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People take a bow
I am, I am, I am the queen

I'll make you the king
Give you a tahanan within my castle
Everything on everything
I know that you're puso is beating faster for my love
If it's true pag-ibig You feel for me

People take a bow
ipakita me that you pag-ibig me
I am, I am the queen
Everybody take a bow
Cause i'm the one and only
I am, I am, I am, I am, I am, the queen

I'll give you a crown
build you a world you never dreamt of
if you are the one
tell me that i'm the one and only in your heart
if it's true pag-ibig you feel for me

People take a bow
ipakita me that you pag-ibig me
I am, I am the queen
Everybody take a bow
Cause i'm the one and only
I am, I am, I am, I am, I am the queen

The one and only
I am, I am, I am, I am, I am I am the queen

People take a bow
ipakita me that you pag-ibig me
I am, I am the queen
Everybody take a bow
Cause i'm the one and only
I am, I am, I am, I am, I am

People take a bow
ipakita me that you pag-ibig me
I am, I am the queen
Everybody take a bow
Cause i'm the one and only
I am, I am, I am, I am, I am the queen.
posted by DeniseAnne
Anne

If we are to believe Eustace Chapuys, the Imperial Ambassador, Anne Boleyn planned to poison Mary to get rid of the girl who was so popular and intelligent and who was such a focus for those who disliked the woman who had usurped Catherine’s rightful place as Queen.
But, we cannot rely on Chapuys because of his hatred for Anne, a woman he never referred to sa pamamagitan ng name but sa pamamagitan ng the name “concubine” instead. There is no evidence that Anne tried to poison either Mary or Catherine, although it is sinabi that she mentioned to her brother George that she would consider putting Mary to death if the...
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The approach of the time for which I have so long waited rejoices me so much, that it seems almost to have come already. However, the entire accomplishment cannot be till the two persons meet, which meeting is madami desired sa pamamagitan ng me than anything in this world; for what joy can be greater upon earth than to have the company of her who is dearest to me, knowing likewise that she does the same on her part, the thought of which gives me the greatest pleasure. Judge wh at an effect the presence of that person must have on me, whose absence has grieved my puso madami than either words or Pagsulat can...
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Letter 1

Though it is not fitting for a
gentleman to take his lady in
the place of a servant, yet, complying
with your desire, I willingly grant it
you, if thereby you can find yourself
less uncomfortable in the place chosen
by yourself, than you have been in
that which I gave you, thanking you
cordially that you are pleased still to
have some remembrance of me.

Henry R.

Letter 2

Although, my Mistress, it
has not pleased you to remem-
ber the promise you made me when I
was last with you — that is, to hear
good news from you, and to have an
answer to my last letter; yet it seems
to me that it belongs to a true...
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posted by DeniseAnne
Mary to Henry VIII, 2 October 1533

In most humble wise I beseech your grace of your daily blessing. Pleaseth the same to be advertised that this morning my chamberlain came and showed me that he had received a letter from Sir William Paulet, comptroller of your household; the effect whereof was that I should, with all diligence, remove to the Cast of Hertford. Where upon I desired him to see that letter, which he showed me, wherein was written that ‘the Lady Mary, the king’s daughter, should remove to the place aforesaid’- leaving out in the same the name of princess. Which, when I heard,...
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posted by DeniseAnne
Since your last letters, mine own
darling, Walter Welshe, Master
Browne, Thos. Care, Grion of Brear-
ton, and John Coke, the apothecary,
be fallen of the sweat in this house,
and, thanked be God, all well recov-
ered, so that as yet the plague is not
fully ceased here, but I trust shortly
it shall. sa pamamagitan ng the mercy of God, the rest
of us yet be well, and I trust shall
pass it, either not to have it, or, at the
least, as easily as the rest have done.
As touching the matter of Wilton,
my lord cardinal hath had the nuns
before him, and examined them, Mr.
Bell being present ; which hath certi-
fied me that, for a...
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added by DeniseAnne
added by DeniseAnne
added by DeniseAnne
added by DeniseAnne
added by DeniseAnne
I heard there was a secret chord
That David played, and it pleased the Lord
But you don't really care for music, do ya?
Well it goes like this: the fourth, the fifth
The minor fall and the major lift
The baffled king composing hallelujah

Hallelujah, Hallelujah
Hallelujah, Hallelujah

Well your faith was strong but you needed proof
You saw her bathing on the roof
Her beauty and the moonlight overthrew ya
She tied you to her kusina chair
She broke your trono and she cut your hair
And from your lips she drew the hallelujah

Hallelujah, Hallelujah
Hallelujah, Hallelujah

Maybe there's a god above
But all I've ever learned from pag-ibig
Was how to shoot somebody who out-drew ya
It's not a cry that you hear at night
It's not someone who's seen the light
It's a cold and it's a broken hallelujah

Hallelujah, Hallelujah
Hallelujah, Hallelujah
Hallelujah, Hallelujah
Hallelujah, Hallelujah

Hallelujah
Hallelujah
I will not make
the same mistakes that you did
I will not let myself
Cause my puso so much misery
I will not break
the way you did, you fell so hard
I've learned the hard way
To never let it get that far

Because of you
I never stray too far from the sidewalk
Because of you
I learned to play on the ligtas side so I don't get hurt
Because of you
I find it hard to trust not only me, but everyone around me
Because of you
I am afraid

I lose my way
And it's not too long before you point it out
I cannot cry
Because I know that's weakness in your eyes
I'm forced to fake
A smile, a laugh everyday of...
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On 3rd July 1533, Catherine of Aragon’s chamberlain, Lord Mountjoy, was instructed to inform Catherine that she was to stop referring to herself as ‘Queen’ and to “satisfy herself with the name of Dowager, as prescribed sa pamamagitan ng the Act of Parliament, and must beware of the danger if she attempt to contravene it” because Anne Boleyn was now Queen.
The instructions from the King warned that “If she be not persuaded sa pamamagitan ng these arguments to avoid the King’s indignation, and relent from her vehement arrogancy, the King will be compelled to punish her servants, and withdraw her affection from...
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added by DeniseAnne