[332] “And here Sir Thomas Wyatt shall deliver unto the Emperor the letter written unto him from the said Lady Mary, whereby it shall appear how she doth repent herself, and how she would that he should repent, and take of her the tenour. Whereof it shall like him to consider, it is not to be thought but it will acquit him therein, his Grace, nevertheless, being so good a lord and father to her as he is, and undoubtedly will be.”—Instructions to Sir Thomas Wyatt: Nott’s Wyatt, p. 314.
[333] Cromwell to Wyatt: Nott, p. 321.
[334] State Papers, Vol. VIII., p. 34.
[335] “My lord: this shall be to advertise you that the Imperials and Frenchmen have taken a truce for ten months, which, as we think, be great news, and of great weight and moment. Howbeit, my trust is, the King’s Highness knows what is the occasion of this sudden turn, or else it will trouble my brain to think of it.”—Sir William Fitzwilliam to Cromwell: MS. State Paper Office, second series, Vol. XI.
[336] Henry VIII. to Wyatt: Nott’s Wyatt.
[337] Cromwell to Wyatt, November 29, 1537: Nott’s Wyatt.
[338] Better known as Mary of Guise, mother of Mary Queen of Scots.
[339] Commission of Peter Mewtas to Madame de Longueville: State Papers, Vol. VIII. p. 10.
[340] Hutton to Sir Thomas Wriothesley: State Papers, Vol. VIII. p. 9.
[341] Henry VIII. to Sir Thomas Wyatt: Nott’s Wyatt.