and with
further danger on the side of Scotland, which Charles had succeeded in
agitating, concluded, on the 23rd of June, a league, offensive and
defensive, with Francis, the latter engaging to send a fleet into the
Channel, and to land 15,000 troops in England if the emperor should attempt
an invasion from the sea.[378] For the better consolidation of this league,
and to consult upon the measures which they would pursue on the great
questions at issue in Christendom, and lastly to come to a final
understanding on the divorce, it was agreed further that in the autumn the
two kings should meet at Calais. The conditions of the interview were still
unarranged on the 22nd of July, when the Bishop of Paris, who remained
ambassador at the English court, wrote to Montmorency to suggest that Anne
Boleyn should be invited to accompany the King of England on this occasion,
and that she should be received in state. The letter was dated from
Ampthill, to which Henry had escaped for a while from his Greenwich friars
and other troubles, and where the king was staying a few weeks before the
house was given up to Queen Catherine. Anne Boleyn was with him; she now,
as a matter of course, attended him everywhere. Intending her, as he did,
to be the mother of the future heir to his crown, he preserved what is
technically called her honour unimpeached and unimpaired. In all other
respects she occupied the position and received the homage due to the
actual wife of the English sovereign; and in this capacity it was the
desire of Henry that she should be acknowledged by a foreign prince.
The bishop's letter on this occasion is singularly interesting and
descriptive. The court were out hunting, he said, every day; and while the
king was pursuing the heat of the chase, he and Mademoiselle Anne were
posted together, each with a crossbow, at the point to which the deer was
to be driven. The young lady, in order that the appearance of her reverend
cavalier might correspond with his occupation, had made him a present of a
hunting cap and frock, a horn and a greyhound. Her invitation to Calais he
pressed with great earnestness, and suggested that Marguerite de Valois,
the Queen of Navarre, should be brought down to entertain her. The Queen of
France being a Spaniard, would not, he thought, be welcome: "the sight of a
Spanish dress being as hateful in the King of England's eyes as the devil
himself." In other respects the reception should be as magni
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