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A05352 A defence of the honour of the right highe, mightye and noble Princesse Marie Quene of Scotlande and dowager of France with a declaration aswell of her right, title & intereste to the succession of the crowne of Englande, as that the regimente of women ys conformable to the lawe of God and nature. Leslie, John, 1527-1596. 1569 (1569) STC 15505; ESTC S108490 138,133 306

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And no dovvbte in case she had any children by the Emperour they shoud haue bene heires by succession to the crovvne of Englāde After vvhose deathe she retorned to her father yet did kinge Hēry cause all the nobilitie by an expresse othe to embrace her after his deathe as Quene olid and after her her children Not longe after she vvas Married to Geffrey Plantagenet a Frencheman borne Erle of Anievve vvho begart of her this Henrie the seconde beinge in France Where vpō the saide kinge did reuiue ād renevve the like othe of allegeāce asvvell to her as to her sonne after her Withe the like false persvvasion the aduersarie abusethe him The like fōde imagination to vvchynge●k Rich. hu nephewe self and his Reader towchinge Arthur Duke of Britanie nephewe to kinge Richarde the firste As thowghe for sowthe he were iustlie excluded by kinge Iohn̄ his vncle by cause he was a forrainer borne Flores historiarum an 1153. Yf he had sayed that he was excluded by reason the vncle owght to be preferred before the nephevve thovvghe yt shoulde haue bene a false allegation and plaine against the rules of the lavves of this realme as maye vvell appeare amōge other thinges by kinge Richard the secōd who succeded his grandfather kinge Edwarde the thirde which Richarde had di●ers worthy ād noble vncles who neither for lacke of knowledge coulde be ignorāte of their right Diuersitie of opiniōs towchinge the vncle ād nephewe whether of them ovvght to be preferred in the royall gouernemēt neither for lacke of Frendes cowrage ād power be enforced to forbeare to chalēge theire title ād intereste yet shoulde he haue had some countenance of reason ād ꝓbabilitye by cause many argumētes ād the authoritie of many learned ād notable ciuiliās do cōcurre for the vncles right before the nephewe But to make the place of the natiuitie of an inheritour to a kingdome a sufficient barre against the right of his bloude Polid. yt seameth to haue but a weake and slender holde and grovvnde And in our case yt ys a moste vnsure and false grownde seinge yt ys moste trewe that kinge Richarde the firste as vwe haue saide declared the saide Arthur borne in Britanye and not sonne of a kinge but his brother Geffreys sonne Duke of Britanye heire apparente Flores his an 1190. his vncle Iohn̄ yet liuinge and for suche a one ys he taken in all our stories and for suche a one did all the vvorlde take him after the saide kinge Richarde his deathe Neither vvas kinge Iohn̄ taken for other then for an vsurper by excludinge him The possessiōs of the crowne of ●nglands that were beyōde the seas seased into the Frenche kīgs handes for the murther of Arthur and aftervvarde for a murtherer for imprisoninge him and priuelie makinge him avvaye For the vvhiche facte the Frenche kinge seased vpon all the goodlie contreies in France belonginge to the kinge of Englande as forfeited to him beinge the cheif lorde By this ovvtragiouse deede of kinge Iohn̄ vve loste Normandie vvith all and our possibilitie to the inheritance of all Britanie the right and title to the saide Britanie beinge devve to the saide Arthur and his heires by the right of his mother Constance And thovvghe the saide kinge Iohn̄ by the practise and ambitiō of Quene Elenour hys mother ād by the speciall procuremente of Huberte then Archbusshoppe of Caunterburie and of some other factious persons in Englande preven tid the saide Arthur his nephewe as yt was easie for hym to do havinge gotten into his handes all hys brother Richardes treasure besides many other rentes then in Englande And the saide Arthur beinge an enfante and remayninge beyonde the sea in the custodie of the saide Constance Yet of this facte beinge againste all iustice aswell the saide Archebusshoppe as also manie of the other did after moste earnestlie repente consideringe the crewell and the vniuste puttinge to deathe of the saide Arthur procured Polid. lib. 15. Flor. histor an 1208. and after some authours comytted by the saide Iohn̄ hym self which moste fowle and shamefull acte the saide Iohn̄ neaded not to have comitted yf by forraine birthe the saide Arthur had bene barred to inherite the crowne of Englāde And muche lesse to have imprisoned that moste innocente ladie Elenour Sister to the saide Ar●hur in Bristowe castle where she miserablie ended her life Yf that ga●e Maxime wolde have serued to have excluded theis two children by cawse theye were strāgers borne in the parteis beyonde the seas Yea yt appearethe in other doinges also of the saide time and by the storie of the saide Iohn̄ that the birthe owte of the legeance of Englande by father ād mother forraine was not taken for a sufficient repulse and reiection to the right and title of the crowne For the Barones of Englāde beinge then at dissention with the saide kinge Iohn̄ renowncinge their allegeance to hym receaued Lewes the eldeste Sonne of Phillippe the frenche kinge to be theire kinge in the right of Blanche his wife which was a stranger borne Albeit the lawfullnece of the saide Richard and dawghter to Alphōs kinge of castill begotten on the bodie of Elenour hys wife one of the dawghters of kinge Henrye the seconde and sister to the saide kinge Richarde and kinge Iohn̄ Whiche storie I alleage onlie to this purpose thereby to gather the opinion of the time * Levves the frāche kinges sonne claimed the crovne of this realme ī the title of his vvife that forraine birthe was then thowght no barre in the title of the crowne For otherwise howe coulde Lewes of France † Pro here ditatevxoris i●re scilicet neptis Reg Io. vsque ●d mortem 〈◊〉 necessitas exigeret decertab● pretende title to the crowne in the right of the saide Blanche hys wife beinge borne in Spaine Theis exāples are sufficiēte I suppose to satisfie and contente any man that ys not obstinatelie vvedded to his ovvne fonde fantasies and frowarde friuoulous imaginations Flores histo An. 1216. or otherwise worse dep●aued for a good suer ād substanciall interp̄tation of the cōmon lawe And yt were not altogether frō the purpose here to cōsider ād weighe with what ād howe greauouse plagues this realme hath bene ofte afflicted ād scowrged by reason of wrōgfull ād vsurped titles I will not reuiue by odiouse rehearshall the greatnes ād nōber of the same plagues aswell otherwise as especiallie by the contentiō of the noble howses ād famelies of yorke ād Lācaster ▪ Seinge yt ys so fortunatelie and almoste with in mās remēbrāce extīct● ād buried Haroldꝰ muneribꝰ genore fretꝰ regni diadema inuasit Hēr Hunt hist● Angliae li. 6. I will nowe putt the gentle Reader in remēbrāce of those onlie with whose vsurpinge titles we are nowe p̄sentlie in hāde And to begīne with the moste auncient Cui regnum iure hereditario debebatur Ealredus Rieuall in hist. R. Angl. ad H. 2. what
magis Beside that I wolde faine knowe by what reason might a man saie that they of the kinges bloudd borne owte of the allegiance of Englande maye inherite lādes with in this realme as heires vnto theire Auncetours not beinge able to inherite the crowne Trewelie in myne opinion yt were against all reason But on the cōtrarie side the verye force of reasō muste driue vs to graūte the like Yea more greate ād ample priuilege and benefitt of the lawe in the successiō of the crowne For the royall bloude where soeuer yt be fownde The royall bloud bearethe hys honour withe yt wheresoeuer yt be will be taken as a praecious and singuler Iewell and will carrye with yt his worthie estimation ād honour with the people and where yt ys dewe his right with all By the ciuill lawe the right of the inheritance of priuate persons ys hemmed and ynched with in the bādes of the tenthe degree Vide Ant. Corsetū de potest excell regia q. 106 The bloude royall ronnethe a farther race and so farther race ād so farre as yt maye be fownde where withe the greate ād mightie cōquerers are gladde and fayne to ioyne with all euer fearinge the weaknes of theire bloudie sworde Cōquerers gladde to ioynewith the royall bloude in respecte of the greate strēgth and force of the same For this cause was Henrie the firste called for his learninge ād wisdome Beauclerke gladde to consociate and cupple him selfe with the Auncient royall bloude of the Saxones Henrie the first which cōtinewinge in the princely successiō from worthy kinge Alured was cutt of by the deathe of the good kinge Edwarde And by the marienge of Mathildis beinge in the fowrthe degree in linia●l discente to the saide kinge Edwarde Was reuiued and revnited From this Edvvarde the Quene of Scottes as vve haue before shewed takethe her noble anciente petigrevve Theis then and diuers other reasons cavses moo maie be alleaged for the vvayēge ād settīge forthe of the trevve meanīge intēte of the saide l. vve Novve in case theis tvvo cavses cōsideratiōs vvill not satisfie the adversarie We will adioyne ther vnto a thirde Whi●he he shall never by any good honeste shifte avoide And that ys the vse ād practise of the realme aswell in the time foregoinge the saide statute as after vvarde We stande vpon the interpretatiō of the cōmon lavve recited declared by the saide statute And hovve shall vve better vnderstāde vvhat the lavve ys therin l. fi ff de le thē by the vse and practise of the saide lavve Cōmō vse ād practise the beste interpretation of the lavve For the beste interp̄tatiō of the lawe ys custome But the realme before this statute admitted to the crovvne not onlie kinges children and others of the first degree but also of a farther degree And suche as vvere plainely borne ovvte of the kinges allegiāce The foresaide vse and practise appearethe● Eodē Anno Rex cū in diebus suis ꝓcessiss●● Aeldredū Vigorniēsem Ep̄um ad regem Hungar. trāsmittēs reuocauit inde filiū f●is sui Edmūdi Edvvardum cū tota familia sua vt vel ●pse vel filij eiꝰ sibi succederent in regnum Flor. ●ist An. 1057 ▪ Flor. hist. 1066. vell before as sithens the time me of the conqueste Amonge other kinge Edvvarde the cōfessour beinge destitute of a lavvfull heire vvith in this realme sent īto Hūgarie for Edward his nepheve surnamed Owtlavve sonne to kinge Edmunde called Irōside after many yeares of his exile to retorne into Englāde to the intente the saide Ovvtlavve shoulde inherite this realme which neverthelesse came not to effecte by reason the saide Ovvtlavve died before the saide kinge Edward his vncle After vvhose deathe the saide kinge appointed Eadger Ethelīge sōne of the saide Ovvtlavve beīge his nexte cosen ād heire as he vvas of right to the crovvne of Englāde And for that the saide Eadgar vvas then but of yōge and rēder yeares ād not able to take vpō him so greate a gouernemente the saide kinge cōmitted the protection asvvell of the yonge Prīce as also of the realme to Harold Earle of kente vntill suche time as the saide Eadger had obteined perfecte age to be able to Weilde the state of a kinge Aelred Rhievalēs de regib Which Harolde neverthelesse cōtrarie to the truste supplāted the saide yōge Prince of the kingdome Anglor ad regem Henr. 2. ād putt the crovne vpō his owe head By this yt ys apparante that forrain birthe was not accompted of before the time of the cōqueste a iuste cause to repell and reiecte any man beinge of the nexte proximitie in bloude from the title of the crowne And thowghe the saide kinge Edwarde the confessors will ād purpose toke not suche force ād effecte as he desidered and the lawe craued yet the like successiō toke place effectuouslie in kinge Stephē and kinge Henrie the seconde Kinge Stephen and k. H. 2. as we haue alredie declared Neither will the aduersaries shifte of forriners borne of father and mother which be not of the kinges alleageance helpe him For as muche as this clawse of the saide statute ys not to be applied to the kinges childrē The ad●er saries seamed by imaginatiō that kinge Hēry the 2 shouldecome to the crowne by compositiō ād not by ꝓximitie of bloud● but to others as appearethe in the same statute And theis two kinges Stephen and Henrie the seconde as they vvere borne in a forraine place so theire fathers and mothers vvere not of the kinges alleageance but mere aliens and strangers And hovve fonde notoriouse a vaine thinge yt ys that the aduersarie vvolde persvvade vs that the saide kinge Henrie the secōde rather came in by force of a composition then by the proximitie and nearenes of bloude I leaue yt to everie man to consider that hath any manner of fealinge in the discourse of the stories of this realme The composition did procure him quietnes ād reste for the time vvith a good and suer hope of quiet ād peaceable entrāce also after the death of kinge Stephē And so yt follovved in * Rex Stepha nꝰ cū here●● viduatusp̄ter solummodo ducē Henricū recog●ouit in cōuētu ●piscopo●ū aliorū de regno optimatū ꝙ dux Hē ius hereditariū in regnū Angliae habebat dux benigne conc●ssit vt Rex Stephanus tota vita sua suūregnū pacifice possideret ●ta tamē cōfirmatū est pactū qd ipse rex ipsi tune p̄sētes cū caeterisregni optimatibus iurarēt qd dux H. post mortē regis 〈◊〉 superuiueret reguū fine aliqua contradictione obtineret deede but there grevve to him no more right thereby thē was duë to him before for he was the trewe heire to the crowne as appearethe by Stephen his aduersaries ovvne confession Henrie the firste married his davvghter Mathildie to Henrie the Emperour by vvhom he had no children
kinge Henries deathe the heires of the bodye of the saide Ladye Frances begotten vvere vncertaine yet at suche tyme as the sayde remainder shoulde happen to fall the saide heires might then certainlye be knowen In deede I vvill not denye but that paraduenture they might be then certaynlie knowē but what greate mischeiffes and inconueniences might haue ensewed and yet maye yf the vvill take place vpon that ꝑaduenture and vncertaine limitation I vvolde vvishe all men vvell to note and consider Yt ys not to be doubted but that yt might haue fortuned at suche time as the remainder shoulde happen to fall to the saide heires of the Ladye Frances the same Ladie Frances shoulde then be also liuinge Who I praye you then shoulde haue had the crowne Paraduenture ye wolde saye the hey●es of the bodye of the Ladye Ele●●our to whom the next remainder vvas appointed Vndowbtedlie that were cōtrarie vnto the meaninge of the saide supposed wyll For so muche as the remainder ys ther by limited vnto the heyres of the bodie of the ladie Elenour onlie for defaulte of issewe of the saide Ladie Frances Whereby yt maye be very plainlie gathered vpon the saide supposed wyll that the meanynge therof was not that the Chyldren of the Ladie Elenour shoulde enioye the crowne before the Chyldren of the Ladie Frances But what yf the sayde Ladie Elenour had bene then also lyvinge wich myght have happened for as muche as bothe the saide ladie Frāces and Ladie Elenour by cōmon cowrse of nature myght have lived longer then vntyll thys daye Who then shoulde have had the crowne Trewlie the ryght heyre whom thys supposed wyl mente to exclude so longe as there shoulde remaine any issewe eyther of the bodie of the saide Ladie Fraunces or of the bodie of the saide Ladie Elenour lawfullie begottē And therfore quite contrarie to the meāninge of the saide supposed wyll Wherefore I do verelie thincke that yt woulde hardelie syncke into any reasonnable mans head that had anye experience of the greate wisdome and advised doinges of kinge Henrye the eyght abowte other matters beynge of nothinge like weyght that he wolde so slenderlie so vnadvisedlie and so vnlearnedlie dispose the succession of the crowne Where vpon the whole estate of thys Realme dothe depende in suche Wyse that they to whome he ment to geve the same by hys will coulde not enioy yt by the lawe Where vpō ye maye plainlie see not onlie the greate vnlikely hodde that kinge Henrie the eight wolde make any suche will with suche slender advice But also that by the limitation of the saide will the succession of the crowne ys made more vncertaine and dowbtefull thē yt was before the makinge of the saide Actes of Parliamente which ys contrarie to the meaninge and intēte of the saide Actes and therefore with owte anie sufficiente warrante in Lawe But paradventure some here will saye that althowghe theis dangers ād vncerteinties might have ensewed vpon the limitation of the said ▪ vvill yet for as muche as they haue not happened neither be like to happen they are therefore not to be spoken of Yes verilie yt was not to be omitted For althovvghe theys thinges haue not happened and there fore the more tollerable Yet for as muche as theye myght haue happened by the limitation of the saide supposed will contrarie to the meaninge of the saide actes the vvill cā not by any meanes be saide to be made accordinge to the meaninge and intente of the makers of the saide statutes And therefore in that respecte the saide will ys insufficient in lawe And to aggravate the matter farthere ye shall vnderstande of greate incōveniences and imminent dangers which as yet are l●kelie to ensevve yf that supposed will shoulde take place Yt ys not vnknowē but that at the time of the makinge of the saide will the saide Ladie Frances had no issewe male but onlie three dawghters betwene her and Henry Duke of Suff. Aftervvarde in the time of our late Sovereigne Ladie Quene Marie the saide Duke of Suff was attainted ād sufferid accordinglie After whose deathe the saide Ladie Frāces to her greare dishonour and abasinge of her self toke to her husbande one Adrian Stockes who was before her seruāte a man of verie meane estate and vocation and had issewe by him Whiche issewe yf yt were a sonne ād be also yet livinge by the wordes of the saide supposed will ys to inherite the crowne of this Realme before the dawghters betwene her and the sayde late duke of Suff. begotten Which thing was neither intended nor ment by the makers of the saide Actes Who can withe any reason or common defense thincke that all the states of the Realme assembled together at the saide Parliamēte did meane to geve auctoritie to Kinge Henry the eight by hys lettres patentes or laste Will to disherite the Quene of Scottes liniallie discēded of the bloude Roiall of this Realme and to appointe the sonne of Adrian Stokes then a meane servinge man of the Duke of Suff. to be Kinge and governour over this noble Realme of Englande The incōvenience wherof as also of the like that might have followed of the pretensed mariage of Maistre Keyes the late sergeante Porter I referre to the grave consideratiōs and iudgemēts of the hōnorable and worshipfull of this Realme Some paradventure will saie that kinge Henrie the eight mente by his will to dispose the crowne vnto the heires of the bodie of the saide Laide Frances by the saide Duke lawfullie begotten And not vnto the heires by any other person to be begotten Wiche meaninge althowghe yt myght verie hardlie be gathered vpon the saide supposed will yet can not the same be with owte as greate incōueniēces as the other For yf the crowne shoul de nowe remaine vnto the heires of the bodie of the saide Ladie Fraunces by the saide Duke begotten then shoulde yt remaine vnto two dawghters iointelie they bothe beynge termed and certainlie accōpted in lawe but one heire And by that meanes the state and governement of thys Realme shoulde be changed from the auncient Monarchie vnto the governemente of manie For the title of the Ladie Fraunces beynge bywaye of remainder wich ys compted in lawe a ioynt purchase dothe make all the issue female inheritable alyke and can not goe accordinge to the aunciente lawe of a discente to the crowne Wich ys that the crowne by discēte muste goe to the eldeste dawghter onlye as ys afore saide For greate differēces be in lawe where one cometh to any title by discente and where as a purchasser And also yf the one of those issewe female dye thē were her heire in the title as a severall tenante in taile And so there shoulde followe that so many dawghters so manie generall governours and so myght theire issewe beynge heyres females make the governemēt growe infinit which thinge was moste farre from the meaninge of the makers of the saide parliamente What yf the saide Kynge had by hys
saide as what vve further shall saie in supplemente of full answere and then to iudge and deme of the matter none otherwise then reason equitie lawe do craue They shall at lengthe finde owte and throwghlie perceaue and knowe theis mens dealings and doings Who as yet cover theire fovvle filthie lienge detestable practizes and traiterouse enormities withe suche a visarde of counterfeite false fained holines and suche excedinge greate shewe of zeale to the Quenes honour in punishinge off malefactours and to the preseruatiō of the state of the realme as thowghe all the worlde vvolde fall and goe to rewen yf yt were not vpholden vnderpropped by the strēgthe of theire showlders Theie shall see hovve they will appere in theire owne naturall likenes so ovvgelie that all good harts vvill vtterlie detest them and thincke them most vvorthie for example sake to all the Worlde hereafter of extreme punishemēte We affirme then first that as they have produced nothinge in the vvorlde tovvchinge the principall points As of the lorde Darleies deathe the acquitall of the Erle Bothvvell and the Quenes mariage vvith him iustlie to charge her vvithall So are theie them selues asvvell for the saide acquitall and mariage as for theire damnable and rebellyouse attempts against theire Sovereigne and for manie other enormous crimes so farre and so deapelie charged ▪ so fovvlie stained and so shamefullie marked and noted that never shall they Withe all theire hypocriticall fine fetches be able to rubbe ovvte the dirtye blotts therof from theire skirts Whiche thinge vvilbe easelie perceaved of them that vvyll vouchesauf and aduisedlie cōsider the fonde friuolouse and contradictorie excuses they make in theire ovvne defence At the begininge theire open surmised quarrell vvherby they vvente abovvte to dravve the peoples harts to them selves and to strengthen theire ovvne faction stode in three poynts as appearethe by theire excuses and by theire pretensed proclamations The first vvas to deliver the Quene from the Erle Bothevvell vvho violentlie deteined her The causes that the Rebells p̄tended at the begininge and to preuent daungers imminēt to her parson The seconde to reuenge the kings deathe vpon the saide Both vvell vvhom they knevve as they pretended to haue bene the principall doer in the execution of the saide murther The thirde Was to preserue the yonge Prince the Quenes sōne This ys theire iolie and holie pretēce Novv lett vs see hovve conformable theire vvorthie procedings are to theis theire colorable cloked holie collusions The fyrst gentle and humble admonition that theis good louinge subiects gaue her An ansvvere to the first to reforme the surmised enormities vvas in battell arraye at Bortvvike castle vvhiche they thovvght vpō the sodaine to haue possessed vvith the Quenes person vvher vpon they beinge disapointed therof gatt into the tovvne and fortresse of Edenborowghe by the treasō of Balfoure the capitaine therof and of Cragmiler the prouoste of the citie Wherbi they beinge the more animated to followe and prosequute theire vvicked enterprise begane nowe to be stronge in the filde The Quene hauing also a good strōge armie and thinckinge her self vvell able therby to encounter vvithe the ennemie and to represse theire furiouse outrage yet not vvithestandinge for the greate loue ād pittie she toke of them thovvghe rebelliouse subiects Wilinge as muche as in her laye to kepe and preserue theire bloudd from shedinge offered them fayre of her owne free motion that yf they wolde peaceablie come to them and take dewe and conuenient order for the redresse of all suche things as might appere by lavve and reason mete to be reformed Wher vpon the lorde Grange was sente by the lords to her The lorde Grange ꝓmised vpō his knees obedience in all the rebells names Who in all theire names moste hūblie vpō his knees assured her of all dewe obedience of securitie and sauftie of bothe her life and honour And so the good ladie her conscience beringe her vvitnes of all her iuste and vpright dealings and therefore nothinge mistrustinge dismissinge her armie yelded her self to the lords Who conueyed her to Edenborowghe ād there sett her at suche a meruelouse libertie and in suche securité and safetie that all good men to the Worlds ende Will vvonder at theire excedīge good loyaltie Fyrste kepinge her owne pallace they sett and placed her in a marchants howse and vsed her otherwise verie homelie She nowe consideringe and perceauinge to vvhat ende theis matters tended most pittifullie cried ovvte and called vpon them to remember theire late promisse or at the leaste that she might be browght before the counsaile offeringe to stande to the order and direction of the states of the realme but God knovvethe all in vaine Fo● novve had they the praye vvheron they intended to vvhett theire bloudie teathe or they did dismisse or forgoe her as the euente dothe declare Wherefore in the night priuelie she vvas conuaied and vvithe haste in disgvvised apparrell The Quene inprisoned at lochleuen to the stronge forte of Lechleuen and after a fevve dayes beinge stripped ovvte and spoiled of all her princelie attyremēte vvas clothed vvith a course brovvne cassocke After this theis good loyall subiects practisinge ād encreasinge more and more dailie the performance of theire saide promised obedience neuer ceased vntill they had vsurped the full auctoritie and regiment of the vvhole In to the vvhiche thovvghe they had entruded them selues yet seinge as blinde as they vvere by disordinate vnseamlie and vnmeasurable ambition that the Quene remained and vvas still Quene and that there vvas no iuste cause by the ordinarie course of the lavve or for anie her demerites deserts to brīge her forthe to her triall that she might be conuicted ād deposed vvent like good honest plaine men and vvell meaninge subiects bluntlie to vvorke and consulted and determined to dispatche and ridd her ovvte of her lif vnlesse she vvolde yelde to them ād subscribe suche vvritings as they vvolde sende to her concerninge the demission of her crovvne to her sonne and the regimente of the reaulme to the Erle Murraie Wher vpon the Erle of Athole Secretorie Ledington withe other principall of theire factious bande sent Robert Miluen to Lechleuen to vvill her in anie case yf she sovvght the sauuegarde of her life to condiscende to such demandes and to sett her hande to suche vvritings as shoulde be proposed and brovvght vnto her Whiche as they saide to do The Quene threatned to be ridd avvaye yf she wolde not renōce her crovvne neuer coulde be preiudiciall to her beinge by force and violence extorted Syr Nicholas Throkmarton also beinge then ambassadour there for the Quene of England gaue her the like aduice Novve at the laste comethe the lorde Lindzaye sente in comisssiō from theire counsaile to presente and offer vnto her the writings who most greauouselie withe full fearefull words verie cruell sterne countenāce threatened her that vnlesse she Wolde therto subscribe she shoulde lose