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302 THE HERALDRY OF YORK MINSTER.<br />

" wrapped in lead) was ordered to be honourably entombed in the church<br />

" of the Friars Minors, at -Stamford."<br />

In the History of Stamford (published by John Drakard, 1822) we are<br />

informed that this was in accordance with her will, dated August yth, 1385,<br />

in which she desires to be buried in the chapel of their Hospital, near the<br />

grave of Thomas, Earl of Kent, her husband. That will was made, then,<br />

nine years after the death of Edward the Black Prince. Perhaps in the<br />

lonely hours of her second widowhood her mind went back to her first<br />

married home ; or perhaps there is here an indication of the truth of the<br />

story that Thomas Holland had been her first lover, the hero of her childhood's<br />

days, before considerations of rank or earthly prospects enter the<br />

young head, and the boy lover is, for the time, at least, the ideal of<br />

perfection. If so, how natural, when the brightness of a very sunny day<br />

had waned, and shadows of life were gathering, how natural to wish that<br />

the weary body should rest, not under or near the great tomb at<br />

Canterbury,<br />

but once again at his side, and in the quiet stillness of the cloisters<br />

await the resurrection.<br />

This John de Holland, however, eventually made his peace with the<br />

King through the intervention of the Duke of Lancaster, and was received<br />

into favour. In 1397 he was advanced by Richard II. to the Dukedom<br />

of Exeter, made Chamberlain of England and Governor of Calais. In<br />

the first year of Henry IV. he was deposed<br />

from the title of Duke of<br />

Exeter, and beheaded at Pleshy, in Essex (Sandford's Genealogical History],<br />

"upon the third day after the Epiphanie, in the year 1400, for seditious<br />

"conspiracy against the life of King Henry," on the very spot where the<br />

" Duke of Gloucester was arrested by Richard II., which was in the base<br />

" court of the castle of Pleshey, that he might seem to be justly punished<br />

" for the Duke's death, of which he was thought to be the principal<br />

" procurer, and he lyeth buried in the Collegiate Church there."<br />

He married Elizabeth, second daughter of John of Gaunt, sister to<br />

Henry IV. His eldest son, Richard, died without issue, 4 Henry V. His<br />

second son, John, was, in the twenty-second year of Henry VI., restored to<br />

the title, and distinguished himself as<br />

a gallant soldier and able administrator<br />

in the reign of Edward V. and VI. ; but his only son Henry, having<br />

fought bravely for the Lancastrians at Towton and Barnet, escaped to<br />

France, where, after wandering about destitute and bare-legged, begging<br />

his bread for God's sake, he died, his body being found in the sea between<br />

Calais and Dover, but the cause thereof was never ascertained (13 Edward<br />

IV. 1473)-<br />

And the family of the eldest son, Thomas Earl of Kent, was<br />

even shorter-lived. He himself served in the retinue of his gallant stepfather<br />

the Black Prince, and was held in high estimation by Richard II.

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