Page:Life and transactions of Mrs Jane Shore (2).pdf/22

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her eyes; but some malicious neighbour informing against him, he was taken up and hanged for disobeying King Richard's proclamation, which so terrified others, that they durst not relieve her with any thing; so that, in miserable rags, almost naked, she went about a most shocking spectacle, wringing her hands, and bemoaning her unhappy fate.

Thus she continued till the battle of Bosworth-field, where Richard was slain by Henry Earl of Richmond, who succeeded him by the name of Henry the VII; in which reign she hoped for better days; but fortune raised her another adversary, for he married Elizabeth, eldest daughter of Edward IV.

and King Edward's Queen, who mortally hated her, then bearing a great sway, another proclaination was issued to the same effect; and so she wandered up and down, in as poor and miserable a condition as before, till growing old and utterly friendless, she finished her life in a ditch, which was from thence