Footnote 542: L. and P., iv., 3326.[(back)]

Footnote 543: In 1531 he was said to have written "many books" on the divorce question (ibid., v., 251).[(back)]

Footnote 544: Ven. Cal., iv., 365.[(back)]

Footnote 545: Cranmer, Works (Parker Soc.), ii., 245; cf. Ven. Cal., iv., 351, 418.[(back)]

Footnote 546: L. and P., iv., Introd., p. ccxxxvii.[(back)]

Footnote 547: There is not much historical truth in Gray's phrase about "the Gospel light which dawned from Bullen's eyes"; but Brewer goes too far in minimising the "Lutheran" proclivities of the Boleyns. In 1531 Chapuys described Anne and her father as being "more Lutheran than Luther himself" (L. and P., v., 148), in 1532 as "true apostles of the new sect" (ibid., v., 850), and in 1533 as "perfect Lutherans" (ibid., vi., 142).[(back)]

Footnote 548: Sp. Cal., ii., 201.[(back)]

Footnote 549: Ven. Cal., ii., 1230.[(back)]

Footnote 550: L. and P., vi., 775. Hoc volo, sic jubeo; stet pro ratione voluntas. Luther quoted this line à propos of Henry; see his preface to Robert Barnes' Bekenntniss des Glaubens, Wittemberg, 1540.[(back)]

Footnote 551: L. and P., vi., 351; vii., 148.[(back)]