his clandestine marriage with Mary Tudor, [50-51];

letter to Wolsey, [51-52];

received by Henry VIII, remarried to Mary Tudor, [54];

verses by, [56];

attitude of Wolsey towards, quarrels with Wolsey, [56-57];

his London residences, [58];

fights in a tournament, [59];

Lady Mortimer claims connubial rights, [61];

reaffirmation of the dissolution of his marriage with her, [61];

Pope Clement publishes a bull dissolving this marriage, and legitimizing Anne Browne’s children, [62], [63] f.n., [64], [65];