John Foxe: "Acts and Monuments," 6.37ff.


June-July 1547. Wily Winchester continues stirring the pot answering old letters from Somerset. The frequent use of “I” and his constant exculpatory notes leads one to think: “Methinks thou dost protest too much, Steve.” Meanwhile, he’s holed up in the Winchester Palace whence he writes. Also, Dr. Cranmer has issued homilies for the Bishops to read. That’s the new issue for Wily. Wily’s persistent theme—let’s keep things the way they were in Henry’s time (“our late sovereign Majesty—“God rest his soul!”). Thus, the war is on long before the armies will gather on the field of battle during Mary’s time.


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