[288] “A sketch of Hengrave Hall, Suffolk,” by Sir Henry Rookwood Gage.

[289] Henry had confiscated the place on the attainder of the Duke of Norfolk. The Duke requested pathetically that he would be pleased to bestow it on the royal children as it was “stately gear”. Mary restored it to its rightful owner.

[290] Papiers d’Etat du Cardinal de Granvelle, d’après les manuscrits de la Bibliothèque de Besançon, publiés sous la direction de M. Ch. Weiss, tom. iv., p. 31.

[291] Cotton MS. Vit. F. xii., Brit. Mus. Printed in the Chronicle of Queen Jane and Two Years of Queen Mary, p. 110, appendix.

[292] Holinshed, 1084.

[293] This was so generally believed, that the Emperor told Mary that she ought to put to death all the conspirators who had any hand in the late King’s death (Renard apud Griffet, p. 11).

[294] Papiers d’Etat du Cardinal de Granvelle, p. 39.

[295] Foxe, vol. vi., p. 385.

[296] Stow, 610, 611.

[297] Foxe, Acts and Monuments, vol. vi., p. 389. Burnet, vol. ii., p. 384. Holinshed, 1087. Bishop Godwin says that “he was scarce heard out with patience” (Life of Ridley by the Rev. Gloucester Ridley, LL.B., p. 415).