The history of the reformation of the Church of England . s relapft, and fo was to expect no mercy by the Law, yet theBitnop of London enjoyned him Penance, and let him go. For Tonjiall being Book I. of the Church of England. 33 being a man both of good Learning and an unblemifht Life, thefe Vir-tues produced one of their ordinary effe&s in him, great moderation, thatwas lb eminent in him, that at no time did he dip his hands in , Lom, and Thomas Gerard, alfo abjured for having had LtfthersBooks, and defending his Opinions. Thefe were the Proceedings againft Hereticks, in the fir
The history of the reformation of the Church of England . s relapft, and fo was to expect no mercy by the Law, yet theBitnop of London enjoyned him Penance, and let him go. For Tonjiall being Book I. of the Church of England. 33 being a man both of good Learning and an unblemifht Life, thefe Vir-tues produced one of their ordinary effe&s in him, great moderation, thatwas lb eminent in him, that at no time did he dip his hands in , Lom, and Thomas Gerard, alfo abjured for having had LtfthersBooks, and defending his Opinions. Thefe were the Proceedings againft Hereticks, in the firfl: half of thisReign. And thus far I have opened the State of Affairs, both as to Re-ligious and Civil Concerns for the firfl: 18 years of this Kings time, withwhat Obfervations I could gather of the difpofitions and tempers of theNation at that time, which prepared them for the Changes that followedafterwards. The End of the Firfl Book THE 34 HISTORY O F T H E REFORMATION O F T H E Church of England. The kgia-ning of theSuit of Di- n i e. BOOK Of the frocefs of Divorce between tQng Henry and Queen Katha-rine, and of what puffed from the Nineteenth to the Twenty fifthyear of his ${eign, in which he was declared Supreme Head of theChurch of England. TNG Henry hitherto lived at eafc, and enjoyed his plea-sures 5 he made War with much honour, and that al-ways produced a juft and advantageous Peace. He hadno trouble upon him in all his Affairs,except about thegetting of Money, and even in that, the Cardinal ealedhim. But now a Domeftick trouble a-rofe, which per-plexed all the reft of his Government, and drew afterit Confequcnces of a high Henry the jth upon wife and good considerations, refolved to linkof Prince At- himfelf in a clofe Confederacy with Ferdinand and IJabella, Kings ofCz-tothe/i- f///c arK} Arragon, and with the Houfe of Burgundy againft France, which was looked on as the lafting and dangerous Enemy of England. Andtherefore a Match was agreed
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Keywords: ., bookauthorburnetgilbert1, bookdecade1680, booksubjectreformation