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446
REIGN OF HENRY THE EIGHTH
[ch. 5.

refuse him the merit of sincerity, because (to use the language which Cromwell used at the fatal crisis of his life[1]) 'It may be well that they who medelle in many matters are not able to answer for them all.'

May 10.Cranmer, then, being fortified with this permission, and taking with him the Bishops of London, Winchester, Lincoln, and Bath and Wells (the latter perhaps having been chosen in consequence of his late conduct in the Convocation, to give show of fairness to the proceeding), went down to Dunstable and opened his court there. The queen was at Ampthill, six miles distant, having entered on her sad tenancy, it would seem, as soon as the place had been evacuated by the gaudy hunting party of the preceding summer. The cause being undecided, and her title being therefore uncertain, she was called by the safe name of 'the Lady Catherine,' and under this designation she was served with a citation from the Archbishop to appear before him on Saturday, the 10th of May. The bearers of the summons were Sir Francis Bryan (an unfortunate choice, for he was cousin of the new queen, and insolent in his manner and bearing), Sir Thomas Gage, and Lord Vaux. She received them like herself with imperial sorrow. They delivered their message; she announced that she refused utterly to acknowledge the competency of the tribunal before which she was called; the court was a mockery; the Archbishop was a shadow.[2] She would
  1. Cromwell to the King on his Committal to the Tower: Burnet, Collectanea, p. 500.
  2. So at least she called him a few days later.—State Papers, vol. i. p. 420. We have no details of her