n, 71;
Henry's letter of complaint to Wolsey about the appointment of an
unfitting person, 72;
Campeggio's prearranged delays, 74;
speech in the City, 81;
resolves to let the trial proceed before Campeggio and Wolsey, 93;
Henry's address to the Legates at Blackfriars, 101;
refuses to accept Clement, the Emperor's prisoner, as judge of his
cause, 102;
his momentary inclination to abandon Anne, 111;
reception of Chapuys, the Imperial ambassador, 112;
interpretation of the advocation of his case to Rome, 123;
denunciation of the Pope and Cardinals, 126;
approves of the _reforming_ side of Lutheranism, _ib._;
consults foreign doctors on his cause, 127, 134, 136;
continued liking for Wolsey, 129;
a brief from Clement forbidding his marriage, 134;
Henry invited by Francis to join the Smalcaldic League, 135;
desire to recall Wolsey, 136;
sends him down to his diocese, 139;
the suggestion of a neutral place for the trial, 143;
Henry again denounces the Pope and all his Court, 145;
emphatically refuses to allow his cause to be tried at Rome, _ib._;
revival of the Praemunire, 147;
a step towards the break with the Papacy, 149;
Henry's direct appeal to the Pope, 150;
Clement's second brief against Henry's second marriage, 153;
a struggle with the Pope inevitable, 157;
clipping the claws of the clergy, 158;
Henry declared Supreme Head of the Church of England, 159;
receives the Papal brief forbidding his second marriage, 162;
reply to the Nuncio's questions as to the nature of his new Papacy,
163;
and to the Pope's appeal for aid against the Turks, 164, 178;
disregards the Pope's threat of excommunication, 169;
rejects the Pope's efforts at friendly negotiations, 178;
alleged bribery by Henry's ambassador at Rome, 179;
deliberateness of Henry's conduct of his policy, 182;
his reply to Bishop Tunstal's letter against schism, 183;
steps towards the toleration of heresy, 186;
displeasure with More, _ib._;
Annates Bill, 187;
French advice to Henry to marry without waiting for sentence, 192;
meeting with Francis, 193 _sqq._;
the immediate outcome thereof, 195 _sq._;
rumour of his secret marriage with Anne, 196;
again threatened with excommunication, 198;
Henry appoints Cranmer to Canterbury, 203;
privately married to An
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