[162] ‘To crown your Grace in the town of Edinburgh within bref tyme.’—State Papers, iv. p. 574, Sept. 29, 1531.
[163] ‘That we may lawfully write ourself prince of England and Duke of York.’—State Papers, iv. p. 599.
[164] ‘Of an audacious and bold spirit.’—Spotswood, p. 63.
[165] Knox, Hist. of the Ref., pp. 45, 46.
[166] ‘This carnal prince who altogether was given unto the filthy lusts of the flesh.’—Knox, Hist. of the Ref., p. 48.
[167] Ibid. pp. 48-52.
[168] Calderwood, i.
[169] MS., Advocates’ Library.—Pitcairn’s Crim. Trials, i. p. 161.
[170] ‘Mores regi posse sine sacris libris?’ (Alesii Epistola contra Decretum quoddam Episcoporum in Scotia.) This letter bears no name either of its publisher or of the place where it was printed. There is at the end only Anno MDXXXIII.
[171] ‘Ut populus paulatim induat ethnicas persuasiones.’—Alesii Epistola contra Decretum quoddam Episcoporum in Scotia.