[195] 'Quare me a vera gloria abstraxistis.'—Ibid., p. 214.
[196] Llorente, Histoire de l'Inquisition, p. 188.
[197] 'Legatus Angliæ qui ... verum Christi martyrem agnoscebat, ad aliquot menses ex aula exulavit.'—Memoirs of Enzinas, ii. p. 216.
[198] Crespin, Actes des Martyrs, book iii. p. 157. Llorente says 1540. De Castro, p. 41, says: 'That event must have happened in 1545 or 1546.' Crespin and M'Crie, p. 174, say 1544. In order to determine the date we must observe that Enzinas (ii. p. 173) writes the narrative while he is himself a prisoner at Brussels, and that he escaped in 1545. M. Campan assigns the date 1543, the year in which the account was written. This account follows that which relates to Peter de Lerma, who died in August, 1541.—Editor.
[199] Calendar of letters, dispatches, and state papers, relating to negotiations between England and Spain, edited by G. A. Bergenroth. London: Longmans & Co. 1868.
[200] Premia, Dar cuerda.
[201] Letter from Cardinal Adrian to the emperor, Sept. 4, 1520.—Bergenroth, Calendar of Letters, &c.
[202] Reports of Friar Thomas de Matienzo, August, 1498.
[203] Instructions of the archduke Philip to John Heidin.
[204] Instruccion del rey don Fernando. Granvella's State Papers, July 29, 1506.