, finding the conversation less animated than he anticipated but attributing this to the absence of Sydney Smith:

“This day I dined at the King of Clubs which meets monthly at the Crown and Anchor in the Strand. The company consisted of Mackintosh, Romilly, Whishaw, Abercromby, Sharp, Scarlett, etc. Smith is not yet come to town. The conversation was very pleasing. It consisted chiefly of literary reminiscences, anecdotes of authors, criticisms of books, etc. I had been taught to expect a very different scene – a display of argument, wit and all the flourishes of intellectual gladiatorship, which though less permanently pleasing, is for the time more striking. This expectation was not answered, partly, as I am given to understand, from the absence of Smith, and partly from the presence of Romilly, who evidently received from all an unaffected deference and imposed a certain degree of restraint.” (King of Clubs)

“The last dinner recorded in this book was on June 7, 1823, when those present were Lord Lansdowne, Mr. Whishaw, Mr. Hallam, Lord Dudley, Mr. Blake, Mr. Lamb, Mr. Philips, Mr. R. P. Knight, Mr. J. Allen, Mr. Boddington, and Mr. Smyth as visitor. With that gathering the Club seems to have passed out of existence.

“The reason for its death may perhaps be found in some reflections of Campbell. Many of the members were his warm friends, and as their guest he was present at several of their dinners. But the entertainment gradually palled upon him, and he analysed his feelings in a letter to one of his correspondents.

“‘Much as the art and erudition of these men please an auditor at the first or second visit, the trial of minds becomes at last fatiguing, because it is unnatural and unsatisfactory. Every one of these brilliants goes there to shine, for conversational powers are so much the rage in London that no reputation is higher than his who exhibits them to advantage. Where every one tries to instruct there is, in fact, but little instruction. Wit, paradox, eccentricity, even absurdity if delivered rapidly and facetiously, takes priority in these societies of sound reason and delicate taste. I have watched sometimes the devious tide of conversation guided by accidental associations turning from topic to topic and satisfactory upon none. What has one learnt? has been my general question.The mind, it is true, is electrified and quickened, and the spirits are finely exhilarated; but one grand fault pervades the whole institution—their inquiries are desultory, and all improvement to be reaped must be accidental.’

“If Campbell’s conclusions were correct this combination of wits died from excessive brilliancy. Fortunately for the prolongation of their existence, most London clubs are not at this time composed of such material.” (Lord Byron and His Times)

Posted in British history, Great Britain, Living in the Regency, real life tales, Regency era, Whigs | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

Celebrating Our Ladies: Roundup of My Regency Heroines + a Giveaway

Cathy Helms of www.avalongraphics has designed us this logo

Cathy Helms of http://www.avalongraphics has designed us this logo

During the month of October (on Tuesdays) nine other authors and I are “Shining a Light on Our Ladies” by taking a closer look at what makes our heroines so special. The other authors involved include: Helen Hollick, Alison Morton, Anna Belfrage, Inge H Borg, Linda Collison, Elizabeth Revill, Patricia Bracewell, Sophie Perinot, and Diana Wilder.

This is the last of the posts on my Regency-based heroines. I loved the process of looking back at some of my creations, and I hope we will soon do the same for the heroes in our books.

Lady Sonalí Fowler of A Touch of Emerald is the last of the ladies from my REALM series. I purposely kept her removed from the previous two posts on the women of the REALM because in book one she was but a five-year old child. The hero of A Touch of Emerald, Daniel Kerrington, Lord Worthing, was but 10 years of age in book one (A Touch of Scandal) and the courtesy title of Lord Worthing belonged to his father. In book 2 (A Touch of Velvet), Lady Sonalí was kidnapped by a Baloch warrior Rahmat Talpur. He held her in the space of the bench in the coach increasing her fear of the dark. Later when the then Lord Worthing (James Kerrington) rescued her, Sonalí was forced to squeeze through a collapsed smugglers’ tunnel in order to reach freedom. Moreover, the realization that her father chose to chase after the kidnapper of his cousin/love interest Miss Velvet Aldridge instead of Sonalí skews Lady Sonalí’s self confidence. In A Touch of Emerald, she must face each of her fears for the Baloch warlord, Shaheed Mir, captures her and places Sonalí and five of the younger REALM children in Chistlehurst Caves, which is 22 miles of passages.

Moreover, the fact that she is of Indian descent plays a role in her development. Beyond fighting for her life, Sonalí must face social criticism and find a means to claim her identity as an asset rather than a deficit to her father’s name. Today’s society often defines a person based on looks. Sonalí encounters this phenomena, and in the beginning she attempts to “hide” from her place in the society, but with the guidance of Daniel’s parents, Sonalí steps into the light. 

ATOE eBook Cover - Green TextA Touch of Emerald: The Conclusion to the Realm Series
(Fiction/Historical; Historical Romance/Mystery/Adventure; Regency)

Four crazy Balochs. A Gypsy band. An Indian maiden. A cave with a maze of passages. A hero, not yet tested. And a missing emerald.

For nearly two decades, the Realm thwarted the efforts of all Shaheed Mire sent their way, but now the Baloch warlord is in England, and the tribal leader means to reclaim the fist-sized emerald he believes one of the Realm stole during their rescue of a girl upon whom Mir turned his men. Mir means to take his revenge on the Realm and the Indian girl’s child, Lady Sonalí Fowler.

Daniel Kerrington, Viscount Worthing, has loved Lady Sonalí since they were but children. Yet, when his father, the Earl of Linworth, objects to Sonalí’s bloodlines, Worthing thinks never to claim her. However, when danger arrives in the form of the Realm’s old enemy, Kerrington ignores all caution for the woman he loves.

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One of my favorite characters is Adam Lawrence, Viscount Stafford, heir to the Earl of Greenwall. Stafford is my go-to character. He made his first appearance in The Phantom of Pemberley, where he assisted Fitzwilliam Darcy capture a murderer. In that book, Stafford is a bit of a rake; he travels with his mistress Cathleen Donnel. At the end of the book, he releases Cathleen to return to her family. During the next seven years, Stafford makes appearances as a minor character or a walk-through character in A Touch of Velvet, A Touch of Grace, A Touch of Honor, His American Heartsong, and A Touch of Mercy.

Readers asked me to write “Adam’s story.” Therefore, I created His Irish Eve. Adam encounters Aoife Kennice when his father sends Adam to Cheshire to claim Adam’s by-blow by the long-ago dismissed mistress Cathleen. When he arrives in the area, Stafford discovers Cathleen left him to return to her family and to deliver their children (triplets). The children are being cared for by Cathleen’s cousin, Aoife Kennice. [Just as a side point, “Aoife” is the Gaelic name for “Eve.” Get it: Adam and Eve. I know I am sick!!!] Aoife tends sheep and keeps his children safe. Their relationship begins rocky for Adam is accustomed to women falling for him immediately. Aoife considers him a conceited “prat.” From her, however, Adam learns something of the value of a full day’s work, as well as pride in his accomplishments. They literally fight off the brigades storming St. Peters Field during the Peterloo Massacre to keep the children from harm. Moreover, Aoife leads Adam back to his family, especially his father, Lord Greenwall. 

Unknown-1His Irish Eve
(Fiction/Historical Fiction; Romance; Regency Romance/Adventure)

When the Earl of Greenwall demands his only son, ADAM LAWRENCE, Viscount Stafford, retrieve the viscount’s by-blow, everything in Lawrence’s life changes. Six years prior, Stafford released his mistress, Cathleen Donnell, from his protection; now, he discovers from Greenwall that Cathleen was with child when she returned to her family. Stafford arrives in Cheshire to discover not only the son of which Greenwall spoke, but also two daughters, as well as a strong-willed woman, in the form of AOIFE KENNICE, who fascinates Stafford from the moment of their first encounter.

Set against the backdrop of the early radicalism of the Industrial Revolution and the Peterloo Massacre, a battle begins: A fight Lawrence must win: a fight for a woman worth knowing, his Irish Eve.

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The last of my Regency offerings is from Book 1 of the First Wives’ trilogy. The premise behind this trilogy is that each of the heroines will be presented to Society as a “first wife”/widow (even though she is not but a country miss). As a widowed woman of the Regency era, the lady will have more freedom than an unmarried miss, especially in London.

Rosellen Warren comes to stay as a companion to the Dowager Countess Eggleston, but the countess means to find Rosellen an appropriate marriage. However, the countess never suspected that the one person who really takes to Rosellen is the woman’s son, the current Earl of Eggleston. Unfortunately, Nathaniel Epperly is legally married to another. That is until his wife turns up murdered, and he is accused of the slaying. 

Yet, Epperly has a staunch supporter: Rosellen will move heaven and earth to prove Lord Eggleston is NOT the murderer, even risking her own life to do so. 

FWCCoverjpgcropThe First Wives’ Club: Book 1 of the First Wives’ Trilogy (Regency romance, historical romance, trilogy, series, mystery, family relationships)

NATHANIEL EPPERLY, the Earl of Eggleston, married the woman his father chose for him, but the marriage was everything but comfortable. Nathaniel’s wife, Lady Charlotte, came to the marriage bed with a wanton’s experience. She dutifully provides Eggleston his heir, but within a fortnight, she deserted father and son for Baron Remington Craddock. In the eyes of the ton, Lady Charlotte cuckolded Epperly.

ROSELLEN WARREN longs for love and adventure. Unfortunately, she’s likely to find neither. As a squire’s daughter, Rosellen holds no sway in Society; but she’s a true diamond in the rough. Yet, when she meets Epperly’s grandmother, the Dowager Countess Eggleston creates a “story” for the girl, claiming if Rosellen is presented to the ton as a war widow with a small dowry, that the girl will find a suitable match.

BARON REMINGTON CRADDOCK remains a thorn in Eggleston’s side, but when Craddock makes Mrs. Warren a pawn in his crazy game of control, Eggleston offers the woman his protection. However, the earl has never faced a man who holds no strength of title, but who wields great power; and he finds himself always a step behind the enigmatic baron. When someone frames Epperly for Lady Charlotte’s sudden disappearance, Nathaniel must quickly learn the baron’s secrets or face a death sentence.

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Now, for the giveaway. Three winners will be chosen from those who comment below for eBook copies of the novels listed above. Winners choice of book! The giveaway closes at midnight EST Saturday, October 31, 2015.

In case the links no longer work for the blog hop, here are the original links so you might copy and paste them:

PLEASE JOIN THE OTHER PARTICIPANTS IN THE BLOG HOP. I HAVE LISTED THOSE FOR TODAY AND THOSE FOR THE PREVIOUS THREE TUESDAYS. 

Light on ladies group6 October Participants:

Regina Jeffers ~ Four Heroines of the Realm Series

https://reginajeffers.wordpress.com/2015/10/06/shine-a-light-on-our-ladies-the-women-of-the-realm-series-part-1/
Helen Hollick ~ Emma of Normandy http://ofhistoryandkings.blogspot.co.uk/2015/10/shining-light-on-our-ladies_6.html
Pat Bracewell ~ Emma of Normandy http://www.patriciabracewell.com/2015/10/shining-light-on-our-ladies-a-tale-of-two-queens/
Inge Borg ~ Princess Nefret    http://devilwinds.blogspot.co.uk/2015/10/shining-light-on-our-ladies-blog-hop.html

Ladies post 213 October Participants:

Helen Hollick ~ the two Ediths of King Harold II http://www.ofhistoryandkings.blogspot.com/2015/10/shining-light-on.html
Diana Wilder ~ Lavinia Wheeler and “The Safeguard” http://dianawilder.blogspot.com/2015/10/shining-light-on-our-ladies.html
Regina Jeffers ~ Elizabeth Bennet https://reginajeffers.wordpress.com/2015/10/13/shining-light-on-our-ladies-blog-tour-elizabeth-bennets-less-likable-qualities/
Liz Spear (Revill) ~ Caroline Llewellyn    http://www.elizabethrevill.com/blog/shining-a-light-on-our-ladies

Ladies post 3 smaller20 October Participants:

Alison Morton ~ Aurelia Mitela    http://alison-morton.com/2015/10/20/meet-aurelia-mitela-woman-and-warrior/

Helen Hollick ~ King Arthur’s Ladies http://www.ofhistoryandkings.blogspot.com/2015/10/shiningh-light-on-arthurs-ladies.html

Sophie Perinot ~ Marguerite de Valois http://www.sophieperinot.com/blog/2015/10/20/marguerite-de-valois-shinning-a-light-on-a-much-maligned-french-princess/

Regina Jeffers ~ Four More Heroines of the Realm Series  https://reginajeffers.wordpress.com/2015/10/20/shine-a-light-on-our-ladies-the-realm-part-2-a-giveaway/

week427 October Participants:

Helen Hollick ~ Pirate Captains’ Ladies  http://ofhistoryandkings.blogspot.co.uk/2015/10/shining-light-on-pirate-captains-ladies.html

Linda Collison ~ Patricia MacPherson, an 18th-century cross-dressing protagonist    http://www.lindacollison.com/shining-light-ladies/

Anna Belfrage ~ Kit de Guirande      https://annabelfrage.wordpress.com/2015/10/27/shining-a-light-on-my-lady/

Regina Jeffers ~ Roundup of my Regency Heroines 

Posted in British history, Great Britain, Living in the Regency, Regency era, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Chaucer’s Influence: Minor Stories and Poems

 Geoffrey Chaucer - Author, Poet - Biography.com www.biography.com


Geoffrey Chaucer – Author, Poet – Biography.com
http://www.biography.com

According to Chaucer’s biography on the Luminarium, “GEOFFREY CHAUCER, English poet. The name Chaucer, a French form of the Latin calcearius, a shoemaker, is found in London and the eastern counties as early as the second half of the 13th century. Some of the London Chaucers lived in Cordwainer Street, in the shoemakers’ quarter; several of them, however, were vintners, and among others the poet’s father John, and probably also his grandfather Robert. Legal pleadings inform us that in December 1324 John Chaucer was not much over twelve years old, and that he was still unmarried in 1328, the year which used to be considered that of Geoffrey’s birth. The poet was probably born from eight to twelve years later, since in 1386, when giving evidence in Sir Richard le Scrope’s suit against Sir Robert Grosvenor as to the right to bear certain arms, he was set down as “del age de xl ans et plus, armeez par xxvij ans.” At a later date, and probably at the time of the poet’s birth, his father lived in Thames Street, and had to wife a certain Agnes, niece of Hamo de Compton, whom we may regard as Geoffrey Chaucer’s mother.”

By 1357, Chaucer served in the household of Elizabeth, Countess of Ulster and wife of Lionel, Duke of Clarence. Notations in her household accounts show where she paid for Chaucer’s clothing and expenses. In 1359, Chaucer entered the war with France, spending time at “Retters,” (Rethel) near Reims, where he was taken prisoner and later ransomed by the government. King Edward III paid sixteen pounds toward the ransom in March 1360. 

“…on the 10th of June 1367 Edward granted him a pension of twenty marks for his past and future services. A pension of ten marks had been granted by the king the previous September to a Philippa Chaucer for services to the queen as one of her “domicellae” or “damoiselles,” and it seems probable that at this date Chaucer was already married and this Philippa his wife, a conclusion which used to be resisted on the ground of allusions in his early poems to a hopeless love-affair, now reckoned part of his poetical outfit. Philippa is usually said to have been one of two daughters of a Sir Payne Roet, the other being Katherine, who after the death of her first husband, Sir Hugh de Swynford, in 1372, became governess to John of Gaunt’s children, and subsequently his mistress and (in 1396) his wife. It is possible that Philippa was sister to Sir Hugh and sister-in-law to Katherine. In either case the marriage helps to account for the favour subsequently shown to Chaucer by John of Gaunt.” (Luminarium)

 Philip Mould | Historical Portraits | Geoffrey Chaucer | 16th ... www.historicalportraits.com


Philip Mould | Historical Portraits | Geoffrey Chaucer | 16th …
http://www.historicalportraits.com

Serving as a diplomat, Chaucer traveled to both France and Italy. Eventually, he was given a political appointment as customs controller and later made a justice. Later still, he became a Knight of the Shire. He died in 1400 and is buried in Westminster Abbey. 

Chaucer’s works include…

Before 1372: Minor poems and the Book of the House of Fame, Anelida and Arcite. This is the period of the French influence.

1380-1386: The Parliament of Fowls, Troilus and Cressida, Boece, The Legend of Good Women, and minor poems. This is the period of Italian influence. 

1387-1392: The early Canterbury Tales, and the Astrolobe.

1393-1400: The later Canterbury Tales, and minor poems. 

Chaucer’s Verse:

Chaucer was one of the most musical of English poets. When read properly, his lines retain a fine melody even to the modern ear to which his language is unfamiliar. To read Chaucer properly, the following simple rules should be observed: 

  1. Vowels should be pronounced as in modern European languages, especially the Teutonic. That is, the “a” as in “father”; the “i” as in “machine” or “this”; the “u” as in “full”; the “o” as in “dope” “ou” as in “ghoul.”
  2. An “e” at the end of a word is usually give full syllabic content. 
  3. Chaucer’s favorite line is a five foot line which is accented as follows: 

Whan thát Aprílle wíth his shóures sóote

This type of line is used uniformly throughout the Canterbury Tales. 

Some selections from Chaucer’s works: 

Minor Poems

“The Former Age” – In the former age, men did not know of luxuries or riches. It was a period of blissfulness. Corn grew without ploughing and all lived simply, yet well. It was a wholesome innocent world. 

Now Chaucer says: “For in our days nit but covetyse Doubleness, and treason and envy Poyson, manslaughter and mordre in sundry wise.”

“Truth” – Truth shall deliver all from ill. Be bold and honest and have no fear. 

“Gentilesse” – True gentility is inborn; it cannot be passed down as a title. 

“Lack of Steadfastnesse” – Contrast of former time and the present. The past age was stable and steadfast; the present is false and deceiving. Chaucer is keenly aware of the ills of the world in which he lives. 

“Lenvoy of Chaucer to Scogan” – Scogan has scoffed at love. Chaucer ironically warns him of his great foolhardiness. He has caused Venus so to weep that her tears caused the floods of 1393. 

“Complaint to his Empty Purse” 

“I am so sorry, now that y be light

for certes, but ye make me heavy cheer.”

The Envoy pleads to the king (Henry IV) to remedy the emaciated condition of the poet’s purse.

Please take the time to read Chaucer’s Biography HERE.

Posted in Age of Chaucer, Anglo-Normans, British history, Great Britain, literature, real life tales | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

“One Minute Past Christmas,” a Holiday Short Story + a Giveaway


OMPC Cover Concept 2Are you sick of Halloween already? Dreading Thanksgiving? Are you ready for Christmas? Then I have just the thing to bring a bit of the HOLIDAY Spirit.

In 2012, a gentleman friend released a Christmas-based eBook short story, which his friends and family promptly read, but few others. Although the story had a great premise, Dr. Arnold is not a “story” teller. In truth, he’s a retired journalism professor (my journalism professor some 45 years prior). If you know anything about journalistic writing, as opposed to fiction, you know that in journalism all the “fluff and stuff” is omitted.

Enter moi. An expert in “fluff and stuff.”

Therefore, I convinced Dr. Arnold into permitting me to “rework” the story, and we could release the tale together. When the story was originally written it was 6500 words. Now, it’s over 17,000. “Fluff and Stuff.” 

This is not a Jane Austen story, but I believe you will enjoy it just the same. “One Minute Past Christmas” is the story of a Greenbrier County, West Virginia, family in which a grandfather and his granddaughter share a special ability — they call it a “gift” — that enables them to briefly witness a miracle, for surely only God could grant them such an unbelievable sight. What they see each year begins at precisely one minute past Christmas and fills them with as much relief as it does wonder. But Jared Nicholas and his granddaughter Jessica worry that the “gift” — which they cannot reveal to anyone else — will die with them because it has been passed to no other relative for sixty-five years.

OMPC Cover Concept 1Excerpt:

She climbed the steps to the attic a bit more slowly than she did previously. Jessica claimed her sixty-fifth birthday in September, and even though both the Nicholas and Lawrence families traditionally lived well into their late seventies and early eighties, Jessica could not shake the idea that her days were shorter than she hoped.

“Where to look?” she murmured as she pulled the chain to turn on the bare overhead bulb to illuminate the space once used as a drying room, but which now held the family “treasures.”

Hanna joined Jessica to look around in bewilderment.

“I did not realize there were so many boxes.”

“Several lifetimes chronicled here,” Jessica said as she scanned the markings on the side of many of the boxes.

She turned slowly to scan the many configurations.

“You used to like to play among all the boxes,” Jessica reminded her granddaughter. “We made castles for you to crawl through.”

“Really?” Hanna asked in surprise, and Jessica could not disguise her scowl of disapproval.

“I don’t wish to think upon the values you lost by movin’ away from your family home,” she pronounced in chastisement.

“Yes, your father found a viable position, but your family abandoned so much more.”

“Oh, Gram, don’t be going there again. Papa is accounted one of the best mechanics in the area. He has fifteen men working for him.”

“Financial success doesn’t keep a person warm in the same way as one’s memories do,” Jessica countered.

Her granddaughter rolled her eyes in the way of all young people who think they know everything.

Discarding her frustration with what she could not change, Jessica gestured toward several rows of boxes against the far wall.

“You look over there. I’ll take this side. The boxes are labeled, but it wouldn’t hurt to take a peek into each to make sure the contents match the labels.”

“Do you think there are mice in here?” Hanna asked tentatively.

Her granddaughter lifted a box from the top of the stack to investigate the inside.

“You know nothin’ of livin’ in the country,” Jessica remarked as she adjusted her glasses upon her nose so she could read through the bifocals.

“Your grandfather and I have three of the best mousers in the county. Nothing gets past those cats.”

“I thought you kept the cats because they were treasured pets,” Hanna said in distraction before searching through the first box.

Jessica thought, Not likely, but she said, “No. The cats earn their keep.” Like everyone on this farm.

Silence fell between them as they searched. Hanna made quicker work of the task than Jessica. Reminiscing over one of Jeremy’s toy trucks or a favorite picture frame belonging to her mother required time. Recollections required time. Her grandfather Jared Nicholas taught Jessica that time only bent for those God granted a miracle. When Hanna was born, Jessica thought to teach her granddaughter something of the magic, but Jeremy and Molly snatched the child away from Jessica before she could show the girl what made the child one of God’s chosen beings.

“Any luck?” Hanna called out.

“Not yet,” Jessica murmured as she caressed each of the precious items before returning them to the box.

Hanna stood to scan the stacks.

“Do you recall anything of how the dress was put away?” the girl asked.

Jessica watched Hanna work her way behind what appeared to be an artificial Christmas tree box along the wall.

A smile of recognition claimed Jessica’s lips.

“I recall now,” she said before crossing the small space to spin the box meant for a fake tree around where she could tear away the tape holding it closed.

“There is no need for an artificial tree on a Christmas tree farm,” she declared. “My mother thought it a good joke to store a family heirloom in a hoax of a box.”

Stripping the masking tape away, Jessica placed the box upon the floor and opened the flaps.

“Ah, here it is.”

Jessica lifted the garment bag, which was closed at the bottom with more tape to keep moisture and air from ruining the dress.

“There are mothballs in the box,” she said with a laugh. “We may need to air the dress out.”

Jessica slowly unzipped the bag.

“I imagine my mother covered the hanger before returning the dress to it. My mama, bless her soul, was most particular about the gown. It was the most expensive dress anyone in the family ever owned. I think her cautions and her protestations nearly persuaded your mama not to marry our Jeremy.”

“Will you be as crazy with my wearing it?” Hanna asked half in a tease and half in fear.

“Count on it,” Jessica said smartly as she lifted the dress from the bag.

Beneath the heavy garment carrier was a dry cleaning bag covering the gown and its layers of soft lace.

“Thanks for the warning,” Hanna retorted in what sounded like cynicism.

The girl reached for the bottom of the bag and lifted the plastic to reveal a dress with all the glamour of the 1920s.

“It is like something right out of The Great Gatsby,” Hanna gasped. “It is perfect. We can do the wedding as if it’s high tea in the Hamptons.”

Jessica was more practical.

“We must check all the seams. The lace has yellowed a bit, but not enough to hurt the look of the dress. We may need to find some replacement lace for the sleeves, but matching it shouldn’t be too difficult. It’s a common rose-and-ivy pattern. I do not want you to think of making this a flapper look. My mama and my grandmother would roll over in their graves. Grandma Lily ordered this dress special, based on a picture of her mother’s wedding dress in the old country. Grandpa Jared spent his last penny to please Lily Hardwick. During their first few years of marriage they had nothing to live on but love, but that was enough. Even later, during the Great Depression, they never considered selling the dress or the lace.”

“I promise I’ll treat it properly,” Hanna swore, crossing her heart with her index finger.

“I’ll return the dress to the bag, and we’ll take it downstairs for a closer look. Later, we’ll go into town for lace and whatever else we might need.”

Jessica reached for the box.

“Help me set the empty carton from the way.”

“Yes, Ma’am.”

Jessica thought it ironic that the prospects of wearing her great great-grandmother’s dress brought a return of Hanna’s manners.

“What’s that?” Hanna asked as she lifted the box to hear a thud hit the floor a second time.

“Best we find out.”

Jessica draped the bagged dress over the back of a chest of drawers, which should be donated to one of the shelters, before she knelt to dig into the bottom of the tree box.

“Well, I’ll be,” Jessica swore with a chuckle. “I haven’t seen these since before Grandpa Jared passed. I thought it long gone. I wonder who put them in this box.”

“You must have put whatever it is there, Gram,” Hanna said with a bit of impatience, common of young people dealing with the older generation.

Jessica’s frown lines met.

“You are assuming I am suffering from early ‘old timer’s’ disease, but it’s not true. I thought these were long gone.”

She withdrew two composition notebooks with hard covers.

“Love poems written to Grandpa Bob?” Hanna teased with a raised eyebrow.

Jessica clutched the two books to her chest as she stood.

“No, they contain a story my Papaw Jared thought should be kept alive to be shared sometime after our deaths.. He was in his eighties when he asked me to record his tale, a story I shared with him. Although he could read and write, Papaw Jared was not much for his letters. He worried too much about correct spelling and such. His teacher was quite strict, striking his hands many times for his poor penmanship, and I often helped with legal papers and the such as I grew older. Eventually, Papaw told his tale into an old tape recorder, and I transcribed it for him.”

Jessica shot a quick glance at her granddaughter, and hope lodged in Jessica’s heart. She long regretted not knowing for certain whether Hanna could be the answer to a family mystery. With the absence of Jeremy’s family during those years when the girl might show herself, Jessica remained uncertain about how to approach the subject.

“I’d like very much to share the story with you,” she said tentatively. “There’s a bit about you in it.”

BookCoverImageNOW FOR THE GIVEAWAY! I HAVE 3 eBOOK COPIES OF “ONE MINUTE PAST CHRISTMAS” FOR 3 LUCKY WINNERS. TO BE ELIGIBLE, LEAVE A COMMENT BELOW. THE GIVEAWAY ENDS AT MIDNIGHT EST, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24.

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Posted in Appalachia, Christmas, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 10 Comments

Celebrating Our Ladies: Four More Heroines of The Realm Series + a Giveaway

Cathy Helms of www.avalongraphics has designed us this logo

Cathy Helms of http://www.avalongraphics has designed us this logo

During the month of October (on Tuesdays) nine other authors and I are “Shining a Light on Our Ladies” by taking a closer look at what makes our heroines so special. The other authors involved include: Helen Hollick, Alison Morton, Anna Belfrage, Inge H Borg, Linda Collison, Elizabeth Revill, Patricia Bracewell, Sophie Perinot, and Diana Wilder.

Specifically, we are looking at what makes heroines in our series such an integral part of the action. With this first post, I wish to highlight some of my favorite female leads from my award-winning REALM series. For those of you who are first timers on “Every Woman Dreams,” the REALM is a covert operation working under the auspices of the Home Office during the Napoleonic Wars. There are seven men in my group, and each book of the series is devoted to one of them (and the lady who brings the gentleman up to snuff). Please note that although the series is about the men of the REALM, the books all sport images of the women the men love.

I spoke of the Realm ladies of books 4, 5, 6, and the companion novel on October 6. You may see those comments HERE.

Today, I wish to start with A Touch of Scandal, Book 1 (aka The Scandal of Lady Eleanor) and the “stalwart” of the Realm ladies, Lady Eleanor Fowler Kerrington, the Countess of Linworth. Of all the women of this series, Lady Eleanor suffers the most, but she is remarkably resilient. Eleanor’s father, the late Duke of Thornhill, physically abused Eleanor from the ages of fourteen to sixteen. Because Thornhill involved another couple in his “fantasies,” the duke exposed Eleanor to blackmail from Sir Louis Levering. Only with the manipulations of her brother, Brantley Fowler, the Duke of Thornhill, and the man she loves, James Kerrington, Viscount Worthing, is Eleanor saved in a bizarre twist of fate at a party hosted by Prince George.

Later, in the series, we see Eleanor in defense of the injured Viscount Levering’s life when she takes on Murhad Jamot, one of Shaheed Mir’s henchmen. Eleanor also serves as the “mother” for the other ladies of the Realm. She is the first to marry, and she assumes the role of leader of the women as her husband did with the men. When her father was ill, suffering from the pox, it was Eleanor who kept the estate running in her brother’s absence. It is Eleanor who arranges each of the weddings of the Realm ladies. But more importantly, it is Eleanor who accepts Kerrington’s ten-year-old son Daniel as if he is her own. Being a stepmother to two sons, long before I was a mother, I infused some of the qualities I exercised and some I wished I knew into Eleanor and Daniel’s relationship. Even when she bears Viscount Worthing other children, she adamantly considers Daniel her son.

Eleanor never “talks down” to Daniel; she permits the boy to express his opinions and presents him with value. She encourages Daniel to be his own man – not an imitation of his renown father. Although the other members of the Kerrington family “criticize” Daniel’s later mother, Eleanor acknowledges that the memory of the late Elizabeth Kerrington should be a part of Daniel’s life.

ATOS eBook Cover ConceptBook Blurb for A Touch of Scandal

JAMES KERRINGTON, the future Earl of Linworth, left his title and infant son behind after the death of his beloved Elizabeth, but he returns to England to ten to his ailing father and to establish his roots. With Daniel as his heir, Kerrington has no need to marry, but when Lady Eleanor Fowler stumbles and falls into his arms, Kerrington’s world is turned upon its head. He will do anything to claim her. 

LADY ELEANOR FOWLER hides from Society, knowing her father’s notorious reputation for debauchery tainted any hopes she might have of a happy family. And yet, despite her fears, her brother’s closest friend, James Kerrington, Lord Worthing, rekindles her hopes, but when Sir Louis Levering appears with proof of Eleanor’s participation in her father’s wickedness, she is drawn into a world of depravity, and only Kerrington’s love can save her. 

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Book 2 of the Realm series features Lady Eleanor’s cousin, Miss Velvet Aldridge, as the heroine. A Touch of Velvet brings childhood “lovers” together. Brantley Fowler, the Duke of Thornhill, has loved Velvet Aldridge since she was twelve. Velvet is a distant cousin of the Fowlers; she came to reside at Thorn Hall when she was but five. The Duchess of Thornhill sent for Velvet to be a companion to her daughter Eleanor. Velvet’s parents are killed in a questionable accident, and the Aldridge sisters are sent to different relatives to reside.

I wrote Velvet as a “dreamer” of sorts. She reads “romance” and “wishes” for Brantley Fowler to act the role of her prince. When she learns he chose an Indian wife (who has passed) and has a daughter, Velvet sets out to make Bran jealous of what he left behind. Velvet does act with some courage when Murhad Jamot kidnaps her, but overall I did not permit her to be as strong as some of the other characters in the series. This was a conscious choice (which I could not discuss with others until the end of the series). Although I liked some of the characteristics I presented Velvet, I did not always approve of her methods. Velvet is a dreamer (not an idealist), and as such she expects opposition and misunderstandings, but she believes she be successful. Another of her more likable characteristics, Velvet takes positive steps toward achieving her goals. In Velvet’s defense, Fowler does not display the same maturity as other members of the Realm. The reader will hope that they mature together. 

I write about modern issues, but set them in the Regency. In “Velvet,” I explore the modern idea of “victim mentality.”

Victim mentality is an acquired (learned) personality trait in which a person tends to regard him or herself as a victim of the negative actions of others, and to think, speak and act as if that were the case — even in the absence of clear evidence. The desire of sympathy is crucial in that the mere experience of a harmful event is not enough for the emergence of the sense of being a victim. In order to have this sense there is the need to perceive the harm as undeserved, unjust and immoral, an act that could not be prevented by the victim. The need to obtain empathy can then emerge.” As the series developed, I presented Velvet with a mild case of this trait, but her sister Satiné is more neurotic. 

ATOV eBook CoverBook Blurb for A Touch of Velvet

No one finds his soul mate when she is twelve and he is seventeen, but BRANTLEY FOWLER, the Duke of Thornhill, always thought he had found his. The memory of Velvet Aldridge’s face is the only thing that kept him alive all those years he remained estranged from his family. Now, he has returned to Kent to claim his title and the woman he loves, but first he must obliterate the memory of his infamous father, while staving off numerous attacks from Mir’s associates. 

VELVET ALDRIDGE always believes in “happily ever after.” Yet, when Brantley Fowler returns home, he has a daughter and his wife’s memory to accompany him. He promised Velvet eight years prior that he would return to Thorn Hall to make her his wife, but Thornhill only offers her a Season and a dowry. How can she make him lover her? Make him her “knight in shining armor”?

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Book 3 of the series is A Touch of Cashémere. Miss Cashémere Aldridge is the youngest of the Aldridge sisters. She is the twin to Satiné. When Velvet was sent to live in the household of the Duke of Thornhill, Satiné was sent to live with the girls’ maternal uncle, Baron Ashton. Unfortunately, Cashémere remains with her father’s younger brother (and heir) and her paternal grandmother. The Aldridges are not easy people with whom to live, and Cashé is expected to follow VERY strict religious teachings. When we first encounter her, Cashémere is opinionated and a bit caustic. Aidan Kimbolt, Viscount Lexford, looks kindly upon her, but it is Marcus Wellston, the Earl of Berwick, whose approval she seeks. Unfortunately, Berwick is besotted with her twin, Satiné. 

Cashémere takes the situation in hand. As they are identical, she maneuvers Satiné toward Lexford, while she charms Berwick. All looks well until a former Scottish suitor kidnaps Satiné, thinking it was Cashémere, and strikes Lexford a blow that nearly costs the viscount his life. Assuming the responsibility for the ruse going awry, Cashémere sets out to set her twin free and to accept the marriage her uncle/guardian arranged with Lachan Charters. 

One of the reasons Cashémere knows success is Berwick. Where Lexford permitted her to rant and rave and called it “adorable,” Berwick holds Cashé accountable for her actions. After learning of her Uncle Samuel’s deceptions, she sees the world through a lens of opportunity. Cashé also is quick in making logical decisions. Where others might act irrationally, Cashémere tests herself and finds her own rhythm. One of Cashé’s most endearing qualities is how she treats Wellston’s oldest brother Trevor. Trevor has what we would now call Down’s syndrome, and although he is the oldest, he is not capable of claiming the title. First his brother Myles and then Marcus accepts the title as Trevor’s regent. This is another “modern” issue I included in the plot lines for the series.

ATOCcrop2Book Blurb for A Touch of Cashémere

MARCUS WELLSTON never expected to inherit his father’s title. After all, he is the youngest of three sons. However, his oldest brother Trevor is judged incapable of meeting the title’s responsibilities, and his second brother Myles loses his life in a freak accident; therefore, Marcus returns to Tweed Hall and the earldom. Having departed Northumberland years prior to escape his guilt in his twin sister’s death, Wellston spent the previous six years with the Realm, a covert governmental group, in atonement. Now, all he requires is a biddable wife with a pleasing personality. Neither of those phrases describe Cashémere Aldridge. 

CASHEMERE ALDRIDGE thought her opinions were absolutes and her world perfectly ordered, but when her eldest sister Velvet is kidnapped, Cashé becomes a part of the intrigue. She quickly discovers nothing she knew before is etched in stone. Leading her through these changes is a man who considers her a “spoiled brat.” A man who prefers her twin Satiné to Cashémere. A man who’s approval she desperately requires: Marcus Wellston, the Earl of Berwick. Toss in an irate Baloch warlord, a missing emerald, a double kidnapping, a blackmail attempt, and an explosion in a glass cone, and the Realm has its hands full. The Regency era has never been hotter, nor more dangerous. 

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The last book I will mention today is A Touch of Honor: Book 7 of the series. As I mentioned above, when I started writing this series, I planned for Miss Satiné Aldridge to play a leading role in book 4. However, I did not care much for the woman I created, and although the fans wished me to bring her back and “tell her story,” I was not convinced. I am one of those who wants a HEA (happily ever after) for my characters, but perhaps not the one the reader anticipated. 

In book 3, I permitted Baron John Swenton to develop a tendre for Satiné. At the time, I anticipated writing a novella for Swenton and the lady, but throughout the series, I began to wish to know more of Swenton. “Honor” is a word that marks his actions throughout the series, so it became an appropriate title for “his” book. At the beginning of this book, Satiné has gone to Europe to hide the shame of her kidnapping and assumed violation by Lachlan Charters. Swenton has kept tabs on her and makes an unexpected call upon the lady’s household when he must travel to Austria to settle his estranged mother’s will. Swenton’s purpose is to propose to the woman. He has witnessed his friends (Berwick and Thornhill) make happy marriages with Satiné’s sisters and so he “assumes” she will make him an excellent wife. Honorably, he “assumes” his title will protect her from any more rumors. 

Unfortunately, when Swenton arrives, he learns Satiné has given birth to a son by a man she met upon the Continent. Most men would walk away from her, but the baron says he will marry her and claim the son is his (but because the boy is born before they marry, the child will be his acknowledged by-blow). Satiné is not happy with this outcome, and she manipulates Swenton for many months. 

However, the baron finds salvation in the woman he hires to be his baroness’s companion. Miss Isolde Neville is the daughter of an Irish baron, who happens to be part of the Elgin expedition. Isolde assists Swenton in understanding Satiné’s nature, and despite their attraction to each other, she encourages John to make the best of his marriage. One of the issues is Satiné’s growing dependence upon laudanum so she might control her weight. 

Isolde’s loyalty and her caring spirit make her a true heroine. She acts with as much honor as does Swenton in the manner in which they handle Satiné’s depression   satisfies the reader (even the ones who wished this to be Satiné’s tale). She walks away from Swenton in order that he can find some happiness in his marriage, but Isolde never forsakes him. The baron is badly bruised by his mother’s desertion and his father’s absolute authority. Only once does he open his heart to a woman, and Satiné walks all over it. It is through Isolde’s thoughtfulness that Swenton is healed. (There is also the matter of bringing an Irish Catholic into a Protestant household…just a bit of history). 

ATOHCrop2Book Blurb for A Touch of Honor:

For two years, BARON JOHN SWENTON thought of little else other than making Miss Satiné Aldridge his wife; so when he discovers her reputation in tatters, Swenton acts honorably: He puts forward a marriage of convenience that will save her from ruination and provide him the one woman he believes will bring joy to his life. However, the moment he utters his proposal, Swenton’s instincts scream he made a mistake: Unfortunately, a man of honor does his best in even the disastrous conditions. 

SATINE ALDRIDGE fell for a man she can never process and accepted a man she finds only mildly tolerable. What will she do to extricate herself from Baron Swenton’s life and claim the elusive Prince Henri? Needless to say, more than anyone would ever expect. 

ISOLDE NEVILLE was hired to serve as Satiné Aldridge’s companion, but her loyalty rests purely with the lady’s husband. With regret, she watches the baron struggle against the impossible situation in which Miss Aldridge places him, while her heart desires to claim the man as her own. Yet, Isolde is as honorable as the baron. She means to see him happy, even if that requires her to aid him in his quest to earn Miss Satiné’s affections. 

GIVEAWAY: LEAVE A COMMENT BELOW TO BE ELIGIBLE FOR AN eBOOK GIVEAWAY. TWO WINNERS MAY CHOOSE FROM ANY OF THE FOUR TITLES LISTED ABOVE. THE GIVEAWAY WILL END AT MIDNIGHT EST ON FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2015.

PLEASE JOIN THE OTHER PARTICIPANTS IN THE BLOG HOP. I HAVE LISTED THOSE FOR TODAY AND THOSE FOR THE PREVIOUS THREE TUESDAYS. I LEFT THE ORIGINAL LINKS IN CASE SOME OF THE CONNECTIONS ARE BROKEN. 

Light on ladies group6 October Participants: 
Helen Hollick ~ Emma of Normandy http://ofhistoryandkings.blogspot.co.uk/2015/10/shining-light-on-our-ladies_6.html
Pat Bracewell ~ Emma of Normandy http://www.patriciabracewell.com/2015/10/shining-light-on-our-ladies-a-tale-of-two-queens/
Inge Borg ~ Princess Nefret    http://devilwinds.blogspot.co.uk/2015/10/shining-light-on-our-ladies-blog-hop.html

Ladies post 213 October Participants:

Helen Hollick ~ the two Ediths of King Harold II http://www.ofhistoryandkings.blogspot.com/2015/10/shining-light-on.html
Diana Wilder ~ Lavinia Wheeler    http://dianawilder.blogspot.com/2015/10/shining-light-on-our-ladies.html
Regina Jeffers ~ Elizabeth Bennet https://reginajeffers.wordpress.com/2015/10/13/shining-light-on-our-ladies-blog-tour-elizabeth-bennets-less-likable-qualities/
Liz Spear (Revill) ~ Caroline Llewellyn    http://www.elizabethrevill.com/blog/shining-a-light-on-our-ladies 

Ladies post 3 smaller20 October Participants:

Alison Morton ~ Aurelia Mitela http://alison-morton.com/2015/10/20/meet-aurelia-mitela-woman-and-warrior/

Helen Hollick ~ King Arthur’s Ladies http://www.ofhistoryandkings.blogspot.com/2015/10/shiningh-light-on-arthurs-ladies.html

Sophie Perinot ~ Marguerite de Valois http://www.sophieperinot.com/blog/2015/10/20/marguerite-de-valois-shinning-a-light-on-a-much-maligned-french-princess/

Posted in Great Britain, heroines, Living in the Regency, Regency era, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment

History Behind the BBC Series “The Last Kingdom”

MV5BMjE1MzYzNjk3OF5BMl5BanBnXkFtZTgwMzk0MzYwNzE@._V1_SX214_AL_I am watching “The Last Kingdom” on BBC America (Saturday’s at 10 P.M.). It is a tale of Saxon history, with England struggling to become a “nation” in itself, without the rule by the Danes. Although I possess a “working knowledge” of the time period, this is not an era of which I am well versed; even so, I find the series fascinating, even though the author of the book upon which it is based is said to have taken great liberties. Again, I cannot speak to those liberties, but I am certain some of my history novel friends can.

From imdb we learn, “The Last Kingdom is an adaptation of Bernard Cornwell’s Saxon Stories. The books follow Uhtred of Bebbanburg from a boy taken from his birthright and raised by Vikings, later fighting for King Alfred the Great and his son Edward. Shield walls, blood, revenge and the forging of many Kingdoms into one nation, a dream of Alfred’s called England.”

According to several sources, in Bernard Cornwell’s series The Saxon Stories the protagonist is the Northumbrian Earl Uhtred of Bebbanburg. The story of the siege of Durham, which I mention below, and the severed heads on poles is told about the historical Uhtred (see Battles of the Dark Ages, Peter Marren), though it is perhaps possible to assume that the fictional Earl Uhtred of Bebbanburg is an ancestor of this Uhtred. In Bernard Cornwell’s series he adds a ‘historical note’ at the end, in which, especially in the first book, he mentions that Uhtred was his ancestor. He took the liberty of installing Uhtred earlier in history.” (Wikipedia51HD+PdbeML._SX331_BO1,204,203,200_

My only complaint so far in the series is that the “delicious” Matthew Macfadyen, who portrayed Lord Uhtred, the boy’s father, is killed off in episode one.

If you missed the premiere episode (October 10) you may view it HERE.

There are several places that indicate streaming of episode two (shown on October 17), but I did not want to include a link that I felt was not safe.

Disclaimer: I plan to attempt to make sense of the real story of Uhtred. Please bear with me. There is a line in episode one where the Danes say something to the effect how the Saxons had unusual names. After reading this, you will likely agree. I admit that I have cited several sources below for I would not presume to portray myself as an expert on this material. 

“Uhtred, earl of Bamburgh (d. 1016), magnate, was the son of Waltheof (fl. c.994–1006) and an unknown mother. Waltheof was probably the son of Eadwulf, the son of Oswulf (d. 966), the son of Ealdred of Bamburgh (d. 933?); the family had ruled Bernicia (Northumbria north of the Tyne) since the Scandinavian invasion and settlement of the late ninth century. The northern part of their earldom (Lothian) was ceded to the Scots, probably by 973.” (Oxford Dictionary of National Biography)

Uhtred (the Bold) was an ealdorman of Northumbria from 1006 to 1016. Prior to that time, we have records of Uhtred assisting in the removal of St. Cuthbert’s remains from Chester-le-Street to Durham. An English chronicler and a monk of Durham Priory, Syemon of Durham, recorded Uhtred’s efforts in moving St. Cuthbert’s remains. Uhtred married Bishop Aldhun’s (founder of Durham cathedral) daughter Ecgfrida, earning Uhtred several estates once belonging to the church.

“According to the De obsessione Dunelmi, a Durham tract on the history of the earldom of Northumbria, the principal theme of which was the right of Durham to certain estates, Uhtred married Aldhun’s daughter, Ecgfrida, probably at about this time. The marriage brought Uhtred certain vills of the church of St Cuthbert, namely Barmpton, Skirningham, Elton, Carlton, School Aycliffe, and Monk Hesleden in the south of co. Durham. This marriage has been seen as part of the church of St Cuthbert’s policy of recruiting allies, although the earl would also have gained from an alliance with this powerful ecclesiastical institution. Uhtred was to retain control of these vills as long as he lived honourably in marriage with Ecgfrida.” (Oxford Dictionary of National Biography)

Alexander Dreymon, who portrays Uhtred in the series "The Last Kingdom"

Alexander Dreymon, who portrays Uhtred in the series “The Last Kingdom”

“In 1006 Malcolm II of Scotland invaded Northumbria and besieged the newly founded episcopal city of Durham. At that time the Danes were raiding southern England and King Ethelred was unable to send help to the Northumbrians. Ealdorman Waltheof was too old to fight and remained in his castle at Bamburgh. Ealdorman Ælfhelm of York also took no action. Uhtred, acting for his father, called together an army from Bernicia and Yorkshire and led it against the Scots. The result was a decisive victory for Uhtred. Local women washed the severed heads of the Scots, receiving a payment of a cow for each, and the heads were fixed on stakes to Durham’s walls. Uhtred was rewarded by King Ethelred II with the ealdormanry of Bamburgh even though his father was still alive. In the mean time, Ethelred had had Ealdorman Ælfhelm of York murdered, and he allowed Uhtred to succeed Ælfhelm as ealdorman of York, thus uniting northern and southern Northumbria under the house of Bamburgh. It seems likely that Ethelred did not trust the Scandinavian population of southern Northumbria and wanted an Anglo-Saxon in power there.” (Wikipedia) “Æthelred II added the earldom of York in succession to the Mercian Ælfhelm. The king’s grant effectively reunited the two parts of Northumbria under the earls of Bamburgh. In this respect Uhtred may have been seen as a political counterweight to the Scandinavians at York who may still have harboured thoughts of a separate Scandinavian-dominated north.” (Oxford Dictionary of National Biography)

Reportedly, Uhtred abandoned Ecgfrida to marry Sige, whose father (Styr) was a wealthy man residing in York. Sige presented Uhtred with two children, Eadulf III and Gospatric.

By 1013, King Sweyn of Denmark invaded England. Having made connections with the Danish in Deira, Uhtred submitted to Sweyn along with other Danes in the north. Sweyn was made king in December 1013, but he died on 2 February 1014. With Sweyn’s death, Ethelred, who had went into exile with Sweyn’s claim to the kingdom, returned to claim his throne. Therefore, Uhtred and others switched their allegiance once again. Uhtred supposedly married Ethelred’s daughter Ælfgifu.

“In 1016 Uhtred campaigned with Ethelred’s son Edmund Ironside in Cheshire and the surrounding shires. While Uhtred was away from his lands, Sweyn’s son, Cnut, invaded Yorkshire. Cnut’s forces were too strong for Uhtred to fight, and so Uhtred did homage to him as King of England. Uhtred was summoned to a meeting with Cnut, and on the way there, he and forty of his men were murdered by Thurbrand the Hold, with assistance from Uhtred’s own servant, Wighill and with the connivance of Cnut. Uhtred was succeeded in Bernicia by his brother Eadwulf Cudel. Cnut made the Norwegian, Eric of Hlathir, ealdorman (“earl” in Scandinavian terms) in southern Northumbria.” (Wikipedia)

“According to the De obsessione, the marriage was contracted [to Sige] on the understanding that Uhtred would kill Styr’s enemy Thurbrand. Similarly, the marriage of Uhtred’s first wife, Ecgfrida, to Kilvert, son of the Yorkshire thegn Ligulf, may also have been an attempt by Uhtred’s ally, Aldhun, to establish political support in Yorkshire.” (Oxford Dictionary of National Biography)

“Uhtred remained faithful to the West Saxon cause despite Cnut’s promise of substantial rewards, and accompanied Edmund Ironside on campaign in Staffordshire, Cheshire, and Shrewsbury against Eadric Streona. Cnut replied by invading Northumbria, forcing Uhtred to submit. Summoned to Cnut’s court and granted safe conduct, Uhtred was murdered by Thurbrand Hold, presumably that enemy of Styr. Forty of Uhtred’s men were slaughtered with him at Wiheal, identified as Wighill, near Tadcaster, in Yorkshire. Although a comparatively late source puts Uhtred at the battle of Carham leading the English to defeat by the Scots in 1018, it is now generally accepted that this was an error and that his death occurred in 1016.” (Oxford Dictionary of National Biography)

“The killing of Uhtred by Thurbrand the Hold started a blood feud that lasted for many years. Uhtred’s son Ealdred subsequently avenged his father by killing Thurbrand, but Ealdred in turn was killed by Thurbrand’s son, Carl. Eadred’s vengeance had to wait until the 1070s, when Waltheof, Eadred’s grandson had his soldiers kill most of Carl’s sons and grandsons. This is an example of the notorious Northumbrian blood feuds that were common at this time.

“Uhtred’s dynasty continued to reign in Bernicia through Ealdred, Earl of Bamburgh (killed 1038) his son from his marriage to Ecgfrida, and Eadulf (killed 1041) his son from his marriage to Sige, and briefly Eadulf’s son Osulf held the earldom of northern Northumbria 1067 until he too was killed. Uhtred’s marriage to Ælfgifu produced a daughter, Ealdgyth, who married Maldred, brother of Duncan I of Scotland and who gave birth to a son, Gospatric, who was Earl of Northumbria from 1068 to 1072.” (Wikipedia)

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