
Katherine Swynford's unhappy marriage becomes the fire that forges her strength and poise, which soon enchants the Duke.
But her admiration and love for John’s wife, the Duchess Blanche, serves as a powerful deterrent to any fulfillment of the growing passion between them. Her first reaction to Blanche, when the duchess rescued her from the snobbish contempt of the other court ladies, was hero-worship: "The duchess was today dazzling as the southern May, having dressed to please her husband's taste, in full magnificence of jewels and ermine. Her silver-gilt hair was twined with pearls and she wore her gold and diamond coronet. She smelled of jasmine and Katherine adored her."
Seton offers a personal story of love, sacrifice and endurance, but also a broad view of the waning days of the Plantagenet dynasty, a pivotal time in England’s history. A young Geoffrey Chaucer marries Katherine’s sister, Philippa, and we hear him belittling himself as “an indifferent maker” of poetry. The horrors of the plague are a vivid presence. John Wyclif disrupts the comfortable Roman Catholic clergy with his English translation of the Bible, making the scriptures directly accessible to their flocks. Led by John Ball and Wat Tyler, the peasants revolt against a staggering burden of taxation in a burst of violence that spills into Katharine's private world and threatens her life.
This is “the classic love story of medieval England” for good reason.
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