After reading Ives' "Life and Death of Anne Boleyn", where small comparisons are made between Anne's and Catherine's downfalls, i realized that I didn't know very much about this young woman, fifth wife of Henry the eight. I had this book so I decided to read it and learn more about her.
Catherine was very young when she married the king, pushed by her family in the arms of a man that was now old, fat, and ill. It couldn't have been easy for a twenty years old girl to find herself married to such a man, to love him, respect him and be faithfull to him. She played her cards well in the beginning, making Henry believe to have married a caste, pure and sinless girl. She fooled him well, but eventually she loosed the grip on her behavior, making coarse mistakes. Problem is, she surely was young, naive, and flirtatious, but first of all she was unprepared to be queen. Where Anne had politics ideas, religious ideals, a vivid intelligence and strong ambitions, Catherine lacked all this. Anne was able to be loved by people who surrounded her, Catherine wasn't. That was perhaps her greatest lack. Smith follow the events that bring her to her death, putting us in the middle of sixteenth century politics, alliances, deceptions and court life. I must admit I felt very sorry for her while reaching the end. Sure, she should have thought about what she was doing, especially since she must have known how easily Henry got rid of people who disappointed him, or lacked him respect, so I can't say she was blameless, nor very smart, yet she didn't deserved what she got. Smith also gives us a portray of the Howard family, and he show us how they abandoned Catherine while she was falling in disgrace. What a family!
I've found the last lines of the book very sad, and hard to digest, making me feel very sorry for this young woman, despite her faults.
"There is a certain inevitability in the tragedy that occurred, but somehow one feels that the shallow motives, the juvenile desires, and petty and vain considerations of the Queen had little to do with the final calamity the end would have been the same, history would have been unchanged, had she never lived or died. Possibly no worse verdict can be passed upon a human life. Here in a twisted, obscure sort of way lies the essential failure of Catherine Howard's life: although she was caught up in the game of politics and was never a free agent, the Queen never brought happiness or love, security or respect, into the world in which she lived."