[296] Herbert, p. 381 (ed. 1649).

[297] Addenda to the Third Book of his History.—He acknowledges that this mistake, as he calls it, was an invention of the miserable Sanders.

[298] Kingston's Letters, p. 455.

[299] 'This much troubled the whole company, especially the queen.'—Herbert, p. 445.

[300] Histoire d'Anne Boleyn, by Crespin, p. 186. See also Archéologie, xxiii. p. 64.

[301] Kingston's Letters, p. 456.

[302] 'This gracious queen falling down upon her knees as a ball, her soul beaten down with affliction to the earth.'—Wyatt, p. 144.

[303] 'In the same sorrow, fell into great laughing.'—Kingston's Letters, p. 451.

[304] Kingston's Letters, p. 451.

[305] Ibid.