[282]. ‘Non licere in eodem prætenso matrimonio remanere.’—Wilkins, Concilia, iii. p. 759; Rymer, Fœdera, vi. p. 182.
[283]. Cranmer, Remains, p. 245.
[284]. Mr. Froude says that Anne went to the Tower on the 19th of May, and that she quitted it for Westminster on the 31st, so that she resided there for eleven days (History of England, i. pp. 450, 451). That appears hardly probable, and is in contradiction to Cranmer’s narrative, where we read: ‘Her grace came to the Tower on Thursday at night.... Friday all day the king and queen tarried there.... The next day, which was Saturday, the knights rid before the queen’s grace towards Westminster.’—Letters, p. 245.
[285]. ‘Lambert delivered ... by the coming of Queen Anne.’—Foxe, Acts, v. p. 225.
[286]. ‘To the clear alienation of a great part of Christendom from that see.’—State Papers, vii. p. 477.
[287]. ‘That the matrimony was and is naught.’—Ibid. p. 498.
[288]. ‘Serving for the common utility.’—Tyndale to Fryth, Works, iii. p. 74.
[289]. Foxe, Acts, v. p. 10.
[290]. Tyndale and Fryth, Works, iii. p. 421.
[291]. ‘He would never seem to strive against the papists.’—Foxe, Acts, v. p. 9.