Footnote 811: Ibid., v., 831.[(back)]

Footnote 812: Ibid., v., 1017-23. If the Court was responsible for all the documents complaining of the clergy drawn up at this time, it must have been very active. See others in L. and P., v., 49, App. 28, vi., 122.[(back)]

Footnote 813: L. and P., v., 989.[(back)]

Footnote 814: Stubbs, Lectures, 1887, pp. 320-24; Hall, pp. 784, 785; see also Lords' Journals, 1532.[(back)]

Footnote 815: L. and P., v., 1013. More had, as Henry knew, been all along opposed to the divorce, but as More gratefully acknowledged, the King only employed those whose consciences approved of the divorce on business connected with it (vii., 289).[(back)]

Footnote 816: See P.A. Hamy, Entrevue de François I. avec Henri VIII., à Boulogne en 1532. Paris, 1898.[(back)]

Footnote 817: L. and P., v., 1187.[(back)]

Footnote 818: L. and P., v., 1274.[(back)]

Footnote 819: In 1529 Du Bellay had written si le ventre croist, tout sera gasté (L. and P., iv., 5679).[(back)]

Footnote 820: L. and P., v., 1633.[(back)]